Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The Milford Track Day 1: Batteries Not Included.

I have been busy gardening in the living room and planning a trip west, far west. I will be riding the shimmering beams of the setting sun through Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Scandinavia, and Central Europe, straight to a booth at Vinnie's Pizza in Brooklyn.  I traded a day of my life to the Lords of Time Travel for the opportunity to see the world. Indeed, I will be taking the longest way home.

I am on a 30 day sugar-free[ish] diet [no added sugar of any kind; yes fruits/no fruit juice]. Day 14: I have lost my mind.
Back to my stories:

April 7, 2011
The day could not have been perfect. The learning curve of a novice hiker rises steeply from zero to potentially fatal as you take your first steps on the trail. I have read about the risks, everything from falling off a cliff to hypothermia, and packed a medical kit full of Ibuprofen, duct tape, and band-aids. Luckily, there are no scary human-eating beasts in Fiordland, just adorable birds and glowing maggots, more popularly known as glowworms. 

I arrived on the afternoon boat to the start of the Milford Track with about twenty other people.  I waited for everyone to pass and began by myself, the 33.5 mile journey from Lake Te Anau to Milford Sound.  The trail is a spectrum of green that lines the banks of the Clinton River, oversaturated on land and reflected in the transparent water.  Since Daylight Savings was over the weekend, it is now getting dark earlier, and even earlier than earlier in the forest. Welcome to winter. I was aware that I had to keep schedule but I promised myself I would not rush this journey.  I dropped my jaw to the ground and spun my head around and around trying to see every big and small thing. I also packed at least 100 pounds too many and so slow going was the only going. Wow, I am going to get really fit.  

Along the way there was a turnoff for a Wetland Walk. Sphagnum Moss is New Zealand's magical ground cover. The colors, oh! Pretty!

I was the last person to arrive at the hut, making it there around 5:30.  Even though I am traveling alone, there are 39 other people also hiking the trail.  Since the Department of Conservation regulates the number of hikers per day and prohibits camping, we are all in this together, sort of.  Basically, we are all sleeping in the same small, stinky, snoring hut. 

Ranger Ross monitors this segment of the trail and is exactly the person you would expect to find here: an old gentlemen about seven feet tall with spindly legs and a walking stick.  He excitedly took us on a fascinating nature walk but I can only remember the whistle of his S's and the Lancewood Tree.  

After, I went to the kitchen to prepare dinner. [By the way, it is totally possible -- EASY -- to be a vegan hiker.  More on that later. When I tried to do research on what food to pack, Google told me nothing useful. So I will write a separate post and maybe make things easier for someone else.] I have never used a gas camping stove before today and even after reading the instructions, even after someone verbally instructing me, it took two people to help me get the flame going.  I promptly boiled water to make some soupy thing. 
Then. 
It happened.  
The not perfect part to my perfect day! 
I spilled boiling water on my hand. Apparently, you need to extend the handle of a billy pot before boiling the water. Do you know what a billy is? I just learned. I stood in shock for about five seconds with at least three people gasping at the not perfect part to my perfect day. I walked over to the sink, ran my hand under cold water for a few minutes and pretended like nothing was the matter.  In reality, my hand tingled like bubbles of molten lava. I checked it out, no bones showing, no skin peeling off, and repeated cold water immersion.  My hand is red and my skin feels fake, but I am surprisingly okay. Which is good because I have nothing in my medical kit to solve this problem.

Ross told us where to see glowworms that night, a short walk down the trail.  I put on my headlamp but instead followed the path illuminated by
Su-Lin's 'could have been a beacon in a lighthouse' lamp.  Flicker, flicker, huh, my headlamp died.  I trusted that when I paid for all of my rental gear, everything was set to go. Guess not.  We turned off our lamps and stood mesmerized by the bright green spark of the glowworm's bioluminescence.  A few seconds later, I realized I was in complete darkness in the middle of the forest on a fiord in the center of nowhere several feet from a million maggoty larva.  Ahh! I kindly asked for headlamps to be turned back on. Whew, close one, I almost looked like a scaredy cat.


Swing Bridge #1, Clinton River.

Yes, it swings.

Hike, Day 1.

Fungi.

Sphagnum Moss.

Hobbit Hole, maybe?

Clinton Hut

Ranger Ross and hikers @ the helicopter pad.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The Milford Track: Season 1, Episode 1 Summary

I am a glacially slow writer.  So while we all hold our breath and wait for me to transcribe my journey, here are some photographs:

The Milford Track: 4 days, 33.5 miles, 40 independent hikers, 
56 avalanche paths, 9 swing bridges, 1154 meters above sea level 
at Mackinnon Pass, 970 meters climbing down Mackinnon Pass, 
0 mm of rain, 1 foot in front of the other, ∞ evil sandflies.

 
 Wetland walk on the way to Clinton Hut. 
Sphagnum Moss is super-natural! Super nature!

 
 Making friends along the way. Bush Robin.

 
This is New Zealand.

 
 Sunrise at Lake Mintaro.

 Mackinnon Pass, mindblowingly beautiful.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The Restaurant at the End of the Universe

 [April 6, 2011]
Three seats, one row entirely to myself.
31. 
Today is my birthday and I just boarded a new Air New Zealand All Blacks Rugby themed airplane from Auckland to Queenstown.  The sweet chemical smell of plastic off-gas is still identifiable in the recycled air.  Since new technology is flawless, I take comfort in knowing that this plane will most likely not fall out of the sky. The safety information is brought to us by the ever-lasting flamboyance of Richard Simmons: "step step, pump pump ... and now you're fit to fly!" Yes, he is still doing that thing that he does.  I believe they call it exercise -- no -- "sweatin' to the oldies." Except, in this version he is demonstrating how to fasten a seat belt and put on a life preserver.  Dance music, sweatbands, and electric pink outfits definitely distract from thoughts of planes crashing.

I booked a bus from Queenstown Airport to Te Anau, then tomorrow a shuttle from Te Anau to Te Anau Downs, and a boat to the start of the Milford Track.  When the bus arrived to pick me up at the airport, it turned out that the bus was actually a small van and there were just two other people on board.  As if there was only one thing to do on the South Island, my van-mates Su-Lin and Yan are also hiking the Milford Track tomorrow.  Now that I am slightly less alone, I feel slightly less terrified of my insane solo journey into the wilderness.  Slightly.

Thanks to a hotels.com deal and a generous birthday present, I am staying in a villa in Te Anau like a real adult. Te Anau is one of the smallest towns in the world, comprised of a single main street flanked by hotels, motels, and backpackers for Fiordland adventurers. And me. At about 5:30, I walked to Bev's Tramping Gear Hire to pick up all the stuff for my hike that I didn't bring/don't own/would never own: a hideous bright blue fleece jacket, a fluorescent yellow raincoat, a headlamp with a dead battery, rain pants made of black trash bags, and various other essentials.

Despite my arguments for solitude, Su-Lin and Yan insisted on going out to dinner for my birthday.  Hello, I am a vegan in the middle of nowhere, let's eat! After walking up and down Main Street [or whatever it was called] and reading the menu in nearly every restaurant window, we decided on Chinese Food. The dining room was enormous but only two tables were occupied, both by parties speaking languages other than English. It is a big world in a small town. Here I am, 10,000 miles from where I was born, sitting with strangers in a restaurant at the end of the universe.


Tim made me vegan chocolate chip pancakes with rainbow 
sprinkles for my pre-birthday day!

 Flying over the Southern Alps. South Island, New Zealand

Landing in Queenstown.

[sneak preview]
4.711:  Boarding the boat to Milford Track, Te Anau Downs.

 Scenes from the boat, Lake Te Anau.

 Traveling to the middle of nowhere, getting nervous.

 See that patch of sand, yeah, that is the start of the Milford Track. 
ONWARD!

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Waving, Not Drowning

There are waves crashing in the canal of my left ear.  I have jumped, shaken, spun, and poked but not even gravity changed the tides.  In this muffled world with an ache soaring through my head, I now know for sure that I am a lousy swimmer. My form has never progressed from the inefficient half sinking/half gasping for air technique I developed as a kid.  Yesterday, I went swimming for over thirty minutes and finished with a baby pool of water trapped in my ear. 

Last weekend Tim and I accepted a generous invitation to escape to a beach house in the Coromandel Peninsula.  The bach [pronounced "batch," beach house] at Little Bay was tucked into a nick on the eastern coastline, about a three hour drive from Auckland.  The ride was an uneasy mix of beauty and motion sickness: lush green hills on one side, the Pacific Ocean on the other, and a long stretch of scary narrow winding gravel road. 

We arrived late at night and followed Simon, our host, down to the ocean.  I clung to Tim's sleeve like a child afraid of the dark, because I was, and together we carefully walked towards the water.  Without the context provided by daylight, the ocean at night is deceptively small.

In the morning, Simon and I went for a run in the bush [forest].  Our run started with a twenty-minute uphill climb on a dirt road.  I cannot remember the last time I pushed my body to such an extreme that someone had to tell me not to pass out.  I slowed to a pathetic shuffle-like jog and kept moving until we entered the bush.  Simon led the way, and away, as I did my best to keep him in sight and not fall. I failed at both my tasks. I lost the trail because it wasn't a trail -- it was a few broken blades of grass and random gaps between trees.  To my credit though, I only tripped once. 

Later that day, I [almost] cried while swimming in the ocean.  I am not a very good swimmer. So I waded in up to my knees and then walked out ...
No.
Ah, quit being a baby.
Tim dragged me back into the waves, instructing me to either go up and over or under and through. Panic.  I did what I was told and made it out alive.





 


 Next Episode: Tales from the Milford Track

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Free Auckland

Some photos before I post some photos.
The Ports of Auckland offers a free boat tour of large vessels, shipping containers, and monster machines:




 





 [The belly of the Harbour Bridge]