Thanks very much for the replies, the more I read this forum the more I read of overseas visitors trekking the OLT very unprepared so in some ways it gives me confidence that we will be ready when we do it!
Nuts wrote: In the end, completely overloaded though prepared for every eventuality I was knackered in the first couple of hours. The heat had me and after a day in the tent it was the third night before we camped at Waterfall Valley..
I'd suggest a list of your gear on here. It's not at all 'everything' but it might give others something to go on. Plan a few short walks around CM?, try for an overnight walk to Scott-Kilvert Hut?.. Just take the necessities, leave in good weather, walk around the mountain. Wander out on the cirque west of Mt Emmett for a good view of the northern end of the park (and the first few days of the track).
Hi Nuts, thanks. It does look like day 1 is the killer, Id be interested to hear what went wrong for you? Was it just heat exhaustion? Pack too heavy? Fitness wasn't up to par? Id be devastated if we had to pitch the tent early and then spend a full day resting on the side of the track, especially if it was day 1, you must have been concerned about pushing on?
As for equipment it is probably a bit early to list our gear because a lot of it will change before this hike but Ill give you an idea where we are at anyway......
My pack is a really old canvas thing around 75ltr that is being replaced but it is ok for what I have been doing to date. I will be upgrading to something lighter but similar size.
My sons Pack is a middle of the range Denali 60ltr we bought at Anaconda. In fact it is my wifes, but my son uses it too.
I can't think of the brand of our sleeping bags but mine is a -5 and its a middle of the road quality, however my sons is a far better quality, its rating is better (I'm not 100% sure atm) and it packs better than mine.
We both used some Aussie brand sleeping mats for years but both of them recently started leaking in a really awkward spot around the nozzle and we can't repair them so we are buying new mats soon. Our old ones were too heavy anyway so its a good excuse to buy something better.
We will share our trangia for cooking. And we will share the weight of our 2 man tent. It is a Lanson we bought from Kathmandu years ago. It weights over 2kgs but works well for 2 of us.
As for clothing we are all over the place with that at this stage. We generally hike in just thermals and shorts with gators. But both of us are keen to get some good breathable lightweight clothing. We both need lighter wet weather gear and we both need good lighter warmer gear. As it is now we just layer with what we have, which is way too heavy for a multi day hike like this. So our clothing is the main thing we need to 'test' more before we go...besides our fitness

We are hoping to be around 15kgs each for this hike once we have our gear sorted........or even lighter if we can LOL
icefest wrote:
For me there were three considerations; 1) Equipment 2) physical fitness 3) mental fitness.
Thanks Icefest and I agree.
Our equipment is something we are working on as outlined above and I am confident we will have ourselves well and truly sorted before we do the OLT as far being able to easily adapt to the varying conditions without having too much gear.
Our physical fitness if I was to be honest is the main concern for me. I mean we are reasonably fit but we need to do some more multi day hikes so we are getting a better understanding of what its like to back it up day after day.
Mental fitness is our strength. We love adversity, in fact we thrive on it! When we do a trip regardless if it is a hike or a camping trip or a family holiday we deep down hope something goes slightly wrong because in our minds its those things that make memories

Don't get me wrong, we are not ambulance chasers by any means but going outside of our limits and pushing the boundaries is what it is all about for us

Nothing worse than being on a trip with someone who whinges and moans the whole way and spits the dummy when things start going a bit pear shaped LOL
Heres a pic of us stuck in the outback with a broken camper....looking back we loved it!

South_Aussie_Hiker wrote:We did a few little things which weren't so smart and which we do very differently now, but most importantly we were probably over-prepared rather than under-prepared. There was never any doubt we were going to be able to safely survive what the track and weather threw at us.
Thanks very much South Aussie Hiker. Care to elaborate on what it was that was no so smart? To heavy perhaps?
I think your approach is exactly how we are approaching it.