Tue 28 Aug, 2012 8:20 am
Tue 28 Aug, 2012 5:55 pm
Tue 28 Aug, 2012 9:22 pm
Wed 29 Aug, 2012 6:45 am
Wed 29 Aug, 2012 6:50 pm
tomh wrote:In Queensland there are no public rights of way as there are in England. To cross private property (usually to gain access to National Parks) you should find the owner and ask permission. Usually it is given willingly.
As far as a choice between forested or open walking - although there are plenty of SE Qld walks that incorporate both and walks such as in Lamington that are almost totally covered, nothing goes even close to resembling Snowdonia, the Lake District, Kosciuszko NP, the Overland, or N.Z.
Vive la différence.
Wed 29 Aug, 2012 7:41 pm
Drifting wrote:some of the lower hikes in Lamington have nice views- the ones in gum forest.
Thu 30 Aug, 2012 4:21 pm
gidge12374 wrote:......can you elaborate on the the open walks in SE QLD? I know nothing will resemble the above but anything other than forests will be a breath of fresh air!
Sat 01 Sep, 2012 8:38 am
tomh wrote:gidge12374 wrote:......can you elaborate on the the open walks in SE QLD? I know nothing will resemble the above but anything other than forests will be a breath of fresh air!
Not sure of the walk difficulty you are willing to attempt, but as you mentioned Mt. Barney I'll take that as a clue. Most of these are off-track so you'll need navigational skills.
Spicers Peak- great open views as you climb from Governor's Chair to the gulley near the top of east peak. Forested on top, but great fern floor. If you can then find the N-W descent ridge near the west peak (do not attempt if unsure of navigation skills), this is also open.
Mt. Maroon - once you achieve the 'plateau' after the climb, plenty of open rock-slab walking on top including the peak cairn.
Mt. Ernest - the ridge extending for about 2km west of the peak
Mt. Barney - Logans, Mezzanine and North ridges plenty of open/low-growth sections with good views
Girraween NP may be too distant but definitely worth a visit, plenty for the low-growth devotee. Minimum dry forest, some head-high scrub amongst large climbable rock formations. Easy walking.
Lamington - best open track walk is Dave's Creek Circuit and only the circular part after the track divides. You could also try Shipstern - some low growth sections with views along the ridge and at the end.
Thu 06 Sep, 2012 7:38 pm
gidge12374 wrote:tomh wrote:gidge12374 wrote:......can you elaborate on the the open walks in SE QLD? I know nothing will resemble the above but anything other than forests will be a breath of fresh air!
Not sure of the walk difficulty you are willing to attempt, but as you mentioned Mt. Barney I'll take that as a clue. Most of these are off-track so you'll need navigational skills.
Spicers Peak- great open views as you climb from Governor's Chair to the gulley near the top of east peak. Forested on top, but great fern floor. If you can then find the N-W descent ridge near the west peak (do not attempt if unsure of navigation skills), this is also open.
Mt. Maroon - once you achieve the 'plateau' after the climb, plenty of open rock-slab walking on top including the peak cairn.
Mt. Ernest - the ridge extending for about 2km west of the peak
Mt. Barney - Logans, Mezzanine and North ridges plenty of open/low-growth sections with good views
Girraween NP may be too distant but definitely worth a visit, plenty for the low-growth devotee. Minimum dry forest, some head-high scrub amongst large climbable rock formations. Easy walking.
Lamington - best open track walk is Dave's Creek Circuit and only the circular part after the track divides. You could also try Shipstern - some low growth sections with views along the ridge and at the end.
Thanks for this. I didn't even know Giraween existed. Looks a top place and I've just got the wife to book a long weekend off so we can spend a few days there.
We've done ships stern and Daves creek. there not completely open but just enough to tease. Climbing up on surprise rock is a top spot for lunch though. Awesome views.
With regards to the others. We'll check a few of them out next time we're heading down Mt Barney way
Thanks again
Fri 07 Sep, 2012 10:12 am
gidge12374 wrote: Can you recommend any overnighter on there?
Fri 07 Sep, 2012 11:16 am
tomh wrote:There are a few 'remote' camping sites (small, no facilities, often not easily identifiable but close enough is good enough
Sat 08 Sep, 2012 5:41 pm
Sun 09 Sep, 2012 10:15 am
gidge12374 wrote:... As we're training for the Overland track would 20 kg packs for me and the wife be too much on Girraween?
Sun 09 Sep, 2012 12:14 pm
© Bushwalk Australia and contributors 2007-2013.