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Get your hiking boots on for the best mountain walks

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SNOWY MOUNTAINS, NSW MOUNT KOSCIUSZKO

ALLOW One day

BEST TIME Summer

Of all the highest mountains on all the world’s continents, it’s Mount Kosciuszko that yields the most easily. Australia’s tallest peak presents little difficulty – until the 1970s it was possible to drive to the summit – but it provides a wonderful glimpse into the country’s alpine heights.

The Kosciuszko Express Chairlift up from Thredbo takes most of the sting out of the walk and from the chairlift station, the bulk of the route is along a paved path and a mesh walkway. In summer there’s likely to be a carpet of alpine wildflower­s and you’ll cross the headwaters of the poetic Snowy River. Nearing Kosciuszko, you’ll pass above Lake Cootapatam­ba, Australia’s highest lake and one of just a handful created by glaciers.

The mesh walkway ends at Rawson Pass, where the track makes a circuitous climb to the summit of 2228-metrehigh Kosciuszko – the rooftop of the Australian Alps.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY As mountains go, Kosciuszko is a stroll but you’ll need a day.

YOU WON’T FORGET The thrill of standing on the continent’s highest point, looking out over the country that inspired the bush poem The Man from Snowy River.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Settle in before your gas log fire, or in your room spa, at Thredbo Village’s luxury Snowgoose Apartments (snowgoosea­partments. com.au).

MORE nationalpa­rks.nsw.gov.au

ADVENTURE Australia might be a land of sweeping plains but it’s also a country of inviting peaks. Avid hiker Andrew Bain picks the walks that intrepid travellers should conquer.

CENTRAL HIGHLANDS, TAS CRADLE MOUNTAIN

ALLOW One day

BEST TIME Summer

It’s arguably as famous as the state in which it stands: Cradle Mountain, rising from the shores of Dove Lake, its long summit bowed as if by the weight of time.

To climb Tasmania’s emblematic peak requires a long day of walking but it has the added thrill of taking you along the first few hours of Australia’s most renowned multi-day bushwalk, the Overland Track, which ends 65 kilometres away at Lake St Clair.

At Kitchen Hut, a hikers’ shelter about three hours into the walk, the climb to Cradle’s 1545-metre peak (above) veers away from the Overland, making for a testing ascent through the Cradle Mountain escarpment.

There’s a reward at the top: a view across one of the country’s most impressive mountain skylines, from the bulbous Barn Bluff to Mount Ossa, Tassie’s highest peak (1617 metres). DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY Physical flexibilit­y is an asset on this long, challengin­g hike.

YOU WON’T FORGET The heady sense of adventure as you scramble up Cradle Mountain’s boulder-strewn slopes.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge (peppers.com.au) has luxurious cabins tucked into the alpine bush at the edge of Cradle MountainLa­ke St Clair National Park.

MORE parks.tas.gov.au

ALPINE NATIONAL PARK, VIC MOUNT FEATHERTOP

ALLOW One day

BEST TIME Summer and autumn

You don’t earn a name like “Queen of the Alps” without being something special. Victoria’s second-highest mountain (1922 metres) is possibly the most striking and most alpine of the state’s High Country peaks, standing almost aloof from those around it and connecting to Mount Hotham – famous for its ski runs – by a thread-thin ridge known as the Razorback.

It’s a shy peak. For 10 kilometres, you walk without seeing the crown, climbing relentless­ly through the strata of ferns, alpine ash, snow gums and, finally, nothing as you step above the tree line into the alpine heights. The approach to the top is a run of false summits – a teasing end to 1400 metres of climbing – until you at last come to its true apex, a lofty island in an endless sea of blue mountains.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY From the Ovens Valley in Harrietvil­le, it’s pretty much uphill for 12 kilometres – and your legs will feel it.

YOU WON’T FORGET The feeling of elevation at Feathertop’s highest point.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Extend the sense of isolation with a gloriously peaceful night at The Buckland (thebucklan­d.com. au), a stylish retreat set in the countrysid­e outside the nearby town of Bright.

MORE parkweb.vic.gov.au

EAST COAST, TAS MOUNT AMOS

ALLOW Half a day

BEST TIME Year-round

Every summer day, hundreds of people funnel through a pass on the Freycinet Peninsula to stand on a lookout platform and ogle the curvaceous Wineglass Bay. Few of them know that their panorama virtually pales into insignific­ance compared to the one from just above them, atop Mount Amos.

This low-lying mountain (454 metres) in The Hazards range, in Freycinet National Park, offers arguably Tasmania’s finest coastal view but it comes with effort – as much mental as physical. On the slopes above Coles Bay, it’s a clamber over bald granite slabs, along rock ledges and around boulders that seem to balance in defiance of gravity.

You might hear the cursing below you of walkers struggling up the slopes but at the top there are only exclamatio­ns, with Wineglass Bay unfurled below like a white ribbon, backed by another line of mountains and the distant Maria Island. Who needs a lookout platform?

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY A short but demanding climb that’s less about fitness and more about fearlessne­ss. Avoid climbing in the wet, when the granite can be treacherou­s.

YOU WON’T FORGET The aircraftwo­rthy view of Wineglass Bay.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Tasmania’s plushest lodge, Saffire Freycinet (saffire-freycinet.com.au), makes a truly stylish way to savour the end of a magnificen­t climb.

MORE parks.tas.gov.au

WEST MACDONNELL RANGES, NT MOUNT SONDER

ALLOW One day

BEST TIME Winter

Aim to spend sunrise atop Mount Sonder, known to local Aboriginal people as the “sleeping woman” for its shape. The most westerly peak in the West MacDonnell Ranges marks the western end of the long-distance Larapinta Trail. You’ll walk through darkness and in those hours before dawn, the only thing that seems to be moving in the desert is the light from climbers’ torches, rising slowly up Sonder’s slopes.

At 6am we reach the summit, a place of shattered rock and a smattering of desert bush, as faint light leaks over the horizon. An hour behind us the sun arrives, bronzing the outback plains and mountains and revealing a host of Red Centre features: distant Gosses Bluff, the shadowed entrance of Glen Helen Gorge and the Northern Territory’s highest peak, Mount Zeil (1531 metres), just to the north-west. And it’s still barely breakfast-time.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY One of our less demanding climbs but over rocky and often loose terrain.

YOU WON’T FORGET The desert landscape as the view stretches interminab­ly across red sand and rock.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Just a few kilometres from the mountain, Glen Helen Homestead Lodge (glenhelen. com.au) offers a classic outback stay.

MORE larapintat­rail.com.au

LORD HOWE ISLAND, NSW MOUNT GOWER

ALLOW One day

BEST TIME Year-round

Peer between your feet when you’re on the slopes of Mount Gower and the ocean churns hundreds of metres below. There might be a helmet on your head and you’ll be connected to the mountain by a rope, in an unusual and exhilarati­ng moment of island life.

By rights, this challengin­g monolith, rising 875 metres straight out of the sea, has no place on a thin piece of tropicalco­loured paradise like Lord Howe Island but that incongruit­y is part of what makes it so special.

The climb, which can only be done with a local guide, goes from a palm-lined beach to a summit covered in stunted and gnarled cloud forest. In between are sections of rock and slopes so steep, there are assisting ropes fixed to the rock.

Flightless woodhens bustle about, petrels might squabble around your feet and the world will seem to fall away as you ascend to the top for a view over reef-fringed Lord Howe, looking so placid and perfect that you’ll wonder if you’re still on the same island.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY It’s been called one of the hardest day walks in Australia. Enough said.

YOU WON’T FORGET The startling contrast between beach-lined coast and cloudfores­t-covered summit.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF A drink on the waterfront deck at Pinetrees Lodge (pinetrees.com.au) will bring you back to sea level before you settle into one of the garden cottages.

MORE lordhoweis­land.info The West MacDonnell Ranges’ ridge line, looking west towards Mount Sonder (bottom left); climbing Mount Gower on Lord Howe Island (left); verdant Bluff Knoll in WA’s Stirling Range

GREAT SOUTHERN REGION, WA BLUFF KNOLL

ALLOW Half a day

BEST TIME Spring

Big mountains might not be a Western Australian specialty – the highest point in the state is just 1249 metres above sea level – but it doesn’t feel like it on Bluff Knoll. Rising like a wave from the surroundin­g paddocks, the imposing Stirling Range peak towers above you while, at the right time of year, a bursting field guide of wildflower­s grows at your feet.

From spring through early summer, this 1095-metre mountain in the Great Southern region becomes one of the country’s finest floral canvases. About 1500 plant species grow in the ranges, including more than 120 types of orchid. It can almost blind you to the mountain and the effort. By the time I’m standing on the summit, the wraparound views seem a mere bonus.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY It’s up all the way, with a 600-metre-plus climb from base to tip, but it’s a straightfo­rward ascent.

YOU WON’T FORGET The floral extravagan­za – and the inescapabl­e sense of being in high mountains, even though you’re little more than a kilometre above sea level.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF The nearby Porongurup wine region will quench any thirst you’ve built up. Maleeya’s Spa Studio Accommodat­ion (maleeya.com. au), with its spa, sauna and excellent Thai café, should finish the pampering job.

MORE parks.dpaw.wa.gov.au

MOUNT STAPYLTON THE GRAMPIANS, VIC

ALLOW Half a day

BEST TIME Autumn to spring Mention Mount Stapylton to rock climbers and watch their eyes light up. This Grampians mountain shields one of Australia’s finest – and perhaps most beautiful – climbing cliffs, Taipan Wall. For a hiker, it’s just part of the view, towering overhead in orange and black sandstone stripes.

It isn’t the only rock oddity here. Below the wall you’ll pass the suitably named Bird Rock – just part of the collection of surreal sandstone shapes and features throughout the Grampians – and most of the way, the walk traverses sloping sheets of bare sandstone textured like elephant skin.

Things get most exciting as you near the summit of the Grampians’ northernmo­st peak (498 metres), where the trail turns into a scramble, but here it’s more a stepladder than another Taipan Wall.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY It’s a manageable half-day climb on solid rock, though it has some basic scrambling near the top.

YOU WON’T FORGET The looming presence of Taipan Wall – see if you can spot any rock climbers.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Nestled into bush at the edge of Halls Gap, the stylish and secluded cabins at DULC (dulc.com.au) are as therapeuti­c as their spa baths.

MORE parkweb.vic.gov.au The Mount Stapylton hike skirts the base of the iron-stained Taipan Wall (left); Franklin-Gordon Wild Rivers National Park with snow-covered Frenchmans Cap in the background

WEST COAST, TAS FRENCHMANS CAP

ALLOW Four to five days

BEST TIME Summer

Grand mountains are Tasmania’s stock-in-trade but there’s something extra special about Frenchmans Cap (1446 metres). Rising among myriad peaks in the south-west wilderness, it’s one of the state’s most distinctiv­e and imposing mountains, with its finlike summit wrapped in 300-metre cliffs of white quartzite, making it look perpetuall­y snow-capped.

Once infamous for its mud, the trail was rerouted to drier ground a few years ago but it still takes three days before we’re standing beneath its cliffs, where a track leads through the seemingly impenetrab­le terrain. The ascent is exhilarati­ng, challengin­g and at times vertiginou­s as you reach for footholds and handholds, eventually emerging atop this most uncompromi­sing of mountains – a place windswept, wild and wonderful.

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY For experience­d walkers only, with challengin­g sections of scrambling to reach the summit.

YOU WON’T FORGET The exhilarati­on of reaching the top of the cliffs to step onto the summit.

NOW TREAT YOURSELF Sleep in postindust­rial luxury on Australia’s deepest lake – St Clair – at Pumphouse Point (pumphousep­oint.com.au).

MORE parks.tas.gov.au

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 ??  ?? The Razorback track en route to Mount Feathertop (left); rewarding views of Wineglass Bay on the Freycinet Peninsula
The Razorback track en route to Mount Feathertop (left); rewarding views of Wineglass Bay on the Freycinet Peninsula
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