Monday, July 23, 2007

walk #2

Well, despite my best intentions and though I swear I was not late, I was firmly put in place by being the very last to arrive at the meeting place for our walk. Next time!

It was a grand day, fine, still and lots of blue sky that held much promise. We all met at the Mylor Oval and then organised two cars to take us to Rocky Creek Hut in the Kuitpo Forest where we were to commence the walk.
There were some concerned faces as we put some distance between us and Mylor, travelling by car over hills and gravel roads, and I could see some asking though not many verbalising "how far are we walking?". Everyone was being far too polite.

We arrived
at Rocky Creek Hut to be greeted by a large group of walkers who were taking a break. They had started out from Dashwood Gully, some 4 kms south and were part of the 'End to End Walk' group (one of three!!) lead by The Friends of the Heysen Trail. So, rather than investigate the area first to get our bearings, we high-tailed it out of there to try to get some distance between us, only to run into another group on the trail (two of three!!). It was like Rundle Street in the High Country! Obviously lots of people are doing the 'End to End' walks with The Friends which is great to see.

The walk for the first four kilometres is along the perimeter of the forest reserve and there are some undulating sections before the trail meets Pocock Road. It is there that we nearly lost them! We detoured onto Pocock Road as planned to avoid a logged section of the forest which, on a prior visit, had proved rather uninspiring. The first photo of the group, minus Ken who has the camera, is taken at the point where we re-enter the forestry area. The trail eventually meets up with the Heysen Trail about a kilometre further on. As we approached the Jupiter Creek area, the vegetation changes to native bushland. We found a nice quiet spot in the sun, away from the Indians, to enjoy our lunch. And once we left there, that was it, we never saw them again. No explanation, they just seemed to vanish!

With the Indians out of sight, we journeyed on through some very picturesque farmland, over fields and board-walks, down gravel and bitumen roads. Were we 'nearly there yet'? "Nearly, just a bit further to go!" We all arrived safely having put 14+ kms behind us. It was a good effort and the coffee was great.



Many thanks to Ken for all the photos. You can view the larger images by clicking on the following link - http://picasaweb.google.com/Sticks2u

The next walk on Sunday, 19th August will be on the South Coast between Waitpinga and Kings Head Beach. Expect fantastic vistas.

1 comment:

Jez said...

I'm reading your blog, about the Mt Lofty hike, then following a link through to Picasa to look at your photos, then look at your photos from your Kuitpo walk... hang on a minute! some things are looking awfully familiar here! Are these the people we swamped when we hiked through here? They look like them, and are similar in number... go back, read your blog entry... OMG, we meet again.

I enjoyed reading your blog, keep up the good hiking and good writing.

From one of your little indians

PS I can assure you we finished our hike, about 500m south of Mylor oval, though I don't remember when. Maybe 3ish? I dunno. There was a paddock full of cars to give us away (but difficult to see from the main road perhaps)

http://jez-heysen.blogspot.com