Heemskirk Falls … maybe just a little bit further

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Some opportunities you just can’t miss …

Even in the photos I put myself at the back …

Yes, getting a photo at this new sign at the Zeehan Caravan Park is one of those opportunities, but a better example might be taking advantage of a work trip over to the West Coast to go check out Heemskirk Falls.

Now, you may recall that on a previous adventure, I’d got oh so close to the falls, but ultimately was defeated by a lack of track down the last four or five hundred metres.

Well having learnt my mistake, this time I was more prepared …

Enter the packraft – Heemskirk River

It had been a long day (starting from Hobart), but we’d wrapped up our series of meetings by 3.30pm and I was back at my hotel by 4pm, so I grabbed my hotel room key, changed into my cycling gear, pulled the mountain bike out of the car (hey, I figured I was over here to talk mountain biking so it was only proper that I bring the bike for street cred) and set off to the falls.

It’s about 20km by road to the Heemskirk River from Zeehan, and from there it’s only a short few kilometres of riding over the button grass plains to get back to where I’d been to before … this being as far as I could go on a bike, but with the river curving out of sight towards the top of the waterfall …

A few leaches came to visit me while I pumped up the packraft, and some very rude animal had used the area I was trying to pump the raft up on as a toilet recently (and it had a bad case of diarrhea), but fortunately I was quickly on the water (without any smelly ‘additions’ to the raft) and heading off …

I felt just like Huck Finn as I headed off around the first corner and saw the river disappearing off in front of me …  adventure awaited.

Just not as much of it as Huck had with the Mississippi … in fact, as I’ve already mentioned it’s only about 500 metres from the track end down to the top of the falls, and if you didn’t mind a bit of wading and maybe a short swim or two, you could easily walk the river down to the falls.  Most of it would be around knee deep.

There was one short ripple (which I had to pull the raft up on the way back up the river) but otherwise it’s pretty much flat with slow flowing water and just a few trees to get over on the way down to the waterfall …

A little stream coming in.
Small ripple rapid (very short and easy)

Then it’s welcome to disappointment-ville.

At least it was for me.

You see if you google “Heemskirk Falls tasmania” and look at the images, you’ll see lots of beautiful waterfalls … not one of which (as far as I can see) is actually Heemskirk Falls, and you also kind of figure that if it’s been nominated as a potential destination for a new mountain biking trail then it’s got to be something spectacular …

But this is Heemskirk Falls …

The suspense builds – you have to walk the last 40 metres
Heemskirk Falls
Heemskirk Falls – probably 5 metres high
the view out over the lake

and looking the other way …

But, in fairness,  now that I knew what it looked like, a bit more searching turned up this photo from the State Library which shows the falls in its glory days before the Pieman was dammed (unfortunately it’s copyrighted so I can’t show it here – you’ll have to follow the link.

Now that I would have ridden down to see, but not what is there today, at least not now that I know what’s there.

But fortunately for me, I didn’t know what was there, so for me at least there was still an adventure to be had.

Yep, maybe this isn’t the end – maybe I can go on for just a little bit further yet …

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