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198403 [2016/03/17 15:33] – [GREAT WESTERN TIERS AND CENTRAL PLATEAU TASMANIA.] kclacher | 198403 [2016/03/17 15:44] (current) – [Established June 1931] kclacher | ||
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|Social Notes for April | | 16| | |Social Notes for April | | 16| | ||
- | ===== S.B.W. OFFICE BEARERS - 1984. ===== | + | ===== S.B.W. OFFICE BEARERS - 1984 ===== |
The following office-bearers and committee members were elected at the S.B.W. Annual General Meeting held on Wednesday, 14th March, 1984:- | The following office-bearers and committee members were elected at the S.B.W. Annual General Meeting held on Wednesday, 14th March, 1984:- | ||
Line 85: | Line 85: | ||
"Carra Beanga Falls," | "Carra Beanga Falls," | ||
- | George wanted to camp at the junction of Kanangra Creek and what we were calling Sally Camp Creek. (Actually, this junction is of Kanangra Creek and Kanangra River - Sally Camp Creek flows into the Kanangra River.) 4 pm arrived, and no Sally Camp Creek. George reckoned we were nearly there; | + | George wanted to camp at the junction of Kanangra Creek and what we were calling Sally Camp Creek. (Actually, this junction is of Kanangra Creek and Kanangra River - Sally Camp Creek flows into the Kanangra River.) 4 pm arrived, and no Sally Camp Creek. George reckoned we were nearly there; |
+ | by Jim Brown. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In the February and March magazines you will find a group of bushwalker recipes, featuring a mixture called " | ||
+ | |||
+ | On seeing this word my first reaction was "Ah, good, something to discourage the flies that swarm along the Kowmung" | ||
+ | |||
+ | I recall an old walking crony of mine, Roy Bruggy, used to say "The bugs are pretty smart, you know. They know what they' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Amongst the recipes I also see one for a " | ||
+ | "Humus - organic constituent of soil formed by decomposition of plant materials." | ||
+ | |||
+ | Well, anyway, the " | ||
+ | |||
+ | Getting back to the Pesto, I think I can foresee a future for it, and perhaps even T.V. advertising like - "When you're on a good thing, stick to it". Maybe - " | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== AN ODE TO 18-TONNE TESS AND SPINDLY SAM ===== | ||
+ | (Pool of Siloam, Walls of Jerusalem; January 1984)\\ | ||
+ | by Peter Harris (with appropriate apologies) | ||
+ | |||
+ | I was down the Walls of Jerusalem, knockin' | ||
+ | And bedding down in camping spots, where camping wasn't fit;\\ | ||
+ | And lookin' | ||
+ | Of hardened walkers arguin' | ||
+ | |||
+ | And on one of these occasions while scouting far and wide,\\ | ||
+ | I chanced to come across a tarn, and searched its southern side.\\ | ||
+ | And heard a conversation most peculiar in its way,\\ | ||
+ | 'Cos it's only 'round the Pool of Siloam you'll hear a lady say, | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Where ya bloody been, ya drongo? I haven' | ||
+ | An' me girlfriend' | ||
+ | She's been lookin' | ||
+ | An' even up The Temple where she bloody never goes." | ||
+ | |||
+ | Nell, the other bloke said, "Seen 'er, owed 'er 'alf a bloody quid,\\ | ||
+ | Forgot to give it back to 'er, but now I bloody did.\\ | ||
+ | Could used the thing me-bloody-self, | ||
+ | T'buy canvas-bloody-gaiters for these tiger-bloody-snakes." | ||
+ | |||
+ | Now their conversation was quite loud, and listening I heard\\ | ||
+ | Their peculiar integration of this adjectival word.\\ | ||
+ | But the lady was enormous, and to laugh I wasn't game,\\ | ||
+ | So I stood around and let them think I spoke the bloody same. | ||
+ | |||
+ | But neither of them were interested, she asked him for some more,\\ | ||
+ | How many tiger-bloody-snakes he bloody went and saw?\\ | ||
+ | And the spindly bloke said, " | ||
Saw eighty-bloody-seven and that's bad e-bloody-nough!" | Saw eighty-bloody-seven and that's bad e-bloody-nough!" | ||
Line 96: | Line 143: | ||
Some canvas-bloody-gaiters for these tiger-bloody-snakes. | Some canvas-bloody-gaiters for these tiger-bloody-snakes. | ||
- | ===== THE ALPINE WALK JANUARY 1984. ===== | + | ===== THE ALPINE WALK JANUARY 1984 ===== |
- | by Meryl Watman. | + | by Meryl Watman |
- | Leader; Bob Younger. With Christa Younger, Shirley Dean and M. Watman. | + | Leader; Bob Younger. With Christa Younger, Shirley Dean and M. Watman |
From Valhalla to Tom Groggin, the Victorian sector of the Alpine Walk, is approx. 400 km - 160 km of foot tracks, the balance access fire trails, old logging tracks and short distances on road. The countless peaks and radiating spurs seem from the tops of Feathertop and Bogong give a bird's eye view of what must be a very challenging plod yet walkers, many alone, cover it each summer in four to six weeks. | From Valhalla to Tom Groggin, the Victorian sector of the Alpine Walk, is approx. 400 km - 160 km of foot tracks, the balance access fire trails, old logging tracks and short distances on road. The countless peaks and radiating spurs seem from the tops of Feathertop and Bogong give a bird's eye view of what must be a very challenging plod yet walkers, many alone, cover it each summer in four to six weeks. | ||
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400 km of Alpine Walk - well, that remains a challenge. | 400 km of Alpine Walk - well, that remains a challenge. | ||
- | ===== FERRY TRIP ON HAWKESBURY RIVER. ===== | + | ===== FERRY TRIP ON HAWKESBURY RIVER ===== |
How: Comfortable modern Ferry: | How: Comfortable modern Ferry: | ||
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For further details contact SANDY JOHNSON - Tel. 48-3500. | For further details contact SANDY JOHNSON - Tel. 48-3500. | ||
- | ===== AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION. ===== | + | ===== AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION ===== |
At the Annual General Meeting' | At the Annual General Meeting' | ||
Line 168: | Line 215: | ||
The Constitutional Amendment to Clause 5(e) of the Constitution moved by Spiro Hajinakitas and seconded by Jo Van Sommers, was LOST. | The Constitutional Amendment to Clause 5(e) of the Constitution moved by Spiro Hajinakitas and seconded by Jo Van Sommers, was LOST. | ||
- | ===== SOCIAL NOTES FOR APRIL. ===== | + | ===== SOCIAL NOTES FOR APRIL ===== |
|April 4 |Committee Meeting | |April 4 |Committee Meeting | ||
Line 175: | Line 222: | ||
|April 25 |Anzac Day - being a public holiday, the Club will be closed. | |April 25 |Anzac Day - being a public holiday, the Club will be closed. | ||
- | ===== ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS 1984. ===== | + | ===== ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS 1984 ===== |
The annual subscription6 decided upon at the Annual General Meeting on 14th March are as follows: | The annual subscription6 decided upon at the Annual General Meeting on 14th March are as follows: | ||
Line 183: | Line 230: | ||
The subscriptions for Prospective Members, Non-active Members, and Non-active Members with Magazine posted will be decided by the Committee and notified in April magazine. | The subscriptions for Prospective Members, Non-active Members, and Non-active Members with Magazine posted will be decided by the Committee and notified in April magazine. | ||
- | ===== THE FEBRUARY GENERAL MEETING ===== | ||
- | by Barry Wallace | ||
- | The meeting began at about 2023 hours with 20 or so members present and the President in the chair. There was one apology; from Spiro Hajinakitas, | ||
- | |||
- | The only business arising from the Minutes concerned the question of a Club phone contact. After some desultory debate a motion was passed that we discontinue our phone listing. | ||
- | |||
- | Correspondence comprised a letter from the Australian Wilderness Society advising of a forthcoming public meeting, from Steve and Wendy Hodgman requesting transfer to non-active membership, from Span Unlimited advising of a slide night in aid of the Australian Anapurna Expedition, from our archivist, printer, paper procurer and part-time international skier, Phil Butt, concerning the proposed run-out of stocks of imperial sized papers, from Mr. Dick Smith declining the invitation to address the membership at one of our social nights, a notice from the Paddy Pallin Foundation regarding this year's awards, and last of all our letter to the Central Mapping Authority deprecating the recent practice of obscuring map details on the Royal National Park map with depictions of native animals. They have replied that the prints featuring animals sell better to the tourist trade, but that they will re-examine the positioning of the animals before the next printing of the map. | ||
- | |||
- | The Treasurer' | ||
- | |||
- | All of which brought us to the Walks Report. The first news was of Tom Wenman' | ||
- | David (fair weather) Rostron reported a wash-out of his Kanangra li-lo trip scheduled for 13,14,15 January. Peter Christian cancelled his Heathcote National Park swimming special that same weekend, but John Campbell did lead his abseiling instructional. | ||
- | |||
- | The following weekend, 20,21,22 January saw John Riddell and Bill Holland pooling their resources, so to speak, on the Shoalhaven River. They reported a party of 11 people in all. Peter Christian reported | ||
- | 18 people and an enjoyable day on his Royal National Park day walk on the Sunday, and John Campbell and his seven starters are reported to have run out of time on his Claustral Canyon trip that same day. | ||
- | |||
- | The Australia Day weekend saw George Walton leading sseven people on his Kanangra to Carlons walk. They reported a good walk with cool weather and some rain. Of Peter Hislop' | ||
- | |||
- | The weekend of 3,4,5 February produced a couple of no reports with both Gordon Lee's and Bill Burke' | ||
- | |||
- | Federation Report indicated only minor items for attention. | ||
- | |||
- | General Business drew forth some debate as to whether we should return to the system of obtaining written walks reports from trip leaders. The discussion did not result in a motion. | ||
- | |||
- | So, then, it was just a matter of announcements, | ||
- | |||
- | ===== BUSHWAIKER RECIPE - HUMUS ===== | ||
- | A Healthy Spread for Bread, Biscuits.\\ | ||
- | From Evelyn Walker. | ||
- | |||
- | 2 1/2 cups cooked chick Ped6 (soak overnight) - Simmer for 2 hours.\\ | ||
- | 1 small onion, minced + 1 clove. of garlic, crushed\\ | ||
- | 1 1/2 tablespoons tahini (sesame paste) + tbspn. oil lemon juice\\ | ||
- | 1 tablespoon tamari sauce (or soy sauce)\\ | ||
- | Blend well to form a spread - it will keep on a trip for several days.\\ | ||
- | |||
- | ===== GREAT WESTERN TIERS AND CENTRAL PLATEAU TASMANIA ===== | ||
- | |||
- | 26 December 1983 to 9 January 1984\\ | ||
- | by A Pawn | ||
- | |||
- | As we were sitting around our campfire on the second night out Spiro announ9ed that he had been specially commissioned as a reliable reporter of this walk, so Jo put her notebook away, apparently in a bit of a huff. Joan was carefully entering up her diary every day so perhaps the rest of this account comes from her. Who knows? Perhaps one of the pawns on the chessboard, observing the players, is responsible. | ||
- | |||
- | Peter Harris, our leader, played the role of the King. Peter' | ||
- | constitution also took a bit of a hiding when he succumbed to some deadly bacon (we all took our own food for breakfast on the first four days). Although he was carrying a large first aid kit, and amusing himself by suggesting various parts of the anatomies of the other members that he could doctor with it, this pawn noticed that the treatment seemed to consist entirely of slugs of scotch. It must have worked, because he was able to lead us on a day walk to Forty Lakes Peak, from whose summit at least that many lakes and tarns could be seen. We knew he was better: next morning when he burst into " | ||
- | |||
- | Joan Cooper played the Queen. Joan was always out in front, claiming that she falls into a slothful dawdle if she walks at the rear. On New Year's Day we climbed the Walls of Jerusalem in a gale. "This is terrific," | ||
- | dessert except tarts. (The King regretted this and had to be satisfied with his little fantasies about nymphs at every lake.) | ||
- | |||
- | Spiro Hajinakitas was the White Knight. Into camp, the fire is lit and the cry " | ||
- | |||
- | Bill Burke played the Black Knight, planning the deployment of his rations in a most efficient fashion. He spent considerable time each day doing mental arithmetic with an air of serious consideration. Is he aspiring to join Mensa or perhaps to sit for the Public Service exam again? This pawn, being privy to his mind, can tell you his train of thought - " | ||
- | |||
- | The White Bishop was played by George Gray. George carried half the communal billies, especially adapted by him to fit together. Playing a good Bishop' | ||
- | |||
- | On New Year's Eve we spotted a possum boldly ransacking a pack, and.during the night George surprised an intruder actually inside the plastic bag lining his pack. He had it by the neck but let it go; later he regretted this charitable action when he found that the dear little thing had actually gnawed through the bottom of his new pack, severed its straps, and made off with his extra salami and a packet of orange barley powder, and left three punctures in a plastic bottle which lost its contents. The same night the little furry creature or his/her mates chewed a large hole in the King's pack and made off with fifteen bucks' worth of ham spec. At the base of the Walls of Jerusalem there is a possum, or Tasmanian devil, or perhaps a tiger-cat, still sleeping off the effects of its grand orgy. We, on the other hand, went soberly to bed at ten. Just goes to show; if we'd roistered noisily all night we'd have been better off in the morning. | ||
- | |||
- | Jo van Sommers was the Black Bishop; another cunning intellectual type with a secret plan to divide her load in two and do the initial climb up the Higgs Track twice - once with the first half and again with the second half. She had thought the Christmas week would be a great way to train for long immersion in cold waters, but not so good for hot climbs, and was quite amazed to find the 2000 ft up through the beech forest was quite manageable after all. How did the canny Bishop get her pack down to 44 lbs when most people had 54 or 55 and two had 60 lbs? It was noticed that she never changed her clothes, had no towel or toiletries other than a tiny toothbrush, felt slippers instead of spare shoes one pair of newish Hercules which lasted the distance without any problem, thermal underwear which is much lighter than woolen trousers, shirt and singlet. The carriers of heavy loads must have had items from the optional list - indeed men were shaving in mirrors, changing their smalls daily without doing any washing, producing clean shirts on the last day. Bill even pulled out an unworn and immaculate pair of long trousers from the bottom of his pack at the end of the walk. | ||
- | |||
- | Dick Mason was the Black Rook, covering a lot of territory. He was a great explorer and bird-watcher. On the evening of our most beautiful campsite, near the summit of the Mountains of Jupiter, beside a tarn and sheltered by a natural amphitheatre, | ||
- | |||
- | Spiro put a stop to the Rook's meanderings by putting him in charge of damper-making that night. Dick turned out a fine specimen, although cynics said that under Spiro' | ||
- | |||
- | Jim Percy played the role of the White Rook. Jim lapped up the longer days of walking, like Day Four from Lake Nameless to Pencil Pine Tarn, which was so hot in the morning that everyone fell asleep during the lunch stop, but later compensated for this by rambling around exploring the numerous pretty lakes set in rocks and pines in the evening. | ||
- | announcing that he was going home to mother? What was our cheerless bleeder doing changing his fly in the middle of the night?), so we walked around the lakes instead of venturing on to the windy tops. The next day was damp too, but Jim's tent was cosy under the Pines while the rest of the party enjoyed the dark warmth of the hut at Junction Lake. He could have cooked inside if necessary, but instead it turned out that he carried the stove and fuel for the whole way just for the exercise. One would have thought that the Rook would enjoy the breakneck gallop along the Overland Track after we crashed down from the plateau on Day 13, but he wasn't happy with the " | ||
- | |||
- | The party took the long way home via the Cuvier Valley, where most of the mud was dry and the buttongrass afforded a quick passage. I am happy to be able to report that they are all still speaking to each other and are planning a reunion. The Leader did not master the rules and strategies of chess in one lesson, the Queen was persuaded not to pat the cute little Tasmanian devil that came close to the campfire, the Knights did not let us starve, the devious Bishops did not overdo the deep conversations scientific and political, the rangy Rooks finally came home to roost. Thus the game was satisfactorily concluded. | ||
- | |||
- | ===== AVAGOODWEEGEND. ===== | ||
- | by Jim Brown. | ||
- | |||
- | In the February and March magazines you will find a group of bushwalker recipes, featuring a mixture called " | ||
- | |||
- | On seeing this word my first reaction was "Ah, good, something to discourage the flies that swarm along the Kowmung" | ||
- | |||
- | I recall an old walking crony of mine, Roy Bruggy, used to say "The bugs are pretty smart, you know. They know what they' | ||
- | |||
- | Amongst the recipes I also see one for a " | ||
- | "Humus - organic constituent of soil formed by decomposition of plant materials." | ||
- | |||
- | Well, anyway, the " | ||
- | |||
- | Getting back to the Pesto, I think I can foresee a future for it, and perhaps even T.V. advertising like - "When you're on a good thing, stick to it". Maybe - " | ||
- | |||
- | ===== AN ODE TO 18-TONNE TESS AND SPINDLY SAM. ===== | ||
- | (Pool of Siloam, Walls of Jerusalem; January 1984)\\ | ||
- | by Peter Harris (with appropriate apologies) | ||
- | |||
- | I was down the Walls of Jerusalem, knockin' | ||
- | And bedding down in camping spots, where camping wasn't fit; | ||
- | And lookin' | ||
- | Of hardened walkers arguin' | ||
- | |||
- | And on one of these occasions while scouting far and wide, | ||
- | I chanced to come across a tarn, and searched its southern side.\\ | ||
- | And heard a conversation most peculiar in its way, | ||
- | 'Cos it's only 'round the Pool of Siloam you'll hear a lady say, | ||
- | |||
- | "Where ya bloody been, ya drongo? I haven' | ||
- | An' me girlfriend' | ||
- | She's been lookin' | ||
- | An' even up The Temple where she bloody never goes." | ||
- | |||
- | Nell, the other bloke said, "Seen 'er, owed 'er 'alf a bloody quid, | ||
- | Forgot to give it back to 'er, but now I bloody did.\\ | ||
- | Could used the thing me-bloody-self, | ||
- | T'buy canvas-bloody-gaiters for these tiger-bloody-snakes." | ||
- | |||
- | Now their conversation was quite loud, and listening I heard\\ | ||
- | Their peculiar integration of this adjectival word.\\ | ||
- | But the lady was enormous, and to laugh I wasn't game, | ||
- | So I stood around and let them think I spoke the bloody same. | ||
- | |||
- | But neither of them were interested, she asked him for some more, | ||
- | How many tiger-bloody-snakes he bloody went and saw? | ||
- | And the spindly bloke said, " |
198403.1458189189.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/03/17 15:33 by kclacher