Posts Tagged ‘australia’

Hiking the Coast Track - Royal National Park NSW

Monday, January 21st, 2008

This spectacular walk is a year round activity, but especially beautiful in the spring and summer months.

Four of us Shane, Marc, Benny and I headed out on the 3rd and 4th January 2008 and to a mix of weather conditions and terrains.

Its a 27km trail that can be done from Otford to Bundeena or vice versa, the most popular route is from the north, walking down to the Bundeena ferry under the railway track bypass from Cronulla Station or parking at Gunamatta Bay and walking around to the ferry. The ferry, departs every half hour runs between 8 am to 6.30pm every day. You could also if in a group drop one car off at the exit point at Bundeena and drive to Werrong beach coast walk entry at Otford hill.
or vice versa.

I’ve done it from both directions and i think it’s much of a muchness which way you do it. The beginning and end is the most spectacular part of the walk to me, or maybe its just the excitement.
We started from Otford this time.

The first part of the walk takes in the cliff edge above the Bulga Settlement and further along the nude beach of werrong (yes sometimes it’s nice to take the ‘forks in the road’) Werrong is an easy walk but steep on the way back, so probably better if you’re not at the end of the walk. You are walking in packed sand and acacias and gums with the view of the ocean taking in your whole right side. It remains this way for the first half hour before winding inland to the big gums and descending into what is, for me, the most beautiful part of the walk. Almost rainforest like in appearance with giant trees growing from boulders and crossing small creeks in shade. Down hand hewn steps til ascending again into the palms area. Ancient palms line the track in clumps of green,brown and matting, there are glimpses and small tracks and lookouts to the coast and ocean, it’s fantastic to look out at the many headlands that you will be crossing into as you wander. None of the track is hard, i’d say it’s difficult to get lost, though we did take 2 ‘alterior courses’ we always ended up back on track.

After about 3 hours the track opens up to heather and you wind around and descend into the first of the 2 settlements, Burning Palms, it’s not just beautiful, it’s great for a swim and rest and lunch beneath the rock formations in the middle of the beach. The history of these 2 settlements (Era next along) is beautiful to, in the 30’s the government said if you can carry it and build it yourself you can set up huts in the area, and a few very motivated souls did just that, so there are some eclectic ramshackle and mind blowingly interesting huts on the beach too. Families have handed them through generations until a few years ago when it was stated that when the original owner dies it becomes the property of National Parks again, so some are falling to ruin now. Still it’s a peace of history.

There is another slight climb to the next headland and Era settlement, which is much more contemporary, probably because of its locality to Garie it has easier access.

You have to cross the beach here and again it’s just lovely.

As you come down from the next headland there are spectacular rock pools and rock formations as you wander at the foot of a cliff beside the ocean to Garie Beach. Garie has road access and is a popular surfing beach, it even has a hostel if you’ve decided this is the life for you and you just want to stay! (or it is your 1st chance to say that “this is it! I’ve had enough!” and get on your mobile for someone to come pick you up!)

It’s a long beach walk this one, the longest sand scrubbing of the walk, leading to, just inland the track (which is in the grasses above the clearing) for the steepest climb of the trip.

Here on in it is heather, though most of it reaches head height so there’s a bit of shade i don’t recommend it in the heat of the day. It winds up and down through several small headlands and beaches, along cliff walks and on wire meshed track to protect plants but the expansive views to your left of the rolling scrub and the right of ocean are lovely. There are many aboriginal rock carvings here too, if you have the time to seek them out. it’s another 2hrs to Wattamolla. Here again is road access, the best jump-rock in Australia, snorkelling, and a great bush camp area off to your right on the cliffs edge past all the BBQ and picnic areas for the day trippers. This is where we stayed, along with 3 girls who were also doing the coast walk.

The night was beautiful, a couple of flash storms that the smart ones stayed dry through(Shane and Marc) and the dumb one (me) got drenched in. But the clouds were moving so fast and by the time the sun had set, as spectacularly as it could, the night cleared for the stars and sounds of the national park to take over.

The birds woke us at 7, and we had packed up and set out by 8am. Across the river just up from the jump rock and into the very low heather which is the rest of the walk.

It’s so much easier this bit, the gradients have eased out, but because all of the plants only reach waist height it’s very exposed, for these last 4 hours of walking the views are intense, and even more exciting for me are the rock formations. Each pocket is so very different, there are pristine white rock cliffs which rival Dover. Red, orange and yellow sandstone formations, sponge rocks and because you are on the edge overlooking the ocean some brilliant vertigo inducing moments.

This is also where the 2 most remote beaches are, little Marley and big Marley, in the wind and storms there were a couple brave fisherman out on the rocks, but this was the first time, in the 6 or so times I’d been here, that there were other people. It’s maybe not so beautiful as the beaches further south, but it’s a special place to me because of the remoteness.

Blisters and sunburn accompanied us this last bit, but it was just too nice to care, and all of a sudden, we were on the old fire trail which led down to Bundeena and the beaches. It’s still a couple of kilometres down to the ferry and we stopped at the cafes for a bite to eat, the sun now shining at our accomplishment before we took the ferry back across. It was choppy and a perfect relaxing finish to cross to Cronulla. Blessed we were, that our trains met up to take us back to Otford (Cronulla and Otford are on different lines) And Shane the angel, saved us the last very steep walk up to the car to bring it to us down at the station.

It was a great 2 days, fantastic company, and after it’s over, you just want to do it again.

Carmen Major

See Also:

Ten Great Reasons To Get Into Outdoor Sports

Friday, January 18th, 2008

Outdoor sports, in all of their variety, have one thing in common - The effect of engaging in them on a regular basis has a huge positive impact on your life. Whether you start hiking regularly, rock climbing, mountain biking, canyoning, or whatever other outdoor sport - and where regularly can be as little as once a month or as often as a couple of times a week - the numerous benefits of doing anything in outdoor sports become obvious to participants very quickly.

For those who haven’t ever regularly participated in any outdoor sports though, it is worth looking at some of the best reasons for doing so. So here I have attempted to put together 10 specific benefits from engaging in outdoor sports - there are no doubt more, and some of them are actually several reasons wrapped up into one point, but the overall point remains the same >> Enjoy outdoor sports : Improve your life.

10. Improve Your Fitness/Physique


Outdoor sports, all of them, are just unbelievably good for your fitness and overall physique. Whether you are walking up and down hills, climbing vertical rock faces, or paddling downstream, you are giving your body the best sort of all round natural work out - a workout which works your entire body in natural proportions. No muscle groups to worry about, no repetitious straining exercises, no unbalanced exercises - outdoor sports involve natural motions, natural exertions, and usually involve whole body exercise. Gyms use 10 different machines (or more) to achieve the same result as doing a single canyon - and even then you have to be directed by a professional to know how to use those 10 different machines to get a balanced workout.

Our bodies evolved in this outdoors landscape - we are built to walk, run, jump and explore wilderness areas - what better way to improve our natural body capabilities but to use them for what they were designed to do? What better way to make our bodies feel useful again, but to apply them to the situation they were designed for?

Get out into the outdoors every weekend for a few months, and the improvement in your fitness will blow you away. Not only will you have better endurance, better fitness, and increasing strength, but you will find other improvements not usually experienced by gym junkies; things like better balance and flexibility - Even the side effects are positive!

9. A Break From It All…


Outdoor Sports provide a very healthy ‘break from it all’ for when life just gets to be too much. Whether you need to have a break from your stressful job, or you simply need some time away from your daily life, losing yourself (figuratively) in the wilderness or in a challenging sport is a great way of providing some temporary stress-relief.

Take up a sport like Rock Climbing, and it doesn’t matter how much pressure you are under at work, get yourself 20m up a vertical cliff, and suddenly all of your daily worries fall away from you as you focus your whole mind and body on the single problem right in front of you. If that idea itself is too stressful for you, then try heading out into the bush for a bushwalk - the beauty around you, the views, the isolation from the real world all provide a way out of your normal thought processes, habits and stresses alike. Moments of serenity and mental clarity are often found on mountain tops…

8. Cheap Entertainment


At it’s cheapest, outdoor sports is nothing more than a water bottle, the clothes on your back, and some shoes… and with just those few items you can be entertained for hours. For most other outdoor sports there is some technical equipment which is required - but once that gear is purchased, borrowed, rented, or received as a gift, the sport becomes almost free, costing nothing more than the transport and food bills while doing it - and it isn’t like you don’t have to pay for that in your daily life anyway! Cheaper than the movies, cheaper than a night out drinking or clubbing, and far more entertaining than either.

Even better than the single day trips, outdoor sports can provide you with cheap holidays. Why spend thousands of dollars to travel overseas for a holiday, when chances are you haven’t even explored some of the most beautiful parts of Australia? I don’t mean visiting the well known tourist hot spots - I mean going to the out of the way places, the not so well known places, the places which are just as - or more - spectacular than any of the easily accessed tourist destinations. Why spend thousands of dollars flying and staying in hotels in order to have a break, when you can have a relaxing, enjoyable, entertaining break in your own backyard.

It is almost perverse that some of the most active people in the Australian outdoors are foreign exchange students - why don’t more Australians take advantage of the great country we have? Why go to so much trouble to travel the world, only to see things which you have completely ignored at home? Entertainment, adventure, relaxation, exploration…all without the price tag. Cheap Entertainment - great value entertainment.

7. Solitude AND Social Interaction


These two opposing options are encountered in every outdoor trip. For most outdoor sports you need at least one other person with you, often a group for safety - so from that aspect you get the ability to socialise. By involving yourself in an outdoor sport community you will meet great people who are usually the most easygoing happy go lucky you people you will ever meet (once you finish reading this list you will understand why) and you will usually have heaps of time to get to know them while walking, paddling, climbing etc.

Yet at the same time it is easy to find the most peaceful solitude while outdoors. If you feel like some time alone it is really easy to just walk ahead of the pack a few hundred meters (or behind). Many people also enjoy bushwalking alone, so if you really need some time alone, then getting out onto a walking track is a great way to achieve that - if you go to the right areas, you could spend days walking and not see another person.

So whether you want to meet new people or escape from people altogether - outdoor sports provides the means.

6. Perspective

I’m sure I am not alone in thinking that our lifestyle here in Australia is designed to make us lose perspective. It is designed to make us think designer clothes and shoes matter. It is designed to make us think that our vote on Big Brother means something. It is designed to make us worry about what Britney Spears did last week. It is designed to make us stress over what is going to happen next in Neighbours - who’s going to die? Who’s going to get married? It is designed to make us buy the junk food that has the better advertising campaign over the food which is better for us and better tasting… And we all get lost in this world - get caught up in its dramas, in its advertising, in its pointless distractions because it surrounds us all the time.

The only way out of it is to simply extract yourself from it - but like most people I actually like the world I live in enough that I don’t want to become a hermit and live in the middle of nowhere with no electricity and no money. That being said, I do like to remember occasionally that money, electronic gadgets, and television dramas are not what life is all about. Putting yourself into the wilderness for a period of time can really help you realise how irrelevant so many of your stresses at home are, and how much more important certain things are - like bringing enough food for the trip!

Better still, it helps you put your daily comforts into perspective. Nothing reminds you how comfortable our beds are than lying on pointy rocks every night for a week. Nothing reminds you how easy microwaves are to use, or stoves for that matter when you have to cook everything over an open flame with limited tools. Running water earns the respect it truly deserves when you are out bush.

Better perspective again is gained with things don’t go as planned. Never to wish ill fortune on anyone, but if you do enough outdoor sports you will encounter problems one time or another eventually. Hopefully nothing too serious, but missing a path can make a 3 hour walk turn into a 6 hour walk. Twisting an ankle is easy to do and if done in bad circumstances can leave you stranded in awkward positions. No one goes into outdoor sports planning to encounter these sorts of hardhsips, but if - when - they happen, I guarantee your perspectives on life will change as you fight to correct the situation.
I think these changes in perspective can really make a positive difference in your daily life when you return to ‘the matrix’.

5. Lose Weight

Backed by a multi-bazillion dollar industry I figure weight loss is a reasonably important thing to many people. I don’t find many “Lose weight by doing outdoor sports” ads around the place - I wonder if that is simply because no one knows how to make money from it? (See reason 8) The fact is that if you do outdoor sports regularly - you will lose weight. End of story. No fad, no gimmick, no sales pitch, no special meetings - just find a sport you enjoy and do it regularly. Once a week is enough - go find a different walking track every week - Explore Australia one four hour walking track at a time! You will lose weight.

Want to lose weight fast? Get a hiking pack, grab a tent, sleeping bag, bedroll, water purifier, portable stove and whatever food you can carry - then go for a week long hike. When you are walking all day everyday and can only eat the food you can carry on your back - I guarantee weight loss will result. Plus, for most people the swap from soft drinks, beer, and all of the other mass marketed drinks to nothing but water for a week is probably the healthiest thing you can do for yourself.

I should probably mention that I am not a dietician, doctor, or anything like that, so I have no statistically backed medical proof of this claim, but how many overweight hikers have you ever seen? Get out into the outdoors and one of the first things you will notice is that everyone who does this stuff regularly is a very healthy weight - and I guarantee it isn’t because they pay Jenny Craig to help them keep it.

4. Improve Self Esteem

The ways in which outdoor sports improve the self esteem of those doing them is innumerable. If you lose weight while doing it, won’t that improve your self esteem? If you improve your fitness, your physique, your balance and coordination, won’t that improve your self esteem? If you feel a zen-like sense of perspective about the world, a sort of ‘enlightenment’, won’t that improve your self esteem?

Again, you don’t take up outdoor sports with the goal of ‘Improving my self esteem’…but it is just what happens when you do it. Sometimes it comes from something as simple as bragging rights - you spend the weekend rock climbing and feel like a colossus when you return to work on Monday and tell everyone that you climbed up several 20m high vertical cliffs on the weekend…I wonder what they did?

It doesn’t even have to be bragging to be effective, sometimes just the excitement of having done something interesting. Having spent your weekend walking through the bush to find this incredible waterfall, pristine clear water, no people around for miles…just you and the nature around you…that’s what you did with your time. Something productive. Something profound. Something which was healthy, challenging, and worth it. Better than wasting your life away in front of the television.

3. Challenge Yourself

Directly following on from the previous point, the ability to challenge yourself is something which I personally believe is largely lacking in our society. It is hard to feel good about yourself when everything you do is designed for the lowest common denominator - all challenge has been removed from our life for fear of offending someone or causing a lawsuit.

Outdoor sports inherently involve a degree of challenge in them. At the most basic level the challenge is as simple as walking to the top of the hill (more challenging than you would think on some hills!), on a more difficult level it may be learning to keep your kayak upright on rapids, or staying on your mountain bike on a downhill course. At the most extreme, it is surviving a challenging environment or situation. No matter what level you may find yourself at you can do something which will challenge your preconceived notions of what you can achieve. Our super-comfortable world has all of us drastically under-rating our abilities - constantly keeping us in a state of not trying to hard, or pushing ourselves. Push past a boundary once in a while and find out what you are actually capable of. It will blow you away.

2. The Beauty of it All…

If you think this, or this, or this, or this or any of these are incredible to look at…you should try being there yourself. There are some scenes, some places, some tricks of light which simply cannot be caught on film. Nor can the feeling of being in a place of such beauty be captured on film. These photos should act as inspiration for you to go out there yourself - see it for yourself, feel it for yourself. Envelop yourself in the beauty of the outdoors because the narrow perspective of a single scene provided by a camera never does justice to the reality of the experience.

Go and experience it.

1. It Is Good For Your Soul

And finally, the number one reason to get involved in Outdoor sports is actually the culmination of all of the other reasons. This is not a cop out, this is about what happens when numerous individual benefits interact with each other to create a sum greater than their individual parts. Sure, improving your fitness is good, sure adding perspective to your life is good, and allowing yourself the occasional stress free, inexpensive break from life helps out, plus challenging yourself and seeing an improvement in your self esteem is a great consequence to have from doing outdoor sports…but what do you think would happen if you felt all of these things happening to you - in your life? You feel your body improving - you are losing weight, you are losing your breath less easily, you feel your body gaining strength, shape, form. You start to find yourself able to do things you never expected to be able to do, your self esteem improves and you find yourself generally happier with life as all of the irrelevancies fall away and you focus more on what actually matters… Your whole life improves.

You feel physically great, mentally together, and happier in all regards.

In a world where depression affects 1 in 5 people and as many as 4 out of 5 people are overweight, what better advice can someone be given but “Start bushwalking”? Start Mountain biking, start canoeing, start rock climbing, start surfing, horse riding, road cycling, snowboarding, canyoning, whitewater rafting, caving…. Find your sport - find something YOU enjoy, and do it. Its fun, its cheap, and it will improve your life in ways you can’t imagine.

Wrap Up

If you would like to start doing more outdoor activities but are unsure where to start or what to do, then drop into our Outdoor Sports forums and ask there. You will find plenty of support, help and advice. Outdoor Sports all have an element of risk with them, so make sure you understand what you are doing before starting!

I hope to see you out on the tracks one day.

Geronimo Canyon

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Here is the Geronimo Canyon video, followed by a trip report written by Rob Luikens:

Having wasted days and nights eating and drinking with family and friends to usher in the new year, it was high time we grabbed our gear and went off to do something fun. We hadn’t heard any first hand feedback on this canyon, but the book described Geronimo Canyon as a great canyon, and that’s more than enough for us.

We left our cars at the fire shed at about 10:30 and walked down to the Wollangambe. We missed our turn off and ended up a bit far downstream. Thankfully, it was fairly easy to find our way back to where we were meant to be. A short walk over a saddle and we were on the correct ridge. At 1:30, we made it to the first abseil. We stopped for a sandwich, and Shane made friends with an exceptionally inquisitive skink, who seemed to love tuna in sweet chilli sauce and was willing to risk life and limb to get some.

Then came the first abseil. I wasn’t anything too difficult, but you have to be careful recovering the rope. The start of the canyon is quite pretty, and has lots of little fish swimming in it. Excited, the group continued on. After about 10 minutes of high canyon walls and Lost World type scenery, we reached the jump in that gives the canyon its name. I abseiled down and checked it out. Once I’d cleared it Shane and Jake jumped down. Both came out screaming about how cold the water was. Even at this time of year it’s pretty chilly in there. A couple more minutes of swimming and scrambling and we were at the next abseil. It wasn’t what I’d call a difficult abseil, more like irritating. The rope got covered in mud making it slow going. The ground was mossy making it hard to get a good footing. After that, it was another fairly short walk and scramble until we hit the Wollangambe. We had a well earned soak in the river, got out of our wetsuits, and began the 2 hour odd stroll back to the car.

Not a bad day all in all. The canyon gets its grade 4 more from being slippery and sometimes tricky that extremely physically demanding. It’s nowhere near as demanding as say Claustral. I wouldn’t call it one of my all time greats, but it was a good, albeit rather short day.

Rob Luikens

 

See Also:

Arethusa Canyon Trip Report

Monday, December 31st, 2007

This is one of those trips which will be brought up in campfire discussions for years to come. “Remember that Canyon where we had to walk out in the dark with a couple of headlamps and a couple of crappy torches between 5 people?” Yeah…this canyon didn’t go exactly as planned.

Arethusa is a less well known and less travelled canyon than most around Katoomba. I’m not exactly sure why - my best guess is because the standard guide book ‘Canyons Near Sydney’ mentions it once being polluted, and so maybe that turns a lot of people off it. It could be argued that it is the difficult walk in and walk out that deters people - but that is only the case because so few people do it. If more people do it, then clear walking tracks will appear and the walk in and out will be pretty straight forward. So I’m not sure why more people don’t do it, but thats the way it is, and that is why there is no track leading into the canyon, and why there is no walking track out from the canyon.

That being the case, we found the directions we tried to follow from the Canyons Near Sydney book lead us to a pretty solid cliffline on the way into the canyon. So we decided to ditch those directions, and followed our own navigations from the Katoomba Topographical map. We picked a path down a ridgeline, down into a gully which met up with Katoomba Creek just under the high tension powerlines.

We followed Katoomba Creek for more than two and a half hours
before reaching the start of the main canyon, marked by an obvious abseil. Again the guidebook describes getting through Katoomba creek mostly dry as possible, but our experience was that we had to do several swims. I expect the water level was a little higher than normal, but I have trouble imagining staying dry throughout the 2+ hours spent in the creek.

We climbed up to a ledge on the right hand side above the abseil, and anchored from several slings wrapped around a decent sized tree. The start was a little difficult, but I dropped down first, and boy the bush bashing in and long walk through the creek was worth it just for this abseil. Dropping straight down into traditional blue mountain canyon alongside this awesome pumping waterfall. The waterfall was just awesome (see the photos…) and as I called “Off Rope!” down the bottom and stepped off from the small rock I was standing on, onto the sandy bottom, I got a bit of a fright as I sunk to my waist (seriously) in sand. I’ve sunk to my knees in light packed sand pleny of times, but never to my waist before.

Anyway, continuing on through the canyon was pretty standard fare - there was a lot of climbing down slippery rock surfaces (all of the rocks were very slippery actually. I guess regular traffic through most other canyons helps wear away the slippery mosses and algae etc that normally cover all of the rocks), and quite a few swims. There were very few jump ins because there were always large rocks just under the surface. Some of the climb downs were quite tricky and dangerous - high risk of twisted ankle mostly.

The end of the canyon came quickly enough (took us 1.5-2 hours to complete the main canyon) and we had some lunch atop the waterfalls (I think it was about 3:30pm, or maybe even 4:30pm at this point). We abseiled down Arethusa Falls and started climbing our way down the creek (large boulders, lots of negotiating a way through it all) to the small waterfall which marked our exit from the creek up to the cliffline.

We took our wetsuits off, rinsed the sand out of our shoes, and started the stupidly steep climb straight up to the cliffline. The path was occasionally there, regularly not, then after a short while of traversing along the cliffline, it simply ceased to exist. It was hard going as the ground was steeply falling away to the right constantl, we were walking on loose dirt/rocks/scree with very few plants around to either hold on to or to stabilise the dirt, and where there were plants, they were usually sharp, spiky, thorny plants which just made things unpleasant. (Lawyer Palms? Not sure if they were or not, but there was one particular type of vine with razor sharp thorns on it which liked to trip you over and cut your legs open at the same time)

We kept trudging along this damn cliffline for hours, forever certain that just around the next bed…surely Beauchamp Falls would be just there… but it just kept not happening. Bush bashing, on an uneven unstable ground, with a group of 5, makes the shortest distances take so much longer. This wall section was less than 2.5km, but it took us around 5 hours to get to Greaves Creek. After 3 it was obvious that nightfall was coming, and we started to lose group Morale. There was talk of setting up camp and waiting until morning. Where we could ’set up camp’ exactly was another problem in itself - there was not an inch of flat ground anywhere, and getting down from this cliffline presented its own set of problems - the further down you went, the steeper, rockier, and dodgier it got.

The simple fact was, that getting stuck on this hillside wasn’t an option, and we had to press on. It was obvious though, that the situation had destroyed morale - we had been walking for several hours, it wasn’t fun walking, it was uncomfortable and a few of us had already run out of water. The group was moving slower, fatigue was setting in, and as light was failing, the risk of accident was rapidly increasing.

I wanted to get down to the creek below us, because I knew that the other side of the creek was a walking track. A walking track would resolve all of our morale issues, and simply prove that we could make it out tonight. I picked a line down the hillside, always moving towards Beauchamp Falls, and managed to get incredibly lucky by finding myself at a point above the river which wasn’t too difficult to get down into the ankle deep water. I reached the creek bank just as it got so dark that I had to pull my headlamp out.

Rob had a headlamp, I had a headlamp and a spare mini LED torch, and trev had a small torch too - Ifound the route across the creek, then guided everyone across. Alan climbed up the other side, and immediately found the path - I can’t express in mere words just how incredibly super duper holy crap releived I was. Nightfall was breaking point. If we didn’t reach the creek just as night fell, there was a good chance we wouldn’t have been able to convince the group to keep moving. Reaching the creek was a good start, but if the track wasn’t immediately on the other side - if we had to climb up the ridge for several hundred meters or something stupid like that, it could have been just as bad. But there it was. We had the track, and we had enough light (sort of - 4 light sources, 5 people) to follow it. Only another 2 hours of walking uphill to go! And all of us out fo water… :(

The trip from there was otherwise uneventful. We filled up a bottle with some running water as a safety, but rationed out the last 500ml water which rob had between us occasionally. And walked our way back up Rodriguez Pass Walking track to the Grand Canyon Walking track, then onto Pilcher Trail, finally walking back to the car along the dirt road. We got out first bit of phone reception on Pilcher trail at 10:30pm, and got messages out to loved ones telling them that we were alive, not injured, and everything was fine - call off the resuce parties! We got back to the cars at about 11:20pm, and have never been happier to be at the end of a days canyoning.

Better yet, we even managed to drive the two hours home (we all live in Sydney) without falling asleep while driving!

See Also:

Whitewater Kayaking - Snowy River and Tasmania

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

This video comes from KayakCanberra and has some really nice whitewater in it. Check out the rest of his videos, and have a lok at his website: kayakcanberra.com which is regularly updated. They are currently in New Zealand getting on to some incredible looking rivers.