jsnrss wrote:Hi, has anybody made it down to the Kowmung in the past few weeks or months? I'm interested in the Orange Bluff campsite. I'm hearing mixed reports about some of the trails (e.g. Brumby being overgrown). I've heard mixed reports of overgrowth but no first-hand reports.
A manageable overnight hike with camp on Kowmung is sought.
I went on an overnighter down to Orange Bluff and back from Kanangra walls back in early January (the Kowmung area had only been reopened for a week or 2 so we were probably some of the first people to venture into the area for a while).
Our route was Kanangra walls -> Brumby Ridge -> Orange Bluff/Kowmung and returning the same way. The Gingra trail was faint in places but mostly easy going. Brumby ridge was VERY heavily overgrown in places. There were areas completely taken over by what I have now learnt to be native incense plants. In places they were above our heads and we had to cooee to each other if we were more than about 10m apart as the growth was that thick. They are fairly easy to walk through and not really scrubby but it is still quite demoralizing and energy sapping to have to walk through them not being able to see where you are going. The plants also seemed to be crawling with spiders! In some parts of the ridge where the growth wasn't so thick you could see remnants of the old track.
We found on the way back up it wasn't quite so bad as we managed to keep a more direct line right on top of the spur where the undergrowth is less thick. I think what happened on the way down is we hit the first dense patch of undergrowth which made it difficult to see where we were going, and we ended up slightly off to the side of the line directly down the spur which has thicker vegetation growing. Plus we had made paths when walking through some of the worst bits on the way down the day before which we managed to follow up.
Down by the Kowmung the grassy flats at the Orange Bluff campsite have been completely taken over by weeds. We found a small sandy patch towards the river with no weeds to pitch our tent. I have a few photos of the Orange Bluff campsite below (no photos of the incense plants on Brumby ridge unfortunately).
Does anyone know how areas such as these usually go in the years after a fire? It would be a shame if these weeds and dense undergrowth becomes the new normal in areas that were previously open bush/grassy flats that were well suited for walking and camping. I have noticed similar regrowth along the Coxs river and in the Wolgan Valley although the stuff at Kanangra was definitely the densest. I'm hoping as the forest canopy regrows the bush will become a bit more 'normal'.