May I suggest starting out very very carefully?
Australian winter conditions are so different from Californian ones that one cannot carry over much knowledge.
The weather here is normally extreme - sometimes bright and sunny, so the surface gets wet in the PM, sometimes hard ice, especially AM, and sometimes a howling storm. Winds of 100 kph are NOT uncommon: the record is at Betts Camp near Kosci and is, iirc, >200 kph. We had sleet one Boxing Day.
As OP mentioned, one hazard you get here and seldom in Cal is getting wet. Another hazard is that the weather can flip across extremes in <1 hour. We will not go into KNP without winter gear - in summer. Special gear is needed for winter.
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Early morning near Kosci after a full night of hammering hail. It rattled.
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This was the good morning. By evening I could barely see my feet, and the wind was clocking 100 kph all night. Those clouds on the horizon were NOT harmless fluffy things!
Better note: American tents need NOT apply here. A tunnel tent would be a safe move. Unlike in the USA, they are common here.
Figure on cooking inside your tent: outside it the pot might get blown away.
But we love it.
Cheers
Roger