• Townsville-based Australian Army officers Captain Monika Georgieva  from the Combat Training Centre and Captain Wes Walsh of 1st Battalion The Royal Australian Regimen (002). Image supplied.
    Townsville-based Australian Army officers Captain Monika Georgieva from the Combat Training Centre and Captain Wes Walsh of 1st Battalion The Royal Australian Regimen (002). Image supplied.
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Two Army Captains have successfully traversed the Australian Alps Walking Track in record time – but it wasn’t easy!

North Queensland Army Captains Monika Georgieva and Wes Walsh have completed the first recorded unsupported traverse of the Australian Alps Walking Track, trekking more than 730km in 19 days, 9 hours and 30 minutes. They had already come a long way before they even started the trek. CAPT Walsh is from South Africa and moved to Australia after finishing school. CAPT Georgieva born in Bulgaria, went to school in UK and moved to Australia aged 18.

Both joined the Army soon after their move to Australia and both are currently posted to Lavarack Barracks in Townsville. Their epic walk involved more than two years of planning. On December 8 last year they packed the last of their gear and drove from Canberra to start walking at dawn from a rotunda in Walhalla, an old mining town in east Gippsland Victoria. It began with a steep set of stairs to an old mining track into the mountains, and it was raining within the first hour. “Before we had time to think about what we were getting ourselves into, we were right in the middle of it, walking uphill in the rain with the packs as heavy as they were going to get,” Captain Georgieva said.

They had a burning desire to challenge themselves and also to raise money for Legacy, with more than $7000 donated from the trail walking community.  They began with everything they’d need for the journey, gathering water as they went and receiving no outside assistance – the average traverse takes 4 to 5 weeks with caches of supplies along the way.

The Victorian Alps feature steep ascents to narrow ridges, followed by equally steep descents, with temperatures ranging from four degrees on the peaks to over 30 in the valleys. They walked from 13 to 18 hours a day, constantly re-evaluating how far they needed to go and how many hours they needed to walk.

An eye-opener came on day 11 at Mt Wills Hut when a route description on the wall made them realise they weren’t going to reach their destination within the 17 days they planned. “We made the decision to increase the number of hours walked each day, and to push the rations out to 20 days.  This meant we were effectively increasing the effort by 30 per cent and decreasing the calorie intake by 35 per cent,” Captain Walsh said.

After making it through the Victorian Alps, they arrived at the source of the Murray River, knowing that they would be walking well into the night to make up time. As they prepared dinner, a brumby and her foal watched them from a distance, then the foal approached and began to move around them, rearing up and displaying its jumping prowess before rushing back to its mother.

“I was in a bit of a bad mood coming into Cowombat Flat; just getting sick of the tough terrain, being constantly hungry and behind our goal, and at that point having one of our biggest days,” Captain Walsh said. “Having those brumbies interact with us, watching the foal learning to be a stallion and keep strangers away to protect the mares, but then running back to his mum, was just a really cool experience.”

The more open terrain of Kosciusko NP allowed them to move faster, regularly covering nearly 50km a day, as opposed to 25-30km in the Victorian Alps. Mother nature gave them a surprise on Christmas Day with non-stop rain and hail, cutting their day short with the beginnings of hypothermia – putting them even further behind schedule, knowing that day’s remaining distance would now be added to the next.

They walked 51km the next day to the Murrumbidgee river, with a storm spending much of the day trying to slow them down. Luckily, Oldfield’s Hut stands at the foot of the Murray Gap – the barrier to the ACT and was well-stocked with wood. They started a fire to dry out and made a hot meal, the first since running out of gas days earlier, which revitalised them for the final push.

They covered 86km in the final 33 hours and finished on the afternoon of December 28, with the enormity of what they had accomplished not setting in straight away. “There was a sense of validation and calm in knowing we went out and did something only reliant on yourself and each other; no external help, and that was very rewarding,” Captain Georgieva said.

“The coolest and the hardest thing about doing this first is the unknown of ‘is this actually possible? Can we do it?’.” GPS data and a trip report have been submitted to Fastest Known Time to have the accomplishment officially recognised.

“Some people had expressed doubts and basically said, ‘you're crazy, this is not possible’ and ‘if it was possible, it would have already been done’. So, it was nice to get it done and I think anything's possible if you're willing to endure what it demands,” Captain Walsh said. “Just because it hasn't been done before or hasn't been done this way doesn't mean it's not an option.”

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