north-north-west wrote:Far fewer than there used to be. But we have the bast walking in the country, so it's only fair we have the most - and the best - active bushwalkers.
Lamont wrote:Max -Tasmania, yes Tasmania, oh that's great, Tasmania. I just have one question.
Chief - what is it?
Max - what's Tasmania?
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Lamont wrote:Max -Tasmania, yes Tasmania, oh that's great, Tasmania. I just have one question.
Chief - what is it?
Max - what's Tasmania?
Just one question... what are you talking about?
doogs wrote:Methinks the mainlander is quoting something that he finds somewhat amusing. Quotation marks would have helped clarify this but were sadly lacking and led to your (and my) confusion on his comment.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:doogs wrote:Methinks the mainlander is quoting something that he finds somewhat amusing. Quotation marks would have helped clarify this but were sadly lacking and led to your (and my) confusion on his comment.
Ah I see... have you spent time amogsnt them? You seem to have a decent grasp of their strange lingo....
ILUVSWTAS wrote:I know people who have lived on Bruny island for 20 years and the true locals still call them Johnny come latelys.
I'm not sure where 14 trips puts you eggs but you may have a way to go yet before you get a local tag...
doogs wrote:I was part of a scientific study team to assess why 'mainlanders' cannot drive round bends at more than 30km/h
GPSGuided wrote:doogs wrote:I was part of a scientific study team to assess why 'mainlanders' cannot drive round bends at more than 30km/h
It’s that black ice on an early autumn morning! One rental car totalled two decades and more ago. Grrrr!
doogs wrote:As a matter of fact, yes I have. I was part of a scientific study team to assess why 'mainlanders' cannot drive round bends at more than 30km/h
north-north-west wrote:doogs wrote:As a matter of fact, yes I have. I was part of a scientific study team to assess why 'mainlanders' cannot drive round bends at more than 30km/h
I spent more than thirty years on the big island trying to work that out. I think it comes down to the fact that most of them never learnt to drive properly. They're either too urbanised or unaccustomed to winding roads.
Unfortunately, far too many younger Tasmanians are much the same these days.
eggs wrote:One is tempted to say "bends?" What are "bends".
But one might have needed to drive across the Nullarbor to really get that.
Or perhaps the road from Hobart to Queenstown by contrast. Although I suspect that is a dig at slow drivers the locals have encountered?
[Is that more the case for travellers from other countries...?]
But then - I am the one who happily drives across half of Tas to go for a day walk while the locals think it is a major undertaking...![]()
But seriously - after 14 odd trips to Tasmania, one might think I was a Tasmaniac.
And I note a few current inhabitants with the Tasmanian super walker label did not start out walking there.
But in answer to the original question - it probably has to do with how internet blogs work or don't.
So yes - Tasmania is a bushwalking magnet - particularly in the Australian Summer.
And the number of different and dramatic walks in such a small area sets it apart from the rest of Aus.
And yes - having been setup as Bushwalk Tasmania, it clearly got a major user base from there before other blogs and facebook etc proliferated.
On another thread someone has asked about it all going quiet and that is true. But looking at how often older articles are accessed, I suspect a lot of newcomers are happy just to use it as a reference source rather than contribute.
I am just happy that it has a relatively pure bushwalking focus and is happy to store my notes and photos for posterity.
doogs wrote:north-north-west wrote:doogs wrote:As a matter of fact, yes I have. I was part of a scientific study team to assess why 'mainlanders' cannot drive round bends at more than 30km/h
I spent more than thirty years on the big island trying to work that out. I think it comes down to the fact that most of them never learnt to drive properly. They're either too urbanised or unaccustomed to winding roads.
Unfortunately, far too many younger Tasmanians are much the same these days.
This bloke must have been coming back to Hobart after a bushwalk in the north of the state..
https://www.police.tas.gov.au/news-even ... -liawenee/
Moondog55 wrote:I have to believe the police are exaggerating there, a Civic doing 200kph ??
Tekker76 wrote:Bushwalking in Tasmania. I notice its very represented here. Is this due to the site formerly being Tasmanian based or the state does have a much greater general hiking popularity ? I was thinking a lot of Australia, no offence to my fellow mainlanders is often so damn large, hot, dry, brown and spaced out, hiking may not have the local interest levels. Could be totally wrong about that.
Wollemi wrote:Tekker76 wrote:Bushwalking in Tasmania. I notice its very represented here. Is this due to the site formerly being Tasmanian based or the state does have a much greater general hiking popularity ? I was thinking a lot of Australia, no offence to my fellow mainlanders is often so damn large, hot, dry, brown and spaced out, hiking may not have the local interest levels. Could be totally wrong about that.
I don't think anyone answered the OP's Q - this is OK. I can't tell if some respondents are acting smugly, or cryptically humourous.
I think a working week may make a lot of people disinterested in hiking, as does a fear of the unknown Australian bush, as well as beer culture - gotta stay home for the barbie... That said, I reckon there are at least 40 very active walkers in my bushwalking club, and I know 40 more who I can contact to bushwalk or do related activities - and non of them contribute to this forum. Because they are bushwalking/canyoning/kayaking/cycling/travelling/gardening.
potato wrote:Wollemi wrote:My thoughts are that the population has become suburban to the extent that few like doing challenging activities where you are likely to be away from a shower or the internet for more than a day.
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