At around 170 metres deep, Lake St Clair is the deepest freshwater lake in Australia. The local indigenous people call it Leeawuleena, or ‘Sleeping Water’.
Formed by ice over glaciations two million years ago, it is the head of the Derwent River.
It is also the end of the Overland Track from Cradle Mountain, as I could see at the glitzy Visitors Centre, which was more like a ski lodge. There were many young people there doffing enormous packs and relievedly taking off walking shoes and wriggling freed toes.
The campground is expensive (even hot showers were extra), having more cabins than camping spots, and only a tiny section was allotted to non-powered sites like mine.

There are several short walks here, and it is often through eucalypt forest for a change.

The new red leaves of these plentiful blue-green gum leaves were eye-catching.

So too were the Pink Mountain Berry shrubs, which here get an information marker of their own; this says it is Cyathodes parvifolium.

This is called Watersmeet, for obvious reasons.

Right beside the bridge there was a white-flowering small tree; I have seen several of these and keep wanting it to be Leatherwood, but I am told that shouldn’t be in bloom now.
So if anyone can tell me what these shrubs/trees are, I’d be grateful.

For me the beauties on this walk were close at hand, like this spectacular coral fungus, which I think is Ramaria anziana. I had bought a FungiFlip, a stunning pictorial guide to Tassie fungi, by the University of Tasmania, so that may be right.

I assume these wonderful pale blue/green balls are lichens… new to me… and wow!

The embracing habit of these lichens was so decorative that I saw them as braceleting the tree trunk, as jewellery.

For pattern and colour this little grove won the day; I don’t know what the trees are, but it made me feel as if I was definitely in another land. Or another world.
As I am…