Please print and display a poster wherever appropriate and legal.
For more information, see the Great Heritage Highway Walk blog.
A call for safe footpaths between all Tasmanian cities and towns—starting with a path between Hobart and Launceston.
I had a productive, half-hour meeting yesterday with Alderman Jeff Briscoe of the Hobart City Council, who is a known supporter of improved walkways and bikeways and the like. I am pleased to record that he listened attentively to our proposal for, inter alia, a proper, continuous footpath between Hobart and Launceston, and to details of the planned Great Heritage Highway Walk next Easter, and to other, related ideas. Not only did he expreſs general support, he also aſsured me that he will help publicise our Walk; he will, for example, speak to the Lord Mayor of Hobart about official involvement in welcoming participants of the Walk when they arrive in Hobart. Alderman Briscoe also revealed that he knew well that it was easier to walk between Hobart and Launceston in colonial days because he posseses diaries from an ancestor describing such a journey; he promised to send us an account of his ancestor’s trip soon.
Thursday, 2 April, Launceston, viâ Perth*, to Epping Forest (44 km);
Friday, 3 April, Epping Forest to Roſs (34 km);
Saturday, 4 April, Roſs to Oatlands (36 km);
Sunday, 5 April, Oatlands to Kempton (39 km);
Monday, 6 April, Kempton to Brighton (24 km); and
Tuesday, 7 April, Brighton, viâ Granton, to Hobart (30 km).
Rose Cottage, Epping Forest;
Roſs Hotel, Roſs; &
Kentish Hotel, Oatlands.
(Also, somewhere on the village green‡ in Kempton Town.)
Rose Cottage,‡ Kempton, since nearby hostelries closed in recent times, no longer has any hireable accommodation for paſsing visitors other than some provision for camper-vans (and, undoubtedly, for those with contacts, a few hospitable, private dwellings). Thankfully, Kempton still has a tavern so that walkers will at least be able to procure a refreshing beverage or two.
Barton Road, Epping Forest 7211, (03) 6391 5569,
rosecott@southcom.com.au;
Roſs Hotel,
35 Church Street, Roſs 7209, (03) 6381 5445,
rosshotel.au@gmail.com;
Kentish Hotel,
60 High St, Oatlands 7120, (03) 6254 1119,
nadiaalbertini@bigpond.com.
Evandale has a wonderfully historic streetscape and just south of Evandale at Nile, is the magnificent historic estate of Clarendon House. Also home to the Australian Fly Fishing Museum and the Norfolk Plains Heritage Centre.
At Longford, we have two World Heritage Listed Convict Sites, Woolmers and Brickendon.
When you get to Oatlands, there is a fabulous historic mill, the Callington Mill, and it is poſsible to book tours of the mill. They are great tours . . . don a hardhat and go right to the very top inside the mill. Very fascinating. […]
At Brighton, there is the amazing Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary. Great opportunity to get up close and personal with Taſsie’s wildlife as they are cared for by wonderful people, either for their lifetime or in preparation for release back to the wild.
Anyone who has cycled through Tasmania will tell you that pedalling through the landscape provides a very, very different perspective to driving.
Cycling completely immerses tourists in the experience of travelling through our countryside.
Cycling tourists smell the eucalypts and banksias, breathe the incredibly clean, fresh air and feel the undulating hills and dales with their thighs.
They can hear the chirping of birds, the soothing rhythm of waves lapping at the shore and the wind as it blows through the trees.
The much slower pace of pedalling through the scenery enables riders to gain a more thorough appreciation that is vastly more engaging than peering out the window of an air-conditioned sedan.
Mr. Hodgman went on to point out that a 480 kilometre trail already existed from Devonport to Dover via Sheffield, Miena, Ouse, New Norfolk and Geevston which is acceſsible for bike riding and walking.