“There are only two types of weather in the South-West: good dry weather and good wet weather.”
Water droplets on buttongrass. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
On the second day of our trip, the Crossing River was at an ideal level to run the gorge for the first time in months, with the hydro gauge on the Davey River reading just a bit below 1000ML per day. (We were getting daily inreach messages from Gabe’s dad, thank you Maciej!) And while day two was warm and dry, the problem was, the forecast promised significant rain on day three and four and the earliest we could have put in above the gorge was the afternoon of day two. So if we didn’t get through the gorge in a single day, there was the very real possibility of getting stuck inside Crossing Gorge in a minor flood!
Memorable views from the Port Davey Track. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
In fact, we had already discussed this possibility with Gabe in the lead up to our departure and abandoned our original plan of paddling Crossing Gorge as we didn’t want to risk getting stuck in the gorge on a rising river. We opted for walking another day further before putting in on the Crossing, putting us below most of the serious white water and all the major portages. Making the decision not to run the Crossing Gorge was the first of a number of conservative decisions we made on this trip that ensured our eventual safe return.
So day two of our trip was about slogging it out on the Port Davey on a particularly warm and sunny spring day. Our packs felt progressively heavier as the day went on. (This was a common phenomenon during our entire trip in fact).
Gabe taking a well deserved break on the Port Davey Track. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
The Port Davey Track has some really nice sections to be fair, but also some pretty lousy ones: open walking on buttongrass ridges with tremendous views, mountains all around; and scrubby gullies with squelching mud that comes up to the knee at times. As we learnt, the Port Davey is a very well graded track, it was cut almost like a tramway would be cut, with minimal elevation change, contouring around on the hill sides. The track is marked with rusting star pickets which are unevenly spaced and not always present in the overgrown sections, which is most gully crossings. Mostly though, up till the Spring River at least, the Port Davey is a pretty good track, by South-West standards at least. Nevertheless, we were very happy with our decision to bring our big, heavy, leather bushwalking boots.
Spring flowers. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
The heaths were all in flower and I learnt a few new plant names from Gabe. We saw a ringtail possum right next to the track, with the white end of its tail sticking out of a tree. It didn’t seem too perturbed by us. We left it in peace. We also saw plenty of tracks in the mud, belonging mostly to wombats, but also a few devils.
It took us eleven hours to walk from Alpha Moraine to Watershed Camp. We took regular breaks and drank lots of water. My daily ration of chocolate melted in my pack in the afternoon.
Buttongrass and forest. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
Day three brought the rain, as per the forecast. It rained most of the day, with only a few short breaks in between. There was some really fantastic walking around the head of the Spring River where the track contoured around the hillsides with tremendous views. A personal highlight were the pools of water on the track, with hundreds of tadpoles in there. As we would walk past, the tadpoles would wriggle under the mud to get out of sight, the result being all these bubbles in the pond coming to the surface, reminding me of champagne.
We also saw some orange-brown coloured burrowing crayfish, or yabbies, about three or four inches long. They were most alarmed to see us and quickly reversed into their hole. My understanding is that they reverse into their hole so their pincers are ready to defend their burrow from the other, sometimes bigger yabbies.
Hills near the Crossing River. Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
We left the Port Davey track to ascend a large knoll from the summit of which we could descend to the Crossing River. There was plenty of slime on the soil among the buttongrass, making walking on the steeper sections quite treacherous. Our tea tree walking sticks came in handy with every step. The slime was an ongoing theme on our trip. We suspected it was a type of algae, not sure of the species though so if anyone knows more the slime in the South-West, I’d be keen to know!
We set up camp about 50m from the river among some old tea trees. It took us about seven hours of walking from Watershed Camp to the large pool below the Crossing Gorge where the river turns north. We had a look at the river and it was calm and smooth.
Then it rained all night and when we woke up we found a different river.
Rocky Outcrop, Pentax MX, Kodak Pro 100, Nov 2025.
-A.S. 9/12/2025, Brushy Creek, Nipaluna/Hobart.