Monday 5 June 2017

The End of the New Zealand Journey

We are safely and happily home from New Zealand.  A few comments on the final days of our trip follow.

The morning we left for Dunedin, the Highway from Oamaru was closed due to snow.  Not having much else to do we wandered around Oamaru stopping for coffee and doing a bit of lackadaisical shopping.  Around noon the road was finally opened and we were on our way.

The Boulders at Moeraki
We made a stop at Moeraki and went to see their big tourist attraction of some odd, rounded boulders on the beach.  It was very cold and windy, but quite a busy tourist site despite the weather.  A bit further south we turned off to the Moreaki Lighthouse at Katiki Reserve.  It was blowing a gale, with occasional showers and wind that threatened to push us off the clifftops.  But we went out to the penguin sanctuary past the lighthouse and saw the rare Hoi-Ho or Yellow-eyed penguins, as well as a lot of seals or sea lions napping on the grassy headland.
Hoi-Ho or Yellow-Eyed Penguin
  

As we headed into Dunedin, the road was lined with snow and the pavement was slushy.  Snowploughs (I hadn’t seen one of those in years) were pushing the slush around and spreading grit.  They don’t use salt on the roads here which is probably better for the cars, but drivers complain about the grit instead.

It was windy and very cold most of the time we were in Dunedin, so we spent most of our time in museums.  The Toitu Otago Settlers Museum near the wonderfully ornate train station was one of the best museums we saw in New Zealand.  It traced the history of settlement and development in Dunedin and Otago.  The scary part was the more modern displays from the 1940s to the 1980s, where everything was familiar. (wringer washing machines anyone?)  Bill was particularly taken with a big display of computers from 1950’s onwards.

Flemish Renaissance Style Train Station Dunedin

We tried to get a tour of the Cadbury’s Chocolate Factory, but it was closed for maintenance.  Instead, we visited Olveston House, a mansion that has remained virtually unchanged since the 1920s and had been donated to the city totally furnished as an example of life (at least, life for rich people) in the early 20th century.  We booked for the last tour of the day, and as we were the only two there, got a very detailed private guided tour of the house.  I enjoyed the tour very much, and a grand home that needed 7 servants to run it was a slice of a life that we will not see again.

Queenstown
Our next stop was Queenstown, where we had booked a day tour to Doubtful Sound, a very large and dramatic fiord southwest of Queenstown.  The trip started at 6:45 with a 2 1/2 hour drive to Lake Manapouri, where we took a 45 minute boat ride across the lake to another bus.  This bus drove us on an isolated gravel road, narrow, steep and twisting with no guardrails to Deep Cove on Doubtful Sound.  This road was built to facilitate the construction of the Manapouri generating station.  It runs from the south side of Manpouri Lake to Doubtful Sound, and is not connected to any other road.

Lake Manapouri

The day was pouring rain and cold, with patches of fog.  We stopped a couple of times to take photographs of waterfalls, but even the dedicated photographers did not leave the comfort of the bus for long.  The rain let up temporarily when we reached Deep Cove and boarded the cruise boat for our trip along the sound.
Doubtful Sound
The cruise took us about three hours along the sound to the ocean and back again.  Doubtful Sound is about 20 times larger than Milford Sound and has steep green cliffs, lots of waterfalls, 9 metres of rain a year and rain at the ocean surface 69% of the time.  They don’t tell you that when you book the cruise.  The wind was cold, the rain was often horizontal, it was mostly cloudy with occasional sunny patches near the end, and lots of rainbows which seemed to get everyone excited.

 We saw no wildlife to speak of, except for a Mollymawk, a relative of the Albatross.  On top of that, the sound is not really a sound but a fiord.  Sounds are formed when a river erodes a valley and then the sea rises to fill it; fiords are valleys formed by glaciation that the sea then fills.  I guess the name, which Captain Cook gave it as he doubted it was a good harbour, could refer to the fact that it is doubtful if it is a sound.  Bill thought the trip was great, but I am doubtful if it was worth all the time and money for the short cruise that we took.

Our last big stop was Wanaka, a beautiful town in a mountain valley about an hour north of Queenstown.  Friends Peter and Belinda from Sydney built a calm and spacious house in Wanaka and are spending quite a bit of time there.  Peter took us for a short hike up Iron Mountain, a hill near the town that gives excellent views of the surrounding countryside.  The next day he drove us about an hour north of Wanaka to the Matukituki Valley and the start of a track to the Rob Roy Glacier.


Wanaka
The glacier hike was not long, (about 4 hours return) but 99% of the first half was uphill to a lookout where you can see the front edge of the glacier.  The track followed a clear mountain stream with pale blue-green pools lined with white sand most of the way up.  The lookout point was cool and quiet, and gave stunning views of the blue-white glacier.
Rob Roy Glacier
Rob Roy Glacier Track
After coming down and devouring the lunch Belinda had packed, we headed back to Wanaka and had dinner by the fireplace.  Thanks to Peter and Belinda, who  hosted us for a wonderful two days in their second home.

The last few days of our trip were steady driving up the west coast of the South Island.  We stopped at many beautiful waterfalls, the Fox Glacier (easier to access but a dirty brown colour rather than the clean blue-white of the Rob Roy glacier), and saw something I have never seen before, roundabouts with train tracks running through the centre of them.  I’m glad we did not have to deal with any trains when we were also negotiating auto traffic.


Near Fox Glacier
On our last day in the South Island we drove to a little seaside port called Havelock.  Not too touristy, but with a large harbour and marina, some decent eating places, interesting old architecture and an excellent art and craft gallery.  From Havelock, we took the 30 kilometre Queen Charlotte Drive to Picton.  It was the most beautiful seaside drive we did in New Zealand.  The road was a narrow tunnel of green that twisted, cork-screwed and zig-zagged along the coast of the Queen Charlotte Sound.  Homes clung to the cliffs below us or perched on points above green bays full of anchored yachts.  The early morning fog lifted and we had brilliant sunshine for the whole drive.  We stopped many times to take photographs and I think to give Bill a rest from turning the wheel.  I would have loved to have more time to spend in the Queen Charlotte Sound area.

Havelock



Queen Charlotte Sound Drive


Once again, we took the ferry back to the north island and headed for Auckland.  We took Highway 1, The Desert Road, which crossed a flat high plain of gold tussock grass and electricity pylons.  It was dry, open and flat, and so different to everything else we had seen it New Zealand.  The huge arc of the sky was spotted with cirrus and cumulous clouds against a clear blue background.  Later the plain became more desiccated with red rock and furrowed gullies.  Truly a lovely surprise on our drive.
Desert Highway
We had time to visit the Auckland Botanic Gardens the morning of the day that we flew back to Australia.  This was a pleasant, relaxing end to our trip and we enjoyed both the gardens and the sculpture that are scattered throughout the grounds.  Every two years they hold an open competition, and the winning sculptures are displayed in the gardens so the artwork is constantly changing.

Auckland Botanic Gardens

Sculpture "Splayed"  Botanic Gardens




Our trip ended with a non-eventful flight back to Australia.  No idea where the next trip will take us.