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Green Rosellas are the alpine parrots of Tasmania

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Subject: Green Rosellas are the alpine parrots of Tasmania
From: Laurie Knight <>
Date: Tue, 23 Apr 2019 04:28:59 +1000
My son and I recently went for a stroll along the Overland Track during the 
Easter holiday break.  

It was interesting to see how the place had changed over the three decades 
since I last walked through the park.  The huts are getting bigger and better 
equipped, more people are walking the track and restrictions are in place for 8 
months of the year, there are rangers based on the track, there is more 
protective boardwalks and the sections that aren’t protected are being eroded, 
and most people take the ferry to avoid the last day on the track.

Fortunately only a small proportion of the people walking the track take the 
time to visit Pine Valley and the Labyrinth.  [The people who don’t leave the 
track don’t know what they are missing out on - the Du Cane Range is the best 
part of the park.]

We chose Easter as the time to traverse the park so we could enjoy the golden 
hues of the deciduous beech in its autumn glory.  We had a 10 cm dump of snow 
while we were passing Cradle Mt and then a run of fine weather [including 3 
gold coast weather days] on the way to Cynthia Bay.

There was little avian activity in the snowscape, and indeed it was pretty 
quiet for much of the walk.  The pack-opening currawongs were the most common 
and vocal birds followed by Green Rosellas.  The interesting thing about the 
rosellas was the number of times we saw them on the summits (Ossa, Gereyon, the 
Acropolis and Walled Mt).  Indeed, it was nice to have a rosella sitting on a 
track marker as we climbed through the snow onto the roof of Tasmania.

The tranquility amongst the peaks, lakes, tarns and thickets at 1300+ metres 
ASL was stunning, and sharing the soundscape with the frogs, rosellas and 
breeze was remarkably refreshing.

If you are able, enjoy it while you can.

Regards, Laurie.
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