200504
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200504 [2023/08/11 08:29] – created - external edit 127.0.0.1 | 200504 [2023/11/14 13:27] (current) – kennettj | ||
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41045 Victoria Rd West Ryde NSW 2114 Tel 9858 5844 | 41045 Victoria Rd West Ryde NSW 2114 Tel 9858 5844 | ||
- | Tents | ||
- | Bushwaking Packs | ||
- | Travel Packs | ||
- | Travel ware | ||
- | Sleeping Bags | ||
- | . - Rainwear | ||
- | Icebreaker Merino | ||
- | Snow wear | ||
- | Bushwaking boots | ||
- | Sleeping mats | ||
- | Climbing Equipment | ||
- | Cookware | ||
- | Water filters | ||
GPS | GPS | ||
Books & DVD's | Books & DVD's | ||
Line 274: | Line 261: | ||
management. | management. | ||
- | Death of Grace Noble | + | **Death of Grace Noble** |
- | We were saddened to hear that Grace Noble | + | |
- | passed away on 20" March after a short illness - | + | |
- | aged 95 years, | + | |
- | Grace, | + | We were saddened to hear that Grace Noble passed away on 20th March after a short illness - aged 95 years, |
- | the early 1930s. | + | |
- | All members will join in offering sympathy to | + | Grace, and her husband John joined |
- | John, and also Dorothy and Malcolm, both ex- | + | |
- | SBW. members. | + | |
- | A tribute to Grace, by Helen Gray appears to | + | All members will join in offering sympathy to John, and also Dorothy and Malcolm, both ex- SBW members. |
- | on Page 4. | + | |
+ | A tribute to Grace, by Helen Gray appears to on Page 4. | ||
4" May Committee Meeting: | 4" May Committee Meeting: | ||
Line 435: | Line 417: | ||
Get your entry in now for a chance to win great prizes ! | Get your entry in now for a chance to win great prizes ! | ||
- | | Page 4 The Sydney Bushwalker | ||
- | April 2005 | + | **A Tribute to Grace Noble** |
- | A Tribute to Grace Noble | + | On March 20th 2005 S.B.W. member |
- | On March 20th 2005 S.B.W. member | + | Grace Edgecombe was born of Australian parents in 1910 in Buenos Aires. In 1913 she and her mother |
- | died. She had led a long, adventurous, and full life. | + | left for Australia, via Scotland where they were marooned by the outbreak of World War 1. The journey was resumed in 1913, but Graces father, the artist Harry Edgecombe, didn't get back until 1919. [The story goes that one day 9 year old Grace went to her mother |
- | Her interest in others, and in everything, remained to | + | and it could be my father" |
- | the end; as did her memory, her humour, | + | Certificate at Sydney Girls High. Lacking the prerequisite Latin to study Arts at Sydney University, |
+ | she embarked on a Science degree instead [with no school science!] | ||
- | Grace Edgecombe was born of Australian parents | + | In 1935 Grace joined S.B.W. She has described herself as a rabbit amongst tigers |
- | in 1910 in Buenos Aires. In 1913 she and her mother | + | Tiger Walkers of the 1930s and their amazing walks] but my reading of a trip report by Gordon Smith in |
- | left for Australia, via Scotland where they were | + | 1935 shows that Grace was no rabbit! In 1944 Grace married fellow S.B.W. member John Noble. |
- | marooned by the outbreak of World War 1. The | + | |
- | journey was resumed in 1913, but Graces father, the | + | |
- | artist Harry Edgecombe, didnt get back until 1919. | + | |
- | [The story goes that one day 9 year old Grace went to | + | |
- | her mother and said Theres a man at the front door | + | |
- | and it could be my father.] Grace didnt start school | + | |
- | until aged 8, but at 16 had completed the Leaving | + | |
- | Certificate at Sydney Girls High. Lacking the | + | |
- | prerequisite Latin to study Arts at Sydney University, | + | |
- | she embarked on a Science degree instead [with no | + | |
- | school science!] and graduated with Ist class | + | |
- | Honours in Geology in 1930. From geology came | + | |
- | Graces love of bushwalking, | + | |
- | the early 1030s As a student of geology you could | + | |
- | escape some of the limitations of being a girl; you | + | |
- | could camp and wander alone. | + | |
- | In 1935 Grace joined S.B.W. She has described | + | During WWII Grace worked for AWA. Because |
- | herself as a rabbit amongst tigers [referring to the | + | |
- | Tiger Walkers | + | |
- | but my reading | + | |
- | 1935 shows that Grace was no rabbit! In 1944 Grace | + | |
- | married fellow S.B.W. member John Noble. | + | |
- | During WWI Grace worked for AWA. Because | + | I first met the Nobles |
- | the Germans controlled most of the worlds | + | |
- | supply of quartzite for radio crystals, her work | + | |
- | included searching maps and mining records for | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Helen Gray | + | |
- | + | ||
- | probable sources, and {ater the application of her | + | |
- | mathematical skills to achieve the required electronic | + | |
- | frequencies of crystals. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | I first met the Nobles | + | |
- | Dorothy, young John, and baby Malcolm - at | + | |
- | Jamberoo when I was a teenager. I was intrigued by | + | |
- | this family; so different from the 1950s model, with its | + | |
- | unconventional mother who avoided housework, fed | + | |
- | her family on wholegrain bread and vegetables, cared | + | |
- | little for possessions, | + | |
- | creative, and to think freely and express their opinions. | + | |
It was a family very much ahead of its time. | It was a family very much ahead of its time. | ||
- | Graces first job had been school teaching, which | + | Graces first job had been school teaching, which she resumed as her children approached adulthood. This gave her the means to travel and in 1970 she was on one of the first organised treks to Nepal. Other trips followed: to Europe, where she revelled in being an older woman travelling and walking alone, then to Argentina, Chile and Peru entirely on her own. She added to her interests the study of Ancient Greek and Spanish, printmaking, |
- | she resumed as her children approached adulthood. | + | |
- | This gave her the means to travel and in 1970 she | + | |
- | was on one of the first organised treks to Nepal. | + | |
- | Other trips followed: to Europe, where she revelled | + | |
- | in being an older woman travelling and walking | + | |
- | alone, then to Argentina, Chile and Peru entirely on | + | |
- | her own. She added to her interests the study of | + | |
- | Ancient Greek and Spanish, printmaking, | + | |
- | and ceramics, and still found time for operas, | + | |
- | concerts, plays, and art exhibitions, | + | |
- | bushwalking friends. I was lucky and privileged | + | |
- | to be one of those friends; Grace heard and saw | + | |
- | everything with an open, fresh, mind. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Grace was an active walker with the club until in | + | |
- | her 70s, and not just on easy walks. She was known | + | |
- | to say yes impulsively to any invitation to go | + | |
- | bushwalking. Thus she came to be on a Narrow | + | |
- | Neck trip in the' | + | |
- | the way one gets off, and up, Narrow Neck. [Her | + | |
- | children didnt call her The Muddie-headed Wombat | + | |
- | for nothing!] She ended her written account of the trip | + | |
- | thus: Home late, to account the horrifying story of | + | |
- | ropes and chains. | + | |
- | But of course, it was in the walks programme. | + | Grace was an active walker with the club until in her 70s, and not just on easy walks. She was known |
+ | to say yes impulsively to any invitation to go bushwalking. Thus she came to be on a Narrow Neck trip in the 70s, Grace had forgotten about the way one gets off, and up, Narrow Neck. [Her children didn't call her The Muddie-headed Wombat for nothing!] She ended her written account of the trip thus: Home late, to account the horrifying story of ropes and chains. | ||
- | Why didnt you tell me? | + | Why didn' |
- | I knew you wouldnt take any notice. | + | The death of Grace' |
- | The death of Graces | + | John] found solace in many interests, and the family, especially in encouraging the grandchildren in their |
- | crash was devastating, | + | creative endeavours. Grace cared little for the opinions of others. But she DID care about her friends, and cared very much about the state of humanity, and of the world. Dorothy summed it up at her Mothers funeral: |
- | John] found solace in many interests, and the family, | + | |
- | especially in encouraging the grandchildren in their | + | |
- | creative endeavours. Grace cared little for the | + | |
- | opinions of others. But she DID care about her | + | |
- | friends, and cared very much about the state of | + | |
- | humanity, and of the world. Dorothy summed it up at | + | |
- | her Mothers funeral: | + | |
- | Ever an optimist, she looked on the positive side | + | Ever an optimist, she looked on the positive side of everything without exception. This meant that never in my life did I hear her say an unkind thing about another person. She could get angry and infuriated with people, but never did she demean them. |
- | of everything without exception. This meant that | + | |
- | never in my life did I hear her say an unkind thing | + | |
- | about another person. She could get angry and | + | |
- | infuriated with people, but never did she demean | + | |
- | them. | + | |
Farewell, dear friend. | Farewell, dear friend. | ||
Line 1847: | Line 1755: | ||
April 2005 | April 2005 | ||
- | The First of Many Visits to Beautiful Tambo Creek | + | **The First of Many Visits to Beautiful Tambo Creek** |
Alison Shames | Alison Shames | ||
Line 1853: | Line 1761: | ||
.-- Not Peter Love's Easter Walk 2005 | .-- Not Peter Love's Easter Walk 2005 | ||
- | The Putty Road Roadhouse at 7:30 on | + | The Putty Road Roadhouse at 7:30 on Good Friday morning looked more like a bushwalker' |
+ | caravan park, with both Peter Love's " | ||
+ | trip masochists meeting at the Roadhouse parking lot. After a quick bacon, egg and cheese sandwich (oops, | ||
+ | it's no-meat Good Friday, Grace belatedly remembers) and deciding to help Ken's group with a car shuffle, we drive everyone to the end of the Grassy Hill Fire Trail to begin the walk. Ken's group descends and begins what we thought would be a walk from hell and our group happily ascends to Alidade Hill. The view on Alidade Hill was duly admired and off we went to conquer Pass 12. | ||
- | Good Friday moming looked more like | + | Ropes came out, packs were hauled, scouts went scrambling. One scout got a bit ambitious and found her way down without coming back for the rest of us, but we managed to find a route and an hour and a half |
+ | later we were down on the muddy banks of the Colo River. The river was swollen and murky and made us | ||
+ | wonder how the rest of the walk would go. We rewarded ourselves with a bit of lunch, and pondered | ||
+ | how we would fare on other passes, given that Bob Buck labelled Pass 12 "an easy though steep route" | ||
- | a bushwalker' | + | A quick cross over the Colo and we embark up Pinchgut Creek. We avoid a waterfall by climbing to the |
+ | right, and then drop back down to the creek for a water refill and afternoon tea. The creek is flowing and the waterhole is picture perfect. We continue walking, relatively level with the creek and our pace slows as rock hopping commences. The rocks are slippery, and the end of day approaches. It would be kind to use the word " | ||
- | caravan park, with both Peter Love' | + | Our morning begins at 8am, we cross the creek, load up with water for the day and start climbing towards Mount Savage. Why climb Mount Savage, you ask? The stunning views, the beautiful vistas? No, simply because it's marked on the map. After lunch, we find our way down to the " |
- | + | ||
- | " | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Clacher' | + | |
- | + | ||
- | trip masochists meeting at the | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Roadhouse parking lot. After a quick | + | |
- | + | ||
- | bacon, egg and cheese sandwich (oops, | + | |
- | + | ||
- | i's no-meat Good Friday, Grace | + | |
- | + | ||
- | belatedly remembers) and deciding to | + | |
- | + | ||
- | help Ken's group with a car shuffle, we | + | |
- | + | ||
- | drive everyone to the end of the Grassy | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Hill Fire Trail to begin the walk. Ken' | + | |
- | + | ||
- | group descends and begins what we | + | |
- | + | ||
- | thought would be a walk from hell and | + | |
- | + | ||
- | our group happily ascends to Alidade | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Hill. The view on Alidade Hill was duly | + | |
- | + | ||
- | admired and off we went to conquer | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Pass 12. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Ropes came out, packs were hauled, scouts went | + | |
- | scrambling. One scout got a bit ambitious and found | + | |
- | her way down without coming back for the rest of us, | + | |
- | but we managed to find a route and an hour and a half | + | |
- | later we were down on the muddy banks of the Colo | + | |
- | River. The river was swollen and murky and made us | + | |
- | wonder how the rest of the walk would go. We | + | |
- | rewarded ourselves with a bit of lunch, and pondered | + | |
- | how we would fare on other passes, given that Bob | + | |
- | Buck labelled Pass 12 "an easy though steep route" | + | |
- | + | ||
- | A quick cross over the Colo and we embark up | + | |
- | Pinchgut Creek. We avoid a waterfall by climbing to the | + | |
- | right, and then drop back down to the creek for a water | + | |
- | refill and afternoon tea. The creek is flowing and the | + | |
- | waterhole is picture perfect. We continue walking, | + | |
- | relatively level with the creek and our pace slows as | + | |
- | rock hopping commences. The rocks are slippery, and | + | |
- | the end of day approaches. It would be kind to use the | + | |
- | word " | + | |
- | " | + | |
- | 2-person tenters were a bit slow in claiming territory, but | + | |
- | Maurice came to the rescue and gave up his perch, | + | |
- | finding a lovely level space with room enough for one | + | |
- | closer to the creek. We all fall asleep looking forward to | + | |
- | leaving the creek in the morning. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Our moming | + | |
- | load up with water for the day and start climbing | + | |
- | towards Mount Savage. Why climb Mount Savage, | + | |
- | you ask? The stunning views, the beautiful vistas? | + | |
- | No, simply because it's marked on the map. After | + | |
- | lunch, we find our way down to the " | + | |
- | Creek. We start rock-hopping, | + | |
- | and slowly pass the afternoon. We spot a suitable 2- | + | |
- | star site at about 4pm, and grab the chance for a level | + | |
- | night' | + | |
- | + | ||
- | on for an hour more. We all enjoy a peaceful evening. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Sunday morning and Peter promises that the creek | + | |
- | will open up and we'll move a bit quicker. We hope to | + | |
- | get out to the Colo by lunch, in time to either explore | + | |
- | pass 20 or go up 18 and down 19. We have 6km of | + | |
- | creek in front of us. It looks like a lot on the map ... | + | |
- | and it is. Bob Buck didn't nickname this " | + | |
- | Creek" for nothing. The going was very slow indeed. | + | |
- | And the map looks nothing like reality--those wide | + | |
- | open spaces never eventuate. We cross the creek, | + | |
- | cross back again, slip on the rocks and slip some | + | |
- | more. We stop for lunch at a lovely water hole, and | + | |
- | enjoy a bit of swimming and rinsing off. The | + | |
- | afternoon is much the same, but a bit more slipping as | + | |
- | the bodies tire. Peter learns that all good falls happen | + | |
- | in threes: first, his right side goes into the creek; | + | |
- | second, he gets sucked up by a mud hole; third, his | + | |
- | left side goes into the mud. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | We finally make it to a very swollen Colo River at | + | |
- | 3pm. Too late to explore any passes. We all agree that a | + | |
- | stroll up the river is the suitable route. We walk along | + | |
- | the banks of the Colo, the water just too deep for river | + | |
- | walking. Quickly we meet our match with a kilometre or | + | |
- | so of thick, unforgiving blackberry bushes. I was | + | |
- | thankful to be last in line, and let Peter and Ian and | + | |
- | others do the blackberry bashing to clear a path for the | + | |
- | bludgers among us ) Having forgotten his machete in the | + | |
- | car, Ian had to settle for his Swiss Army blade. | + | |
- | Maurice' | + | |
- | while the rest of us survived with just a few scratches. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | The bewitching hour approaches and we go on the | + | |
- | lookout for a suitable campsite. We spot a decent | + | |
- | level area but we still have an hour or so left of | + | |
- | daylight and the party agrees to keep looking for | + | |
- | another site. We arrive at a second possibility but it's | + | |
- | The Sydney Bushwalker | + | |
- | April 2005 Page 19 | | + | Sunday morning and Peter promises that the creek will open up and we'll move a bit quicker. We hope to |
+ | get out to the Colo by lunch, in time to either explore pass 20 or go up 18 and down 19. We have 6km of | ||
+ | creek in front of us. It looks like a lot on the map ... and it is. Bob Buck didn't nickname this " | ||
+ | Creek" for nothing. The going was very slow indeed. And the map looks nothing like reality--those wide | ||
+ | open spaces never eventuate. We cross the creek, cross back again, slip on the rocks and slip some | ||
+ | more. We stop for lunch at a lovely water hole, and enjoy a bit of swimming and rinsing off. The | ||
+ | afternoon is much the same, but a bit more slipping as the bodies tire. Peter learns that all good falls happen in threes: first, his right side goes into the creek; second, he gets sucked up by a mud hole; third, his left side goes into the mud. | ||
- | not as good as the first one, and while some are ready to | + | We finally make it to a very swollen Colo River at 3pm. Too late to explore any passes. |
- | settle for a lopsided night' | + | |
- | group agrees | + | |
- | literally 1 minute away is the best campsite we have | + | |
- | seen all trip. A Colo beach, views of the red rocks, flat | + | |
- | places to sleep ... payback time for a day of hell on | + | |
- | Suicide Creek. Many celebrate with a swim to rinse off | + | |
- | the grime of the day, and we all enjoy a night around | + | |
- | campfire. The comfort | + | |
- | giddy and before we know it, we were all barefoot | + | |
- | around the campfire! We'll be blackmailing Maurice | + | |
- | Tan should just resign now before | + | The bewitching hour approaches and we go on the lookout for a suitable campsite. We spot a decent |
- | known as " | + | level area but we still have an hour or so left of daylight and the party agrees to keep looking for |
+ | another site. We arrive at a second possibility but it's not as good as the first one, and while some are ready to settle for a lopsided night' | ||
- | Monday was thankfully uneventful. The blackberries | + | Tan should |
- | were few, the slippery rocks were underwater and a faint | + | |
- | trail helped to speed the walk along. We reached Canoe | + | |
- | Creek by 11:30 and enjoyed a quick cup of tea courtesy | + | |
- | of a camping party' | + | |
- | we climb and climb out of the Colo. Back at the cars by | + | |
- | 2pm, just in time for a late lunch of a burger with the | + | |
- | works at the Roadhouse. And we beat the Easter traffic, | + | |
- | about the only thing that went to schedule this entire | + | |
- | with those photos for the rest of his presidential term and __ trip! Alison Shames | + | Monday was thankfully uneventful. The blackberries were few, the slippery rocks were underwater and a faint trail helped to speed the walk along. We reached Canoe Creek by 11:30 and enjoyed a quick cup of tea courtesy of a camping party' |
INDIAN HIMALAYA | INDIAN HIMALAYA |
200504.txt · Last modified: 2023/11/14 13:27 by kennettj