Kangaroo Island Wilderness Trail Wildflowers

Kangaroo Island Wilderness Trail, wildflowers.

Pig face (carpobrotus) and hibbertia sp along the coast, day 2

Kangaroo Island Wilderness Trail abounds in wildflowers. Here are the names of some I have been able to identify that I saw as I walked along the trail. The length of the list speaks volumes for the fabulous diversity to be found. Thanks to the fabulous Alison Buck for checking and helping me with the list. Any errors are mine, not hers. (On Monday I will post my account of walking the trail).

acacia paradoxa (this filled the scenery for several early sections of day 1)

boronia edwardsii (broder leaf than the one below)
boronia filifolia (fine leaf, sandy section)

calytrix smeatoniana (a paler calytrix than the one below)
calytrix tetrogona (wonderful pale pink)

carpobrotus rossii (pigface; bright pink)

chamaescilla corymbosa (blue squill, or blue stars; wonderful delicate mauve flowers. A tuberous herb with grasslike leaves)

cheiranthera alternifolia in early forested section – another delicate mauve flower

Calytrix tetrogona, seen on most of the days.

correa decumbens

dampiera lanceolata

daviesia asperula (one of many ‘eggs and bacon’ pea flowers)

euphrasia collina (mauve pea family; eye bright)

goodenia blackiana
goodenia ovata

grevillea quinquenervis (pink spider plant)
grevillea halmaturina (white spider flower)
grevillea rogersii (just two spider legs in kind of pairs, darker red)

hakea rostrata (delicate white spider flower with needle leaves)
hakea vittata (hooked needle wood; low growing)

hibbertia riparia
hibbertia acicularis
hibbertia virgata

Orthrosanthos multiflorus 

lasiopetalum discolour (velvety leaves, mauve) (sorry, refuse to spell colour the american way, especially when it is an Aussie flower)
lasiopetalum schulzenii (hanging bells of cream)

leucopogon parviflorus (divine smell. How I wish I could preserve it. It filled the air with its delicacy at times on day 1).

olearia taretifolia (tiny white daisy flowers on a bush)

orthrosanthus multiflorus (mauve morning iris)

pimelia sp (there are several species of pimelea on the island)

pomaderris obcordata (small [20 cm high mostly] clumped pant covered in with tiny white or pinkish flowers)

prasophylium elatum (snake orchid – near campsite at the end of day 2)

prostanthera spinosa (dark mauve; prickly leaves)

pultenaea daphnoides  (large leaf pea flower; egg and bacon colouring; beautiful perfume)
pultenaea scabra (a different egg and bacon flower

More calytrix lining the path
scaevola linearis

senecio lautus (yellow daisy flower)

stackhousia aspericocca

swainsona lessertiifolia – a small mauve pea flower with many erect stems

Tetratheca halmaturina (see below)

thelymitra epipactoides (delicate mauve sun orchids)

wahlenbergia multicaulis

xanthorrhoea semiplana

Tetratheca halmaturina with grass-like stem and leaves, crawling here up a Petrophile multisecta.

(My favourite of the several ‘koala trees’ was eucalyptus viminalis cygnetensis – great for humans to climb, too – which not many eucies are). I also enjoyed the huge eucy camaldulensis exemplars, especially those on the last day growing by the river, and, to a lesser degree, the cup gums, sugar gums and coastal mallee gums that decorated our walk.

Freycinet NP 2016

Freycinet National Park – a winter visit. June 2016

What a terrible dilemma we had. It was created by the fact that Tassie (Tasmania) is a mountainous island, with more beauty to offer than most places can dream about (which is why we choose to live here). It was a long weekend, and I had to choose between going to the mountains, where some early snow was scheduled to fall, making the already mesmeric landscape a stunning white, or going to the sea, where the weather would be milder, and the rolling tides and swells would make interesting patterns as the water surged. I consulted my dog, who said to stay at home, but that was not a popular vote.

I love mountains more than sea, but perhaps the snow would be set within dark grey conditions, with no views to the distance. My husband said he’d come too (a great sacrifice on his part, as he’d earmarked this time for getting his reports written), and the idea of camping near to the sound of the ocean won the day.
To please the ‘no-voting’ dog, we stayed at home until lunchtime, taking her for a good long run before setting out, aiming to eat at Campbelltown to break the journey – well, that was the excuse. The food there greatly pleases us, which was the real reason. Here we ran into the first of many friends: Jess (from Pandani Bushwalking Club) was going to paddle to Shouten island with another mutual friend. Nice idea until you took note of the fact that it began to snow shortly after we finished lunch – just wet, sleety sort of snow, but you could see it falling and see the icy blotches it made on the windscreen. Our hands had been frozen just crossing the street.
Now, some people call me an adventurer, so this blog is no doubt going to greatly destroy my image. What great adventurous thing did I do this afternoon? I photographed sunset from a nice perch on a headland, and selected our camping spot for the night. I also nearly lost a few fingers taking long exposure shots in sub-zero air. Then we went to the pub, intending to set up camp in the dark, later.

We sat at our little table for two, innocently eating our meals, and in came two friends from Hobart Walking Club, who chatted to us while we ate. Then two from the Northwest Walking Club came in; more chatting. Then my friend and fellow expeditioner, Pete, from Hobart Club spotted us, so came to say “Hi’, followed by two more friends that I knew from the Eldons expedition. Next there was Sally, an old workmate of Bruce’s, and a lady from my Pilates class. The list goes on, and includes my climbing partner and “sister-in-crime”, Angela. We had a merry night, and didn’t leave until quite late. That’s fine. That’s what head torches were made for, isn’t it?

We had a glorious night, cosy within tent fabric with puffy down to keep us snug, sleeping away to the sound of waves crashing on the rocks slightly below. I sat on my perch watching stars for a while before turning in. Photographing sunrise next morning was a thrill that was so riveting it took my attention right away from the cold that theoretically must have been there. It certainly was when the excitement died down.
Hauling himself up
I was delighted when my husband announced that he’d like to climb my mountain with me rather than sitting in a warm spot getting some work done. (You see, you can cheat in Tasmania, and vote for the sea, but take in a mountain anyway). When someone who has Parkinson’s disease announces that he/she wants to give something a go, you encourage, not deter (well, when that person is your husband, anyway). I knew it would probably mean that we wouldn’t make the summit, but the summit will be there for me some other day. This was a day for climbing with Bruce. We rolled around the rocks for a while, with me getting quite anxious about the difficulty of what he was undertaking, especially when I led him across a ledge with an overhang and nothing to hold on to. Shortly after that he said he’d had as much as he could take of this level of difficulty (and there was no easier way coming from this starting spot), so we turned around.
Bruce, trying the recommended rocky approach, having a breather from mental as well as physical exhaustion.
I sussed out a different attack further down, one that I’d been eyeing up for a while, and it was an excellent lead (we followed it up until just short of the Mayson-Mayson saddle), but Bruce was exhausted by this stage, so we turned around once more, and continued down to the beach at Wineglass and turned the day into a pleasant normal-person walk. On the way back, we bumped into two instructors from the gym where we work out, so I had a chat, sending Bruce on ahead. Whilst giving chase, just before the track down forks in two, I saw a girl I thought I recognised, but, hey, she lives in Sweden, and visited us just two years ago, so it couldn’t be her. She stared at me with the same look – I mean, what are the odds of bumping into a foreign friend there in the middle of a national park? We rushed to hug each other when we realised that, despite the laws of probability, the other really was the person we thought it was. Ironically, the last time I had tried to climb Mayson had been with her, and meanwhile, she was on her way to repeat the experience we had introduced her to, namely, sleeping on Mt Graham. They always say that Tassie is small, but it felt very small, and very, very homely this weekend.

 

South West Cape Trail 2015 Mt Karamu, New Harbour Range, Smoke Signal Hill

South West Cape Track.

South West Cape Track: hard or easy? It depends on your expectations as created by your experience and the context within which the word is used. Pictured are the others walking along the path that most found easy. I added challenge by climbing little thises and thats along the way.  Warning: the blog this week is not easy :-).

The entrance to New Harbour
Dawn on Day 2, New Harbour. 
Same, looking in the other direction (east)
Looking mostly south. This is also the view out my tent on the final evening / morning

I stood on the summit of New Harbour Range, mesmerised by the view, my spirit reaching out towards Antarctica to the south, South America to the West, New Zealand to the east. Infinite space; infinite glory; infinite peace. My being was no longer coterminous with my epidermal layer but transcended to a space beyond, which could not be numbered. One of the three companions who had climbed with me turned to me and said, most aptly: “You know, I’m  not a religious person, Louise, but this here is the nearest I get to a religious experience.”

Day 2. Rising above New Harbour (en route to Hidden Bay, then Ketchem Bay), and looking back to Smoke Signal Hill and the New Harbour Range behind. Both of these would be climbed by four of us on our return leg.

He is, of course, so right, but his words had a bitter sting in our current political context, as we bushwalkers are, basically, fighting for our right to have experiences like this in this area we called wilderness, to keep these areas accessible yet untarnished by the sound of jet skis, the sight of grand luxury tourist hotels and cable cars. Liberal governments, both state and federal, make the assumption that spiritual connection to the land – a transcendental experience that is prompted by place – is something that only indigenous people can experience, and that if a non-indigenous person has what might be called a soul, then they should go off to a dark and musty church building made by human hands in order to connect with the eternal. I am sure there must be somewhere bushwalkers who are only there because it’s “sport” and a challenge to be had in nature, but the ones I mix with are there in the wild places because it is precisely in such infinite beauty that we find freedom and peace, and that these are things we need to keep happy and sane.

A pack. A wild beach. Does it get any better than that? (Hidden Bay).

 

Further along Hidden Bay, where we had an early lunch having inspected the elephant seal that we hoped was just exhausted but that we feared was dead.
 But let me begin at the beginning, which I guess is when I read “Mt Karamu” on the Hobart Walking Club trip list, checked out the coordinates of this peak, and signed up with record-breaking speed, hoping I hadn’t delayed too long to be given a place. And several months later, there we stood on the

Denny King airstrip at Melaleuca, ready to venture into this part of the state that I have long coveted but never had the opportunity to explore.

Same Day. Now we’re above Hidden Bay and about to get our first glimpse of Ketchem.
First sighting of the fabulous Ketchem Bay with its rocky islands and caves, nooks and crannies: our camping spot for the night.
What does the word “wilderness” mean to you, I wonder. To me, it suggests vastness, ruggedness, remoteness, and ruthless nature with no attempt to be tamed by audacious and pretentious humans. If this exposure to the unleashed forces of nature in all its sublimity is what you desire, then the ne plus ultra in a Tasmanian context must surely be the South West Cape of Tasmania. Even the flight in to utterly isolated Melaleuca, perilously near to rocky faces that can kill you with a single kiss, fills you with a frisson of delight. 
Ketchem Island from Ketchem Bay. Dawn breaks on Day 3.

As I reclined in my tent on the final evening, gazing out past rainforest trees at the endless variety of the patterns of force as the waves crashed on the sand about 120 metres from my bed, I thought about our governments and their concept of luxury, for to me there is no greater luxury than the liberty to have this sight. I let my eyes wander in the direction of Antarctica to the south, a place that I could not see, but just knowing that it was the next expanse of land was enough to thrill – like reading on a menu the process of marination and the herbs and spices that have gone into the dish you’re about to eat. The very knowledge adds flavour that you would not otherwise experience.

Day 3. So far, we are avoiding the shepherds’ warning of the dawn and are enjoying glorious weather for our climb to Mt Karamu. Here we are looking back east as we head for Wilsons Bight.

 

Now this bit was NOT easy. See those rocks there lining the headland to the left? They were the scene for one of the best games of my life: an adult version of musical chairs + What’s the time Mr Wolf? Dinner time, or the moment the music stopped, was the time the next huge wave approached. On cue, you had to rush post haste to the nearest rocky island, usually about 1 metre high and 1.5 long. Perched up there you waited, usually 7 waves long, for the next opportunity to advance a square. If you missed, you got drenched and risked being taken places you didn’t want to go to by the force of the incoming tide. I was pleased to emerge at the end as dry as a bone, but not all my friends had the same happy fate.

I thought about how simple our needs become in the wilderness. Do you want to know what I thought of as other luxuries? Not a glass of champagne on a pontoon with fake palm trees and facile conversation with others whose world revolves around money. No. Here is my list of “negative luxuries” if you will: dry boots at the end of a day; packing up the tent without rain falling on you; putting your hand out the tent flap without having leeches jumping onto it; feeling free to use toilet paper rather than leaves (a self-inflicted hardship I employ to help protect the environment); food that has not been dehydrated; fresh undies each day. “That sounds horrid”, do I hear you say? These little pleasures are so often taken for granted yet they also indicate tiny hardships we take on board for the greater luxury of being there in the midst of such unattenuated beauty, and the beauty is so overwhelming that we just laugh together at what we go through to be there.

Wilsons Bight far below now. This shot is taken not far in vertical metres from the summit, although in horizontal metres there was still quite a bit of ground to cover, as Karamu has a long ridge leading to its highest point, which is right at its northern tip. Plenty of time to enjoy expansive views to left and right, and to gaze down on SW Cape – obviously, with a name like that, the furthest point to the south west of our island state.
The view to the north from the summit of Karamu
Much as I adore wilderness and was looking forward with eager anticipation to this trip, I was a little worried about the tiny amounts we would be walking each day. I looked at the map, and did my maths, and saw that we would not be advancing up this board with staggering speed. The advantages of this, of course, would be plenty of time to explore each beach and to photograph as the mood took me. The disadvantage for a person with my restless spirit and uncontrolled energy was that I ran the risk of exploding like a saucepan on the boil with the lid kept on. Would I cope? I couldn’t tell in advance. I thought of taking runners, but didn’t want the extra weight. I’d just have to tough it out.

Autumn has only just arrived, but there were young fungi out in many sections of rainforest we walked through.

 

I hadn’t realised how very often we would be walking through glorious rainforest. When not walking along beaches, we were often in fairyland. Here is the forest behind Ketchem Bay where I went to play if I wanted a change from infinite beach. 
This brings me to another issue that interested me this trip: the relativity of how we perceive experiences. It is always so hard to imagine that someone else might dislike what we love. I am still stunned that my neighbours actually hate trees. I don’t mean they don’t love them like I do. I mean they actually hate them. Here on this walk, we had a person who did not relish the experience in the way the rest of us did. The situation reminded me of CS Lewis’s busload of people from hell who go to visit heaven and hate it there, or William Blake’s phrase in his glorious poem about love (The Clod and the Pebble), how one can “build a Hell in Heaven’s despite” (and one can also “build a Heaven in Hell’s despair”).

Day 5. The summit of New Harbour Range. For me, the equal highlight of our trip. I preferred its view to that of Mt Karamu, but enjoyed the utter remoteness of the latter. Each had so very much to offer.

 

New Harbour Range summit, looking north to Melalauca, where the adventure began. We have nearly come full circle.
Tut. I have not described our route or what we did, other than gaze at beauty. The route is on the map – a little red line – or in Chapman’s guide. The mountains are mentioned and discussed in my photos above. What did we do other than gaze at wondrous beaches and climb heavenly mountains? We walked some more, pondered much, stared with wonder heaps, chatted, ate dehydrated food, sheltered in our tents from rain or sang glorious songs (well, I did) when the sun came out. We explored the minute detail of the superb wild beaches. I paced up and down, up and down said beaches. K collected bags of rubbish washed ashore by irresponsible and selfish boat people. C also paced the beaches, photographing little marine items that captured her attention. Mary sketched the most exquisite line drawing of Ketchem Island that quite literally took my breath away with its expertise, artistry and beauty; T did crosswords and trotted around the campsite in her new trendy shoes – two left crocs, way too big for her – that we salvaged from debris (she had regretted not brining camp shoes); V manufactured chairs out of other scraps of debris (perhaps her frypan chair was the most innovative), and served up gourmet food to her husband and J and V spent a great deal of time trying to dry their tent fly and sodden clothes on makeshift clotheslines.

Looking back down to New Harbour from Smoke Signal Hill.

 

Back down at New Harbour.

“Do I want to return to civilisation?”, (odd word when one considers how very uncivilised most humans’ behaviour is, a point teased out superbly in David Malouf’s An Imaginary Life), the caretaker of Melaleuca asked me. “Yes”, I replied. There is a moment for everything. Wilderness is a glorious time out, but I also enjoy the rough and tumble of normal twentieth century life, and enjoy many of the luxuries it has to offer, like long, hot showers, lights to read by, chair backs to make reading comfortable, a fire in my hearth and real food and wine on my table, which nearly always has a candle burning at meal times and a flower from my garden to decorate it. If we keep technology as our slave rather than becoming enslaved to it, it has much to offer us, and I embrace many of those opportunities. Next week I’m off to Sydney to see Aida on the Harbour and the ballet, Giselle, at the Opera House. Many philosophers regard culture as the antithesis of nature. I love both.

My room with a view and all my worldly needs for six days.

 

Freycinet loop 2014

Freycinet Loop 2014 Jan

The others continue while I loiter to photograph them walking

It seems we must think that Freycinet is the very best place to introduce someone to bushwalking. When our children were 7 and 9, the Freycinet loop was their first overnighter, held as a warm-up to the Overland Track that they did about a week later. (They did other overnighters before this, but they got carried. This was their first self-propelled effort where they carted their own gear). Our grandson, little Gussy, had his first overnighter (in a papoose) here Dec 2011, and now this year, we took Jon (our daughter Yelena’s boyfriend, (Post script – now husband) on his first overnighter. We thought a cute little 33 km hike over a mountain and then a bit extra to get the tents we’d left at the first camping ground would be a nice introduction for him.

Yelena begins the descent from the saddle to Wineglass Bay

No one doubted Jon’s ability to do 33kms ++ in a day: he’s a sporty fella, but he hadn’t carried a big pack before or done the overnight bit, so we were keen that he should enjoy it. He went famously, and – despite deplorable weather – coped well with the distance, the pack, carrying a three-man tent (our only spare), the mist, rain and furious wind, and the fact that views from the tops were non-existent.

The cute duo arrives as evening light illuminates the water’s edge

We set out for Wineglass Bay after dinner on 28th, knowing that it wouldn’t take us long to get there, and we were right. One hour’s walking saw us up and down the saddle and along the beach to the base of the stairs that ascend a sand dune that announces the camping area at the far end of the beach. We had described to Jon sparkling, cerulean waters of “pure gin” as my IG friend Dietmar Kahles puts it. What confronted him on the beach were rough waters, angry waves, a wind that whipped up the sand to bite the legs – most unusual weather for this region. Nonplussed, we pitched the tents and assembled in their large one to play cards for the rest of the evening, hoping for an improvement in the weather next day.

Pre-dawn beauty

At 5 a.m. when I arose to photograph the dawn (rather reluctantly, it has to be admitted), the wind had mostly abated, but thick mist enshrouded the mountains and flirted with the waters. I took some long exposures and returned groggily to the tent to wait for breakfast time. During the night (3.30am to be precise) there had been a bit of noise from my daughter in the tent next door. I had warned Lena and Jon to put all their food inside their tent. They presumed that putting it in secured packs in the vestibule would be enough. At the hour stated above, they heard a wallaby or possum (it didn’t hang around for full identification) having a tardy midnight feast of muesli, chocolate and macadamia nut bar, all intended for later that day. We had laughed when Bruce arrived at the tent for cards clutching his little bag of food for protection, but perhaps he had the last laugh here. Luckily I’d brought enough extra treats to cover for the marsupial greed.

Lena and Jon being far too nice to a possible thief who thinks that looks can exonerate the crime.

By 8.30am we were off up the misty slopes with trees being intermittently revealed as fog chased its tail around them. There were no views. My husband accompanied us for an hour but then quit while he was ahead, leaving three to complete the rest of the walk.

Early stages of the loop

 As we walked along the tops, surrounded by a thick grey, moist envelopment, I described in glowing terms to Jon the mountains and beautiful blue waters he should be seeing. Yelena wanted to show him beautiful Tassie, so was disappointed, but did admit that the mist was atmospheric. The wind was wild enough for us to have that “Wuthering Heights out on the moors” feeling, but not strong enough to be unpleasant. At one stage I informed them they were now on the summit of Mt Graham; at another, that there was a saddle about a minute below us. Visibility was so poor that neither fact was self-evident.

It is tradition to stop at this exact spot each time we do this walk to gaze with wonder at the view, which is, under normal circumstances, fantastic.

However, as we neared Cooks Beach in time for a swim before lunch, the day was absolutely perfect, with the promised and much-spoken-about blue water, liquid jellyfish, was shining as if bad weather had never existed. Lena and Jon swam while I photographed, and yet even while I did so, you will see from the photos that clouds were amassing to the west again. By the time we arrived back at our tents having completed the circuit and then come back on Wineglass to pick up the heavy gear, the wind was whipping the waves up a fury, and sand was stinging our legs. Even so, everyone except yours truly had a swim, and then we depitched tents and did the beach yet again, with a little less enthusiasm and energy than the first time.

The whole way home we were treated to the most fantastic skies – a dirty golden background with steely grey clouds in layers, with silhouetted gum trees in the foreground. However, we were tired, so I didn’t hold everyone up taking more photos. Those are the day’s fish that got away and will just have to live in my memory and not on a screen. They were fabulous.

 

Moody skies returned at the end of lunch