This walk takes place on Dharawal Country
During my chemotherapy to treat my Leukemia, I sometimes was placed in rooms in Wollongong Hospital that had me looking out over Mount Keira. I would sit there often looking out over it on sunny and rainy days and tell myself that after I had beat my cancer I would go and walk it.
I did one trail on it, the Ken Ashburn track with my friend Tristan in between my third round of chemo and my Stem Cell Transplant. I always planned to do the other walks, but time got by, and I never got around to it. While discussing future walks with him after we had done the Tarbourie Village track, I threw out a few suggestions to him to see if he was interested. One of these was the rest of Mount Keira. He wasn't so I thought it was a good opportunity to do some more walks with my nerdy friends Stuart and Megan, who I had done the Saddleback Mountain walk with.
They were keen to go, and we locked in the date, with Megan asking if they were alright to pick me up at 8am. We set off early with Stuart driving and asking me for directions. I told him to go up Mount Ousley to head straight to the summit, as I had investigated some of these walks right before I went in for my Stem Cell Treatment while spending a day out with my Dad.
We arrived at the summit park and from this point I knew exactly where to head, taking them straight over to the lookout facing North over the Illawarra.
From here we walked down a set of stairs down to a bronze wheel marking the distance and direction of Illawarra locations.
As we walked back up the stairs, I was humming the soundtrack to 'Hamilton' to myself as I had been listening to it once again.
"What?" Megan asked me, thinking I had said something.
"Oh no, I'm just singing Hamilton." I replied, explaining that I was listening to it again. We made our way back up, past a sign towards Five Islands Lookout, which I explained was the direction to go as I had gone that way with my Dad.
As we continued along Megan mentioned she and Stuart had been getting into 'Hadestown', another musical, but they explained to me it was based on the Greek myth of 'Orpheus' which immediately perked my interest as a lover of Mythology. Stuart interjected and mentioned something about Hades becoming a mining town and something about everyone wearing mining outfits.
"Oh, that makes more sense." Megan said.
"So, is this on something?" I asked, assuming, like Hamilton you could watch it on some sort of streaming service.
"No, we've just been listening to it." They responded.
I was about to mention to them about a musical artist I listen to: 'Shawn James' and how he had written a song about Orpheus, before I realised that the path in front of us had been blocked by a fallen tree.
We walked through a small section of scrub on our right onto another section of path that just had the base of the tree in front and simply walked around the other side of the tree.
After passing the tree, the conversation moved on and I never mentioned the song. As we approached the Five Islands Lookout, we got a view through a clearing overlooking Lake Illawarra.
I mentioned that I wanted to do a blog that was a bike ride around Lake Illawarra, saying I had attempted the ride around once before with my Dad, leaving from Central Park in Oak Flats, however I got a flat tire at Tallawarra Power Station, not far from completing and thus I never finished.
The lookout itself was barricaded off, apparently due to being on an unstable cliff, I couldn't remember it being there when I had come up with my Dad (however looking through old photo's it was). I remembered the stick pyramid structures and explained to the two of them Dad and I had come up here for a little walk after going out for lunch at Bourke Street Burgers.
We walked over to read a sign explaining the structures that also told the local Dharawal creation myth of Mount Keira or 'Geera' and that of the Five Islands that were off our coast.
"Merrigong Environmental Sculpture - The Six Daughters of the West Wind
The west wind, Oolaboolawoo lived on top of Merrigong (Illawarra Range) and had six daughters, Mimosa, Wilga, Lilli Pilli, Wattle, Clemantis and Geera. Mimosa would scratch and fight when the girls were playing and to punish her, the west wind blew her and the rock she sat on out so sea. She landed away from the land and became an island, which none of her sisters could swim to. Mimosa's fate should have been a lesson to her sisters, who were also cast out to sea by their father.
Because Oolaboolawoo way always bust out west, the last sister Gerra sat lonely on the escarpment looking out at her sisters, the Five Islands, eventually allowing the animals and trees to grow on her.
She turned to stone and became the mountain known as Mt Keira (Geera).
The sculptures were inspired by the story of the six sisters. The site where the sculptures are situated is both sacred for women and is said to have once been a place of massacre.
The ephemeral and fragile quality of the 'twig-like' structures refers to a former occupation of the site by the traditional people. The permanency of the bronze material consolidates Indigenous survival and everlasting connection to place."
We all agreed that it was cool to learn about local mythology, and I talked about how I liked to include some history of places as often times we really don't know much about the places that we have grown up around. I pointed on towards Dave Walsh's Track saying that it led on to the Mt Keira ring track that we wanted to do.
As we continued on and talking an elder couple had caught up to us, and not wanting to walk with other people we sort of slowed down, allowing them to pass and I headed to a clearing over by the ledge that had not been barricaded off.
I brought up the conversation of the upcoming Indigenous Voice to parliament referendum. They were both confused as neither really follow politics, but I was surprised by the fact that neither of them had even heard of it.
"It basically acknowledges Indigenous people in our constitution" I explained, "currently they're not referenced in our constitution, other than that what it does is gives an Aboriginal advisory committee in parliament in regard to Indigenous issues, and because it would be in the constitution the next government couldn't simply get in and dismantle it."
It seemed like a pretty reasonable thing to both of them, and I explained that many Australians were voting no, for various reasons. I explained about Lydia Thorpe previously for the Greens was voting no because she wanted Treaty, and semi explained the concept of that to them, while explaining a lot of other people who were voting no were, and I was fairly blunt here: "racist."
The older couple was no longer in sight, and we continued our way down Dave Walsh's track and I wondered to myself who Dave Walsh was, and I also wondered who Ken Ashburn was. Which after a Google search, I learned David Walsh was a local, big in the scouting movement, so whether or not he created the trail, or it was simply named after him I'm not sure. When I looked up Ken Ashburn I could find nothing, causing me to go into my previous blogpost for any information that might have been on that walk, where I learned that I had simply misread his name, and even incorrectly titled by blog post. as it was named after Ken Ausburn, not Ashburn, causing me to have to retroactively go back and edit that previous blog post, but leaving any other incorrect mentions in other blog posts.
As we approached the decent a couple and their child began approaching from behind so I went over for the view of Mount Kembla hoping that they too would continue past us.
Picture my Dad took, 2 and half years earlier |
Soon the couple and their child began approaching me on the edge, so I made my way over to Stuart and Megan who were at a different spot. I began pointing out the climbing bolts saying this area was used for rock climbers. Megan had a look, before saying she would need to get her climbing fitness back up, and her and Stuart had let their indoor climbing memberships expire before attempting that, however none of us had really attempted outdoor climbing other than some light bouldering.
While we were looking at this the couple began making their way slowly down the mountain, and we lingered waiting for them to move substantially ahead of us.
I pointed toward the arrow nailed to the trees marking the way and commented that this path was pretty obvious and that they weren't really needed to follow the trail. I said that I had seen someone do a post on a Facebook hiking page complaining about people marking the tracks in ways like this, or spray painting, or tying on bits of plastic, or making cairns, saying that if you couldn't find your way you didn't deserve to be doing the walk. Which I could agree with in some ways, but I told Stuart and Megan I had often done many walks with various trails splitting off in different directions for various points along the way and nothing to tell you which was the right way to go. These were often not 'wilderness' walks, but marketed and promoted National Park walks.
A cold wind picked up, and I commented that I had made the right choice wearing long pants, but wondered if I should have worn my beanie rather than my hate, as I held it down from blowing off.
"I never think to wear a beanie." Megan said.
"I always wear my beanie." I replied.
"We know friend." Said Stuart, referring to the fact that wearing my beanie had become a pretty constant thing for me casually after my hair never returned after my Stem Cell Transplant.
"It comforts me." I insisted.
Soon the path turned right down, but the couple with their child continued straight to a section of boulders you could walk between, seeming to almost form a sort of boulder cave. We turned right and continued down, able to move a little faster now.
We followed the stairs down until we a dirt trail that began winding through the bush. I snapped a lot of photos along the way, saying that my Wife had complained recently about how many I take while we had done the Glow Worm Glen walk. I said that there had been a few times where I had tried to take less, but then when it came to writing a blog, I struggled to remember where things happened on the walk sometimes. I said that it just gives me that jump-start to my memory to remember where we were at certain points in time, and those cues helped me remember things such as conversation that had occurred along the way, but I would often cull a lot of them, or sometimes spam a bunch of images when I found I had less to write about.
We soon caught up to the older couple we had let go ahead a while back, and I could see them stopping for photos but also looking in different ways. As they saw us approaching, they began moving again and as we reached the spot they were at we saw that there was a trail heading left and right as well as continuing down the mountain. The way right had no signs or markings, however the way left had a danger warning sign, informing that the area was closed.
I wondered out loud to the two of them if that track was the 'ring track' as I had never done it before.
"I wonder if we follow it down, if that's just the Dave Walsh track." I questioned, vaguely remembering walking to the end of it with my Dad and coming to a road.
"How about we follow it down, and if this ends up being the ring track we can just walk back and just follow it the opposite way to the closed sign?" I suggested, and they both agreed, so we continued forwards.
As we walked, I told them how my Wife and I had gone to a Nature Talk at the Shellharbour Civic Centre that was about astronomy and told them about what we had learned about Black Holes while there, and how they can 'burp' and also sort of go into a type of hibernation where they don't suck everything in, and can randomly start again, talking about what bizarre enigmas they are.
"Oh, burp is what you meant." Megan said, referring to a message I had sent them in a group chat where I wrote: 'I just learned that black holes burb and I'm terrified.'
"I wasn't sure if you meant burp on burn, I thought you might have meant black holes burn."
"Did I write burp?" I asked.
"No, you wrote burb."
The canopy above us opened up revealing sky as we walked by a clearing made by powerlines and we entered under the canopy once more.
Someone the conversation changed onto how I was watching season 10 of the US survival TV series 'Alone' where I was talking to them about how good it was in comparison to the recent Australian version. I commented that I had read the headline of an article on Facebook recently about a recent British version of the show where the headline was along the lines of 'Have any of these people even been outside before?'.
Soon the canopy cleared again, and the bright sun lit the surrounding greenery and we commented that it was beginning to get warm now.
"I'm glad I didn't wear my beanie now." I stated.
I pointed out native raspberry plants all lining the side of the track.
"I feel like I point them out to you every time we go on a walk" I said as we passed a sign and could see a road ahead of us.
"Hey, this one actually had a raspberry on it!" I showed them, explaining that I wouldn't eat one out some where because I didn't know if it had potentially been sprayed with chemicals.
A few cars passed as the three of us shuffled across the road. As we reached the other side we saw the track was splitting in two directions, left the sign said was towards Byarong Park in 1.2km and right towards Robetsons Lookout in 2km.
I thought Byarong Park was a stop on the ring track as I recalled stopping in their with my Dad as we drove down from the summit, but I wasn't sure about Robertson's Lookout, so we decided to head towards the lookout and would just backtrack afterwards.
As we began down this track, I heard the end of some joke or reference Stuart had said in regard to Jurassic Park, Dennis Nedry and a Dilophasaurus.
"Speaking of-" I said quickly, my brain thinking after the Jurassic Park reference. "Our alliance is almost full, so we will have to start culling people who are inactive too long." I said referring to the Jurassic Park mobile game: Jurassic World Alive (which is sorta like the Dinosaur equivalent of Pokemon Go), which Stuart had got me into as a time killer while I was in hospital undergoing my chemothrerapy.
Yeeeboiii |
"It's not all out yet?"
"No, only like the first 3 episodes." I replied.
"Is that murder on the Orient Express?" Megan asked.
"Yeah, and Death on the Nile and the new one."
"Yeah, we watched it and liked it."
I told them my Wife didn't like the genre, so I hadn't found time to watch them yet. I mentioned I would like to do one of those murder mystery live action games before also mentioning I was looking forward to the 4 of us doing the Jumanji escape room in Sydney that we had booked for the following Sunday.
"Oh, so I've stopped you playing D&D for 2 weeks in a row." I said in regard to next week's escape room.
I continued "What was the theme of the second room we're doing? It was like, very similar to our D&D game Stuart had hosted."
"What's that way?" He asked me.
"Up there is just a road, and the other way if you follow it long enough leads back to Mount Keira." I answered.
"He's probably just pulled up at the carpark and is just having a little look around while he's stopped." I said.
"But you eat Pigs." I pointed out. "Which have the same intelligence as Dogs if not more."
He realised I was right, but I continued trying not to make him feel bad.
"I couldn't think of anything worse than being stuck on an island for a school dance." Megan said.
They both laughed.
"To be fair," I said "My post mentions I went the wrong way and warns people about this fact."
"I like that your blog does that with stuff, like with Wedding Cake Rock and calling people out on it." Megan replied.
"Did you notice them this time?" She asked.
We nodded and the conversations quickly jumped from one topic to another. I mentioned that I had stayed up a bit late the night before watching 'Air' on Amazon Prime about Michael Jordan and the history of the 'Air Jordan' sneaker. Stuart looked at me with a face that said he didn't think that sounded like his sort of movie. I commented that it was pretty good and that while looking up movie trivia on IMDB (which I do after watching any movie), one of the other Basketball players mentioned as a potential for Nike to invest in was Mel Turpin, who unfortunately his career never took off which affected his mental health, and he ended up taking his own life.
I commented that at least we didn't have to worry about that, because we would never be great at anything.
"I'm under no delusions." I said, "I'll never be the best hiker, or climber, or adventurer or traveler. I do what I can within my budget and within my means and don't have the pressure of having to be great."
"Detective Pikachu? Sonic? I asked.
"No Sonic was awful." He responded.
"Oh, I didn't mind it," I said. "Though I do like Jim Carrey. As long as it wasn't the Uncharted movie. That was a piece of shit, and those games are fantastic."
"We haven't seen it." Megan said.
"Yeah, why would they cast Michael Cera." Stuart said.
I began laughing. "Michael Cera!" I laughed, thinking that it might have actually improved that awful film.
"You know who I mean! Spiderman!" Stuart urged, still not recalling his name.
"Tom Holland." I responded, putting him out of his misery.
"What?" They asked.
I told them I had kept meaning to bring the 'NSW Rocks' I had found over time and had built up in my study, and place them when I was doing walks, even finding one the time I did the Ken Ausburn track.
"But I don't want to place them in Wilderness areas, more on these suburban frequently visited sort of walks."
We crossed a road to continue the walk and realised the road we were crossing was the entry way we had driven to park at the summit.
"We started, but then my Wife realised she hadn't watched it all and so we went back and are watching it from the beginning before we continue with the new season."
"And I only watched like 2 episodes of the Rings of Power before I gave up on it." I told them, and they said they hadn't even watched it.
"It probably leads back to the car park." Stuart said, meaning Mount Keira summit where we had parked.
As he said it a couple approached from the left saying they had just come up a lot of stairs, and told us that the way they had come from was the way to go and so we headed off down that path.
Stuart began to tell me about Saruman dying in the extended edition, and them filming it, and then the anecdote about Christopher Lee.
"Is this about him murdering Nazi's in World War II?" I asked, having seen the story floating around on Facebook.
"Yeah!" Stuart said, mentioning other weird things that happen in the books like Merry and Pippin drinking Ent juice.
"I've never read the books, I tried to read the Hobbit and really struggled with it. I'll just stick to Deltora Quest!" I joked.
"And we'll still have to walk back up." Stuart replied.
"Maybe, it's a loop track. Honestly I think we've gone the easy way, if we had headed left instead of Robertson's Lookout we'd be walking up all these." I commented to him.
"But there's probably more up along the way." Stuart said.
We walked along as I quickly pulled out my phone for 'on the go' photo's as I often do, both turning out blurry, before sticking my phone in the air for a quick selfie in which Stuart couldn't help but look away every time I took a photo.
We waited as all the palm fronds shook, and the rustling intensified. I thought to myself that it might be a deer as the loud noises grew. I squatted down, trying to see what it was, wondering if maybe it was people cutting through the bush, then I saw it, digging around on the ground, another Lyrebird.
"No." Stuart told me.
"It's fine, I can see holds." I replied, dropping my backpack and ungracefully climbing up.
"Before I did the Ken Ashburn track with Tristan," I said, misnaming that walk once more. "The only time I had done Mt Keira was in year 7 of High School when I went to Wollongong High. I remembered walking from the school to top, and when I did Ken Ashburn I had thought it seem too far away from the school, as it was behind the Uni." I continued. "Maybe that track leads down somewhere and that was the way up my school group walked?" I pondered, annoyed at how useless my memory seemed to be.
"My Mum got it out." I laughed.
"But like, how?" Stuart asked.
"With tweezers." I answered.
"No!" Stuart yelled at me. "You're not supposed to do that."
I told him I know that now, but it was fine, and that I'd only ever removed ticks this way.
"Man the ending sucked." I said.
"What was the ending?" Megan asked.
Stuart and I made awkward eye contact.
"You can tell her." Stuart said, laughing about the shows silly ending.
We decided to make a move back to the ring track while I filled her in. She had a basic understanding of the show as Stuart had talked to her about it before, so I simply gave a rough run down of the final few episodes.
"Basically, there's a Viking village that took slaves, including the main Caveman: Spear, his love interest Mira, and they go to the village and end up killing everyone including the Viking chief's son and eventually the Viking chief, who end up in hell and makes a deal with, I guess the devil? He comes back as a shape-shifting flame monster-" I said puffing as we made our way back up the corrugated concrete section. "Anyway, he I guess succeeds in killing Spear, so gets pulled back to hell, while Spear is like dying, his whole body covered in like third degree burns, Mira like... hops on top, and like, has sex with him so there's a flash forward with like, his kids even though he's dead."
"Because there's nothing painful about that at all." Stuart commented.
"I'd be surprised if he could even get up with third degree burns on his dick." I joked. "But before the ending it was a good show."
We arrived at the turn off to Byarong Park and continued along the ring.
Up |
Back down |
"Maybe," Stuart replied, mentioning all the lifeline signs that had been at the top of the mountain.
"Hopefully it was just reckless driving." I replied.
The toilet is a lie |
"One the scale of reasons why it's bad to be a woman, that one is pretty low." Megan commented.
"Yeah, I just think about it I guess because it's such a convenience."
"I've seen those mentioned on sites, but I've always thought, after you use it, you now have this object that is covered in piss. Like, then you have to wash it off I guess." I said, as we slowly made our way up hill, and I commented to Stuart that I didn't think this way was anywhere near as steep as if we had walked the opposite direction.
"Maybe after I get back from Iceland." I suggested, knowing I had to spend less time blogging after my return as I had to knuckle down and finish my Tafe course (I had begun a Cert IV in Business Admin, at the suggestion of my Wife to get a higher paying job role, though I would have rather done something along the lines of 'Outdoor Recreation').
As they dropped me off home, I hopped out of the car, now feeling a little sore from the walk, but feeling like my lungs had handled it fine, hoping for the best for my lung test.
"See ya's next Sunday!" I said referring to the two escape rooms we had organised. As I walked inside and kicked off my shoes, I had a sense of satisfaction, having wanted to do the walk since my chemotherapy. I felt glad to be alive.
Amazing stuff hope you are doing well
ReplyDeletethe trail is so beautiful
ReplyDeleteWow, this place looks so amazing. It's my type of fun. I love nature! Thanks for sharing this post!
ReplyDeleteI love that your views and dreams became your adventure.
ReplyDeleteMount Keira looks like an adventure of its own. Really love that you shared your story and pieces of your time there.
ReplyDeleteMount Keira looks amazing! One for the wish list!
ReplyDelete