by north-north-west » Thu 06 Jun, 2013 6:40 pm
Right, now that I've had a little sleep and relaxation:
in the Grampians, Thackeray and the Fortress have a reputation as being a bit of a challenge by Victorian standards. Never done them so can't comment from knowledge. One area that you should find interesting - if all I've heard is true and from the little I've seen it may well be - is the Seven Dials. I'm not sure about access these days, the old routes may be closed due to fire damage, but it's not far from Halls Gap and is pretty spectacular country that can be scrub-bashed from either the east or the west. If you get in there, let me know what it's like, it's still on my 'must do before moving back to Tassie' list.
Abrupt and Sturgeon are decent if shortish daywalks, and Abrupt in particular can be very challenging if the weather's a bit iffy.
Down at the Prom you have the northern circuit, which a fit, strong young chap like you might be able to knock off in three longish days. Or there's the Vereker Range. Track to the lookout and you're on your own from there. I know it gets done on an infrequent but regular basis, but never found anyone willing to admit to having done it. I've followed a pad for about two km up from the lookout and it seems to continue.
Like most Victorian scrub, both these areas are fairly open by Tassie standards. Regrowth can cause some issues but for the most part the vegetation is not the problem. Water is, both quantity and quality.
The Tamboritha/Ligar circuit is two moderate days, three short days, or one long one and a half. You can extend it if you go counter clockwise by continuing along the ridge over the Sugarloaf and Bruni Knob, and then curve back down to the road on the most convenient spur. That's good fun - steep hillsides but generally open enough to be reasonably easy going.
As for Feathertop, Bungalow Spur is a walk in the park - very gentle consistent grade pretty well all the way up. To make the walk more fun (if the track & bridge are open) you can do a circuit from Harrietville, going up Bon Accord Spur (always one or two downed trees, the issue here is the footbridge before you start climbing) and along the Razorback. Plenty of good snowcamping sites from there on, especially around High Knob or up near Molly Hill's if the weather's not too bad.
"Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens."