Showing posts with label beetle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beetle. Show all posts

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.






4 Jun 2021

Durras APR 2021


Fruit of Water Vine Cissus hypoglauca

Sea-mat or Sea Lace - a Bryozoan


Bryozoan animal colony, under the bridge at low tide.


Fruit of Burrawang/Burrawong or Macrozamia


Macrozamia communis


White Root Lobelia purpurascens


Elkhorn Platycerium bifurcatum


Lilac Lily Schelhammera undulata


Fruit of Pittosporum undulatum


Fruit of Cheese Tree


Glochidion ferdinandi



 Rough fruit Pittosporum Pittosporum revolutum


Painted Sedge Skipper Hesperilla picta


The larvae has one food plant only (Gahnia clarkei)




Blueberry Ash Elaeocarpus reticulatus


In the sand dunes, Epicoma Epicoma contristis or E tristis

6 Feb 2021

AAWT - Day 13 - Pockets Hut to Bill Jones Hut

 New Years Day at Pockets Hut 

















Chamomile Sunray Rhodanthe anthemoides













Gold coloured Leaf Beetles mating Cadmus litigiosus













Blue Eyes Lacewing Nymphes mermeleonoides













Hatted Caterpillars and younger instars of Gum Leaf Skeletonisers Uraba lugens






















The hats are retained skins from previous molts. On Black Sallee E. stellulata





















Alpine Daisy Bush Olearia algida

















Dwarf Sour Bush Choretrum pauciflorum













Snow Gum forest between Seventeen Flat and Pockets Hut








































Swarm of Honeybees on the move, protecting their queen Apis mellifera
On E. Stellulata





















Seventeen Flat
















Cooleman Plain

















Brachiopod and other fossils in the plains limestone




































Fields of blue Flax Linum marginale

















Dragonfly










Caterpillar- tons of this species, mostly on weeds













Bill Jones Hut













Limestone and dry creek beds around Blue Waterholes