A guide to snowshoeing for bushwalkers
0

Your Cart is Empty

A guide to snowshoeing for bushwalkers

July 01, 2022

A guide to snowshoeing for bushwalkers

Snowshoeing originated thousands of years ago by the the First Nations people of the Northern Hemisphere as a way to travel over deep winter snow. Today snowshoe designs have evolved utilising aluminum and modern composites materials. 

How to use Snowshoes

There’s nothing too scary about them. You strap your shoe in, and you just walk.

  • The large surface area keeps you above the snow, so your feet don’t get wet
  • The foot area pivots so the metal bit under the toe grips really well
  • There are metal rails along the bottom so you don’t slip.

The snowshoes that are ideal in Australia are tough plastic-ey designs, making them durable on Australian rocks, sticks and icy snow conditions. There are other types of tennis racket snowshoes in the world which are fine for a metre of powder but unfortunately that usually isn't the case in our climate. 

Snowshoes have “heel raisers” which make walking up hills much more pleasant – a bit of metal goes under your heel and “raises” it.

Other gear you will need

(and probably already have in your kit!)

Check out our Snowshoe range or hire a pair to try it out on your next snow adventure. 


Leave a comment

Comments will be approved before showing up.


Also in The Mont Blog

Our Weather
Our Weather

October 31, 2025

I had brought my Mont Helium 680 with me. A luxurious bag rated to -12°C for warm sleepers, it is perfectly suited to Tasmania’s cooler months. Ice crusted the ground and tent the next morning and checking my temperature sensor I was surprised to see that the temperature had dropped to -7.7°C overnight. That is remarkably cool for late October in Tassie!

Read More
Why Mont Only Has One Online Sale a Year
Why Mont Only Has One Online Sale a Year

October 20, 2025

At Mont Adventure Equipment, we believe that quality gear, people, and the planet deserve care. That’s why we only participate in only one yearly sale event that falls on Black Friday. 

Read More
Late Snow
Late Snow

September 30, 2025

Tasmania has had a burst of late snowfalls recently and I headed up into the mountains yesterday to take advantage of a patch of fine weather. Unfortunately, the snow has coincided with very windy weather which makes conditions in the mountains challenging (but invigorating) for photography.

Read More