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Mountain Journal

Environment, news, culture from the Australian Alps

Planned burn in biodiversity hotspot

This summer has seen sustained community campaigns against specific fuel reduction burns, from Flowerdale to Gippsland. Now Friends of Bats and Habitat have raised the alarm about a large burn which is planned for the Mitchell River National Park.

Roaring Mag: There are so many redflags with this remote 1,875 ha Forest Fire Management Victoria (FFMV) burn which is expected to be ignited within ten days in the Mitchell River National Park. A rapid desktop survey brings up a whole of suite of threatened, rare and endemic flora and fauna records within this burn site. Dropping off cliffs are waterfalls, sheltered narrow gullies, large areas of old growth forest, and the most southern occurrence of warm temperate rainforest … If you went looking for a Spot-tailed Quoll, this is where it might be.

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Alpine Odyssey Aotearoa to cross NZ from north to south

Many backcountry enthusiasts will be familiar with Huw Kingston. Most recently he has released and toured the film Alpine Odyssey, which covers his winter crossing of the Australian Alps during 2022, which was unusual because he visited all of the ski resorts along the way.

Now he is planning a winter crossing of Aotearoa New Zealand. Traveling from the tip of the North Island to the bottom of the South, he and his friend Laurence Mote plan to ski, cycle, walk and sail the full length of both islands. They also intend to ski at all 24 ski fields in the country. They start their journey on 25 June.

You can read more below.

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Backcountry film festival – May 11

The backcountry film festival is a pre winter institution in Melbourne. We have been screening the festival each year since 2011. This is a first announcement for the 2025 screening and a call for local backcountry films to be included in the festival.

The festival will happen on Sunday May 11, 2025.

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‘Mountain Minds’ gathering on kunanyi / Mt Wellington

Friends of the Mountain are proud to invite you to Mountain Minds.

This will be a free community gathering of music, talks, workshops and yoga, designed to bring people together through their shared passion to protect kunanyi / Wellington Park from inappropriate commercial developments like cable cars, ziplines and restaurants/ whisky bars on the mountains summit. kunanyi / Mt Wellington sits above Hobart/ nipaluna and has been threatened by various development proposals in recent years.

Mountain Minds is an all – ages inclusive, alcohol free event featuring a kids area so the young ones are entertained. Including talks, music, workshops & more from an amazing array of locals, this half- day event aims to bring together a community of like minded people… to inspire, inform & enjoy all the reasons that kunanyi must stay protected.

 

Save the date: Saturday 3rd May, 1pm – late.

There is a facebook page for the event here.

 

Mountain Journal is proud to support this event.

An ecological disaster is underway in the Victorian high country

There have been significant fears raised in the environmental community about the two high country fires that are currently burning. One (the Matlock fire) has threatened to run south to the Baw Baw Plateau. It is now contained. The second one (called the Mt Margaret fire and marked on Emergency Victoria maps as NE of Licola) is not yet under control and moving into precious high country areas. UPDATE, March 6: there is a new fire – in the Wonnangatta Valley.

We appreciate the huge effort that has gone into containing the Matlock fire. Forest Fire Management Victoria (FFMV) crews have obviously worked hard on both these fires. But a situation is unfolding at present (monday March 3, 2025) which could see an ecological catastrophe happen in the coming week.

We will post updates here as there are changes to the conditions on the fires. Scroll down to find the latest.

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A report from the snow gum summit

Each year it gets a little harder to ignore the impacts of climate change. For us mountain folk, the obvious signs are the more erratic winters, the dwindling snowpack, and the longer fire seasons that, increasingly, disrupt our summers.

Every natural ecosystem on the planet is being impacted by climate change. In the Australian high country, the two most obvious victims are alpine ash and snow gums. It is impossible to miss the walls of grey dead trunks and the thick and flammable regrowth as you drive up into the mountains from any valley town. Climate change is making our fire seasons longer and snow gums are increasingly being burnt beyond their ability to recover. Research from Latrobe University[1] shows that ‘long unburnt’ snow gums are now ‘exceedingly rare’ in the Victorian Alps, comprising less than 1% of snow gum forests.

And dieback is now killing thousands of trees. Dieback is a natural phenomena, caused by a native beetle. However, climate change appears to be ‘super charging’ the scale of the impact. This is because winters are shorter and warmer (meaning more beetles survive the cold months) and summers are hotter and drier (meaning trees are more water stressed and less able to produce the sap that acts as a defence against beetle infestations).

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Mountain Journal magazine #5 – call-out for contributions

It’s that time of year. We are starting to get the annual magazine started. MJ magazine is an annual magazine that is distributed for free in mountain and valley towns between Melbourne and Canberra. And this year we have a guest editor: Anna Langford.

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Fire near Mt Howitt

Recent dry lightning caused a number of fires across the Victorian high country. Most were quickly contained but one just north of the Howitt Plains is becoming a concern.

This area, of high elevation snow gum woodlands inter-spaced with grass dominated plains, has been burnt several times in recent decades, with many areas now holding thick (and highly flammable) regrowth forests. Fires in these recovering forests can lead to ecological collapse – that is, the loss of snow gum dominated forests, which are replaced by grass and shrubs. It is essential that we exclude fire from these ecosystems as they recover.

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Above the Snow Line

Sarah Lynch is an artist based in Naarm (Melbourne) and works primarily in photography, video, and installation. Lynch’s most recent work examines the diversity of the botanical world and the relationship between plants, people, and the ecosystems they inhabit.

Sarah will be presenting at the snow gum summit, which will happen at Dinner Plain from February 14 – 16, 2025.

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International Mountain Day 2024

International Mountain Day is marked each year on December 11. This is one of those globally recognised events that often have an annual theme, and according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the UN (FAO), this year it is “Mountain solutions for a sustainable future – innovation, adaptation and youth”.

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Do you have a film to include in the 2025 backcountry film festival?

Last winter already seems like a dream. It was so brief (with some moments of absolute powder glory) but gone so soon. Living through the second short season in a row makes us all worry about what’s coming as climate change keeps kicking in (the recently released ‘Victoria’s changing climate report –  available here – highlights the fact that snow pack has been in decline in Victoria since the 1950s).

But to be a skier or rider in Australia is to be an eternal optimist. So we plough on, hopeful that next winter will break the current losing trend.

And, when we can’t get to the snow, there is always the Backcountry Film festival!

Continue reading “Do you have a film to include in the 2025 backcountry film festival?”

What next after the logging? Have your say

On January 1, 2024, all native forest logging on public lands in the east of the state of Victoria ended. This is a wonderful win for forests, animals, landscapes and the climate, and comes after decades of hard work by many thousands of people.

After a long wait, the state government has now announced the consultation process for making a decision about how these forests should be managed in the future. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to influence the way Victoria’s forests are cared for into the future. Fill out this short survey as part of the Great Outdoors Taskforce’s engagement on the future of state forests.

Continue reading “What next after the logging? Have your say”

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