Thu 19 Dec, 2013 4:09 pm
Thank you for your enquiry regarding the Great Ocean Walk. If you are hiking multiple days of the Great Ocean Walk and intending to camp within the park, it is a condition of the walk that you book into the designated Great Ocean Walk hike-in campsites. This can be done through our Information Centre by phoning 13 19 63.
Within the Great Otway National Park you are only permitted to camp in designated camping sites.
None of our camping sites are designed to accommodate a hammock. Many of our coastal tree species are quite spindly and frail and would not bare the weight of a hammock. Furthermore all designated camping areas have been cleared of trees, so it would therefore not be logistically possible in most sites to find two trees in close enough proximity to hang a hammock.
All vegetation in the Great Otway National Park is protected under the Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act and National Parks Act, under which it is an offence to tamper with any vegetation within the park.
If you require any further general information on the Great Ocean Walk I recommend you read the FAQ’s attached or look at the home page for the Great Ocean Walk on Parks Victoria’s website: http://parkweb.vic.gov.au/explore/parks ... ocean-walk
Please do not hesitate to contact me if you require any further information. Regards, Kate.
Kate Churven
Ranger Team Leader, Great Ocean Walk
T (03)5237 2512 E kchurven@parks.vic.gov.au
Parks Victoria
PO Box 63, Apollo Bay VIC 3233
Thu 06 Jun, 2024 3:50 pm
Fri 07 Jun, 2024 6:42 pm
Sat 08 Jun, 2024 7:17 am
backpaqer wrote:Given this is a 10 year old message, it may be out of date. But looking at all the Parks Vic offerings, they seem very scared of hammocks and have not addressed their needs in their camping offerings. I've stayed in many Vic parks in my hammock and generally there are always some good solid trees to take advantage of - or my car and one solid tree. Always looking up and assessing the risks. Parks Vic have obviously taken heed of their legal team and cleared out anything that could squish unsuspecting campers (and making campers less intelligent in the process when scoping out non-Parks Vic campsites). After spending hundreds of $$$ on my hammock gear and absolutely loving the kind of sleep and total lack of pain every morning - this leaves me with two options around the GOW; not go, or stealth camp.
The whole booking campsites all year thing is stupid too - I've been looking at kayaking the Glenelg River. Never been before and I've got no idea what campsites to book beforehand. They force you to prebook, but what if you're having a great day on the water and just want to keep going? That campsite reservation doesn't allow you to say "oh I've paid but I want to stay here instead". Same with the GOW - feeling great? want to keep going? Parks Vic will thank you for your donation and probably fine you as well. Maybe they wont? It's just not clear.
Sat 08 Jun, 2024 10:02 pm
Tue 11 Jun, 2024 5:31 pm
Xplora wrote:
I think the reasoning is not tying anything of weight to the trees as it could damage them. I know they do not allow horses to be tied to trees. Hammocks would be similar once a person's weight is in it. A horse doesn't put weight on the tree unless it tries to get away. I suppose it is worse if the rope around the tree is thin. When winching a 4wd from a tree a wide strap is used to protect the tree.
Wed 19 Jun, 2024 7:51 pm
Eremophila wrote:Providing you have phone coverage there’s nothing stopping you from booking on a day-by-day basis…. Unless it’s a busy period.
I’ve just had a quick scroll through some of my photos. Some campsites, such as the one shown below, are definitely not suitable for hammocks. And in those campsites which may have large enough trees, you would be trampling the undergrowth to access that space.
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