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Our thirty-third Annual General Meeting commenced with a welcome to two new members, Giesler Kowlowski and Vince Aitken. Apologies were received from Tan McKenzie, Joe Turner, Edna Garrad and Morrie Berry. | Our thirty-third Annual General Meeting commenced with a welcome to two new members, Giesler Kowlowski and Vince Aitken. Apologies were received from Tan McKenzie, Joe Turner, Edna Garrad and Morrie Berry. | ||
- | Another successful social month was reported. Some 40 members attended the theatre party and 15 had dinner together before going to the theatre. Our Walks Secretary reported that the commando trip along the Kommumg, led by Colin Putt, had been a success, though some had exceeded instructions in the matter of equipment and the trip had not turned out as tough as expected. | + | Another successful social month was reported. Some 40 members attended the theatre party and 15 had dinner together before going to the theatre. Our Walks Secretary reported that the commando trip along the Kowmumg, led by Colin Putt, had been a success, though some had exceeded instructions in the matter of equipment and the trip had not turned out as tough as expected. |
The swimming carnival had been marred by rain. Although there were enough present to have a race or two, some were tired, others wouldn' | The swimming carnival had been marred by rain. Although there were enough present to have a race or two, some were tired, others wouldn' | ||
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- Brian G. Harvey. | - Brian G. Harvey. | ||
- | Anzac Day, this year falling on a Wednesday, does not give us the opportunity of a long weekend to visit Splendour Rock, that lofty crag where the N.S.W. Federation of Bushwalking Clubs placed a bronze plaque to honour for all time the Bushmalkers | + | Anzac Day, this year falling on a Wednesday, does not give us the opportunity of a long weekend to visit Splendour Rock, that lofty crag where the N.S.W. Federation of Bushwalking Clubs placed a bronze plaque to honour for all time the Bushwalkers |
At the Tenth Anniversary Commemoration Service, held at sunrise on Anzac Day, 1958, I had the honour of laying the wreath. During last Anzac weekend, on the occasion of my official walk to Splendour Rock, I again performed that duty. | At the Tenth Anniversary Commemoration Service, held at sunrise on Anzac Day, 1958, I had the honour of laying the wreath. During last Anzac weekend, on the occasion of my official walk to Splendour Rock, I again performed that duty. | ||
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As it will be impracticable for me to visit the Rock this year, I feel it mould be very appropriate to remind the Old Hands, and to acquaint the New Hands, of the honour due to those unsung heroes of the Club who have no perpetuating memorial to their services for the meritorious tasks during the war - Maurie Berry, Doreen Harris, Winifred (" | As it will be impracticable for me to visit the Rock this year, I feel it mould be very appropriate to remind the Old Hands, and to acquaint the New Hands, of the honour due to those unsung heroes of the Club who have no perpetuating memorial to their services for the meritorious tasks during the war - Maurie Berry, Doreen Harris, Winifred (" | ||
- | May I explain that the Services Committee was formed from the Federated Clubs to post mental and physical " | + | May I explain that the Services Committee was formed from the Federated Clubs to post mental and physical " |
Funds were raised by various resorts - barbecues, raffles, anyhow. Members picked peas and dug potatoes at farms near Liverpool - and donated their wages to the fund. This backbreaking work was on a production basis - and not easy. | Funds were raised by various resorts - barbecues, raffles, anyhow. Members picked peas and dug potatoes at farms near Liverpool - and donated their wages to the fund. This backbreaking work was on a production basis - and not easy. | ||
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From "John 0' London" | From "John 0' London" | ||
- | " | + | " |
Other times - other Walkers. | Other times - other Walkers. | ||
- | In the sumer months Reed regularly walked to Cambridge if he was playing in an all day cricket match on the Saturday - the 55 miles walk from London was then a regular hike for many students, __who thought nothing of it__. Reed's time was 16 hours dead, and he would arrive in Cambridge for breakfast on Saturday. Then came 8 hours of cricket starting at 11 a.m. followed in the evening by a " | + | In the summer |
- | Concentrate on this last word, and then ponder on toddy' | + | Concentrate on this last word, and then ponder on toddy' |
- | I have a book all about another great (civilian) walker of a century ago - George Borrow. (The Romany addict). He strolled from bottom to top of Wales. He would stop and talk to any man, woman, child, | + | I have a book all about another great (civilian) walker of a century ago - George Borrow. (The Romany addict). He strolled from bottom to top of Wales. He would stop and talk to any man, woman, child, |
With this outfit he ignored the weather no matter how soaked - his night time pub always had a log fire. | With this outfit he ignored the weather no matter how soaked - his night time pub always had a log fire. | ||
- | 30 miles per day was quite normal, and he would plug on in the dark in strange uninhabited roads. No torch! Even with the gamp he could turn on 6 m.p.h. and not in the 600 pages does he mention foot trouble. The bootmalmrs | + | 30 miles per day was quite normal, and he would plug on in the dark in strange uninhabited roads. No torch! Even with the gamp he could turn on 6 m.p.h. and not in the 600 pages does he mention foot trouble. The bootmakers |
He found Wales a singularly contented though poverty ridden place. One farm hand he talked to was a married man on 7/- per week! | He found Wales a singularly contented though poverty ridden place. One farm hand he talked to was a married man on 7/- per week! | ||
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There were, however, some notable absences - Edna Garrad, Dorothy Hasluck, the Gilroys, the Crokers, Marion Ellis - to name a few. Some had legitimate excuses but no doubt the weather discouraged others. A storm on Saturday afternoon forced a few to hasten their leisurely erecting of tents. There was an awful moment soon after the beginning of the campfire when a few more drops would have caused most people to gather up their belongings and flee to their tents. But the rain held off until some hour in the early morning when, if anyone was caught in it, it served him (or her or them) right. Not only did the rain hold off but the air was warm and still and seemed to me the pleasantest atmospheric conditions for the Reunion for many a long day. | There were, however, some notable absences - Edna Garrad, Dorothy Hasluck, the Gilroys, the Crokers, Marion Ellis - to name a few. Some had legitimate excuses but no doubt the weather discouraged others. A storm on Saturday afternoon forced a few to hasten their leisurely erecting of tents. There was an awful moment soon after the beginning of the campfire when a few more drops would have caused most people to gather up their belongings and flee to their tents. But the rain held off until some hour in the early morning when, if anyone was caught in it, it served him (or her or them) right. Not only did the rain hold off but the air was warm and still and seemed to me the pleasantest atmospheric conditions for the Reunion for many a long day. | ||
- | We must hand it to tbe organisers - we loafers - they do a mighty job. Sometimes when I feel a little critical I suddenly break out into a lather of shame. When you consider all the fetching and carrying which goes on behind your back - but it has to be done on someone else's back! | + | We must hand it to the organisers - we loafers - they do a mighty job. Sometimes when I feel a little critical I suddenly break out into a lather of shame. When you consider all the fetching and carrying which goes on behind your back - but it has to be done on someone else's back! |
This year everything seemed to go right. The Colo Shire had improved the road and provided a parking space at the end. I am not going to invite a spate of letters to the Editor by expressing an opinion on the desirability of this use of the Shire' | This year everything seemed to go right. The Colo Shire had improved the road and provided a parking space at the end. I am not going to invite a spate of letters to the Editor by expressing an opinion on the desirability of this use of the Shire' | ||
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Sketches were topical, typical and sometimes epileptical. The young children were organised by Pam Baker into a presentation of " | Sketches were topical, typical and sometimes epileptical. The young children were organised by Pam Baker into a presentation of " | ||
- | Robert Duncan of Camden (or is it now of Boulder?) was the butt of several sketches - allying as he did a provocative personality with an almost immediate departure far America. (God bless America.) We were very grateful for some of the lines in these sketches though the execution faltered at times. But if you have had a script shoved under your nose for the first time two minutes before you go on stage and you have lost the place, or never found it in the first place, and the torch won't work, it is difficult to know what the auther | + | Robert Duncan of Camden (or is it now of Boulder?) was the butt of several sketches - allying as he did a provocative personality with an almost immediate departure far America. (God bless America.) We were very grateful for some of the lines in these sketches though the execution faltered at times. But if you have had a script shoved under your nose for the first time two minutes before you go on stage and you have lost the place, or never found it in the first place, and the torch won't work, it is difficult to know what the author |
The children loved Ray Bean's flea but I hope it will be some years before the boys so sincerely leer "Have some madeira, m' | The children loved Ray Bean's flea but I hope it will be some years before the boys so sincerely leer "Have some madeira, m' | ||
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Sunday is the relaxing day for the Reunion. The worst of the work for the common labourers is over, the feverish quiverings of the hypersensitive artists have dissipated and, without shining examples all around, the drones may drone away without twinges of conscience. It is so pleasant wafting from group to group. | Sunday is the relaxing day for the Reunion. The worst of the work for the common labourers is over, the feverish quiverings of the hypersensitive artists have dissipated and, without shining examples all around, the drones may drone away without twinges of conscience. It is so pleasant wafting from group to group. | ||
- | But even on Sunday we had damper making to keep us interested. And when the Organiser wins first prize we may yet see Mr. Tallentire winning fir at prize in an Opera House lottery. Along the path I saw Alex Colley going campwards with his damper tucked underneath his arm and lookng | + | But even on Sunday we had damper making to keep us interested. And when the Organiser wins first prize we may yet see Mr. Tallentire winning fir at prize in an Opera House lottery. Along the path I saw Alex Colley going campwards with his damper tucked underneath his arm and looking |
I liked this Reunion the most ever. I have been trying to work out why. I think it was because it had all the essentials of a good Reunion but more variety than usual - even the rain didn't dampen us but only kept us on our toes. | I liked this Reunion the most ever. I have been trying to work out why. I think it was because it had all the essentials of a good Reunion but more variety than usual - even the rain didn't dampen us but only kept us on our toes. | ||
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---- | ---- | ||
- | Our recorder reports that there were 190 preent | + | Our recorder reports that there were 190 present |
---- | ---- | ||
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and nowhere more effectively than in Bushwalkers' | and nowhere more effectively than in Bushwalkers' | ||
- | It has never been clear just why so many bushwalkers worry about what the public thinks about them. Speaking from a statistical basis, the public doesn' | + | It has never been clear just why so many bushwalkers worry about what the public thinks about them. Speaking from a statistical basis, the public doesn' |
The 6% of the population who do recognise us for what we are, are probably sufficiently intelligent to be of little account in public affairs, and their opinion of us would matter not one iota if it were not for the fact that people distrust what they don't understand; the public is therefore always ready to distrust us. Even our name has a suspicious Teutonic construction, | The 6% of the population who do recognise us for what we are, are probably sufficiently intelligent to be of little account in public affairs, and their opinion of us would matter not one iota if it were not for the fact that people distrust what they don't understand; the public is therefore always ready to distrust us. Even our name has a suspicious Teutonic construction, | ||
- | The way to arouse their suuspicion | + | The way to arouse their suspicion |
Carrying this method to extremes doesn' | Carrying this method to extremes doesn' | ||
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The best way to give the public the idea that we are a happy, healthy, moral and patriotic group, is to act as freely and naturally as possible, short of stamping on their corns. Coat yourselves with charcoal to the eyeballs and do square dances in hobnailed boots on the platform while waiting for trains; the public will love it, and you, if you're careful not to knock them into the path of an oncoming locomotive. | The best way to give the public the idea that we are a happy, healthy, moral and patriotic group, is to act as freely and naturally as possible, short of stamping on their corns. Coat yourselves with charcoal to the eyeballs and do square dances in hobnailed boots on the platform while waiting for trains; the public will love it, and you, if you're careful not to knock them into the path of an oncoming locomotive. | ||
- | If Bushwalkirg | + | If Bushwalking |
While the public think of us very little, we think of ourselves quite a lot, and __this__ is where it does behove us to watch our behaviour a little more closely. Internal Intolerance is our greatest danger, and as I sit, at the time of writing, pretty squarely on the half way fence of our threescore years and ten, I feel exceptionally well fitted to explain to Older Members that boys will be boys, and to Younger Members that Older Members will be Older Members, and to all that the only way to justify your claims to consideration is to do something for the Club. A club, fortunately, | While the public think of us very little, we think of ourselves quite a lot, and __this__ is where it does behove us to watch our behaviour a little more closely. Internal Intolerance is our greatest danger, and as I sit, at the time of writing, pretty squarely on the half way fence of our threescore years and ten, I feel exceptionally well fitted to explain to Older Members that boys will be boys, and to Younger Members that Older Members will be Older Members, and to all that the only way to justify your claims to consideration is to do something for the Club. A club, fortunately, | ||
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|April 22-22|Blackheath - Car to Perry' | |April 22-22|Blackheath - Car to Perry' | ||
- | TIME 1ATE CLIOED MT. FLETCI:72, | + | =====The Time We Climbed Mt. Fletcher.===== |
- | Geof Wagg. | + | |
- | It was the second evening of a 3-day weekend and we were camped in an enormous open-sided cave in the maze behind | + | - Geof Wagg. |
- | The snow had stopped by the previous morning and the sleet had stopped about midday. Even the covering blanket of the clouds had been torn apart and the few remaining tatters now dreadfully harassed by the mind. Soon we altpt snagg]T, tucked into various sheltered crannies while incur mrrow strip of slcy great stars blazed | + | |
- | Those last two days seemed to me then to have been empty and frustrating. Grace and Snow and I were out with some Tech. boys, proposing to go from the Vines over Renwick and the Castle then up the Clyde River and back to the Vin via Castle Point. Harried by rain showers and the bleak wind on the first day, we seemed to be doing well when we lunched sheltered by the cliffs of Tarn Mouritain. Later in the afternoon we were making our way towards the southern point of NI. Renwick with the close scrub clawing at our knees and groundsheets snapping and cracking in the mind. Before us lay an awful void of blue-black where the massif of Currockbilly merged with the deeply shadowed valley of the Clyde. As we watched, a single sunbeam driven by the wind fled like a hunted thing across the dnrk folding ridges, rested a moment on Pidgeon House then on to vanish in the depths of a distant gorge. Suddenly it seemed the cloud behind us split showing | + | It was the second evening of a 3-day weekend and we were camped in an enormous open-sided cave in the maze behind |
+ | |||
+ | The snow had stopped by the previous morning and the sleet had stopped about midday. Even the covering blanket of the clouds had been torn apart and the few remaining tatters now dreadfully harassed by the wind. Soon we slept snuggly, tucked into various sheltered crannies while in our narrow | ||
+ | |||
+ | Those last two days seemed to me then to have been empty and frustrating. Grace and Snow and I were out with some Tech. boys, proposing to go from the Vines over Renwick and the Castle then up the Clyde River and back to the Vines via Castle Point. Harried by rain showers and the bleak wind on the first day, we seemed to be doing well when we lunched sheltered by the cliffs of Tarn Mountain. Later in the afternoon we were making our way towards the southern point of Mt. Renwick with the close scrub clawing at our knees and groundsheets snapping and cracking in the mind. Before us lay an awful void of blue-black where the massif of Currockbilly merged with the deeply shadowed valley of the Clyde. As we watched, a single sunbeam driven by the wind fled like a hunted thing across the dark folding ridges, rested a moment on Pidgeon House then on to vanish in the depths of a distant gorge. Suddenly it seemed the cloud behind us split showing | ||
" | " | ||
- | The next morning we moved out rather late, into a world of black and White. The sky was white as the'snow and the trees, black as the rocks. We were cold in our shorts and sandshoes. In the open valley the faintest breath of wind seemed to saw with teeth of ice into Qur flesh, so we hunched our shoulders and tucked in our hands and tried to cross the mnl-slly | + | |
- | THE | + | The next morning we moved out rather late, into a world of black and white. The sky was white as the snow and the trees, black as the rocks. We were cold in our shorts and sandshoes. In the open valley the faintest breath of wind seemed to saw with teeth of ice into our flesh, so we hunched our shoulders and tucked in our hands and tried to cross the marshy |
- | To reach the Castle we left the valley and climbing among the intervening pinnacles, crossed | + | |
+ | To reach the Castle we left the valley and climbing among the intervening pinnacles, crossed | ||
"Well are we going to climb this mountain?" | "Well are we going to climb this mountain?" | ||
- | 17. | + | |
- | Whilst John and Peter were away up the mountain we built a small fire and warmed ourselves, in the resulting clouds of chold..ng saoiga. Later 601135 | + | Whilst John and Peter were away up the mountain we built a small fire and warmed ourselves, in the resulting clouds of choking smoke. Later some of us built another fire in the next cave which had better ventilation and as we prepared lunch on this a shout announced the return of the climbing party. Investigation showed that not only had they returned |
- | Lunch eaten in the ventilated cave only led to hagglint, | + | |
- | "That sleet has stopped there' | + | Lunch eaten in the ventilated cave only led to haggling |
+ | |||
+ | "That sleet has stopped there' | ||
" | " | ||
- | " Snow in the chimneys - " - Frozen rope - | + | |
- | " No caves on the Clyde!" | + | "0 Snow in the chimneys - !" |
- | Yes, that was it. No caves on the Clyde. Comfort against | + | " - Frozen rope - !" |
- | This was the difference however; that evening we bad seen Mt. Fletcher. Seen it for the first time as a mountain I mean, rather than a hummock, amoilkst\others on The horizon. Cold it looked from here when across the massive precipice of the western face the freezing wind growlecl | + | |
- | .... | + | "No caves on the Clyde!" |
- | This morning is cold too; not the biting cold of the wind bit a pervading chill that you feel all over. The dark silver of the morning | + | |
- | First find your mountain. | + | Yes, that was it. No caves on the Clyde. Comfort against |
- | We skip and jump from dane to hummock and frequently back from hummock to dome. We plough the fern and leaf mould and swing on tangled | + | |
- | " | + | This was the difference however; that evening we had seen Mt. Fletcher. Seen it for the first time as a mountain I mean, rather than a hummock |
- | 18. | + | |
- | " | + | ....... |
- | nce more we slip and swing and jump but by the time we are furrowing the trough of this gully with our backs to ti -B open window of its steep descending side we know at last we can touch our mountain. Touch it.' | + | |
- | "Yair, this is where Doug Doughnut climbed ' | + | This morning is cold too; not the biting cold of the wind bit a pervading chill that you feel all over. The dark silver of the morning |
- | 1 tamp | + | |
- | "She looks O.K.". says Pete. I say nothing. | + | First __find__ |
- | "It seems a bit wet", says Michael, and we all eye the-, big wet patch halfway up and estimate | + | |
- | "I think we'll do better around on the eastern face" | + | We skip and jump from dome to hummock and frequently back from hummock to dome. We plough the fern and leaf mould and swing on tangled |
- | When it comes to the point Famous Higgins wants to try the convertional | + | |
- | and some stay with him while John, Pete, Mike, Snow and myself rope down the overhang into the gully opposite the way we came. We haven' | + | " |
- | It's so late now that we know we haven' | + | |
- | we intend to choose a likely one and give it our best. Passing two promising places we take the third -vhich | + | " |
- | " | + | |
- | "No, I don't .. " before he completes | + | Once more we slip and swing and jump but by the time we are furrowing the trough of this gully with our backs to the open window of its steep descending side we know at last we can touch our mountain. Touch it! "You must rub your nose on it", the climbers say, " |
- | 19. | + | |
- | , | + | "Yair, this is where Doug Doughnut climbed ' |
- | "Right The rope' | + | |
- | John and I go up in quick succession. John brings the other' | + | " |
- | "You feel so safe just because it isn't vertical." | + | |
+ | "She looks O.K.". says Pete. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I say nothing. | ||
+ | |||
+ | "It seems a bit wet", says Michael, and we all eye the big wet patch halfway up and estimate | ||
+ | |||
+ | "I think we'll do better around on the eastern face" | ||
+ | |||
+ | When it comes to the point Famous Higgins wants to try the conventional | ||
+ | |||
+ | It's so late now that we know we haven' | ||
+ | |||
+ | " | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Mike is!" | ||
+ | |||
+ | "No, I don't .. " before he completes | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Righto! | ||
+ | |||
+ | John and I go up in quick succession. John brings the others | ||
+ | |||
+ | "You feel so safe just because it isn't vertical." | ||
"That makes it hard to get into." | "That makes it hard to get into." | ||
- | "am. Let's see if there' | + | |
- | Alternatives are scarce. To our right a vertil | + | "Hmm -. Let's see if there' |
- | "No chance" | + | |
- | A large tree, its trunk blackened by -oast fires, grows in the very mouth of the chimney trying to look as though it were responsible for splitting this mighty rock and* Mike embraces this to get him through the undercut section. I see him scuffling and scraping on the otherside | + | Alternatives are scarce. To our right a vertical |
- | " | + | |
- | Now comes the delicate | + | "No chance" |
- | "Nice going Nike". | + | |
- | nEhnim. Looks wider further in and I can see daylight above. Think I'll try it there. Again he disappears and his movements are indicated by the paying out of the rope. | + | " |
- | " | + | |
+ | A large tree, its trunk blackened by past fires, grows in the very mouth of the chimney trying to look as though it were responsible for splitting this mighty rock and Mike embraces this to get him through the undercut section. I see him scuffling and scraping on the other side of the tree. Dust and flakes of charred | ||
+ | |||
+ | " | ||
+ | |||
+ | Now comes the delicate | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Nice going Mike". | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Hmmm. Looks wider further in and I can see daylight above. Think I'll try it there". Again he disappears and his movements are indicated by the paying out of the rope. | ||
+ | |||
+ | "G'ahrrr!!" | ||
" | " | ||
- | "Ah/ therets | + | |
- | 20. | + | "Ah, there' |
- | "No option I'm afraid. And one by one we run the gauntlet of the charcoal and the tar. | + | |
- | When I finally slip into sunlight trough the grimy lips of this crevice and see the others I realise even more fully what we have in common. We 're filthy! Smeared black and sticky with this stuff, smudged with charcoal too and this on top of a normal | + | "Oh well, stick to it " |
+ | |||
+ | "No option I'm afraid." | ||
+ | |||
+ | When I finally slip into sunlight trough the grimy lips of this crevice and see the others I realise even more fully what we have in common. We're filthy! Smeared black and sticky with this stuff, smudged with charcoal too and this on top of a normal | ||
Clean as the taste of the fresh morning sunlight in our mouths. Clean as the clear, blue, rainwashed distance rushing away from us in every direction. Clean as the feel of the crisp rock under our feet. This cleanness is deep and real. | Clean as the taste of the fresh morning sunlight in our mouths. Clean as the clear, blue, rainwashed distance rushing away from us in every direction. Clean as the feel of the crisp rock under our feet. This cleanness is deep and real. | ||
- | We leapt and skipped like young animals, on the spreading terraces of the summit. This was living. This was us. Then we watched far a little while quietly, then turned and vent dawn. | ||
- | APRIL 284.22:22 Blackheath - car to Megalong - Black Jerry' | ||
- | Easy going down to Cc's - pleasant river scenery at foot of Black Jerry' | ||
- | APRIL 29-30 | ||
- | Leader: Pam Baker. Maps: Myles Dunphy' | ||
- | Katoomba Military | ||
- | Jenolan Military. | ||
- | Kanangra Walls - MUrdering Gully - Hanangra Creek - Thurat Spires - Big Misty Kanangra Walls. | ||
- | Private Transport to the Walls. | ||
- | We quote Bill GiLLam' | ||
- | "The Spires are no more than 50-100 feet vide at most and are connected by a knife edge a mere yard wide. They fall on on side to Kanangra Deep, and on the other to the similar Danae ' | ||
- | This is a rugged day-trip, including a good deal of scree scrambling and some rope work. | ||
- | See Leader Bob Jones far further details. | ||
- | ON THE IVIAY - AUGUST PROGRAMIE. | ||
- | *ki 576-7 | ||
- | " 6-7 | ||
- | George Gray will lead a trip to Bungonia Gorge - Private Transport. | ||
- | Reg Meakin s will lead a walk well known for its scenic attractions. Train to St. Anthony' | ||
- | SEE THE NEW WALES PR CGRAUTE FCR FUR.THER DETAILS. | ||
+ | We leapt and skipped like young animals, on the spreading terraces of the summit. This was living. This was us. Then we watched far a little while quietly, then turned and went dawn. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | |||
+ | |April 28-29-30|Blackheath - car to Megalong - Black Jerry' | ||
+ | |April 29-30|Kanangra Walls - Murdering Gully - Kanangra Creek - Thurat Spires - Big Misty - Kanangra Walls. Private Transport to the Walls. We quote Bill Gillam' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | |||
+ | =====On The May-August Programme.===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | |May 5-6-7|George Gray will lead a trip to Bungonia Gorge - Private Transport.| | ||
+ | |May 6-7|Reg Meakins will lead a walk well known for its scenic attractions. Train to St. Anthony' | ||
+ | |||
+ | See the new walks programme for further details. |
196104.1455581586.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/02/16 11:13 by tyreless