Tuesday

NZ Week 9


Week 9 Kepler Trek, Milford Sound, Gore (ugh) and Dunedin

January 23, 2012
Kepler Trek
I have completed the Kepler Trek.  As a little background, New Zealand is full of hiking trails, consisting of all lengths, difficulty and insanity; although the Kiwis prefer to call these walking trails. Of the myriad trails that exist there are a few that are known as the Great Walks of New Zealand. Supposedly they are the best of the best, the crème de la crème, if you will.  With their gorgeous vistas and glorious and heavenly panoramas that you witness as you meander through the trails, nearly falling over as you lose your breath in their beauty.  Or so they say.  In reality there are non-Great Walks that are equally amazing but the biggest difference is the GW’s are more crowded and more expensive to sleep in the overnight huts.  Every hut on a Great Walk will cost you $51.50 per night per person; that gets you a cot and access to some water and a gas stove. The huts are really more like giant non-insulated cabins than a 5 Star Hotel that you might expect for that price.  Sometimes I wonder if the tax levied on the hikers is steeper than the hills we are climbing to pay for them. 

In preparation I have been making day trips on some of the other Great Walks, usually by taking a water taxi out to some point and walking out and back to my hostel to spend the night (at half the price of a hut).  But it was time for me to experience a Great Walk in all its glory; to complete an entire trail and even pay for a damn hut in the process. So I chose the Kepler Trek which starts just a couple of miles from the town of Te Anau in the far southern region of the south island.  Kepler is within the Fiordlands of New Zealand and [I think] it has some of the best scenery of the entire country.  The trail is 61 km long and contains 3 different huts, which means you can take up to four days to walk the trail.  The norm is three and I chose two.  The ladies at the Department of Conversation who sell the maps and post the weather updates kept trying to talk me out of it.    Frankly I found their lack of enthusiasm perturbing; their furrowed brows and droopy frowns trying their best to dissuade me.  It was going to take more than a bunch of negative Nancy’s to change my mind.

I don’t know if it was the favorable weather conditions or the half dozen eggs I had for breakfast but I had amazing energy the first day.  Day 1 contains nearly all of the uphill and just under half of the total distance.  It begins a couple of hundred meters above sea level and travels through the bush bringing you to the first hill.  Cutting switchbacks wind you up about 1000 meters and eventually above the bush line until you reach the first resting point, Luxmore Hut.  It took me less than three hours to climb up there and I stopped for an early lunch.  Most trekkers bring pasta, freeze dried meals, bread or other food that will last and isn’t too heavy.  I had no interest in any of that.  I packed tuna, salami, cheese and trail mix.  Given the high cost of dairy in New Zealand (strange since they produce it here) this was the first time I had bought cheese; it was decent but nothing fantastic.  But I do give significant credit to that cheese and some of the salami for giving me the energy to do the second half of the day to the Iris Burn Hut where I spent the night.  From the Luxmore I began to encounter those that had spent the previous night there, spotting them on the trail from a distance and slowly overtaking them.  I began to think of them like rabbits, and I the hound coursing them.  My mentality of course was to overtake all rabbits and avoid getting passed.  That would have worked too except while I was eating lunch some guy came jogging up the trail; he was running it all in one day.  I was inspired by his ability and I became determined to make great time. My first day took me 6.5 hours. 

The second day was technically longer in distance but virtually all flat back through to the end of the trail’s loop.  Recalling the runner from yesterday I began jogging parts of the trail myself.  My pack was lighter, most of my food was gone and this allowed me to more easily run while having something strapped to my back.  I hiked and jogged my way to the last camp, Motorua Hut, in under three hours and stopped here for a snack.  Although I was on a bit of a time schedule the camp warden didn’t notice as he rambled at length about life in the woods.  I nodded approvingly between bites of boiled eggs, bananas and peanut butter.  Honestly I don’t recall much of what was said, except it was harder than I thought to remove myself from a one sided conversation.  This put me on the final stretch of the track.  Twisting and turning down the trail I pressed ahead, stumbling over exposed roots alternating with a fast walk. When it was all said and done Day 2 took about 5 hours, putting me at a respectable 11.5 hours total trail time for 61 km.  Needless to say I slept very well that night.

January 24, 2012
Milford Sound
Today I opted for one of the more “touristy” things to do in New Zealand; I took a cruise into the Milford Sound.  I even stumped up to pay for a bus ride out there and return.  So much for hitch hiking everywhere I go. Milford Sounds is the quintessential image that appears whenever you hear about the New Zealand Fiordlands.  With tall peaks jutting into the sea after years of glacial carving it paints a picture nearly worth the price you have to pay to see them.  Boarding the bus was a mix of sentiments; finally I didn’t have to wait and question when I would be leaving, a seemingly small thing to be grateful for but surprisingly providing much relief.  On the other hand, I was surrounded by the very people I have gazed at in shock, awe, disgust, etc. in so many other places – the package tourists.  Where is the originality or sense of adventure of having everything planned for you?  The bus was half geriatric and half Chinese.  There’s nothing wrong with either group but I felt more out of place there than in the passenger seat of some Kiwi stranger.  Luckily I could sink into oblivion with my headphones while the family of four that occupied every seat around me passed subway sandwiches like hot potatoes, the smell wafting through the air abysmally while the others would chatter senselessly and rush from window to window to take 17 pictures of every mountain.  At least Milford Sound was beautiful enough for me to let that all slide off the cuff. 

January 27, 2012
Dunedin
So I have made it to Dunedin after taking a slightly extended amount of time hitch hiking out from Te Anau.  That morning started well, the sun was out and old crazy Bob who runs the hostel I was staying in was cleaning the kitchen and talking to himself again.  I have to admit, it was a great hostel: big, new, nice bathrooms, cheap internet and located out on a decent sized piece of land.  But there was something about the owners, and it wasn’t just me, the other guests thought so too.  Each night when Bob would come in to clean the kitchen or show a new guest around we called it the Bob Show, you just never know what he was going to say.  He had a garage full of nice cars and motorcycles – where did the money come from Bob?  And he would just say weird things or tell you not to do things that would not otherwise be mentioned at a backpacker hostel.  His best conversations were probably the ones between him and his two kittens.  The morning I left was no different, walking out the front door I could hear him mopping and arguing with the cats.

It started quite well, receiving my first lift within 15 minutes of getting to my waiting point.  A 30 year old Austrian picked me up and we discussed the merits of traveling, quitting work and then how to find some sort of a balance.  He was headed back North towards Queenstown so he dropped me off in the small town of Mossburn where the highways intersect.  It seemed like a good spot and I plopped my backpack down and waited.  And waited and waited.  About 2.5 hours in an SUV full of young adults slowed down and began to pull over in front of me.  I was elated at this change in fortune given how long I had already been waiting, but my excitement quickly changed to surprise and disgust as the passenger rolled down the window, gave me an aviary salute, and then they sped away. 

As the minutes ticked by I found myself depleting all of my rations; the banana was long gone, the emergency can of tuna had been eaten and I had already scraped what remained from my jar of peanut butter.  And then, nearly at the 5 hour mark, a small car pulled over and offered me a ride.  Inside sat Steve, a 50’s something man with white hair, dressed in business casual and eating a giant ice cream cone.  Even if I thought there was something odd about Steve it didn’t really matter, I was ready to be gone from my roadside prison in Mossburn.  Steve proved to be alright, but he was only going as far as Gore, a halfway point of my journey to Dunedin.  But it was late and I decided to stay in that town whose citizens apparently have the nickname of Gorons.  One night was more than enough.  Gore was small, boring and offered little to the traveler except maybe a place to refuel.  Although on my way back from the grocery store I was pretty sure I saw someone trying to steal a car.  I’m not sure what to do in those situations so I just watched a little as the man was using either a clothes hanger or pry bar of sorts to enter this SUV, in broad daylight in the middle of Main Street.  If it wasn’t for the giant fish at the town’s entrance then Gore wouldn’t even have been worth a photo.

So yesterday I awoke in my hostel and being the only one there (no surprise) I made haste to exit.  It was Victor who stopped first, a 28 year old Mexican guy who left home to discover the countryside of the rest of the world.  And test the NZ speed limits.  I’m not even sure where he dropped me off but we got there with time to spare.  Turns out we turned off the main highway and before I knew it I was standing out front of a café in the middle of nowhere.  I ordered a cup and sat on the road counting the lack of traffic.  I suppose by percentage of vehicles seen then this was the best spot.  But considering I only saw 7 in an hour it’s a miracle that one stopped.  I didn’t catch her name but even if I had I probably wouldn’t have remembered it.  That’s the thing with traveling, names just seem to float in and float right back out.  She was a student with loans, car repairs and rent.  It sounded all too similar and yet distant.  She dropped me in Balclutha where I waited in the sun for 30 minutes until I got my next ride.  The name again escapes me but it was an interesting trip.  She was early 40’s, full of conversation and a native Kiwi who now lives in Ireland on a houseboat who was back for a short holiday.  We stopped at her friend’s house for a cup of coffee and only the kids were home.  They immediately began with a plethora of questions.  “Aren’t you scared to hitch hike?  Where are you from?  Do you know the Kardashians?  Where do you sleep?  Have you ever seen the Kardashians?”  There’s something strangely fun about a youthful inquisition.  They wanted to know more about America and why I was traveling.  I did my best but when I left the one girl still in disbelief and a little upset that I had never met anyone famous. 

And so I finally arrived in Dunedin, a student city that sits on the Eastern shore of New Zealand and is full of steep streets.  For some reason I chose a hostel above all others. Literally that is, the damn thing was at the top of the last hill.  It has been windy and rainy since I arrived but there is a break in the rain now at least.  It is even cold, the heaters in the hostel are on but their effectiveness is a bit suspect.  Alas I will venture out and see what I can find to do in this city, indoors that is.

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