Showing posts with label Blue Lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue Lake. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

The Central Otago Rail Trail

Tangaroa parked at Lake Dunstan


Central Otago is an area that both Malcolm and I love and keep returning to—from one direction or another.  There is a clarity in the air in 'Central': the mountains stand out sharp and clear against the blue skies.  The hills and valleys may look a dusty brown but there are vineyards on the hillsides and pockets of fruit growing areas where everything is lush and green.  The fruit stalls along the country roads are always enticing and Central Otago cherries are to die for.
            One of the highlights of our South Island explorations was riding the Central Otago Rail Trail.  This is New Zealand's original Great Ride and first Rail Trail.  Providing 152 kilometres of off-road riding, the trail follows the former route of the railway.  Like most things in the South Island it all started with gold.  Otago was one of the main areas to experience gold rushes in the 1860s.  After this came the orchardists and farmers.  The roads were rough and, wanting to help the farmers get their wares to markets in Dunedin, the Provincial Council began planning a railway.  Begun in 1879, it took 42 years of work with pick and shovel before the line was completed.
            Sixty years later road transport was much more viable and the railway became uneconomic.  When the Clyde Dam was built the railway lines between Clyde and Cromwell were dug up.  A decade later, in 1991, the track was taken out all the way to Middlemarch.  Three years later the Otago Central Rail Trust was established, with the idea of turning the disused rail corridor into a cycle trail.  By the time the trail opened in 2000 the trust, together with DOC, had provided a track with a good surface, safe tunnels and decked bridges.  Along the trail they provided information boards and shelters, making the ride not just one through the countryside but through history.
Clyde

On the cycle trail between Clyde and Alexandra

            We began the Rail Trail in Clyde, parking Tangaroa near the dam on Lake Dunstan.  Clyde began life as a gold mining town called Upper Dunstan (with Alexandra being Lower Dunstan).  After its initial boom time, followed by a period of dredging in the 1890s, Clyde became a backwater—which helped preserve its lovely old buildings.  One of the first things we did was to pick up a brochure describing all Clyde's heritage buildings and wander around the old part of the township.  We looked at historic cottages with pretty old-fashioned gardens, churches, banks, the Court House, the Post Office, hotels, stores and much more—all built from the attractive local stone.
            We have cycled from Clyde to Alexandra on both sides of the Clutha River and prefer the Alexandra to Clyde 150th Anniversary Walkway on the southern bank, although this is not the official Rail Trail route.  This track passes along willow-lined stretches of the river with evidence of gold-mining days to be seen, especially in the area of the old Earnscleugh Tailings.
            Like Clyde, Alexandra sprang up after gold was discovered.  Alexandra still has many old buildings and sites connected with those days but, unlike Clyde, it has grown into a thriving town.  We always love having a coffee at the old courthouse, now a cafe with seating in its pretty garden.  The courthouse was built in 1879 and was used for almost a century; it has been restored so that its original appearance can be appreciated.  Nearby, beside the 'new' bridge over the Clutha River, (constructed in 1958) the towers of the old bridge stand like aquatic sculpture, their arched 'windows' providing snatches of view: water, landscape, sky.
            We were soon immersed in the landscape ourselves as we cycled, over a period of days, from Alexandra to Middlemarch.  We moved Tangaroa several times to freedom camping spots along the trail and used the car to take us to the start of each days ride.  After getting back to the bus we would shower, have something to eat and drink, then load the bikes onto the bus and drive to where we had left the car.  Then we could put the bikes on the car's rack, hook it up behind the bus and drive away to our next destination.  It may sound complicated but the system worked well.
Alexandra

            From Alexandra we cycled to Omakau.  The distant hills were brown but the landscape was quite green in places with merino sheep grazing beside ponds.  The ganger's sheds had information panels regarding the flora and fauna, history and geology of the landscape we were cycling through.  At Chatto Creek we came across the remains of an old gold dredge that worked the Manuherikia River for about ten years from 1898.  The population of Chatto Creek stands at eleven now but was once booming—not with gold miners for once—but with rabbiters.  These men worked on the early sheep stations, trying to eradicate the rabbits that were becoming pests throughout the area.  The historic Chatto Creek Tavern is right beside the trail as is the tiny Post Office that has been restored—you can post a letter bearing the Chatto Creek postmark.
Chatto Creek

            The settlement of Omakau is not particularly picturesque but six kilometres away, just off the trail, is Ophir—which is a very attractive place.  Ophir is a town founded in gold-mining days.  Originally known as Blacks Diggings,  it got shortened to Blacks, a name that lingered even after the town was re-named Ophir in 1875.  Thousands of miners lived in the area in the 1860s and it became a commercial centre with churches, courthouse, school, stores and all the other buildings associated with a thriving town.  The population dropped as the miners left and the final blow came when the railway by-passed Ophir.  Like Clyde, Ophir became a sleepy backwater until, ironically, the coming of the cycle trail.  Although it is not actually on the route, cyclists love to divert to Ophir for photo opportunities.  We watched a group of cyclists pose in front of the historic Post Office as we strolled around admiring the old buildings.
At Ophir

            Like Clyde, (and St Bathans which we visited later) the village was packed with lovely old buildings.  Rambling roses bloomed in profusion, tumbling over fences and trellises in the gardens of old stone cottages.  With their corrugated iron roofs, whitewashed stone walls and with lace curtains in their sash windows, it seemed as though we were walking around a village unchanged for a hundred years.  The Post Office was built in 1886 and taken over by Heritage New Zealand in 1976.  It is open from 9.00 am until 12.00 pm daily, and is another place where visitors can get a unique postmark on their letter or postcard.  .
            The next stage of the Rail Trail was probably the most scenic.  Between Omakau and Oturehua we rode along sections of trail that passed over viaducts and bridges—including the picturesque and widely photographed Manuherikia Bridge, the longest on the trail—and through tunnels.  As the trail wound between these feats of engineering, we cycled beside weathered schist rock formations, and looked across striking scenery to the distant mountains that framed the views.
            We stayed overnight in the grassy paddock at Hayes Engineering Works at Oturehua, a POP.  This is an historic homestead with a cluster of engineering workshops, once the farm and home of Ernest and Hannah Hayes.  The English-born settler was the sort of bloke who liked tinkering around in sheds, and he was soon inventing contrivances to help with work at Windmill Works, the Oturehua farm he established in 1895.  Ernest Hayes's most well-known invention was a refinement of a fencing wire strainer, still used world-wide today.
Hayes Engineering

Gilchrist's Store

            Malcolm was fascinated by all the agricultural and engineering tools and paraphernalia in the sheds and outbuildings.  I was captivated by the mud-brick homestead.  Built in the 1920s the home was well ahead of its time.  It had electricity, (generated by a wind turbine) music piped to all rooms, bookcases suspended from the ceilings and, in the bathroom, a flush toilet and overhead shower.  All the rooms were furnished in the Victorian and Edwardian style.  The parlour was crowded with side tables and pianos, the dining table was laid with the best crockery and silverware, the dresser groaning under a weight of plates, cups and saucers.  Each of the bedrooms looked as though the occupant has just popped out.  Ernest and Hannah had nine children, all of whom were brought up in the homestead.  Information about them all was displayed in their rooms.
            While Ernest was the engineer, wife Hannah was the saleswoman.  Despite the restrictive dress of the era, Hannah cycled around the farms of Otago selling the tools and inventions her husband had produced.  An interesting connection, as many of those cycling along the Rail Trail visit Hayes Engineering en route.  It is open from September to May and has a cafe.
            In Oturehua itself there was another reminder of bygone days, Gilchrist and Sons store, established in 1902.  Inside, the shop looked more like a museum—with ancient embossed metal tills and old adding machines on the counter, and nostalgic advertising posters and old biscuit tins displayed beside every-day goods for sale on the shelves.
            While we were parked at Oturehua we took the car to St Bathans, a 20-minute drive to the north.  Like Ophir, St Bathans is a former gold mining settlement now almost a ghost town, with a tiny permanent population and some amazing old buildings.  The Vulcan Hotel was built in 1882 and still displays an iconic, historical facade.  We wandered in for a cold drink and were the only customers.  The shamrock, displayed proudly on the signboard goes back to the days when there was rivalry between the many Irish miners in St Bathans and the Welsh settlers in nearby Cambrians, known locally as the 'wars of the roses'.  We were also told that the hotel is haunted by the ghost of a barmaid called Rose, who was murdered there in the 1880s.
The Blue Lake at St Bathans

St Bathans

            After walking up and down the main street admiring the other buildings, particularly the imposing wooden two-storey Post Office building, we took a look at another of St Bathan's famous landmarks, the Blue Lake.  The lake was formed by sluicing which reduced a former hill to a deep hole close beside the town.  The waters that now fill the Blue Lake are full of minerals and this gives the lake its distinctive turquoise colour.  The Blue Lake is surrounded by striking white clay cliffs, giving the area a surreal look.

            Back on the Rail Trail we cycled past the railway goods shed that famously features in artist Grahame Sydney's painting July in Maniototo.  It was early morning and the air was crisp and cold.  Stopping at the next ganger's shed to read the information panels, we were startled to see a young man struggling out of his sleeping bag.  Obviously it had looked like a good place to stop for the night!  We cycled on to Ranfurly where the NZMCA has a park near the Centennial Milkbar, one of the town's art deco buildings, now a gallery celebrating the style.
Art Deco architecture in Ranfurly

            From Ranfurly we drove to look at Naseby, yet another town with a rich gold-mining legacy.  Naseby was once the main business town in the Maniototo but missed out to Ranfurly when the railway came through and has declined in importance since.  It is now chiefly known as a curling centre (it has indoor and outdoor rinks) and for its historic streetscape.  Scots settlers introduced the sport of curling to Naseby in 1878 and it has been popular ever since. 
Naseby

            The Victorian buildings in Naseby were so old-fashioned that they looked like one of those tourist attractions made up from old buildings transported from other places.  This was not an outdoor museum though, just a pristine selection of architecture that included buildings of red brick, kauri and adobe.  There was a watchmaker's shop, surmounted by a clock, run by a Robert Strong from 1868 until 1959.  Next door, the shop sign still says 'boot manufacturer' but is operated as a museum.  The striking, two-storey, brick Post Office contrasted with the adjacent Union Church, built of corrugated iron in 1865.  Central Otago is unique in New Zealand in having these historic old towns, unspoiled by modern developments.

            We now had to cycle the final part of the Rail Trail.  We parked Tangaroa beside the trail at the tiny settlement of Tiroiti for a couple of days.  Arriving back to the bus one day we found ourselves surrounded by a herd of sheep that a farmer was mustering.  The cycle trail then took us through Hyde, another quiet ex-mining settlement, once called Eight Mile because that was the distance from Hamilton's gold mine.  We stopped for a picnic lunch at the old railway station two kilometres past the town, where there were still some original stock wagons rusting and rotting away on tracks.  The railway station is privately owned and was for sale.  A little further along the trail we came to a triangular cairn commemorating the Hyde railway disaster, which occurred in 1943.  Twenty-one passengers were killed and 47 injured.  Until the Tangiwai Disaster a decade later, it was New Zealand's worst railway accident.
Scenery along the Rail Trail





            It was a long straight slog across the Maniototo Plains next, with the mountains of the Rock and Pillar Range on our right.  I was relieved to reach Middlemarch.  We had moved Tangaroa there in preparation for riding this stretch, and Malcolm had cycled ahead to put on the hot water for showers. 
            I was very happy to have completed the 152-kilometre-long trail.  It had been an amazing ride through Central Otago's wonderful scenery.
Information about places mentioned in this post - correct at the time of writing

  • ·         The Otago Rail Trail

www.otagorailtrail.co.nz
This 150 km trail can be cycled in either direction, over a period of days.  We broke the ride into five sections:
Clyde to Omakau, 37 km, grade 1: easiest
Omakau to Oturehua, 30 km, grade 1: easiest
Oturehua to Ranfurly, 25 km, grade 1: easiest
Ranfurly to Hyde, 33 km, grade 1: easiest
Hyde to Middlemarch, 27 km, grade 1: easiest

Places to visit
  • ·         Hayes Engineering Works

39, Hayes Rd, Oturehua
www.heritage.org.nz/places/places-to-visit/otago-region/hayes-engineering
Hours: November-April 10.00 am-5.00 pm, September, October and May Wednesday-Sunday 10.00 am-5.00 pm, closed June-August
Entry price: adult $12

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

The Steaming Earth - around Taupo and Rotorua

Waimangu Warbrick Terrace

New Zealand is a volatile country—earthquakes shake us.  In the past volcanoes blasted the landscape and the earth simmers still, spitting boiling mud from bubbling pools and heating the water for those hot pools we love to soak in.  Lake Taupō was formed by a volcano 27,000 years ago.  It last erupted in AD 181, turning the skies red over China and Rome.  The caldera is now New Zealand's largest lake, with a surface area of 616 square kilometres.  Lake Rotorua was formed in another caldera, its volcano erupted 200,000 years ago.  Mount Tarawera last erupted in 1886, altering Lake Tarawera, the Blue and Green Lakes (and other smaller ones) burying the Māori village of Te Wairoa, and destroying the famous pink and white terraces.
            These silica terraces were at the time New Zealand's premier tourist attraction, a series of beautiful pools where people could bathe, the silica looking like frozen waterfalls between one pool and the next.  They look so stunningly beautiful in paintings and photographs from the time that I deeply regret their loss.  The eruption caused the deaths of about 120 people and altered the surrounding landscape, dumping tonnes of ash and debris over the area.  We found out a lot about the eruption at the Buried Village Museum which is on the road from Rotorua to Lake Tarawera.  This is a combination of museum, archaeological site and reconstruction, set in twelve acres of park-like grounds.
Waimangu Volcanic Valley
Waimangu Volcanic Valley, a little further south, was formed by the Tarawera eruption of 1886.  We walked for two hours through this amazing steaming and bubbling wonderland (taking a shuttle bus back to the visitors centre) discovering many features that illustrate the geothermal activity of the area.  There were pools, both hot and cold, coloured shades of blue, green and even red.  Hot springs bubbled up to the surface of Frying Pan Lake, causing strange sounds to echo around, while steam drifted up past the Cathedral Rocks behind.  These were completely changed in shape after the Frying Pan Flat eruption of 1917 which killed two people.  There are silica terraces that must be similar to the pink and white terraces, though on a smaller scale.  Ripple terraces are forming beside the original ones.  At the end of the walk we rested beside the shores of Lake Rotomahana, where boat cruises are available.
St Faith's Church, Rotorua

            Rotorua itself is a city built on geothermal activity.  Kuirau Park near the city centre is an area of thermal springs which can be strolled around in an hour.  On the lakeside itself we always love walking around to Ohinemutu, once the main centre for the Rotorua region.  The village was chosen because of its setting and because of the hot springs which Māori used for cooking and washing.  We first walked there one still evening and were soon shrouded by steam which gave the place an eerie feel.  No one was about but there were two carved meeting houses and a church.  It was as if we had stepped out of time.  The church was St Faith's, built in 1914.  The impressive interior is rich with carving and woven panels while a window is etched with the figure of a Māori Jesus, who appears to walk on the waters of the lake.
We headed to the Polynesian Spa hot pool complex beside Lake Rotorua where we took the waters, as visitors have been doing since 1878.  From the pools we had views over the lake.  Our muscles were relieved by the acidic water from the Priest Spring and we were promised ageless beauty as we relaxed in mineral rich waters of the Rachel Spring.  This complex is one of the more expensive and luxurious we have visited a contrast to places like homely Ngawha Springs in the north and tiny Morere Springs that we would visit later.
Hamurana Springs

            Springs of a different sort are found on Lake Rotorua's northern shores.  We followed the Hamurana Springs track through a forest of towering Redwoods (planted in 1919) before coming to New Zealand's deepest natural fresh water spring.  The crystal clear water that rises up into the pools here has been underwater for 70 years.  The main spring is called Te Puna-a-Hangarua and we saw lots of coins sparkling from the bottom.  Throwing coins into the spring is an old tradition, and back in 1957 divers recovered more than 5,000 pennies which were donated to charity.
            State Highway 30 took us west to Kawerau.  Built in the 1950s as a mill town, the town site was chosen because of its proximity to the Kaingaroa Forest and the readily available geothermal energy.  Now the little town encourages freedom camping in self contained vehicles like ours.  Not only can people park up for seven nights at various places in the town but Prideaux Park, where we stayed, has free power available.  Even better, just over the fence were the free, thermally heated pools where we had a few soaks.  These pools were a million miles from the sophisticated Polynesian Spa experience.  Here local families splashed around and had noisy fun.  It was an honest-to-goodness kiwi experience.   
On the Tarawera falls Track

            We wanted to visit Tarawera Falls near Lake Tarawera.  Described as the most spectacular falls in the Bay of Plenty, the waterfall is formed by a river plunging 65 metres down a sheer cliff face before separating into many smaller cascades.  Accordingly we went to an office in Kawerau for a forest access permit, and then drove Tangaroa along the 27 kilometres of forestry road to the DOC camp on the shores of the lake. 
            The walk started here at the Tarawera Outlet and followed the river through native bush for five kilometres, about one and a half-hours walking.  There were several very pretty rapids and waterfalls, also a tempting shady swimming hole, but the Tarawera Falls themselves were a disappointment.  It had been a dry summer and the cascade we had seen in pictures was not in evidence.  Water gushed from lower down and it was a picturesque scene—just not the dramatic one we had hoped for.  Back at the camp ground we decided the place was too dark and gloomy, so we drove Tangaroa all the way back to Kawerau and parked at the spot we'd left that morning.  In retrospect, we should have gone in the car—especially as the forestry road had been very muddy and Malcolm had to wash the bus and car on our return.  We were glad of those hot pools after the day's exercise.
On the Tarawera Falls Track

            Back in the Rotorua area we walked a circuit around the Blue Lake.  This is so named because it looks a turquoise colour, due to light reflecting off pumice on its bottom.  Two thirds of the walk is through native bush and the track passes the Green Lake which has a shallow sandy bottom making the water looks green. 
Blue Lake from the walking track

            Then we took the road to Taupō.  Although it was tempting to stop at the hot pools in the Waikite Valley—we have been there before of course—we continued on and freedom camped beside the lake near Taupō town centre.  From here we went to DeBretts Hot Springs, another of New Zealand's earliest hot pool facilities.  First discovered by Sir William Fox in 1874, the present pool complex was created in 1958 and modernised in 1987.  Now it is part of a holiday resort with accommodation and camping, though the pools themselves, accessed down a steep driveway, feel private and secluded.
DeBretts Hot Springss

            There is a cycle route that goes right around Lake Taupō—we know because we have taken part in the Lake Taupō Cycle Challenge.  One year we did it as part of a four-person team, another year Malcolm cycled it as an individual.  We weren't planning on cycling this time though because we had a walk in mind: the Tongariro Crossing.  We had set out to do this walk before, but when we got as far as Mt Ngauruhoe—famous to Lord of the Rings fans as Mt Doom—decided to climb to the summit.  It was a clear, sunny day and we knew we would have magnificent views, which we did, right across to Mt Egmont Taranaki, 180 kilometres away. 
On the Tongariro Crossing



When, on a previous occasion, Malcolm walked the Tongariro Crossing, he had pulled in an ascent of Ngauruhoe as a side trip.  I'm sure he could have done so this time too.  However I am always slow on steep up-hills, and found the scree slopes very difficult as I kept slithering backwards.  The outcrops of sharp volcanic rock were awkward to get across too so, after enjoying the views and eating our picnic lunch, we descended and walked back along the track to Whakapapa Village.  This had been a seven hour walk in itself, so on the way back to Taupō we stopped for a relaxing soak at the Tokaanu thermal pools—a basic but peaceful place near the southern tip of Lake Taupō.
            I successfully completed the next crossing attempt with Malcolm and  small group of friends.  We met up at Whakapapa and began the crossing, which took around seven hours.  The first section went through the Mangatepopo Valley, scoured out in the ice age and partially  in-filled by lava from Mt Ngauruhoe.  After about one and a half hours the track began to climb steadily and steeply, giving great views back down the valley.  A poled route lead us across South Crater to a ridge, then up to Red Crater, the highest point on the crossing.  From here it was a short walk down to the Emerald Lakes where we ate lunch.  The lakes' colour is derived from minerals seeping into the water from nearby thermal areas.  We looked across at Ngauruhoe, recalling our previous climb, then turned to continue our tramp.
            I had pulled on warm gear and a windproof coat by now as—even though it had been hot work climbing up to the Emerald Lakes—it was very cold here with a blustery wind.  I had been warned that it could get icy at 1,700 metres above sea level and was glad of the warm clothes.  We continued along the next section of the track from Central Crater to the Blue Lake which is a freshwater lake in an old lava vent.  Like the Emerald Lakes, dissolved minerals give the Blue Lake its distinctive colour.  The lake's Māori name is Te Wai-whakaata-o-te-Rangihiroa (Rangihiroa's Mirror) and it is tapu (sacred).  Rangihiroa was said to have explored the volcanic plateau around AD1750. 
Me on the Tongariro Crossing

Amazing views on the walk

View of Ngauruhoe from the Tongariro Crossing Track

            The next section of track skirted the edge of the North Crater, then we began the descent.  We stopped for a coffee break and snack by the Ketetahi Hut, before continuing through podocarp forest to the road end car park.  The Tongariro Crossing is one of New Zealand's greatest day walks and I can see why—it was an unforgettable experience.
            There was only one thing left to do—check out the new hot pools at Taupō's Wairakei Terraces.  The pools here nestle beneath silica terraces—reminiscent of the pink and white terraces.  As we soaked amongst the steam and silica we thought if we couldn't visit the terraces of bygone days, this was probably the next best thing.
Tranquil Wairakei Terraces

Information about places mentioned in this post - correct at time of writing
Walks

  • ·         Waimangu Volcanic Valley

www.waimangu.co.nz
Hours: 8.30 am-5.00 pm
Entry price: adult $38.50, child $12
Various walks.  We took the Waimangu Highlights Track, 2 hrs (with shuttle bus return) easy walking track
Access: 587, Waimangu Rd, Rotorua

  • ·         Hamurana Springs

www.freewalks.nz/rotorua/hamurana-springs-walk
Hours: 9.00 am-6.00 pm
2.5km, 1 hr, easy: short walk
Access: 773, Hamurana Rd, Hamurana


  • ·         Tarawera Outlet to Falls Track

www.doc.govt.nz/parks-and-recreation/places-to-go/bay-of-plenty/places/lake-tarawera-scenic-reserve/things-to-do/tarawera-outlet-to-falls-track/
5 km, 2hrs one way, easy: walking track
Access: from Kawerau via private forestry roads. 
Permit required $5, available from Kawerau Information Centre, Plunket St, Kawerau, open 9.00 am-4.00 pm

  • ·         Blue Lake walk

www.freewalks.nz/rotorua/blue-lake-walk/track
4.5 km, 1.5 hrs, easy: walking track
Access: Tarawera Rd, Rotorua

  • ·         Tongariro Alpine Crossing

www.doc.govt.nz/tongariroalpinecrossing
19.4 km, 7-8 hr, intermediate grade: great walk
Access: Limited parking,  access and pick up best by shuttle bus, arranged at
Whakapapa i-SITE +64 7 892 3075, State Highway 48, Whakapapa Village
Turangi  i-SITE 0800 288 726, Ngawaka Place, Turangi
Ohakune i-SITE 0800 647 483, 54, Clyde Street, Ohakune
Taumarunui i-Site 07 895 7494, Railway Station, Taumarunui
Taupō i-SITE 0800 525 382, 30, Tongariro Street, Taupō

Places to visit
  • ·         Buried Village of Te Wairoa

1180, Tarawera Rd, Rotorua
9.00am-5.00pm summer, 9.00am-4.30pm winter
adult $35, senior and student $32, child $10
http://www.buriedvillage.co.nz

  • ·         Polynesian Spa

Hinemoa St, Rotorua
www.polynesianspa.co.nz
Hours: 8.00 am-11.00 pm daily
Entry Price: Various spas and pools in the complex.  We visited the Adult Pools, $30

  • ·         Maurie Kjar Memorial Swimming Pool

Corner Glasgow and Plunket Sts, Kawerau
Hours: Monday-Friday 8.00 am-6.00 pm, Saturday-Sunday 8.00 am-8.00 pm
Free entry

  • ·         Tokaanu Thermal Pools

Mangaroa St, Tokaanu
www.nzhotpools.co.nz/hot-pools/tokaanu-thermal-pools
Hours: 10.00 am-9.00 pm
Entry price: adult $8, senior $7, child $6

  • ·         Wairakei Terraces Hot Pools

SH 1, Wairakei
http://www.wairakeiterraces.co.nz/
Hours: 8.30 am-9.00 pm (summer) 8.30 am-8.30 pm (winter) 8.30 am-7.00 pm Thursdays
Entry price: adults (over 14 years) only, $25  

The Daytime Kiwi - Milford Sound and Stewart Island

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