Extreme cycling

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Sun 12 May 2013 10:09
I found out that the famous Queen Charlotte track is open for mountain bikes for some of the year. 70km off-road along the side of Queen Charlotte Sound at the very northern tip of South island. So e arranged to do it. the set-up is excellent: a small ferry takes you and your bike and camping gear out to the far end of the track and you cycle back. The ferry takes your luggage. Easy-peasy. However, what the tourist information, which leads you to think that this is a nice gentle country cycle did not mention anywhere is that the track is graded 'advanced' to 'severe' for bikes. An easy walk maybe, but a very challenging cycle.
 
Here I am on it:
 
 
We have no photos of most of it because we were either shattered from pushing up steep hills, or too terrified to stop going down steep bumpy hills. The photo above makes it look easy, but it wasn't. But it was really good fun, one of the very best things we did in NZ. We took four days over it. The views over the Sounds are tremendous:
 
 
This area was rapidly deforested by farming settlers, and much of it just as quickly abandoned a few years later - just long enough to destroy the environment. Then they planted exotic European pines which out-compete the native bush and spread into recovering areas. The government and local people are now waking up to the sad state of the Sounds, and doing something about it. In the shot below you can see several dead pines sticking up through cleared & recovering native bush:
 
 
These dead trees have been exactly located by GPS by a trained Ranger botanist, then individually sprayed with a contact herbicide from a helicopter using the GPS coordinates. Very clever, and very successful. But there is so much to do it will take many decades.
 
Below is the view towards Picton (base for the inter-island ferry to the capital Wellington) from the track:
 
 
Finishing the track:
 
 
And waiting for the ferry at journey's end: