12 May 2022

AAWT - Day 18-20 - Tantangara Creek to Kiandra

First two night/three day journey on this AAWT adventure. Completed over Dec 2021 / Jan 2022.


Poa spp. at Tantangara Creek

 
Many plains filled with wildflowers


Candle Richea Richea continentis- First time seeing this plant on the trail 


Alpine Rusty Pods Hovea montana


Dragonfly just hatched and drying its wings


Witzes Hut


Found this old blob-top bottle piece in the dug-up roadworks near Witzes Hut. Have left it in the Hut. The absolute largest number of brumbies ever seen in one spot near here at Blanket Plain- I counted 100 individuals at once.


Eucalyptus Leaf Beetle Paropsis porosa


Some thick patches of yellow Kunzea Kunzea muelleri



Woodruff


Hamiltons Orb weaver Araneus hamiltonii - is my best guess, but the patterning is not as angular/wavy as most photos indicate


Camp Night 1


Stellaria



Snowy Mountains Highway






Ruins of Kiandra



This burnt-out ghost town marks my completion of section 8 in Chapmans' AAWT guidebook. I have now done a whole section! I planned and enjoyed this section over many months-years in fact- because over time, so many things came in between me and a weekend in the bush. Parenting, Covid lockdowns, depression, illness, work, life, weather.

No super-special equipment, no food drops, no through-hiking with extended leave from work, etc. Mostly just me and sometimes a friend, and the occasional golden weekend of free time.

Section 8 Fun Facts!!

My favourite place:
    I love Murrays Gap


My favourite Hut:
    Probably Oldfield's


My favourite wildlife encounter:
    Lyrebird tracks and wild dogs howling in the snow at Murrays Gap
    

My favourite plant:
  Fairy Aprons at Murrays Gap


Most scariest episode:
    Driving back out on Bullocks Hill Trail, by myself, getting stuck, sliding backwards, getting stuck, sliding backwards, etc etc, then grinding my way up and out with every nerve jangling- on Xmas day with absolutely no-one around.
    Oh and also- walking in to Murrays gap in the snow covered track, and having wild dogs very close, and having some kind of low temperature asthma episode-bit freaky.
     And, walking past cranky wild horses is usually a bit freaky as well. They also don't like it when you are camped somewhere near anywhere they consider to be theirs.
    And feeling like I was going to die of heat exhaustion was also a tad scary.
    Many people ask me if I get scared out there. Yes.


The hardest part:
    Walking and walking with a big heavy pack.
    Continuing to get myself out there and make it happen when I felt lonely and could not get a buddy to hike with.
    

The easiest part:
    Ditching packs and doing day-pack walking. SO easy.


You can imagine how keen I am to walk across that big Highway and up that track towards Tabletop Mountain, and begin my journey into the Next Section of Jagungal and Kosciusko. But, there will be delays. Currently I am unable to drive as I have had a seizure and a shadowy lesion has shown itself on a scan of my precious brain. The brain that I need to help me do this stuff.

The day I put up my next AAWT post, I will be a very happy girl. See you then.






11 Apr 2022

AAWT - Day 17 - Old Telegraph Poles to Tantangara Creek

This was Christmas Day 2021, a day hike on the AAWT...



Heading down to the Murrumbidgee




Wasn't as hard to cross as I thought it might be




Across the river and heading north




Beautiful walking




The Old Telegraph Poles




This marker is where I made it to last time when I was walking from the North in cold and fog. This time, walking in from the south in sun and wildflowers.





The wildflowers seemed larger than usual - Yam Daisy Microseris lanceolata  




Cicada





Dragonfly




Subalpine Leek orchid Prasophyllum sphacelatum




Divergent lateral sepals - either Prasophyllum 
viriosum (Stocky Leek Orchid)  or P. candida (Kiandra Leek Orchid)




Podolepis daisy




Hamilton's Orb Weaver Araneus hamiltoni




The Jester Thallarcha jocularis




Tantangara Creek