Nelly Brett becomes youngest person to climb all 158 Abel Mountains
Nelly Brett was 13 years old when she landed on a dream to climb all 158 Abel Mountains. Four years later, she has achieved it, with her dad joining her every step of the way. All about their journey.
Tasmania
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For Nelly and Gavin Brett, their walks have been more than just a weekend activity – they have changed their relationship forever.
Nelly was just seven years old when she first started hiking with her dad.
Five years into her journey and after an exhausting hike up Mount Field West, Nelly landed on a mission to complete all 158 mountains featured in Bill Wilkinson’s guide to the Abels.
And now at 17, she stands as the youngest person to ever do it.
The culmination of 10 years of hiking was met with emotion and relief, Mr Brett said.
“We had a super touching and sentimental going up on the last mountain, thinking how much Nelly’s developed,” he said.
“I’m just very proud, and very happy to have such a good relationship with my daughter.”
The feelings were reciprocated by Nelly, who had come to see her father not as a figure of discipline but as someone who was “going through life for the first time as well”, discovering the uniqueness and rugged beauty of rarely-seen places.
It was in these areas Nelly learnt to “live in the moment”.
“I’m not a stressed person because walking for a long time forces you to get away from thinking about the future or the past,” she said.
“You’re very much in the zone.”
Making time for her passions, and pursuing a long-term goal even with schooling pressures were lessons Mr Brett was proud to pass on to his daughter.
He recalled an early moment in their journey when he vowed to cease “motivational speeches”, hoping to foster within her resilience and self-determination.
It was a technique that paid off.
“I learned about having a goal and accepting that sometimes I would have to miss something, change the plan last minute or be flexible,” Nelly said.
Mr Brett said flexibility was certainly a must for anyone hoping to embark on a similar journey, with Tasmania’s capricious weather often complicating their meticulous plans.
Despite this, the duo would not have had their journey any other way.
“It is like another full-time job, you dedicate a lot of time to it,” he said.
“But the way I looked at this was I didn’t want to be pushy, or make it only my thing.
“It’s about just letting your kid figure out what they like, and then going on the journey together.”