Day 7: Mt Dale to Brookton

We acknowledge the Nyoongar People as the traditional custodians of the land and waters along the Bibbulmun Track

single straight foot track through open country with many grass trees and thick understory plants bight blue sky above

Absolutely loving the more open parts of the walk.

This was a delightfully short cruisy walk after the climbs of the past few days, and the packs are light before our resupply tomorrow at the highway.  The Bibbulmun has been deliberately designed with short distances initially at either end to ease hikers into the walk, and it has been excellent even without the training we usually do. I’m feeling positive.

Satellite map of Bibbulmun track route in blue the section from Kalamunda to Dwellingup highlighted yellow todays walk is red

Location of today’s walk. Use the Bibbulmun Track Foundation Map 1 The Darling Range

satelitte map with elevation graph 150 metre gain 210 metre loss

Today is a short (7.8 km) flat day with a general down gradient but of course there is still a little uphill… but it’s an easy grade.

Some of the flatter country we walk through is quite different, too so there is still lots to like.

open woodland view with short scattered trees and dense understorey

Views through the trees rather than vistas today

close up of white flower buds on small bush

Leucopogon strictus

hiker with blue back pack on single vehicle track with dense shrubbery either side under a bright blue sky

Lovely wide walking track, alternating between sand and laterite.

Soup and crackers for lunch at a pretty spot, but I didn’t take too many photos today as one of my spare batteries turned out to be flat. Arrrggghhh! They have to last all the way to Dwellingup and – oh no!- there are sure to be many more things I REALLY want to photograph! What if I run out? Horror!

burnt tree trunk that has been hollowed out by fire and is suspended by timber on one side only  with a big gap on the other side which hiker is peeking trough

The old burnt trees are amazing. This one is dead – how is it still standing? However, many burnt  trees are still alive, even when hollowed out, because they are adapted to fire with thick bark. The living tissue is under the bark, not in the centre of the tree.

close up of single stemmed orchid with purply blue flower

These Silky Blue orchids (Cyanicula sericea) are very common. From a distance, they look EXACTLY like South Australia’s Purple Cockatoo (Glossodia major). I wonder if they fill the same environmental niche? You can see by my musings – often aloud as we walk – that Geoff is a VERY patient man!

close up of rough looking gravel track

Here’s a closeup of that lateritic gravel and rock. You can see why it’s so tough on tent floors.

close up of small green single stemmed orchid
close up of small green single stemmed orchid from side it looks like a bird

There are so many of these bird orchids (Pterostylis barbata). In these shots, you can see the pollination mechanism. There’s the fluttery hairy labellum to attract the pollinator, which enters the backlit hood because its translucency makes the insect think there’s an exit inside.  You can see the pollinia inside at the top. The insect climbs up through the hood  and then out through an opening at the top front, which has special bristles to direct the insect to brush past the pollen on the way. You can see the little white bristles just below the yellow pollinia. Ingenious!

hiker with blue backpack in bright shine walking along single vehicle wide track in open woodland many grass trees

The open forestry tracks are pleasant, easy walking.

Acacia drummondii and Kennedia coccinea (Coral Pea)

bush with yellow and burnt orange pea flowers and many sharp thorns

Davesia horrida. Just look at those spines. And what a great name!

close up of small sundew plant with red leaves laying flat on small pebbles on the ground

The aptly named red ink drosera (D. erythrorhiza)

four sided rammed earth hut but two of the sides are stopped short so there is a gap on one corner

And quite soon we arrive at Brookton Hut, another one of the newer rammed earth ones rebuilt after fire.  They are very comfortable, without bunks but a larger platform, and this one has been carefully oriented with the door in the lee corner as it is a windy site.

view inside hut there is a picnic table in cntre with a wooden sleep bench around each wall a tent is set up on the sleeping bench in one corner

Many hikers set up a tent inner against mosquitoes or for privacy when there are few people in the hut. This is one advantage of a freestanding tent on this track - it can be done with non-freestanding inners too, but you have to suspend the apices and weight the corners, so it’s trickier.

rammed earth hut with green roof and rainwater tank there are two picnic tables outside of hut

Plenty of tables: one inside the hut, as well as these two outside.  There are two signs on short wooden posts: one to the toilets, and another to the campsites.

small tent setup on clear ground in dappled shade surrounded by grass trees under clear blue sky

And here we are in another perfect campsite! We chose our Triplex tent over our Stratospire Li for this hike because the Triplex is so roomy inside. The Stratospire Li stands up to tougher and more exposed conditions, but we knew the campsites would almost all be relatively sheltered.


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Day 6: Beraking to Mt Dale