Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Milford Sound as a pound

Howden Hut - Milford Sound, NZ - 25 Nov, 2006
After the strange night of inexplicable goings-on at Howden we had an a red-eye start to hike to the end of the Routeburn Track, get to the nearest road and meet transport at 8am. This would take us to Milford Sound where we were going to go kayaking (come on, it's canoeing) for the day.

It was up at 5:50am and off we set into the...yup...pishing rain for a change. It dampened us in body only, our spirits were soaring and to take our minds off the lung-busting climb out of the valley we played the 'Countries Game', first played (by me) on a chair lift with Iwan, Rach & Jo in Morzine earlier in the year. The idea is to name countries that all begin with the same letter of the alphabet starting with 'A'. You take it in turns until nobody can come up with any more 'A' countries, the winner being the last person to name a country. You then move onto the next letter in the alphabet. (That's 'B' for those that were wondering.) Heck, it sounds pretty nerdy and childish but it can take your mind off the weight on your back, grumbling in your legs and the fact your gasping for breath. You could make it less nerdy by turning it into a drinking game but that wasn't really on the cards at 6am whilst hard hiking. It was also better than the last game we came up with called 'A Brief History of the World'. Also I was pretty good at it. I kept my degree in geography quiet. That said, Jo Bole also did a geography degree and thought Newcastle was in Scotland and as for Rik Ledger's trip to Oman when he nearly ended up in Amman, Jordan...well I guess it doesn't really count for anything.

Routeburn Track ticked off. Us at The Divide waiting for transport to head to Milford Sound.


Some ominous looking mountain on the way to Milford Sound.
The weather had kindly cleared up by 10am and, after getting into our boating wear in some derelict mizzen hut with broken glass for carpet, it was off in the kayaks/canoes (let's just call them boats)...boats onto Milford Sound. I was captaining HMS Sprattles with Steve, who had been bleating on and on about kayaking back in Minnesota, taking a free ride in the back. I swear he didn't do any paddling.

Apparently the mountain in the middle of the above snap was meant to look like a lion. It's amazing what hallucinogenic drugs people take to get by when they live in extremely remote places.

Steve & I spotted some Fiordland crested penguins whilst we were out paddling (well, I was paddling and Steve was having a cushy ride in the back). There were fewer of these than normal at this time of year as a rogue leopard seal had made a home in the sound and had been scoffing the penguin population willy-nilly. When I learnt it was over 9ft long it suddenly made me feel less like capsizing...not that I had a great desire to capsize before. We didn't see it. Did find a cap floating in the water though, so there's something.

After battling into the wind before lunch, we rafted up, hoisted a sail and relaxed (although Steve had been relaxing all morning obviously), the wind carrying us back down the fiord. By the way, I'm not wearing the cap I pulled out of the Briney, the boating company provided it.

Lunch stop on a gravel bank. How pleasant.

After lunch Adrian & Steph, our guides, took us on a wee tour of some backwater and explained that the point we were currently in is called Sand Fly Creek for obvious reasons and that this is where in days of yore local law breakers would get tied to a tree and left to be bitten to sh*t. For those unfamiliar, sand flies are to NZ what midges are to Scotland only they're bigger and can cause more damage. Well, there we are bobbing about and getting bitten to death whilst Adrian & Steph go off on this massive long rambling Maori story about the creation of NZ (or Aotearoa as it is in Maori). Hmmm, didn't recall infringing any laws recently. Nice one. Steve actually fell asleep.

That night we stay at the Milford Sound Lodge, have our first wash in three days (Steve & Dom smelt ripe, I naturally smelt of roses) and collected the food parcel that Teapot had sent out for us. We actually sent half of it back to Queenstown as we had clearly over catered.

Two things punctuated our stay at the Milford Sound Lodge. Firstly, Steve whilst carrying his dinner comprising of a massive plate of spaghetti from the kitchen to the dining room didn't spot the step down and spilt it all over the floor like a giant pile of dog sick. Nice one.

Secondly, we were in a mixed dorm and Dom was snoring like a boat crashing on rocks. The poor Dutch girl that was in the bunk above him couldn't sleep and eventually woke him up to tell him to pipe down. Dom, on being woken up, and using the logic of a lunatic, thought she must be complaining about someone else. He decided it was Steve so he then got up and punched Steve saying:

"Shut the f*ck up dude, the poor girl above me can't sleep."

He then went back to sleep and proceeded to snore as before. Steve was a little perplexed. Later sobs emanate from the bunk above Dom as Dutch bird realises she's in for a sleepless night. Oh dear.

She was on the same bus as us the next morning back to The Divide where we were going to pick up our hike. She didn't speak to us.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Routeburn Day2

Routeburn Falls to Howden Hut, Mount Aspiring Range, NZ - 24 Nov, 2006
It had been blowing a gale overnight not that that disturbed our baby like slumbers. In fact my nudges followed by aggressive blows and karate chops to the head couldn't wake my companions' slumbers come the morning. I 'sandal & socked' off to make breakfast - porridge and fresh fruit for me and whatever was left over for them.


Steve had to re-pack his skyscraper monstrosity of a rucksack. I thought I was a slow starter but Steve really took the biscuit (or cookie as he might call it).

We were heading for the Howden Hut. Most people break their journey half way there at the MacKenzie Hut. Hmmm.

10:30am; other hut dwellers' comments: 'Where are you guys heading?'
Me: 'Howden Hut.'
They: 'Oooh you should probably get started, eh?'
Me: 'Yeah, probably.'


Steve fettling about ad infinitum with his pack. (German bloke in background whom I later met in Auckland.)

Harris Saddle, towards the crux of the Routeburn hike.

Harris Saddle shelter looking like some crazy space station.

Hello there!

Harris Saddle and the dirty remnants of snow. Dirty dirty! If you're sharp, you might spot a snowball being thrown. Boyos!!

The trio taking a welcome break (not to be confused with a Welcome Break, altogether different).


Approach to the MacKenzie Hut. Alas not our destination that day. We had further miles to hike...or tramp...or whatever.

Everyone at MacKenzie was prepping for an evening meal and relaxing. No such luck for us. After nary enough time for a brew, it was off again...

...and back above the cloud line (which was about 16m) aiming for the Howden Hut.

Made it eventually. Hello, who brought the Apple Vodka complete with powdered fruit mix? I have to say as 'thin air' cocktails go this was pretty good - Orange & Mango powdered drink mix and apple vodka...tastes like peach schnapps. Nicely. Eee, Steve, great look:...tights and a spacca hand. Socks & sandals all round is what I say!

There were strange goings on that night at the Howden Hut. We were (not unsurprisingly) some of the last to bed but there was a guy loitering around the kitchen about 12:30; the sound of giggling and demonstrative instructions on how to wash pots coming from one of the toilet cubicles as if two people were washing up in there...but there was no sink; the overpoweringly pungent smell of Tiger Balm in the dorm and the sound of someone doing a comedy impression of 'bashing one out' later on. Maybe we had hit the 'swingers' hut. Maybe so. Steve & Dom didn't pick up on any of this, they were too busy sleeping like the innocent. Maybe I dreamt it. Dunno.

Routeburn North Branch - who let them out?

Here are a couple of clips:



A re-enactment of the Sound of Music, NZ style (gaylords!).



This is how many people die in the NZ backcountry - being an idiot. (This wasn't staged!)

Routeburn Day1

Routeburn Track Day 1, NZ - 23 Nov, 2006
Everything was prepared so there was nothing more to do other than set off. Steve's pack had the look of a very shonkily thrown together skyscraper and probably weighed as much. Dominici was sporting some fine Polish cut-off army trousers. This was going to be 'interesting' as my mother might politely call something dangerous, stupid and/or odd-looking.

You could tell Christmas was approaching as someone had seemingly hung a Christmas bauble on the tree behind the sign...or was it a rain drop on the lense?

One of the many suspension bridges encountered en route. Dom never ceased to amuse himself by bouncing about on them. He was the only one that was amused!


Lunch stop at the Routeburn Flats Hut and then a wee detour (pleasantly without packs) off route up the North Branch. This got us off the 'motorway' that the main route proved to be:

+Vrooom, vroommm...honk, beep, beep+
-
F*ck you, buddy!
- I say George, were they speaking English?


There's absolutely no point in trying to keep your boots dry on a NZ hike. Immerse and enjoy.

This was taking things just a little too far though.



Views on the Routeburn North Branch.

Looking down on the Routeburn Valley as we ascend to the Routeburn Falls hut and night one. Funny cone shaped hill, huh?

The ascent of Rumdoodle - planning

Queenstown, NZ - 20-22 Nov, 2006
The clouds of fate were gathering (as well as the rain clouds, no surprise there). Steve & I spent the next three days 'meticulously' planning six days of outdoorsy activity. Not the usual run-of-the-mill few days hiking for us. Nope. We were going to take on no less than three NZ greatwalks in succession with a day of kayaking (I still call it canoeing) in Milford Sound, a stunning fiord on the far west coast. The route: The Routeburn Track, 'day off' kayaking, followed by the Caples and Greenstone tracks linked by a lesser walked path called Steele Creek that took on mythical and abominable status in our minds - no-one at the Department of Conservation (DoC) office had walked this track, in fact they didn't even know it existed. Days were spent poring over maps, annoying the staff at the DoC office, planning our overnights, booking transport, sourcing equipment (mainly from Ali Baba's Outdoor Emporium) and trying to get Steve to experiment with something other than a SubWay chicken parmesan sandwich for lunch.

We adopted a local transport agent called Keiran (a.k.a. Teapot...reason explained later) at The Track & Info office. He seemed to have his finger on the pulse of what we were trying to achieve and managed to arrange the logistics with consummate ease: transport to the start of the route, kayaking and overnight in Milford Sound, a provisions drop, further transport back to the route and a pick up (including water taxi) from the end of the hike along with assorted equipment rental. We dropped some serious cash on Teapot and when we bumped into him in the World Bar one night, he expressed his appreciation by buying us a dubious cocktail - some milky white gloopy fluid that tasted vaguely of coconut (hmmm) delivered in...well...a teapot. Errr...thanks.

Dominici Stanczyk was due to arrive on the evening prior to our departure. He missed all the fun.


Steve calling his pots and pans broker to find out whether we were getting a deal on some second hand camping pots. We weren't...apparently.
Some of the provisions we were taking. Notice the abundance of cans and glass bottles. Not ideal - as well as being heavy, we had to carry all our rubbish out as well as in!

Reminded me of an unintentionally hysterical climbing movie made by Toby Mollins, a friend of Isobel's. Documenting an expedition to the Karakorum range Toby interviews his Logistics Manager in front of a seemingly haphazard and disorganised array of equipment and food.

Toby: 'Is this the most complicated expedition you've been involved with?'
LM: 'Yup.'
Toby: 'And how many expeditions have you been involved with?'
LM: 'This is the first.'

Route planning using the big wall map.

Getting pointy-fingery with the map.

At least we had the essentials: wine, cheese, Pringles & chocolate.

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Next stop Queenstown

Queenstown, NZ south island - 19 Nov, 2006
I was in and out of Franz Josef with military precision (but with fewer body bags) and on to Queenstown, the hub of outdoorsy activities in the Fiordland, the south of NZ's south island, so called because it has fiords (or fjords if your Norwegian). You see what they've done there. Cunning.

I had arranged to meet a young fella in Queenstown by the name of Steve Johnson (23yrs, Minnesota, USA) whom I had originally met in Auckland. The idea was to do some hiking or tramping as they call it in NZ. This is not to be confused with tramping in the UK which is getting drunk and tapping off with a different person each night. No, no, no. I'll leave that sort of tramping to the Kiwi Experience crew.

There was also a rumour that Dominici 'Dommy' Stanczyk, the Polish Australian, again an Auckland contact, might be in town and join us for a re-enactment of the Sound of Music. Things could get 'interesting'.

Below is a collection of snaps from the journey to Queenstown.



Waterfall, pebbles, lake. Standard fayre for NZ.



Lake Wakatipu on the shore of which nestles Queenstown.


Me with jacket trying to make a break for it. Oh, and more Wakatipu in different hues.




Statue of Kiwi bloke and his wife; Steve wishing he was Kiwi bloke's wife and a cloud oddly stuck on a tree.

Steve and I share a beer over looking Lake Wakatipu. Not a bad spot for a beer. Is there ever a bad spot for a beer?

Glacier - kinda minty

Franz Josef, west coast NZ south island - 18 Nov, 2006
Being a physical geographer at heart I've always had a fascination with glaciers and woooah, looky looky here, there's a fine, accessible example of a glacier on NZ's west coast at Franz Josef. What a stroke of luck.

I used my newly adopted 'precision tourism' approach - get in, see the glacier, get out. This was lucky as Franz Josef is a tiny spot with nothing to do other than see the glacier...and it was absolutely tipping it down with rain. I really can't describe how hard it was raining. It was coming down so hard that you thought it couldn't possibly rain any harder...and then it did. And after that brief increase in intensity, it upped the ante and started raining harder still. It was like an open air power shower (the power being 10 to the nine).

A bleak west coast beach and my attempted 'arty shot'. Maybe I should stick to macrame.


The Franz Josef glacier from about 3kms away. It's a big ol' beasty.
Up onto the glacier. Interestingly (for me anyway) the Franz Josef glacier is quite unusual in that it comes down to almost sea level and into the forest line. Our guide, in a bid to educate us, asked us why we thought the glacier was so unusual. I had all the answers (naturally) and had to bite my tongue so I didn't appear like the class spod and so he could look knowledgeable. In case you were wondering it's due to a combination of massive precipitation (7m of rainfall p.a. at sea level equating to 50m of snow at the accumulation zone), massive collection bowl (corrie) and very steep descent meaning it travels fast (for a glacier that is...I could still take it in a sprint) and to lower altitudes than its less well fed cousins. So ends the geography lesson.


A crevasse in the glacier. All strangely blue, which is better than being Strangely Brown.

Gordon & Phyllis whom I met at the FJ hostel. A fine and sprightly couple with a taste for adventure. And they come from Norfolk - Up The Canaries! If I have half as much energy as them in my 60s I'll be doing very well.