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New Zealand -- particularly Queenstown
and the South Island -- are frequently called the adventure
travel capital of the world. On this trip, you'll quickly see
why. With our friendly gay and lesbian group, you'll enjoy not
only the activities New Zealand offers, but its varied landscape
and scenery.
Take the sparkling lakes of
Italy and the deep-cut fjords of Norway, the snow-capped
Alps of Switzerland and the glistening glaciers of Alaska, the
dolphin-filled waters of Greece and the Highland hiking trails
of Scotland. Now pack it all onto one small island -- and you'll
be shocked how much room is still left for sheep. That's New
Zealand.
As a Wild Kiwi,
you'll enjoy a new activity every day. Glacier hikes, kayaking,
mountain biking, snorkeling with dolphins and seals, canyoning,
rock climbing, river surfing, rafting, and even a bungy jump,
are just a few of the activities that await you.
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We begin in cheerful Nelson, at the
northern tip of the South Island. This pleasant fishing port and
crafts community gets more sunlight than any other spot in New
Zealand, and offers a warm introduction to local hospitality
during our two-night stay.
Linger over coffee at
a sidewalk cafe. Browse in the galleries. New Zealand is
famous for its many walking trails (known here as tracks);
hikers will enjoy The Center of New Zealand Walk, which
departs right from town with spectacular views of the bay. Or
simply head for Nelson's long stretch of sandy beach. There's
nothing like a dose of sunlight to get over jet lag.
For our first evening, we've
reserved tables at one of Nelson's top restaurants. This is an
opportunity get to know a few of your fellow travelers over
dinner.
Who will be there? With
our emphasis on active vacations and the outdoors, Alyson
Adventures' trips draw people who are energetic and outgoing,
who enjoy interacting with life and with each other. The
majority of people on a typical trip are traveling alone but
there are usually several couples as well. Single travelers
don't need to pay a single supplement as we'll match you with a
roommate if you'd like the double-occupancy price. A majority of
the group will most likely fall in the 30-to-55 age range but
there will almost certainly be some who are older and quite
possibly a few in their twenties.
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The next morning, we head for nearby
Abel Tasman National Park. No one who visits this breathtaking
park forgets the scenery that awaits. We've planned a day of sea-kayaking
in the clear waters of Tasman Bay.
If you've never kayaked
before, don't worry. We use stable two-person sea kayaks, and
fifteen minutes of instruction is all you'll need to learn how
to paddle and steer.
Soon you'll glide past
wind-sculpted islands onto the golden beach of a sparkling
lagoon. Catch a few minutes of sun on the sand, with the
lingering tang of salt on your tongue before you stop for your
lunch. Then cool off with a swim in the clear sea while you
haul your kayak back into the water. Don't be surprised if you
see a dolphin flash through the surf this afternoon as your
kayak ripples through the gentle waves.
Today's kayaking is included
in the trip price and most of the group will be out on the
water. But the hiking trails of Abel Tasman also are
spectacular, winding through the native beech forests to rock
canyons and picturesque waterfalls. Avid hikers have the option
of choosing this activity instead and will have many appealing
trails to choose from.
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Blenheim (pronounced "blennum")
lies in the heart of New Zealand's famed Marlborough wine
country. Cloudy Bay Sauvignon Blanc, one of the country's top
wines, comes from here, as do many others. We'll stop at a
Marlborough winery for a wine-tasting and a vineyard tour.
Afterwards, we’ll have lunch at a beautifully-sited restaurant
fronting the South Pacific further down the east coast at a
hamlet called Kekerengu.
A few acres of sheep -- well,
actually more than a few acres -- and we reach the scenic
peninsula of Kaikoura. The name Kaikoura means "eat
crayfish". That is, indeed, high on our agenda. This
seaside town is justly famous for the spiny lobsters known
locally as crayfish. But the real draw for us is the abundance
of sea mammals.
Huge schools of squid live in
the deep trenches off Kaikoura; these attract sperm whales,
the largest toothed animals on earth. Whale watches are a
popular activity here. Giant squid also live off the shores of
Kaikoura, though they are seldom sighted and nobody's yet been
eaten by one.
A two-hour hike along
the jagged peninsula takes us past a seal colony, along the
rocky coast, through sea caves, then back along the clifftop.
(This hike cannot be done at high tide, so if tidal times are
wrong today, we'll try the next day.) Back in town, there's
plenty more to explore. Visit Kaikoura's best-known land site,
the Fyffe House. Sitting on a stack of whale bones, it provides
a glimpse of a long-past era when harpoonists balanced in frail
boats as they hunted for whales.
And then... if you're up to it:
Kaikoura's best! Try a tasty dinner of crayfish at one of
Kaikoura's best seafood restaurants.
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Most visitors to Kaikoura are content
to admire the sea life from the dry deck of a boat. Not us!
We'll put on wetsuits, take a short boat ride into the bay, and
listen to some background about the dusky dolphins that call
this water their home. And then, we snorkel with the dolphins.
You slide off the boat.
Dorsal fins flash in the distance, but underwater, all you see
is the filtered sunlight. Then you remember your instructions:
the dolphins are curious. But you must tell them you're
here! So you start making noises. Hoooot! Hoooot!
Kaa-Kaa-Kaa! Immediately a graceful grey body
slides right under your nose, then another, and another. Hoooot!
Hoooot! Now one wants to play, and circles
around under you. You circle too, trying to catch up, but
there's no question who's better at this game.
Those who'd rather stay on the
boat can sip hot chocolate as they watch a great performance by
the acrobats of the sea - and their new playmates. Dusky
dolphins are the most playful of all dolphin species. Scientists
don't yet understand why they love to skip and somersault
through the air, but that doesn't stop the show.
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Touring south, we arrive in Christchurch,
the South Island's largest city, built of Anglican dreams and
determination. Laid-out on a simple grid pattern around a
central cathedral, Christchurch will surprise with its English
gardens, lively cafe scene, neo-gothic architecture, and vibrant
arts scene.
Our hotel is in the center of
the excitement, a block behind the Cathedral, convenient to all
downtown sights, shopping, nightlife, and Hagley Park, a
sprawling expanse of green that dominates the western edge of
downtown and contains the perfectly manicured botanic
gardens. Just enjoying the scents of a hundred varieties of
roses could fill a sweet hour.
Hire a punt and be guided along
the serpentine Avon River, watching for trout and black swans as
you wend through the park. If you want to be more active, take
the Christchurch Gondola 945 meters up the side of a collapsed
volcano to the summit of Mount Cavendish, which offers expansive
vistas of the city below and of the Canterbury Plains.
Afterwards you can bike your way back to the bottom of Mount
Cavendish or all the way to the hotel.
Due to its proximity to Antarctica,
Christchurch serves as the headquarters of the New Zealand and
United States Antarctic Programs. It’s still an eight-hour
flight to Antarctica, but you can learn more about the coldest
and driest continent by visiting the International Antarctica
Centre, where, among other things, you can experience the chills
of an Antarctic snowstorm – parkas are provided! There is also
an excellent exhibit on Antarctic exploration at the Canterbury
Museum.
In the evening, enjoy a
tasty buffet of New Zealand cuisine, then walk through the
Willowbank wildlife reserve. This is an opportunity to see some
of New Zealand's distinctive wildlife, most especially that
elusive nocturnal bird: the Kiwi.
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Yes, New Zealand does have Alps: In
fact, New Zealand’s Southern Alps serve as the spine of the
southern island, jutting-up just inland along the West Coast,
from Nelson in the north to the southern tip of the island. The
Alps cause a dramatic change in the climate, creating temperate
rainforests on the West Coast, yet hot and dry plains in the
east. Today we leave the sheep behind (don't worry -- we'll see
them again) as we cross the Southern Alps by way of dramatic
Arthur's Pass. We’ll have several stops along the way to
explore this new terrain: forests of beech, rocky karst
landscapes, vistas of mountain valleys and peaks, and at the end
of the day, the wild west coastline of the Tasman Sea.
Shortly after our first
mountain pass, we will have a short stop at Castle Hill Rocks.
Teetering over lush green grass are tall, short, huge, and squat
boulders and cliffs of limestone, which, weathered by erosion,
create magical shapes, with some even looking like castles. Some
may want to hike here while others head further up the road to
Cave Stream Reserve to get wet in the wonders of a cave carved
through the limestone, creating it’s own interesting shapes
and thrills. Afterwards we’ll stop at Arthur’s Pass Village
for an enjoyable 45-minute hike up a switchback trail, past
rocky ravines and through Mountain Beech forest, to the
spectacular 131 meter Devil's Punchbowl Waterfall.
Then it’s a steep (16%
grade!) down the Alps to the Tasman Sea. We’ll spend the night
in Greymouth, a historic gold-mining area, but before checking
into our hotel, we’ll drive up the wild west coast to the
dramatic cliffs and blowhole at Punakaiki Rocks. As the winds
blow from the west along the Tasman Sea, the waters become rough
and slam into the western side of New Zealand, creating a
dramatic coastline of weathered cliffs and beaches. At Punakaiki,
the waves crash against pancake-layered limestone cliffs. If the
tide is right, we’ll catch the waves exploding up through the
blowhole!
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Today you’ll have an option to try another
activity unique to New Zealand: blackwater rafting.
We’ll be outfitted in a wetsuit and helmet with a torch (Kiwi
for flashlight), then after a short drive, we’ll hike to the
entrance to a series of caves. Our certified guides will lead us
down into the darkness and surprise: an underground river!
There, you’ll wade and explore the wonders of the cave, then
jump onto an inner tube and float with the current through the
darkness, under a star-like ceiling created by the luminescence
of the famed New Zealand Glow Worm.
After blackwater rafting,
we’ll travel down the coast to the old town of Hokitika.
Originally settled during the gold rush of the 1860s, Hokitika
has undergone several transformations since those heady days.
Today, one big local industry is carving jade (locally known as
greenstone). You can watch the artisans at work in several
shops. Another workshop produces handcrafted gold jewelry from
the small nuggets that are still found locally. This is our best
New Zealand souvenir shopping stop.
If there was ever any doubt
that the South Island is lightly inhabited, these roads prove
it. Even on the major west-coast road, traffic is so light that
most bridges can only handle cars in one direction at a time --
and still there's never a wait. (Even more interesting is the
bridge -- still on the main road -- where a one-lane bridge
handles not only traffic from both directions, but also a
railroad track!) In fact, the only delay is caused by cows in
the road.
We arrive in the tiny village
of Franz Joseph Glacier, at the base of the largest of these
rivers of ice. Tonight or tomorrow night, we can take a quiet
walk that takes us through moss-covered forest, just a short
distance from our hotel. After dinner, the trail sparkles with
that distinctive New Zealand creature, the glow worm. Then, away
from the trees and the lights of the city, the jeweled sky comes
alive, and we gaze up at the glow worms of the Milky Way, and
the four corners of the Southern Cross.
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At the glacial terminus, a steady
torrent of water gushes from a sub-surface river. A picturesque
45-minute hike, against a glistening mountain backdrop, takes us
to the edge of the ice. There, we fit on crampons, pick up a
pointed walking stick, and begin exploring an icy world on our glacier
hike.
Those looking for a shorter
day on the ice can take the half-day tour, then turn back
after a relatively easy 90-minute walk on the glacier. For
others committed to a day of icy adventure, an all-day
excursion takes us past towering pinnacles of cerulean teel-blue
ice and over shimmering crevasses. We may wander into crystal
caves that were formed only last week, and will be gone
tomorrow.
From a distance, the
glaciers simply look like large, two-dimensional sheets of ice.
Close up, they become an eerie ice world, full of tunnels
disappearing into the glacier, serpentine rivers of chilled
water, fantastic ice structures, and yawning crevasses.
Occasional creaks and crunches remind us that as the glacier
moves -- some of the world’s fastest, at speeds of up to 2 or
3 feet a day -- new crevasses and formations continually appear
and disappear. Our experienced local guides swing their ice axes
to cut steps in the rock, and guide us to routes where we can
see the many faces of the glacier.
For a special thrill, take a
helicopter ride through the glacial valleys, or let a plane
deposit you right atop a glacier.
Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers
are among the few spots in the world where a glacier advances to
a temperate rainforest. After a day on the glacier, those who
want to explore the green world below can choose from several
short hikes.
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Even if you aren't normally an early riser,
this is a great morning to get up early and go for a hike to
take in the grandeur of this unique setting. After breakfast, we
leave the glaciers, and drive down the west coast, across Haast
Pass and into Wanaka, with stops enroute to see primordial
swamps and forests, waterfalls, and vistas of huge
glacially-formed lakes, including Lake Wanaka and Lake Hawea.
We spend three nights in
the quiet mountain village of Wanaka, enjoying a wealth of
activities. Perched on Lake Wanaka, with Mount Aspiring National
Park rising behind it, Wanaka offers sports on land, sea, and in
the air.
We'll arrive in time for a
quick hike above our hotel to view the layout of the town, then
we’ll settle in for one of Andy and Graeme’s famous BBQ
dinners. Afterwards, take a walk along the lakefront and through
the quaint downtown, stopping at Kai Waka Pai or Cafe Paradiso
for a nightcap.
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What will be your favorite activity on
Wild Kiwi? Many travelers give that title to a sport you may
never have heard of: Canyoning (sometimes known in North
America as canyoneering).
Don a wetsuit, then hike down
to a crystal stream that over the millennia has carved its way
deep into the bedrock. Now, you'll simply follow this stream and
canyon as they wind through the rocks and trees.
First obstacle: The
stream drops fifteen feet, through a narrow trough, into a pool
of water below. There's no obvious way to get down until your
instructor demonstrates. It's quite simple: sit at the top, and
just slide down.
The next drop-off has no such
slide, so you try another technique: Rappelling (known Down
Under as "abseiling"), in which you slide down a
rope, using a belay plate to control your speed. Then another
pool, and a more basic technique: This time you simply jump
into the pool of water ten feet below. Bend your knees as you
hit, the guide explains, and it goes without a hitch.
Those are the three basic
canyoning techniques: slide, rappel, jump. Soon you've got
the hang of them -- or so you think. But in the natural
environment of the canyon, every situation offers its own
peculiarities.
The next water slide looks to
be about 25 feet, and just about straight down. No problem, it's
a deep pool of water, explains your guide, and you soon discover
he's right.
Working along the edge of the
canyon, you spot a giant boulder lodged between the canyon walls
ahead. A rope runs from your wall to the other side. Moments
later, securely clipped to a carabiner, you're sliding along the
rope, 100 feet of air gaping below you, and onto the boulder.
Hot tea is served on the boulder, but only half the group is
able to relax and enjoy it -- the others are firmly gripping the
safety rope.
Ready for the next step?
You've got to descend those 100 feet. There happens to be a
small waterfall in your path, but the guide hasn't noticed it,
and you're too polite to say anything. So, before you can say
"call me a cab," you're clipped into the rappel rope
and splashing down through that waterfall. As with other
rappels, the guide has a second safety line attached to you.
You can control your descent with the belay plate; but if you
mess up, the guide will still have you.
If you're not participating
in canyoning, you can sign up for one of many other
activities offered. Biking, wine tours, or even a full day of
paragliding lessons on Mt. Iron, overlooking the lake, at a site
known for its steady winds. New designs have made it easier to
learn this once-dangerous sport.
Your first glides will be short
distances, from the bottom of the hill to a grassy paddock.
Soon, as your instructor communicates through a radio in your
helmet, you'll increase the distances. By the end of the day,
you could easily find yourself flying solo, right from the
summit.
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Today we will tour one of New Zealand’s
famous sheep farms -- what North Americans would call a vast
ranch. There are less than four million people in New Zealand,
but over forty million sheep! We’ll visit the Glendhu Sheep
Station, recently used as one of the sites for the
Eco-challenge, located around the bay on Lake Wanaka. Originally
started in the 19th century, the station is still family-owned
and operated. Specially trained dogs are able to herd and direct
all the sheep within miles of the headquarters at the sound of a
whistle. We’ll watch them herd and single out a sheep or two
for shearing, then have lunch or tea at the original homestead.
An option for today is a unique
eco-rafting experience, one that is less challenging than our
rafting option in a few days in Queenstown. Spend four hours in
a rubber raft with local legend Lewis, experiencing a bit of
everything: birdwatching, brewing herbal tea from leaves we've
just picked, listening to the history of New Zealand, then
shooting a few Class-II and (briefly) Class-III rapids.
New Zealand had its own gold
rush, some 15 years after the '49ers of the United States
swarmed to California, and the sandy beach alongside the river
where we're rafting holds a higher concentration of gold
flakes than any other river in the world. In fact, commercial
dredgers would be lining the banks if that weren't strictly
forbidden. We, however, are allowed to carry away whatever we
can turn up by the centuries-old method of panning for gold,
and with a few minutes practice, each of us ends up with a
small bag of sand that sparkles in the sunlight as the rays
reflect on the yellow dust.
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Early risers watch a sunrise
illuminating the mountains of Mount Aspiring National Park
before enjoying our last breakfast in Wanaka. Today's drive
across historic Cadrona Pass brings us to a stunning perch on
the Crown Range Saddle high above the Kawarau River valley
overlooking Lake Wakatipu.
Once we've descended from
the Crown Range Saddle, we'll swing down the Kawarau River to
our next adrenaline-rush activity: the most anticipated and
talked-about Wild Kiwi event and also the briefest. The bungy
jump lasts perhaps 30 seconds from the heart-stopping moment
you step into thin air, until you've stopped bobbing up and down
sufficiently to be hauled into the pick-up raft. But the
adrenaline will keep pumping for hours.
It's all deceptively easy.
Walk onto the Kawarau suspension bridge, present your ticket,
and sit down on the platform. The jumpmaster wraps a towel
around both your ankles, ties a sturdy sling to it, and clips
you to the bottom of a bungy cord (essentially a very long
rubber band, but if they called it that, nobody would sign
up). Stand up, walk to the edge -- and now it's up to you.
What's your style? A
graceful swan dive is the classic exit. A camera captures the
critical moment, and just within our group, we see quite a
range. One steps off upright, his hands pressed in front of him
as if in prayer; another scrunches up in sheer terror. Our
64-year-old steps off as nonchalantly as if going out to buy a
loaf of bread. Two guys admit to having been firmly instructed
by their mothers not to jump: one does it anyway; the other
obeys Mom. (Our advice for future travelers: Don't tell Mom your
plans until after the trip. That way, you can have fun without
being disobedient.)
Bungy jumping got its
start right here at the Kawarau Suspension Bridge, outside
Queenstown. A.J. Hackett no longer offers a free jump to
anyone who will take the plunge nude; too many people accepted
that promotional offer. But the 140-foot bungy jump is free
for participants in our tour.
However -- to answer the most
frequently-asked question about Wild Kiwi -- no,
you don't have to make the jump. It's free -- but it's
optional.
Our day is not yet over!
Following the rivers out of the mountains, we pass into the
acclaimed adventure capital of the Southern Hemisphere,
Queenstown, our home for the next three nights.
We've got several activities
scheduled in Queenstown, but you have virtually unlimited
options that you can try instead during our two and a half days
here.
If you're a whitewater fan,
this afternoon is a good time for whitewater rafting on
Class-III and IV rapids. Based on river conditions and water
levels, we'll head for one of two nearby rivers. The wild and
untamed Shotover River takes us through six rapids, then we raft
through 500 feet of darkness as we pass through the Oxenbridge
Tunnel, an historic diversion tunnel built by goldminers. Or
we'll raft the Kawarau, the largest commercially rafted river in
New Zealand. Here we pass under the Chard vineyards, and through
four sets of rapids. We'll paddle under the bungee jumpers on
the Kawarau bridge, culminating in the unforgettable Dog Leg
Rapids. On the Kawarau, there are sometimes opportunities for
cliff jumping, and to swim through smaller rapids.
Back in town, you'll also want
to stroll onto the peninsula and the Queenstown Garden. And this
evening, you'll discover that Queenstown's highlights extend
into the culinary realm, as well.
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This morning is on your own to explore
Queenstown. A good introduction to the area is the gondola
ride to the top of Bob's Peak, 1400 feet above town. Sip a
drink at the restaurant as you watch bungy jumpers hurl
themselves from The Ledge, a precarious platform jutting into
space, or paragliders sail above the lake.
Bungy jumping started in
Queenstown, and every year some nut in Queenstown comes up
with a new adrenaline sport. A few of these we're happy to skip.
(If you want to roll down the mountain inside a giant inflatable
ball, please reserve it yourself.) But there's one that we
really like, which we suggest for this afternoon: Riversurfing.
Never heard of it? Okay,
imagine yourself whitewater rafting, with an enormous wave
coming up. Now imagine yourself in the same spot, but without
the raft. There -- you've got the general idea.
Riversurfing has one thing in
common with bungy jumping: The first time you hear about it, you
think somebody's pulling your leg. But they're not. Armed with a
meter-long boogie board, short fins, helmet, and 45 minutes of
instruction, you'll hop into the Kawarau River. For a while, you
flow placidly along, admiring the rugged cliffs that tower above
you. For variety, try riding your boogieboard like a horse; the
balance takes a bit of practice, but soon you'll feel like a wet
John Wayne.
Then come the first
rapids. Putting your instruction to good use, you change
your boogieboard grip to a more stable position, and ride out
the waves. Not so hard. You do a full body
twist, and come up smiling. What's all the fuss?
Another stretch of calm water,
then you see the Class-III rapids ahead. Now the adrenaline
starts to flow! Keep left, the guide motions.
Before you know it, you've gotten through the churning
whitewater. Still not hard. Your instructor motions you to the
side, and explains: Try it again, but this time, catch the wave
and surf it! A backward eddy carries you upstream to the rapids,
and you stand on a rock, then plunge in and try again. Aim
45 degrees upstream, catch the eddy behind that rock, paddle
like hell to the rapids, and then catch the wave! On
your second try, you succeed, and ride the wave for perhaps five
seconds, foam swirling past as you surf in place.
More scenic flatwater. A bridge
appears ahead -- something seems to be falling from it -- hey,
it's the bridge where you bungee-jumped a couple of days ago!
You paddle over to the side and watch a jumper.
And then . . . here come the
Class-IV rapids. Your guide motions you ashore, and from a
nearby bluff, you preview what's to come. See that wave
there, he says, motioning to a pile of water that would
seem able to sink the Titanic. That's the one you need to
watch. Actually, it would be hard to miss. Minutes
later, you're in it, trying to remember your instructions. Attack
that wave. Weight the board, and dive down into it. You
do your best, but the monster simply slaps you back. Yet
somehow, anyway, you pass on through, and soon you're cruising
on smoother waters.
Some good news about these
particular rapids: If you feel they're too much for you, you can
walk around them. Some even better news: Those who wish can walk
back and run them again.
This evening, a few of us will
go out on the town and see what Queenstown has to offer. With
its adventure activities during the summer and world-class
skiing in the winter, there’s a lot to look at and plenty of
night clubs to visit. What an end to an exciting day!
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After two weeks in New Zealand, you'll
have some ideas about how to spend your last day. There are
plenty of choices.
If you've ever watched rock
climbers scaling a cliff, you may have assumed the sport
requires phenomenal strength. Yes, certain overhanging cliffs
are easiest if you can do a few dozen chin-ups without
breaking into a sweat. But most climbing is more dependent on
technique and judgment, and after a day of rock climbing,
you'll find yourself scurrying up cliffs that you once would
have thought would stymie Spiderman himself.
For a day on land, we
recommend a hike to the top of Ben Lomond, the mountain
overlooking Queenstown and the lake. You can start by taking
the gondola, or hike from town, and can go all the way to the
summit, or merely to the pass. Depending on your choices, this
can range from an easy to a moderately strenuous hike, well
rewarded with grand views of the Remarkables.
Those who want excitement
without sweating today can jet-boat within inches of jagged
overhanging rocks on one of the famed Shotover Jet boats.
These remarkable boats, powered by jet rather than propeller,
can go through water a mere four inches deep, and the pilots
take great delight in blasting full speed toward a looming
boulder, then turning a full 180-degrees within a single boat
length. Or take a calmer boat ride: the restored steamship TSS
Earnslaw makes several trips across the lake each day.
Pan for gold in nearby
Arrowtown, once a thriving settlement, and the nearby ghost
towns of Macetown and Bendigo. You could get there by bus -- but
we recommend mountain biking. The dirt road to Macetown
takes you across 40 fords, perfect for a hot day.
Horseback riding is
available on Doonholme Deer farm, where both new and experienced
riders are welcomed -- though we recommend that beginners stick
to a half-day ride. The trails take you into 800 acres of
rolling countryside, with spectacular mountain views that seem
to be ubiquitous in Queenstown.
Those who developed a taste
for canyoning in Wanaka can experience a new canyon
near Queenstown. Splash through waist-deep water and jump into
a pool below. The waterslide here has a special twist: As you
push off from the top, you can't see even the bottom. You'll
just have to trust your guide that it's all going to work out.
(One reassuring fact: your guide slides down first.)
Or, weather conditions
permitting, take a day trip to Milford Sound. Rudyard
Kipling described this deep fjord as "the eighth wonder of
the world." A winding trip through dark forest takes you to
the tip of the glacier-carved inlet, where you board a boat to
ride past cascading waterfalls and Mitre Peak, rising a full
mile high from the water. The boat draws so close to a
thundering waterfall that you could fill a wineglass with the
spray. In fact, one waterlogged guest has done exactly that.
Southern fur seals eye us carefully as they sunbathe on a rock.
Perhaps you thought we were
exaggerating when we called Queenstown "the adventure
capital of the Southern Hemisphere." But by now, it has
earned the title.
This evening, we’ll come
together and celebrate one last time as we end our two week
vacation together at our closing dinner at one of Queenstown’s
finest restaurants.
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The hardest thing about our trips is saying
goodbye to a wonderful group of new friends. As we make our way
home from Queenstown, however, there's one thing you can be sure
of: active vacations like this one draw a special type of
person. We depart knowing that many of us will see one another
yet again.
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