Bushwalking pictures.
Forum rules
Please keep the width of embedded images (using [img] [/img] tags) in this forum to no more than 800 pixels wide (this will avoid them being clipped without notice by most users' window sizes). Attached images can be any resolution so long as the file size is no more than 1 MB (attachments will be displayed by the forums as thumbnails no larger than 800 pixels linked to the full-size image).
Please include a description of the pictures' content so that readers know what they're all about.
For topics focussed on narrative rather than the photos, please consider posting in one of the 'Trip Report' forums instead.
Thu 08 May, 2014 12:02 am
Some lovely colour there Robi - thanks.
Where were they taken?
Thu 08 May, 2014 10:31 am
Looks like he got to drive up Mt Read. I didn't realise there was so much fagus up there.
Thu 08 May, 2014 6:28 pm
eggs wrote:Looks like he got to drive up Mt Read. I didn't realise there was so much fagus up there.
Fagus abuts the western side of the famous alpine Huon pine up there.
Fri 09 May, 2014 1:17 pm
The photographer parked near one of the locked gates and walked up.
Info is in "The Abels" volume two. The book mentions 21 sq km of fagus.
Fri 09 May, 2014 2:08 pm
Buddy wrote:eggs wrote:Looks like he got to drive up Mt Read. I didn't realise there was so much fagus up there.
Fagus abuts the western side of the famous alpine Huon pine up there.
Doesn't Mt Read have the largest single patch of gunnii - something measured in acres?? I recall mention of something like that in the relevent Abels book.
Edit

Obviously I took a while between writing and submitting that comment.
robl wrote:The photographer parked near one of the locked gates and walked up.
Info is in "The Abels" volume two. The book mentions 21 sq km of fagus.
That was what I was referring to..
Thanks
Last edited by
gayet on Sat 10 May, 2014 8:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Fri 09 May, 2014 10:18 pm
robl wrote:The photographer parked near one of the locked gates and walked up.
Info is in "The Abels" volume two. The book mentions 21 sq km of fagus.
Thanks robi and others. Shame about all the towers etc on top, but having just read the Abel description, Mt Read is now on my "must visit some time" list. Sounds like it would be great in Spring as well as Fagus time.
Before this, it was just a mysterious mountain somewhere in the West which had apparently replaced Gray as being the most-mentioned high rainfall site in daily BOM reports
© Bushwalk Australia and contributors 2007-2013.