by RVG » Sun 11 Oct, 2015 8:15 pm
Recently, I read a comment about the lack of bushwalking guides for Kosciuszko National Park. That is about to change.
The 2003 fires in Kosciuszko National Park, destroyed 23 huts and did enormous environmental damage. But they had some beneficial side effects. By clearing the undergrowth they revealed things which had been hidden or forgotten, including lost huts, old dray tracks and bridle trails.
After the fires, a number of bushwalkers separately began to record the old tracks and other information which were revealed when the fires cleared the undergrowth. Over several years we bumped into each other and also met up with Graham Scully from the Huts and Heritage group of Kosciuszko Huts Association. Graham was recording oral and other histories of the families which owned land in the Park.
A loose group was formed and we (bushwalkers) began to work with Graham to locate and record old huts, graves, tracks, etc. Again, separately, David Scott a conservation architect had amassed several thousand old records relating to the Kosciuszko region, including old maps showing routes used by miners and stockmen, Snow Leases, parish records, land grants, army maps, Snowy Mountains Authority records, and so on.
From this information, together with NPWS, KHA and other records, a database was compiled of all the known European sites in the Park. Many of the positions were “groundtruthed” by GPS to locate precisely where places were located. Six huts, not previously located, were found, as well as graves, diggings and other features.
In the years after the fires, we found, Charlie Carters hut at Diggers Creek, Campbells Hut at Campbells Creek, a miner's hut at Collins Creek, another miner's hut in the Back Gully running down to the Burrungubuggee River, Macgregors Hut at Macgregors Diggings and Crooks Hut at Crooks Racecourse (the latter of which is on private property). Mines, water races, diggings, graves and other features were also discovered.
But the real revelation was that the bridle trails and dray tracks, which had been used by graziers and miners for over 100 years, were very sensible routes. Moreover, they are just as useful for bushwalkers today as they were to the old-timers then. Many of those tracks were found and recorded by GPS.
Those tracks are now fading away, but to some extent it does not matter because we now know where they went. That makes it a lot easier for us to traverse the same country.
Some of that work has resulted in a book about to be published within days on Amazon and Apple as an eBook and soon to be published as a physical book. The physical book will be distributed by Klaus Hueneke's Tabletop Press, sometime near Xmas. Suggestions for other bookshops are welcomed.
The book is called "Exploring the Jagungal Wilderness" and it records many of the routes in the Jagungal area and especially towards the eastern side of the Jagungal Wilderness. It should open up much of the Jagungal Wilderness to bushwalkers.
Klaus Hueneke reviewed the book and said,
“The most detailed coverage of track and hut sites in the Jagungal Wilderness ever compiled. Chapter after chapter, map after map, reveal numerous routes and sites between Snowy Plain in the east and the Grey Mare Range to the west, and between Island Bend in the south and Happy Jacks Plain to the north.”