MickyB wrote:Is there a worse feeling than being in a forest and then hearing the crack of a tree that is about to fall. It has happened to me on couple occassions including today (not even windy). You don't know where it is going to fall and you wouldn't have time to get out of the way. All you can do is pray!!!
Onestepmore wrote:Is there a worse feeling.....when you're picking up dog poo in the backyard with a plastic bag, and you realise that you've put a hole in it.......
Moondog55 wrote:Certainly is a much worse feeling.
Walking on a snowy ridge to hear the sound of ice cracking and see a crack appearing 3 metres downhill from where you thought was safe to walk
Happy Pirate wrote:Snapped this just before my GF dragged me away from the front.
cheers
Steve H
icefest wrote:Moondog55 wrote:Certainly is a much worse feeling.
Walking on a snowy ridge to hear the sound of ice cracking and see a crack appearing 3 metres downhill from where you thought was safe to walk
Can you tell me more about this story?Happy Pirate wrote:Snapped this just before my GF dragged me away from the front.
cheers
Steve H
Do you have a bigger copy of the photo?
icefest wrote:I just couldn't make out what was happening in that shot. Thanks for the link to the big shot.
On the topic of fire, one of the most stunning moments was walking through a pine forest shortly after a fire and seeing great big holes in the ground. It turns out that once a pine catches it burns away roots and all. It's almost as if the tree is invisible.
MickyB wrote:Is there a worse feeling than being in a forest and then hearing the crack of a tree that is about to fall.
north-north-west wrote:How about watching the dead timber which is your only viable foothold on a particularly tricky part of a very steep, rough, exposed descent (and will be needed further down as a handhold) slowly bend and crack under your weight . . .
-GPSGuided wrote:north-north-west wrote:How about watching the dead timber which is your only viable foothold on a particularly tricky part of a very steep, rough, exposed descent (and will be needed further down as a handhold) slowly bend and crack under your weight . . .
Were you in that Tomb Raider movie? Or were you with Indiana Jones, Dr Jones?
madmacca wrote:You just hope it is a fairly dense forest and it gets caught up in other trees.
One of the things that scares me is walking along a track and seeing a branch that has speared vertically into the ground. I'm sure it's all just mental, but I'd much rather be crushed than impaled.
kjbeath wrote:This http://www.latrobe.edu.au/education/dow ... injury.pdf records information on deaths from falling trees in outdoor education but also in other area.
My experience of a close call was seeing a tree limb fall from a height of about 50m, about a 100m in front of us, very close to where we would have walked. It seems that Eucalypts on hot days can develop weaknesses, I think due to low water, and just suddenly break off limbs. I assume it was what happened at Steavensons Falls as there was no wind.
walkerchris77 wrote:Finding out your down to the last bit of loo paper and still 2 days left on your trip.
walkerchris77 wrote:Sought of feel for the old man
frenchy_84 wrote:I believe it happened to a school group on the meander falls track where one or possibly two people died. I remember a memorial plaque in place.
MickyB wrote:walkerchris77 wrote:Sought of feel for the old man
Old Man's Beard is a plant. Also known as Spanish Moss. (Tillandsia usneoides)
Wooly lamb's ear is also a plant.
walkerchris77 wrote:Sought of feel for the old man and the lamb.
and ill walk past the ivy and leave it for someone else
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