A group of 5 us (including BWT members MJD, ILUVSWTAS, Bap & myself) had a superb weekend on the rarely visited & untracked Loddon Range this past weekend, the range being located west of the King William Range and the last significant dolerite range before the Frenchmans Cap region.
Our departure point was a fairly arbitrary location on the Lyell Highway, descending steeply to the, thankfully, not too swollen, Surprise River. An icy wade across here led us uphill to Eucryphia Lead, a long forested & in places scrubby spur leading up toward Ronald Cross.
Lunch on the tops & the views in all directions were simply spectacular, a cloudless bluebird sky greeting us after several days of snow during the week prior. Our designated camp site was originally Needle Rock Tarn, but soon after the summit of Ronald Cross we came across a flat, sheltered area with enough water to last us our short stay.
After setting up camp here it was a long and often arduous traverse south along the Loddon range to the high point; we pretty much followed the broken dolerite ridge tops all the way along in a vain attempt to avoid the wiry alpine scrub which choked everything, particularly annoying as linking sections of rock & scree to gain pace was near impossible. Still, after 2 hours we reached both summits (6m height separating the 2 so we visited both) for amazing views to the Prince of Wales, Spires & King William Ranges and to the west the remote valleys of the Jane River & beyond to Frenchmans Cap. Just under 2 hours on the return leg saw us back at our little camp site just on dusk, exhausted after a 10 hourish day but treated to a beautiful clear sunset over the Cap to the west.
Next day was a lazy start as we had done the hard yards the previous day, so we just had the descent down the lead to deal with & the odd spot of scrub. The river level had dropped, so an easier wade led us to the final climb back up to the Lyell Highway, a change of clothes & a hungry team pit stop at the Hungry Wombat at Derwent Bridge.
It was a great 2 day adventure to some truly remote, untracked & rarely visited country.
Some photos below: