Invercargill
We left
Queenstown on Friday around noon after bidding our friends “Adieu” and drove down
Highway 6 along the edge of Lake Wakatipu, en-route to Invercargill. At the end of the lake we stopped in at
Kingston, a little town with a railway that travels between Kingston and Fairlight. The train and engine are in amazingly
good condition and obviously well cared for. After leaving Kingston we headed south and the land became
much flatter than we have encountered anywhere else in New Zealand and the
roads, for the most part, very straight more like Alberta. Needless to say we made good time and
arrived in Invercargill mid afternoon.
We checked in
to our Motel, The Monarch Motel in Tay Street. Our unit, a one bedroom is very large, clean and comfortable
with good cooking facilities.
Saturday - we
had an easy morning and then went in to town for a reconnoiter. Downtown was pretty dead, as most people have left for their
summer vacations. Many of the
businesses are closed until mid January. After leaving the Downtown we headed out to The Bluff to book
our passage to Stewart Island and Ulva Island on Monday. We decided to have lunch at The
Anchorage Café and ordered the seafood chowder, as we wanted to cut down on our
food intake. The bowl of chowder
was delicious but absolutely enormous.
It could have fed an army; hence, we had a very light salad for dinner.
Sunday we took
a drive to the Catlins, via Gore and Balclutha. The drive to Gore was uneventful and much like Invercargill
pretty dead when we arrived. We
did not stop for long just a quick visit to the Gore Gardens. They were small but had enormous
trees. Just before Balclutha we
stopped at a place called Peggydale Farm and had coffee. Instead of getting back into the car we
decided to take a quick look in the gift shop where they had lots of expensive
merino/possum clothes and beautiful leather goods. We hadn’t been in there long when there was a cloudburst and
the rain came pouring in through the roof. Jim and I went straight into action pulling away racks of
clothes and shelves full of leather goods. Amazing how you just leap right in there. One of the sales ladies asked where we were
from and then told us her sister-in-law used to be the cook at Anchor D Ranch
in Turner Valley, Ab. Eventually
the rain subsided enough and we resumed our journey.
By the time we
got to Nugget Point it was merely a drizzle as we walked up the hill to the
lighthouse and on our ascent, which was very steep and the cliff a sheer drop on
one side, we met a couple and they were from Okotoks!!!! As we reached the summit it began to
rain harder and harder. As we had
almost a kilometre return trek we got absolutely soaked on the way back to the
car. Needless to say we did not
stop for anymore sightseeing. However,
it didn’t seem to bother the fur seals frolicking below us.
Monday was an
early start to drive to The Bluff and catch the ferry to Stewart Island. The ferry was actually a very fast
Catamaran but even so it was an hour journey. As we got out into the sea the swell was around eight foot
and although many people on board were seasick Jim and I were just fine. We disembarked in Oban, Stewart
Island. Everything is very
Scottish here in the south of New Zealand. We went to the hotel across the street and had coffee, then
strolled around the town and visited the National Parks Information Centre,
which was very interesting. The
islands are either predator free or have embarked on a program to make them
so. These predators are all
introduced species and have decimated the indigenous bird and reptile
population. Since the eradication
program started the numbers of threatened species have increased
considerably.
Around
lunchtime we boarded another catamaran for our trip through the Paterson Inlet,
culminating in a guided walk on Ulva Island. From Paterson Inlet you get great views of all the shoreline
and little bays and coves of Stewart Island and on Ulva Island we got to see
rare birds and plants. We managed
to see three very rare birds, the Saddleback, Kaka and Rifleman. We also saw Tuis, Shags and Albatrosses. Apart from the lichens, mosses,
liverworts and ferns we also saw rare green hooded orchids. We managed to get photos of all the
birds with the exception of the Rifleman.
This little bird only weighs 5 grams and does not stay still for hardly
a second. It flew past my ear and
its wings were beating so fast it reminded me of a hummingbird.
After returning
back to Stewart Island we decided not to wait for the six o’clock ferry but to
return on the 3:30 pm as a gale was forecast for the later time. After disembarking we retrieved the car
and drove a short distance further south to Stirling Point at the very end of
Highway 1. This now meant we had
been at the very north end of Hwy 1 at Cape Reinga on the North Island and now
the most southerly point on the South Island. As we were quite tired from our day’s exploits we had
an early dinner then came back and had an early night even though it was New
Years Eve.
Tuesday morning,
New Years Day, the rain was beginning to subside, so we left for a drive around the Southern Scenic Loop via
Riverton and returning through Tuatapere pronounced Two Tapery. It was raining so hard at Riverton that
we just drove on through. We
reached the bluff near Gemstone Beach and sat in the car to eat our picnic
lunch without venturing outside.
After leaving there we needed the washroom so stopped in the little town
called Tuatapere. The outside of
the washrooms were the most decorative we have seen on our travels, with murals
on three sides. After leaving the
ornate washrooms and with the rain having subsided, we crossed the road to
visit Gallery 65. What an
apparition. Wayne Edgerton was the
artist who had done the Murals and his gallery was full of his beautiful Fjordland
landscapes. The Gallery building
used to be a National Bank of New Zealand building, which he bought and turned
it into a working studio and art gallery.
He was even kind enough to let me take the photos for you to enjoy. He is self-taught and now an
internationally renowned oil painter.
Don’t miss the photos.
Tomorrow we
leave Invercargill and our hosts at The Monarch Motel, Kyle & Kerry, who
have made us very comfortable, despite the weather and also accommodated our
internet time at no extra charge, so that we have been able to update this
Invercargill blog for all of you to follow our journey down under. Thank-you so much K&K.
It just remains
now, before we head out tomorrow for Dunedin and hopefully a dryer drive
through the Catlins, to wish all of you ”blogging in”, a Very Happy New Year
for 2013 and may you all stay safe, have good health and happiness……………..
Barbara &
Jim
|
The Kingston Flyer |
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Kingston Station |
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Invercargill |
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Invercargill Town Hall & Theatre |
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Large Tree in Gore Gardens |
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Gore Gardens |
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Nugget Point - The Catlins |
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The Lighthouse - Nugget Point |
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Stone Settlers House, Stewart Island where nine children were raised |
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An Albatross came to visit |
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Boat Houses - Stewart Island |
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Coastline - Stewart Island |
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School House - Ulva Island |
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Rare Saddle Back |
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Shag - Stewart Island |
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Island off Syney Cove - Ulva Island |
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Sydney Cove - Ulva Island |
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Closer view of Island off Sydney Cove |
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Kaka - Rare Alpine Parrot |
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Tui
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Jim and Barbara at the end of Highway 1 at Stirling Point |
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Washrooms at Tuatapere |
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Gallery 65 - Tuatapere |
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Gallery 65 - Formerly National Bank of New Zealand |
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Wayne Edgerton - Artist |
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Gallery 65 - Formerly National Bank of New Zealand |
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Oil Painting by Wayne Edgerton |
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