Stones Outstation Hut, Lake Eildon National Park, Victoria, Australia Framed Art Print
Designed and sold by Michael Boniwell
$220.87
Style
Framed Art PrintGallery-grade prints with choice of wood frame
$220.87
Product features
- Wow, exhibition-quality prints and framing, a worthy decor centerpiece for years to come
- Choose from four high-quality timber finishes to suit your decor
- Premium acrylic pane is clearer and lighter than glass
- Shipped in protective packaging
- Your choice of custom box or flat frame styles
- Dimensions listed indicate printed image size, excluding mat board and frame dimensions
- Due to regional differences, the box frame thickness may vary depending on the local fulfiller with a minimum depth of 30mm up to 40mm
- Since every item is made just for you by your local third-party fulfiller, there may be slight variances in the product received
Stones Outstation Hut, Lake Eildon National Park, Victoria, Australia
Australian Landscape Photography by Michael Boniwell. All images copyright. This is image is suitable for enormous prints. View Larger on Chockstone Photography Stones Outstation Hut resides deep within Lake Eildon National Park, so tucked away in fact, that you will need a pair of hiking shoes and a good dose of energy to get there. Consisting of a small cattleman's hut beside a lovely little creek, and the remains of a stockyard, Stones Outstation represents a worthy goal for a scenic day walk. The hut sits just above the water line of Lake Eildon and can be accessed via two or three different treks out of Devils Cove Campground. One path, at around 20km return, follows the shoreline and will take the better part of a full day to get in and out. An alternative shortcut, clocking in at around 10km return, can be had by fighting your way inland, steeply uphill, and down again. Yet another alternative would be to descend crazily from Skyline Road, but the return would be a nightmare. For those with a boat, things get considerably easier. You can dock and camp at Mountaineer Inlet and take a leisurely 2km stroll to the hut instead. Our boy and I managed the inland shortcut on a drizzly afternoon, slogging wearily back out in the dark. The little stream beside the hut proved irresistible to him. Not sure what it is about running water, but boys do not seem to be happy until their socks are wet. Regardless it was a grand adventure, and I was happy with the resulting image despite the pain in my knees from all the steep descending.
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