After my last walk I was feeling good and eager to get back out for more. I had a bone marrow biopsy done on Monday the 18th January and had planned a hike with my Dad for the Friday, hoping by that time the pain and stiffness from my biopsy was fine and I would be all good to go.
However I received a phone call from my step-mum, informing me she was in hospital with a suspected minor stroke, and would be staying in until more tests where done, with my Dad having to delay our hike. I was worried for my step-mum but at the same time felt a disappointment, desperately wanting to get out and do some more before I have to go back to hospital for my stem cell transplant that will keep e in hospital for about 4 weeks and leave me severely weak and immune compromised for about 3-6 months according to my Doctors.
My Wife, knowing I was disappointed, asked to find a walk we could do as a family taking our Dog: Orla.
I have often struggled to find walks through the bush for Dogs, as Australia isn't particularly Dog friendly compared to other countries. But I had done two walks in the Southern Highlands with Orla and decided looking up there would be my best bet. After some research I can across Gibbergunyah Reserve and we decided we would go on Monday the 25th, the day before Australia Day.
That morning I woke up and after taking my cancer medication, told my Wife that I wasn't feeling to well, as my medication can sometimes make me feel sick, and asked her to drive. I went to the toilet twice before leaving as the medication after taken makes me often need to urinate. As we made our way up the twists and turns of Macquarie Pass, commenting about how crazy packed it was, I could feel my stomach churning and felt myself getting sicker.
As we reached the top of Macquarie Pass my Wife remembered she had not brought her Drivers License, as I had backed the backpack and I had brought my wallet. She said she thought she should be ok, as she recalled being told you're allowed to forget it once on your full license. I questioned how true that was, and we talked about the change in unmarked speed camera laws in NSW. I told her I was busting to go to the toilet again, and mapped a free public toilet at Hampden Park in Robertson. I told her when we pulled up, I would take over driving as a precaution. After going to the toilet (yet again) I felt a little better (being on a non winding road helped), and I left the sound directions on loud and placed my phone down and we made our way to the Bowral end of Gibbergunyah Reserve.
As we arrived we saw a group of older people just heading out along the track. We sat in the car and applied our sunscreen and took a photo of Orla and set out on the walk.
The track began in between two properties and we followed it down past a garden of agapanthus on our right.
The track veered left with a sign letting us know Gibbergunyah Reserve was in 500m.
This trail continues past these properties, a gorgeous house property on the left with the righthand side opening onto a local golf course.
The trail turns in a bit though you can still see the golf course through a thin veil of trees. The track began to slightly incline and slowly the trees between the path and the golf course thickened. The trail began to incline a lot more and the track itself became bumpy with rocks and tree roots.
We came upon the group of older folks sitting at a point where the inclined trail increased a lot, sitting panting they asked me if this was the way to the Reserve Walk. I told them I thought we were on it but I didn't know for sure as I had never been here before. I wished them a good day as we continued up further with my Wife complaining about the heat and humidity as she was beginning to struggle. We reached the Moyengully Rest Area, named after a Gundungurra Warrior as we stopped for a short while for my Wife to catch her breath as she complained that she wished we were living in England.
After a small break we continued uphill again as I noticed a few small little blue bugs with interesting patterns crawling along the trail.
Finally we reached the top of the incline, reaching a sign of the Gibbergunyah Trails as well as a fork in the road, with a massive hill on our left and a flat trail to our right.
Beneath the sign was a little wooden letterbox looking thing. I could see there was some paper inside and hesitantly I reached in and took one out to find it being a information brochure about the area.
My Wife was already struggling and Orla was crazy thirsty from the heat so we headed right along the Goanna Circuit, while constantly walking through invisible spiderwebs. I had a quick look around me and told my Wife I had to pee, yet again from my cancer medication. I quickly did a whizz off the path in the bush with my Wife commenting that I was lucky (ie, as a male) to be able to do that. I said if I wasn't I wouldn't even bother going hiking while on these meds.
As we went along the bush path I could see a hill through the trees in the distance with an orange dirt base with cars parked there and I wondered if it was a mine or something. We soon came upon a termite mound and I got a photo of Orla with it.
The heat was blistering and there was no relief from it. My Wife and Dog both seemed to struggle and while I was hot I was surprised at how well I was coping due to my condition.
Soon my Wife screamed at me to search her as we had just walked through a spiderweb and she thought that she could feel the spider on her. I had a look but soon noticed the web had broke and swung and the spider was actually crawling up my leg. I quickly flicked it off, commenting that it was crazy how many spiderwebs were along the path, considering how big the track was, having done much smaller off tracks walks and never had to deal with so many. My Wife doubled down on her comments about moving to England which I jokingly shrugged off.
Around the corner the path began to head downwards slightly, while in the heat I thought about how it was prime bushfire weather, with the area giving me flashback to doing Bush Regeneration work with controlled fires at Stoney Range, near Blackbutt in Shellharbour.
We stopped again for Orla to have a drink of water, where she finished her entire water bottle. I told my Wife I was worried as she had already drunk so much and I didn't know how she would be in the heat (hoping the day would begin to cool down), as I thought it a breeze did begin, but not steady and not particularly cool, but enough to notice an effect. I photographed a caterpillar while walking along and we continued the trail until we reached 'Banksia Place'.
Poor baby struggling in the heat |
Banksia Place was on our left and continued the Goanna Circuit while the 'Glen Track' continued straight ahead.
We sat for my Wife to have a break while I poured Orla water from our water bottles so she could have a drink. I told my Wife to have some water but she wanted to save it for me in case I needed it. I told her I was feeling fine and that I would walk Orla for now.
As we continued along Goanna Circuit we we blown away by the sheer amount of Monarch Butterflies.
The track continued on for a while, relatively flat though you could see it fell down into a gully on our right and sloped uphill on our left. Soon our path began to get hilly and my Wife began to really struggle in the heat, getting very dizzy and needing to sit down pretty often.
Every other minute my Wife sat down struggling to continue as I repeated asked her to have some water (she kept refusing). I told her when we reach the where the path connects to 'Gang Gang Track' we'll stop for some food and just turn left back towards the car, which I said would probably all be downhill (given the path left at the start was such a sharp incline)
My Wife was beginning to struggle to even get up from sitting down, saying she was spinning out due to the heat.
We finally reached the Gang Gang Track, with a sign pointing down the way we had come as 'Goanna Track', and my sat and I ate my cheese and tomato sandwich while Orla finished another bottle of water and started some of the third and final bottle. My Wife asked if I wanted to continue on to 90 Acre Hill Lookout. I told her with how she was coping and how Orla was coping it was better to just head back to the car. She told me she didn't want to ruin the day for me. I said it was fine and new it was a risk with the heat and that I was also very concerned for Orla and didn't want to push her. My Wife said she felt bad as it was such a long way to come to Bowral for not very long of a walk. I said it was fine and that I would just come up another day and do the rest of the walk, telling her it wasn't the first time I wasn't able to do the whole walk in the day, having to come back listing examples of Mount Jellore and The Castle.
She commented we could go back to her parents and go for a swim in the pool. I commented that we had no swimmers. She messaged her Mum and found they had some spare pairs we could wear. So we headed left back towards the car.
As we continued along there we small little tracks into the bush that Orla kept trying to walk down, down one of them I noticed a few bike jumps reminding me of my childhood playing and riding around in Croome Road Bushland.
Wrong way Orla |
Soon we reached a property with a boundary fire trail heading right and a sign pointing left for the Goanna Circuit, leading us downhill towards the entry map. I saw a notification on my Instagram, it was my friend Tristan's friend Tara messaging me to say sorry for stealing my hiking buddy (as I had also been asking Tristan to go hiking but struggled to find a good time for us both), she commented that he had twisted his ankle that day doing Drawing Room Rocks. I replied that it was ok, as Orla is much cuter than Tristan.
We soon headed down the hill to the map and back towards Moyengully Rest Area where I asked my Wife to walk Orla so I could climb a little ladder there.
She quickly asked me to stop before I climbed down the other side so she could get a photo of me from the front.
By the time we got back to the car we noticed the car of the older people were gone, wondering if they had just turned back due to the intense heat. We then cranked the aircon and headed to my in-laws. When we arrived we snacked on fresh grapes and watermelon before getting changed to go for a swim.
In the pool I have no neck |
I also noticed a beautiful red Dragonfly handing around the bird of paradise plant they had around their pool area (which had come from our front garden as I wanted to get rid of it).
We spent the next day inside as we new everywhere would be packed on Australia Day, and just sat around binge watching season 5 of the survival series 'Alone'. While letting Orla out for the toilet I got another good shot of a Dragonfly on our wall.
I planned to get up the next morning and head straight back to the highlands to do the rest of the tracks. However I woke up to an overcast day and after checking the Bureau of Meteorology that said Bowral had a 90% chance of rain I decided to spend my day writing this part of my blog, hoping to maybe get up and finish it later in the week. While writing and having no rain I questioned whether or not I should have just gone and done it, but when my Wife called on her lunch break from Wollongong letting me know it was raining there I felt I had at least made the right call, planning to explore the rest before my next stint in a hospital bed.
After having gone on this walk, and written the first half of the blog above this point, there was a few weeks in between where I had some other adventures and wrote another blog post. We also enjoyed a day Kayaking and Fishing in Minnamurra River.
I never learned to fish when I was younger, as my Dad had no interest, and I had tried a few times with my old High School friends when we were in late High School and the first few years following (very sporadically my few times fishing not even in the double digits). And had only been fishing with my Wife twice before, once off shore and the second time, like this, in a Kayak at Minnamurra River.
It was a fun day, and a beautiful location. Catching the biggest fish I had ever caught in my life (at 32.5cm) which I was pretty proud of. We cooked it that night with a lemon balm garlic butter and chillies, with the lemon balm and chillies grown in our yard. Luckily I had 1 anti nausea pill left over from my chemo, as that night with my cancer medication combined with the feeling of being on the water all day I felt like I would throw up. I took the pill and was able to get to sleep without being sick.
Finally the day came where we decided to go and do the rest of the Gibbergunyah walk, as I had been wanting to get back up and do the rest of the walk. I was due to go up to Sydney to sign all the paperwork for my Stem Cell Treatment and we didn't know when I would go back into hospital so my Wife agreed to go and do the bushwalk on Valentine's Day. I asked if she was sure about it, and double checked to make sure she would be well enough to do the walk (as the day before we had walked the length of the Dog Beach between Windang and Port Kembla, a decent walk in the sand). She insisted she would be fine as the weather was much cooler and the day was pretty overcast.
So Valentine's Day morning we set of up Macquarie Pass back to Gibbergunyah Reserve with light drops of rain occasionally hitting the front window of the car. We arrived and began our walk up to where the map of the trails was, this time heading left up the hill straight towards 90 Acre Lookout.
Appreciating the natural world around us as we walked |
We were moving at a quicker pace, helped by the fact that it was a much cooler, overcast day. The sun was not shining as bright and I could really see the colours of the plants around me, everything wasn't as washed out due to the raging Australian sun. There was a gentle cool breeze and I smiled as I walked taking it all in, feeling everything, feeling beyond happy to be alive and loving where I was.
We soon passed the turn off to the Goanna Track we had done the first time we attempted the walk, and continued onwards towards the Lookout, just passed a fire trail marked still in red on the map as part of the 'Gang Gang Track' we stopped to get a photo with our cute Dog and a termite mound.
We passed two fire trails leading along a farmland fence with a sign labelling in the 'Kurragang Corner'.
Continuing along we came to a turn to our right, the 'Galah Circuit'.
The start of the 'Galah Circuit'. I approve of the edit to this sign. |
I had a quick look a picture I had taken of the map on my phone from last time. I asked my Wife if we should turn down here, loop back along the 'Gang Gang Track' to the Lookout, then back-track up the Gang Gang Track to do the Geebung and Glen Track. Not wanting to have to back-track as much she insisted we walk up to the Lookout, and then back down, then taking the Galah Circuit to where it looped up with the Geebung Track, cutting out much of the Gang Gang Track. I explorer in me wanted to resist, wanting to walk the entirety of each trail, but for my Wife and Valentine's Day, I reluctantly agreed and we continued up towards 90 Acre Lookout.
We soon reached the turn off to our left to the Lookout, marked with an area named the Native Cherry Corner with a little... table or seat? Sign? To be honest I wasn't quite sure, but it was sitting beneath an big Exocarpos cupressiformis or Native Cherry Tree.
Just while I was taking a photo a man and woman walked out from the lookout path. I nodded to them and we issued polite exchanged of greetings. They continued walking a little but he soon turned around and asked if we knew the area well, before telling us there was a lovely lookout just down the path. I thanked them and they went on their way and we turned in towards the lookout.
Looking ahead further along 'Gang Gang Track' that we didn't explore |
Just slightly down the path towards the lookout was a big rock formation you could walk up to on the right with a series of plaques expressing some history of the indigenous people of the area.
Attempting a photo isn't always easy |
I noticed a trail on the right hand side leading you on a walk up the side for a view overlooking the bush from on top of the rocks. I went for a walk up there enjoying a spectacular view.
I worried while standing up taking in the view that I was on a sacred aboriginal spot. Although nothing was there to tell me so, but I got concerned anyway and returned down with my Wife snapping a family photo of the three of us.
We continued along, with a few stresses each time Orla ran too far to the left as there was a ledge down into a gully she kept running towards. We arrived at the lookout and sat for lunch and a drink.
View from 90 Acre Lookout, Mount Jellore in the distance to the right |
After we had finished eating and were sitting just enjoying the view we noticed we were beginning to be attacked by mosquitoes and quickly got up to head back to the 'Galah Circuit', noticing a little rock cave to our left as we left.
As we returned to the Galah Circuit and began our way down I noticed the landscape was very similar to that of the Goanna Circuit. We reached a divide in the track with a fire trail off too our right marked on the map as part of the Gang Gang Track.
As we continued a long the trail had a slow decline and the trees around slow began to merge to be more like a rainforest, before we soon began to actually go downwards.
See, not so steep, just a lovely uphill walk |
"Could we listen to something we both like?" She said.
Very good post. Highly informative for travellers who want to go for a Gibbergunya Reserve walk. Nicely written. Keep up the good work.
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