Well it’s around a week since the possibility of doing the walk
this summer occurred to me. What have I achieved so far?
Apart from last weekend’s SAREX, there’s been little
physical preparation undertaken this week. I already ride or walk everywhere,
so I can’t say that I’ve been doing much
beyond what I did anyway. I did spend yesterday's lunch break running up and down a flight
of stairs, drawing many a strange look from passing pedestrians and those in
neighbouring offices. No doubt those looks will get stranger if I resort to
climbing façades or the Salamanca trees instead, but I actually
quite like getting strange looks. After all, the only way to avoid them would be to act normal... Yeah, like that's going to happen!
But there’s more to this trip than just the physical side.
In reality, it’s not much more physically demanding than any other multiple day
hike. The tracks are difficult and I’ll be carrying more gear, but the real
challenge for now lies with the other preparation. Food is usually my main organisation concern,
but that’s a concern for another couple of months away. Right now I’m more worried about other gear. Some of mine won’t be up to the task.
So what needs to be different? Well firstly, reliability is
a major concern. If boots start to fail on day two of a four day walk, they’ll
at least survive until the end. If they fail on day two of a four week walk,
that’s a serious problem. Stoves, too, tend to suffer from reliability issues.
A quick bit of campsite maintenance fixes most of them but I have to plan for
all of them.
This week, I’ve been thinking about what I need for navigation. On paper,
the walk stretches across 17 different 1:25,000 series Tasmaps. Now a few areas
can be comfortably done with less detailed maps, bringing that number down
somewhat. Not all of them though. The last section of the walk will be taking one
of two routes with no defined trails. Navigation then will be critical. While I’ve
resisted the general trend toward them the last few years, I think it’s time to look
seriously at digital navigation aids.
The handheld GPS has come a long way since its origins, and still quite a way since the hiking model I played around with a few years back, which gave me an average walking speed of 70kmph. Not bad
at all, though I don’t remember making all those 20 second long 40km detours
that it showed on the track log. A basic GPS with just a lat/long readout is pretty
cheap, but doesn’t work well under tree cover or in poor weather. If I’m not in
the trees and I’ve got good visibility, I can just use a compass and the
nearest mountain. Next problem: the maps of the area use two different
coordinate systems, varying by around 200m. Your basic GPS can’t give you the
readout in different coordinates, so best mark the new grids on the maps.
Or, do I just get a GPS with a powerful receiver and a full set of 1:25k Tasmanian maps preloaded?
Compared with the cost of 17 laminated maps, that’s actually pretty appealing… I’d still want a printed map as well for some of the more critical areas, in case of electronics failure. Say the cost of 14 laminated maps then. That's still most of the price of a decent map-capable GPS these days. Considering a Garmin eTrex 20 at the moment, mostly because of battery life and included 1:25k vector maps of Tas.
Really though, without going on about, "when I was your age, a portable GPS weighed 5kg and cost a year's wage," I still have to say that I find it impressive how far the technology has come and the prices they've fallen to. A GPS that fits in the palm of my hand, is accurate to within ten metres or so and has enough battery life to log your route for an entire day can be found for the price of an average restaurant steak...
Really though, without going on about, "when I was your age, a portable GPS weighed 5kg and cost a year's wage," I still have to say that I find it impressive how far the technology has come and the prices they've fallen to. A GPS that fits in the palm of my hand, is accurate to within ten metres or so and has enough battery life to log your route for an entire day can be found for the price of an average restaurant steak...
Of course, using a GPS brings up another problem, or more of the same problem I was already facing.
I need a power-supply on track. Cameras, torches, GPSs and mobile phones (large
expanses of the Tasmanian wilderness now have phone reception from the peaks, and the
advice to walkers is that a phone is as important as an EPIRB in an emergency) all use power.
Short trips are easy; a few batteries and you’re sorted. For this trip though,
I can’t afford the weight of that many batteries. Easily sorted, because I’m
guaranteed at least the occasional patch of sunlight. Some walker-friendly companies
have taken to making light-weight flexible solar panels designed to attach to
the top of your pack. They charge AAs plus anything running on USB. Everything is charged by USB now, so that
has me covered.
I've got some new Scarpas and they're breaking in comfortably without a single blister to show for it, which must be a record for me! Still looking at stoves but I've a few ideas there...
For now at least, I think I’ve worked out solutions to most
of the immediate gear issues.
So what else needs doing? I still have to find myself a crew
of keen walkers. I’ve repeatedly had people pointing out that once I set dates
for each section of walk, I’ll end up with others tagging on for a few days at a time.
But there needs to be a small core team that’ll do the whole walk. The process (it sounds so much more organised and careful when I call it that!) has been started and we’ll see how it goes. Again, that’s
covered for now.
That leaves me with my other task for the week, deciding on
the route of the walk itself. Many thanks to John Chapman here, with his guide
books for Tasmanian walks. If you’re thinking of doing a walk anywhere in Tas
and you haven’t read his notes, do so. He lists every campsite, how sheltered
they are, the availability of water and how long it takes to get between them.
He also mentions the off-track walks, and unmarked side trips. It’s thanks to
him that I know about one of the off-track ways that I might use for the last leg of the loop. Unfortunately, the other way I'm considering doesn’t appear in his books,
and I’ve only found accounts of the conditions at either end of it. A valley
crossing the middle remains an unknown, and Google’s satellite photo doesn’t
tell me much. Different maps show it as everything from open grassland to thick
scrub.
Do I take the route that I know to be immensely difficult but definitely possible, or
take the unknown path and risk spending a few backtracking? I do like the idea
of a bit of unknown to finish the trip. There aren’t any supply drop points for
a week preceding that track, so I can’t afford too much backtracking.
All in all, planning continues quite nicely and I’m looking
forward to another weekend of physical preparation. I just have to decide what it'll... Oh look, it’s been snowing!
I think I know what the next round of physical preparation shall entail!
Do I recall being present when those 40km detours occured?
ReplyDeleteYou may indeed have been on the trip in question, and it may have been your GPS that I was referring to...
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