I have been a supporter of PWS over many years and spent a considerable amount of time and effort in volunteer work on parks. It therefore gives me no pleasure at all to write this complaint about the access to Mount Fortescue and the camping platform for the Cape Pillar walk.
With regard to the Three Capes track I have in general supported the concept and in fact met with Stuart Lennox the then Three Capes project manager in 2007 and worked out what I thought were some acceptable options for existing walkers to Cape Pillar area. At his request I then put this in writing.
However, I was on a walk in the area this week and quite frankly I am disgusted with what PWS has done, and I do not get upset easily. The PWS website currently has under Tasman Peninsula a walk listed to Mount Fortescue via Hauy track, but when I got to the junction with the Cape Hauy track, there was a sign said no entry (due to the spurious excuse of phytophthora). Below is the extract from your website as at time of writing.
On web site http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/index.aspx?base=3876
Mt Fortescue Track
(6-7 hours return)
This track takes walkers to the 490 metre Mt Fortescue and provides excellent views of the rugged coastline. The track commences at Fortescue Bay. Follow the Cape Hauy Track (see above) for about one hour to a low spur where a sign marks the Mt Fortescue Track, which leads off to the right.
By and large most walkers coming from the Retakunna hut will have reached or be close to the Cape Hauy junction by the time anyone wishing to go to Mount Fortescue reach that point.
I say that the phytophthora is a spurious excuse for stopping people. The very susceptible Banksia marginata is in very good health all the way along the Hauy track, which suggests that the argument is quite spurious and only being used as an excuse no one could come up with a reason that would be acceptable. In any event is not beyond the wit of PWS to construct a better scrub down station or chemical treatment entry gate to replace the very basic one currently existing. How can walkers going one way be not a threat but those the other are? This is all more ridiculous because walkers can start from the exact same Fortescue Bay spot and walk to the Mount Fortescue by the prescribed route, but presumably do not pose a risk of bringing phytophthora that way.
Denying people access to the spectacular cliff lookouts 10-15 minutes up the track, is simply an appalling situation It is truly ridiculous and from observation many other people probably thought the same as several parties (9 people noticed in short period of time) ignored the sign and proceeded up the track. In other words, a walk of under 3 hours return or trip 6:30 to be able to get views from the same point by the designated route.
The other irritant is the placing of the non 3 Capes walker’s campsite at a stupid location. I wonder if whoever decided that spot has ever done an overnight walk to the area. It is about 2 hours walk to the junction with the only designated non 3 capes walker campsite at Wughalee Falls on Retakunna Creek and then 20 minutes downhill to get there (in the opposite direction to where you want to go). From the junction it is about 30 minutes to Lunchtime Creek. The name of the creek should tell you something.
It seems to me that PWS has decided to get nasty to local or non 3 Capes walkers and I feel that it is a real slap in the face to those walkers like myself who have always been happy to share the area. It leaves me quite disgusted with PWS.