New Zealand, North Island

Dapper Naiper…

Three weeks later, I’m back in Auckland again — but not before a pit stop in Napier (on the east coast of the North Island). Napier’s big tourist draw, besides their vineyards, is their architecture. In 1930 an earthquake measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale leveled the place and raised a shallow bay up above sea level. The entire town was rebuilt in the next few years and the style of the time was Art Deco. There are still many buildings left from the period and they’re all preserved for showcasing to the towns visitors. The formerly submerged bay is now their airport. It was a nice little town to duck into for the night on my way across the North Island to Auckland.

Tomorrow I hop on a plain for Nadi (pronounced “Nandi”), Fiji. I’m looking forward to the warmth, even though Auckland feels pretty good right now.

New Zealand, South Island

My side trip to Antarctica…

After spending a mere 15 hours in freezing Dunedin, where I hiked up the world’s steepest street and inhaled the smell of chocolate from the Cadbury plant, I started heading north to the fork in the road where I could either head for Mount Cook or Christchurch (the South Island’s largest city). Once again I found myself driving in the pouring rain. I decided to skip the mountain for fear that after a long drive it would be shrouded in clouds. Instead I ended up in Christchurch, hoping to spend a full day snooping around.

I had a very hard time finding any accommodation in Christchurch. As it turns out, New Zealand and Australian school students have been enjoying a 2 week break — so everything was booked solid. Except for the YMCA, where I ended up. The Y was actually quite nice. Probably nicer than any other place I’ve stayed on this trip — but it was missing the social feel you get from hostels. It was also a tad more expensive. The hostels were all booked out by entire families on vacation as hostelling in New Zealand is a pretty mainstream activity.

Christchurch was nothing to get too excited about. It looks better from a distance than from within. Or, at least, there wasn’t much to it. I have to give my vote to Wellington as far as New Zealand cities are concerned. Wellington seems to be like hilly San Francisco, Auckland like overcrowded New York, and Christchurch like Los Angeles (flat, at the base of snow capped mountains — but without any freeways).

I decided to geek-out in Christchurch and visit the over-expensive Antarctica Museum. I guess because I couldn’t fit Antarctica into my itinerary any other way on this trip. It was a pretty good show, but mainly aimed at kids with lots of wiz-bang interactive stuff (including a windy chill room you could go into to see what the South Pole felt like). The museum was actually located out at the Christchurch airport. Why? Because that’s actually where several countries funnel their supplies to the bases in Antarctica. Right across the street from New Zealand’s Antarctica offices were the United States Antarctica offices. Behind chain link fences along the road you could see long strips of supplies on palets under netting, waiting to be slid onto Hercules Transport Planes for delivery to the South Pole. I thought it was pretty cool. They do 2 flights down there a week.

Although they wouldn’t accept be as a guest, the YHA people in Christchurch were very nice and helped me secure reservations at a string of hostels that will lead me back to Auckland in time for my flight to Fiji on Wednesday. I’ve been retracing a few places, but I will get the chance to visit Napier on the east coast on the North Island after sailing into Wellington on the ferry tomorrow morning. I’m presently chilling out, cleaning up, and packing up tight for the journey back here in the Havelock schoolhouse hostel where I started on the South Island ten days ago.

New Zealand, South Island

Dodging Avalanches…

I’ve spent most of the past four days around snow, for a change. After leaving the rainforests of the upper west coast of New Zealand’s South Island, I headed south to where a few glaciers can be visited: the Franz Josef Glacier and the Fox Glacier. I was able to hike up to the nose of the Franz Josef Glacier and touch it. It was very blue in parts and it was full of small rocks and pebbles (which is what gives them their dirty appearance). Hiking up to the nose of a glacier is not the safest thing in the world to do since they’re continually melting and collapsing at the bottom, but the “experts” were leading tour groups up onto the glaciers from the same point, so most hikers assumed it had to be safe enough — even though there were signs everywhere warning you not to go near it.

It was raining when I hiked up to the Franz Josef Glacier. One of the coolest things that happens when it rains is the sudden swelling of the streams running off the neighboring mountains. One in particular had a contant flow of water coming out of it, but about five minutes after a downpour it would sound like a jet engine spewing all the runoff that couldn’t be absorbed into the rock.

From the glaciers, I took a long drive through “Mount Aspiring National Park” and the Haast Pass, a spectacular path through snow covered mountains up into “The Southern Alps” — one of the biggest ski regions of New Zealand. The drive was beautiful, taking you past endless mountains covered in snow with many huge crystal clear lakes at their feet. There were several cranked up ski towns in the area (including Queenstown) packed full of partying skiers, so I opted for the quieter Wanaka on the edge of Lake Wanaka. It was the first time I had trouble finding accommodation down here. I was hoping to do a bit of hiking in the area, but the freezing cold weather and the idea of hiking up into the snow fields made me decide to head onward in my nice warm car.

From the ski towns, I headed for Milford Sound in “Fiordland National Park” in the south western part of the country where I took what was probably the most spectacular drive of my life. There were mile high mountains with steep cliff faces that dropped straight down into fjords. For 17 kms of the drive (each way) you were not allowed to you’re your car because of the risk of avalanches. The road gets closed about 20 times a year, I was told, sometimes taking up to 5 days to clear.

The end of the road takes you to Milford Sound, a place that is supposed to attract 7 meters of rain a year. My rough math tells me that equates to an average of about — an inch of rain every single day. Fortunately there were sunny blue skies when I drove in so there was plenty to see. Overnight and on the way back out it was pouring rain, which really hampered your visibility.

There is a 3-4 day “Milford Track” hike that extends through this Fiordland National Park considered by many to be the ultimate hike anywhere wordwide. I was told the hike was so popular you needed to make reservations a year in advance. The reservations even require you start on a specific date to synchronize all the hikers. During the summer months, the trail is supposed to be chock full of backpackers.

I continued heading to the southern tip of the country, through Invercargill, along a scenic coastal drive before heading up north to Dunedin for the night, the South Islands second largest city. The first half of the drive seemed a bit nicer than the second half. The first half ran past the tapering off snow capped mountains of Fiordland. The second have ran past lots of sheep and rolling green hills. Lots of sheep. Actually, many of the sheep have babies this time of the year here, which are very cute to watch. It looks like someone sprinkled the hills with stuffed animals, but they play around with each other like puppy dogs.

I’m juggling my options for travelling from here. I could either continue up the east coast of head inland for Mount Cook, Australasia’s highest mountain (3000+ meters). Depends of the weather. After driving all day in the rain yesterday, I’m not real keen on racing half way across the country to see more clouds blocking my view.

New Zealand, South Island

a bit of this, a bit of that…

I’m on my way to see some glaciers here on the South Island and I’m stuck here in a classic New Zealand rain forest downpour, so I’ve finally found an excuse to catch up on my blog…

After an hour delay on the ferry, we finally set sail from Wellington to Picton with everything imaginable on board. Trains, cars, tractor trailers, campers, people, and sheep. Lots of sheep. The trains surprised me, actually. The entire lower floor of the ferry was reserved for train cars. Trains appear to just run from north to south in New Zealand and hop on the ferry like everyone else. The sheep were actually in trucks and were nothing new to me, living in Fremantle (where they is a big notorious live sheep export business to the Middle East).

I managed to get into Picton a bit later than planned, but decided to make a mad dash to an interesting sounding youth hostel in an old former elementary school house in Haverlock. The school had a few famous graduates including one chap you migrated to the U.S. and became a famous nuclear scientist. It was a nice place with lots of character. One very pleasing thing about this region of New Zealand is that it boasts more hours of warmth and sunshine than any other.

One thing I’ve quickly learned about travelling in New Zealand, unlike Australia, if a road sign says 50 km and the speed limit is 100 kph, that doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll get there in about 30 minutes. You have to contend with the possibility you’ll be on switchback roads up and down mountain peaks that will slow you down to around 40 kph (even though the posted speed limit might be 100 kph). My mad dash to Haverlock ended up taking a lot longer than I thought and almost got me there too late.

After spending the night in Haverlock, I drove to Nelson in the beautiful warm sunshine and decided that I really wanted to take another crack at camping while I was in New Zealand. The weather certainly seemed right for it, so I aimed to get into the Abel Tasman National Park — which is famous for a multi-day coastal hiking trail and beautiful beaches. Unfortunately, I found myself getting caught up in another tediously long switchback pass over the “Takaka Hill”. Some hill! This road was gruelling enough to make any driver carsick.

I finally managed to get to the outskirts of the park around sunset, and thought it a safer strategy to grab a tent site from a commercial campground than to try heading deep into the park to find the ideal one before dark. It wasn’t a bad spot. Right along a beach and not too cold. Just a bit of heavy dew in the morning. I drove into the park early and had breakfast in the camp area I was aiming for before taking a sample 3 hour hike along the coastal track. It was very nice, dipping down to beautiful beaches with bright yellow sand and then back up into the densely wooded hills from time to time. There were two sections of the trail that could only be used at low tide since they went across tidal mud flats. I’ve been told by several locals that these trails are packed with tourists in the summer months. I saw about 20 people with packs while I was there.

After my successful camping outside of Abel Tasman National Park (in Takapou), I decided to try my luck getting into the Nelson Lakes National Park camp groups to the south. The Nelson Lakes region is quite spectacular with snow capped mountains dropping into crystal clear lakes. I found hardly anyone there at this time of year and set up camp for the night. It seemed a bit chilly, but everything seemed to be going well until around 1 AM, when you could really start to feel the cold. By morning, there was a thick frost on everything — including my tent. I was freezing for most of the night even though I was bundled up in a 3 season sleeping bag and a cheap thick quilt I picked up in a supermarker. I think a lot of other campers were as uncomfortable as I was that night because I could hear a continuous unzipping and zipping of tents and sleeping bags around me.

By morning I had enough and decided to skip my planned hike in the freezing cold and concentrate on getting to my next destination in enough time to enjoy it before it got dark (unlike my previous several destinations where I found myself rocking up just before sunset). I found the source of the Buller River (by accident, really — but there was a sign there) in the Nelson Lakes National Park and followed it all the way to the west coast where it drains into the sea at Westport. It was nice to follow because it runs through a huge gorge along the way.

Westport was nothing to get excited about, so I decided to head south to Punakaiki along the west coast and next to the Paparoa National Park. This place was really neat: a nice warm rain forest with lots of freshwater rivers beside a huge snow capped mountain range. I decided to take refuge in a warm youth hostel after my freezing Nelson Lakes experience (and also because of an incoming storm front). The youth hostel was spread out in a dense rainforest on a campus-like property. Although neigboring buildings were only about 10 meters apart, you felt like you were along because they were obscured behind the dense vegetation. It was really cool and the owners and visitors seemed very groovy. I was even able to score a couple of lucious home cooked meals while I was there. This place seems to remind lots of Americans of Big Sur in California, but it actually seemed a lot more accessible with loads of good trails heading up into the hills and mountains.

I did a couple of hikes up along creeks. One went to a creek source that ran out of a cave (“Cave Creek”) and the other along the beautiful Porarari River, which looked great for whitewater rafting, kayaking, or canoing. I found out over dinner that 14 students died on an inappropriately constructed viewing platform there back in 1994 when it collapsed 40 meters into a chasm. Gulp! I think they’ve made sure it is safe enough now.

New Zealand, North Island

Getting ready to set sail in Wellington…

As I await my ferry to the South Island, I find myself in Wellington — the capital of New Zealand. Wellington’s is a very nice place, actually. Maybe it’s just due to the fact that I’m here on one of the few clear days they seem to get. It’s at the very southern end of the North Island on a harbour (obviously, if I’m catching my ferry from here) nestled in the mountains (some of them snow capped). There are lots of nice homes built into the hill, much like San Francisco. In fact, it even has a cable car you can ride. It also has a nice downtown area that clings around the curves of the harbour.

I’m staying in a Youth Hostel that runs more like a big city hotel, with magnetic cards for keys and a room cleaning crew. Last night I spent the night in another Youth Hostel in a town northwest of here that seemed more like a Bed & Breakfast. They sure have changed a lot since I first hosteled 17 years ago. I remember when you were expected to perform some sort of chore in exchange for your cheap fee. That seems totally unheard of today. You find all ages staying in hostels. There have been a few occasions when I was the youngest customer. There was one woman staying in this Wellington hostel who must have been in her 80’s! Lots of younger travellers seemed happy to look out for her and help her around. I think that’s why she probably liked it. I’ve also seen a number of families with little kids. I guess YHA found too much competition from independent hostels.

There was an often quoted study done in Australia in the nineties that found that the big travel spenders were actually backpackers, and not the resort visitors. Backpackers stay longer in most countries and end up spending more, so a lot of new hostels have come on the scene looking to cash in.

So I’ve now been to all the big volcanoes around the North Island. I found out today that they are, in fact, still active. The middle one last erupted in 1996, but no one was injured. I had breakfast with a guy from Canada this morning who told me he was talking with a woman who was skiing on it at the time. Boulders the size of cars were raining down and the snow melted almost instantly. Fortunately, no one was injured. There have been fatal eruptions in previous years.

New Zealand, North Island

Trout Capital of the World…

So I was hoping to do this hike on one of New Zealand’s most famous one day treks (or tramps, as they call them around here) — but it was closed by the national park due to heavy winds. It is called the Tongariro Crossing, and it passes between two of the biggest mountain peaks on the North Island. I may be tempted to try again on my way back to Auckland after visiting the South Island. It takes you up past volcanoes and lakes (currently covered in snow). They have a bus service that brings people out first thing in the morning and picks them up eight hours later on the other side.

I went to check out the starting and ending points today, anyway. The trail looks really tempting, but it was pretty cold and the wind was making it feel a lot colder. I could have sworn I heard a loud rumble coming from the bigger of the two volcanoes when I was at the beginning of the trail. The sky was clear, so it probably was the volcano.

They have a neighborhood fish hatchery I visited that claimed to be there in case of any natural disasters “such as a volcanic eruption”. The hatchery was pretty cool. Lots of trout to see. Next to the mountains on the other side of a town called “Turangi” (where I spent the night) is a huge lake that is supposed to have some of the best trout fishing in the world.

I find myself in “New Plymouth” tonight, which has turned out to be a pretty cool little town on the west coast. Lots on interesting little restaurants and a brand new very long and funky coastal walkway that would have impressed Dad for its design. There is another huge volcano just south of here that you are supposed to be able to see from the city, but I haven’t seen it yet due to clouds. Hopefully I will be able to hike there tomorrow on my way south towards Wellington. The drive here took me on some deserted back gravel roads that finally gave me the chance to appreciate the place without having impatient drivers tailgating me.

New Zealand, North Island

Sulfur City…

Ohhhh boy, this place smells. Pee-you! You get wafts of it, anyway. It’s Rotorua, home of New Zealand’s largest group of geothermal springs, which smell like sulphur from time to time. I haven’t had the luxury of a soak yet, but will have that opportunity tomorrow. People swear by its medicinal properties.

Its pretty cool to think the earth’s magma is close enough to the surface to make the ground water steam. Baby volcanoes making their way to the surface. There are lakes of mud in the area that appear to be boiling, but they are really just belching gas.

I spent last night in a hostel in Coromandel, on a peninsula east of Auckland. A very scenic area amongst some rugged mountains. The drive up and down the peninsula roads was very spectacular, with very windy and twisty switchback turns. Unfortunately, the locals (or visiting weekend yuppies from Auckland) were very impatient and seemed to just want to drag race the whole thing. Some are incredibly rude. I used to get waves from fellow drivers in remote parts of Australia. Now I get the finger from drag racing New Zealanders for not getting out of their way fast enough. I had to keep pulling over to let people pass. It was very frustrating.

That’s my first disappointment with New Zealand. For a country with a population of 4 million, I feel like I’ve already met half of them on the road. I’m hoping there are less people the further south I get.

I have managed to get a few short hikes in on the east / Pacific coast today. One was a ninety minute hike down to a beach known as “Cathedral Cove”, and the other was another hour around Mount Maunganui (which is actually in a city, where it juts out of the harbor). One problem with taking such hikes is the fear of having your car broken into. Travel guides warn you. Signs are posted in parking lots. There is the occasional pile of broken glass on the pavement. You can only hope it doesn’t happen to you. Unfortunately, you can never completely relax while you’re out hiking.

After a splash in the thermal pools of Rotorua tomorrow, I’m planning to aim for Tongariro National Park (smack dab in the middle of the North Island) where there is a famous all-day hike everyone talks about. I’m not sure if it’s the right season for it, but I’m hoping to do it on Monday or Tuesday. After that there is a cool looking volcano named Mount Egmont on the west coast that I hope to check out before visiting Wellington (on the southern end of the North Island) and catching a ferry to the South Island on Thursday (where all the LOTR stuff was filmed). I have found out where the “Piano” beach is, by the way, but have no intention of visiting there. It’s not far from Auckland on the west side — but not on my way.

New Zealand, North Island

From one America’s Cup ghost town to the next…

Greetings from Auckland, New Zealand. Another former home of the America’s Cup (after Fremantle). I was here once in 1987 and I can see how they’ve sunk millions of dollars into their harbor in hopes that they would be a long time America’s Cup host. Unfortunately, they just lost it to the Swiss (?) last year. Actually, they lost it to a New Zealander who was hired by the Swiss — which was obviously a bit controversial around these parts. But then again, the America’s Cup has become all about money, anyway.

I seem to have picked a great time to visit this place. The weather doesn’t seem too harsh, but the summer tourists haven’t shown up yet. The benefit is that all the car rental companies and accommodation providers are desperate for business and have slashed their prices (up to 2/3’s in some cases).

My Lonely Planet guide advises not even thinking about visiting Auckland without reservations at one of the hostels. Me, being the organized traveler that I am, decided to rock up and take my chances (just like in 1987, I might add — except back then I only had 10 cents in my pocket. Literally! That’s another story). I called one of the YHA’s from the airport, and they were happy to not only take me in, but give me my own room. And they only charged me as though I was sharing it with someone because business was so slow. They told me I would be better off because it was unlikely anyone else would show up, anyway. Peak tourist season in New Zealand is between November and May (?).

Auckland’s main drag seems a tad grittier than Perth’s, but it has a nice, big city feel to it. They have a space needle type thing they claim is the tallest building in the southern hemisphere. I was given the opportunity to bungee jump off it and declined — but I did see two others jump (including an old guy). They dangle them in front of the observation deck before dropping them to the bottom.

The main strip in Auckland is loaded with Japanese, Korean, and Chinese restaurants. I went for a fabulous Korean pork barbeque tonight. Daniel can attest to Korean barbeques living near Koreatown, Los Angeles. For lunch I had a nice South Pacific seafood chowder down by the wharf. Mmmmm… Tomorrow it’s back to sardines and instant noodles, I suppose.

There are also lots of Yanks about. Something I’m not used to. Must have something to do with those Lord of the Rings movies…

I’ve organized a car rental for the next few weeks. Prices vary quite widely, but they’re all pretty cheap right now. The key was finding one that would help me get to the South Island easily (where the REALLY spectacular stuff is). I finally found one that has a dropoff/pickup at the ferry terminals on both islands so I don’t have to pay the hundreds of dollars I would have had to pay with the cheaper car rental companies to get the car back and forth. It’s a 3+ hour ferry ride.

I will start heading south tomorrow (since I only went north in 1987). I figure about a week on the North Island and about 12 days on the South Island.