Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

UNLIMITED

Wild

YA REEVES

f0050-01.jpg

Ya at work on the Bogong High Plains, 2024.

Credit: Caroline Fulton

It’s a Tuesday in April when I meet Ya at Sydney’s Circular Quay. She’s dressed as described in her message: cream work shorts, grey/brown striped shirt, a green messenger bag slung over one shoulder. “Looks like I’m from the country!” is the final detail in her text, and she does, in all those subtle ways. She strides rather than walks. There’s a broad generosity in how she smiles and laughs. She exudes friendliness, capability and action.

Her four days in Sydney are crammed: She’s renewed her passport at the German consulate; gone on long coastal runs with mates; and had a job interview with the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD). After our interview, she’s meeting with her publisher, Ultimo Press, to pitch her second novel.

The next nine days won’t ease off, either. Tomorrow, she’ll fly to Hobart for another AAD interview (this one a two-day interview for a Field Training Officer position), then a flight/train/drive combo will get her home to Mt Beauty via Melbourne and Albury. A quick jaunt to Ballarat to lecture at Federation University on Monday follows, before driving to Mansfield for a regular few days of outdoor education work at Geelong Grammar School’s Timbertop campus, and then returning home on Friday night.

It’s a hectic fortnight, giving an excellent overview of the disparate but related components of Ya’s life: friends and connections, teaching, adventures in nature, writing. It’s also a period with a lot riding on it. Ya says: “I might be rejected by every single thing that I do this week … maybe Ultimo doesn’t want the book, maybe I don’t get into Antarctica. But that’s OK, because the other things are just as good.”

ADVENTURE, CURIOSITY,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wild

Wild5 min read
Support Our supporters
We get it; we know ads aren’t the primary reason you read Wild. But without our supporters, Wild simply wouldn’t exist*. If you love what we’re on about here at Wild, if you’re passionate about both adventure and protecting our natural heritage, if h
Wild3 min read
To The Lighthouse
There’s something in the air at lighthouses. It seems lighter, clearer somehow. I’m sure it’s because of their location—by definition lighthouses are isolated, unobstructed, surrounded by ocean. But the feeling is mystical, almost monastic, with a ye
Wild2 min read
Other Approaches To Jagungal
Starting at Geehi Flats Campground, hitch up the Alpine Way a short distance to Olsens Road and follow it to the end as it gradually climbs about 500m over the course of 6.2km. After crossing Grass Flat Creek, hang a left on the Pinnacle Trail for a

Related Books & Audiobooks