frank_in_oz wrote:Starting to turns early last week up in the Cradle area. My wife was told Anzac day is the best time?
johnw wrote:I'm also interested in this, never having visited Tasmania in autumn. Will be there first 2 weeks in May and hoping to see fagus in colour at some point. There is a distributon map on the PWS web site but it lacks detail.
http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/veg/fagus/distribution.html
I'm aware that Cradle Mtn is a "hotspot", but having been there recently wasn't planning to return this trip. Likely will go to Mt Field though (best bet?). Are there other places? I'd rather walk somewhere to see it, not just jump out of a vehicle at a lookout.
Kind regards,
John W
walkinTas wrote:...so we can compare notes.
wello wrote:Around cradle, also try Hounslow Heath (behind Waldheim).
johnw wrote:There is a distributon map on the PWS web site but it lacks detail.
http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/veg/fagus/distribution.html
walkinTas wrote: John, This might help. I dropped the PWS Distribution map over the Tasmap Index map. 4038 Cradle, 4037 Wills and 4235 Du Cane are the hot spots. Mt. King William II and Cheyne Range down to Mt. Gell and Mount Bobs also feature on the distribution map. Amazingly, I can't see a single red dot on 4027 Dobson (Mt. Field).
walkinTas wrote: Bring your thermals, the nights are getting cold now.
wello wrote:Some might find this hard to believe, but I was at Cradle Mtn from the 11th May to the 14th May and the Fagus is still quite reasonable in a lot of places. The better spots were Crater Lake, Lake Dove (mainly on Marion's Lookout), Lake Wilkes, Waterfall Valley and Innes Falls (these falls really are worth a look!) Areas that are now gone are Lake Rodway area, Twisted Lakes, and Mt Campbell. Being this late, the colours aren't at their best, but it was still well worth the trip.
Wello
Return to Bushwalking Discussion
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 47 guests