West Coast & Glaciers (New Zealand)

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The Wilder West

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5 Apr 21st, 2005  (Sep 29th, 2008)

134 Ciao members have rated this review on average: exceptional

Advantages:
Unspoiled wilderness, fascinating sights and sites

Disadvantages:
Persistent rainfall, persistent sandflies

Recommendable Yes:

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torr

torr

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Having crossed the Southern Alps and reached the coast at Greymouth, you may be tempted to head south straight away. This is, after all, the direction in which the highest mountains, the deepest rainforest and the remotest tracts of wilderness are to be found. And if you haven't come to see mountains, forest and wilderness, you've come to the wrong place.

Resist the temptation. First, cross the Grey River and take a small diversion up the coast to the north, just an hour's drive to the Paparoa National Park. You will thereby ensure that your first taste of the west coast is not the relatively drab and developed stretch immediately south of Greymouth (only relatively, since nothing along this coast is drab or developed by European standards). North of the Grey River the country is hardly touched, and the drive takes you round rocky hillsides and parallels surf-swept beaches where the Tasman Sea pounds the shore. The main purpose of the diversion, though, is to reach Punakaiki and the Pancake Rocks.

There are wonderful things to see all the way down the west coast of New Zealand's South Island, but the odd thing about them is that few are actually on the coast. Punakaiki is an exception, the Pancake Rocks being located on a headland jutting out into the sea.

A geological freak, these limestone rocks were formed in layers from the skeletons of molluscs and other sea creatures interspersed with layers of compacted mud. Millennia ago earthquakes forced the layers to the surface, since when they have been sculpted by waves and weather into weird designs. The sea has also burrowed blowholes through the rocks, and water spouts shoot skywards through them to relieve the pressure of the surging tides.

Standing on the headland at Punakaiki, amid the crashing of the breakers and the taste of salt spray in the wind, the visitor shivers with a sense of the untamed nature of this coastland, and the appetite to explore it more fully is aroused.

One way to explore the immediate vicinity would be to take a trek inland from Punakaiki through the Paparoa National Park, which is noted for caves and canyons half-hidden amid forests of tree ferns and native Nikau palms. Having not allowed ourselves time to do this, my wife and I headed on south.

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Hokit ika, twenty-five miles or so south of Greymouth, boomed briefly in the 1860s and 1870s as a Gold Rush port, and still has something of a frontier feel to it. Not far away is Shantytown, a reconstruction of a prospectors' settlement, where for a small fee you can try your hand at panning for gold, but we did not visit it. In Hokitika itself we walked along the driftwood-strewn shore to the mouth of the Hokitika River, where many steamers crammed with fortune-seekers came to grief amid the shifting sandbanks and sudden storms.

Gold Rush nostalgia apart, Hokitika is full of arts and crafts shops, with jade carvings, knitwear and leatherwear the main specialities. My wife found plenty of opportunity to add to her collection of unusual knitting wools, for which it appears New Zealand is outstanding. The town's other claim to fame lies in its hosting of the Wild Food Festival, a rather bizarre celebration of unconventional carnivore cuisine. "All God's creatures have their place - between two slices of bread," proclaims a roadside sign on the way into town. Somehow, we were rather glad we were there in the wrong month for the Festival.

Hokitika is a good place to stay, though, with plenty of accommodation of all types and price ranges, and plenty of places to eat. We stayed at Teichelmans B&B, located in the middle of town and comfortably-furnished, where we were given a warm and friendly welcome by the owners, Brian and Frances. The nightly tariff of NZ$170 (approx £62) for the two of us together included not just the copious breakfast, but tea on arrival and a nightcap before bed. Good value and recommended accordingly (0064 3 755 8232).

Inland from the town is the Hokitika Gorge, which offers a short steep drive up beside spearmint green torrents of glacial water to reach Lake Kaniere. Here there is a visitor centre, the starting point for many scenic walks around the lakeshore or into the surrounding hills.

Once south of Hokitika human habitations rapidly thin out, although a railway track runs parallel with the coast road as far as Ross, another Gold Rush relic. It is a relief to leave the railtrack behind, if only because bridges across rivers are frequently shared between road and rail, with room only for one mode of transport at a time. Notices state that trains have priority, not a point that I would care to dispute, although what one does as a driver if one meets a train head-on halfway across I am not quite clear. Hope that the drivers behind are as quick to find reverse gear as you are, I guess.

After Ross the road veers away from the shore and the settlements become smaller - which is to say practically non-existent - and further between. From Ross down to Franz Joseph Glacier, a distance of about a hundred miles, one sees only about half-a-dozen hamlets, and the occasional sheep station. Moving south, the hilly pastures increasingly give way to forests, and the peaks loom ever higher up ahead.

Somewhere along this road we enter the South West New Zealand World Heritage Area, which encompasses thousands of square miles of wilderness, stretching all the way down beyond Westland into Fiordland with its dramatic deep-water sounds. They will be covered in a separate review. Long before we reach them, there is still plenty to be seen in Westland, starting with the glaciers.

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The Westland National Park, encompassing the Franz Joseph and Fox glaciers, lies in the shadow of Mount Cook, New Zealand's highest mountain, which is permanently capped with ice and frequently with cloud.

The rain is pelting down by the time we reach Franz Joseph, and we skulk in the Visitor Centre for a while, absorbing information from the well-presented exhibits while waiting for the weather to clear. It doesn't clear. Perennially heavy rainfall is one of the drawbacks to visiting the area - in places exceeding 4000 mm a year it is over three times as heavy as in the Highlands of Scotland, Britain's wettest region.

Eventually we give up waiting, don our wet weather gear, and trudge up the trail - about two or three miles - to the face of the glacier, the point where it breaks up and begins to melt away. With climate change, the face has advanced and receded over the years, and the approach is across stony streams in a deeply gouged valley that was previously filled with ice. The slatey surface of the surrounding rock-faces is veined with torrents of white water.

Up ahead, the rain-clouds clear briefly to reveal the full length of the glacier, like a gigantic worm wriggling down the mountainside, white at the top, greyer lower down where the debris from rockfalls is carried on its icy back. More colours are revealed as one approaches the face - amid the translucent whiteness are blues and greys and greens. Coldness radiates out of it and sends a shiver down the spine.

Regaining our warmth and composure over a sandwich and a glass of something in Fox Glacier village twenty miles of dramatic driving further down the road, we debate whether or not to walk up to Fox as well. Isn't one glacier enough? No, we decide; we haven't come twelve thousand miles to be deterred by a drop of rain.

A good decision as it turns out. Fox is different from Franz Joseph, in a narrower, greener valley with a more distinct river descending from it, and more ups and downs along the way. It is harder here to see the upper body of the glacier as it grinds its gradual way down from the clouds, but the face is fascinating, forming a hollow ellipse as if to provide an acoustic shell beneath which some icebound orchestra might perform.

For the formidably fit, there are long walks feasible up the mountains beyond the faces of both glaciers, but we do not feel up to tackling them in the rain. For the lazily affluent, helicopters can be hired to buzz one up onto the icecap itself. To us, this has little appeal. But I would heartily recommend the walks up-valley to both the faces, each of them enthralling in its own way.

Returning to the car park, we find a kea (a local species of wild parrot) perched beside our rented car. This alarms us for a moment, since they are notorious for pecking out the sealing rubber around car-windows and windscreen wipers. But this one seems only interested in the remains of our sandwiches and in posing for photographs. Unfortunately I only caught him on video, which is why he is not shown below.

Before leaving the Westland National Park, it is in fine weather well worth visiting Lake Matheson, known as the mirror lake. On its still surface one can see reflected the peak of Mount Cook and the long sweep of the slopes down which the glaciers descend. When the peak is lost in clouds and the surface tufted by raindrops, however, the effect is not quite so startling. It's still a picturesque lake all the same.

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From Lake Matheson down to Lake Moeraki is another seventy miles. On the winding road, it seems a long drive after a long day on the glaciers, and I'd advise anyone following this route to stay over in Fox or Franz Joseph, where there
Pictures of West Coast & Glaciers (New Zealand)
West Coast & Glaciers (New Zealand) Picture 706692 tb
Pancake Rocks at Punakaiki
are several hotels, hostels and B&Bs. Once south of Fox they are hard to find because the road, which already seemed deserted, becomes more deserted still. Ten miles or more can easily pass without a sign of human life. This is not surprising; the through route down this coast was not completed until 1965 by which time the New Zealand conservation movement was already in full swing and development discouraged.

Such places to stay as exist tend to be either very cheap and basic or rather on the expensive side. After much debate we plumped for the latter, and stayed two nights (the minimum booking) at the Wilderness Lodge near Lake Moeraki. It's a beautiful place, looking out over well-tended gardens to the river descending from the lake with rainforest beyond

From one side of the Lodge one can walk down a forest track through densely dripping native trees of ancient lineage (kahikatea, rimu, matai) and tree-ferns, all entangled with creepers and epiphytes - plants like perching lilies and orchids that flourish on the damp bark of the trees. The track brings one, after a mile or two, to a secluded cove, girded by rocks and seething surf, the mist of its spray occluding the horizon.

Seals, including elephant seals, and tawaki crested penguins are often found here, although not alas by us on this occasion. Sandflies - insects as insidious as mosquitoes and with quite as irritating a bite - are also frequently encountered everywhere in this area, and we met many more than we would have liked.

From the other side of the Lodge, one can canoe up the river and around the lake, which we did in the afternoon when we were there. The scenery is stunning - forest down to the water's edge all around, a backdrop of rocky peaks beyond - and the tranquillity barely impinged on by the fact that the main round passes down one bank, so infrequent is the traffic. Out by the far shore of the lake we could pause our paddling and hear nothing except the trill of insects and the call of birds, and then the sudden beat of the black swans' wings as they took off from water, displaying their white tips.

The Wilderness Lodge has ecological ambitions (see www.wildernesslodge.co.nz) which I have to say we found less than wholly convincing. In the short time we were there, we did not go on any of their longer (and rather expensive) guided nature-discovery expeditions. The shorter, more local ones, included in the price, were brief and rather elementary.

In fairness to the Wilderness Lodge most things - excellent breakfast and dinner, use of canoes and facilities - are included in the price. But at NZ$250 (£92 approx) per person per night, the price is hefty; indeed, it was the most expensive place we stayed in the whole of our round-the-world trip. In our view, pleasant though it was, it didn't quite measure up in terms of value for money. The bedrooms, in particular, were pretty ordinary.

In the interests of taking the smooth with the rough, it was an experience and I don't regret having stayed there. But I wouldn't do so if I visited the area again, and I wouldn't recommend it.

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Driving on from Lake Moeraki, the road soon swings back to the coast, reaching it at Knight's Point - a lookout platform with sweeping views along the shore. A few miles further at Ship Creek, there are walks along seemingly endless beaches, and through dunes and marshland behind them, full of exotic birdlife.

Haast, where the main road turns inland again, is a rather forlorn little settlement with a filling-station and motel, its bleakness relieved by the presence of yet another outstanding Visitor Centre. The New Zealand Department of Conservation is extraordinarily good at installing these places, cramming them with interesting exhibits displaying both the natural and human sides of the local heritage.

From Haast a side road runs down thirty more miles of windswept coastline to Jackson's Bay, the southernmost settlement on the west coast, beyond which lie only the cliffs and inlets of Fiordland. We almost took this road, tempted by its promise of empty beaches and coastal wildlife, but were short of time. So, instead, we followed the main road inland up the Haast River Valley, into the Mount Aspiring National Park, amid more neck-craning vistas, and frequent tracks through dense forest to off-road waterfalls. Wonderful country, but almost before we knew it we were out of Westland and into Otago.

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The ideal way to explore Westland is by car or campervan, a method that allows you to take your own time and venture off-track at will. It is, however, possible by bus; for example, the InterCity and Atomic Shuttle services seem to run the length of the route we took, and on down to Wanaka and Queenstown further south inland. There are, of course, guided inclusive tours available from a number of operators.

Places to stay are numerous and varied around Greymouth and Hokitika, sufficient around the glaciers but very sparse further south. It is definitely advisable to book ahead, especially in the high season (December-February).

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New Zealand's Westland isn't quite unique. I can't even say I've never been anywhere like it before. I have - the Pacific north-west coast of America, in Washington State between the ocean and Olympic National Park. That too has glacier-capped mountains, rugged shores and temperate rain forests. It's wild country, but Westland is wilder. Wilder, but somehow more welcoming.

Reflecting on the time we spent in Westland, I find it hard to justify my five-star verdict on the place. The shortcomings are easy to enumerate: it rains too much for comfortable sight-seeing; in most areas it's hard to reach the coast itself, or for that matter high into the mountains; the sandflies are horrid. But when I look back on it without detailed reflection, all those things are outweighed by the things I loved about it, which were many.

Maybe, coming from our densely-packed, polluted British Islands, it's simply wonderful to find in New Zealand another set of islands, of similar size and climate, inhabited by people of similar cultural background and speaking the same language, but islands that aren't polluted or densely packed. Rather, the best bits are sparsely populated, pristine and scenically stupendous. And Westland is definitely one of the best bits.

This is wilderness for which you do not have to brave climactic extremes, dangerous wildlife or hostile natives. It is accessible wilderness - not easily accessible, for that would negate the value of its accessibility and rapidly destroy its character, but accessible to anyone ready to go to the effort and expense to find their way there and to explore.

© torr 2005

For a review of how to reach the west coast by rail, see:
http://www.ciao.co.uk/Tranz_Scenic__Review_5493864

For a review of Doubtful Sound, see:
http://www.ciao.co.uk/Doubtful_Sound__Review_5501846 

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Comments about this review »

kevin121 14.09.2009 20:52

Splendid.

Mcicp1981 09.04.2009 15:25

I'll admit I almost forgot to come back and give this the E it deserved lol.

andyk910 07.04.2009 19:34

I do find your travel writing exceptional. Thanks, Andy

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