Monday, November 23, 2009

A big day on the road visiting the past

The weekend just past I'd set aside to attend the raising of a memorial plaque in Kurow cemetery for my aunt and uncle who passed away a few years back. This involved motoring over the Lindis Pass to the Waitaki Valley and MacKenzie Country to meet with family. North Otago was where I primarily grew up, while my aunt Pat and uncle Jim worked and lived on the remote and very large Otematata Station for about 44 years.

Jim and Pat's new memorial mounted on some greywacke...
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Across the aisle is great granddad Silas...
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I was a bit late for the ceremony, but it suited my mindset to be alone, and so after reclining on the grass by the memorial and watering the poppies left at the graveside, I wandered about the other graves looking at the history - goodness even discovering folk I knew younger than myself are in residence! I quite liked the cultural difference of this memorial though, but some fresh and cool beers would be a nice touch....
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Next I adjourned for lunch to the nearby Awakino Ski Field access road. These modest mountains, The St. Marys Range are where I cut my teeth in winter learning the art of looking after myself in the New Zealand mountains...
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Away back in what seems like another age an older ski club member showed me some hidden graves of two very young children near the ski field access road, so in lieu of some exercise in worsening weather I looked for them and found to my delight that [presumably] the local farmer has tidied them up and planted roses. There is an enclosure each for the two little souls...
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Grave of the two yr. old Emma Barrett who passed on in 1872...
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Grave of 8 day old Jennett Robbie - also 1872...
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Looking down the Awakino river to the Kirkliston Range in the Hakataramea Valley...
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On the road again in changing weather - it went from gale-force nor west and about 33 Celsius, to sth east gale-force again, with a drop in temperature of about 15 degrees in an hour...
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On the way back to Twizel to regain the company of my family I detoured a little to check out Benmore Dam. I found the visit quite thought provoking given the thinking behind my recent posts on the folly of building more dams on the Clutha River. I was just a kid when this monster was built. Many people don't realise too that it flooded an amazing white water gorge that few people have seen [myself only photographs], that was apparently unique in New Zealand and even more so in world terms...
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Next I detoured again to Lake Ohau which is another one of my favourite childhood haunts [caught my largest trout there ever], and in my 20s and 30s the larger area became the focus of much tramping, mt.eering and powder skiing...
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The end of a stock fence in Lake Ohau, and the block of mountains in the middle background is the Glenmary Range. The main peak Glenmary is about 8000 ft. and to the right slightly is the incredibly hard-to-reach Glenmary Glacier. I've had a lot of fun in them tha hills...
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... and another fence near the Lake Ohau access road...
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Many years ago I lived in Twizel for awhile and shifted this house onto two large sections. Apart from many years doing part time renovation on the house I planted about a hundred trees and put them on a trickle irrigation system. It paid off - although the house is long sold and I do miss it a lot, the trees give me great joy...ohau-16.jpg

On another topic some of you may recall a post or two back in Jan. this year about searching for missing tramper Irina Yun on Cascade Saddle in my current near-to-home Mount Aspiring National Park. Well a few days ago her remains were at last found, and fellow blogger and mountaineer Bob McKerrow has done a very good post on the story, which incidentally I think will help her family grieve. Well done Bob... more>>

Lastly, it's been my trend of late to use this place to draw attention to issues I don't agree with such as the damming of the Clutha River, and the Project Hayes Wind Farm [my grounds are simple - blatant use of our unique landscapes at the expense of our own wilderness values and those of our children]. So speaking of children you should read what fellow blogger Marg has written lower down on her weekly post about what our uninspired New Zealand Government is doing to New Zealand early childhood education... more>>

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Autumn travels: trip to Dunedin, fishing in the Waitaki and a farewell at Awakino Ski Field in North Otago

In Central Otago I always maintain autumn is the best of the seasons with it's settled weather, fewer people and stunning landscapes - in other words a nice time to travel about.

Diamond Lake...
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It's about 2 hours drive from home over the Lindis Pass to The Waitaki Ski Club's Awakino Ski Field. This is where I spent my formative mountain years learning not so much to ski, but how to look after myself in mountains in winter.

However these days I don't go back there much, but old friends invited me along this weekend to celebrate the life of my ex sister-in-law Belinda who passed away about 2 years ago up in Nelson. For various reasons many of us never got closure - hence this weekend's get-together.

But I took the long way to get there, via Dunedin. It'll be a year and half away, but it looks like my son may choose the University of Otago to further his studies in science, so I thought it a good idea to spend a day there showing him the campus.

The iconic original building...
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I was amazed at the stone work - no straight lines, which must meant the blocks have been hand shaped from what looks like very hard rock...
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Presumably a grand-dad keeping an eye on his grand-daughter...
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We found it funny and almost Harry Potter'ish how the buildings seem to reflect their purpose when we saw this one - the Center for Innovation...
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Music...
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And a sight I've seen before - thankfully not often. I'm surprised given the odd unsavory Orientation Week that there are still sofas outside student flats that have not been made the subject of bonfires...
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After some shopping we then headed up the coast and inland to camp for the night by the Waitaki River for some fishing, but I had more success making this photograph...
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On Sat. afternoon we headed up into the St Marys Range and Awakino Ski Field to the lower accommodation hut to have a meal and stay the night in honour of Belinda...
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It's a 35 min. walk up a road [snowed over in winter] to the lower rope tow [top left] and day huts...
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As the evening was settled my old friend Julie joined Dougal and myself for a climb to an exposed saddle at nearly 6000ft...
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The view to the south-east into some of the most remote country in North Otago: The Buster gold diggings on the left, the Kakanui Mountains center and some of the headwaters of the Otematata river on the right...
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And to the north from lower down [taken this morning]: looking across the Waitaki river and into the Hakataramea Valley with the Kirkliston Mountains on the left...
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I'll cover the farewell to Belinda in a separate post. Meanwhile have a good week dear readers.

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