Sunday, June 8, 2025

Trumpism Comes to the South Coast!

This report out of the south coast where a work party was over-run by militant toxic masculine identifying persons. Our reporter Ima Fended was on the ground (not literally). Below is they/them’s report:

Upon arriving at the agreed upon meeting place I was shocked that there were no flags flying, none. Not even the rainbow colours flag! Strikingly, I was the only attendee wearing a keffiyeh, even though, this location and activity was absolutely tailor (not used in the gendered sense) made for showing our solidarity with the oppressed world-wide.





But even more shocking was the gender make-up of the work party. Fully 80% of the attendees were cis gendered hetero-normative white males! The patriarchy clearly had control of this event! Introductions were completed and I was both horrified and appalled that no-one asked my pronouns or what my sexual proclivities were. Obviously, when maintaining trails it is of the utmost importance to know who likes boinking men, women, sheep, or no-one at all. Anyone who was asexual or identifies as a eunuch or echidna would have been traumatised by this omission. I stand in solidarity with you!





There may have been eco-sexual’s amongst us, but without the traditional acknowledgements: land acknowledgements, welcome to country, reciting of your various personal intersectional oppressions it was impossible to know. For myself, I identify as short, stout, stocky, female and old, thereby having at least five different and intersecting oppressions forced upon me. I’m sure there are more I just haven’t identified yet!





Once the actual work of the day began it was clear that the patriarchy was going to continue their oppressive colonisation of other peoples. The cis gendered hetero-normative male identified persons took on the more difficult and dangerous job of running the brush-cutters. The operation of this heavy and unwieldy piece of equipment is more suited to larger stronger individuals and I felt robbed of the chance to have my legs sliced off and my hearing damaged permanently, not to mention the possibility of losing an eye (or two). How dare these patriarchal colonisers rob me of my right to suffer bodily injury! It’s obvious that the patriarchy does not understand that there are no physical differences between persons assigned male at birth and persons assigned female at birth. The reason that men can compete in women’s sport and win all the medals is only because women are such shit athletes! If persons assigned female at birth complain it is because they are sore losers. Remember, the most effective way to protect womens’ rights is to erase them all!




On the topic of labour and work, it soon became evident that the male identified persons worked very hard. They barely stopped for almost three hours, brushing, raking, clipping, cutting. Sadly, there were no blessings to the earth mother offered when vegetation that encroached upon the trail was removed. This is a perfect example of the toxicity of the patriarchy: the belief that nature can be bent to the will of “man.” On a number of occasions I attempted to kneel to offer a non-denominational prayer to the fallen vegetation but the “men” simply asked if I was alright, and offered to relieve me of my burdens. They seemed completely unaware that the burden I carried was wrought by the oppressive masculine patriarchy with its colonialist ways!





At the bottom of the trail we had cleared, the “males” offered me a ride back up to the meeting place in a gasoline powered vehicle. There was not a single electric vehicle in attendance, not even a Tesla, even though we no longer speak of Tesla as saving the planet after Elon Musk became a patsy to the fascist dictator of America (aka Donald Trump). I refused, despite the fact that all my clothing, the bicycle I had ridden to the event, my house, and entire life-style runs on so called “fossil fuels.” I believe, as do all right minded people, that my endless moralising and virtue signalling off-sets any carbon that I might be using and grants me exclusive access to taking long haul flights anywhere in the world that I wish to go where I indulgently gaze upon the more primitive and less evolved life-forms who have not yet discovered the blessing that is “diversity, equity and inclusion”: DEI is that DIE? I’m not completely sure, but what I do know is, that like all leftists, I hold the high moral ground and am not required to change any of my own behaviours to reduce my environmental impact.





As bad as all this was, things got worse! A propane powered cooker was brought out and sausages made from actual living animals were cooked up! There was also fried onions, bread, and a variety of beverages. I asked for a vegan option, preferably a sausage made from the ground up bark of the eucalyptus sanctamonious, but the other attendees looked at me as if I was mad! It did not escape my notice that the male identifying individuals – aka the evil colonialists – had gotten up early on a winters morning, packed their vehicles (carbon powered!) full of the supplies that were needed, arrived early to set up the event, coordinated the event, cooked the food after the event, and cleaned everything up afterwards. This was done purportedly to support the community of mountain bikers, as if we cannot support ourselves by sitting at home on the NDIS and complaining endlessly until the government hires immigrants to do the work thus making our community more resilient and connected! It’s almost as if they don’t think that communism works!




In opposition to the tyrannical control exerted upon me, I have begun to organise a community event where those of us who identify as oppressed victims are able to meet in an emotionally safe space. Don’t worry, we won’t actually be doing anything to support the community, get our hands dirty or inconvenience ourselves in any way. We will however, fly all the flags, wear our keffiyehs with pride and, hopefully buy some cheap goods made in overseas sweat shops bearing appropriate logos – for example, Fight The Patriarchy, De-colonise Australia, End The Occupation, Australia Is A Genocidal State - preferably manufactured in Chinese sweat shops. China, as you know, is a very successful communist country with an outstanding record of protecting human rights and they have the most sophisticated social credit system in the world! The Chinese can track everything their citizens do and right aligned behaviour is rewarded with visits outside the labour camp and the ability to buy consumer electronics (but not access the nasty free speaking internet). They might even let you keep both your kidneys!

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Your Feelings Don't Matter

There is no difference between thinking about yourself and being miserable. Jordan Peterson.

Near the end of almost an hour of near meaningless babble, when I semi-seriously thought about throwing myself off the nearby cliff onto the rocks below to end the misery of listening to two self-obsessed people talk about their climb up Temple Crag, I heard the words Contact Pass, and thought, “Wait just a minute, I think I’ve been to Contact Pass.”


Pallisade Crest from the South Fork of
Big Pine Creek

And, in fact, I have. Back in 2011, the year before Doug and I moved to Australia, we skied up to Contact Pass at the end of April. My trip notes indicate that I took my skis off and kicked steps for about 60 metres, while Doug managed to ski the entire distance to the pass. I remember the pass, it was a very spectacular narrow notch with Temple Crag on one side and an unnamed peak on the other. Our trip notes also indicate that we had an excellent corn snow descent. We had come up from the South Fork of Big Pine Creek, while a few years previously we had hiked into the Big Pine Lakes from the North Fork of Big Pine Creek. Things are high in the Sierra Mountains. Big Pine Lakes lie at over 3,000 metres while Temple Crag is almost 4,000 metres high. I’d be huffing and puffing up there now after a decade of living at sea level.


Doug on a crest of wind-blown snow at
Contact Pass

I’m not sure why M and M featured on the Sharp End Podcast, a podcast ostensibly about mountain accidents, as there was no accident and their story is merely a trip report. Interesting, perhaps, to people who are intent on climbing Temple Crag, but otherwise similar to dozens of other trip reports. What stood out to me, apart from the fact that M and M both talked too much to say too little, was how much emphasis they put on “checking in with each other.” The final half hour of the podcast, it’s possible they mention “check in” around a million times (OK, I’m exaggerating). These people were slow, 8 hours to descend 500 feet is slow, as is 4 hours to ascend a couple of hundred feet to get to the start of the climb. As I listened, I wondered if BB “checked in” with his partners every five minutes when climbing Wild Thing on MountChephren or did he and his partners simply focus on the task at hand, climbing the impressive and daunting east face in winter? Would these two slow climbers have been faster if they spent less time “checking in” and more time climbing?


Contact Pass


I’m going to check in with my readers now and say that if you think Blanchard or any other serious adventure athlete spends such an inordinate amount of time and energy “checking in” you don’t understand peak performance. Peak performance requires doing things despite how you feel, because, in all honesty, you probably feel like quitting.


Corn snow on the descent from Contact Pass

Which is not to say that outdoor adventurers should ignore conditions. If you are in the middle of a thunder-storm (as M and M were on their first attempt up Temple Crag), bailing is entirely appropriate, but, mostly your feelings don’t matter; what matters is facts, even though facts are slippery to grasp in dynamic outdoor environments.


Willow Lake, South Fork Big Pine Creek

The emotional people who like to “check in” constantly, often seem to be a generation or two younger than me which makes me wonder if this is a generational issue or a social and cultural issue. It’s possible it’s both. Perhaps, as you get older, you start to realise that if you want to get shit done you have to ignore your emotions and focus on the task at hand, but, it’s likely that a bigger chunk is cultural. Young people today are raised to believe that feelings are all important and virtually immutable, when in fact feelings are merely imperfect conjectures of our defective attention system. We give away our own power when we become focused to the point of obsession on our feelings. If you are 21 hours into a 23 hour day, forget about your feelings or “checking in” and focus on getting the f**k off the mountain.


View from Contact Pass

I don’t mean to denigrate M and M’s achievement. They did an awful lot of things right and, most importantly were willing to have a go, not just once but twice. Undoubtedly, they have the hubris of youth; that mix of heady self-confidence and absolute certainty that allows adventurers to charge forth into the face of challenges they can’t quite imagine unencumbered by the baggage of decades of hard won summits and equally disappointing retreats. Those times you tried and failed, that eat away at your confidence; the accidents, the injuries, even the fatalities. All those years and experiences that strip away youthful hubris and leave you knowing that you can prepare for success but the outcome might well be as predictable as game of roulette.


Skiing up Big Pine Creek

There are many things I miss about youth. The physical strengths of course, but more importantly the blind faith that allows you to set off on expeditions and adventures for which you are ill-prepared whilst holding fast to your own ability in the belief that success is all but guaranteed. You get older, your body is less cooperative, but your mind still dreams of the days when you believed anything was possible and acted accordingly.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Tinderry Peak

The day after we hiked up Tinderry Twin Peak we hiked up Tinderry Peak. The most common route appears to be along Round Flat FT for a couple of kilometres to a point where the FT makes a 90 degree turn to the east. An old road bed marked “closed for revegetation” continues roughly north. The commonest route appears to be along this old road bed towards Roberts Creek and then up onto an east facing spur ridge and thereafter to the top.


The Ballroom with Tinderry Peak behind

Instead of following this route, we decided to walk an extra three kilometres along the FT (joining East Tinderry FT) until we were due east of Tinderry Peak and bushwack straight west to the top. Australian bushwacking is often as slow as 1 to 1.5 kilometres/an hour (sometimes less) so we figured we could gain a couple of hundred metres of elevation gain at least as quickly on a FT and reduce the amount of overall bushwacking. Given how slow and thick some of the bushwacking was, this seemed like a sensible choice. Additionally, but unknown to us when planning the trip, an old road bed leads west from East Tinderry FT for 750 metres to the head of Groggy Creek thus reducing the bushwacking distance even further.


Tinderry Peak Summit

A pig trap marks the end of the old road bed and the best and quickest route to the top of Tinderry Peak is to head west up a gentle draw/gully to a spot just north of a closed contour (1540 metres, GR067468). The closed contour is a big area of large slabs and boulders. I called it “The Ballroom” as once on top, a big flat expanse of slab gives views to the south and north to Tinderry Peak. However, thick brush and lots of scrambling over, under and around boulders surrounds The Ballroom. It’s nice to visit once, but much quicker to avoid the boulders by staying slightly to the north.




The flat terrain on the way to Tinderry Peak is thick in places but, near the top, older forest is open underneath and another small draw leads to a saddle of boulders and slabs just south of the very top. It is an easy scramble north along boulders to the top where there is another NPWS log book, although with much fewer entries than the one on Tinderry Twin Peak. The view is better than Tinderry Twin and is a full 360 view right out to the Main Ranges with, on this day, snow covering the tops. From the peak you can see that Tinderry Nature Reserve is an island of native forest surrounded by farm land. The round trip distance to Tinderry Peak isn’t all that far (maybe 18 kilometres all up) and the elevation gain under 1000 metres but the travel at times is quite slow. For the second day in a row we were wondering if we were going to get back to the trail head before dark.

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Just Paddle

 Step off.  Free fall.  Know the bottom is rushing toward you and you it.  Do Something.   Mark Twight.

 

Very often I don’t feel immediately like doing whatever I’ve put on the training plan for the day. But that really doesn’t matter. You do the thing you decided to do because you decided to do it.




So, I didn’t immediately feel like paddling today, but it’s my day of the week for logging my usual 20 kilometres (the winter standard when I’m not training for a big trip and just trying to maintain a minimum level of paddle fitness). It was, however, sunny on the beach, and warm enough before I even started to strip off a few winter layers. A dolphin pod was circling around the initial reefs inside my local bay, and they were very close to me – a good omen I thought.





A little chop on the water that ebbed to glassy conditions as my three hour paddle progressed. It’s true, I do only 20 kilometres and I watch the clock a bit, but, I did the thing I planned to do. How strong are young climbers these days? This strong.

Friday, May 30, 2025

Tinderry Twin Peak

There are granite domes, boulders and slabs, but they are buried deep in the regrowth from multiple bushfires. In places, the forest floor resembles the first spill of pick-up sticks in the once popular children’s game; only the floor is not a clean, smooth surface, rather a mix of tenacious scrub growing hard-scrabble where ever there is spare piece of earth.



Tinderry Twin from Tinderry Peak

In a straight line, it’s under two kilometres to the top of Tinderry Twin Peak, but, of course, bush-bashing does not follow a straight line! Like all the parties before us, we parked off the Burra Road near Mount Allen FT (fire trail) and chugged our way up this very steep FT. After about three kilometres, Mount Allen FT merges into West Tinderry FT, and keeps going up for another couple of kilometres. At a bend in the FT where the FT begins to descend again, a cairn marks the jumping off point for Tinderry Twin Peak.


Tinderry Twin


The best route heads almost due east to a saddle to the north of Tinderry Twin Peak then pretty much straight south and uphill to the top. If you keep a careful eye, you should find plenty of cairns and even some flagging which marks a good route with, in places, a scant foot-pad. We followed the foot-pad down but just bush-bashed on the way up and the foot-pad route provided far easier travel. Problem is, no-one, at least from what I could discover, seems able to follow the foot-pad from the FT, but, if you take the most obvious route west from the cairn, you’ll likely run across it.


View from Tinderry Twin

The summit is a bit back and a scramble across some granite boulders. You’ll know you are on the very top when you find a sturdy summit register courtesy of NPWS and there is no higher ground. The view from the top is fantastic, we could even see snow lying on the Main Range.

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

The Benefits of Being Short and Sturdy

Strong people are harder to kill than weak people and more useful in general. Mark Rippetoe.

I fell off the bike today, down a hill and into a creek, the bike followed and landed on top of me. Apart from a few bumps and scrapes, I am totally fine. I got up, dusted myself and the bike off and finished my ride. Every so often I fall off the bike on the Mogo tracks, although this was probably my most spectacular fall. I wasn’t going to ride the trail that I tumbled on because it has a steep gully drop into a rock garden followed by a steep climb out and frustratingly I never make it through. There are no guarantees in life however, except for the guarantee that if you don’t try you won’t succeed.




Afterwards, I did wonder if I am going to join the cohort of old people who’ve crashed their bike and smashed their body, but, sometimes you’ve just got to trust in yourself. I like to think that the reason I have yet to break anything is because of my regular weight training. It could also be because I am genetically short and sturdy, not glamorous but good for being harder to kill.

Friday, May 23, 2025

Are We Easily Fooled by Narcissists?

Of course we live in the age of pop psychology where everyone has a diagnosed mental health condition (from stigma to social necessity) and anything even minimally upsetting is described as a “micro-aggression” or a sign of “ageism, sexism, ableism,” add your own ism ad nauseum (nausism?). The ABC (that bastion of unbiased reporting) recently published an entire article on how to commit “Small acts of resistance known as "micro-feminism" [which] can help women feel empowered at work.” These micro-feminist acts include addressing females first in e-mails and holding the door open for men (this must be tough for some feminists who are unable to distinguish men from women). Now, I’ve been known to do both of these things from time to time, simply because being a polite and reasonable person frequently involves holding the door for someone following you regardless of sex, and who, but an obsessed ideologue, really notices the gender order of emails? Does anyone? And if you do, for the love of god, get a more interesting life.




Not that long ago a friend told me that the doctor who recommended her 80 plus year old mother (I’m not sure of her exact age but suffice to say that mum is by all metrics old) might consider getting a walker after her mother fell over and could not get up was exhibiting ageism and, as such, insulting her mother, and, probably, also committing several other micro-aggressions. Now I might argue, and so might the statistics, that hip fractures, primarily if not entirely caused by falls in the elderly, significantly increase morbidity and mortality. An Australian series, in line with data from other countries, indicate that 26% of old people who experience a hip fracture are dead within one year. In this context, a doctor who does NOT recommend a walking aid might be considered either uncaring or incompetent, or possibly both. Biology, it turns out, doesn’t care about your isms. Old people and broken bones are not good matches.




The big latest thing is narcissism. Increasing everywhere we are told, and, although I dislike and disdain overwrought over-emotional headlines, it’s likely true that society is getting more narcissistic. I’m pretty sure that I had a narcissist as a friend for a long time. The friendship was a bit of a roller coaster and I was always left feeling vaguely both disquieted and down-trodden after any interaction. Despite this we remained friends for many years and did lots of trips together, until, one day it all fell apart over unreasonable demands. I actually tried to patch the friendship up; generally I believe it’s hard to have too many good friends, but, the patch up fell apart as well because, as one would expect with a narcissist, everything was my fault and nothing really happened the way it did. There is a certain point you reach in interactions with narcissists when the mask irrevocably falls off and the face behind is anything but pretty.




The most quoted (almost revered) book on narcissism is Christopher Lasch’s book The Culture of Narcissism. I found this a tough read. Written in 1979, it’s more a long and rambling essay, with strikingly few sentence and paragraph breaks, than a book of chapters where each chapter builds on the last. I also struggled part way through (it’s rare for me to NOT finish a book) Anne Manne’s The Life of I: The New Culture of Narcissism. I found Manne’s book too graphically violent and disturbing for bed-time reading and never finished it. The cases she reviewed (coincidentally all or almost all men, perhaps not surprising from an Australian author) seemed to portray people who were more evil than narcissistic. After all, most of us will encounter someone who seems a bit narcissistic in our journey through life but few of us encounter serial rapists and killers. True narcissism is apparently quite rare.





Currently, I’m reading Twenge and Campbell’s book, The Narcissism Epidemic. Twenge, of course, is now well known for her series of books on cultural changes and you might even, cynically, think that her career is built on narcissism (at least research on narcissism). Twenge appears to describe a cultural narcissism probably better described as self-obsession than narcissistic personality disorder which appears to be both rare and dangerous.






We do seem, however, to gravitate towards narcissists, or at least some of us do. I don’t think I’m one of the “some of us” because I am so damned cynical and sceptical, but I could be narcissistic for thinking I’m different. It’s likely true that most narcissists don’t think there is anything wrong with them. Narcissism among the upper classes seems to take the form “see this amazing thing I did for no benefit to myself but all the benefit to others.” Although, when you break the thing down, the doer seems to benefit an awful lot and others, not so much. I always think this when I see prominent political commentators on their favourite soap-box, education, for example. If you’ve been talking about education for 20 years but have not once stepped into your local public school and offered to help teach one child to read, you have achieved far less than you could. Think of it, one day a week, for 20 years teaching one child to read and you would have taught over a thousand people to read. That’s doing the hard yards though, posting on Bluesky is so much easier, plus, you never have to leave the house!




Here’s a great article by Mark Twight about the latest in Everest climbing which is where the worlds faux-climbers go to live out their narcissistic dreams. It’s a shame that young climbers are so disconnected from the great history of alpinism that they do not recognise even some of the best and boldest climbers who ever lived. Perhaps it’s cultural narcissism; the inability to grasp that people who are old now did things that were as hard if not harder than anything today’s young climbers are punching out. It’s a loss of history that only those who’ve been around long enough to witness history made seem to appreciate.

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Avoiding the Rain

It’s a month since I’ve been in the sea kayak and it sure feels it. The wave buoy is at 2 metres with a 12 second period but it must be mostly southerly as my home bay is calm, one of the easier days to launch and stay dry. There’s no one else about which is no surprise as it is cold and grey although there is no wind. Still, the sea surface is messy after the storms of the last couple of days.

I’m by myself and the kayak feels wobbly, the paddle awkward and my pace very, very slow. I cut across the bay to look at the latest “eco-resort.” There are plans - aren’t there always - to build a hotel, villas, restaurants, bars, and “put Batemans Bay on the five star tourism map.” Right now, there are a series of “glamping tents” built on very low lying land that is sure to be inundated the next time an East Coast Low coincides with a high tide, which could be later this week. All the big news announcements are from three years ago and there is bugger all going on now so who knows what has happened to putting the Bay on the tourist map. Most of the locals would probably rather stay off that map.

These developments are so bizarre given the government is always bleating about sea level rise and climate change. The land there is all sand with a height above sea level of a metre or less and, it’s very prone to erosion by big tides and storms. In April this year, a storm event saw homes further to the west and on higher ground flooded by sea water. At my home bay, which is significantly higher, waves wash into the car park at high tide during storms, and the one house that is a metre or so above high tide is wrapped in sea weed after a storm event. It’s obvious to anyone with a functioning cerebral cortex that these developments should not be approved and the cost of remediation and relocation will be paid by future generations. Realistically, however, that is business as usual in Australia where we’ll never pay for today something we can push off until tomorrow. Fuck the future as we say here, or don’t but we would if we were being honest.

The tide has turned so it is slow plugging my way northwest up to the big bridge over the Clyde River and I paddle under all the little jetties on the way past. The tourist boat, that plies up and down the Clyde River daily is nearly empty but it runs every day regardless of numbers. West of the bridge, I cross back to the north side as the current will be less. There’s an oyster shop on this side of the river, a quirky little place that also sells coffee and is never super busy but always has some patrons. Further east, the next restaurant is temporarily closed, but the caravan park further east has a surprising number of patrons for this time of year. There’s a gaggle of kayakers in plastic boats at Cullendulla, but I pass by Square Head and paddle south back to my launch site. Frustratingly, I’m three kilometres short of 20 kilometres when I get back so I have to head back out again and south this time to make the magic number. I get back to the house just as the rain starts.

Monday, May 19, 2025

Don't Be Like George or Riding in the Rain

Years ago, one of Canada’s leading mountain guides was at the hospital I worked at giving a talk at Grand Rounds. Grand Rounds are a great tradition in big teaching hospitals and are generally open to medical doctors and other allied health staff. George’s talk was about rescues in Kananaskis Country and the thing I remember most clearly is that technical rescues (involving climbers from alpinists to rock climbers) comprised under 5% of the rescues conducted in any given year. This was very validating to a rock and mountain climber like myself and I strutted out after the talk feeling pretty self-righteous. Most rescues were for things that an alpinist would consider kind of nit-picky – like twisted ankles or getting wet in a rain storm – small ailments that you might feel a tad embarrassed calling the rescue services for. Not that this holds true in 2025, when a hang-nail is a good reason to call for a rescue.



My one an only rescue off Bugaboo Spire 
after Doug got his leg stuck in a crack at over 3,000 metres

The other thing I remember, which was kind of an off the cuff remark, was that coming into the busy rescue season, George had been out putting in big days in the mountains to get in shape, and, as he got older, he lamented how much harder this got every year. Every summer, I think, “stay in shape for the winter climbing season, don’t be like George;” and every year winter rolls around and I realise that, like George, I’m out of shape again.


Under all that mud my legs are actually blue

So, I’m back on the home wall – with a home wall you would think I could stay in shape – and bouldering locally when it’s not raining. I’ve also got a short term goal to ride (on the analog bike) 1000 metres of elevation gain on my local trails. The most elevation I’ve ridden so far is about 800 metres and my legs were shaking like jello on one of those vibrating fat buster machines from the 1980’s. It was too wet today to climb so I went out on the bike and came home in pissing rain after the light rain intensified into a torrential downpour. And here’s a hot tip for analog riders who dread the uphill grind after the downhill run: ride when it is pissing with rain and about 5 degrees Celsius. You’ll discover that the hills are the only thing that keeps your half frozen corpse-body alive.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Cross-Country Riding

Coming around a switchback on the new Burnaaga trail on the bikes today, we passed a couple of blokes pulled over staring at their screens. Strava, of course, not that these guys were Stravaassholes, just blokes checking their statistics. These blokes were riding from the top of Wandera Mountain back to Mogo after being shuttled to the top, and, apparently, had ridden a greater distance than that advertised on TrailForks. Doug and I were riding the two way section which, if you also ride Sandy Pinch FT to the top of the old Snake track is about 26 kilometres and 500 metres of elevation gain.




Since I’ve joined the growing cohort of people with a tracking watch (a Garmin or Polar, or some other brand), I have all those statistics – distance, elevation gain, time – available simply by glancing at my wrist. But I really try not to. Years ago, when a Suunto altimeter watch was the greatest wrist worn device you could get, I had one ski buddy (just one) with an altimeter watch and during the course of a backcountry ski day Dave would give us a run-down on our statistics. It was interesting, at the end of the day, to see our total elevation gain (which I never quite trusted as it was always so much more than the map indicated – although a standard Canadian topographic map can hide a lot of smaller ups and downs in a 40 metre contour interval), but I never really wanted to know our statistics during the course of climbing a mountain. If we weren’t at the top, we were not there yet, and if we wanted to summit we had to keep going, data from the watch notwithstanding.




I think that is a good way to be. Set your goal and just keep going until you get there. Don’t worry too much about the details. If you keep going, those details will take care of themselves and it’s way too easy to let your brain convince your body to stop despite the fact that you have no good reason to stop.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Palerang Trig

It’s funny the places you find tracks. Palerang trig is one of those funny places. There are other higher trigs and even named “mountains” in the area. Lowden trig, for example is 1346 metres high and nearby Mount Major has a 1330 metre contour. I had an idea that we might find a faint foot pad on the north ridge of Palerang but, in the end, we found a decent marked and flagged trail.




There is now a small cairn where the foot-pad leaves Palerang FT. This is pretty much where you would head up the ridge if you were using common sense to walk up. If you are somewhat careful, you should be able to follow the track all the way to the trig, although in a couple of places large trunks have fallen across the pad, and it is faint and vague in other spots.




At the top there is a giant pile of rocks and the trig. The rocks make a handy lunch spot. The view is somewhat obscured by trees but you can see down to Mulloon Creek valley, out to Lake George and around the nearby hills.




We had been hoping to continue along Mulloon FT to a small camping area and then the next day walk further west to the Black Range FT and some granite bouldering but the road was way too rough for our van and there was a tree across the road near Little Bombay Creek. Driving back out we chatted with the bloke driving the grader and he said he would drive the grader up and pull it off although his mandate was not to grade that far. A pleasant walk if you are in the area.

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Mount Jagungal

 Several sexy campsites…” With a review like that and four stars as well, who could be criticised for wanting to hike up Mount Jagungal? It’s from AllTrails, of course, although I was curious who had given the walk one star. When I scrolled through, I found the single one star review but, frustratingly, there was no comment, no description, no explanation of why this walk, that 71 out of 73 reviewers had rated at least four stars garnered such a dismal rank. I mean, how does a walk get one star, it has to be pretty terrible. Did the rater get bitten by a death adder? Attacked by a rabid fox? Trampled by a male brumby after a mare in heat? Not find a single sexy campsite? It boggles the mind. I’ve had some pretty awful trips over the years, including one where we lost our entire food drop and skied for four days through heavy rain and snow to escape with no food and I still would have given that trip more than one star.




I’ve had Jagungal on my list for years. For many years in a row I had a plan to ski up the mountain over a four day trip from Guthega, but, for those many years, the snow-pack had been so miserly and myself such a snow snob - coming from big mountains and deep snow-packs in the Canadian mountains - that I could never garner the enthusiasm to drive six hours to carry my skis across a lot of flat country side.




A bike and hike is the very best way ascend the mountain unless the idea of a loop walk predominantly on fire trails appeals. The country you pass through is very pretty however, so a two day walk would also be worth more than one star, at least by my rating system.




We had a 40 minute drive to get to Round Mountain trail-head so we started a bit later than previous days but were still away relatively early. The ground was frosty and the trail headed uphill straight away which my old body found uncomfortable. I need a reasonable warm-up these days before pumping my heart rate up to 150. After the first hill, the FT descends down to a ford on a manky bridge made of rusty corrugated metal; a hill I knew I would have to push on the way back.




After that, however, the FT is a delight, rolling along the Toolong Range across open plains with lovely views and hills which are mostly easy to ride. A few kilometres from Derschkos Hut, we met a couple of blokes hiking who warned us about a rambunctious fox breaking into packs and shared the delightful news that there was a track up the mountain. Doug and I had assumed we would be bush-bashing, so this was great news. We passed Derschkos Hut and turned onto Grey Mare FT and, shortly after Grey Mare FT plunged down into and back out of a steep creek gully, we found the trail.




We stashed the bikes in the bush and proceeded to follow the track up a short drainage through some head high scrub to gain a ridge that runs SSW from the top of Mount Jagungal. Once on the ridge, the incline laid back, the scrub cleared and it was a pleasant walk up alpine country to the top. The gently rolling high plains that spread south to the Main Range were pretty and would be nice to walk or ski across some time. The ride out was half an hour quicker than the way in but I did have to push up that first hill.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Mount Tabletop

Riding the bicycles out of Three Mile Dam Campground early on a frosty morning, the only other camper up and about gives us a thumbs up. We ride up the paved road to Selwyn Snow Resort and slip off onto Selwyn FT which climbs 50 metres up to the ridge where the lifts run during the winter ski season. In the big fires of 2020 the resort burnt completely with an extensive rebuild completed in 2023, but the resort only managed to open for a short period in 2024 because it was too difficult to maintain snow coverage with warm temperatures and lack of natural snow.




Ostensibly, Australia is committed to net zero and obsessed with meeting climate targets, and yet, the Blyton Group spent $30 million rebuilding a “snow” resort that cannot survive without artificial snow-making. This large expenditure was made possible by a sweet deal by the NSW State Government who granted a new 40 year lease and facilitated planning permissions necessary for the rebuild. Snow making, of course, uses huge amounts of power and water. Exactly how much power and water is required to maintain snow at the resort is not available in the public domain – quelle surprise! How this meshes with Australia being a climate leader is unclear, and, in essence, any individual with a normally developed level of scepticism will find the entire enterprise suspect.




If you value the natural environment, and particularly Australia’s precious and limited alpine area, you might find the plans for Selwyn Resort just a little bit disturbing. Quoting from the website:

The creation of a brand-new ‘Winter Wonderland’, the first of its kind in Australia, will see the introduction of a range of exciting new snow play products in the coming years including a tubing carousel, skating rink with bumper cars, kids snowmobiles and a miniature enchanted village.




The commonality among all these planned features are, of course, their artificial nature and lack of actual physical activity required to participate. In fact, this dystopian future sounds more like a Disneyland comes to the alpine experience than it does a real authentic experience where people connect with their environment and use their bodies in a healthy way. This is increasingly the style and practice in Australia – the worlds greatest nanny state where the health and safety bureaucrats have the backing of the increasingly timid bed-wetter population – nature and adventure either off-limits completely (see the Arapilies climbing bans) or tamed to become an experience that encompasses no adventure or challenge whatsoever. There is a small and nascent movement against the over-engineering of the outdoor environment but the broader societal influences towards increasing government reliance are broadly outstripping this counter-culture movement. Australia, unfortunately, exists under the tyranny of the “do-gooders.” As C.S. Lewis wrote in 1948:

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.




But, it’s May and there is no snow at Selwyn, and only a dusting of frost. From the 1600 metre high point on the ridge, Selwyn FT heads south, undulating along a gentle ridge of burnt snowgums, falling down to Nine Mile Creek, then climbing again to pass along the eastern and southern flank of Tabletop Mountain. It’s lovely riding, and a bicycle a fantastic way to travel this country. After 2.5 hours we are at the base of Tabletop Mountain and the broad flat summit a mere 20 minute walk up grassy slopes. To the southwest, at 2062 metres is Mount Jagungal. Not a particularly high mountain, but, from this angle, almost looking like a real mountain not merely a rounded hill.




Leaving the van early in the morning, we had forgotten lunch and our snack bags feel very light. We split half an energy bar and a few nuts, and then walk back down to the bicycles for the ride out. Bicycle travel is even better on the way back and we are back at Three Mile Dam in time for lunch.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Tantangara Mountain

The old argument about trail sharing sites, surfaced on a blog I follow yesterday. It’s a tedious argument and driven only by some kind of fake elitism, and, much like other far left debates, makes zero sense from a logical perspective. It’s really about protecting your own turf from the undeserving interlopers, which is a bit weird coming as it does from the inclusive crowd. But, it spurred me to have a look at AllTrails for Tantangara Mountain because the government topographic maps are all a bit inaccurate.




Earlier versions of the standard topographic map call the 1745 metre high point Tantangara Mountain but have no tracks marked while the later version shows the track from the Snowy Mountains Highway but not from Rocky Plains Campground and leave off any names from the high point labelling the top simply SMA0093. I had to use AI to find out what SMA represents, apparently, Snowy Mountains Authority and it means the map was produced during the planning of the Snowy Mountains Hydroelectric scheme.




I don’t actually think AllTrails is very useful as almost any trail/route I have ever looked up on the site says something like “very hard, extra severe, you will likely die.” Mount Jagungal, for example, is described as “hard” (even though there is a good trail all the way to the top), has only four reviews and gets three stars (out of five) from most raters. Most real bushwalkers, who will have Mount Jagungal on their tick list lying as it does in the Jagungal Wilderness and being prominent from many locations will scratch their heads at this and wonder what the raters have been smoking or not, as I thought hash was supposed to make you mellow and happy.




But back to Mount Tantangara. The current topographic map (and AllTrails) makes it look like you should park near Black Walters Creek and follow the trail (an old road) east to the top. This works but the problem arises as soon as you try to legally park. One on side of the Snowy Mountains Highway is a chain up area. I’m not aware of any laws about parking in chain up bays (nor is AI) but it does not seem like a good idea as you could get a ticket. On the other side of the road is a gravel pull-out, ideal for parking except for the sign banning parking.  The better option, is to park down at Rocky Plains area, either at Sawyers Hut or near the campground and follow the track – not marked on any map or AllTrails north to join the track from the Snowy Mountains Highway. The starting elevation is roughly the same but the walk is about 2 kilometres shorter.




It’s a very pleasant walk. We saw some feral horses down near Black Walters Creek, despite heavy culls they are everywhere. The entire walk is easy and scenic owing to burnt forest and the ridge line track. From the top, we used a compass to locate our next couple of destinations: Tabletop Mountain and Mount Jagungal, and also Mount Morgan which we had completed the day before. Mount Jagungal looks like a real mountain from this location and will pique any peak-baggers interest, unless, of course, you read AllTrails and then you would simply shrug, turn over, and go back to sleep.