Last weekend a mate and I did this walk; “walk 26 - the crosscut saw” by Glenn Van Der Knijf… wow. It's now the toughest (mentally then physically) trek we’ve done.

Full:
http://i.imgur.com/6ykTUvc.pngUpper Howqua campsite was spacious with only a few fly fishing guys in 4WD’s there. Id arrived in a 2WD medium sized car which meant having to pay close attention to large rocks on the 25km’ish drive road in.
The walk from campsite to Stanley's Name Spur crossing was open, clear, gorgeous and lush.
Queen Spur road is an old 4WD track full of inch wide saplings and 50 or so fallen trees that need moving over or under; slow going, but easily manageable.
The problem is the last zig-zag to the northwest that the road takes, just after 2 crossings of King River, with the track literally disappearing! One is meant to move along there for another klick, find a partial track heading northwest on the Queen Spur that takes one to the summit of Mt Buggery.
We had a recent map of area, plus Glens map, plus ORUX maps on Android.
After about 30 mins of trying to either find the rest of the Queen Spur road or the mysterious “soft walking track” on the spur, we’d realised we had to make a decision to either a) bush bash a klick northeast (and 100m’s of inclination) to the top of Mt Buggery (or the last bit of the Crosscut Saw) or b) call it quits and head back an hour, camp overnight on the Queen Spur track and head back to Howqua camp the next day…
We took option a) where an hour of swearing and grunting ensued. We hit the Spur with bleeding shins and then proceeded to again, rock climb and bush bash up to the top of Mt Buggery. The sight of that 100mm wide dirt trail was something special, I’ll tell you what.
Horrible Gap was how you would expect a section of that name, after 6h of walking. Bang up to Mt Spec, left some gear, 1.2km down to Camp Creek for water. Spent 10m trying to find water (you go down the foot trail, hit the 4WD road (with a concrete campfire full of half burnt rubbish) turn left and walk 30m to where there's water running under the road there.
Back up to Mt Speculation, setup tents just back from the south face and watched the sunset while sipping spiced rum commenting “wonder how cold it gets”?
*F_cking* cold and wet, that's how.
0100>0700h was -10c with windchill and 80km/h winds (numbers pulled from butt). There were serious talks at 0130h around actions if a tent suffered a tear or a collapse; haul down to Creek Camp again and use each other's body heat for warmth while we each remember that scene from Brokeback Mountain.
Woke to views that confirm the reason for the mountains name. Down back to Buggery, across the Crosscut Saw which was worth the pain i feel, then west onto the Stanley's Name Spur.
This was the second interesting experience.
This track is very steep in places, requiring scrambling down rocks and skittering along rocky shale. I wouldn't recommend this for those new to hiking or those that are clumsy.
It's the last 500m before you reach the crossing and it disappearing before your eyes that really got me. Another painful bush bash in shorts and low on water had me go a little loopy in the heat.
Verdict, i wouldn't recommend using Queens Spur Road to get to Buggery with the track as it is now unless you have long pants, time to burn and are a little demented.
35km total, 17 hours, 2700 vertical metres climbed.
Tips:
The water at Camp Creek appeared to be the only reliable water in the large area. I'd suggest setting yourself up to be able to carry at least 4kg of it, with the way the wind whips the moisture out you and the hard, open mouth breathing through Horrible Gap and Buggery.