stry wrote:Bushwalk !!
And a little more fuel for the fire - Track - NOT trail
whitefang wrote:I have always referred to it as hiking, bushwalking is somewhat of a new term to me. Then again, that might be because when I first became interested in hiking/bushwalking I was finding information on international websites rather than Australian ones.
puredingo wrote:Like I've hiked up a few skirts in my time but I've never bushwalked up any...I think???
taswegian wrote:For me it's always been bushwalking.
But then I "walked into Waterfall Valley". Certainly wouldn't have "hiked into..."
But have heard the use of "a fair hike", as in being "a long way (walk)" or a long climb up such and such.
Bushwalking for me it is, or just plain 'gone bush'.
north-north-west wrote:puredingo wrote:Like I've hiked up a few skirts in my time but I've never bushwalked up any...I think???
Oh, the double entendres one could make out of that . . .
Good on ya Scotty! That's telling 'em!Scottyk wrote:Kiwis go Tramping
Americans/Europeans go Hiking
Australians go Bushwalking
Simple as that in my opinion. Anything else is just Un-Australian!
phsculpture wrote:It's hiking for me these days. I grew up in Australia, but spending the past 12 years in the US had an effect.
C'mon you guys! It's time you converted and started bushwalking!whitefang wrote:I have always referred to it as hiking, bushwalking is somewhat of a new term to me. Then again, that might be because when I first became interested in hiking/bushwalking I was finding information on international websites rather than Australian ones
Yes, come to think of it tasw., I have exclaimed "That was a fair old hike today" but that would be after a long day of walking rather than on a long pack-carrying day when I'm more likely to exclaim "Sheesh! I'm shattered!"taswegian wrote:But have heard the use of "a fair hike", as in being "a long way (walk)" or a long climb up such and such.
Scottyk wrote:Kiwis go Tramping
Americans/Europeans go Hiking
Australians go Bushwalking
Simple as that in my opinion. Anything else is just Un-Australian!
Scottyk wrote:Kiwis go Tramping
Americans/Europeans go Hiking
Australians go Bushwalking
Simple as that in my opinion. Anything else is just Un-Australian!
Picaro wrote:Lets go walkabout.
Empty wrote:
On the other hand I googled "tramp" and didn't find anything about walking. Got to get me a better internet filter.
Rambling sounds like walking in an idyllic place in a heterogeneous countryside with some bits of pleasant scrambling, definitely no heavy rucksack but cane picnic basket and poetry book optional and maybe a nice country pub at days end! I like it!Empty wrote:Now I am just rambling.
photohiker wrote:The French:
randonnée
nf
(=sport) hike, hiking no pl
faire de la randonnée to go hiking
(=excursion) walk, ramble
une randonnée pédestre a walk, a ramble
une randonnée à vélo a bike ride
The Germans seem to Wandern
The Norwegians: Vandring, fottur.
The Swedes: fotvandring and fotvandra
I think we have permission to use our own words, and bushwalking suits the country...
A trek is a long, adventurous journey undertaken on foot in areas where common means of transport are generally not available. Trekking should not be confused with mountaineering. In North America the equivalent is backpacking, while New Zealanders use the word tramping.
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