slparker wrote:Hi,
i have a colleague who is walking the OLT with his wife in a couple of weeks time. he has walked it before in a commercial group but is going unsupported this time.
Given the weather he is concerned about snow and the capacity of his wife to push though the white stuff. he is reasonably experienced walker but has never walked in snow.
What's the best advice? On the assumption that the forecast is good on his week of walking (but still snow lying around):
Snowshoes?
Pick another walk?
wait to see what teh conditions are?
cheers
My suggestion is to have a good plan B in place, and ring the ranger at Cradle & maybe Lake St Clair 2 or 3 days ahead to check current snow conditions (and check the forecast).
This time last week, I went in to help a friend on the OLT. She's done it twice before with no snow, no probs. She trained for this one, but is not as well as she was last time. On the plateau, there were a plenty of deep drifts. She quickly tired from walking in snow, and still fell a lot, even using poles and my snow shoes. We bailed well before the Scott Kilvert track junction, as she wasn't going to make it to Waterfall Valley before dark at that rate, we had no real idea how far the snow would last, and some more snow was forecast.
2 others with us (one a first timer 17 yo, and the other ridiculously fit) handled it just fine without snow shoes or poles.
We met a range of people on their way in late in the day - some with apparent invisible floatation devices on their boots (!), and others who were exhausted from post-holing and generally not having their feet stay where they put them.
So it depends entirely on the person.
2 of us had a scary experience in the drift just after Kitchen Hut. We sank in up to our hips (hadn't put the snow shoes back on yet), and that foot somehow got trapped. 'Tortoise goes to help friend and ends up in the same predicament.'

It wasn't a good feeling, with the other leg on the surface of the snow. The only way out in the end was to slowly dig ourselves out with a potty trowel.
If it's possible for your friends to take a pair of snow shoes that could fit either of them, that might be a reasonable compromise. I found the snow baskets on my poles made it very much easier than when I swapped with my friend's basketless ones.