Every time I do a walk in the
Budawangs, I think of another walk I want to do. So, soon after we
climbed The Castle, we were back to the Budawangs, this time entering
from Wog Wog in the west. Our plan was to walk Corang Circuit in a
day, which really is not a big deal, particularly if you don't
misplace the track. Another group was camped at the campground the
night before also planning to do the circuit but over two days. We
thought they were doing it tough - enduring a hot and fly filled camp
at Canowie Brook after carrying a heavy pack half the day - and they
thought we were doing it tough - walking the circuit in one day
instead of two.
Aptly named Christmas Bells
Before leaving we scanned a couple of
personal reports from the internet, made a mental note not to lose
the track along the way and, after packing two litres of water each
and our bug hats, decided we had done all we needed to prepare for
the trip.
Goodsell Basin
The phrase "one does not simply
walk into Mordor (substitute the Budawangs)" comes into my head
every time I go to the Budawangs as access to and egress from the
area commonly seems to include dealing with thick scrubby bush and
overgrown or non-existent tracks. But, when you enter the Budawangs
from Wog Wog, you do simply walk in ... on a very good track.
Doug overlooks Canowie Brook and Profile Rock Hill
Leaving the campground, there is a
short descent down to cross Wog Wog Creek on stones and then a
gradual climb up the plateau that culminates in Corang Peak. The
track is in very good shape for the first several kilometres and
passes a few large conglomerate bluffs that allow views across the
surrounding area. As you approach the old Snedden Pass trail (which
we once tried to follow) encroachment of the surrounding scrub
increases somewhat but never to trouser tearing proportions.
Goodsell Basin and Corang Peak
As the track skirts Korra Hill, you
start to get views down into Goodsell Basin and across to Corang
Peak. We had both been up Corang Peak before so this time we took
the track to the east that bypasses the summit. The views are
actually better from the bypass track as the trees on the track that
goes over the peak obscure all views.
Doug descending to Canowie Brook
Corang Peak lies on a rocky plateau and
the vista down to Canowie and Burrumbeet Brooks is one of the best in
the Budawangs. We had a short lunch stop in the windiest spot we
could find as the flies were thick. This is the third time I have
been past Corang Arch and the third time I have not found it - one of
the hazards of not consulting a guidebook. Apparently, the arch is
off the plateau to the west. We may not have seen Corang Arch but we
could see a good track in open grassland following Canowie Brook down
in the valley below.
Descending the conglomerate slope to
the valley, we turned left at the first campsite we came to and
followed a good track north along the course of Canowie Brook. The
track starts a distance from the creek but as you follow it north the
track and the brook converge until you are walking along the left
hand shore of the creek. This is a very pretty place and there is
another smaller campsite further along where a tributary creek comes
in.
Corang Arch from Canowie Brook
My memory of what transpired next is a
little hazy as to our exact location on the map so you'd do well to
consult a more reliable source. After crossing the tributary creek
at the small campsite the track continues along Canowie Brook for a
short distance to a track junction amongst burned Banksia.
Initially, we took the low track along the brook, but this soon
ended, and, having some faint recollection of reading something about
a short climb above the creek, we went back to the junction and took
the uphill track. This is a cut track through burnt Banksia that
follows the course of the creek and shortly arrives at a bigger
junction marked by a large cairn.
The track along Canowie Brook
This is right around where Canowie
Brook joins the Corang River and the more scenic route lies down hill
(right fork) to the river where there are rocky pools and small
waterfalls. Not knowing this at the time, we took the left fork
which stays high and gives half obscured views of the waterfalls
before descending to thick bush along side the Corang River. The two
routes meet at this point.
Pool on the Canowie River
From here it is under two kilometres to
Corang Lagoon and the Goodsell Track that closes the loop walk and we
were striding along confidently, albeit a little disappointed at
having missed the rocky pools along the river, on an increasingly
well defined track. At this point, the track is again some distance
away from the river and if you happen to bash down to the river you
will quickly realise why - the area proximal to the river is very
thickly vegetated and exceedingly slow, not to mention painful, to
travel through.
Overlooking the rocky section we saw only from above
Somewhere around Broula Brook as we
were following a good track with paint markers on trees we came to a
good sized campsite and completely and utterly lost the track. This
was exactly what we wanted to avoid so we scouted very thoroughly and
systematically around the last point we had the track but, apart from
another arrow painted on a tree pointing toward the river, we found
nothing at all.
We had map, compass and GPS but when
the track is not marked on the map, none of that stuff is actually
very helpful. As the track was mostly away from the river, we
attempted to head away from the river to intersect the track but the
bush is so dense that we were unable to maintain a consistent
bearing. When we just seemed to be thrashing purposelessly through
the bush, we decided instead to use the river as a handrail and
follow it downstream. An admirable solution but slow as we pushed
through dense scrub and flood debris.
Canowie Brook
Progress along the river was clearly
going to be excruciatingly slow so I came up with the idea of taking
a bearing from where we were to the Goodsell track with the idea that
we would intersect it somewhere south of the river. This would mean
travelling pretty much due west and would keep us out of the
immediate vicinity of the river and thus in thinner bush. Doug
thought this was a good idea so we set off following a compass
bearing. Away from the river, travel was easier and within about 15
minutes we actually intersected the track we had lost more than an
hour ago. Of course, it was very distinct and easy to follow. About
10 minutes further on we were happy to reach Corang Lagoon where the
first thing we did was jump into the river to cool off.
At last a swimming hole
We had about 8 kilometres left to walk,
about half on the Goodsell track and the remainder on the track we
had taken that morning. Although the map shows the track leaving the
Corang River and travelling south along a small drainage, the footpad
is actually on a small ridge to west of the draw. This section of
the walk was a bit tedious at the end of a long hot day as the track
descends into and out of innumerable small drainages before
intersecting the morning track. It probably took us a full hour to
walk this section and only about 45 minutes to cover the final
distance to the campground.
There were a few flies about
All up, including stops (two brief
breaks) and losing the track (long) we were about 8.5 hours. The
section of the walk from Corang Peak to Corang Lagoon is the best but
also the shortest and, if you are not careful, you'll miss the best
part. After a hot fly filled day, I again thought that "one
does not simply walk into the Budawangs."
Yay, you found yourself. I always wanted to walk in the Budawangs when we lived in Pambula. my dh said lots of people get lost there. I think in his younger days he used to hoon around the bush near Pigeon house Mtn and scared himself. Wait I will show you some real flies at Thredbo recently.
ReplyDeletePlease help keep the sixty year old walking track into Corang Lagoon open to the public. Please join the facebook group "Keep Corang Open!' to stay informed of this campaign.
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