Monday, 25 May 2020

Woodbridge to Kettering Manuka Hills 2020

Today I'm taking a corona virus walk, meaning I'm alone. It will be from Woodbridge to Kettering and then to the Manuka Hills and return.

The weather is a little overcast, but pleasant for walking as I set off.

Passing through the village of Woodbridge, I continue north on the Channel Highway. Walking behind the barriers along the way make it somewhat safer, although in places you have to be careful not to slip down a steep bank due to lack of foot space.

Large gum on edge of Little Peppermint Bay

It's actually much larger than it appears in this photo, the base is about two metres across.

Safe walking behind a guard rail
You see many more things walking than riding in a car. There's a sharp uphill curve leading out of Woodbridge on the north side. The land below the curve has always been a mess of blackberries and pine trees looking completely impenetrable. Walking up I noticed someone has been at work clearing some of it and doing planting. There is a house you can barely see back in there so I guess they are doing the work.

Someone is making an effort
On I go, climbing out of Woodbridge and heading north. I stop at a pull off point to take a photo looking southeast.

Bruny Island and Umbrella Point across the Channel
That was the scene of our last walk before shutting down because of the virus.

Not long after this spot, I begin to head down to Trial Bay.

I have a look at the ditch running  beside the road and am astounded by the amount of road kill bones. They continue on for quite a distance. I assume it's a popular crossing spot for wildlife as blackberries line the side of the ditch and there are openings pushed through by animals about every metre or so.

Unlucky previous walker

Vineyard just before Trial Bay

The smoke is a pile of rubbish they are burning.

Last look down the Channel
I pick up the track leading around the point that was put in by several local Kettering groups. It's very pleasant walking and they've installed seats in several locations.

Gee, a chainsaw and a wood lathe and that would make a good salad bowl
Just kidding.


It's fungi season

The white ones are really tiny

A bit of colour along the way

The track
There were a few people walking the track, but we all managed to keep our distance.

Reaching Kettering, I walk down to the ferry terminal. Due to the virus, the ferries to Bruny only run at certain times of the day and the one below was just sitting there with no cars waiting.

One of the very new ferries
The older, larger double decked one has been retired and replaced with two smaller, single deck boats.

Time will tell when things return to normal how well this will work. In the tourist season, traffic has been backed up down the Channel Highway at peak times. That's over a kilometre. What difference two smaller but faster boats will make remains to be seen.

I walk up ferry road heading for the athletic oval where I'll have lunch.

Kettering Marina

Who knows?

Art work? It's gold and filled with cement
I cross the unnamed creek on the foot bridge above and start on the track just below the oval.

As I walk, I feel something brushing my knee and look down to find I'm being accompanied by a very large, very hairy Alsatian. At the same time, he looks up at me, and feeling the need to say something, I say "G'day mate, I don't think I'm who you think I am." He obviously felt the same way and immediately turned back along the track. I have no idea where he came from as I had no one behind me at the time.

The oval
Beautiful downtown Kettering




I look for and find a comfortable spot for lunch, complete with seat and take my break.

After lunch, I continue heading for the start of the Manuka Hills track.

I come to a spot where the old, original Channel Highway turns off the new highway.




This is what's left of the original Channel Highway and I spent many years driving back and forth to Hobart every day.

There were very few passing spots between here and Kingston and during apple season you always got stuck behind a truck taking a load of fruit into Hobart. Mostly fairly old or army surplus trucks, they were very slow compared to modern trucks.

I had an advantage in that I was driving a minivan. This had a throbbing 848cc crosswise engine driving 10 inch front wheels, through a four speed transmission with a gear stick about a metre long. A further advantage was that this was a company car (Rank Xerox) which made it much faster than just a private car. I used this further advantage to make my own passing opportunities.

Present day Channel Highway
I follow beside the highway, heading for Dough Boy Drive where I'll turn off to find the start of the track.

Dough Boy Drive. Nice little climb
 It flattens out at the top and continues on.
Mount Wellington lurking in the distance

I follow the road to a cul-de-sac at the end where the start of the track leads uphill.

The track
This climbs up between properties.

Looking back

The usual litter has been cleared as a defense against bush fires


I spot a large wallaby leaping away from me in the bush. Much bigger than the pademelons I usually see. Too fast to get a photo, unfortunately. Possibly a Bennett's wallaby.

There is much thumping coming from the surrounding bush as things move away from me.

A junction
I've decided at this point as it's been a long day, that I will take the track behind me which leads down to Wilsons Road and back to Kettering.

On the way down I hear voices and see a young couple striding up the track. The woman is in front and, despite wearing an ankle length skirt, is setting a cracking pace. Her partner is behind and indicated to me that he's having a hard time keeping up.

Happy to set my own pace, I continue down.

The track leading to Wilsons Road


Start of the track. Bring your horse
I reach Kettering and start on my return journey to Woodbridge.

Wilson Road heading down


On the way back I reach a point where I can see the wreck of the S.S. Laura, a steamer that once traded around the south east coast. You can reach it from the end of Martins Road in Woodbridge by bush bashing, but it's pretty grown up at the moment. There is a plan to construct a proper track, but it's been pushed back for the present.

I've covered 16.73km in 4:57hrs. You can add 3.5km for the walk Bryn and I did before I set off for Kettering.




Monday, 4 May 2020

Proctors Hill - a coronawalk with Peter 2020



Mainly fire trails and regeneration burnt scrub but its and alternative way to or from Mt Nelson for when we return to some normalcy

-Peter





Interesting ruins



 

Sunday, 3 May 2020

Woodbridge to Crippstown a corona walk 2020

Well, we're right in the midst of the coronavirus crisis with almost everything shutdown. Parks are closed and gathering of more than two people generally illegal. The U3A has had to close down which has stopped our weekly bushwalks.

I plan to do some walks around Woodbridge, Tasmania where I live, mostly up some of the side roads which lead into the hills.

I will have a companion who you will meet below. This walk goes to Crippstown, which is a local name for a local area which not many people still remember.

Tasmania used to be known as the Apple Isle and the area around Woodbridge was all apple orchards when we first moved here back in 1969.

The Cripps family owned one of the larger orchards and the area where the family lived was called, locally, Crippstown.

My companion and I are starting the walk from Silverwater Park, just off the Channel Highway.

Silverwater Park
 We exit our back gate, turning south along the Goat Track, heading down to Silverwater Park.

That art installation in the photo above celebrates another bygone industry of the Channel Area and Woodbridge in particular, scallop fishing. There used to be a lovely pale green, cement block long drop toilet here, surrounded by blackberries before this art work was installed.

Bryn the whippet. My walking companion

The footbridge over Masons Creek

The walk could go over the bridge, along the beach and up through the school grounds to the Channel Highway which would extend it a bit, but not today.

Mouth of Masons Creek
No bridge today, but we'll walk up the hill below which takes us to the Blacksnake Path that leads past Woodbridge School.

Up the hill

Heading south along the path to the school locally known as the Blacksnake

Woodbridge School. Primary & Secondary
The Marine Studies Centre near the Woodbridge Jetty is also part of the school.

We continue on as we're turning onto Thomas Road by the 122 year old Uniting Church.




Uniting Church on right and old scout hall on left
A couple of walkers in the distance, but we're maintaining our separation. The large hill in the distance is Woodbridge Hill.

We'll pass some of those very distant houses

A bit of colour in someone's garden

Weedings Way
Thomas Road does a 90 degree left here and heads up a hill. Weedings Way is a fairly recent development. Well, in the last 30 years.
Thomas Road heading uphill
Bryn and I walk to the top where the road makes another right angle turn and heads for the hills.

Looking back down the hill

Just behind us is the smokehouse. Producers of smoked Atlantic Salmon and Ocean Trout from the fish farms around the Channel

The next section

Apple Orchid next to the Smokehouse
There are several new homes along here. Years ago all the now bare hills would have been covered with apple trees. When the market died out, the trees were removed with a government grant of $300 an acre to put in cattle. That didn't last too long before that market went bust.

I'm keeping track of this walk using two types of technology. I use a GPS tracker to produce the map, but we also have DPS which is a much older, battery free system as used by Bryn.

DPS or Dog Positioning System as demonstrated here by Bryn
Large metal bird watching Bryn perform

Looking up the D'Entrecasteaux Channel
Bruny Island on the right.


The Bruny Island Ferry Mirambeena
 A new company has taken over the ferry route and is putting on two newer, smaller ferries. We'll see.
Looking back down
We turnaround, heading down the other side, coming to Cripps Road. As we walk we pass the old and new on opposite sides of the road.

Old and new. Olives on the left and a small portion of the original apple orchard on the right

Locals

I seem to remember this house being called the Admirals House
Presumably because a retired Admiral lived there. Now it supports half a dozen horses.

End of Thomas Road onto Cripps Road
Before we go through Crippstown, we'll turn in the opposite direction and head for the hills.

We'll pass more old orchards being left to their own devices, and some relics of past ventures.





Sheep Dairy?
 I remember there was a business up here in the past, but am not sure if it was goats milk or sheep milk. I'm leaning towards the latter. Not being used anymore.


The road continues past a couple of houses before coming to a junction. One leads to a private property, the other over the bridge is Cripps Road and climbs into the hills.

The bridge crosses Masons Creek

Cast your mind back to the beginning of the walk and the bridge over the creek in Silverwater Park. That's Masons Creek.

Old quarry
Most of the old roads leading off the Channel Highway would have an old quarry somewhere along them. These supplied the road materials for the dirt roads common in the day. I can remember seeing a rock crusher being towed down to set up in these quarries to make the gravel.

The road climbs beside a steep gully containing an unnamed creek that runs into Masons Creek. You can see from the photos that the area would have been very different from what it is today.

Masons creek with man ferns


The hillside is very steep

Unnamed creek. Behind that man fern you can make out a very old and VERY large fallen tree
The photo doesn't do the size justice, but I can tell you it was quite a big tree.



 We come out into open fields on each side. This used to run up to a pig farm. There are a couple of newer homes up hill, and as I can hear a dog barking, Bryn and I will turn around here.


Woodbridge Hill Road is just beyond those trees
We turnaround and walk back down to where Thomas Road enters Cripps Road.


We're heading north now, passing some newer homes to reach the original orchard and packing shed. This is Crippstown.

Apple packing shed

One of the pickers huts
The first time Val and I walked around here was many years ago and the picking season was in full swing. As we walked down here a gentleman on horseback stopped and asked if we wanted a job picking apples.

Had to turn him down. Back in those days, the Channel Highway was pretty much crap and most people lived and worked in the area. Be it fishing or apples. There were a couple of boarding houses in the area for transit workers. I could count the number of people that worked in Hobart while living down here on one hand. I think it was about three, including myself.


Looking back south through Crippstown
It had that name because the Cripps family owned all the land and orchards around the area, living in several houses along the road.

On we go, turning left down a short hill and across Masons Creek again.

Heading down to cross Masons Creek again

Looking back towards the hills we walked up

Masons Creek

A very popular area for these fellows


No more apples, but some belted cattle

Junction with Woodbridge Hill Road
Looking up Woodbridge Hill Road

We're going down towards city centre

Very important tree to the local canine population


Village outskirts

Looking over Woodbridge Recreation Ground to the Fire Department

New club rooms at the grounds


'Chandos' one of the original boarding houses
It's not far to the Channel Highway junction and the Woodbridge Village Store. The Store has excellent coffee and food (takeaways at the moment) with drinks and basic groceries available.

We'll end the walk here so you can enjoy the village. Just head south past the Anglican Church and you'll see the road into Silverwater Park

One man and his dog walked 4.98km in 1:21hrs.

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