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Michael Keats

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Issue_16_April_2016-62

Service To BushwalkingMichael Keats Receives The Order Of Australia Medal

On Australia Day 2016 Michael Keats was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for services to bushwalking and as an author. This is an interview conducted by Bushwalk Australia editor Matt McClelland a month later.

Michael Keats at Hero Point Yuri Bolotin

62 | BWA April 2016


Michael Keats

When did you get into bushwalking?I grew up during WWII living at Balmoral Beach. In those halcyon days even getting to the beach was an adventure - crawling through coils of barbed wire. I would have been five or six. The adjacent headlands were then natural bush. Encounters with wildlife were a daily occurrence. Tracks were few or non-existent. Dad had a petrol ration so we were always going “bush”. We would picnic at Oxford Falls, Turimetta Head and on school holidays go to Camden, visit the underground marvels of Jenolan Caves, or explore the New England Ranges. As a family we did lots of walking. It was unremarkable to be in what others regarded as outlandish places we went where the spirit of adventure called.

I was 11 when we took the flying boat to Lord Howe Island for two weeks and 14 when I went on a student exchange to rural New Caledonia. Interest in walking became more intense when I was at Sydney University and used the vacations to be a mule for post-graduate field geology students, walking miles across the Central West.

However, serious bushwalking had to wait until retirement, when I turned 60. In a self -interrogation a year or so earlier I reviewed the spectrum of what I had enjoyed most in my life to date. Bushwalking and chronicling activities topped the list. So bushwalking became my de facto occupation.

What initially drew you to bushwalking?I suffer from excessive curiosity. If I find something out of place, exotic or unusual I need to know all about it. What I love about the Australian bush is the huge diversity of everything, from the big picture horizons to the subtle nuances of individual floral speciation. When I encounter man-made objects I want to understand how and why and when. In this mode I become part detective, part researcher and then find myself seeking out descendants of the people who built or crafted railway lines, dams, stockyards, etc. Research is also a disease and knowing when to stop can be hard. Love of maps is another failing. My first book on the Lower Grose River was inspired by a first edition copy of the Kurrajong topographic map given to me by bushwalker Don Brooks. It was annotated with evocative notes. I just had to go and see for myself.

What do you now look for in a good bushwalk?Diversity, challenges, the unknown, any factors that cause adrenalin to rush are essential ingredients for a “good” bushwalk. To plan a walk I take a topographic map and seek the area that is most crowded with wiggly topographic lines, then study the aerial photos of the same and see how much bare rock, deep canyons, slots and challenges are in that area. Then I concern myself how to get there. I am so fortunate that over the years so many like-minded adventurers have been prepared to come with me on the basis that it is an adventure and that we have no idea of what we may find. After the walk I enjoy the pooling of photographs and reliving the day (or days), as I document the sights seen and the emotions experienced. Then there is the sharing of the story with other walkers and non-walkers who would love to have been there. That is my recipe for a good bushwalk.

... what I had enjoyed most in my life to date. Bushwalking and chronicling activities topped the list.

BWA April 2016 | 63


You have written more books than most bushwalking authors. Tell me, what are the books about and why did you write them?In the world of work I always had goals, key benchmarks to achieve and time lines that were often ridiculous. I was also an innovator and dreamt up activities that drove the organisations I headed up. I guess a reason I wanted to write about what I saw and experienced was that nothing else existed. “Therabulat Country” was conceived because the area is so special. When it came to writing the first book I was very green. By the time I had the second one in concept form I was already organising a logical flow of the material - Passes of Narrow Neck. By the time of the fourth book, “The Upper Grose Valley - Bushwalkers Business,” co–authored with Brian Fox there was a pattern to the work. This process has reached its effulgent flowering in the Gardens of Stone series.

What is it about the Gardens of Stone area that makes it so special to you?Love affairs are always hard to explain to third parties. It is now ten years since I first went walking in the Gardens of Stone area. From the very first contact I was smitten. I had discovered pagodas, high level canyons and remote terrain that was relatively easy to walk through, and where the topographic maps were largely empty of any reference to human intrusion. This dry unique area was chock-a-block with all the elements that pressed my bushwalking buttons. I conferred with co–author Brian Fox and explained to him what I wanted to do. Fortunately he loved the area as well. My initial construct for the work was three books. This rapidly grew to five and now it is nine. The magnitude of the area and the wonders within it leave me astounded after every walk that there is more exploring to do and so much more to learn. The prospect of the coal industry wantonly seeking to destroy the area is like a third party wanting to kill your lover. You stand up and fight.

If you could pass one piece of legislation in NSW this year what would be it be?An irrevocable law preventing any expansion of the coal industry, domestic or for export coupled with an open-ended financial requirement that every coal mining company and executive, past and present be compelled to pay the total real cost of restoring what can be restored and that the state work towards the expansion of solar energy and battery technology.

Being awarded an OAM is a big deal and a real honour. I imagine that it changes your perspective and focus somewhat. Has your mission changed in anyway this year?When the letter arrived in October 2015 I went into mild shock. The fact that it had to be kept secret until January 2016 did not help. What the wait did do was to provide time for careful and thorough thought about my role in bushwalking. Sixteen years ago I could never have imagined that a decision to embrace bushwalking would have led to such recognition. I also never expected to be standing up in front of Commissions of Inquiry defending the National Estate. Being an activist is a new mission. So much of our natural heritage it is at risk from economic, political and social pressures. I look around and find that there is only a handful of stalwarts to fight the good fight. My passion will not let me rest until the future of our natural heritage is secure.

If you could encourage bushwalkers on anything, what would it be?Nurture your curiosity, go bush, explore, discover, capture images, use social media to share, encourage others to venture forth with you. Use the political system to give the bush a voice. It does not have a vote unless you give it one.

Sixteen years ago I could never have imagined that a decision to embrace bushwalking would have led to such recognition.

... Gardens of Stone area. From the very first contact I was smitten.

My passion will not let me rest until the future of our natural heritage is secure.

64 | BWA April 2016


Gardens of Stone Tom Brennan

BWA April 2016 | 65