I am interested in Tasmania’s winter snowfalls/snow depths over the last few decades and was recently surprised to learn that BOM doesn’t measure snowfall. A group of us did the Overland Track in mid August in 1970 with very good snow cover the whole way starting from Derwent Bridge. A couple of us went again same time in 1971 when the snow cover was very good but came late with heavy falls the week before we got there. An indicator of relative snow depth in those two years was that Kitchen Hut (it was single storied then) was buried in snow with just the roof capping protruding in 1970 and up to the top of the door in 1971. The walking was arduous in places where the track was not obvious and where, if you walked off it, you’d fall thigh to hip deep into unseen bushes. In both years hard snow on the upper slope of Cradle Cirque was deep enough for snow-caving (but I was amazed to see recently just how vegetated that slope is, leaving hardly anywhere to make a cave). I can’t remember seeing any photos of the Park being so well covered with snow as in the two years we were there. So my questions are:
- how often do such good winters occur and when was the last one?
- does the southern end of the OT still get snow deep enough that snow shoes are sensible if not just about imperative?
- does a good snowfall year on the mainland also mean a good snow year in Tasmania?
Somewhere at home, I have a printed chart showing the highly variable monthly pattern of snow depth over about 30 years at one of the NSW ski resorts, Perisher I think. Does such a thing exist for Tasmania, eg for Ben Lomond?.
I am planning to walk the Overland Track in mid August this year, a kind of anniversary walk, but probably only if there is a good snow cover because that is what makes the trip special. That’s what probably prompted this post in the first place apart from general interest and a bit of concern.
Thanks for your interest. Mike