Op here
>>1107551Ah, cheers mate. I'm a britbong, it's approaching rainy season/winter here, lovely in autumn but pretty uninspiring for a long hike. I imagine it's unbearable around Christmas/Oz summer, but I'll be taking a couple weeks at a workaway/with mates to acclimatise anyway.
>>1107256Thanks cunt, if you can name two o your favourite hikes in oz I'll drop you a line, and I imagine just about everyone in Britanistan is a poofta compared to the average serious /out/ aussie.
>>1108125Cheers mate, that trail looks gorgeous!
>>1108099Nice, I'll stick right out then as a capable, normal looking bloke, make sure to run me over when you see me
>>1108174 I'll give it a read! Cheers bro
I really don't know the first thing about going /out/ in Oz, except that it's arid, it's beautiful, it's harsh as fuck and needs a lot of expertise, the locals might be a mix of cunts and decent blokes but at least it's a first world country without mines or bandits or militia like a lot of beautiful arid countries.
Can anyone reccomend me a dry, beautiful place i can go on a monster hike in? Britain's rain, politics and urbanisation has left me soft and depressed, I want to challenge myself. I like a lot of American trails but I want to dodge a lot of America's culture, for example one day I'd love to hike California but from the sounds of it I wouldn't want to bump in to 90% of the people or institutions there, and I want my first serious long trek to be a real challenge, hopefully with some small game hunting (Dennis the menace style). I was thinking Morocco and the Atlases, that might be beautiful and varied, but I'm not sure how much unspoilt land there is and I don't want to go in snow conditions of winter.
Bear with me for the naivety bros, this is a first foray, no Chris Mccuckless shit, I genuinely wish to be self reliant and endure something gruelling, and Oz seems beautiful, unspoilt and abundant with few mammal predators (I hammock, no worries about snakes).