We got two full-suspension mountain bikes (Giant) with adjustable saddle pole (bikers know why this is a good thing). We avoided the crowd at the bike park along Queenstown Hill and pedaled a few kilometers outside of town to the “7 Mile Riding Area”. It was definitely worth the ride. 26 tracks, 20 km trails (some with a great flow), scenic points and not many bikers. No lifts, no restaurants, just pure biking. Wonderful. But we have to admit feeling completely exhausted in the evening.
It’s a rainy day, but we didn’t care. Just drove directly to Queenstown to our campground and planned the upcoming days. Queenstown is the Mekka for extreme sports tourists. Bungee, Skydiving, Canyoning, Mountain Biking… you name it. We reserved two fullys (Mountain Bikes) for the next day and booked a Skydiving-Jump.
Less extreme but still nice was our site at the campground at a creek, including a duck family.
We joined a small group with Trips & Tramps. It’s a scenic drive to Milford Sound with some good photo stops, e.g the Mirror Lakes.
As written in the previous article, Milford Sound is known as the wettest inhabited place in New Zealand and one of the wettest in the world (up to 9 meter rain per year!). Travel guides write it basically rains every day. Might be a bit exaggerated, but you get the idea. However, we had a warm and cloudless day and a wonderful time cruising through the fiords. After spotting some seals we wondered if we could also view some dolphins. Well… no, but even better. Even the captain and the tour guide were surprised, as a tresher shark jumped out of the water – multiple times. Hard to believe, but we have the footage. Gerry’s theory: the beginning of a Sharknado!
The ride back to Te Anau had to be earned. We did the Key Summit Trail hike and enjoyed New Zealand’s alpine region. Well, that was a day, even to our (now very high) benchmarks! Thank you, land of Kiwis!
A driving day to the Fiordland National Park, and an escape from the rain, too. Ironically, Milford Sound (our next destination) is the rainiest point of New Zealand! But forecasts are very promising… the sunset in Te Anau (pronounced similarly as the Italian “ti amo” just with an “n”) at least made us hungry for even more sun.
We had to skip Cathedral Caves, as this beautiful rock tunnel is only accessible at low tides, which we missed for that day, so we drove further to a campground at Curio Bay / Porpoise Bay. Sometimes, dolphins can be seen from here (missed them, though), a petrified forest and with some luck, yellow-eyed penguins. About an hour before sunset three penguins returned from the sea. This time, taking pictures was allowed. Check.
It was the description of a campground which took us to the Otago Peninsula, and it was worth the ride. Scenic roads through high hills and wild coasts with abundant wildlife. On the short hike “Seal Point to Sandfly Bay” we almost stepped over two big seals.
The touristy thing first: a walk up on Baldwin Street, the world’s steepest street according to Guinness World Records.
World’s steepest street
Dunedin (pronounced as Dah-nee-den, German: Daniiden) surely offers a lot – British / Scottish styled buildings (“Edinburgh of the south”), breweries, museums, chocolate factory and much more. We have to admit that we only stopped to buy an additional blanket for colder nights and left the busy city soon after.
Around 50 spherical boulders can be found at a beach a bit south from Oamaru. Some of them weight over seven tons. Their age is estimated to be around 60 million years.
We took the nice scenic route till Oamaru, a picturesque town known as the Steampunk Capital.
Steampunk HQ
After dinner we watched little blue penguins returning from their hunt on sea. Unfortunately, filming was not allowed.
Little blue penguins – my illegal photo, taken via spyglass
But on the way back to our campground, we saw even more of those cute little fellas coming back to their nests. One nest was even within our campground.