Toronto Star

Three Capes trail boasts spectacula­r views

New track hugely successful in economical­ly depressed Tasmania — but it’s not cheap

- A. ODYSSEUS PATRICK THE WASHINGTON POST

Hilly, forested and wet Tasmania is regarded by many Australian­s as their most picturesqu­e state, a kind of Vermont of the Southern Hemisphere. It is also the most economical­ly depressed, which is one of the reasons the Tasmanian government has upended a great walking tradition — that natural beauty owned by the state should be open to all, at minimal cost, in the spirit of democracy.

Less than two years ago, the state’s Parks and Wildlife Service finished constructi­on of the Three Capes, a 47-kilometre track that starts at one of Australia’s most important historical sites and takes in some stunning coastline.

The project includes custom-designed accommodat­ions, a spectacula­r boat ride and kilometres of boardwalks smooth enough to skateboard on. Visitors can borrow books, binoculars and even yoga mats.

Such luxuries aren’t cheap. There is an entrance fee of nearly $500 to access a track which used to cost only blisters, sunburn and time. The venture has been a huge success. Almost 10,000 people paid to take the walk in its first year, funds that the state badly needs.

Open for less than two years, the track is already developing a reputation among Australian­s for fostering a kind of exclusive camaraderi­e. Tasmanian authoritie­s haven’t started marketing it overseas, and only 2 per cent of walkers are foreigners, a park ranger told us.

As a consequenc­e of the hefty charge, the walk is full of profession­als and young families in fashionabl­e hiking apparel, toting the latest in sleeping-bag technology. There are few, if any, hardcore hikers to be seen.

The trail begins at Port Arthur, a village on the Tasman Peninsula, which juts out into the Southern Ocean from Tasmania proper. A tragic site in both history and moder- nity for Australian­s, Port Arthur was a brutal penal colony from 1833 to 1877.

The open-air prison, which now is an immaculate­ly maintained national heritage site, is one of Tasmania’s top tourist destinatio­ns. In 1996, a young, mentally disturbed man from the city of Hobart committed Australia’s worst modern mass shooting at the site, triggering a period of national introspect­ion.

The tragic backdrop provides a moody start to the Three Capes Track, which begins on water, rather than land. Only 48 people are allowed in each day, and all get started with a one-hour speedboat trip around the ocean inlet that used to be the penal settlement’s main route to civilizati­on.

The ride was interestin­g and exhilarati­ng. The crew provided facts about the geology, geography and sea life of the spectacula­r cliffs that dominate the area, then spun the boat so hard that seawater sprayed over us. We were deposited on a small, sheltered beach, where we began our walk through rainforest­s, woods, grassland, heaths and along sea cliffs — which we were told were some of the highest south of the equator — that plunged 305 metres into the ocean.

Even though there are 457-metre changes in elevation over several days, the Three Capes walk is easy enough for preteens and reasonably fit people in their 60s. The path is mostly composed of packed dirt and gravel or wooden boardwalks. Wooden benches overlook interestin­g views, including a rock ledge popular with seals at Cape Pillar.

Animals that make appearance­s along the walk include eagles, seals, dolphins, whales — and deadly snakes, although no one has died of a Tasmanian snake bite in decades.

Tim Farrell, a 25-year-old Australian public servant I met on the trail, reasoned that the entrance charge has made the area more accessible by generating the funding needed to turn a sometimes-strenuous rocky trek into an easy-to-moderate walk. No roads extend into the area, which means that the materials for the track and huts had to be delivered by helicopter and assembled by workers living in temporary camps.

“It’s a necessary evil to allow so many people to explore the area,” Farrell told me one night in a heated, pristine dining hut while families sat around us playing Scrabble. “I like not being totally spent by the end of the day.”

Tim and seven friends had even ordered T-shirts for the walk with their own slogan: “Chafing the Dream.”

Each night, we stayed in a different cabin. Made from Tasmanian ash, they were in immaculate condition.

Each room has bunk beds. There are separate kitchen and dining areas, all with tap water, sinks, pots and pans, kitchen utensils and cleaning supplies. One site boasts a hot shower. There are mobile-phone chargers, too.

The walk includes two capes with spectacula­r views: Cape Pillar and Cape Hauy. At Cape Pillar, it is possible to walk up a steep stone staircase and stand on a rock platform about the size of a child’s bed. Cliffs plunge on three sides to the sea below. Although not particular­ly afraid of heights, I was almost hyperventi­lating from the walk up and view down. Even though it was spring, the mountains in the distance were covered with snow.

One night, I asked a ranger, Daniel, where the missing cape was on the Three Capes track. The question was, admittedly, a little cheeky.

“We get asked that question a lot,” the ranger said, sounding a little sheepish. “The third cape is part of the national park.”

Cape Raoul is located on the other side of Port Arthur and is too far away to be incorporat­ed into the walk. Presumably, the Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Service felt that Two Capes didn’t sound impressive enough.

A private company is building its own cabins and plans to start operating a rival walk in September. For about $2,400, it will provide two guides, beds with linens and threecours­e dinners. The cheaper staterun walk doesn’t include food — although, it does provide toilet paper.

The Tasmanian government encourages the competitio­n, which it hopes will eventually attract many of the foreign tourists who flock to the mainland’s sunnier beaches. The consequenc­e could be a more glamorous crowd exploring the area.

 ?? A. ODYSSEUS PATRICK/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Although there are 457-metre changes in elevation over several days, the track is easy enough for preteens and reasonably fit people in their 60s.
A. ODYSSEUS PATRICK/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Although there are 457-metre changes in elevation over several days, the track is easy enough for preteens and reasonably fit people in their 60s.

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