Sunday, January 3, 2010

Some of my favourite wild places in New Zealand

Happy New Year readers - may 2010 treat you well!

Thanks for the well wishes I've received re. my tooth problem. It's now sorted and all I can say is it's left me with a reminder that good health is everything, and an unbelievable need for sleep.

Some more scans of my slide collection - some from my early days of New Zealand mountain and landscape photography - some of my favourite shots and places really.

Classic view of Mt Cook and Mt Tasman from the Malte Brun Range...
cook-hochstetter-tasman.jpg

Summer snow...
ranuculai-snow-alpine-flowe.jpg

Sunrise on Mt Cook from Tasman Saddle Hut...
tasman-saddle-hut-pink-sunr.jpg

Ron...
ron-with-pipe.jpg

Storm from door of old Muellar Hut...
mueller-hut-wind.jpg

Hooker Valley and Mt Cook in early winter...
mt-cook-hooker-valley-in-wi.jpg

Skiing the Tasman Glacier between storm fronts...
kris-tasman-wind.jpg

Chris and Sarah on Mt Hooker...
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Muchison Glacier [I forget the mountain names I'm afraid]...
kris-wagner-muchison.jpg

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Sunday, December 13, 2009

A celebration of our wild New Zealand landscape and National Parks - and a "heads up"

Quentin Smith of Wanaka has recently formed a FaceBook group: Hands off Mt Aspiring NP and a few days ago membership stood at 5000, and it's now well over 6000!

... which relates to the noises our new, seemingly unenlightened and uninspired, New Zealand Government are making to initiate mining investigations in our National Parks. Not only my local Mt Aspiring National Park I might add!

While they say it's only a stock-take even that is a transgression and impossible to do without major disturbances and destruction of our heritage put aside for all coming generations.

Having got this off my chest [link below] I'm here sharing some of my favourite landscape photos I've made of our wild New Zealand landscape.

This is Mt Brewster - somewhat in the middle of the area of Mt Aspiring National Park our National Government has it's beady eyes on [and in bed with which multi national corporation that historically is always in the background taking profits when it comes to mining resources in any country?]...
skiing-mt-brewster.jpg

Marks Flat under Mt Hooker - a huge tract of land designated at Conservation Estate in South Westland. Should it be part of the World Heritage Site in this area [Te Wahipounamu - South West New Zealand]?
marks-flat-1.jpg

You can "mine" great powder on the slopes of Mt Cook in Mount Cook National Park...
hochstetter.jpg

Alma hut in Westland National Park, with Franz Josef neve behind...
alma-hut-sunset_2.jpg

Mt Aspiring from Cascade Saddle
aspiring-cascade-saddle.jpg

Lake Hankinson in Fiordland National Park [not far from the Milford Track]...
lake-hankinson.jpg

Looking down one of the significant glaciers in Westland National Park
fox-glacier-alma-2.jpg

There is a FaceBook generated link here, to view, or I suggest join the group: Hands off Mt Aspiring NP.

Or failing above then click on Groups in your FaceBook account and type in "Hands off Mt Aspiring NP"

And on a related matter this week I found out that New Zealand has 56,000 Kms of public roads that are not public, and our current New Zealand Government, and the preceding one it seems, have apparently been doing their best to sweep these "paper roads" under the carpet by use of cunning legal moves to give the land to those [many of whom have already fenced them off], in exchange for easements. The former offer us, the recreational users and owners unfettered access, the latter, easements, do absolutely nothing for us - only for self serving interests of those who've squatted on our rights.

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Sunday, December 6, 2009

The theme of past follies continues

For my last two posts I've visited the past - first a family internment and then about the local celebration of the first ascent of Mt Aspiring last weekend. Well the trend continues: this week gone by I attended our annual Wanaka Search and Rescue helicopter training. While it's tempted me to write about adventures around helicopters and rescues that went well or not-so-well, a friend has recently lent me his new colour slide scanner so I've gone intensely for scanning hundreds of my landscape photography collection which goes back 40 years or more. It can do about 40 an hour, which is a lot better than my one at 8/hr. So dear readers, I've been so delighted with the results I've decided to share some of my favourite images from what seems like a past life:

Bluffs and rainbow on Mt Hooker taken from Marks Flat in South Westland. In fact I spent a week looking at this hillside while living under a nice rock riding out a nor wester once. Rocks are very peaceful things to live under as soon as I get over thinking about earthquakes, but none-the-less it was really nice to see this little reminder of sunshine...
mt-hooker-bluffs.jpg

Market gardens in North Otago...
market-gardens-oamaru.jpg

Mt Hooker - waterfall...
mt-hooker-waterfall.jpg

Bush with light-shafts in seaward Kaikouras...
bush-light-shafts-kaikoura.jpg

Sunset on an Otago beach...
sunset-on-sea-otago.jpg

And to finish on something not 30 years old, the new Squirrel coming in carefully for our recent Search and Rescue practice...
squirell.jpg

Not a good situation in which to contemplate walking uphill away from the helicopter!
squirell-2.jpg





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Sunday, November 2, 2008

Basing peace, calmness and perception on the energy of the landscape

For 2-3 years now a favourite tome I reference often, seeking clarification for my journey, has been a paper back written by the Dalai Lama called "The Way to a Meaningful Life"

...lent to me by a dear friend I'll have to give it back when the opportunity presents! So just before my recent holiday traveling to Nelson, I ordered another of his books, and then the serendipity began again...

While visiting an artist's gallery in Upper Moutere, an aspect of Nelson's environs I'd never checked out before, I asked her if there were any good private/remote places to camp the night in my 4wd camper. "Yes", she replied, "a cleared forestry area over in that direction, oh, and up Sunrise Road that goes to the Buddhist center that the Dali Lama stayed at, you might find something"

The forestry area won the day near this school and the Toss Woolaston gallery, and the curiosity that is the landscape photographer in me was piqued by the light and the energy I felt about me...
moutere400-1.jpg

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So... having identified a lovely spot overlooking Nelson City for the night, exploration of Sunrise Road was called for by my intuition.

With a growing sense of peace I was led to this amazing... Supta, a concept quite new to me. It's overlooked by the Chandrakirti Centre Tibetan Buddhist Study and Meditation Centre , but above all else it was the setting that impacted on me, with it's inherent peace and tranquillity, no doubt extended by the Centre ...
mthooker400-5.jpg

The brief stay, and walk around the Supta taking photos [apparently there are benefits from circumambulating Stupas], made a profound mark on me: I knew in my heart great peace - one I've known many times before often in people's homes or gardens, my own even, and our mountains and high country. The experience was so heightened this time though, that I believe it's a message to explore the concept further, and share it, raising awareness to aid all in a "Way to a Meaningful Life"!

The head of the Fox Glacier in South Westland - despite numerous alpine hazards such as crevasses, avalanche terrain, high altitude and the potential of nasty weather to arrive almost instantaneously from the Southern Ocean, this place is recognized by many to be conducive to human well being and growth...
mthooker400-3.jpg

However before I diverge into wrapping this post up, there was a funny side to the visit: at the end of Sunrise Road there is a nudist camp. I'm sure the Dali Lama with his renown sense of humour, and others will join me in a grin if we ponder how we could become totally at one with ourselves at the Center, then finish the break with a sojourn down the road being "only" ourselves!

Attributes of energetic and non energetic places:
  • Some people refer to the energy on the earth's surface as Geopathic Stress lines or areas.

  • I believe there is nothing mystical about high or and low energy locations - one day science will learn to measure same [radon gas emissions from the earth are already implicated as are overhead power lines]

  • A peaceful energy in a place lends itself to healing, creativity and growth.

  • Sensitive people should avoid spending time in places they feel are low energy, and especially should not sleep in same.

  • Plants don't seem to flourish in low energy locations

  • People with an open heart will gravitate subconsciously to healthy locations, those who are closed off will actively promote less than ideal locations

  • Low energy locations can be detected with techniques similar to water dowsing

  • In-sensitive people may not, in the short term, be affected unduly by low energy locations, but maybe in the medium to long term. Manifestation examples being relationship problems, tenseness, divorce, conflict, and less than perfect health mentally and physically

  • Feng shui must surely be just another name for what I'm on about!


  • Another high energy mountain location in South Westland I've spent aprox. 80 days of my life in: from the slopes of Mt Hooker looking down into the Clarke valley, and The Solution Range, beyond which is the The Landsborough River, and further away yet my home town of Wanaka...
    mthooker400-2.jpg

    Wrapping it up: The two posts below talk about perception. Raise sensitivity and awareness and perception changes, then the identification of healthy areas to live in simply follows! This is one [rather odd I'll admit], technique that works for myself:

    I imagine an aspect of myself being anywhere from 10 metres to hundreds of meters away from myself looking in my direction observing myself.

    Then, and this is where for me it gets rather multi dimensional: I then observe this observer observing myself.



    When I get it right I then notice my vision and other senses, but especially my vision, notices multiple instances of acute attention to details, in rapid succession - the end result being I simply see objects and patterns of light and shade I'd normally miss. Thus I look at my New Zealand landscape photography literally through new eyes, but the real implication is the way to a means of a "Meaningful Life". Of course astute composition can draw the attention of others to seeing things differently, and hopefully with compassion we'll all get there sooner rather than later!

    Links:

    The Way to a Meaningful Life... more>>

    Stupa ..more>>

    The Chandrakirti Centre Tibetan Buddhist Study and Meditation Centre ..more >>

    Feng shui.. more >>

    Geopathic Stress.. more >>

    Landsborough River... more >>


  • NZ Photographer Tony Bridge has a wide range of beautiful work and textually diverse material on photography and perception ... more >>

  • My good friend Roger Wandless has a great New Zealand landscape photography site with shots that demonstrate what is possible in terms of how the eye can be taken on a journey [perception over time!]... more >>


  • PS just after posting Tony [as above] sent me this link to a couple of interesting posts... more >>


  • Acknowledgments:
    Rika Couwenbergh ex Wanaka
    His Holiness the Dali Lama
    Roger Wandless
    Sam [Pepper] White

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