mikeb wrote:What an amazing days effort. Hope the walkers hut is warm and comfy. He might even be able to dry his sleeping bag.
jmac wrote:As you arrive by vessel there's a pretty sternly worded sign prohibiting unauthorised vessels from entering the lagoon (sensitive bird nesting habitat) and insisting all vessels proceed to the jetty. Whether he could see it in the half-moonlight is another question.
GPSGuided wrote:Would he be able to see the signage in the dark? Or did you inform him prior?
mikeb wrote:mikeb wrote:What an amazing days effort. Hope the walkers hut is warm and comfy. He might even be able to dry his sleeping bag.
He might still be on the move - just targeted junction north of Cox Bight...
doogs wrote:
I'm now, finally, confident that he's going to make it to Cockle Creek.
!
ILUVSWTAS wrote:doogs wrote:
I'm now, finally, confident that he's going to make it to Cockle Creek.
!
I never had any doubt. He seemed very very keen on walking out to meet his sponsors, tv crews, helicopters and fans at Cockle....
GPSGuided wrote:If LP hits Cox Bight in the coming days, he would have completed the north-south winter traverse of Tasmania. He doesn't need to reach Cockle Ck to claim that crown.
MrWalker wrote:He did really well yesterday, but I'm not convinced he can get to Cockle Creek in 4 days.
That will need about 21 km/day and his track speed is never over 2km/hr for the day. So he needs over 11 hrs walking each day.
Even he does some walking after dark in the moonlight that's going to require long days on little food.
If he does do the four days, then his reception committee will need to stay up until midnight to greet him at Cockle Creek.
north-north-west wrote:GPSGuided wrote:If LP hits Cox Bight in the coming days, he would have completed the north-south winter traverse of Tasmania. He doesn't need to reach Cockle Ck to claim that crown.
I don't get this. We have four seasons, not two. It's spring. How can travelling through the three weeks prior to the equinox be considered "winter"?
Yeah, pedantic again, but seriously . . . this is not winter.
north-north-west wrote:I don't get this. We have four seasons, not two. It's spring. How can travelling through the three weeks prior to the equinox be considered "winter"?
Yeah, pedantic again, but seriously . . . this is not winter.
rangersac wrote:Not an early starter is he? Almost 9:30am and no movement. Hard to get the SCT done in four days leaving several hours after sunup.
Mark F wrote:The winter solstice to spring equinox is considered winter in much of Europe. Similarly for the other seasons. I find this makes more sense of the climate living in Canberra than June 1 - August 31. It better accounts for the energy balance in the environment.
Son of a Beach wrote:north-north-west wrote:GPSGuided wrote:If LP hits Cox Bight in the coming days, he would have completed the north-south winter traverse of Tasmania. He doesn't need to reach Cockle Ck to claim that crown.
I don't get this. We have four seasons, not two. It's spring. How can travelling through the three weeks prior to the equinox be considered "winter"?
Yeah, pedantic again, but seriously . . . this is not winter.
Although we usually go by calendar months, where Winter is June, July & August, it's arguably more technically correct to say that Winter is from the Winter Solstice, to the Equinox. This still caters for 4 seasons.
AndyR wrote:Winter is defined by meteorologists as the 3 months with the coldest average temperature which is why it's June, July and August (in the SH) which is...
AndyR wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:north-north-west wrote:I don't get this. We have four seasons, not two. It's spring. How can travelling through the three weeks prior to the equinox be considered "winter"?
Yeah, pedantic again, but seriously . . . this is not winter.
Although we usually go by calendar months, where Winter is June, July & August, it's arguably more technically correct to say that Winter is from the Winter Solstice, to the Equinox. This still caters for 4 seasons.
Winter is defined by meteorologists as the 3 months with the coldest average temperature which is why it's June, July and August (in the SH) which is in turn caused by the earth's tilt. So really, the tilt causes winter, it doesn't define it![]()
Andy
GPSGuided wrote:AndyR wrote:Winter is defined by meteorologists as the 3 months with the coldest average temperature which is why it's June, July and August (in the SH) which is...
The other practical reference is the Chinese lunar calendar, one that has seasons and astronomical dates defined and used by the farmers for a few thousand years. In it, the seasons are similarly divided per solstices and equinoxes. There’s no understanding of the months based seasons.
north-north-west wrote:I don't get this. We have four seasons, not two. It's spring. How can travelling through the three weeks prior to the equinox be considered "winter"?
Yeah, pedantic again, but seriously . . . this is not winter.
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