Summer finally
seems to have arrived, its 30 something deg C, not a cloud in the sky and was
hot last night and looks like it will be tonight as well. The forecast is for
this to continue for at least 4 or 5 days, which is nice, but it’s a bit too
hot to do anything energetic.
An amusing personalised numberplate we saw |
As it
happens we’ve been driving in the van for most of the day, partly to get from
Ranfurly towards Aoraki Mount Cook, so it hasn’t been quite so bad with the air
con on. We didn’t make it all the way, as it’s a long way, but also we wanted
to go over Danzy’s Pass, which is a gravel/rocky roadway in a remote mountainous
area. It is not recommended for campervans, but we checked with the i-site in
Ranfurly and they told us our smaller van should be OK, its steep in places,
with very sharp hairpin bends with large drops off on a narrow road they said, well,
they were right! Fantastic views all the way and the 45km road took us well
over 2 hours, so you can tell we were going slowly!
The curling rink at Naseby |
As we
approached the pass we went into a town called Naseby, which seems to be the
curling capital of NZ. I think I’m right in saying that the sport of curling
originated in Scotland (Alex will no doubt put me right on that) and is now an
Olympic sport. We both have mental views of people sliding ahead of the stone,
rubbing the ice with brushes to fine tune its speed and direction to get it as
close as possible to its position. ‘We must have a look’ we thought, so pulled
into the car park to see an outdoor skating rink and luge track (both closed
for the summer), as well as a big purpose built stadium for curling. We had a
look inside to see three full sized curling lanes in a really good facility.
Watch out Scotland, NZ will be on your tail in the next Olympics!
Naseby town centre |
Anyway, once
we got onto Danzy’s Pass proper the views were just fantastic, we stopped a
couple of times for photos and it was absolutely quiet and amazing. As usual,
the photos just don’t do it justice, but it was great! On one occasion we
stopped for a large bird of prey pecking at a dead rabbit in the road in front
of us, I’ve been trying to get a photo of one of these for ages, but on each
occasion they fly off majestically before I can get my camera out, this was the
same unfortunately.
Sheep were also a hazard, they’d run off when we approached
and, on several occasions, one would get separated and run off in front, with
no-where to go, cliff face one side, huge drop off on the other, we’d just go
at snail pace until it could find some refuge to allow us to pass.
The Flying Pig cafe |
Eventually
we got back to civilisation and ended up in a town called Duntroon which,
according to our climbing guide, has a couple of climbing crags and a
bouldering area. The climbing is a bit hard for us and well spread out, so we
decided to give it a miss as we want to get on to Aoraki Mount Cook, where
there’s some multi pitch climbing (if the weather stays fine), so instead we
stopped in the town at the ‘Flying Pig’ café, which was, very pink, for a
coffee, a look at the gaol and stocks and finally made our way across the road
to the ‘Vanished World’ fossil exhibition and museum.
Best place for her! |
The exhibition was
interesting and they have a trail you can follow in the locality to view
fossils in the rocks and hillsides, but more interesting was the guy who ran
the place as a volunteer. He was well past retirement and was great to talk to,
we spent what must be half an hour having a laugh with him and talking about
everything, fossils being only a small part of it. He’d never heard the old saying
from a British barber ‘something for the weekend sir?’, so we had to explain,
which caused great amusement to him.
Lunch by Lake Aviemore |
As we left he
told us to take a side road off the main road further on and go over the dam at
Lake Aviemore, round the lake and returning to the main road by going over the
dam at Lake Benmore, as its very picturesque. Well, it was and we stopped for
lunch right next to the lake, stopping again when Jackie spotted a pear tree
and apple tree next to the road, allowing us to pick our own fruit.
Dinner on the barbie at the campsite |
We finished
the day at Omarama at a very nice campsite. As there is an oven in the kitchen
here, I made apple crumble and custard (custard powder from the local shop as
Jackie thinks its wasteful to use only the yolk of an egg for real custard!),
so after a BBQ followed by crumble and a bottle of chilled white wine, we’re
full, contented and happy people. As I write its 9:00pm, the sun is just
setting and I’m sitting outside the van still in shorts and tea shirt! Not a
bad life!
1 comment:
Hi Guys,
looks like you've had a few great days again. Very jealous of the picnic by the lake with hand picked fruits, (not to mention the bbq and crumble and custard!). Our promised extra snow on Friday didnt come. Instead it rained heavily and most has now gone - leaving mud and wet and flood. Our clean house is back to mud splattered and footprints where they shouldn't be!
Off to see Manu and Crystal at an Iraq restaurant in Small Heath tonight. Not sure what to expect food wise, but sure it will be scrummy. Take care and don't burn!! H, I & R xx
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