Monday 26 September 2011

New Zealand Week 3: Cromwell, Wanaka, Tekapo, Oamaru, Dunedin, Christchurch




Week Three: Cromwell, Wanaka, Tekapo, Oamaru, Dunedin, Christchurch
A large collection of photos illustrating this post are on Flickr. I suggest you read the whole week here and then switch to Flickr to see the photos, click on NZ week 3 : http://www.flickr.com/photos/deedesign/sets/

My travels this week



Tuesday September 20th Yesterday I spent a lovely afternoon tasting wine at Felton Road, and parked overnight in nearby Cromwell. Some say camping is for mugs. Well I awoke to strong sun, a rising temperature, clear blue sky, and snow on the tops. There’s not much wrong when that’s your breakfast scene.



Today I’ll only drive about 55 miles, but I think it might be quite special (or ‘spishul’ as they say in NZ). My first stop today is at “the stream that roared” Roaring Meg (you’ll need to look at the photo to see why it/she is so called)

Next, just down the road, is Kawarau Bridge, the location of the world’s first commercial bungy (or bungee) jumping site. I had a coffee, stayed an hour, felt absolutely no temptation to participate, but was happy to watch and chat to those who did. The man in my photos is English and I gathered from his girl friend that he had been desperate to do this, she thinks it’s mad, to pay $180 to drop 43 metres, in a matter of seconds, and then its all over. I certainly agree. I’d rather spend than sort of money on wine: the pleasure lasts much longer and you can share it with others. Still, he enjoyed it and was happy to pose for me afterwards.



I’ve decided against going to Queenstown, even though I pass within 15 miles. So many Kiwis have told me in the last couple of weeks that it is Partytown, has plenty of activities, but is now very commercialised and not the quiet, chilled place it was. I turn north, heading for the Cardrona Pass, or Crown Range Road as it is more properly known.

This is the highest sealed road in New Zealand, with spectacular views, which winds steeply from Arrowtown to Wanaka. It’s a long haul to the top, hairpin bends, with only a couple of small places to stop and appreciate the view. At one of these, whilst taking photos, I see a plane flying at my height, a strange experience when your feet are on the ground.



The plaque at the summit records the height as 1076 m - 3530 ft. After the summit the road winds through a long high valley, passing the Mount Cardrona ski resort, and the quaint village of the same name.

By one o’clock I’m at my destination for today, Wanaka, and stop at the edge of the lake for a picnic lunch. It’s another small town, just 5,000 people, about which I had read this a few months ago “Wanaka is almost unfeasibly pleasant and has to rank as one of the most desirable places in New Zealand”. Based on my 24 hours there I’m prepared to agree. We are still in the Central Otago region, with all the climactic benefits, rich productive land, and fabulous scenery. The town is at the southern end of the lake, and has become something of a tourism resort and activity centre. However, like other places I’ve seen, it is maintained with some class and quality.



In the afternoon I head to the edge of town and the Mount Iron Scenic Reserve. This is a “45 minute” walk to the top – it takes me well almost 90 minutes, partly because I continually stop to photograph, and also because local walkers stop to chat.
Mount Iron has, of course, been left behind by a glacier. It dominates the town and the summit at 250 metres provides a great place from which to get your bearings, and a great 360-degree view of the whole region.
The overnight is on a quiet campsite, raised, with a view over the trees to the lake. In the evening I walk the 3kms back into town for dinner at The Landing (since you ask: squid and prawn with chilli jam, pork belly to follow, and suitable wines). It’s a taxi home and a deep sleep.)

Wednesday 21st Wanaka. Another day, another pass, another lake, the same blue sky, and stunning views. I wake to find two ducks outside my door: I guess they were here before me.


Today’s drive is about 145 miles from Wanaka north to Lake Tekapo, but I can’t leave Wanaka without taking a few more shots showing the town and it’s front onto the lake. I am taken by the decent modern buildings, simple parkland, and the way it all fronts onto the beach and water. Another very attractive town.

Today I head through the Lindis Pass, often closed to traffic by snow, but today all clear. It is actually much easier than yesterday, no hairpins, and not quite the same long-distance views either. For many miles we follow the path of the Lindis river, again through farming country, this being mainly sheep and at one point I spot hundreds rounded-up and penned. They are waiting to be sheared, and sure enough a few dozen soon trot out of the long shed looking a little sad. Those waiting to go in won’t have long to wait: it seems like a fast turnaround.

I have noticed over the last few days some huge steel ‘arms’ on wheels, lying across the fields, obviously some sort of watering system. Today I came across a massive installation, and as it lay right beside the road, I stopped to investigate. I could only guess at the length, easily a mile long, as it straddled the fences dividing the fields. At one end it was coupled into what appeared to be a pump house and feed from underground. What I couldn’t understand was how it moved. A few miles further, another system, this decorated with the flags of all twenty nations participating in the rugby.


A mile again and I came across some engineers at Lake Ruataniwha, who answered my questions. The first installation I had seen is 2.5 kms long. Within each wheel is a small motor, the connections between each section have a flexible rubber coupling, and each one has a GPS link to keep it true and in line. The whole contraption moves in a giant arc, pivoting at the pump house feed. The shape they make on the ground is visible from the sattelites Google earth use for mapping. Fascinating.


In the long valley before Omarama, where the road runs in a straight line for some miles, I saw some tiny stone cairns standing at the roadside. At first a few, then dozens, over about a mile. What are they? Obscure distance markers? Do they have some Maori significance. When I stopped for diesel I enquired. Apparently some years ago, hitchhikers waiting for a lift had built couple, then a couple more. As word got round more people decided to do their own thing (people in cars, not hitchers) so its now become another modest ‘attraction’.


Not having a car I don’t buy fuel at home, but all the Brits I’ve met have been delighted at how cheap the diesel (photo).

At 3pm I arrived at Lake Tekapo, my stop for the night, and a chance to sit in the sun, write up this blog, and chat with my neighbours.

Tonight: another adventure beckons.

Thursday 22nd Lake Tekapo. Last night I went stargazing. I found this description some time ago and reproduce it here,as it handily explains what I was up to. Apologies: I’m unable to credit whoever wrote it.

Lake Tekapo has one of the most spectacular night skies in the world. Visitors from all over the world are amazed by the clarity and numbers of stars visible to the naked eye during Lake Tekapo's night.
 Canterbury University operates a astronomical observatory on top of Mt John, overlooking the Lake. The clear skies and low levels of local light pollution have put Mt John observatory on the international map with observations and discoveries of the southern sky. Since Mt John was established, the village of Lake Tekapo has grown, so increasing night sky brightness has become a concern. Mackenzie District Council ordinances require that all outside lights be full cut-off so that no light shines upward into the sky.

In 1960 the University of Pennsylvania received a grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation to survey NZ to find the best site for an observatory. From here more of the southern sky was continuously visible throughout the year. In 1969 the U.S. Air Force built a satellite tracking station on Mt John. They also funded the sealed road up the mountain and a water supply from Lake Tekapo. The tracking station employed a large staff for following the positions of US and Soviet satellites. The USAF station closed in 1982 as new imaging technology made it redundant and the building passed to the NZ government. Canterbury University now leases the building and has modified it, adding a large dome to the north end to house its one-metre telescope.

The local company Earth and Sky have the sole rights to access the site and provided the tour facilities for us. http://www.newzealandsky.com/earthandsky/   So I joined about twenty others at 8pm for a mini-bus trip up to the Observatory. Our anticipation of things to come was heightened by the driver turning off his headlights for the last half-mile of windy road (to reduce pollution). We spent two hours up there, very well wrapped up, with some really helpful guides, but I have to admit that much of what they said was lost on my: science was never my thing. I think most of the crowd were knowledgeable about astronomy, some keen amateurs, others perhaps in the business.
Additionally, a specialist in astrophotography was on hand so those with SLR cameras (as opposed to point-and-shoot like mine) were able to follow his advice, use his specialist equipment, and obtain some great star photographs.

At 20:10 our guide trained on the low mountain range across the lake from us and assured us that in four minutes we would see Jupiter rising. Spot on time it did, and we saw it first with the naked eye and then through the telescope. Regular sightings include the international space station orbiting ‘past’ us. (They also saw the Shuttle on its last ever departure from the space station)

One interesting feature of the evening was that the entire tour takes place in the dark. We were required to turn off mobiles, mask the viewfinders on cameras, and not use torches. The guides use low level red torches to guide us about, but that was all. As we said our thanks at 1030, we all joked that we had no idea what our guides looked like, nor they of us……only by our voices do you know us.

I hope my stage-name forbear, John Dee, would be pleased by my endeavours last night.
There is more about the Observatory here:

Thursday 22nd: Lake Tekapo Today is Hannah’s 30th birthday, which she will celebrate in London over the weekend with Robin and Ella, Toby will join them, and she’ll also have Susan and Rafa staying. Susan and Hannah were born on the same day, lived about four doors apart in Leeds, grew up together, and both went to London at the same time to study at drama school.

Today I had to start my return journey towards Dunedin for the England – Romania match on Saturday. I retraced my steps for about 90 kms to Omarama and then turned east on Highway 83 to Oamaru, where I am spending the night. I was on this site on September 9th – less than two weeks ago. I’ve driven 2,231 kms in two weeks. How much I’ve packed in since then.

Today I drove through Aviemore, Duntroon, and Peebles; in Dunedin I have walked along Dundas, Frederick, and Leith streets, Heriot Row and Moray Place. You get the idea: the Scots have a very long, strong, and proud presence in this lower part of the South Island.
In my photos of the canal, and later the river, the water really is that colour. Apparently it is a result of the source being from glaciers: in Switzerland they call it ‘glacier milk’.
A funny moment today in Oamaru. I wanted to post two cd’s to myself back at home (backing up my photos). Walking through the town I saw the ‘Postie’ shop, clearly identified with a strong white-on-red graphic, crossed the road and walked in – only to find it’s a ladies clothes store. The Post Office is directly across the street, also with a strong white-on-red graphic.

Tonight I’m in Oamaru, and I will be eating again in Fat Sally’s (fish and chips) and watching the South Africa – Namibia game on tv. And then to bed.

Friday 23rd . A short drive today from Oamaru south to Dunedin, for my third and final weekend in this very nice city.

The city of Dunedin stands at the head of Otago Harbour, the south side of which is defined by the Otago Peninsula, a long arm of land reaching about 25 kms eastwards into the South Pacific. The Otago Peninsula hosts the world's only mainland breeding colony of the northern Royal albatross, and is home to the world's rarest penguin, the yellow-eyed, and various species of seals, sea lions and birds. 



I have been keen to explore this, having read many reports of the wildlife study tours, and my aunt Lily enthusing about the albatross centre, which she visited recently. All the guide books comment on Elm Wildlife Tours, as do many reports on Trip Advisor, as the company to host your visit.www.elmwildlifetours.co.nz   So I booked a half-day with them.

A small party of us left the city centre at lunchtime, drove out onto the peninsula for about 50 minutes, and made our first call at Taiaroa Head, site of the Royal Albatross Colony, a combination of scientific research centre and tourist observation spot. It’s called Royal, I should add, because that is the particular species of albatross, nothing to do with HMQ ,although Charles and Anne have visited. Our NZ host yesterday wondered aloud if Zara might be visiting, with her new husband’s head tucked under her arm to feed to the birds!

Seeing the birds is not a certainty, but is dependent on the weather and the time of their breeding cycle. We saw three, largely immobile, sitting on the hillside nesting. When they did stretch, stand and move we could begin to understand the enormous size of these birds: wing span of 3 metres, adults weigh 9 kgs, and can fly at 120 kph. As we were boarding our mini-bus to move on to the next stage an Albatross flew overhead, coming back in to the Colony, and we could appreciate its size compared to the seagulls also in the sky.

Two weeks ago I was in the Southlands Museum in Invercargill and saw a small display about the Albatross. In 1994 a female, ‘Hinemoa’ had been tagged with a radio transmitter. In 13 days she traveled 5601 kms in 13 days- without landfall.



We moved on some miles to a private beach location to view the penguins, a variety known as Yellow Eyed penguins. I’d probably seen a penguin as a child in a zoo somewhere but had no real appreciation of their size, nor of their charm. Look at my photographs to see them alone, watching us, walking, and flirting with a potential mate. These Yellow Eyed penguins are the rarest of the world’s 18 species of penguins and are found only in New Zealand. They go to sea during the day to feed and return to their roosting area in late afternoon (handy for the tourist trade).

Walking along the beach we came upon three sea sea lions dozing, lions (two m, 1 f) sleeping on the sand. We could approach to within about two metres, stand, observe and chat for 15 minutes, but were warned that if aroused and troubled, they could move at 20 kms per hour. Further along the shore we could see a seal playing in the foam.

A steep climb up the cliff took us along a path in the gorse and brush where one little penguin just stood and watched us as we passed by, one-by-one, and each took a couple of photos. He/she almost seemed happy to pose for us. We spent time in a hide, looking down on a fine stretch of beach where we could see more sea lions dozing, untroubled by sheep and lambs wandering by, penguins waddling past, and the inquisitive seagulls.

The final climb took us up onto an exposed headland and then down the other side to a small bay of rock pools where there were dozens of Fur Seal pups, some suckling, others learning how to swim in the pools. In the last century these creatures were hunted to extinction by European hunters, but the last few years have seen a large population increase, a successful re-colonisation. Although we were very exposed here to a biting wind, and the light was fading, we hung on for quite some time to marvel at these youngsters at play, before heading back up the headland to find our bus, sitting in the mist.


Of everything we saw, I’d have to rate the penguins as my favourites: their style of walking so reminded me of baby Ella’s first steps just five weeks ago – side to side, learning to balance.

If you want to locate all this on maps, we started at the Albatross Centre beyond Harrington Point, and then went onto private land on Cape Saunders. Our excellent guide was Sean McConkey. This tour has been awarded New Zealand’s Best Leisure activity, which I certainly endorse. It cost $85 (£42) and was worth every penny.

Saturday 24th Dunedin. The RWC organisers have just emailed me to say that they still have some tickets available for the Final. The world economic crisis has undoubtedly reduced the number of sponsors and corporates taking up their allocation of tickets. However much they might talk-up the opportunity, I shall pass on the idea of a single ticket at $1.278 - £641. I’ll be in Sydney, thanks, watching it on tv.

A quiet day today. Cooked brekkie in the van, did some washing, and then a couple of hours editing photographs and uploading them. Early afternoon, wrapped up warm and with my England shirt on top, I walked down into Dunedin and had a coffee and cake. Nearly all the small coffee shops have great pastries, which they always assure me they make themselves: another legacy from the Scots? By 4 pm I joined the general drift of fans in the general direction of the stadium but the shower turned to rain so shelter was called for – in a pub. The match was satisfactory in that England beat Romania 67-3, but I’m still disappointed by England’s performance; it all looks pretty formulaic and certainly won’t work when we get to the knockout stages against tougher, smarter opposition.

A nice moment tonight: taking my seat in the stadium I found a Kiwi family was sitting behind me, mum, dad, and four-month old son. They say that rugby is like a religion over here; they sure start them young.

A hilarious moment tonight: the Dunedin Pipe Band entertained us before the match last week. Tonight it was the Band of the NZ Army. I won’t tell you what they did – look at YouTube, and se it at 2 mins 45 secs in: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vdlkcklf4Ww&feature=related

A brisk walk after the final whistle and I was installed once again at the Alhambra Rugby Club LINK where all visiting fans were welcomed with beer, grub and big tv’s. There must have been over two hundred watching The All Blacks play (and beat) France 37 – 17. The one mile walk home down deserted streets is now quite familiar; this city feels very safe and quite comfortable.

Sunday 25th. Dunedin. The clocks went forward an hour during the night so we are now 12 hours ahead of the UK. I packed up quickly, and made a Skype call to speak with Toby. It was great to see him, Hannah and Robin, Susan and Raphael, all sitting round the table in Silk Gardens enjoying wine (and Rafa with a bottle of Fanta!).


Goodbye Dunedin, you’ve been a great host to fans from many nations including Argentine, Romania, Georgia, Scotland and England, and you still have the Irish and Italians to come. I’ve certainly enjoyed my time here and the local people have been genuinely warm and welcoming.

Local newspaper headline on the All Black’s 37-17 win: “French Toast”

The drive north to Christchurch took about four hours, with lots of traffic and dozens of campervans. I vowed to make no photo stops, but one opportunity persuaded me otherwise: the shot of the ocean and sky (what else) taken at Pareora, just north of St Andrews. After two weeks of driving this van I’ve worked out how to retune the radio – don’t laugh, the instructions run to 27 pages. The result was four hours of classic rock: Phil Collins, Clapton and Sting.


In Christchurch I’m back at Amber Park, where I spent my first night in New Zealand – just 17 days ago. Is that all? I’ve travelled so far and seen so much I feel I might have been here at least a month.

Monday 26th: Christchurch.
Christchurch is the largest city on the South Island and is considered New Zealand’s second city. It has a population of about 375,000, and many consider it the most English of the cities. It is called ‘The Garden City’. It is also a rugby stronghold and was intended to host six matches at the Rugby World Cup.

The magnitude 6.3 earthquake which hit Christchurch in February 2011 was the most destructive earthquake to strike NZ in 80 years. It caused extensive damage to Christchurch’s central city, resulting in the loss of 181 lives and many injuries, destroyed and badly damaged buildings, forced the closure of businesses, resulted in many job losses and changed the face of the city forever. Up to 50 per cent of the buildings in what is known as the red zone need to be demolished.

Wkipedia has very thorough entries on the three Christchurch earthquakes: September 4th 2010, February 22 2011, June 13 2011. The February 'quake is the most significant in terms of both loss of life (181) and damage to the city and the eastern suburbs.

Amongst several qualities, Christchurch is flat, making it ideal for cyclists, so this morning I unhooked the bike from the back of my van, and set off to explore the city. One mile of dual carriageway, half a mile across Hagley Park, and I reached the city centre proper at the main hospital, in the south west corner I was hoping to both view the city, and try to see the severe damage caused by the February earthquake, although I knew much of this would be out of bounds. A large central part of the city is closed off to all but essential workers, within a cordon called the Red Zone.

Although I had read many news articles, and studied the maps, I wasn’t prepared for the size of the area affected, nor by the enormous scale of the devastation. I worked my way round the edge of the cordon, which covers the very centre of the city. Within this are all the major buildings one would expect: cathedral, banks, shops, large corporate offices for the legal and financial sector, large hotels, churches, department stores, theatre, dozens of shops, and many smaller businesses.


It was eerily quiet, little traffic, very few people around, no children at all, traffic lights blinking away to no purpose, the clack-clack of flagpole ropes. The river Avon which flows through the city looked idyllic, with cherry trees flowering and ducks on the water, but just metres away were empty buildings, derelict churches, or already-flattened sites. It is weird to look up at an office building, see furniture inside but no windows. Or to see another such building, all inside left just as it was at lunchtime on February 22nd, untouched now for seven months.

MY collection of photos from Christchurch is on Flickr. Start here and use the ‘next’ button to advance: http://www.flickr.com/photos/deedesign/6299339936/in/set-72157628020234464

Just occasionally I would come across some men working, on what appeared to be infrastructure (cables, telecomms, data). I saw only three tall cranes in the centre. There was the occasional hum of a compressor, the grind of a digger, or the sudden crump as heavy debris was dropped into a steel skip, yet I didn’t see what I had expected: gangs of workers in yellow jackets coming and going. There was some coming and going of engineers, surveors and project managers at the four checkpoints into the red zone. These points are manned by Territorials from the NZ Army. There were a few foreign tourists like myself, looking on in awe; there were as many native New Zealanders, come to look and try to understand.  Apparently much of the work to demolish dangerous buildings is being held up by wrangles with and between insurance firms.

I’m told that all the major businesses have relocated to work in the outer suburbs. The worry must be that they find life acceptable there and chose not to come back into the centre when it is rebuilt. There is a view that the city had already (pre-earthquake) spread itself in too large a sprawl. The likely result could be denser suburbs and an ‘empty centre’ with few businesses, and little life. Some wise heads are rightly describing this as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to rebuild a new, thriving modern city, embracing not only the latest thinking on ‘quake-proof construction, but on best environmental and transportation ideas too. However, the wrangles over insurance could see this taking a decade.   The authorities have identified 900 buildings in the central zone that need to be demolished, of which 546 have come down. I heard on the radio that 2,800 children have left education in the city as families move to other parts of New Zealand and that 161 teachers have gone.

I had never expected such devastation. It is unsettling just to view it. God knows how those affected really feel. My photographs will better illustrate what I saw than I can describe here. http://www.flickr.com/photos/deedesign/6299340130/in/set-72157628020234464   There is a website here with some powerful photographs taken in the hours immediately after the 'quake hit.

Tomorrow I will go to see the eastern suburbs of the city, where over 5,000 properties have been deemed unfit for further habitation.

My travels in Week Three




Monday 19 September 2011

New Zealand Week 2: Invercargill, Bluff, Manapouri, Te Anua, Doubtful Sound, back to Dunedin, on to Central Otago.


Last week I travelled from London to Christchurch, on to Dunedin to see England play Argentina, got diverted by bad weather from my plan to see The Catlins, and finished the week in Invercargill

Tuesday 13th. This week stared in Invercargill with a quiet day, some shopping, a session in the public library (using wi-fi) and a visit to the city museum.  Invercargill is certainly a quiet place: all day I kept thinking it’s quiet now, but wait till lunchtime when they’ll all come out of their offices, or wait till 4pm when school comes out. Well they didn’t – or if they did I never saw them. It is the major town for the whole of the south end of the island and I had expected more life. On the other hand its existence is really down to supporting a wide rural area, almost entirely dependent on agriculture, so I guess many residents live some way from the town. My impression is that although it tries hard to attract them, most tourists use it as a jumping-off point for flights or ferry to Stewart Island (which actually area sail from Bluff), rather than staying in Invercargill. It is also blighted by sprawling suburbs, with many businesses lining the long North Road – tractor dealers, tyre depots, liquor stores, builders yards and so on: all making for a rather unattractive approach into the town. In the town centre there is a curious style of architecture to all the shopping streets, rather a ‘wild west’ look to the store fronts. The population is around the 40,000 mark, and I’m afraid it reminded me of Inverness, around the mid-1970’s when we lived up there.



The best known man in Invercargill must be David McKilop, local estate agent. His photo and contact details are all over town, in the windows of the many shops closed and for sale. Sad.



Invercargill was also cold and of course wet; some nights the temperature was at 1 degree, which is might cold when you are in a very poorly insulated camper van (basically a tin box on wheels). I sleep badly.

I’d been advised before I came here that there is a frustrating lack of free wireless access to the internet. The places to head for in most towns are the libraries (sometimes free, more usually charged by the hour), hotels (extortionate rates) and the smaller coffee shops (low connection speeds). I did just that, getting my first week’s blog and photos posted in the public library.

The NZ press have been running with the issue of the unfair way that the small nations are treated in this tournament, some of them having just three days off between games. It is desperately tough on them. They have many fewer players than the big nations, and very limited funding. The reason of course is that the tv broadcasters want to stage the big games at weekends when viewing figures will be high, so England, France, Australia and the like all get weekend games, with six days rest in between; Georgia, Fiji and other ‘tier two’ countries have to put up with fitting around them.

Wednesday 14th Another cold and wet night. This morning I’m off to see the ‘bottom of the world’, or at least the most southerly point on New Zealand’s South Island. It is a short drive to the small town of Bluff, perhaps most famous for producing Bluff oysters. Stirling Point marks the spot, and the sign tells me I’m 19,000 kms from London, and only 4,800 from the South Pole. In the adjacent Drunken Sailor I passed, reluctantly, on the $32 Fisherman’s Catch (scallops, battered blue cod, turbot, smoked salmon, oysters, squid and mussels). I made do with battered oysters and chips: very agreeable.



The harbour at Bluff is busy: the ferry service to Stewart Island, a large fishing fleet to service, and just across the water a major aluminium smelting plant.




On the way back into Invercargill I take a short detour to Ureti Beach, a notable spot, with miles of beach, and in the summer a great many sports and other attractions. I saw just one car, one man, and one dog.

Back the site to park up the van and prepare for tonight’s game, Scotland v Georgia. I'm supporting Scotland, on behalf of my Glasgow-born family members. The forecast is rain, temperature 4 degrees, and I'll be in an open stand, so its thermals and waterproofs tonight for me. We start with a ‘sausage sizzle’ at the camp site where many fine men have turned out in kilts, and then it’s a free bus to the centre of town where we find the unofficial RWC pub. After a few rounds we are led by three pipers and a couple of policemen through the town to the rugby ground. It’s an elderly ground, which has been temporarily extended to get the capacity up to 16,000, and I’m surprised to see that two sides of the ground are simply standing spaces, with people on grass banks – quaint.
Scotland win by nine points.


If you want a brief and useful daily update on the rugby, I can recommend The Breakdown: subscribe for free and it will appear in your email each morning. It’s full of interesting snippets about referees, players, some gossip, citing and suspensions.
Thursday 15th. After another night disturbed by heavy rain, I’m up early and on the way by 0900. (No breakfast today). I rejoin the Southern Scenic route driving west out of Invercargill, around the coast to the little town of Riverton. Coffee and a roll. It is a lovely drive, on really quiet roads. I can go three or four miles and not see another vehicle. Between rain showers the sun comes out and the snowy peaks of the Longwood Range come into view, although the very tops are often in cloud.



I make quite a few stops to admire the view, take photos, and stretch my legs. However, there are several occasions on which I see something of interest but by the time I’ve stopped, parked, and got the camera out the sun has gone and the rain rolled in. It changes very quickly.



I’ve taken quite a lot of photos today to capture a flavour of this part of New Zealand, the scenery of course, but also buildings, houses and other things that caught my eye. The bus shelters are great fun, each with their individual design. The countryside is all about farming: sheep of course, cattle, some forestry and timber.



By midday the sun is strong and warm, I can dispense with my jacket, and at one point I’m searching for my sunglasses – all this is a treat after the wet and grey days earlier in the week. By lunchtime I’ve reached Lake Manapouri and the little town of the same name. Actually I’m confused by what is a town and what a mere village. In the café/shop the lady breaks off from sorting the post to serve me. She says she has to sort the mail into 103 pigeon holes, representing 103 houses: that is the entirety of Manapouri. So I class this as a village.

Some lunch, a walk by the lake, and I decide to move on north the few miles to Te Anau, my stop for the next two nights. I’m determined to not spend too much time behind the steering wheel on this trip. Today was just 125 miles, tomorrow will be none. I shall walk and possibly go on the lake.

A leisurely walk around the town takes just one hour; it is small, tidy, entirely given over to tourism but not at all tacky. It feels very like a small Swiss village, set right on the edge of the lake. I have booked to go on a cruise to Doubtful Sound tomorrow, an eight hour trip. This evening is spent in a small bar, The Black Dog, sipping a local Syrah, and chatting with two families over from Argentina, whilst watching USA play Russia.
The bar is part of a new building, a boutique cinema, which has an interesting story. A local man, Kim Hollows, has spent his working life as a local helicopter pilot, flying commercially around the Southland and Fiordland area. He was so keen that people should see the fantastic scenery that he saw every day whilst flying, that he commissioned a film, all shot from helicopters, which has been widely praised. He then built, with his own money, a small cinema, in the very centre of town, which now shows the film four times a day, with a regular commercial screening in the evening. To

Friday 16th. I’m just back from a really excellent day out. It required an early start and I was away and on the road at 0745, retracing my steps the 15 miles back to Manapouri. I’m taking a trip to and cruise on Doubtful Sound, one of the ‘sights’ of Fiordland, and have to check-in at the departure point at 0915, so there is time for a cooked breakfast at the Cathedral Café. Of course this isn’t the usual tourist season, so all 40 of us on the trip are here for te rugby, the usual collection of different nations, and we quickly fall into discussing the matches so far and our views on the likely winners.



Before going any further let me try to describe the area, and the reason for the trip. The south west ‘corner’ of New Zealand’s South Island is the Fiordland region, much of it a World Heritage site. Within the area are some significant attractions including Milford Sound, Doubtful Sound. The area is wild, remote, imposing and spectacular. I had read many guidebooks and blogs about the area and reports on the merits or otherwise of the various trips. I plumped for Doubtful Sound because it seemed the less popular than Milford, and is larger. It is an eight-hour trip and at just £100 really excellent value (I think we had an out-of-season price). The instructions given to us when we booked was to ‘bring warm clothes, wet weather gear, cameras, some lunch, and sun cream’. We didn’t need the last of those as the weather continued generally cold, overcast, and with occasional showers.


The day is divided into five parts:
First we make a 45 minute boat cruise along Lake Manapouri and we were blessed with some sun which gave us all lots of photo opportunities, although it was cold on the open deck. We landed at 10:30 at West Arm where there is a chance for a loo break and coffee.
Then we board two small coaches for the trip up Wilmot Pass Road to Deep Cove. We are all aware that the main attraction is still to come but this part itself is unusual and exciting. The road is entirely landlocked and runs 22kms. The material to build it, the coaches that run on it, all having been brought here by boat across the lake. It is a single track, well-made but nonetheless gravel road, and it rises many hundreds of metres up the Pass. We have an excellent driver, who is also a nature guide, who makes a couple of stops to allow us off to take photos. The forest is dense, rich with lichen, beech trees and many other species, and wonderful bird calls. Soon however we are into falling snow, then quite heavy snow, and then we are slowed by a snow plough working the track in front of us. Interesting to note that the plough has snow chains. And then we are over the summit, slowly dropping down the other side, a 1:5 descent “the coach is due its annual brake inspection tomorrow” says John our driver. He has a wonderfully dry humour. We are now into temperate forest, with very different life.

And now we start the third stage: we leave the coaches and board the Patea Explorer, a beautiful new catamaran, which will take us the length of Doubtful Sound, 40 kms from this point to the Tasman Sea. The scene before us is mystical: mist, low clouds, mountains appearing through the gaps, no other boats or sign of humans other than we forty or so.
Moored just a few metres from us is the boat The Fiordland Navigator a lovely looking vessel which does the same crusie as us but does it overnight. It has private en-suite cabins, a dining saloon, observation deck, and kayaks for those who wish to take to the water. It is of course much more expensive than the trip I’m on but sounds very romantic.
Our boat has an inside cabin, with little snack bar, which we have to use from time to time: it is just too cold to stay on deck when we pick up speed and the wind and rain is driving into you – even in full waterproofs. I saw a couple of people lose their caps.
After about an hour we come to this tiny little building, sitting all alone on the water’s edge. It is where the crayfish are landed and held until the helicopter comes in to pick them up and take them away to market, and on to tables around the world. Standing in the cabin, one can look through into the cockpit and follow our progress on the radar: we are nearing the end of the sound and the open sea. When we get there we don’t linger: it is rough, with visibility surprisingly short. The captain turn us round, and we start the return journey. On this leg we will detour into some of the ‘arms’, the branches that run off the main sound. We see many waterfalls, and at one point are drawn to a beautiful almost-vertical rock face covered with sphagnum and other growths. The captain takes us close, and closer, until eventually he is teasing the boat forward half a meter at a time to let us really see the plant life up close. We are so close now that you can feel the spray from the fall (see the water on my lens).

We are now in Crooked Arm, one of the long side reaches of Doubtful Sound. The captain tells us that he will close down the engines, and allow us to float. He asks us all to stand in silence, and simply listen and appreciate the sounds of nature: water falling, lapping against the boat, a few bird calls, and the occasional click of a camera shutter. It is an eerie two minutes of silence, and quite special.

A big challenge on this trip is to know what to photograph: I’ll never make this trip again, there is so much to record, but I’m already worried about the battery on my camera. I can’t possibly upload all the shots to Flickr during this trip: I’ll have to post just a few to give a flavour, and upload the rest when I’m back in the UK. We continue to sail round into another arm, Hall Arm, and we see Mount Crowfoot ahead of us, covered in snow, framed between two forested peaks, and standing 1885 metres.



Back at Deep Cove, after 3 hours on the Sound, we are back on the coaches, to start our return, but there is a diversion ahead. We make the 45 minute trip back over Wilmot Pass to West Arm and now move into the next stage of this remarkable day: a visit to the underground power house of the Manapouri Power Station, 176 metres below ground. Work started in 1963 and wasn’t completed until 1971. The purpose was to meet the power requirements of the giant aluminium smelter, 170 k away at Bluff (which I had seen just two days earlier). We travel, still in our coaches, down a 2km long spiral tunnel into the granite. Finally, we emerge into the viewing platform where we look down onto a James Bond-type scene, the huge hall holding the tops of the seven generators. In fact we are only seeing one third of the hall, the rest is out of sight below the turbines. You can read more about this project here.

The final stage is the return cruise, back up Lake Manapouri, to get us back to our starting point. It has been an amazing day, quite extraordinary. A full eight hours, with superb organization, excellent guides, unique experiences, and all of it a million miles away from rugby.

The route of the Doubtful Sound trip

More on Doubtful Sound here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doubtful_Sound
And the website of the company who organize the trip, Real Journeys, (highly recommended): http://www.realjourneys.co.nz/Main/Doubtful/

Sunset over Lake Te Anau

Saturday 17th. Today I’m heading back to Dunedin for the England v Georgia match tomorrow. It’s only about 180 miles so I have a leisurely start and even have time to look at The Guardian online during breakfast. The weather is good, the road of course very quiet, except for mini-convoys of campervans all heading in the same direction. I pass through the small town of Gore (I think I should stop saying small, all towns here are small) which has two claims to fame: “NZ’s Capital of Country Music” and “World Capital of Brown Trout Fishing” – something the Bevins side of my family doubtless know already. The next place on the road after Gore is called Clinton. The stretch of Highway 1 between them is officially called The Presidential Highway.



The first thing I do on arriving in Dunedin is head to the Kathmandu store and ask for the best sleeping bag they have. It is rated as suitable for down to minus 10 degrees: that will surely do me.

Back on the same Dunedin campsite, and with some of the same neighbours, we spend an evening watching on tv as Ireland play Australia: what a game, and what a result as Ireland outplay the second favourites to win the Cup. Result: Ireland 15 – Australia 6. The next day’s paper has a smashing colour photo of Irish winger Keith Earls going high on Kurtley Beale with the headline “Cop that Cobber!” Brilliant.



Sunday 18th. An excellent sleep, really snug. After breakfast I make a skype call to Hannah and suggest she we make it a video call. I want to hear her reaction to my beard after 11 days without shaving. Luckily Ella was asleep: she might have freaked out seeing her Pop’s face. An hour late I shaved it off.

A quiet day on the campsite dealing with domestic chores: a load in the washing machine, emptying the waste tanks on the van and filing with fresh water, some emails, and then time to don the England shirt and walk into Dunedin. It’s an early game, a 6pm kick-off, so we all get to walk to the ground in sun, stopping on the way for some refreshments. The crowd is smaller than for the previous Eng v Arg match, but all the Kiwi neutrals are rooting for Georgia, who play really well, except for one strange habit: they have more players down, injured, than I have ever seen in any match. I can only assume it’s a tactic to slow down the pace of the game, perhaps they are not as fit as the opposition. They did just the same in the game against Scotland in Invercargill. (I ought to be sympathetic, having made the point above about them having only 3 days rest between matches). It makes for a very long game, a very stop-start affair. However, that doesn’t take away from England’s dire performance (again). At least this time we didn’t get the management team saying “ it’s a win, that’s good”. It appears from martin Johnson’s post match comments that they have finally realised this is unacceptable. It was at this point in the 2007 competition that the group of senior players apparently ‘stood up’ to the management, told them that the tactics and game plan were wrong, and as they had won the Cup in 2003, they would take the lead with a new game plan. Did it work? Well England did get to the semi-final after being written off. Will th same thing happen this time? No, many of the current squad are close to Martin Johnson, having played with him. I also don’t think there are the same kind of leaders as Lawrence Dallaglio was.

High point of the evening was pre-match: the Dunedin Central Pipe Band marched onto the pitch, about 100 of them, playing some wonderful stirring music: always makes me shiver. If I can upload it, I’ll put the video on Flickr.

Odd point of the evening was post-match. Long after the game was over, and all the players and press had departed for the dressing rooms, Jonny Wilkinson spent 30 minutes training with one coach, whilst a small band of England supporters looked on, bemused. He ran, sprinted, kicked, chased, and generally worked hard. Was he wanting to avoid the post-mortem in the dressing room? Had teacher told him to stay behind for mis-behaving in Queenstown?



I walked back into town, chatting on the ‘phone with Toby, who had just watched the game on tv in Leeds. I installed myself in the spacious clubhouse of Dunedin’s Alhambra Rugby Club – the same one where the nude rugby was played last week. They have been having open house for any visiting fans and about 200 of us took up their offer: cheap drinks, hot food to order, and the Canada – France game on big screens. A good evening, chatting with a senior member of Christchurch Rugby Club, the second oldest in the world, about the trouble his city faces. I may drop in there in ten days time.

Monday 19th. A few days away from Dunedin and rugby. I drive south, then west, then north, into the region of Central Otago. I’m aiming for Bannockburn, the centre of the Otago wine region. It’s just 150 miles: strong sun to start, then rain, then dry, then wet. (Can I stop writing about the weather? It does truly change every hour or two by day, it rains, the sun is hot, and the nights are cold. That’s it). The region is the heart of New Zealand’s fruit region and the roadsides are lined with orchards growing olives, cherries, apples, pears and other fruit. It is beautiful countryside, and the blossom is just appearing.


This is the southernmost wine-growing region of New Zealand, and also the highest. Although known as one of the smallest regions, and for its relative youth, the region has become renowned for its Pinot Noir.

Doing my homework I came across this extract from an article in Decanter:
Every wine region needs a hero. Sauternes has Yquem, Central Otago has Felton Road. From its first vintage a mere decade ago Felton Road has blazed a trail for other winemakers to follow. A great vineyard site at Bannockburn, one of Central Otago’s warmest districts; a gifted winemaker called Blair Walter and an innovative owner, Nigel Greening, have proved to be a devastating combination. Felton Road achieved almost overnight success with its first vintage of a slinky, elegant Pinot Noir. That was followed a few years later by the single-vineyard Block 3 and Block 5 Pinot Noir. As the numbers rose, so did quality and price. Organic viticulture, reduced crop levels, vine age and experience have seen the quality of Felton Road Pinot Noir steadily rise. Although the winery is best known for Pinot Noir, the three Rieslings are at least as good. All boast knife-edged acidity with flavours that develop magnificently with bottle age. For the winery’s two Chardonnays, the unoaked version is remarkably Chablis-like – the country’s best unoaked Chardonnay.
I had heard of them of course but hadn’t knowingly drunk anything they produce. So my plan was to try to get there for a tasting. With them held in such high regard around the world, I imagined a car park full and a crowd of pre-booked tasters. Well, surprise, surprise. I was the only person there.



I was met by Sarah Lundon who gave me all the time in the world, talking me through the history of their business, the production process and a tour of the winery. They are a very small business, employing just 12 people, only about 12 years old, and producing at the limit of their capacity. They can’t produce any more, and don’t want to, fearing they will lose their concentration on quality.


I tasted three wines, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir Bannockburn, Pinot Noir Cornish Point, but couldn’t try the Riesling as it is sold out. I made a modest purchase, perhaps thankful that as I’m flying I couldn’t take more home: the bank wouldn’t stand it either.


As I was leaving I met Gareth King, viticulturist. I wanted to talk about his success, and wine generally. Being a Kiwi he chatted about rugby and his delight that this last week his two young sons had met the All Blacks at a visit to their school, part of a between-games exercise the AB’s are undertaking across NZ.

After the high of that afternoon, and possibly heady from the Pinot, I parked the van and went for a brisk one hour walk into the hills above the vineyards.


My pre-booked campsite was only 15 minutes away and I rolled in as dusk fell.


What a fantastic week this has been.

Week 2: Sept 13th - 19th