Day 2: Melaleuca to Buoy Creek
Vast plains, sheltering mountains and wide white beaches
Walk with Us:
On this trip, we are wearing goretex Arcteryx Beta AR jackets, but lighter weight goretex Outdoor Research Foray rain pants, both purchased during sales at significant discounts – autumn sales when new models arrive are good times to buy superseded models. These pants would not suit serious Tassie scrub-bashing, but are fine for the SCT.
When choosing rain pants, look for ones with long zips and wide legs so you can put them on without taking off your boots; the latter is a pain if you're donning and doffing in showery weather. Hikers with big feet wearing boots rather than shoes need to be especially vigilant! Some rain pants like ours have full-length two-way zips, great for cooling off as well as being easy to put on quickly without smearing mud inside. Look also for press studs that tighten the cuff around the ankle.
We normally wear rain pants tile-style over gaiters to avoid funnelling water into our shoes, unless we're in tough terrain.
We have the campsite to ourselves, most likely because we left in the morning after stopping overnight in Melaleuca after our flight. Hikers that head-off straight from their flight into Melaleuca will almost certainly stop at either Freney Lagoon or Point Eric - Buoy Creek is a little too far to be done in the late afternoon. And hikers going east to west will also most likely push onto to Point Eric or Freney Lagoon so that can reach Melaleuca in time for their return flight. Much nicer without the rush: enjoy the solitude and make your next day to Louisa River easier.
We acknowledge the Tasmanian Aboriginal people and their enduring custodianship of lutruwita (Tasmania).