Hey guys, thanks for the interest in the trip. We ended up heading to Falls Creek from the 8/07 to 9/07. We chose to go there instead as we were a bit nervous about the weather forecast and we were more familiar with the Falls Creek area. Originally we were planning on staying out for 5 days but we chose to head back early because my girlfriend was suffering from a nasty chest infection. I ended up taking the following sleeping gear:
- Therm-a-Rest Trail Lite 3/4 length pad
- Therm-a-Rest NeoAir Original pad
- Hilleberg Nammatj 2 tent
- An old Outer Limits brand synthetic sleeping bag rated to -1
- Montbell Alpine Light Down Parka
- Polypropylene thermal pants and top
- Merino thermal pants and top
- Fleece pants
- 2 x 320 weight merino jumpers
- 3 x Icebreaker ski socks
- Polypropylene sock liners
- A thick woolen beanie
- A merino neck gaiter
- Gore-Tex alpine bivy
- Rab Bergan overpants
- The North Face Varius Guide Jacket
- Polypropylene glove liners
- OR Gripper Gloves
- Lowe Alpine Stormshell Mitts
Our campsite was out at the Rocky Valley Storage Dam wall. The temperature got to around -2*C at night and the lowest I think we had was -4*C at 10 am in the morning. Visibility would have ranged from 100-200 m at a guess for most of the time, with fleeting moments where the cloud/fog would pass and all would be revealed. We had probably 15-20 cm of snow overnight/in the morning and had snow showers on our walk out. Of the above gear I used the tent obviously, two pads, sleeping bag, bivy, polypropylene top and bottoms, two merino jumpers, sock liners and beanie. I felt pretty toasty using this combo.
I think next time I would take a pair of dishwashing gloves as well. The glove liners got wet far too quickly when I had to take my mittens off for extra dexterity. I got pretty cold hands a couple of times as a result. I also would make more of an effort to keep the fuel bottle warm before starting the stove - I found it much more difficult to start in the colder conditions. I will probably invest in a GPS before we head out in the snow again too I think. We didn't get caught out ourselves but I could imagine navigation would become very tricky in white out conditions regardless of how good you were with map and compass. We were also told that the dam could become a trap for the unaware in winter as when snow falls on the ice it can become indistinguishable from solid land. This could mean not knowingly walking out onto the lake and falling through a thin patch of ice

I had not thought of this up until the other day and I thought other first timers might benefit from this information also.
All in all we had a fantastic trip even though it was shorter than what we had hoped. We learnt a lot and are looking forward to heading out on our next snow camping trip with more of an idea on what to expect and what to bring. If anyone has any suggestions or questions, I'd be happy to hear them

Thanks for your advice Moondog, it was very helpful in planning our trip, and rodb, we will definitely keep those areas in mind for our future planning. To answer your question, we took snowshoes with us as neither of us are confident to travel solely on skis yet. We plan to make this switch sometime in the near future though! How did your trip go crispyscapes? Would you alter your gear list at all? What worked well and what didn't?