Lophophaps wrote:Many years ago my party found a large pile of boots near Ritchies Hut on the Howqua River near Mount Buller in Victoria.
GBW wrote:Probably a chap we bumped into on the AAWT. He was chatting to my missus while I was looking for a spot to set up and as I looked towards his tent the door was open and inside was...an inflatable dollOn first glance I thought I was seeing things but a second look confirmed it. At that point I said "Anyway, we'd better be off" and quickly made tracks.
taswegian wrote:NNW was it the age of the couple or what they were engaging in that your comment is aimed at?
wayno wrote:abandoned packs on a track by people who panicked in bad weather when they saw someon with hypothermia being carried and dumped their packs to get to the huts faster,
Ant71 wrote:Not walking but in the bush on my mountain bike I found a fairly serious looking camera bag on the side of a creek. I wandered up the creek to see if anyone was around and found a guy taking some photos of some nude girls on the banks of the creek.
Ant71 wrote:Not walking but in the bush on my mountain bike I found a fairly serious looking camera bag on the side of a creek. I wandered up the creek to see if anyone was around and found a guy taking some photos of some nude girls on the banks of the creek.
whynotwalk wrote:
We were two days walk from the nearest road, in the middle of New Zealand's Greenstone-Caples Track, when we came across a wooden door. Bold as its brass handle, in the middle of thick forest, it stood propped up against a mossy ledge. The words “Please Shut the Door” we're scratched onto it.
We assumed it was a track worker's sight gag, and that a helicopter had been involved. We had a laugh, took a photo or two, and walked on. But I have since pondered its usefulness as a metaphor (e.g. opening or shutting access to wilderness etc),
cheers
Peter
Son of a Beach wrote:I found a light switch installed in one of the public huts on the Overland Track once. I think it might have been the new new Windy Ridge hut (ie, Bert Nichols monstrosity), when it was just about finished.
(It was not connected to anything, of course, but I wonder how many people flicked the switch expecting something to happen.)
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