Winter canyoning in the Blue Mountains can get ridiculously cold. Luckily, Tiger Snake Canyon in the Newnes Pateau requires little to no swimming, meaning you can stil get out there in the colder months!

Highlights

  • An easily accessible and spectacular canyon
  • Walk-in and out through amazing panoramas of pagoda country
  • No swimming required (knee deep pools are worst-case under normal conditions)

The Newnes Plateau

It takes a healthy dose of bravado mixed with a cupful of stupidity to attempt many of the popular canyons in the Blue Mountains during winter. Thankfully, there are a few dry canyons in the area. This enables you to get your canyoning fix during the colder months, lowering the risk of inducing hypothermia.

With this in mind, a group of us set off to the Newnes Plateau on a chilly weekend in June to visit Tiger Snake Canyon.

 

Winter Canyoning at Tiger Snake Canyon // Newnes (NSW,) Warwick Harding, hikers, helmet, gorge, walls

 

We arrived late on Friday night to camp at the Bungleboori picnic area, around 10km out of Lithgow. There was no desire to hang around – the campground is covered in a carpet of rubbish and glass (a thoroughly unpleasant place to camp), so we quickly made tracks in the morning to the trailhead of the canyon. Here we encountered an NPWS ranger, who informed us that there was a decent amount of water around due to the recent rainfalls.

Tiger Snake Canyon

For this reason, we set off along the access track with a good deal of trepidation – cold swims certainly did not fit the bill of a day of dry canyoning! There was some relief when we reached the creek, which was flowing at merely a trickle.

The canyon itself is a lot of fun – a mixture of scrambles and climb-downs (some of which have optional abseils), as well as a few small abseils in a spectacular constriction.

 

Winter Canyoning at Tiger Snake Canyon // Newnes (NSW,) Warwick Harding, rope, abseiling, wet, moss

 

After a 17m abseil down a vertical face, the creek opens out for a while before narrowing up again in the lead up to the highlight of the trip – a 25m abseil into a very narrow slot.

This would be one of the more impressive abseils around – after a tricky overhang is negotiated into the slot, you find yourself suspended in the constriction far above the bottom – incredible.

A (comparatively) short walk out through some magnificent pagoda country makes for a thoroughly enjoyable winter’s day (some members of our party even managed to keep their feet dry!).

Looking for more canyoning in the Blue Mountains? Read Empress Canyon Tour.

Essential Gear

  • Canyoning gear (ropes, harness, descender, helmet, prussiks, etc),
  • First aid kit
  • Headtorch (recommended on final abseil)
  • Warm clothes
  • EPIRB (recommended)

How To Get There

Tiger Snake Canyon is accessed from the end of Old Coach Rd on Newnes Plateau. The canyon is a tributary of Deane’s Creek. Use Ben Bullen and Mt Morgan topographic maps.

Activities

Skill Level

Intermediate

Distance Covered

A shortish day of canyoning with a 3km walk in and out. Our party of five completed it in 6 hours.