Hmm... how would you like to come on my next walk?ILUVSWTAS wrote:... on day 6 I pull out the smarties and toblerone and drinking chocolate and sit back reading my book with a glass of scotch........

Hmm... how would you like to come on my next walk?ILUVSWTAS wrote:... on day 6 I pull out the smarties and toblerone and drinking chocolate and sit back reading my book with a glass of scotch........
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Thats the point isnt it, experience will tell all. I did an 8-10 day trip recently and carried 26kg. But I had a book on standby and lots of luxury items. At the end of the day it comes down to knowing what you NEED to carry and what extra you WANT or maybe more importantly are capable of carrying!
Im jealous of guys who can carry 15kg for a 10 day trip. but im sure they are jealous of me when on day 6 I pull out the smarties and toblerone and drinking chocolate and sit back reading my book with a glass of scotch........
ILUVSWTAS wrote:I just figure while im young fit and strong I'll carry a few extra comforts. Im sure like others here when I get old I'll start to lighten my gear right up!
Until then I have no problem carrying 20-24kg.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Hehehe maybe.....
Yeh I walk with a few guys around my own age that carry around 14kg for multinight walks.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Hehehe yeh I hear ya.... sadly my plans have changed and it's looking like im gonna have to drive up at 9pm and walk the track by torch. probably wont make it to PV until 3am. I may have to reconsider how much im going to carry......
Brett wrote:the above is an all to uncommon occurrence that dominates news.
sef wrote:I mean no offense, but your simplification of the issue is ridiculous. All other things are not equal. If you absolutely must have an answer, for reasons covered exhaustively in this thread and I don't doubt dozens of others, it's no. In the absence of any other information, a new starter would be better off having something than not, and something over rather than under spec'd.
Brett wrote:Hi Tony
As for people claiming Tassie has only three seasons in the alpine areas for some months I say again, and again, and again, show me a month that it has never snowed in the last ten years. It is not unseasonable or unexpected for it to snow in any month in Tassie at altitude along with bushwalkers alerts so if heading out for even an overnight walk not prepared for surviving such an event is courting a search and rescue operation and on a eight night walk putting extraordinary faith in the Weather Bureau. Yes people have been dragged off the top of Marions Lookout after a day walk that went wrong with exposure so lets not underplay the importance variable weather has in Tassie. I have been frozen by driving rain and snow and then on the next day walked in high twenties to low thirties heat with the advice from the Weather Bureau being stable and calm conditions with low possibility of light showers in the elevated areas.
Cheers Brett
for extractions of walkers with hypothermia from "extremely dangerous" places as the top of Marions lookout
These conditions that you talk about are not only experienced in Tasmania, by world standards Tasmania has a mild climate.
Joel wrote:These conditions that you talk about are not only experienced in Tasmania, by world standards Tasmania has a mild climate.
This is very accurate. Some of you blokes make out bushwalking in Tasmania is like crossing Antarctica. There are many, many place around the world that have far harsher conditions than Tas. Including our neighbours in New Zealand. We do not have extremely cold conditions and we also do not have to contend with altitude.
Joel wrote:Some of you blokes make out bushwalking in Tasmania is like crossing Antarctica.
Joel wrote:for extractions of walkers with hypothermia from "extremely dangerous" places as the top of Marions lookout
Sorry Brett, when exactly did this happen?
Unless I'm mistaken, you seem to be making things up.
Unbeknown to us on this day, two walkers had set off their EPIRB beacon yesterday (May 2nd, 2006) afternoon, after setting off from Cradle to complete the Overland Trek, and the signal indicated that they were near Marions Peak. Search and Rescue (Police, SES, NPAW) had a small team dispatched and by the following day, a full search and rescue operation was underway. A helicopter was called for but we were experiencing a blizzard and there was no way that they were going to fly a chopper there in such conditions.
The following day we set off for Kitchen Hut via Marions Peak, believing that now that the cold front had passed we might be able to get some walking under our belts. We still weren't aware of any search and rescue operations as we headed for Marions. The conditions were fairly miserable, the snow had abated but the rain, sleet and graupal never ceased and as we started to climb the peak, the winds became much stronger. Climbing to the lookout on Marions Peak was difficult, with a full pack it was a job to stay upright with the driving winds, I had my Kestrel with me, I measured winds at 72kmh over the space of a couple of minutes, but the gusts would have been around 50% higher again.
So, we decided not to go on and commenced our descent, meeting up with a couple of walkers attempting a day walk from Cradle. They advised us that there was a search and rescue operation underway for 2 walkers that had gone missing yesterday, and we advised them that the climb to Marions was pretty *&%$#! awful and none too safe. We returned to Cradle via Wombat Pool and spent the afternoon in the Cradle Mountain Lodge bar, of course...
During the afternoon we found out that the two missing walkers had been located, by chance, safe and well by a Victorian bushwalker. As it turned out, they were not far from Marions Peak and were found on the same track we were on, not long after we were there! We were surprised by this as we'd not seen them, but the visibility was poor and it would have been difficult to hear them under such conditions. Had we stayed on longer or set off on the walk half an hour earlier, we probably would have come across the lost walkers ourselves.
A rule of thumb is for every 100 metres expect the temperature to drop by around one degree centigrade.
Joel wrote:for extractions of walkers with hypothermia from "extremely dangerous" places as the top of Marions lookout
Sorry Brett, when exactly did this happen?
Unless I'm mistaken, you seem to be making things up.
Brett wrote:As for the mildness of the Tassie climate this has probably resulted in nearly all under prepared experiencing nothing more than a colder, wetter and uncomfortable trip than would have otherwise been the case. However the same time this mildness lures people into a false sense of safety. You will see people heading from the coast for a day walk to the top of Cradle dress in shorts and cotton t-shirt, I would hope that mid winter in the Australian Alps such event does not happen. It is the seeming mildness of the weather that catches many tourists out. We as locals see people from WA planning to sleep out under the stars while walking the OLT. Bit like a Tassie walker heading inland in SA during summer planning to use only a yabbie straw and mug to get water a long the way. I tend to put great store in what the locals recommended rather than ridiculing them.
Cheers Brett
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