The mysterious Victor of Victor's Hut

In 2009 a post was made on this forum as to the whereabouts of the burnt ruins of Victor's Hut, an original dwelling that was built in the 70s by the enigmatic Victor in Wellington Park, Hobart. Thanks to the aforementioned post as well as some great assistance from others I have set my plans in motion and, through my curiosity and opportunism, have since frequented the remains of the hut several times in the last three months in the hope of learning more about the place and the man who once resided here. The hut itself it now non-existent due to decades of fire that have ravaged the mountain . All that remains of the hut itself are various scatterings of tin sheeting and some lonely brick work surrounding a pretty awesome cast iron oven. Be that as it may, what is of particular interest to me is the stone wall that surrounds that encircles the area of the hut as well as the five or six terraces from within the perimeter, one of which would have accommodated Victor's Hut. From the primary and secondary evidence I have been given about the place, the outstanding workmanship and attention to detail that has been given to the wall and terrace suggests that both these features pre-date Victor's abode and were perhaps (according to an article that ran in 1998 edition of The Tasmanian Tramp) an offshoot development from a saw mill expedition in the 19th century (maybe even early 20th century).
Needless to say apart from the 98' article that vaguely describes the experiences that the author had with the place and the occasional descriptive sentence on the layout of Victor's abode in the late 70s/early 80s plus an Wellington Park audit (2005) of Victor's Hut I (also known as The Temple and Xanadu) and Victor's Hut II (this was the hut built by Victor after the first hut was destroyed by vandals), there is virtually no documented information on the dwellings and its history of being occupied.
Subsequently, my attention and interest in both the huts, the original terrace and stone wall, and most intriguingly of the mysterious individual known as Victor, the research I have undertaken has grown from an nagging interest to an inarguable fixation.
This is where you come in!
I am in need of answers.
Plus I need photos. I only have a single grainy shot of the 'two story' hut from the 1998 article.
Let's start piecing together the dots to the hut and most importantly the life that this elusive individual lived or may still be living.
Needless to say apart from the 98' article that vaguely describes the experiences that the author had with the place and the occasional descriptive sentence on the layout of Victor's abode in the late 70s/early 80s plus an Wellington Park audit (2005) of Victor's Hut I (also known as The Temple and Xanadu) and Victor's Hut II (this was the hut built by Victor after the first hut was destroyed by vandals), there is virtually no documented information on the dwellings and its history of being occupied.
Subsequently, my attention and interest in both the huts, the original terrace and stone wall, and most intriguingly of the mysterious individual known as Victor, the research I have undertaken has grown from an nagging interest to an inarguable fixation.
This is where you come in!
I am in need of answers.
- Do you have any background information on when the first and second huts were built?
- The history of the terraces and wall?
- Who was Victor? His age? life story? Why did he build the huts? Where was he from (I have reason to believe he immigrated to Tasmania from the Ukraine in the 60s/early 70s)? What were your interactions with the man? Is he still alive (the audit states that he returned to the Ukraine and became an orthodox priest after the fall of the Soviet Union)
- Stories that you have of the hut(s)?
- What was the layout of the hut?
Plus I need photos. I only have a single grainy shot of the 'two story' hut from the 1998 article.
Let's start piecing together the dots to the hut and most importantly the life that this elusive individual lived or may still be living.