
The scene from our partly sheltered position:

Andrew W tries some photography during the maelstrom:

The wind whips up a frenzy:

Son of a Beach wrote:I got to Paddy's once, and no further than that. It looks just the same in your photos as I remember it. We had a a gale with sleet, and saw almost nothing. Camped near the shore of the lake overnight, and worried all night about the tent getting torn to bits (this was in the days when we camped in A-frame tents).
tastrekker wrote:Of all these routes, the Tramway Track is my favourite because:
* History - Old saw pit and wooden tramway
* Vegetation - All of these tracks feature changing vegetation from rainforest in the gullies to wet eucalypt scrub on the slopes to alpine shrubs up high. The Tramway Track has the added attraction of passing through the most northerly King Billy Pine forests in Tassie (and in the world for that matter).
* Starting altitude - Carpark is almost 200m higher than Loongana thus less altitude to be gained
* Climb is done in sections with levelish patches between - Once the Brookes Track starts climbing, it's fairly relentless
* Interesting Rocks - The link track from Winterbrook Falls to the ridge above Paddy's Lake climbs through some interesting rock formations and slabs
eggs wrote:Well done.
Amongst all our delightful fair weather photos it is good to get some which show the normal Tasmania.
tasadam wrote:The Exif info shows the photos being taken 9th May.
tasadam wrote:I went looking for weather stations nearby to see what the wind might have been blowing.
the_camera_poser wrote:Maybe it was like the mountain in the Lord of The rings- it didn't want you climbing it that day...
james cav wrote: On the fist occasion however, camped at paddys lake, my party consisting of my wife, brother and myself we all had a very strange unsettling kind of encounter. If anyone knows what im talking about please reply or pm if you dont want to look like a nutter. Ill leave that alone for now.
james cav wrote: seeing at the foot of our tent three or four weed covered creatures that must have been no more than 3 ft tall just looking at us.
james cav wrote: I dont know when we all fell to sleep however at some point in the night I remember ( and please dont laugh) seeing at the foot of our tent three or four weed covered creatures that must have been no more than 3 ft tall just looking at us. Ha Ha very funny. I dont recall anything else however in the morning I started to retell this strange dream to both my companions to which they both looked at each other then me and recanted the same experiance. This was just plain #*&&*ing wierd. By the way way my brother slept in a seperate tent which had the fly blown off. Hmmm simultanouse Hypothermia maybe.
Son of a Beach wrote: The mountain itself almost seems to be out to get us.
Kainas wrote:Son of a Beach wrote: The mountain itself almost seems to be out to get us.
I love the thought (also appreciate a book reader...the movie was awesome but simplified the forces of the land into two evil wizards and a few nice races).
Son of a Beach wrote:Yeah, the movies were good entertainment, but simplified what is probably the second-best faery story of all time, into just a fairy-tale.
Son of a Beach wrote:...The weather over the rest of Northern Tas looked great from just below the plateau, but the closer we got to the top, the stronger the wind, and the colder the temperature...
Son of a Beach wrote:...we persevered and reached the top of the trig point peak...
johnw wrote:Did you guys take any photos?
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