Archive for the ‘Queen Charlotte Track’ Category

Queen Charlotte Track – Flora & Fauna Update

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

Our senior guide, Ray Waters, regularly writes a flora and fauna update for our visitors and staff.  We thought you might like to see what is happening on and around the Queen Charlotte Track at this time of the year.

 

FAUNA

PAREKAREKA/ SPOTTED SHAG   Stictocarbo Puntatus

A very handsome bird at this time of the year with it’s breeding plumage.  A double crest rising at the forehead continues to the nape of the neck with a metallic glow.  Skin around the eyes is opalescent blue and green.  Pouch bright blue and feet bright orange/yellow.  Each wing feather has a black dot, hence the name.  Immature birds are dark grey above and pale grey below.  Can be seen nesting or roosting on rocky cliffs throughout the Sounds

KARORO/ SOUTHERN BLACK-BACKED GULL  Dominicanus Vetula

A large gull which as all white except for its black back and wings.  It has a yellow bill with a splash of red near the head, and orange eyelids.  Watch for pairs nesting close to the high tide mark, they may made a lot of noise and dive at passers-by if you approach too closely.

 

FLORA 

RANGIORA   Brachyglottis Repanda

Coastal and flowering now in large much branched panicles which have a strong, sweet scent. 

BUSH CLEMATIS   Clematis Paniculata

A strong woody vine which is now flowering in great clusters of lovely white flowers in the tops of trees.

 TUTUKIWI/HOODED ORCHID

Green hooded with moving pterostylis – in flower now.  The stem may attain a height of 30 – 45 cm.       

HEKETARA /FOREST TREE DAISY  Olearia Rani

A shrub found in lowland forest. Flowering in profusion throughout the sounds,  especially on forest margins.

 NGAIO   Myoperum Laetum

A rounded tree up to 8 meters high, especially overlooking beaches in the sounds.  Flowering now, with the mauve berries appearing about March.

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A Warmer Winter on the Queen Charlotte Track

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Aah – autumn is here and winter on its way. Believe it or not, we love this time of the year.  After the busy hot months, we relish the quieter, cool crisp mornings followed by stunning clear, calm days which are so typical for autumn and winter in the Marlborough Sounds.  As locals, we all often comment that it is the best time of the year to be here and if only everyone else realised how stunning it is.

Well this year we decided to try and tell more people about walking and biking in the Marlborough Sounds during winter and entice you all with some great offers with our warmer winter deals .  Getting out and getting warm is our message this winter – walking or biking is a great way to do it.  Should the weather deteriorate (we don’t deny that we do get our share of rain and cold), then there is always a warm fire, hot shower and comfortable bed to welcome you at the end of the day.   Furneaux Lodge, Punga Cove Resort and Portage Resort Hotel are fantastic spots to stay and during the winter are welcome respites from any bad weather.

Our relatively temperate climate means that the Queen Charlotte Track is one of the only tracks open during the winter, and with fewer numbers walking or biking the track during these months you are guaranteed peace and solitude along the way.

Autumn and winter are also ideal times to gather the family together for a bit of adventure.  There are three school holidays during the warmer winter special deals period.  We have designed some excellent value packages that are deliberately designed to cater to the varying levels of fitness and requirements of family groups.  There are some minimum age recommendations on some trips, so don’t hesitate to contact us if you need to talk through the best options.

Sea Kayaking is also a great experience during the winter. The days may be shorter, but the wildlife is generally more plentiful and the conditions calmer for paddling.  We offer a guided day trip during the winter months operating from 10.00am to 3.00pm for just $85 and of course kayak rental is always available.

This winter will also be interesting as we watch our new office building arise out of the dust.  We are looking forward to moving into our smart new offices hopefully by Labour Weekend (24 October) this year, and the new waterfront precinct that is being developed by the Marlborough District Council.

In the meantime, Sara, Dave and the team encourage you to get out this winter and get warm. Make the most of these great winter deals – you will feel better for it!

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Queen Charlotte Track makes LA Times

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

In March this year we were delighted to have Amanda Jones, Journalist for the LA Times, join us on a 4 Day Guided Walk. Amanda and her friend Debbie thoroughly enjoyed their time with us on the track and it was a pleasure for our guides Ray and Jeremy to accompany them. Amanda’s article about their experience with us appeared recently in the LA Times and makes for great reading. Enjoy.

Hiker opts for comfort on New Zealand wilderness trek

She trades a backpack and tent for lodging comforts on a 51-mile trip through the South Island’s Queen Charlotte Track.

By Amanda Jones, REPORTING FROM NEW ZEALAND
10:51 AM PDT, October 29, 2008

What happens when the idea of adventure is still compelling, when the desire to commune with nature is strong, when you still fancy yourself an outdoors woman but the appeal of pitching a tent has lost its luster?

Here’s what you do: You find places that provide opportunity for strenuous exertion, but with the reward of a bed and a glass of chilled wine at the end of the day.

In March, I was talked into going to New Zealand to hike the Queen Charlotte Track with a friend on a fitness bender. What sold me was that, sure, we’d be hiking 51 mostly uphill miles over four days — 45 miles on the actual track and an extra six for diversions. But by night we’d stay in lodges, eat fine food and drink good wine.

Located in the pastoral Marlborough region on the coast of the South Island, the Queen Charlotte Track is one of New Zealand’s most scenic multiday hikes. It was opened in its entirety in 1992, but it is not well known to American tourists who tend to throng to the South Island’s Milford Track.

A lush grove of tree ferns makes for a verdant hike but obscures the view of Queen Charlotte Sound.The Queen Charlotte cuts across a pristine coastal ridgeline, through ancient forest and virgin bush. A sound is a former valley flooded by the sea, leaving haphazard slivers of land, surrounded by water but still adjoining the mainland on one side. The Marlborough region has three sounds — the Queen Charlotte, Kenepuru and Pelorus. We were to hike across two.

Although the Queen Charlotte can easily be hiked on your own, my fitness-freak friend, Debbie Harkness, and I decided to book through the Marlborough Sounds Adventure Co., which offered a reasonably priced package more in keeping with the sybaritic adventure we had in mind.

The company booked the lodges and transfers; provided a hiking guide and a kayaking guide; and arranged for our baggage to be whisked ahead by boat. We chose the five-day excursion, taking a day’s break to kayak.

In late March, the end of the New Zealand summer, we flew from Auckland to Blenheim and then drove 30 minutes to Picton, the only town in the sounds. Early the first morning we had a trip briefing and met the rest of the group. We were eight in total, the others from England and Australia.

Ray Waters would be our guide. Seventy-one years old, he and his leather-tan and sinewy legs smacked of the über-athlete. Indeed, he told us, 10 years before he had run the entire track in less than 10 hours.

Boarding a small ferry, we headed west toward the trail head. Dolphins, the only wild mammal appearing genuinely delighted to see humans, surrounded the boat, leaping and spinning.

We stopped along the way to investigate a salmon farm. Lining its periphery were hundreds of seals peering through the netting that held the salmon in and them out.

Amanda Jones and friend Debbie Harkness wanted an adventure without tents and backpacks but with lodges and good food. So they connected with a professional tour group for a four-day, 51-mile hike through Queen Charlotte Track on the South Island. Here, Harkness takes a plunge off the dock at Punga Cove Resort, a family-style lodge.“Look at them perving at the fish. What a fantasy!” Debbie said. Apart from being very fit, Debbie is also very amusing. She is one of those I call my “elevator friends.” If you had to be stuck in an elevator for a long time, whom would you choose to be with? Debbie is on my short list.

The boat also stopped to allow us to climb Motuara Island for a sweeping view of the sounds. Motuara is one of the only “predator free” places in New Zealand because the Department of Conservation has systematically relocated or eradicated all nonnative birds, rats, possums and other predators in an effort to bring back native species.

New Zealand is a robust example of what science calls “the law of unforeseen consequences.” When the white man (pakeha) arrived, he brought with him creatures that went ashore and flourished, several by gobbling up the native species that sat about stupefied, having never before encountered a predator.

Pre-pakeha New Zealand had no predators. Then came the pakeha, and New Zealand is now fighting for the survival of many native species.

“Listen to the bush,” Ray said as we walked up Motuara. “Then compare it to the mainland.” The bird song was clear and thick. It sounded healthy, possibly as it had been 65 million years before.

At lunch we were dropped off at Ship Cove, a significant place in New Zealand’s colonial past. Capt. James Cook first anchored in this lovely white-sand bay in 1770 when he claimed New Zealand for Britain.

After a brief reverie, our guide pointed to the track, and upward we tramped. Debbie’s hiking poles flashed, her feet traipsed sprightly on the dirt trail, legs pumping mechanically. I clamped a grin on my face and dragged my undertrained limbs ever onward.

The group thinned, with Ray far out ahead; Debbie and I were a respectable distance behind. Ray had once been an Outward Bound trainer, and it was clear there would be no mollycoddling. He would jog back down the track to say, “You ladies all right. Righty-o. Carry on,” then run off again.

Finally on top of the ridge, we looked down through fern trees to a peacock blue sea scattered with diamonds. Behind us was virgin bush, untouched since Cook’s time, with 2,000-year-old trees towering above the others.

By 6 at night we tumbled off the track onto the trimmed lawn of Furneaux Lodge, originally an early-1900s holiday home for well-heeled pioneers. The main building speaks of an older, slower time.

Nowadays, hikers sprawl on the vast porch paying homage to their first Steinlager of the evening.

The free-standing suites at Furneaux were modern and chic, with a view of native bush and sea. It was more luxury than could be dreamed up, given the location, and considering the only access to the lodge is either on foot or by boat.

Equipment-laden Debbie Harkness makes her way across a classic New Zealand swinging bridge over a river in Queen Charlotte Sound.Day 2 was a piece of cake, with all day to hike seven miles. We climbed past waterfalls and through forest glens, parts tracing the waterline and others deep in the forest.

We spent that night at Punga Cove Resort, a lodge where kids roam in a posse and parents go fishing. The rooms were simple A-frame cottages, nothing luxe about them, but it was a step up from a tent and the only thing around.

We woke early to face our longest day. We would hike 15 undulating miles to the 1,300-foot ridge above Kenepuru Sound. Panting mountain bikers passed us on the trail. It is possible to ride the track, but a lot of folks were pushing their bikes up the steeper inclines.

We also passed pig hunters, rifles shouldered and dogs in tow. Pigs, another pakeha introduction, have run amok here since Cook released them. In Kafka-esque style, they mutated to three times their English farmyard size, grew savage tusks and now eviscerate the earth, overturning trees and destroying habitat.

By late afternoon we dragged ourselves gleefully into the Portage Resort Hotel, formerly a run-down lodge renovated into a swanky seaside hotel. With minimalist lines, Mondrian colors, Modern art, gourmet food and wines, the Portage has to be one of the country’s most sublime locations. We catapulted straight into the pool for a swim.

And so, hallelujah, came our day of rest. We bid farewell to the group and to Ray. Jeremy Martin would be our new guide, and he was to escort us around the bays in a kayak, returning to the Portage for another night of elegant repast.

Jeremy Martin paddles into an empty bay on Kenepuru Sound. He served as a guide for Amanda Jones and Debbie Harkness, who navigated in a double kayak, on a water tour of the area. The two women stayed two nights at the upscale Portage Resort Hotel.

Jeremy was a young, athletic Kiwi bloke, capable and stoic, as such blokes often are. He fitted us with a double kayak, with Debbie, naturally, taking the steering position. He took a single and ran circles around us.

I am proud to say that we made it across Kenepuru Sound, where we stopped to have a cuppa, as is the wont of New Zealanders, a throwback to their ancestry. We were alone on the beach, and the water lapped so soothingly, we lay side by side on the warm sand and had a “kip” of tea.

The three of us set off cheerfully and fully restored the next day, prepared to walk the 12 miles to Anakiwa, the end of the track, where a ferry would return us to Picton.

But at 3:40, as the end was nigh, I discovered that I had dropped my sunglasses. In a flash, Jeremy was off back up the trail at a sprint. The minutes ticked by. No Jeremy. The ferry approached. No Jeremy. The ferry docked. No Jeremy.

And then, as the clock struck 4:01, he came thundering out of the forest and down the dock brandishing my glasses. And that, right there, is reason enough to forsake the do-it-yourself approach.

Jones is a freelance writer.

travel@latimes.com

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Marlborough Sounds Festival Starts Soon

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Five weekends to remind you why we have weekends – the inaugural Marlborough Sounds Festival begins on the weekend of 26 September.  This five weekend festival has been created by Portage Resort Hotel.  The festival has five themed weekends, beginning with the Sounds Water and Wilderness Weekend.  Stay at the hotel and enjoy activities, delicious food and wine.  The 2nd weekend is our Sounds Adventure Challenge – a day of sea kayaking, mountain biking and running, achievable for all from the nervous novice to the experienced multi-sporter out for a training run.  The third weekend features the Sounds Seafood School – al fresco dining and workshops.  Get creative on the fourth weekend with painting and writing workshops and the final weekend ends with Spring in the Sounds – a weekend combining all the highlights that the sounds have to offer.  There are options for everyone, from groups of friends wanting to get away for the weekend together, to family groups looking for a bit of adventure, to just couples needing that short break away.  Check out all the details on the website www.marlboroughsoundsfestival.co.nz

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New Zealand’s Tourism Minister Bikes Queen Charlotte Track

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Returning from a ride on the QCTThe Right Honorable Damien O’ Connor, Minister for Tourism recently visited Picton to launch the Queen Charlotte Track Tribute.  A keen mountain biker, Mr O’Connor took the opportunity to enjoy a short ride from Mistletoe Bay to Anakiwa on the Queen Charlotte Track with Dave and John from our crew.  A keen mountain biker the Minister commented that the Queen Charlotte Track had been on his list of "must-do’s" for a while and it was a great opportunity to at least get a taste of this great mountain bike ride.  We look forward to the Minister returning for more of the Queen Charlotte Track soon.

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Peter Potterfield Walks the Queen Charlotte Track

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Walking the Queen Charlotte Track with Peter Potterfield

Peter Potterfield Walks the Queen Charlotte Track with MSACWe were delighted to host U.S. journalist and adventurer Peter Potterfield on a guided walk on the Queen Charlotte Track recently. 

Peter has written more than a dozen books on outdoor adventure and contributed to Outside, Conde Nast Traveler, National Geographic Adventure and other major magazines. 

His most recent publication “Classic Hikes of the World” features the best walking tracks in the world. 
Peter is currently editor of GreatOutdoors.com, where he writes his regular column, Wilderness Notes.  You can read Peter’s blog on walking the Queen Charlotte Track by going to www.greatoutdoors.com/blogs/peterp/new-zealand-hikes-blog

(Dispatch 6)

Some of Peter’s comments:
“As we caught the water taxi back to Picton, I had time to reflect on the unique nature of the Queen Charlotte Track. Here’s a long, interesting four day route in one of the most scenic parts of New Zealand’s South Island that offers a rare combination of four honest days of hiking with real comforts–in what is often the best weather of all New Zealand.

This is a route that I think will soon rival the classic treks of the South Island, such as the Heaphy Track and the Milford Track.”

Peter has walked all over the world, with many different operators and we were particularly delighted to receive his feedback on the experience:

“Thanks for all your help. MSA really has the trip wired, I was very impressed. Ray and Hally do a great job, and reflect very well on your company. I think you’ve got a remarkable product,and hope someday to do it again at a more leisurely pace”.

 

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Queen Charlotte Track Tribute Launched

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Queen Charlotte Track TributeA new initiative was recently launched focusing on the long-term sustainability of the Queen Charlotte Track. 
From 1 October 2007 all adult unguided track visitors will be asked to contribute $5 to the Queen Charlotte Track Tribute Fund. QCT Tribute tickets can be purchased from the dedicated ticket machine located at Picton Wharf prior to departure on a track experience. 

In the spirit of sustainability, the Queen Charlotte Track Tribute Fund is setting an example for the rest of the world.

 

 

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Queen Charlotte Track – Spring walking

Friday, September 21st, 2007

Spring is definitely in the air and there is no doubt that people arestarting to move out of their winter hibernation.  We are loving the torrential spring rain today, soaking into what has been a very dry season so far.  Picton and the Sounds are particularly magical on a wet day with a myriad shades of grey in the hills.

We are now planning for a great summer. Our first guided walk on the Queen Charlotte Track begins on 1 October and it will be a wonderful time to see the early spring flowers featuring on our native floras such as the Kowhai, Bush Clematis, Rangiora, Bush Lawyer, Hooded Orchids and Tea Tree flowering.  Visitors out paddling with our guide on a day trip this week also enjoyed paddling with a large pod of 50 bottlenose dolphins. 

So it isn’t just us that is starting to revel in the joys of spring, so are the native residents of this beautiful place that we live in.

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