I decided to go back again and try for the highest point on the Whakanui East trail. This trail is no longer marked and is sort of reverted to a trap line. Here in NZ you will find all kinds of traps and poisons along almost every trail. They are attempting to rid NZ of all predators by 2050. I’m glad they are trying to save the native animals; there are no native mammals to NZ other then two bats. But at the same time it greatly detracts from the sense of being alone in nature to see traps and boxes of poison everywhere.
I often find
them located in the in nice flat spots where I want to eat lunch. I think the boxes might make a nice seat but
who wants to sit on a rat trap while eating?
Last time I
tried for this high point I missed and unmarked turn and I got soaking wet and
turned back before making the high point. I also got very cold.
I caught two
buses to the trail head today. Abra
could not drop me off since our car was stolen and we are still waiting on
insurance to repair it. Good thing the
bus system here is so great.
I started my
hike at 9:30 and gave myself a 1pm lunch and turnaround time if I wanted to
make it out before dark.
Winter
solstice is near. The shortest day of
the year will be June 21-22 so the sun is setting at 5: PM. That makes a nice change from home where it
gets dark at 4:30 on the shortest days of the year.
I was so
tired at the start of this hike; I was not sure how far I would make it. I soon realized I was too hot; I had overcompensated
for being too cold last time. I took off
my hiking pants and just hiked in my leggings and that helped a lot.
In the 4
times I have hiked up here I have only seen people twice. One time I saw a
couple working the trap line and today I a hiker passed me while I was resting
and wearing just my leggings. He turned up a different trail though so I never
saw him again.
I was low on
water for most this hike as I got distracted by seeing one other hiker on the
trail and forgot to make the turn to get water.
I did not miss the turn by much, but I felt too lazy to go back and get
more water.
I finally
made it to the top just at one pm. It was a hard hike for me but the plants at
the top made a nice reward. I saw lots
of “prince of whales” fern and at least one other plant that only grows up
high.
I also saw a
green mushroom for the first time ever.
It is native to NZ and Aussie so I have never seen it before.
There were a
lot of bright mushrooms on this hike, but not very many of them, just lots of
colors to be seen.
I was too
tired to spend much energy on good photos.
I barely made it to the top really.
On the way
back down I made my previously missed turn for extra water and I brewed a cup
of coffee and a cup of tea back to back.
It started
to drizzle on the way down but nothing too bad.
In the end I was glad that I wore my boots.
This was my
first hike in this pair of La Sportiva boots.
My other identical pair cracked when I dried them on the dehumidifier. I packed a brand new pair of them to NZ not
knowing how much it might cost to get them here.
I stashed a
bottle of kombucha at the trail head for myself since I did not have a car to
keep a drink in and I knew I would be thirsty by the end of the hike.
I made it
down to the bus stop just in time to catch the 5:15 bus out. My bus stop on Sunny grove road (in a sunless
gully) is the last one on the line. The
bus was turning around just as I arrived, so I did not have to wait at
all.
I had ten minutes
to chance buses from the 170 to the 160 line at Queen Street. Just enough time to grab some venison sausage
at the butcher.
Editing photos for this post right now.
We had the
sausage with king boletus that we found just blocks from our house the day
before.
When I got home I was very tired but still I washed a mountain of dishes and cooked dinner. Abra was quite tired when she got home after being on her feet all day and losing 15 minutes waiting for the bus to pick her up from the train station. With no car she is taking a bus and a train to work.
Normally she takes her car to the train station.
The trail signs here drive me a bit nuts, they often state the time it take to hike the trail rather than the distance. I’d much rather know the distance and the elevation gain. The time it took someone to hike it is pretty worthless to me. I hike at my own rate, mostly slower than the stated times.
Except when going downhill then I seem to go about twice as fast as the
stated times. Also I think they measure
it different depending on if is a walking trail or a tramping trail.
7 miles with
2,600 feet elevation gain or11k with 790 meters
My company at lunch time. |
Too tired to take non-blurry photos |
Yummy but a bit heavy I guess |
Brewing back to back tea and coffee after getting dehydrated. Yes I know both are dehydrating as well. |
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