Facing a quiet weekend at home, my interest was easily piqued by an offer to join some friends for an overnighter at the Cathedral Ranges. The plan was to meet at the Farmyard campsite for the night.
I decided to do a loop from Cooks Mill to Sugarloaf Peak, then along the Razorback - about 13 km in total. This route is part of the Cathedral Range Circuit, described in Weekend Walks Around Melbourne.
I parked at Cooks Mill, donned the pack and headed off around 4:20pm.
I decided to do a loop from Cooks Mill to Sugarloaf Peak, then along the Razorback - about 13 km in total. This route is part of the Cathedral Range Circuit, described in Weekend Walks Around Melbourne.
I parked at Cooks Mill, donned the pack and headed off around 4:20pm.
It was typical Melbourne stinker, with the temperature in the low 30s C. A short walk got me to the Jawbone car park, followed by a long haul up the Cerebus Road, passing along the eastern side of the range.
The tall gums along the road gave scant shelter from the sun and I glad to arrive at the shelter at Sugarloaf Shelter at 6pm.
Mt Sugarloaf has been a popular location for rock climbers in the past |
Once on top the views in the clear, late afternoon light, were fantastic as I made my way first up to Mt Sugarloaf for a brief stop, then along the Razorback.
Terrific views from the Razorback |
Much of the route along the Razorback involves scrambling over rocks and boulders. It is not particularly challenging - actually, I found it fun for the most part - just slow going.
The one annoyance was that the trail runs along the western side of the ridge line and is quite exposed, meaning that I got to bear the full brunt of surprising heat in the setting sun. It was a relief when the sun finally dropped below the horizon. Later, as darkness fell, I made my way using my head torch.
Apparently this area was originally seabed and there are occasional signs of this past in the rocks along the route |
There's lots of fun scrambling along the Razorback |
With everyone having an early night I elected to follow suit, so I pitched my pyramid, then settled down for the night.
We all woke to a beautiful Sunday morning. We shared a leisurely breakfast before heading off at around 8:30am (in 20C) for the short walk down the hill to Jawbone car park, then onto Cooks Mill.
The Farmyard - a lovely place to camp. |
Keen campers - Amy & Fraser |
Cooling off at Little River (Brett, Amy, Fraser, Fiona and David) |
The author taking things too far |
I must have missed this blog when you posted it but, better late than never because this looks like a really good walk! Has all our favourite ingredients - i.e. rocks, scrambling, razorback ridges! Nice.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it's a great part of the country!
ReplyDeleteGreat trip report Andrew. You need to start arriving at camp in the daylight if you expect people to be awake. See you next time.
ReplyDelete