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Posts Tagged ‘new south wales’

River Caves Canyon and the Glow Worm Tunnel

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

On the Sunday of the Australia day long weekend, I tried my best to cram some family friendly canyoning in so that everyone with us could come along. The plan was to head out to do River Caves Canyon in the morning, then come back and do the Glow Worm Tunnel and canyon…it sort of worked out that way.

I organised to meet Penny at Zig Zag at 9am, and so had to leave the camp site at 8am. Well it turns out that after a night spent up drinking around the fire until 4am, most people don’t like to get out of bed! So we lost quite a few of the participants from River caves, and ended up heading out with just Carmen, Ben and myself to meet Penny.

We met up, then drove to the canyon, walked down the ‘Natural Bridge’ saddle into the gully. Walking along the gully (through the billion spiderwebs!) we actually managed to walk a short distance past the canyon before I stopped to check the maps and Jamieson directions, only to look up and notice the incredibly narrow crack in the cliff face covered up with bright green trees. So we walked back the 50m to the bottom end of the River Caves canyon, and upon walking into it, the change was just awesome. A ‘Canyon’ is a hard to define concept when it comes to deciding whether you are bushwalking, canyoning, or maybe you should be paddling - but instances like this make the difference oh so obvious. The difference between the gully we were walking in - a gully with cliffs on both sides of it, and a flowing creek in the middle - and the canyon that we just walked into - also with cliffs either side and a creek in the middle - left no doubt in your mind that one was really a gully, and the other was a canyon.

River Caves Canyon leaves no doubt in your mind where its name comes from either. The high walls are incredible, and the overhanging caves at water level are really quite awesome. We enjoyed the change from the hot open gully to the narrow, cool, dark canyon. Walking up the canyon (against the water flow) was very easy and the scenery was beautiful - if there was any complaint to be laid against this canyon, it is simply that it is over too soon. If you blink, you will miss it.

So after we got back to the car we dropped Penny off back at Zig Zag, then drove all the way around to Newnes again to pick up the masses for the second canyon of the day - the Glow Worm Tunnel Canyon. My plan was to drive a short distance down the road, then walk up the hill to the tunnel, but there was concern that the kids wouldn’t be able to make it (being an 8km round trip), so we decided to drive to the tunnel. Someone knew a shortcut across to the top of the plateau (because I knew the drive out to Lithgow, then back up Glow worm tunnel road took a long time) so we decided to go with that option. We crammed about 8 or 9 people into each of the two 4wd’s we had…we had to, the shortcut apparently was a 4wd track - and off we went. 3 hours later, and 18 very bored, sore people got out of our 4wd’s at the Glow Worm Tunnel parking lot. The short cut wasn’t nearly as short as I expected, and we ended up needing to go all the way along the Glow Worm Tunnel road anyway.

Oh well, we made it, and most of us decided that we would simply walk back down the hill this time, rather than go back via the 4wd track. So we walked through the tunnel - I don’t want to ruin anything here for people planning to do the tunnel, but there’s something pretty cool in the tunnel, and it rhymes with Flow Terms. Actually, to be honest, they aren’t the most impressive display of Glow worms that you can find - but to be fair, it was in the middle of the day with many many many people walking through the tunnel constantly. So the poor creatures were probably trying to hide for the most part.

Once on the other end of the tunnel, the plan was to then go back up via the canyon beside the tunnel - thus completing the Glow Worm Tunnel Canyon. But because we were walking back down into the valley below, we didn’t head back up to the cars via the canyon - so we missed out on the canyon :(

We did however, not miss out on the walk down into the valley, which was pretty spectacular. The walk was a very easy gradient the whole way back down to the Wolgan River, and the views from the beginning were really very nice, looking down over the valley.

We all eventually made it back to our camp site, and had a much more relaxed night than the previous one.

See also:

Twister Canyon Video and Trip Report

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Australia Day 2008, No better time to be camping and canyoning out in Newnes. Weather was impeccable, and company even better.

Shane had decided to take Nick, Marc and me, Carmen out to Twister Canyon, the ‘Amusement Park’ Canyon. Nick and Marc were newbies, their first canyon. I had done this canyon, and only this canyon, once, a year before. I’d say it’s the greatest starter canyon, because anyone can do it, from littlies to oldies, the unfit, the infirm, and it gives you an idea of your competence. Even though, I was actually shitting myself on the way, thinking i’d become to sick to do it. But Shane could calm a tiger, and i’d run out of butterflies before we even parked.

It’s a simple short walk down to the canyon, about 15 minutes worth, taking a your first right off the fire trail. It doesn’t take long to descend from the eucalyptus to the ferns and lush walls of the canyon, enjoying some pagoda formation rock walls on the way.

We gear up in our wetsuits and let the fun begin.

The first few pools are slippery slides, so fun and simple. slide down, climb out, slide down, swim through to the next bit, walk through some lovely tree ferns and palms and then there it is!

The first jump, and truly, the shakes came back, given the boys do this all the time, i had to toughen up. So i did, and wow, that feeling, as you swallow your tummy the wrong way, you just know its good for you. I watch Shane and Nick (who are obviously capable of much greater grades than this easy 3) climb back up and then further up, along the wall, to do the big jumps into the pool. i don’t want to look, I think it’s impossible someone can cover so much distance with just a single step and no run up, so i close my eyes and let the video watch, but yes, they are OK.
Marc thinks as i do, and backs down from the high jump, to just do the normal jump again, I’m proud of him, he’s my partner and i don’t want to be carrying him out, i bags being the one carried out! Half Way through, Nick amazes us by finding the smallest little hole and pulling himself up through it and popping out the other side! this guy is definitely in need of harder canyons!

From there on in the jumps get a little lower, but sometimes tougher, of the 3 jumps or the one slide or jump, the last is the most technical (not that it’s technical at all for canyoners, but us newbies think first,and hesitate, before do) because you have such a small pool to land in. And I guess because on our first trip there, when there were eight of us, it was the place where a friend slipped off, and nearly wasn’t OK.
It is beautiful this canyon too, especially the last descent, straight from the little pool, you pull out and do a rope climb down the last bit. Which is always hilarious for me. Because i can’t use my broken arthritic arms, so i get all the attention of these lovely fit fellas, helping me down! such a lucky girl!

They ease me off the top backward, and i just fall into one of them and do the last bit myself, it’s not very high, or very slippery, and it’s quite easy for (almost) anyone, so no excuses, you should be out there!

We contemplated at the bottom, doing it again as it hadn’t taken as long this time, with less people, just over half an hour, but we didn’t have time for Rocky Creek canyon which follows on from it. But by the time we’d scrambled around the rocks and did the walk across the tree and then the straight up bit at the end, we were all so tired and still in ecstasy of our canyon adventure that we completely forgot!

Ah the smiles on the faces of those new to canyoning, it just makes you glow at the end.

So much fun, and any demand on your health or body is stripped by the satisfaction. highly recommended. EASY. FUN.

See also:

Firefly Canyon Trip Report and Video

Tuesday, February 5th, 2008

We didn’t get to Newnes on the Friday before Australia day until about 11:30am, so it was a pretty late start. We decided to pick Firefly canyon because it had a few easy abseils (good because this was going to be Josh’s first time abseiling) and wasn’t described as a ‘long’ day or anything like that - hopefully we would be able to get back before nightfall!

We walked from the camp site along the road to the gate, then through the industrial ruins to the large gully we were meant to walk up. I was hoping to find a track, but alas, none existed - it was a gully bash the whole way up. The first bit was just bashing through thin shrubs, the occasional stinging nettle etc. I stumbled across a Bower Bird nest (first wild one I had ever seen) scattered with the usual assorted blue decorations. As the gully increased in steepness we found ourselves climbing up boulders more and more and bashing through shrubbery less and less. We got to the first cliff line pretty quickly, but our excitement at that achievement died just as quickly as we realised that the first cliff line was nowhere near the last one - this hill seemed to just keep on going up!

After a while we eventually reached the final cliff line - it was a rather frightening cliff line to reach after an hour of climbing; one that didn’t have any apparent way up it! It was a sheer cliff (with over hang) and it seemed to carry on like that in both directions. Not detered (we trusted Jamieson!) I sent Jake out to the right up a little ascending ridge of boulders that might possibly show a way up. He climbed up a little and reported that it was a no go. I told him to keep going. I was right :p

The way was up a very narrow crack between a large slab and the cliff line. You could cold chimney it, or shimmy through it and step up some conveniently stacked chock stones and climb to the top of the slab. Once atop the slab, you then had to jump over the crack and climb up a short cliff to get on to the very top of the cliff, but it was easy enough (if not incredibly dangerous simply because of the exposure). We scrambled up the next pagoda rock section and finally reached the top of the ridge where we saw a prominent little cairn.

We started down the other side, and found most of it was down steep difficult drops, but we zig-zagged regularly and managed to find a way down without needing to abseil anything. We did use a hand line at one point, and had to make some hairy jumps, but made it without incident. Once we reached the main creek, it was reasonably easy going. Bashing our way through the creek, picking our way through the millions of spider webs (which we had been doing the whole way up and down either side of the ridge now that I mention it), we pressed on until it started to get wet before putting our wetsuits on. A short while later we reached the first abseil and dropped down that into a nice chilly pool.

As I said above, this was Josh’s first time abseiling - he’s an incredibly capable guy and done his fair share of physical activity, so I was confident he wouldn’t have any problems - but of course you still put all safety into place. I talked him through it from the top while Jake was below on belay. The abseil wasn’t too difficult and so was a great start for him. He dropped over without any problems and we were on our way. The second abseil was only a short distance after the first one, and we got to practice again. The third one, not far again, then the fourth one…then the fifth one…When we came to our sixth abseil we decided that we must be at the end and there must be another way down. We were right, and a track headed off down the true left side of the canyon.

We descended the final drop down the gully at the end of the canyon pretty quickly and found the track heading back to the ruins. We didn’t get back to the camp until after 8pm (that’s what you get for starting a canyon at midday!) . Jamie seemed to really enjoy his first canyoning trip, and Josh did well for his first time abseiling ever.

See Also:

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:

Whitewater Kayaking on the Barrington River Video

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Here is the video I put together from our Whitewater kayaking trip back on the 26-29th of November. There was quite a lot of footage, and I spent all day putting it together, but I certainly think this is my best video yet. Each one is getting a little bit better, just like I had predicted! Woohoo for practice!

It is pretty long, but you should absolutely watch until the end of the first song. I think its pretty cool, with a couple of funny bits.


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