Rail trail: You loved the blog, now see the movie!

I’ve put together some video clips and still photos from our cycle trip on the Otago central rail trail. The videos were shot with a GoPro and with my Olympus OM-D EM-10.

I mounted the GoPro on my helmet but the extra weight made the helmet slide down over my eyes, which wasn’t very good. So some of the clips were riding with one hand and holding the camera with the other, not easy on a bumpy track!

I did have some Kiwi music – Slice of Heaven – but YouTube warned me it was copyright so I changed the music. It’s now a strange mixture of old blues and classical stuff, but well out of copyright!

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A slow boat across the lake

We had a wonderful trip across Lake Wakatipu to Walter Peak on an old steamship, the TSS Earnslaw. Launched in 1912, the Earnslaw is a coal-fired twin-screw steamer 168 feet long.

You can go down into the bowels of the ship to see the boilers being stoked and watch the pistons pumping away at the crankshafts – great stuff! The scenery is, as expected in Queenstown, spectacular. Here’s a tiny video.

After the round trip we walked through the local park – Queenstown Gardens – to the Queenstown Ice Arena, an indoor skating rink.

Jan and Pam were both skaters in their younger days and were keen to relive their triumphs on the ice. They both did well with lots of graceful-ish  swooping around the rink and just one tiny fall.

Steve and I watched admiringly for a while. Then we found an excellent table ice-hockey game and battled it out puck for puck while the girls swirled.

We had more great food in Queenstown at the Botswana Butchery restaurant.

The next day it was back home via Auckland, and back to reality. We’d become acclimatised to NZ cool climate (low teens) and it was a shock to get back to Sydney’s 30-degree plus days.

 

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A fast boat to nowhere

A grey day with rain forecast later. We walked into town and booked ourselves on the Shotover Jet boat then hopped on the shuttle bus for the five minute ride to the gorge.

shotover5

A very slick operation – we were briefed by TV in the bus and kitted out with spray jackets and life jackets when we arrived at the edge of the river. The boats are smart and very high-tech with twin v8 engines and a top speed of 85km/h. The gorge is spectacular (gorgeous?) with the river running very swiftly through its craggy walls.image

The ride was wildly exciting, skimming by the rocks at great speeds with just inches to spare and rushing over shallow gravelly bits. The piece de resistance (or coup de grace?) was the 360-degree spin. The driver would warn us with a wave, then send the boat spinning. You had to hold on tight to prevent yourself being thrown out into the water. Yee-hah!

The only down side was some bumpy bits which were a bit jarring for people with bad backs, but we all survived unscathed.

Altogether an unforgettable experience in spectacular scenery.

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Up in a gondola, down in a luge

Yesterday we headed for the Queenstown cable car to ride up the hill.

“Sit back and relax as the best views in the region unfold before your eyes and the Gondola carries you 450 metres above Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu to the top of Bob’s Peak.”

It was fun. The views over the lake and to the mountains are truly spectacular, we sat and watched for quite a while.

The other big thing was to ride the luge. This involved taking a chairlift even higher up the mountain and climbing on a plastic wheeled sled to hurtle down a concrete track. Extreme fun, quite scary at first, but very enjoyable.

Even higher up was a launch point for paragliders. We watched them soar gracefully down to land on a green oval in the town below. I was keen to try, but decided against it as there was no lift and the flights seemed quite short.

We had checked out of our hotel and later moveimaged into our rented house (Bach in Kiwispeak) for three nights. Fab place, huge with great views over the lake to the mountains from its spacious balconies and an outdoor spa.

We dined at a nearby restaurant called Vknow, starting with a great tasting plate which included local hot-smoked salmon and chicken. I had some wild venison on risotto which was super tasty.

 

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Cruise to the finish line

Our last day on the rail trail dawned with blue skies and a good forecast. We had to start early (6.30 breakfast) to finish our ride in time to catch the shuttle bus to Queenstown at 12 noon.

Over breakfast we heard that after we’d gone to bed, Steve and Pam continued chatting to the Waipata Hotel landlord and his wife, Stephen and Sarah Jones. Steve discovered that he’d played rugby with the guy in the same club in Sydney when they were young men. This brought lots of reminiscences and some extra wine consumption. What an amazing coincidence!

We set off from Waipata on the bus to pick up the trail at the tiny hamlet of Hyde. From there it was 31 kilometres to the end of the trail at Middlemarch. It was cold but sunny and we made good time.

The track had dried out well from the previous day of heavy rain imageand we had no problems with puddles as we rode along the Rock and Pillar range. We passed the memorial to the famous Hyde railway disaster of 1943.

We came upon some sheep that had strayed onto the track and they ran in front of us for a while until they found a place to escape off to the side. We saw plovers, yellow hammers, lots of kites, rabbits, hares, cattle and a bloody great big Angus bull. It was a lovely ride, partly because it was gently down hill.

The trail ends at Middlemarch because from there to Dunedin, the railway still exists. We saw the Taieri Gorge Train arrive, pulled by two huge diesel locos.

We congratulated ourselves for finishing the trail with no obvious injuries and only minor aches and pains. We covered 130 kilometres on gravel tracks over 3 1/2 days. We missed 30 kilometres because we decided not to ride in the rainstorms. Not bad.

We had some lunch and said farewell to our guide and driver, Joyce, who waimageimagevery patient with us and looked after us well.

We then caught our shuttle bus which retraced most of our route before heading across the mountains to the spectacular city of Queenstown.

I’d been taking pictures of some of the spectacular clouds on our route (see above). There were some big lenticular clouds, which mean fabulous wave lift for glider pilots. NZ is famous for these, but I didn’t realise they had names until I read one of the sign boards along the track.

“One of the worlds most famous and dramatic lenticular cloud formation appears over the Strath Taieri. Called the ‘Taieri Pet’ it is a rare lenticular billow cloud that depending on atmospheric conditions can be a single cloud or an enormous, awe-inspiring pile of cloud layers.”

Queenstown offers lots of adventurous things to do. We will NOT be bungy-jumping, but will try some of the other offerings.

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