dalehikes wrote:The precedent that this trail set is nothing short of disgraceful and disheartening: Leasing National Park property to build private huts on, changing conservation legislation to allow clearing of trees (the legislation was meant to be in perpetuity), rejections throughout the EIS process, no public consultation, back-door bribes and political sway, the list goes on. .
dalehikes wrote:I'm not the only one who believes it. The paid articles were obvious. The massive donation for brownie points was obvious.
CBee wrote:How about manicured hikes Spicers to Teviot, with glamping and champagne at Huntley Saddle and Lizard Point? BTW yes should be a good easy hike...
As far as I know, you don't have to join the guided walk to do this hike though.
CBee wrote:No, no. I want porters. And with smiles and happy attitude...
best restaurants in the area
CBee wrote:best restaurants in the area
Oxymoron.
flingebunt wrote:Nope, none of the things say match up to the links that you sent me.
Private/Public funding is not a bribe
NPAQ raised concerns and made a submission. They were not a vocal opposition.
Travel writing is not journalism and travel articles are not held to journalistic standards. The newspapers didn't hold off for years on covering this story so that they could send a couple of journalists on a walk.
Truth is not a democracy. If other people believe something that is wrong, it doesn't make it true. It sounds more like you have read a few angry blogs and are repeating this here.
Please stick to the forum topic, which is, have you walked this trail?
dalehikes wrote:
Spicers will be responsible for the environmental impact of the walk but how can you hold a private company liable for impacts in a national park area that will inevitably be walked by the public more than their guests? This very thing is the force majeure clause that Spicers will use when they fail their contractual EIS obligations in the years to come.
flingebunt wrote:dalehikes wrote:
Spicers will be responsible for the environmental impact of the walk but how can you hold a private company liable for impacts in a national park area that will inevitably be walked by the public more than their guests? This very thing is the force majeure clause that Spicers will use when they fail their contractual EIS obligations in the years to come.
You are claiming now that Spicer's retreat will be responsible for people walking in a national park? Do you have a link that describes the governance of this trail?
dalehikes wrote:What is your opinion on the legislation change?
flingebunt wrote:Care to provide a more detailed financial, economic, social and moral discussion on this?
dalehikes wrote:
The notion that national parks exist to make money out of is incorrect. National parks are protected to preserve the eco system, biodiversity and natural heritage. Every little piece of forest that is cut down in favour of buildings is putting further strain on the already overused environment. If we have to lock people out of these areas then so be it. We need forests to survive, we don't need eco huts for rich people to hike in comfort. Allowing a precedent to overturn protective legislation is incredibly dangerous and opens the gate to a slippery slope.
What I care about is the lack of amenities and options for independent hikers. You can only hike the trail one way and you can only hike the whole trail, you can't hike in stay one night and hike out.
The trailhead and first 6km traverse private land, and the agreement with the property owners is for the public to enter, not exit, through their property.
You obviously never eaten at the Spring Creek Mountain Cafe
Lyrebird wrote:If someone submits plans for a water slide down Springbrook it will have to be opposed at the community level, because the legislation is as it stands and Joint Ventures are the new normal.
I mean, they could just put a bus up the mountain for both tourists and locals, but that sounds crazy.
Geographical error, make temporary camp, reevaluate and exit in the morning.
ofuros wrote:As I understand from the website, it's the Trailhead & the first 6km across private land that is one way. Their land their rules.
The rest is within the Np, so off track circuits from Glen Rock or Mana Gum campsite, section hiking along the Winder track to Mistake Mts, Blackfellow falls, Amphitheatre or from/to Bare Rock & Cunningham's Gap are all still options in any direction...Nothing has changed there.
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