
From Coast to Nook

Day 1: 23 November 2018
Well, what a great day! The beginning of our Tasmanian traverse has been very special indeed, with a wonderful group of friends and family sending us off. We began on the edge of Bass Strait, outside the house where our children were born. We walked past the East Devonport Medical Centre where I (Merran) worked for 8 years. It was quite moving to revisit places and memories and to share the first part of the walk with Tim’s father and our dear friend Jessie. Time at Bells Parade for a coffee with friends before parting ways.
Continue reading “From Coast to Nook”Counting down to departure day
With less than a week before we start our Island Traverse, we have had several firsts … Our first food cache went off with our son Justin yesterday (thanks Justin Dyer!); we did a trial pack of all our gear then donned our packs and climbed the Badgers, checking out our Day 3 route to Mt Roland in the process, and we tried out our ultra-light trekking umbrellas in the back garden. Tim’s research is coming up with heaps of innovations, so we will be trialing quite a few new ideas over the next couple of months. Continue reading “Counting down to departure day”
Southern Reconnaissance Trip
One month today…. GO PREPARE
It is a month today that we shoulder our packs, dip our toes in the waves of Bass Strait, and head south along the banks of the Mersey. After some 42-45 days of walking, in two separate blocks, if we emerge from the South-West of Tasmania we will have traversed the Island from North to South. At least that is the plan…. and as we all know, anything can happen!
We are using the standard GO PREPARE expedition planning tool for this trip. We will detail this out over the next few weeks.
G – Overall Goal
O – Other objectives
P – Participants (age, health, needs, experience)
R – Rations (Food, food drops, other soft consumables, cache planning)
E – Equipment List (hard personal and group equipment)
P – Plan (Route, stages, maps, GPS files, cache locations)
A – Access (Permissions, crossing private land etc)
R – Resources, money, people and advice (books, maps, advice, support and transport)
E – Emergency planning (First aid, communications)
Pilgrim Prayers

A Pilgrim Prayer
God be with us over every mountain,
Jesus be with us through every valley,
Spirit be with us across every stream.
Each lake and ridge,
Each moor and plain,
Each forest and beach,
Shows the way of God.
God be with us each lying down,
Jesus be with us each rising up,
Spirit be with us each step of the way.
Each shelter found,
Each summit reached,
Each crossing safe,
Shows the care of God.
God shine your sun upon us,
Jesus shade us with your clouds,
Spirit refresh us with your breeze.
Each thought of hearth and home,
Each care of person dear,
Each gift of place to dwell,
Speaks the love of God.
God guide us through this day,
Jesus help us on our way,
Spirit bring us home again.
Extended and adapted from ideas in the
Carmina Gadelica
The places of God
God be with us as we answer the call
God be with us as we prepare our hearts
God be with us as we load our packs
God farewell us as we close our door
and take leave of the place you have given.
Jesus be with us as we find our way
Jesus be with us as we shoulder our gear
Jesus be with us as we face each challenge
Jesus prepare for us as we camp each night
and find each new place in which you dwell.
Spirit be with us as we complete our journey
Spirit be with us as we reflect and learn
Spirit be with us as we lay down the pilgrim’s staff
Spirit welcome us as we open our door
and arrive home to your gift of place once again.
Morning Prayer
We arise to this new day to the glory of God
We give thanks, Jesus, for sustenance for our way
We pack and step forward to follow, Holy Spirit
Three in one – Light the way before us
Three in one – Walk along beside us
Three in one – Watch the way behind us
May we walk through this day in praise to you
Father, Son and Holy Spirit

A Pilgrim Prayer
God be with us over every mountain,
Jesus be with us through every valley,
Spirit be with us across every stream.
Each lake and ridge,
Each moor and plain,
Each forest and beach,
Shows the way of God.
God be with us each lying down,
Jesus be with us each rising up,
Spirit be with us each step of the way.
Each shelter found,
Each summit reached,
Each crossing safe,
Shows the care of God.
God shine your sun upon us,
Jesus shade us with your clouds,
Spirit refresh us with your breeze.
Each thought of hearth and home,
Each care of person dear,
Each gift of place to dwell,
Speaks the love of God.
God guide us through this day,
Jesus help us on our way,
Spirit bring us home again.
Extended and adapted from ideas in the
Carmina Gadelica
The places of God
God be with us as we answer the call
God be with us as we prepare our hearts
God be with us as we load our packs
God farewell us as we close our door
and take leave of the place you have given.
Jesus be with us as we find our way
Jesus be with us as we shoulder our gear
Jesus be with us as we face each challenge
Jesus prepare for us as we camp each night
and find each new place in which you dwell.
Spirit be with us as we complete our journey
Spirit be with us as we reflect and learn
Spirit be with us as we lay down the pilgrim’s staff
Spirit welcome us as we open our door
and arrive home to your gift of place once again.
Morning Prayer
We arise to this new day to the glory of God
We give thanks, Jesus, for sustenance for our way
We pack and step forward to follow, Holy Spirit
Three in one – Light the way before us
Three in one – Walk along beside us
Three in one – Watch the way behind us
May we walk through this day in praise to you
Father, Son and Holy Spirit
Introduction
The meaning of a pilgrimage unfolds in stages. The actual journey is just one of several components, embedded in preparatory and home-coming phases.
A pilgrimage begins with an idea (‘Maybe we should do that sometime?’) which only becomes reality if the vision is caught and the decision is made, to ‘Let’s do this!’. Then come the planning, training and preparation until one day the pilgrim dons a (preferably) light pack and leaves to travel to the destination and return. This step is taken with hope and faith that despite obstacles, the pilgrim will be brought safely back home. Then, after completing the physical journey, the pilgrimage continues over weeks, and even years afterward, as the significance of the experience impacts the person’s spirit and soul.
Tim and I made our decision while being attacked by an army of mosquitoes on the edge of Lake Steers in September 2017. We planned our pilgrimage to be a 6-week journey finishing in January 2019. This was not to be, as it took a dramatic turn when Tim had a cardiac arrest at the end of the second day. However, we had been captured by the call. We started to dream of continuing as Tim was recovering from cardiac surgery. That initial decision had to be remade several times over the year. We headed back on the road in February, then paused for several months while Tim awaited further surgery. Once we were informed that his second procedure had been successful we were able to continue once again and with great joy. We are profoundly grateful to have been able to continue the pilgrimage albeit in a very different form, and finish it at the end of 2019.
It is now four months since we arrived at Cockle Creek having concluded a 520-kilometre journey from Bass Strait to the Southern Ocean. From the vantage point of the COVID-19 pandemic and our present self-isolation, the challenges we faced then, of finding the way despite bridges down, fallen trees and overgrown tracks, seem quite insignificant. In fact, it seems like we walked through another world in which the greatest difficulty we faced was plodding through seemingly endless stretches of mud, day after day.
Prior to walking the Via Francigena, in 2011, we grasped the concept that a pilgrimage is a parable of life. The journey we describe here is rather more complex, as our 34 days on the road were interspersed with significant illness and recovery, as well as our normal work and family life. Our present reflections are informed by the direct and indirect consequences of this pandemic. We treasure these memories as we grieve for our world at this time. And we yearn to return. We keep listening for another call to become pilgrims again.



