Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Waipohatu Waterfalls Loop Walk

We needed another hike and this 2-3 hour day hike in the bush near Curio Bay seemed right. The vegetation was beautiful and endlessly interesting, but very bush...and humid.

All good DOC walks begin with a bridge

Fern trees in the 15-20 foot range


And other weird trees



Much of the 6k trail was corduroyed, paved with fern tree
logs

Thus



Creek; required for waterfalls


Vine city



The short fat waterfall

The tall thin waterfall

Us, there

Tree vs boulder...trees always win

OK, it was a conglomerate boulder

Gondwana beeches


Walking the home stretch, a large bird--maybe 3 times the size of a pigeon--lighted
overhead and stayed, unperturbed as we walked beneath [turns out it was a pigeon]

Thalatta! It was more of a hike than we bargained for, especially
with the humidity, and we were glad to get back to Rooby and
our Nemo

Southern Coast, 1

We drove on south to old friend Invercargill (and Henry, the Tuatara) but then turned east to spend a couple days re-exploring the southern coast of the South Island. Temps were in the agreeably low 70s and 60s though there was occasional light rain and much humidity. We stopped on the sound at Fortrose, camped there, and then carried on the next day to Slope Point, then the Waipapa lighthouse, and then to Waipohatu, doing the bush loop walk with its two waterfalls (next post). Next day we visited Curio Bay before turning back to Invercargill.
On the sound at Fortrose, at a free municipal campground
















Thus; or possibly something else

The Waipapa lighthouse came about after the wreck of this
ship in the 1880s, with the loss of 131 lives, merely a kilometer
off shore


Environs

Near Slope Point, southernmost bit of the South Island


Been there, done that; it was enough in 2018 merely to see the
sign

It's a windy place

After the Waipohatu  hike and spending the night there, we drove
on to Curio Bay, to see again the petrified forest on a coastal
shelf there

Thus

Like a Jurassic logging truck lost its load there


Thus


Neat place

With flowers, too


On Lake Wakatipu

An hour's slow drive around to the far end of the lake, near Kingston, and we were back to the New Zealand we fell in love with in 2009...



Queenstown, 2018

Queenstown can wow you, as it did us in 2009. In 2014, it was more of an old friend. (Just enter Queenstown in the search box for my several 2009 and 2014 posts; not to be missed is my Birth of Venus pose at the Basket of Dreams, Queenstown Hill).  In 2018, it was more of an old friend who has greatly changed. We checked into the favored Lakeview campground, did the wash, then walked down the hill to the downtown, mostly unchanged, and shopped our favorite shops...Kathmandu, Global Culture, Torpedo 7. A pizza dinner. Though the downtown area is still recognizable, its surroundings are vastly changed, back through Frankton, and across the lake too. Aspenization is not fully realized, but it is well underway. New Zealand is not a wealthy country. One wonders who will inhabit the thousands of new condo units. In any case, the weather was turning from warm to hot as a heat wave of historic proportions engulfed the island. We decided to head toward Antarctica...
In the Crown range
Above Queenstown and beautiful Lake Wakatipu; note jetliner
taking off from airport

Street scene

Ditto; an incredibly international place





























































Best Asian grocery in this part of the world


BBQ!

Concert in the square

Bradrona: The Great Bra Fence At Cardrona

We spent another night at Raspberry Creek and then drove the cruel, corrugated gravel road back to Wanaka (past the world's largest and most awful campground, at Glendhu), provisioned, and drove on, crossing the Crown range, and encountering the Great Bra Fence of Cardrona, 8th wonder of the Kiwi world, now known as Bradrona. It has grown considerably since 2014, in size and also respectability. Sort of.


Only in New Zealand