The discovery of Doubtful Sound is pretty complicated since we need to take a first boat to cross the Manapouri lake before hopping on a bus up to the mouth of the fjord. The ones who survived these 2 tests generally choose a second boat to enjoy the cruise, sipping a drink. On the other hand, this relative difficulty of access is a guarantee of tranquility pushing away the herds of tourists who prefer keeping in mind the images and steep lines of Milford Sound. As for us, after the trek, we are going to relax our legs and make our arms work because we decided to discover this area by kayak.
Doubtful sound doesn't have the greatness and the mind-boggling verticality of Milford sound but we sample the exquisite pleasure of feeling alone. Our paddles break through the oily sea and twist the reflected images of the flora kingdom that flanks the banks. The cliffs are notched by sterilized, clean gullies. On the walls, the nature is so dense that the ground isn't tough enough to support the weight of all this vegetation and the extra scrub triggers a tree avalanche which washes out a whole part of the granite wall and throws roots, trunks and branches into the abyss of the fjord.
We won't eyewitness this defeaning chaos and our paddles that gently stroke the water are the most violent noise we'll hear. A supreme serenity in an outstanding country.
Keyword - at the kiwis country -
Friday 16 November 2007
Kayak trip in Doubtful Sound
By dorian on Friday 16 November 2007, 02:21 - RTW-New Zealand
Thursday 15 November 2007
Emerald paradise on the Milford Sound track
By dorian on Thursday 15 November 2007, 02:16 - RTW-New Zealand
It's soon in the small pier of Te Anau Downs, little life troubles the place. A boat tied to the wooden wharf waits for the group of the day who goes to begin the Milford Sound track. Only 40 people daily start and we must book between 2 and 6 months before to be in the group. Fortunately my brother Christophe thought about it.
After half an hour on the lake, we get off the boat at Glade Wharf. A mere wooden pontoon. Each one of us dip his shoes into a chlorine liquid in order not to soil the earth of the park. The main threat is called Didymo, an out-of-control seaweed that invades lakes and rivers bed and stifle every kind of life. A picture in front of the entrance sign and we start this first day of trekking, a one-hour-and-a-half short stage. We slowly slide in this gree heaven. Swingbridge, walk in forest, river and stagnant waters. There's a good smell of undergowth's humus, a heavy moss carpets branches and trunks. No more things needed to open our hikers' appetite.
We arrive at the first hut, the Clinton Hut, where we make the group's acquaintance. A heterogeneous and international group.
Waiting impatiently for tomorrow.
7h, the dorm wakes up. We pull on a pair of trousers, we buckle up the backpack to start again, to go and get lost in the emerald maze. The omnipresent moss clings to the rocks and to the earth, hangs from the upper branches of the scrubs. A green corridor breaks through the lush forest as a triumphant welcome to a small colony of lucky people. On the river banks, knotty vegetation-incrusted trunks draw a multicoloured jigsaw. The most beautiful city, monuments of the human genius, will never scratch the eternal beauty of the nature. Rotorua was a world of sulphur, arsenic and volcanic activity, Milford Sound Track is a world of harmony, greenery, land of expression for the nature which dresses up for our flying visit. Within this chromatic kaleidoscope, we are only a few free electrons revolving around the twists and turns of a place where fauna and flora live in symbiosis.
Second relaxing night at the Mintaro Hut.
3rd day - we leave the corridor drilled through the impenetrable undergrowth to reach the top of a hill. The green carpet suddenly falls down to a desolate scenery, a rocky wave sprinkled with snowy patches. A dark and shiny patchwork streaked by a zigzag path. The effort is rewarded at the Mackinnon Pass. An emerald valley is behind us and another one reveals itself downstream. The mountain parrots, the Keas are there. They savour the strips of our backpacks and learn how to open them in order to nose around, looking for food. The cold lashes and dashes us up to start the descent. Flat and slippery stones, gleamed by a thin layer of spring water, strew the course. As for the first valley, the transition is brutal and the moss-wrapped knotty branches draw a triumphant entrance. We walk along a stream which chose the waterfall as means of expression. A leitmotiv that fascinates us. In our heads, musical notes resonate and and drive us intoxicated. The "water" element establishes itself in this section and blossoms into the powerful Sutherland waterfall that gushes down from the 580-meter-overhead cliff. A bath of sprays. A shower of visual and ringing feelings.
A last hour of walking to reach the Dumpling Hut. Last night on this magical path a poetess of the early century described as the finest trek in the world. And the qualifier never became tarnished.
Last day of trekking after a short night. The bodies are tired for some of us. And the walls of the dorm trembled due to the snores of the most agitated sleepers.
Backpack on the shoulders, our eyes keep on analysing the colours, our nostrils examine the olfactory surroundings and our ears make the vigilance pay attention to the slightest branch creaking. Each new step gets us nearer to the Sandfly Point. Bye-bye pristine waterfalls, twisted shrubs, silky mosses and smooth path.
Because there are terrestrial heavens which can only be visited on foot. Because there are still chunks of lands where the trees grow up without fearing the axe. Some droplets, a few chips of wood, a little bit of moss and Mother Earth will make you a fabulous garden.
In the beginning of the afternoon, we hop on a boat that moves us away from the path to lead us to the Milford Sound village. The wharves come out into a large hall like a Parisian train station. We meet again the flocks of tourists who come here to enjoy the ladscapes of the Milford Sound. We follow them and sit down on board in one of the big boats which lean against the quays. The cruise makes us discover the mouth of the fjord. A myriad of narrow waterfalls flow down the cliffs. Immense jagged-outlined cliffs. On the banks, we look for the crested penguins, a kind of rastafarian penguins with yellow and long eyebrows which gesticulate on the rocks after a fishing session into the waters of the fjord.
This cruise finishes an unforgetable time of our New Zealand adventure. A heap of photos, a mixture of feelings, a set of bewildering landscapes and such a few words to describe them...
Sunday 11 November 2007
From the top of a bridge
By dorian on Sunday 11 November 2007, 22:12 - RTW-New Zealand
Within the pristine landscapes of the Hast Pass, we drive alongside the Kawarau river. A bridge, an elastic rope, a bunch of cracked people. Here we are for a few-second rush of adrenalin. This spot isn't specially high - 43m - but that's here everything started. The first commercial bungie-jump spot opened in 1988. The pioneer of this activity is AJ Hackett and became famous for jumping from the Eiffel tower in 1987 without guards and policemen knowing. He couldn't have a better hype for this fledgling activity. A few months later, he will open the center where we are right now.
Impossible not to attempt the adventure. The heart beat quickly increases while we approach the bridge-overlooking plank, but hard luck, it's better to feel remorse than having regrets. By small leaps, we come brushing against the edge of the plank and we feel alone, desperately alone because the hardest thing is not to dangle at the end of a rope but it's definitely to do this step, the extra step that eliminates the link with the dry land. Afterwards, I cannot relate it, you must live it!
With a loud AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!!!
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