Maelgwn wrote:But seriously, heaps of the lakes in tassie would require hours/days of bashing through obscure forest and scrub down some steep hillside to get to a lake that looks like the last one. Then you have to get out again.
Maelgwn wrote:We should invent it. Take a packraft and go for a paddle around them.
sthughes wrote:Maelgwn wrote:But seriously, heaps of the lakes in tassie would require hours/days of bashing through obscure forest and scrub down some steep hillside to get to a lake that looks like the last one. Then you have to get out again.
Same as peak bagging then, but inverted ?
sthughes wrote:at least a lake you can see the other side.
Strider wrote:sthughes wrote:at least a lake you can see the other side.
That rules out Lake Taupo for this list!
sthughes wrote:Might spawn the invention/popularisation of floating tents too, which I often think would be ideal when flat ground is hard to find
matagi wrote:EDIT: Actually ..... I bet there are a few iced over lakes in the Victorian Alps in winter.
matagi wrote:Lake bagging May through to October - you have to be fully submerged and you get extra points for being naked?
Not necessarily disagreeing with you, but is aesthetics considered in peak bagging. ....And that's and interest question in itself - what is the best looking Mountain in Tassie. Surely the highest score goes to the one that is hardest to bag.stepbystep wrote:Surely aesthetics have to come into it, Ewart may be remote, but it's no Rhona
doogs wrote:I vote Ewart as the Holy Grail of Tassie Lakes.
Ewarts got ducks, does Rhona? Ducks must count for something
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