by Hallu » Tue 12 Aug, 2014 6:39 pm
Done. I realize that it's actually hard to pick day walks outside of Tasmania. I mean in Tasmania you have plenty of day walk classics (Cape Hauy/Raoul, The Walls, Mt Murchison, Mt Anne, the Mt Field Plateau, etc...) that are several hours long, with great interest all along. But if you think about it, it's harder to find those in other states, because often a part of the walk is on 4WD tracks, or it's too short, or rarely a circuit, or not all the way interesting, or not "official" with no online info. For example, Mt Buffalo is gorgeous, but it's mainly several short walks, there isn't a good 5 h walk in the park unless you connect several walks yourself. Same thing in the Mallee : it's only short walks or long ones where you're walking for too long on 4WD tracks. For VIC, I wanted to put the Rame Head walk in Croajingolong, but since you can't really find online info on it, and the track isn't maintained, I picked the Mt Feathertop via Razorback instead.
In the Northern half of WA, it's hard as well, appart from "The Loop" in Kalbarri, there is no classic documented day walk there, whereas there is a great potential for it. You can make your own tailored day walks in Karijini or Kennedy Ranges, but it's not "official" and you won't find info on it. I loved the NSW Sapphire coast, but again, no real day walk there. Same thing in the Mungo/Mutawintji area.
I think it's connected to the lack of mountains : it's easier to have walks towards summits, because that's a natural objective. Before tourism was here, natives or settlers walked those tracks, and they become classics walks. But in a semi-arid or coastal environment, you need to build your own day walk, and it's not easy. On the coast, it's usually one way, and most people don't have a car shuffle option. A semi-arid environment rarely has "vistas" to see all over, so it's hard to justify a long day walk there : it's more interesting to camp, enjoy the stars, the solitude and the nocturnal wildlife. It's also of course connected to the ridiculously small amount of money given to National Parks for track management and track building. And in that sense, again, Tasmania is ahead of everyone else.
Last edited by
Hallu on Tue 12 Aug, 2014 7:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.