GreatSights

Mt. Cook, Lindis Pass, and Next Time

Share Button

Another day, another drive!

This time, we were on our way to see Aoraki / Mt. Cook, the highest mountain in New Zealand at more than 12,200 feet. Today’s driver guide, Stuart, had a teacher’s way with his old-timer’s knowledge of the land, its nature, and the country ways. We spent 7 hours on the bus to and from Mt. Cook village (160 miles each way). It was not nearly enough time to explore the area. Once again, we had to reassure ourselves with “Next time.”

Lake Pukaki

Stuart knew a lot about geology. He told us that New Zealand was the only above-water land on the 8th continent, Zealandia. He explained the moraines that formed the valley and the glacial flour that made Lake Pukaki so unbelievably blue. There were sky blue dollops, within turquoise blue pools and aquamarine patches in Lake Pukaki. I’ve never seen water that blue in all my life. It would have been grand to spend a whole week on those shores, watching the lake change shades of blue in the light, and trying to think of all the words in the world for this Lake Pukaki blue. Next time.

Driver/Guide Stuart takes photos for passengers on the banks of baby blue Lake Pukaki, New Zealand
Driver/Guide Stuart takes photos for passengers on the banks of baby blue Lake Pukaki, New Zealand.

Animals of (and not of) New Zealand

Stuart knew a lot about sheep farming. He told us about Shrek the Sheep who avoided shearing for 6 years by hiding out in the mountains. Poor old Shrek was so matted and “wool blind” by the time they got him that he had to be carried down the mountain. When he was at long last shorn, his wool made enough yarn for 20 large men’s suits.

Stuart knew a lot about herding dogs. He explained the difference between “heading dogs—silent, obsessive, steely-gazed herders” and “huntalongs who walk with the farmer–speaking as often as necessary.” Stuart told us about the Country Calendar TV show that documents rural life in New Zealand. I watched a few episodes in New Zealand, and…next time, I’d love to spend some time with the sheep, the headings, and the huntalongs. The Country Calendar program is not fully available outside New Zealand, but I found an episode featuring the group Retired Working Dog Adoption NZ.

Stuart knew a lot about non-endemic plants and animals:  like the pine trees we saw cut and stacked as wind row fences, and like the rabbits and deer we saw in the fields. Rabbits were first introduced to New Zealand in the 1830s. With few natural enemies, the rabbits over-populated and are periodically culled. New Zealand also has deer over-population, said to have started when deer were gifted to the country for hunting stock. The rabbits and deer compete with the sheep for grass, and in the winter of 1890, it came to a critical head. There was not enough fodder for the sheep, who were left on the fields. When the snow accumulated that year, in one of the harshest winters ever recorded, there was not enough labor to dig the sheep out of the snow in the fields. It’s estimated that 45,000 sheep died. Horrible. But It doesn’t seem fair that rabbits and deer take all the blame. They are not responsible for sheltering sheep, or for not hiring enough people to bring them in. And hey, sheep are not native to New Zealand either.

Kiwis are endemic. And they are endangered because of loss of habitat and non-native predators. In a cruel design twist for a bird, they cannot fly. They lay eggs that are very large in comparison to their chicken-like body size. They have hair-like feathers, and an unusually good sense of smell for a bird (presumably to make up for being nearly blind). These flightless quirky birds can live to be 60-years old. Many live in captivity–to save them, and/or to make a few bucks showing them off to tourists. There is one group called Kiwis for Kiwi that helps birds safely hatch and make it to adulthood before releasing them into nature with their project Operation Nest Egg.  

Cromwell and the Golden Kiwi

We passed Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell twice that day, stopping both times for fresh fruit and sampling. Did you know there is a golden kiwi? We sampled the green and golden kiwis side-by-side at Jones. The golds look almost the same from the outside, maybe a little less hairy. On the inside, golden kiwis look less seedy than the traditional green variety, and I found them to be a bit sweeter. 

Colorful baskets of fruit, fresh from the farm at Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell, New Zealand.
Colorful baskets of fruit, fresh from the farm at Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell, New Zealand. Funny how pine cones sort of resemble pineapples…

Mt. Cook and Sir Edmund Hillary

And as we got closer to Aoraki / Mount Cook, Stuart turned our attention to Sir Edmund Hillary and mountain climbing. Mt. Cook is considered an assessment and practice mountain for those wanting to climb Everest. According to New Zealand’s tourism site, “Mt Cook is a technically challenging mountain. Its level of difficulty is often underestimated. The climb crosses large crevasses, and involves risks of ice and rock falls, avalanches, and rapidly changing weather conditions.” The mountain lost nearly 100 feet in height in 1991 because of a large rock fall that reshaped the summit.

Sir Edmund Hillary—or “Hilly” as they call him here–was born in Auckland. In college, he joined the Tramping Club and studied math. But he dropped-out to keep bees with his family in summers and hone his climbing skills in winters. Hilly made his first ascent of Mt Cook in January 1948, and a month later was the first to top the South Ridge (now known as Hillary Ridge). Of course, in 1953, Hilly was the first to summit Mt. Everest with Tenzing Norgay. New Zealand is quite proud of their native son and he occupies their colorful five-dollar note, sharing it with images of Mt.Cook and the endangered Hoiho penguin.

We spent only a few hours in Mt. Cook Village. A month would not have been enough time. Next time. But my, what a fine, fresh smell. What is it about mountains? Is it the juniper, the grasses on the surrounding slopes? Or is it just the smell of altitude. I stared and stared at those mountains, trying to see the knife-edge ridge of Mt. Cook’s summit through the thick cloud cover. Sometimes, I was allowed a one-second glimpse of snow-capped mountain tops. Was that Mt. Cook? 

A path to the trail to Aoraki / Mt. Cook, Southern Alps, New Zealand
A path to the trails to Aoraki / Mt. Cook, Southern Alps, New Zealand.
Rooftops of cabins with Aoraki / Mt. Cook mountain behind clouds, New Zealand
Cabin rooftops at Aoraki / Mt. Cook Village, New Zealand.
Aoraki / Mt Cook Village, with a view to a campervan on a valley road, New Zealand
Aoraki / Mt Cook Village, with a view to a campervan miniaturized on a valley road, New Zealand.

Lindis Pass

Of all the places we saw this day, I’d most like to spend more time around Lindis Pass. As we drove into this quiet, treeless landscape, Stuart pointed out that early settlers had burned large swaths of tussock around the Pass, destroying the underlying ecosystem. Today, there are miles and miles of rolling green land, rolling and rolling and rolling….like a worn-thin green velvet blanket draped over jade stones, in places rubbed smooth from a worrying thumb.  There was something so peaceful and empty and raw about that landscape. A draw-in-your-breath kind of beauty. Respect. Silence. 

Next time.

The landscape at Lindis Pass, New Zealand
The landscape at Lindis Pass, New Zealand. A selection of my New Zealand prints can be purchased on Etsy.
Lindis Pass tussock on the South Island of New Zealand
Lindis Pass tussock on the South Island of New Zealand.
The road through Lindis Pass, New Zealand
The road through Lindis Pass, New Zealand.
Lovely Lindis Pass, New Zealand
Ridges in a valley in lovely Lindis Pass, New Zealand.

If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for these GreatSights bus or Interislander ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019 or I’d be keeping this for our next trip! Comment or message me if you’re interested! 

The Divide and Milford Sound, New Zealand

Share Button

Queenstown to Milford Sound

To get from Queenstown to Milford Sound is not as easy as it might look on a bird’s map. The two towns are only about 40 miles apart, but it’s 40 miles over the the Southern Alps’ Main Divide. For those of us without wings, our road is 180 miles and a ~4 hour trip each way. On our day trip to Milford Sound, we were lucky to have Greg as our GreatSights bus driver / tour guide. When Greg saw my camera (or maybe it was Bryan’s beer t-shirt?), he invited us to sit in the front row so that I could more easily move into the front door’s jump seat for good photos at key viewing points. 

Reflection in Mirror Lakes, in Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand
Reflection in Mirror Lakes, Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand.
Sky and Mountains reflecting in Mirror Lakes, in Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand
Sky and Mountains reflecting in Mirror Lakes, Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand.

Like all of the bus drivers, Greg knew his New Zealand. He told us so many things about his country…I couldn’t write fast enough to get them all down and ended up with fragments like “can’t chop fallen trees”. We stopped several times that day for sights, and for bathroom breaks, or as Greg said in his sparkling wit, “to spend a penny”. Roadside sights included Mirror Lakes, a river near Livingstone which Greg assured us was 100% pure to drink from “just like the ads said”, and the Chasm. The Chasm is a dramatic and deep gap where the water of the Cleddau River falls, swirls and bubbles down among the sculpted rocks and caverns beneath two viewing bridges.

100% Pure New Zealand, Fiordland National Park
A 100% pure New Zealand river, in Fiordland National Park. 

We passed a marker indicating we were at 45 degrees South, the halfway-point between the Equator and the South Pole. How lucky and strange if felt to see that, remembering that I’d been at 45 degrees North in November with my mother somewhere in Oregon! What a big wide world.

The Divide

We were on our way to Milford Sound. A place that has been called the 8th wonder of the world. Equally impressive and awesome was The Divide, and the Homer Tunnel that goes through to Milford Sound. We were passing through the Fiordland National Park, the land becoming rocky, dramatic, treeless, and dwarfing our bus. Greg explained that the Divide runs from Greymouth to Invercargill and that the area around Fiordlands has more earthquakes than anywhere else in New Zealand because it sits on three fault lines. He reassured us that *only* 2,000 quakes were actually felt in 2016, the rest were imperceptible. The bus was all whispers and shutters snapping as we made our way into the valley between the rock mountains. The tops of those mountains were only visible if you stretched your head to your knees to look up out your window, or if you looked straight up, out the thoughtfully-planned glass roof of the GreatSights bus. We slowed to get in the queue for the Homer Tunnel.

South Island roads are different. Allow more time. The Divide, South Island, New Zealand.
“South Island roads are different. Allow more time.” Yes, indeed! The Divide, South Island, New Zealand.
Queuing for the Homer Tunnel, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Queuing for the Homer Tunnel, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand

Greg told us the story of the tunnel as we waited to go into the tiny entryway. The Homer Tunnel is a 0.75 mile-long tunnel through solid rock. Construction began in 1935 with a team of just 5 men with pickaxes. Other men joined them, and working in tough conditions, they managed to break through to the other side in only 5 years. However, it took much longer to widen and complete the tunnel because of World War II, and an avalanche in 1945. The tunnel finally opened in 1954 after 19 years of construction. It is wide enough for a bus and a car to pass each other, but lights regulate a one-way flow of traffic.

We entered the mouse hole and felt the road begin its steep decline, the wet tunnel walls so very close to the bus windows. Greg told us that this area receives an astounding 39+ feet of rain every year. As we exited the tunnel and saw the breathtaking steep road winding down into the Cleddau Valley, Greg’s voice quaked in pride, “It makes me the luckiest man in the world to have this as my workplace…imagine this on a rainy day when the sun breaks through, water pouring off these mountain walls like a champagne waterfall. It’s the most beautiful thing I’ll ever see.”

"Imagine this a champagne waterfall on a rainy day!" Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
“Imagine this on a rainy day, when the sun breaks through, water pouring off these mountain walls like a champagne waterfall!” Looking back up at the tunnel’s exit awning. Fiordland National Park, New Zealand.
The Chasm and tiny people looking in. New Zealand.
The Chasm with people on a footbridge looking in. New Zealand.

Milford Sound

Milford Sound, or the sing-song Piopiotahi in Maori, is grand, is moody, and is all the things you’ve ever heard describing it. Our 2+ hour lunch cruise took us out past forested fiord mountains, low-flying clouds, deep blue-gray water, and a hard-misting rain. Everything seemed black and white, unnaturally quiet, and Jurassic. We were nothing there on that water, just dots on a dot, on a trickle of water running between those ancient mountains. We passed through the bad weather into the blue skies of the Tasman Sea at the end of fiord. The boat came back into a completely different weather system, sunny and lighthearted now instead of the moody Milford we’d felt on the way out. Dolphins passed our boat from behind, criss-crossing in front like it was a race. Young male seals watched us as we watched them. The cruise captain stuck the nose of the boat under a waterfall, rainbows shooting out in the water droplets blowing back over the boat. Small prop planes took off over us giving bird’s-eye view tours.

My favorite part of this day will always be the image of a champagne waterfall in the Divide, and the shaky voice of a proud Kiwi describing the incredible view he is lucky to see every day.

Moody Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Moody Milford Sound, New Zealand.
The Tasman Sea at the end of Milford Sound, New Zealand
The Tasman Sea at the end of Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Waterfalls and clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Waterfalls and clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Clouds beginning to lift out of Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Planes going out in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Plane going out in Milford Sound, New Zealand.
The green and grey waterfall drama of The Divide, South Island New Zealand
The green and grey waterfall drama of The Divide, South Island New Zealand.
The Divide, South Island New Zealand
The Divide, South Island New Zealand.

 

If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for these GreatSights bus or Interislander ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019. Comment or message me if you’re interested!

To read more about New Zealand’s bus tours and ferry rides, please see these posts:
Bus to Queenstown
Ferry to the South Island