spoltopia

Splake = male brook trout + female lake trout, Spolt = Sparks + Holt

16 February, 2013

A West Coast Ramble to Okarito

Another long weekend and more glorious weather. We started with a romantic Valentine's Day dinner at Cape Foulwind, 
then headed south to Punakaiki rocks the following morning.
A mere 500km later (and exactly nil traffic signals), we arrived in Okarito, famous as the only NZ breeding colony of white heron, or kotuku, and also home to the worlds rarest kiwi, the rowi, one of which we managed to see in the wild after a mere 4 hours in the bush and a litre of blood donated to the local mossies.
Oh yeah, Okarito is also really beautiful. The pics below were all taken on the way up to the Okarito Trig.

The two panoramas above cover 270 degrees of the view from the Okarito Trig. And below some details, including Fox Glacier:
The coast stretching North and South:

Te wahine toa!
and the tidal marsh at the bottom, where we heard fernbirds and saw an eel.
After a night at Jonathan and Julie's Ribonwood Retreat, we headed back to Greymouth, where Kristen's work mate Mike took Richard up for a spin in his flash yellow plane:
Along the coastal hills
 Back to the Punakaiki Rocks, this time from above:
Then back to town (a great view of the Grey River flowing out of the valley)
We also got a tip from Mike and Heather that we might be able to spot a rare blue duck, te whio, along the Styx River. After a fair bit of rock-hopping, slip scrambling and river crossing, we came upon a pair, who luckily were not shy.
 We headed back to Hokitika for a bit of dinner, and the perfect weekend was capped off with a magical sunset through the iconic driftwood sculpture.
 It's back to Wellington for Richard in the morning, but just 3 more weeks before we head to Seville, Cordoba and Gibraltar.

03 February, 2013

Video Hike: Waiohine Gorge


If you look back a couple of posts ago, you'll see we alluded to an upcoming tramp in the then-newly-discovered Waiohine River Gorge-- well, this is it. Located outside of Greytown, the trail starts on the longest suspension footbridge of its kind in NZ, and is another amazing part of that incredible stretch of bush along the Eastern slopes of the Tararuas.