Overland end of September

I understand a thousand variations of this same question have been asked, but here goes.
It seems the weather is unpredictable at any time. I was wanting to do the track for the first time in the last week of September, with one other person. We are both from Canada, and while I have a little bit of experience with multi-day snowshoeing trips in Canada, I have never done a multi-day hike. From what I have read on this board, I am assuming the weather at that time is somewhere between 5-15 degrees...
1. With our lack of experience, is it stupid for us to be doing the hike in winter? It is the only time we have available, but if need be we can change plans for a warmer hike on the mainland...
2. Is it wise to bring an EPIRB? Can we hire one?
3. What sort of dress would be appropriate for end of September weather? I was hoping a thermal-fleece-waterproof layer combo would suffice, but I have been told that is summer wear for the OT. I don't really want to lug around a ski jacket... is it necessary?
Thanks for any responses.
It seems the weather is unpredictable at any time. I was wanting to do the track for the first time in the last week of September, with one other person. We are both from Canada, and while I have a little bit of experience with multi-day snowshoeing trips in Canada, I have never done a multi-day hike. From what I have read on this board, I am assuming the weather at that time is somewhere between 5-15 degrees...
1. With our lack of experience, is it stupid for us to be doing the hike in winter? It is the only time we have available, but if need be we can change plans for a warmer hike on the mainland...
2. Is it wise to bring an EPIRB? Can we hire one?
3. What sort of dress would be appropriate for end of September weather? I was hoping a thermal-fleece-waterproof layer combo would suffice, but I have been told that is summer wear for the OT. I don't really want to lug around a ski jacket... is it necessary?
Thanks for any responses.