Category Archives: New Zealand

New Zealand South Island day 28 – Milford Sound

 


 

The 119 km Te Anau to Milford Sound highway winds its way through majestic alpine scenery  and warrants a day just to explore all the many walks and viewpoints along the way.  But we are booked on the 3:15 pm cruise of Milford Sound and don’t set out until 12 (Tottenham match being shown on TV at 9am) which leaves time to make  only  a couple of stops along the way;  at Mirror Lakes, a series of pools with crystal clear waters and near perfect reflections of the surrounding snow-capped mountains, and for lunch at a viewpoint looking out onto the  towering snow-capped peaks.  The highway winds down the Eglinton and Hollyford Valleys then through the the Homer Tunnel  hewn through1200 metres of  mountain. Emerging from the tunnel the highway makes a steep descent into the spectacular Cheddau Valley.

 

Nestled in the Fiordland National Park, Milford Sound is the most accessible of the 14 Sounds along New Zealands south-west coast, and the best-known of all the glacier-cut fiords.  In fact it isn’t a ‘sound’ at all, sounds being the result of river rather than glacial erosion.  The weather is perfect for our trip – blue skies and sun.  The first view of the Sound is breath-taking, with Mitre Peak rising dramatically out of the water to a steep snow-capped point.  Once on the water it is difficult to grasp the vastness of the Sound and the height of mountains that rise perpendicular from it’s deep black waters.  The cruise boats are like matchbox toys against the sheer immenseness of the landscape and judging distances becomes impossible. 

 

The cruise takes us the 16 km from the head to the Tasman Sea.  Awe-inspiring peaks, hanging valleys, waterfalls cascading over sheer granite cliffs to the sea below and seals basking on the rocks.  There are only two permanent waterfalls in the Sound all the many others come to life only after rainfall. This is one of the wettest places on earth receiving seven metres of rain a year!

 

At the mouth of the Sound the swell of the Tasman Sea  causes the boat to pitch  throwing spray over the bow soaking those of us who remain on deck despite the captain’s warnings!  Ah, what fun!

 

Word of the day:  Hokey Pokey – iconic vanilla ice cream with honeycombe chips much loved by kiwis

 

 

 

 

 

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New Zealand South Island day 27 – Dunedin to Te Anau

 


 

We have a long drive ahead of us today – from Dunedin along the west coast and up to Te Anau in Fiordland on the west side of the island.  A trip of about 425 km and there is lots to see on the way as we take the coastal route between Dunedin and Invercargill which meanders through the Catlins   – an area of rolling hills, sheep, native forests and rocky bays which stretches from Kaka Point in the north to Fortrose in the south.  Our first stop is at Nugget Point a dramatic outcrop jutting into the sea with a short coastal walk with far-reaching views up and down the coast.  In fact at one point it is so narrow it’s possible to look down on sea on either side of the path.  At the end of the point there is a colony of seals and sea lions basking on the rocks.  The weather is gloriously sunny and warm – without a cloud in the sky.  It’s just a pleasure to look out over the several small rocky islets that extend from the point and are encircled by the white rings of surf as the sea gently breaks around them. Long strands of kelp – it thrives in these coastal waters – is pulled back and forth in the gentle swell. 

 

Our next stop is Jack’s Blow Hole   followed by lunch on the edge of the beach at Jack’s Bay.  Jack’s Blow Hole is a 30-minute walk from Jack’s Bay over farmland and cliff tops.  The views from the cliffs are magnificent, but the blow hole is disappointing, though no doubt it is much more dramatic when the sea is wilder.  The blow hole itself is a huge gash in a farmer’s field about 200 metres from the sea.  A small viewing platform gives a partial view through the surrounding bush of the sea crashing in below. 

 

Further along the coast we stop at Florence Hill lookout for a stunning view of Tautuku beach before motoring on to Slope Point, the southern most point of the South Island.  This is not at all the bleak landscape you might imagine – quite the contrary it is full of spectacular views of rolling hills and here and there clumps of windswept trees, their windward sides grey and lifeless, their leeward side green and alive.

 

Our last stop is Te Waewae Bay – an impressively long beach littered with driftwood.   A mist of sea spray hanging above the breakers.  It is 150 km from here to Te Anau and we must kick on if we are to get there by early evening.  As we head north from Invercargill we start to see glimpses of the peaks of Fiordland in the distance.  As we approach Te Anau rolling grasslands give way to rugged, snow-capped peaks and deep glacial valleys.  Te Anau itself is situated in the most stunning setting set against a backdrop of mountains on the edge of Te Anau lake – the largest in the South Island and the second largest in New Zealand after lake Taupo.  The town is immaculately manicured, but  remarkably soulless despite it’s beautiful setting.  It is mainly hotels,  motels, B&Bs and holiday parks serving the huge influx of tourists that come here for the trips to Milford Sound and the tramping, kayaking and other activities that abound in the area.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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New Zealand South Island day 26 – Dunedin

 


 

Another chill and do little day.  The weather is bright, sunny and breezy.  Despite the sun it’s chilly and my jacket comes out for the first time since we got off the Trans-Sib.  We spend a few hours in the centre of Dunedin sightseeing, browsing the shops, buying some clothes and getting a hair cut for Andy.  Also dubbed the ‘Garden City’ – at least according to the tourist bumpf, but any gardens  are not immediately evident and seem to be some distance from the centre.  The hub of the city is  the Octagon, a small patch of grass crossed by Princes Street and bordered by cafes and restaurants, the cathedral and home to a statue of  Robbie Burns.  (Are you beginning to get the Scottish connection?).  But it is not the congested, snarl of traffic you might expect in a city centre, quite the contrary.   The centre is compact and is predominantly low rise. There  is a comfortable mix of the new and old the Victorian and Edwardian gothic sitting happily alongside more recent buildings and the architecture generally has a more varied character than some New Zealand towns.  And whilst the traffic is minimal, it seems more vibrant than in Christchurch.  Perhaps it’s the fact that it is a university town – over fifth of the city’s population of 123,000 are students?  Recently in the news for a raucous Freshers toga parade through the streets which got a little out of hand (eggs and flour were thrown and students vomited in the streets!)  Like Christchurch it is possible to stand in a city centre street and view the hills in the distance;  the kind of vista not normally associated with European towns and cities!  The urban sprawl though is just that, stretching for miles across the hills around the harbour – Dunedin is New Zealand’s largest city by area.

 

We take a walk around the University campus which is situated just north of the centre.  A pleasant, buzzing hive of activity;  this must be the most people we’ve seen in one place since we arrived in New Zealand (apart from at the Billy Connolly concert)!  At the heart of the campus is a majestic 130-year-old gothic stone building on the grassy banks of a small river.  Whilst the streets around with their rather run-down bay-fronted, single-storey weatherboard houses, doors ajar and sofas on the porches have a rather bohemian air.

 

The train station is another majestic Victorian pile which appears, if the information in the ticket hall is anything to go by, to operate only one service;  the Taieri Gorge Railway, reputedly one of the world’s great train trips – a half-day scenic journey along the Taieri River Gorge.  The train runs twice daily and when we arrive to admire the building (which is beautifully preserved both inside and out – the tiling in the ticket hall is superb) the train is standing at platform 1 being washed down!  The station’s other great claim to fame is being New Zealand’s most photographed building, although how exactly that is measured is hard to guess.

 

Another interesting NZ phenomenon and one that is hard to get used to is seeing Lloyds Bank’s pre-TSB livery, including the Black Horse,  in the guise of The National Bank. Does the average Kiwi-in-the-street realise that one of their major banks is a high street bank in the UK in which the British government now has a majority stake, one wonders?

 

Now we have got over the shock of how much everything here costs compared to south-east Asia we have come to the conclusion that the cost of living here is generally much lower than in the UK – food and clothes, for instance, are much cheaper as is a round of drinks – $10 (£3.50) for a beer and G&T – or a £2.50 for two drinks in a cafe.

 

Phrase of the day seen on a directional sign on the Otago University campus:  Queer Support =  ????

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New Zealand South Island day 25 – Dunedin

 


 

It’s a lovely, clear day, sunny and warm as we set out to explore the Otago Peninsular which stretches the length of Otago Harbour and covers 19000 hectares.  The round trip taking the harbourside road out to Taiaroa Heads and returning on the Highcliff Road is about 64 kilometres of breathtakingly beautiful scenery.  The road winds around the bays of  Otago Harbour hugging the quiet shoreline before climbing into the hills and revealing at each twist and turn extensive and magnificent panoramas the length of the enormous inlet;  the Pacific coastline to the north and south;  and glimpses of bays and steep valleys dotted with newly-shorn sheep. 

 

Our first stop is Larnach Castle – which has the distinction of being New Zealand’s only castle.  Built in the 19th century by William Larnach, a banker and politician, it is a curious mixture of  English manor house and New Zealand colonial architecture – a stone-built tower-and-turret affair with a glazed lace ironwork verandah around it.  Inside, it is unusually homely for a ‘castle’, with modestly proportioned rooms that visitors are free to wander into and around without restriction or the usual ropes cordons.  The views from the tower are just to die for and on this sunny clear day it is possible to see the length off the peninsular from Dunedin at one end of the inlet to the Pacific at the other.  The grounds too, are very prettily laid out with a raised lawn, Italian fountain and laburnum-clad pergola (which must be lovely when it is in flower)  through which there is a glimpse of the harbour in the distance.  Several other gardens lead off from the formal lawn in front of the house, one in particular having fabulous views.  The castle was bought by the Barker family in 1967 after a period of neglect and they have made it their life’s work to restore it which they have done magnificently.

 

From Larnach Castle we drive on to the Royal Albatross Colony at the end of the peninsular. There is a large visitor’s centre but little access to the colony itself which is fenced off.  Pilot Bay just below the centre affords the best possibility for viewing the  Albatross, although we only see two or three, as well as a few seals resting on the rocks.  The latter hard to spot without binoculars as they merge so well  with the rocks along the shoreline.  It’s windy and chilly despite the sun and we don’t dally long.

 

We meander back towards Dunedin on the Pacific side of the peninsular which takes onto  unsurfaced roads to the Pyramids – two hills so-called for their remarkable geometric contours –  around Papanui and Hoopers Inlets both wonderfully wild and almost empty of cars, until eventually we return to the Highway Road down into Dunedin.

 

Unfortunately, although wonderfully scenic all the major attractions and in particular the wild life sanctuaries are commercially run, making it almost impossible to see anything other than the seals and sea lions and the odd albatross in flight unless you part with some serious dosh.

 

Word of the day:  superette – small supermarket

 

 

 

 

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New Zealand South Island day 24 – Oamuru to Dunedin

 


 

South of Oamura the flat landscape gives way to hills once more and the 110km drive to Dunedin offers some interesting places to dally for a while.  Our first stop is the famed Moeraki boulders which litter a short stretch of beach between Hampden and Moeraki.  These spherical boulders of differing sizes sit enigmatically in the sand, the waves breaking around them;  their presence a  conundrum.  How did they come to be here?  Apparently they were formed millions of years ago by  a process of concretion when this coast line was submerged.  The boulders are buried in  the soft mud cliffs and have been exposed by erosion  Many more are thought to be still buried within the  existing cliffs.

 

The wind has dropped and the it is sunny and warm by the time we  reach Shag Point a little further down the coast, so-called, we assume, after the Shags or spotted cormorants that congregate here, and there are many along the cliff tops looking from a distance like penguins with long necks!  Shag Point is also home to a colony of seals of which there are many resting on the rocks or hauling themselves out of the water.  They are only few feet below us and seem just a curious about us as we are about them, some craning up to look at us.  Here too, with the aid of binoculars we spot a solitary yellow-eyed penguin standing in full view on a cliff side. 

 

Dunedin sits on the hills surrounding the stunning Otago Harbour.  A sprawling city of x, it has it’s fair share of historic buildings and  attractions, not least the Otaga Peninsular famed for  it’s breath-taking scenery and colonies of Royal Albatross  yellow-eyed and blue penguins, seals and sea lions.  We arrive mid afternoon at the Top 10 Park just outside the city centre.  The standard cabins here are literally little huts with room for a double bed and single bunk above, bench table and chairs.   Set slightly apart from the rest of the site there are 8 cabins sharing a small kitchen and  and two showers.  It could get crowded.

 

Word of the day:  Superette – small supermarket

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New Zealand South Island day 23 – Christchurch to Oamuru

 


 

The journey between Christchurch to Oamuru is flat and quite bland compared to the spectacular scenery we have become used to.  We have decided to stay overnight in Oamuru for two reasons:  there are colonies of the rare yellow-eyed penguins and the tiny blue penguins;  and secondly the town has an historic centre containing a large number of 19th century limestone buildings

 

Penguins are nocturnally active on land.  They leave the colongy before sunrise each morning and return at dusk each night and there are viewing areas for both the blue and yellow-eyed penguins on the edge of town.  We decide to go to see the yellow eyed penguins which are supposed to come ashore around 7.30pm.  But not tonight!  We wait on the cliff top overlooking the beach where the colony resides in the wind and drizzle for almost an hour and not a single penguin comes ashore.  Finally as we are leaving we spot the head of one penguin hiding in the bushes.  Apparently, we later discover it is moulting season and the penguins stay ashore all day.  Shy creatures they tend to stay hidden in the undergrowth particularly if they see or hear humans about.

 

We drive through part of the historic district which has a strangely incongruous feel;  impressive and beautiful as they are, the buildings just don’t seem to belong.

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New Zealand South Island day 22 – Christchurch

 


 

Today is a day for chilling and catching up with some administrative housekeeping. We have successfullys let one of our flats – quite a feat when we are on the other side of the world – and there is some paperwork to complete, sign and send off to our recently ensconced tenant.  There are postcards to catch up on – ones we bought over a week ago when we were in Rotorua.  It’s when we come to post them at the NZ PostShop we find out that there is more than one company provide postal services and the stamps we bought with the postcards are  not NZ Postie Shop stamps and the cards have to be posted in a blue postbox a couple of streets away. 

 

Another quirky thing about NZ is the provision of internet services.  Download speeds are very slow and way behind anything available in the UK.  Internet access is very expensive.  Monthly subscriptions are over NZ$100 a month (£35) compared to around £18 in the UK and access at holiday parks (and internet cafes) can cost up to NZ$9 per hour compared to SE Asia where internet is widely available hostels, hotels and cafes free.  Even more bizarrely internet  services on the  holiday parks (and possibly elsewhere) are provided by a number of third party companies who act as an middleman between the parks and the service providers – which must go some way to explaining the high charges.   Using the internet at different parks can mean having several pre-paid accounts running simultaneously which can start to get complicated!

 

Phrase of the day:  ‘Merge like a zip’ seen at the point where  roads changes from two to one lane.

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New Zealand South Island day 21 – Christchurch


Christchurch is known as the ‘garden city’ of New Zealand and for good reason;  at its heart is the lovely Hagley Park and Botanical Gardens, a wonderful space full of majestic trees, lawns and flowers through which runs the small Avon River.  The Christchurch Beautification Society (yes, really) works to enhance the attractiveness of the city including planting 1000s of bulbs in the park, regenerating an island that used to be the site of an old flour mill and sponsoring floating islands of flowers on the river amongst other not doubt equally worthy projects.  There is a curously dated Englishness about Christchurch not least due to it’s Gothic stone buildings including the magnificent cathedral which dominates the city centre, historic weatherboard  houses with their verandahs and delicate iron fretwork, the English-inspired street names, Cambridge punts complete with punters in straw boaters and blazers and old-fashioned trams  providing tours of the city.  This is a calm city – no hustle bustle here.  As will the rest of New Zealand there is hardly any traffic giving it an eerily quiet almost deserted feel .  We spend most of the day doing a walking tour courtesy of Lonely Planet taking in Cathedral Square, the river Avon which winds its way around the city centre, the high street and the fashionable drinking areas. 

 

Thomas’ Hotel on Hereford is few minutes walk from Hagley Park in one direction and Remembrance Bridge and the centre of the city centre in the other.  We are opposite the Arts Centre housed in a rather nice gothic stone building, which on further investigation turns out to been converted into an artsy-crafty shopping complex aimed at tourists, and a very popular micro-brewery.  The location couldn’t be better.

 

Word of the day:  trundler = supermarket trolley

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New Zealand, South Island day 20 – Hamner Springs to Christchurch

 


 

Hamner Springs is the main thermal resort in the South Island.  Small (population 750) and pretty with mature trees lining streets of weatherboard houses it has oodles more character than the average New Zealand village.    It is a favourite weekend destination for people living in Christchurch  85km further south.  The large thermal springs have nine outdoor pools, three of which are sulphur pools, with temperatures ranging from 38 to 44 degrees C, heated swimming pool with slides, sauna, steam room, health and beauty spa, cafe and shop.  We content ourselves with an hour-and-half moving between the hot pools relaxing and chatting.  A couple from Buckinghamshire arrived in Christchurch a few days ago have come with only summer clothes and, disappointed by the grey and chilly weather, have decided cut short their stay in the South Island and leave for the North Island tomorrow.   We leave Hamner Springs after lunch and arrive in Christchurch the most British of New Zealand’s cities by late afternoon.  We are staying at Thomas’ Hotel.  It is in an old weatherboard house on Hereford Street just a stone’s throw from the town centre and provides a common room and guest kitchen.  The weather is sunny and warm when we arrive and we take a early evening stroll in the glorious Hagley Park at the end of the road.

 

We are discovering that the South Island has a very different character to the North. It has a much more lived-in feel which gives it more character;  no artificial film sets here, only the natural ones that provided the backdrop for the Lord of the Rings trilogy.  The Maori influence too is much less noticeable in the South;  place names generally have a British provenance.  In contrast, most place names in the North are the names given by the original Maori settlers. Maori account for 15% (565,000) of the total population of New Zealand,b but only 5% in the South and are consequently much less visible here.  Maori culture is widely celebrated in New Zealand and the indigenous culture has a special and separate status within the country’s ethnic mix.  Maori is an official language and there is a resurgence of interest in speaking it.  There is also a separate electoral role  granting Maori guaranteed parliamentary seats.  The cultural mix in the South Island is heavily skewed with around 80 percent of European descent compared to Auckland where the figure is slightly over half  which goes some way to explain the South Island’s a distinctly British feel.

 

 

 

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New Zealand South Island day 19- Kaikoura

 


 

The weather is considerably cooler in the South Island and wet.  But according to the weather reports all of New Zealand is in a band of low pressure so the weather is probably little better in North Island.   Kaikoura, on the east coast of the South Island started out as a sleepy fishing village famed for crayfish but an abundance of whales, dolphins, seals, penguins, albatross as well as some stunning scenery has put it firmly on the tourist map.  It retains the air of a fishing village, but with  a proliferation of wildlife tour operators, motels, holiday parks and shops that are aimed more at the tourist than the locals, as well as numerous seafood cafes selling, amongst other things, crayfish at export prices – no local prices here.   A charming place nonetheless.   The view of what should be the snow-capped Seaward Kaikoura mountains, unfortunately shrouded in cloud today, greet us when we emerge from our tent.  Despite forecasts of rain we set off in the sunshine to do the two-hour circular peninsular walk, part of which is along the cliff tops.  We make our way along the dark grey pebble beach which is littered with driftwood but soon decide to revert to the pavement  to make easier and quicker  progress. We can see the rain coming across the hills on the far side of the bay and soon we are donning our capes.   The rain combined with the blustery wind and the fact that we left the map behind,  make a cliff -top walk less appealing and we retreat to the car.  So changeable is the weather that by the time we reach the car the sun is out again and blue skies have made and appearance.  So we decide to drive round to point on the peninsular where the walk ascends the cliff top.  Here there is another seal colony and we brave the winds to walk out across the rocks exposed by the receding tide.  We can make out a handful of seals through the binoculars but this is a poor show compared to colony we stumbled on yesterday.

 

We are making our way south ultimately aiming to get to Milford Sound on the west coast and our next stop is Hanmer Springs.  We might have spent longer in Kaikoura had the weather been better but the forecast is more of the same and swimming with dolphins in the cold Pacific is not proving much of a draw.  The scenery between Kaikoura and Hanmer Springs is majestic – huge swathes of countryside with no visible signs of habitation and empty roads.  Deep ravines, massive dried up riverbeds carrying shrunken rivers, sheer escarpments, plateaus, towering hills, rising up in folds created in an earlier age, milky rivers, mountainous backdrops, the peaks lost in the clouds.  Shades of greens, browns and gold. Welcome to Middle Earth! 

 

The approach to Hanmer Springs is dramatic as we descend into the valley of the Clarence River.  A  enormously wide and meandering river bed with  a much-reduced milky blue river occupying only a fraction of it’s grey stony bed  We treat ourselves to a kitchen cabin.  It’s chilly and for the first time in our trip we turn on the heater!.

 

 

 

 

 

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