As an aside, but related: the clouds and the stars. Sometimes you walk with people who know how to "read" them, the former for safety and the latter for pleasure (or using Crux, for south).
Is there any Tas. specific information on reading the clouds? The prevailing winds are westerly rather than south-westerly and the best known formations, the ones to watch out for, are Horsetails. If you were a confident reader, you can tell all and sundry that camping tonight (or tomorrow night?), at Shelf Camp, will not be a good idea. I guess you'd have to be pretty proficient to read effectively in Tassie,Qld and WA, each with their own unique sets of weather/precipitation patterns.
If the desert encourages star gazing more than Tassie does, it's probably because it's features are more subtle by comparison, there's generally more sky to view and being tired and cool sees you inside earlier.
The Sydney Observatory has an excellent website and if you hunt for it, you can printout the month's night sky Transcript and learn how to use the Cross and Orion to guide you to Betelgeuse. There are 88 constellations in all and distances, sizes and light comparisons against our sun are brilliant

,to know.
Apparently Stellarium is the best regarded website to download.
The Royal Institute of Navigation offer web membership, a forum,competitions and a journal going back years in which Dead Reckoning (wiki) and Aboriginal methods of navigating, a whole different way of viewing the landscape, have been studied.
Surgite et .. andiamo!