[Blue gum blossom on the shores of Fortescue Bay, Tasmania] |
Australians
are a famously coastal people. 85% of us live within 50km of the ocean. We’re
also notoriously irreverent. So when our national anthem celebrates our land
being “girt by sea”, we’re more inclined to take the piss than hold our hands
on our hearts. The 1970s comedy The Aunty Jack Show, for instance, had a
spoof anthem for the coastal city of Wollongong, rejoicing that it was “girt by
sea on one side”.
I’m not sure that Germans have quite the same
sense of the ridiculous, but I do love it that they have a single word for
“girt by sea”, namely “meerumschlungen” (literally “sea-embraced”). It's a beautifully
logical, Meccano-esque language. Need another word? Just bolt it on! I dare say
that if I were to find myself surrounded by cheese, I could be
"kaeseumschlungen".
Ambulatory
rhythms have a way freeing the mind to play. That at least may explain my mind wandering
into this linguistic territory during a walk out to Cape Hauy on the Tasman
Peninsula. It is a classic coastal track that I had somehow missed in my thirty
plus years of bushwalking in Tasmania. With a new, much-publicised track to the
cape, and the Show Weekend weather finally turning friendly, it was time to try
it.
[On the new track, looking towards Cape Hauy] |
The
track first. While it has not yet settled into its environment, I must say there
is a kind of Teutonic logic – not to mention beauty – to the new track. Close
up the stonework is precise and artful, more Lego than Meccano, though in
weathered earth tones rather than primary colours. And it looks ready to last
the next millenium. Some re-routing has been done to avoid the steepest slopes
and the boggiest sections, such that “dry boot standard” might almost be true
of the 4.7km track.
But
the walk is quickly about so much more than the track. We are very soon umschlungen, if not quite girt, by sea
and wind; wildflowers and wings. To our left is Fortescue Bay, a wide, deep
blue embayment, white-capped in the keen wind. And as we climb above the bay we
are soon surrounded by wildflowers: boronia, banksia, pultenaea and pimelia, among
others, all close to full bloom.
[Lemon boronia blossom along the track] |
The
assault on the senses increases as we pass the track’s high point. From it Cape
Hauy comes into view, looming straight ahead as a series of massive, slanted
dolerite bluffs backed by the Tasman Sea. To our right is the next cape south: the
prodigious Cape Pillar, with the mass of Tasman Island disguised behind it.
[On the track, with Cape Pillar behind] |
The
whole coastline has the feel of a disputed frontier. Some think it may mark a
torn edge of the former landmass of Gondwana. Indisputably its huge dolerite
cliffs are the result of the igneous upwellings that occurred in the Jurassic (around
170 million year ago), and ructions that continued into the Cretaceous (around
85 mya), as Gondwana slowly broke into separate land masses.
I
imagine the slow wrestle that led to this dolerite staying here when it could
just as easily have “sailed off” to Antarctica, where matching dolerite is
found today. As we near the final bluff, the wind and wuthering continue, like an
echo of that struggle. Waves carry on the argument, pounding and foaming at the
base of the vertiginous cliffs.
[Dolerite cliffs near Cape Hauy] |
But
further out masses of short-tailed shearwaters, dark and low to the sea; and a
few isolated gannets, broad-winged and angel white, move over the waters like
more peaceful spirits. We walk into the lee of a bluff, and the wind drops,
allowing us a quiet lunch with a priceless view. We’re as glad as we would be
reaching any mountain summit, perhaps gladder. Few summits are quite as girt as
this.
2 comments:
As an ex-Taswegian, it's lovely to revisit via your blog!
Lovely to have you visit Rosemary. And Tassie is still as beautiful as ever.
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