by wildlight » Tue 17 Sep, 2013 7:17 pm
I have done this walk.
There was, in a dry-ish year (autumn) water to be found east of the summit of Mt Hump. It was 300 meters of altitude down from the summit- so this poses an interesting question. Is it just easier to carry some extra water and save the "fetch" procedures? Especially as there isn't much "up hilling" after collecting water near Millers.
Mt Hump Creek has some spectacular waterfalls, without a map in front of me, I can say this: From Mt Hump, head East to the creek, and then walk upstream, it was in the vicinity of about a kilometre, that falls appeared. They resembled Horseshoe Falls a little, (Tassie). Broad Falls, a sheer drop then cascades. Very nice.
As you descend from Gable End to the Razorback, it overgrown but navigable. The vegetation was thick but not higher than a meter (excluding the "trees")- you weren't pushing through a jungle or anything like that.
East of Mt Hump, is a really nice vantage point from which to photograph looking North. Great views. The Razorback Ridge to the South of Hump is scrubbier, and dropping down off Purgatory Spur wasn't fun. Nav was tricky- hard to pick the spur at the top end, and things got very scrubby further down. The area around Golden Point was one of the snakiest places I've been to.
Mt Hump is a really nice place- yes I do recommend a free standing tent- however a pegger will be made to work also, as there were lots of rocks around. I carried 8 litres of water from just near Millers Hut (on first trip to Hump)- it lasted me until the Dolodrook the next day. The waterfall excursion was a separate trip- went searching for water (as reported earlier in this post) and just kept going to Mt Hump Ck and the waterfall. Kept going because progress was so easy.
This is a cracker of a walk- definitely one I would want to do again, although with a car shuffle, to avoid the "loop back" track bash- say come out near Licola or the Mt Margaret Track somewhere on the Licola Rd. Like I say- it's all from memory, not maps. The trip went down as "one of those really really awesome walks".
Best of luck with it.
Safe steps
wildlight
An Add/Edit
The Western face of Mt Hump, in one spot was a "climb" not a "walk". It did involve holding on with both hands, and pushing up with feet- when coming up that way on a different trip- and a fall would not be disastrous- just a couple of meters. A bit like the clumps of rock on the North face of Mt McDonald.