puredingo wrote:Booking to walk in the bush!!! Never have I heard such a ridiculous notion. This is still Australia right?...Just go mate, I give you permission.
You've obviously never heard of the Overland Track then. Shame, it's a beautiful part of the world.puredingo wrote:Booking to walk in the bush!!! Never have I heard such a ridiculous notion. This is still Australia right?...Just go mate, I give you permission.
ninjapuppet wrote:5.5 hrs? you must be one hell of a fast walker!
Takes me 3 hrs to just run it
waylow wrote:Hi all first post on this forum.
Just a heads up as to the current state of the coast walk. Did it in 5 1/2 hrs on Friday Dec 27. I must say how disapointed in people I am. There was a LOT of toilet paper and feaces stewn everywhere, in particular at Marley lagoon. Some younger guys were camping the previous night at Little Marley with cheap tents which clearly didnt hold to to the night weather. These along with their three or four tubs of rubbish most likely will still be there.
The toilet blocks at Era campground have been demolished and replaced with porta loos. Wasnt too keen to check them out! I still would not be very keen to drink water anywhere near there!
There is track work underway repairing the badly eroded southern sections with a new style composite grate walkway which is much better to walk on than the steel type at the northern end.
Just thought I would let you know as Im sute you wouldnt want your wife to be turned off by the lazy fithy habits of others!
Allchin09 wrote:Grantw - Is the composting toilet permanent, or does it look like a portaloo? The last pit toilet there had to be pulled down after it was filled with peoples rubbish...
clarence wrote:In years gone by one required a "bush camping permit" to camp in the Royal NP.
After obtaining permits for my first few years of walking there, I realised it was bureaucratic nonsense, and then never obtained one since. I camped there so many times over fifteen years, without any problem. Never saw anyone else camping, except at the established/authorised campsites.
There are so many out of the way, amazing campsites in Royal NP, where one could camp for days on end with no problem whatsoever. The rangers would never come looking unless you did something really stupid. I guy I know lived in a cave there only a few hundred metres from one of the most highly used tracks. He lived for months- had his camp/cooking fires late at night when no one was in the area to smell the smoke.
My advice is to camp away from the grubby NPWS authorised sites- well away from any track, road, lookout or other facility, and be inconspicuous- and you wont have a problem.
If they ask why you have such a big pack tell them you're training for the Anapurna Circuit or Overland Track or something. The current arrangement is typical NPWS bureaucracy gone mad, written by some desk jockey who has never even been inside a tent.
If you want info on some very easy to find camp spots near the coast track PM me.
Clarence
Tantell wrote:...have a link...about bush camping...
clarence wrote:In years gone by one required a "bush camping permit" to camp in the Royal NP.
After obtaining permits for my first few years of walking there, I realised it was bureaucratic nonsense, and then never obtained one since. I camped there so many times over fifteen years, without any problem. Never saw anyone else camping, except at the established/authorised campsites.
There are so many out of the way, amazing campsites in Royal NP, where one could camp for days on end with no problem whatsoever. The rangers would never come looking unless you did something really stupid. I guy I know lived in a cave there only a few hundred metres from one of the most highly used tracks. He lived for months- had his camp/cooking fires late at night when no one was in the area to smell the smoke.
My advice is to camp away from the grubby NPWS authorised sites- well away from any track, road, lookout or other facility, and be inconspicuous- and you wont have a problem.
If they ask why you have such a big pack tell them you're training for the Anapurna Circuit or Overland Track or something. The current arrangement is typical NPWS bureaucracy gone mad, written by some desk jockey who has never even been inside a tent.
If you want info on some very easy to find camp spots near the coast track PM me.
Clarence
kanangra wrote:Mate Little Marley would be perfect. Nestled in behind the beach.
K.
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