Tramping

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Mon 6 May 2013 10:31
Kiwis (New Zealanders actually so refer to themselves; but absolutely not to be confused with Chinese gooseberries, which here MUST be called kiwi fruit to avoid offence) call backpacking 'tramping'; I know not why. Tramping is big here, usually utilising DoC's excellent hut network rather than camping. Kiwis aren't as roughtie-toughtie as they would have you to believe, it seems.
Tourism is now NZ's biggest foreign currency earner, bigger than agriculture, and the government and DoC are just brilliant at marketing their great outdoors. Part of this effort is the establishment of a number of multi-day "Great Walks". I went to the south of South Island to do one of them, the Routeburn. This starts near Glen Orchy in the Queenstown area and goes across a pass into the Fiordland National Park. The track is only 32km long but by road the journey is about 190km making one way trips a logistical problem so I walked a circular route taking four-five days with two American yachtie friends, Jon and Heather Turgeon, seen below as we climb up from Lake Mackenzie (both are extreme runners, doing mountain marathons for fun; thankfully they move more slowly when backpacking):
 
 
Jon at the top of the first pass (McKellar 'saddle' in Kiwispeak), Mount Crosscut (2230 metres) in the background. The trees are Southern Beech (Nothofagus spp), fairly closely related to the European Beech but with a distinctive growth pattern giving rise to the weird forests seen in the Hobbit films made here. 
 
 
Camping. No wishy-washy huts for us. My tent is the orange one:
 
 
Looking west over the Hollyford Valley towards the Southern Alps and Fiordland. This part of the walk is a 5km traverse at well over 1000 metres with wonderful views:
 
 
On the way down towards the Routeburn Valley in the left distance, Lake Harris in the foreground at 1225m. This is above the natural treeline and is amazingly like Snowdonia in North Wales, albeit at greater altitude. These mountains are very young indeed in geological terms. Until less than 5m years ago NZ was a country of low relief. Since then the land here has been rising at about 10mm a year; this may not seem like much until you start multiplying by the millions required by geological time. In fact the mountains have risen in excess of 20km (!) but erosion has been about the same rate so the summits are maintaining a fairly stable altitude.
 
 
The young mountains have rapidly acquired their own alpine flora. Here are a couple of them. The first is the NZ Common Gentian Gentianella bellidifolia. As usual in NZ the native gentians here are white, possibly because the pollinating insects like white flowers (although this seems too simple an explanation to me)
 
 
And this is the Large Mountain Daisy Celmisia semicordata (I think - NZ has lots & lots of daisies, over 60 species in the genus Celmisia alone, all looking much the same), here growing in  typical mountain habitat of bare rock and sand near the top of Conical Hill at 1515m.
 
 
As a digression, here is a famous NZ flower of the Southern Alps, the very large Mount Cook Lily (recognisably a buttercup) Ranunculus lyallii:
 
 
I actually took this near Mount Cook in December but I've put in in again here because I've subsequently learned something interesting about it. The clue is in the Latin name, Ranunculus. This is a European genus, several species of which are adapted for a montane life. But there were no mountains in NZ until recently. The plant is known (from pollen records) to have been here before humans arrived 850 years ago - so its ancestors must have got here from Europe after the mountains rose but before humans could have transported it. Quite a feat for a buttercup. 
 
Back to the tramp. Here is the valley of the Route Burn looking downstream, east towards Glen Orchy. The natural treeline is very obvious on the right, as if set out with a ruler, and the flat valley floor is almost archetypal of a glaciated valley. The tussock grass here would for millions of years have been grazed by flocks of moa, but sadly no more.
 
 
A very splendid walk, but to my mind the Southern Alps are not as impressive as their European counterparts. On the other hand they are relatively untouched by human activity - no restaurants, no cable cars, no railways, no cars, no towns to spoil the natural grandeur.