Showing posts with label panorama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label panorama. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

The adventure capital of the world

Since we arrived in Dunedin, the time we spent there and in the Catlins wasn't as enjoyable as we hoped for and now we have the added pressure of trying to find a job again having looked at how quickly our funds have run away since leaving Kerikeri - ideally we'll be able to find something that's not beneath most Kiwis but that equally stretches our skills!

But for now, Queenstown is our next destination on the South Island and possibly the one I've been relishing the most since we've arrived in New Zealand. Set in an idyllic spot, Queenstown is surrounded by the soaring peaks of the Remarkables, Ben Lomond and Coronet Peak, and is framed by the endless Lake Wakatipu. It is undoubtedly New Zealand's most popular year-round destination and proudly bears the title of "the adventure capital of the world".

I forgot how much I liked Queenstown and in a way I was hoping that it wouldn't be a case of remembering somewhere with rose-tinted glasses. There's something about the vibe of a small town that has the energy of a big city, where you can tick so many things off your "bucket list". The only slight disappointment has been the amount of rain we've had since the start of our stay.

The mountains of Mordor in Lord of the Rings a.k.a. the Remarkables
William Gilbert Rees, founder of Queenstown
The place where my camera broke 5 years ago!























Lake Wakatipu is the longest lake in New Zealand (at approx. 75km) and the third largest overall in the country. It is also one of the country's deepest lakes, having been carved by a series of glaciers over hundreds and thousands of years - the last of the glaciers began retreating 18,000 years ago. Lake Wakatipu is bordered on all sides by glaciated mountains, the highest of which is Mt Earnslaw (2,830m) near the head of the lake where the Rees and Dart Rivers feed into the lake. Queenstown itself is built on the gravel deposits that the rivers and streams carried along the lake shore.

Lake Wakatipu with the Remarkables, Bayonet Peaks, Cecil Peak and Walter Peak - click here to view in hi-res


Wakatipu is thought to be a shortened form of “Wakatipuwaimaori”, although the meaning is unknown. One of the unique features of Lake Wakatipu is that the water level fluctuates by up to 20cm several times during the day. It is thought that it's caused by variations in temperature and atmospheric pressure, which is a unique feature amongst New Zealand lakes.

Sunrise over Lake Wakatipu and the Remarkables


The steamship TSS Earnshaw has been in service for 100 years

















 On 18th October 2012 the Earnslaw will celebrate it's centenary 






































For our first proper foray in Queenstown, we took a gondola ride up to Bob's Peak (790m above sea level and 456m above Queenstown), which commands fantastic views over Queenstown, the lake and the Remarkables. The cable car is reputed to be the steepest in the Southern Hemisphere! However, it is possible to walk to the summit of Bob's Peak via the Tiki Trail at the base of the gondola, this takes  roughly an hour zig-zagging up through a pine forest and native bush.

Morning mist drifting over Bob's Peak

The night sky above Bob's Peak






























At the top of the gondola there is a viewing deck where you can get 220o degree panoramic views across the Wakatipu basin. Across the eastern shore of the lake the jagged peaks of the Remarkables steeply rise, with the highest point of the range being Double Cone at 2,319m.

If you fancy taking an alternative journey back to the centre of town you can take a tandem paraglide from the top of Bob's Peak. As it was such a nice day, there was a steady stream of people slowly drifting back down to earth, soaking up the amazing views!

The Remarkables rising dramatically above Queenstown

Double Cone at the Remarkables

Coronet Peak (1,651m) is 18km northeast of Queenstown

Looking down on Aspen Lodge where we've been staying


































































A panoramic view of Queenstown, the Remarkables and Lake Wakatipu - click here to view in hi-res











Bob's Peak is also the setting for the highest bungy in New Zealand, at 400m above Queenstown. We watched a couple of jumps from "The Ledge", but what makes this bungy a little different to the traditional jumps is that you're strapped into a special harness which fits around your waist, so you can twist, flip or dive as you plummet 47m.

That moment when there's no turning back!

































View at the Ben Lomond lookout on the Skyline loop track











































Our main reason for coming up to Bob's Peak was to ride the Skyline Luge, which we did on Sentosa Island at the Imbiah Lookout in Singapore (you can also do this in Rotorua at Mt Ngongotaha), as both luges are operated by the same company.

Skyline Luge chairlift base



















We had two rides on the luge, the first one was on the scenic route which I won by a country mile, but on the advanced route it was a closer affair with Lizzie taking the lead to begin with but I managed to force my way through, only for Lizzie to take it back again in the dying stages of the race...

Gravity is your greatest friend in a luge race!















Lizzie on the viewing deck just before we headed back into town

Twilight over Queenstown


As we didn't have a podium to celebrate our victories, we went to the Below Zero ice bar instead - the largest one in Australasia! Pretty much everything in the bar is made of ice; the walls, the bar, the sculptures, even the furniture and the glasses the cocktails are served in.

I'm sitting on what could be anything...
Lizzie with an ice penguin


















An ice sculpture of the jet boat synonymous with Queenstown
At a constant -5o C we had to wear thick jackets and gloves!
The following day we decided to play a round of disc golf in Queenstown Gardens. The rules are simple (as it's played similarly to golf ), all you need are a couple of flying discs and a score card as this is the best way of finding your way round the course. Each "tee" has a par to reach the target in (chain baskets). To finish the hole the disc must end up in the basket or chains. A penalty stroke occurs is your disc lands in a flower bed or if the disc has to be retrieved from the pond or the lake! The game has been played in Queenstown Gardens since the early 1980s and 1996 the Queenstown course became the first permanently marked 18 basket course in New Zealand.

Lizzie by a sign of the Queenstown Gardens Course
 You need to be careful of people crossing the course 
It wasn't as easy to play as it initially sounds, as the golf discs are more difficult to throw than regular frisbees. They're less flexible and made of thicker plastic,which I found out the hard way when one hit me in the shin as we were practicing...

Lizzie teeing off from hole 4
It's hard to believe this is actually a sport

























The guy in the shop we rented the discs from mentioned that the flight path of the disc will curve through the air. If thrown backhanded from your right hand the disc will eventually curve to the left, and if you flick your wrist forward it will curve right in the air. I couldn't flick the disc forward with my right hand so I hand to throw the disc backhanded with the left - physics can be very confusing as we also had to take wind speed and direction into account as well!

Rain called a temporary halt to play on the 15th  target, but I eventually went on to win the round, which made up for throwing away the lead in the luge race.

Every time we've walked past Fergburger, no matter the time of day, we've seen queues out the door - it's  open for 21 hours of the day if you need a midnight fix. There's even the Fergbakery next door that only opened last year which mainly sell pies, pastries, sandwiches and cakes. The first thing anyone asks if you mention that you've been to Queenstown is "did you go to Fergburger?", so to indulge our desire for another taste of Ferg's finest (as we'd already been there once before, and saw some of the stars from the Chronicles of Narnia films 5 years ago), Lizzie had the Bun Laden burger (falafel patties dressed with lemon yoghurt and chipolte chilli sauce, lettuce, tomato, red onion, cucumber, avocado and aioli), whilst I had the Cookadoodle Oink (butterflied and crumbed chicken breast, American streaky bacon, avocado, lettuce, tomato, red onion, aioli and tomato relish). It was so busy in the restaurant that we had to eat the burgers back at the hostel. They were burgers of epic proportions, so huge that we were absolutely stuffed when we finished them.


For our first full day where it hadn't chucked it down with rain, we booked a jet boating trip on a great discount website called bookme.co.nz, where we got a half price jet boat ride with Kawarau Jet (KJet)! Commercial jet boating started off in Queenstown back in the 1970s with the Shotover Jet and today there are at least four commercial operators in the area.

The KJet zooming through Queenstown Bay



















Arriving at the KJet office on the Main Town Pier, we were given an enormous spray jacket to wear and a life jacket. In a stroke of luck we managed to bagsy some seats right at the front of the boat and the handrail was even heated! After a quick safety talk we were under way as the boat thudded over the waves of the crystal clear Lake Wakatipu, with an occasional 360o or a "Hamilton turn" as they're also known. Taking in the majestic mountains and stunning scenery we headed up towards the Frankton Arm of the lake before zooming under the Kawarau Falls Dam. As we went haring up the Kawarau River (the birthplace of the bungy) the driver made some precariously close shaves with the canyon walls, rocks and low lying tree branches with a couple more 360o spins.

The jet boat spinning part way through a Hamilton Turn



















Next the driver took us down the Shotover River, reaching speeds of up to 80km/ hour down a narrow braided river, which is so shallow it reaches less than 10cm deep in places. Because of the way jet boats are propelled, they're able to suck water into the boat and force it out at high pressure so they can operate in really shallow water.

At the end of the ride we got free admission to the Underwater Observatory beneath the jetty. It has six giant windows showcasing life in the lake, including New Zealand finned eels, brown and rainbow trout, and scaup (New Zealand's only true diving ducks) which dive down to collect the food released from a feeder!

New Zealand scaup (Aythya novaeseelandiae) or a black teal



















There a number of nice walks you can do in and around Queenstown, especially when the hard-sell on adventure activities gets a bit oppressive, so we opted to do the Queenstown Hill/ Te Tapu-nui (Māori for mountain of intense sacredness) Time Trail, as there are supposed to be fantastic panoramic views from the 907m summit.

Before we even reached the start of track, it was a really steep climb to Belfast Terrace - we were completely shattered before starting the walk! Once we were actually on our way, it was more relentless uphill sections through a cool and dark Douglas fir forest before reaching a lookout over the Frankton section of the lake and the Basket of Dreams sculpture, which was built to commemorate the millennium. From here we had superb views across the lake including the Frankton Arm, the Remarkables range, upper Kawarau River, Cecil Peak,Walter Peak and Queenstown Bay (Tahuna).

Lizzie by the Basket of Dreams by Caroline Robinson

Cecil Peak and Walter Peak across Lake Wakatipu





































A little further up is a track to the actual summit, not by the Basket of Dreams! It wasn't much further and it couldn't have taken us more than 15-20 minutes to reach, but it was well worth the views. The whole walk took us just under two and half hours but I think that the local i-SITE should do a better job promoting all the fantastic walks on their doorstep, as their staff hadn't a clue what to recommend...

Not much further to the top, I promise!

A large rock pile which could be mistaken for a shallow grave!

Lizzie pointing our towards the Remarkables and Deer Park Heights

The South Harris Mountain range

 Snow covered mountains as far as the eye could see 


























































































Other views in and around Queenstown:

Looking west up Lake Wakatipu up to Mt Nicholas
Queenstown Bay with Bob's Peak and Bowen Peak
Evening mists descending over Lake Wakatipu
A juvenile Little Pied Cormorant (Microcarbo melanoleucosdrying it's feathers by the lake
Sunset over the Remarkables
Starry night over Cecil Peak

Monday, 29 October 2012

The Otago Peninsula

When we visited Dunedin five years ago we arranged to do a wildlife tour on the Otago Peninsula with the renowned Elm Wildlife Tours. This time round we wanted to explore the peninsula and see some wildlife on our own, as we have a car to take us to places off the beaten track.

Dunedin is nestled at the head of Otago Harbour and sits on the doorstep of the peninsula. The harbour was formed around 10 million years ago by volcanic eruptions and is virtually surrounded by rugged hills. The Otago Peninsula separates the harbour from the Pacific Ocean and has long been acclaimed for its beauty, abundant marine wildlife and eco-tourism.

Although the Otago Peninsula is a short drive from Dunedin, we filled up our car with petrol before venturing on to the peninsula as there is nowhere else to fill up whilst you're on there. There are two main roads round the headland, Highcliff Road and Portbello Road each taking very different, but equally spectacular routes, offering sweeping views of the harbour on one side and the Pacific Ocean on the other.

Driving up Highcliff Road we decided to head over to Sandfly Bay on the eastern side of the peninsula to see a colony of yellow-eyed penguins (Megadyptes antipodes) that are resident in the area and which is also a popular site for spotting Hooker's sea lions (Phocarctos hookeri). Having already seen Little Blue Penguins (kororā) at the Blue Penguin Colony in our fleeting visit to Oamaru (and we also saw them at Phillip Island in Australia), we were unlucky not to see yellow-eyed penguins at the Bushy Beach colony (in the Waitaki District) - but I guess they're not known as New Zealand's rarest penguin for nothing!

Looking across Sandfly Bay and Lion Rock from Seal Point Road

Somewhere in these sand dunes live some yellow-eyed penguins

One of the many beautifully sculpted sand dunes























































Yellow-eyed penguins are unique to New Zealand and are the largest species of penguin living in a temperate region. They might also be the rarest penguin species in the world with a population of between 6,000-7,000 individuals. Known as hōiho (the Māori word for "noise shouter") they're easily distinguished from other penguins by their yellow iris and yellow band of feathers across the back of their heads. Hōiho are only found on the south-east coast of the South Island in mainland New Zealand and on the islands off Stewart Island, Stewart Island itself, the Auckland Islands and Campbell Island. Yellow-eyed penguins are considered such a national treasure (taonga) that they're on the reverse side of the $5 note, with Sir Edmund Hillary - the first person to climb Mt. Everest with Tenzing Norgay - on the other side.

Reverse-side of a $5 note depicting a scene on Campbell Island with a hōiho
Front-side of $5 note with Sir Edmund Hillary and Aoraki/ Mt Cook
Heading down a relatively steep sand dune to reach the beach, we then walked a kilometre along the beach to the southern end where a marked track lead us up to a hide to view the penguins. When we reached the hide there was a notice saying that the best time to see penguins is two hours before dusk and unfortunately we were there in the middle of the day! Although the bay itself was very picturesque and dramatic, it was pretty pointless going down to the beach for spotting wildlife, as all we saw was one sleeping sea lion and a couple of variable oystercatchers.

A variable oystercatcher and Lion Rock in the background

















And I thought Baldwin St was bad! The climb back up the dune was a bit epic


In conclusion, Sandfly Bay is possibly is best saved as the last stop on your way out of the peninsula. The only saving grace was that we weren't being bitten by the blood sucking insects that the bay is thought to be named after - in fact the name actually refers to the sand flying off the top of the giant dunes.

Next stop along the peninsula was Taiaroa Head (originally known as Pukekura) at the very tip of the headland to see the Royal Albatross Centre via the small village of Portobello. Driving out towards the north eastern point of the peninsula, we straddled alongside the scenic Portobello Bay where the tide had gone out a long way leaving behind mudflats.

The Royal Albatross Centre is the only mainland breeding colony in the world for the Northern Royal Albatross (Diomedea sanfordi). Along with the Wandering Albatross, the Royal Albatross are the largest seabirds in the world, spending at least 85% of their lives at sea. Inside there are some interesting displays on the Royal Albatross as well as other local wildlife and history, however, a 45 minute guided tour of the centre costs $40 each so we decided to give it a skip. Despite opting to save our pennies, we were a little bit fortunate to see a couple of albatrosses majestically soaring on the thermals from the café area whilst we were having a cup of tea.

An "albatross" we spotted nestled in the bushes!



















The centre is also the starting point for tours round the historic Fort Taiaroa, a warren of tunnels and gun emplacements originally built in 1886 to counter the potential threat of a Tsarist Russian invasion in the late 1880s and later used for training and defence during the First World War and World War II. However, the main attraction is the Armstrong 6-inch disappearing gun, which is actually a massive canon operated by hydraulics. Apparently, it is the only one still in working condition remaining in the world!

Before Taiaroa Head was established as a Fort over 100 years ago, it was originally a significant fortified Māori pā site for the Kāi Tahu tribe when it was first built around 1650.

View to Aramoana Spit and Portobello Bay from Taiaroa Head



















Next we headed over to Allans Beach via some some narrow unsealed roads taking us right down to the water's edge at Papanui and Hoopers Inlets. I wouldn't have liked to have seen these roads once they flooded as it didn't look like it would take much to do so!

Taking a short 5 minute walk down to the beach, there wasn't much in the way of wildlife around, especially as it was a dog-friendly beach, which I thought was a bit strange considering there were plenty of signs warning you to watch out for sea lions and making sure that you keep your distance. The weather also took a turn for the worse with the skies clouding over and threatening to rain so we decided to give up for the day.

Wharekakahu is a steep-sided stack that you see from Allans Beach

A white-headed stilt (Himantopus leucocephalus) on the beach





































Overall, it was a bit of disappointing day, which is a shame as the Otago Peninsula is a beautiful area, but we had expectations to see some penguins and sea lions as we had an unforgettable wildlife encounter when we were here last. I think the moral of the story is that it might be better to go on an organised wildlife tour as they know the best viewing spots (which are usually on private land) so you can see fur seals, sea lions and penguins in the best way possible to avoid disturbing the wildlife.

*** Following our underwhelming day at the peninsula, we had another crack at spotting some yellow-eyed penguins back at Sandfly Bay on a different day via a scenic walk at the Sandymount track to Lovers Leap and The Chasm. From here it's possible to walk back to Sandfly Bay in about 45 minutes.

A panorama of the Mt Charles and Hoopers Inlet from Sandymount Road- click here to view in hi-res







The track gives spectacular views of the Otago Peninsula's coastline and cliff tops, and leads to a couple of unfenced sheer cliff drops of at least 200m down to the sea - Lovers Leap in particular is part of a collapsed sea cave. Standing on the view platform next to The Chasm renewed my healthy respect for heights as I got a sense of vertigo having a peak over the edge...

The sign isn't kidding about an unprotected edge!

The Chasm is so steep that I couldn't get a shot of the bottom!

Lovers Leap and the cliffs at Sandymount are remnants of a volcano






















































Despite timing our return to Sandfly Bay an hour and half before dusk we still had no joy with seeing the penguins returning from their day at sea. It would be worth the Department of Conservation putting a proviso on their notice boards that you can only see these animals at certain times of the year, but generally I got the impression that spotting yellow-eyed penguins was a year-round activity.***