tas-man wrote: I would be interested to know if anyone had attempted to use this track in recent years. The closed scrub sections will now be well overgrown I imagine, but the more open areas and button grass sections may still be able to be followed.
bcshort wrote: Fri 27 Aug, 2010 10:07 am
Hi All,
Some of you may remember Short's Service Station, the Ampol on Davey St Hobart. Anyway When my grandfather and uncle were not running that, they (and the family) were keen bushwalkers. I'm recently become one of the family custodians of all the photos
I've put together all the Lake Pedder ones I could find. And put them in an album for your enjoyment.
http://gallery.me.com/chageaus#100307&b ... &view=grid
Cheers
Ben
beardless wrote:Just saw a picture of Capricorn in the Game, and looked for some more photos online and found this link which has some photos of the Western Arthurs, and South West Tasmania including of relevance, Lake Pedder from 1969/70. Amazing place. (To avoid any doubt, the photos are not mine. I was not even born.)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/garratt3/sets/72157630838440200
tibboh wrote:I wish I had a time machine.
geoskid wrote:It won't be drained - that's nonsense.
stepbystep wrote:geoskid wrote:It won't be drained - that's nonsense.
That's what they said about motor cars and aeroplanes and moon landings. Only this is heaps easier
stepbystep wrote:geoskid wrote:It won't be drained - that's nonsense.
That's what they said about motor cars and aeroplanes and moon landings. Only this is heaps easier
geoskid wrote:stepbystep wrote:geoskid wrote:It won't be drained - that's nonsense.
That's what they said about motor cars and aeroplanes and moon landings. Only this is heaps easier
I feel the need to make amends lest I seem flippant. I don't think it is possible to get back the original Lake Pedder.
Simply draining the water does not get it back. What vegetation would colonise the bare dirt? I bet It would'nt be what was there - we'd need the input of an Ecologist or Biologist to paint a picture of what would happen if the water was drained.
It's not possible , and it's a folly to try.
geoskid wrote:tibboh wrote:I wish I had a time machine.
I get what you are talking about, but why don't we hanker for the times before the original Lake Pedder was there.
Of course we can't hanker for things too far back because the atmosphere was mostly Methane (we can thank bacteria for that) and we were not here. .
So we hanker for what we remember fondly? An ideal remembrance? I do get it.
I did not see the original, and think what is there now is beautiful.
It won't be drained - that's nonsense.
doogs wrote:Hydro are undertaking a smaller scale project at the moment in the Central Highlands http://www.hydro.com.au/lagoon-of-islands.
I don't think that draining Lake Pedder would be as simple as pulling the plug out, more a slow reduction over several years to allow planting of vegetation etc.
tibboh wrote:If/when Pedder is drained it will take generations to regenerate right? Unless the world's people stop pumping CO2 etc into the atmosphere, global warming will cause sea levels to rise................. reflood Pedder yeah I know it's 300m asl, yatta yatta yatta
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