Tuesday 30 June 2020

Visiting Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki, Paparoa National Park

An easy cave adventure at Punakaiki...

The whole of the coastline around Punakaiki is limestone karst country so it is riddled with caves, caverns, overhangs and sinkholes. There is a large cavern just before Punakaiki Settlement which goes back into the hillside for around 50 meters and is big enough to stand up inside. 


The entrance to the Punakaiki Cavern from SH6 at Punakaiki

Karen and I visited the cavern during our recent trip to Punakaiki and the surrounding area. We parked up at the big car-park for the Pancake Rocks and walked the 300 odd meters along SH6 to get to the cave. There is a small parking bay near the cavern but it was full...it will only hold 3-4 cars so it will usually be full.


Map: Punakaiki Cavern is about 200 meters south of the settlement


Punakaiki Cavern: it is hard to see the cavern from outside....

Information panel outside the portal of Punakaiki Cavern

The cavern has been carved out of the rock by water...over the eons rain water has eroded channels through the rock which have enlarged into caverns, caves and tunnels. This cavern might well have been developing for tens of thousands of years...it is probably not older than this as it has only the barest beginning of stalactites growing in it.


Punakaiki Cavern: the stairs leading up to the portal...

View out of the portal of Punakaiki Cavern, West Coast


There are two arms to the cavern at Punakaiki..the right one is short at around 20 meters and peters out at a small tunnel too small for a person to fit through. The left hand arm is much longer and can be navigated almost to its furthest reach about 50 meters into the hillside. Both are large enough to stand in although you have to squeeze through a tight point on the left hand arm to reach the back.


The right hand arm of Punakaiki Cavern

Note that once you get past the portal it is hellishly dark in the cave system so you need to bring a torch with you so you can see where you are going. Boots and a jacket can also be useful...it is muddy and a good 10 degrees colder in the cavern than outside.


Beginnings of stalactites on the roof of Punakaiki Cavern

The cavern is free to access and there are a set of stairs at the portal to make it easier to get into the cavern. DOC have placed reflective markers in the cavern so you can follow them to the end of the two navigable arms and back to the entrance. 


Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Karen thinks it looks like a butt...

The extreme end of the left hand arm of Punakaiki Cavern

The interior surface of the cave is damp clay and it can be quite slippery and will easily mark your clothing with patches of soil. We both had to dust ourselves down after being in the cave and our hands were covered with clay dust. 


The small stream through Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki

In times of heavy rain there is a small stream which runs along the floor of the cavern...you can still enter but it will probably be wet and muddy. Karst stone is absolutely full of holes, cracks and passages ...water can still be percolating down weeks after any rain. It was a dry week when we visited and there was still about a cm of water constantly flowing along the stream bed. 


Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Jon in the portal as seen from inside...


Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Karen heading out of the  cavern portal...

 I must admit that I am uneasy in caves and caverns...living through the effect and aftermath of two major earthquakes has dented my faith in the integrity of caves. Look at Cave Rock and Redcliffs Cave in Christchurch..they seemed indestructible and a bastion against the ages. Both sustained major damage and Redcliffs Cave has been permanently closed as it is too dangerous to enter.

Nothing lasts forever....it is the nature of things. 



Karen at the entrance to Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki
A visit to the cave is a great filler exercise, you can explore the whole cavern system in under 15 minutes so this is a great experience if you are travelling through the area. We visited on the way back from visiting Truman's Track. 


Punakaiki Cavern as seen from across SH6 at Punakaiki

View along SH6 from near Punakaiki Cavern

If you are ever spending a few days around Punakaiki go down and have an explore in the cavern. 


Access: Punakaiki Cavern is on SH6 approximately 200 meters south of the Punakaiki Tavern on the inland side of the road. It is well sign posted and visible from the highway. 
Track Times: It only takes 15 minutes to fully explore Punakaiki Cavern, it takes 5-10 minutes to walk from the Pancake Rocks car park to the cavern entrance. 
Miscellaneous:Some slippery rocks inside the cavern so boots or grippy shoes are the best thing to wear when visiting. It is significantly colder inside the cavern so bring a warm top. There are stairs at the entrance to the portal. 


Monday 29 June 2020

A review of my 2019/2020 tramping season...

Of tramping in the year of the plague...

I thought I would do an review of my 2019/2020 tramping season and look at the highs and lows of the year.

Karen and I revisited the Otira Valley in early January 2020

Highlights of the year that was...

It was a real mix of trip types this year: day walks, overnight trips, Te Araroa Trail sections and Great Walks. The trips I completed saw me visit several new conservation areas: Hakatere Nature Reserve, Trotters Gorge Scenic Reserve, Greenstone-Caples Conservation Park, Rakuira National Park and Paparoa National Park.


Hakatere Nature Reserve was a new park I visited in 2019/2020

This season added another 35 odd kilometers towards the completion of my Te Araroa Trail section walk with my trip along the Rakuira Great Walk. I had meant to walk nearly 300 additional TA kilometres this year but it was not to be...the trips were stymied by the Covid-19 crisis.

The Rakuira Track added 35 km's to my Te Araroa total...

Covid-19 really chucked a spanner into the works....I was right on line for some big multi day trips in March and April including some longer Te Araroa Trail sections. It all came to a shuddering halt with the shut down as we were not allowed out into the backcountry here in New Zealand. The multiple weeks we spent in lock-down will mark this year out in our memories for decades to come. 

No return to the St James Conservation Area as planned...

I had a mixture of weather this season...mostly good (i.e. sunny, clear and warm) but also some big rain events occurred while I was on the Routeburn and on the second day of the Te Ara Pataka track. On both occasions rain forced me to change my plans.

Beautiful weather on day one of my Te Ara Pataka trip...

...not so good on day two on Te Ara Pataka
Overall I think it was a good year as far as the weather was concerned.  It would have been an long summer if not for Covid 19 as we had dry conditions from late October right up to May. That has now ended as proper winter conditions have set in with a lot of rain, cold weather and snow especially in the South Island.


Rest break half way to North Arm Hut on the Rakuira Great Walk...

The trip of the season was obviously going to Rakuira/Stewart Island for the first time...it is awesome and I will definitely be going back. I am keen to tramp both the Southern and North West Circuits over the coming years. Im not sure I can fit either into the 2020/2021 season as I am trying to knock off the Great Walks but never say never...

Patterson Inlet, Rakuira Track in late January 2020...

I also really enjoyed Karen and my recent trip to Punakaiki...I think it might be the most complete holiday I have ever had it was so good. Great company, excellent accommodation, nice scenery and bugger all people.


View of Dolomite Point from our accommodation at Punakaiki

It was certainly good to see New Zealand without the tourist hordes we normally have to wade through. 

The 2019/2020 plan...a story of success and failure...


Here is the trip planning list I prepared for this season which shows all of the outings I intended to take over the 2019/2020 season. The completed trips are marked in red and you can click on the links to see the relevant trip reports. There were a number of trips which did not go ahead (mostly due to bad weather) they are marked in black. 

On the Forest Journey, Hanmer Forest, August 2019

I got a big sack full of trips done this season...I probably spent more days tramping this year than in 2013-2016 combined. Partially this was because Karen was keen to do some tramping with me and we did a few walks while on holiday.


August 2019

  • Hanmer Forest Park, Forest Journey/Conical Hill Tracks30 July – 2 Aug, day trips (holiday with Karen)           
  • Canterbury Foothills, Mt Grey Track: 17/18 Aug, day trip (rain....other commitments...)                    
  • Port Hills, Taylors Mistake to Godley Head: 24/25 Aug, Christchurch 360 Trail, day trip (I walked the Bridal Path instead)
  • Port Hills, Bridle Path the Heathcote side:24 August, day walk
  • Lyttelton Harbour, Quail Island Track: 31 August, day walk


On Pt. 86, Quail Island, Lytellton Harbor


                        
September 2019


My Dad passed away in early September, so I went for a few tramps that month as it is my place for quiet contemplation. My Dad was keen on the outdoors when he was young. Dad was from Illinois in the United States and he liked to fish, hunt, hike and camp but he always felt out of place in New Zealand.

I wish we had taken the chance to go tramping together as he was a awesome bloke with a great supply of stories he liked to tell. I reckon he would have been a great tramping companion. 



Jon at Hokitika Gorge....
                   

October 2019
  • Canterbury Foothills, one of: Mt Oxford/Mt Thomas/Mt Richardson, 5/6 October, day trip (I went to Rod Donald instead)
  • Banks Peninsula, Rod Donald via Waipuna Saddle, 6th Oct, day trip (rescheduled from September) 
  • Banks Peninsula, Mt Herbert via Port Levy Saddle: 19th October, day trip                 
  • Abel Tasman NP, Whariwharangi Hut: 26-29th October, Great Walk: multi-day trip (1 hut)

Approaching Whariwharangi Hut in Abel Tasman NP

Whariwharangi Bay in Abel Tasman NP

                       

November 2019

  • Arthurs Pass NP, Bealey Spur or Woolshed Hill, 2/3 Nov, day trip  (cancelled- rain/snow)          
  • Nelson Lakes NP, Brunner Peninsula/Mt Robert Circuit, 15-17 Nov, camp at Kerr Bay Campground and day trips  (it was raining/snowing so....)
  • Nelson Lakes NP, Traver's Valley Romp: 15-17 November, multiday trip
  • Banks Peninsula, Langer Reserve: mid November (this was a trip to bag Josef Langer Hut but I also had a bit of a ramble around the tracks there) (1 hut)



Damp conditions at Lakehead Hut, Nelson Lakes

                        
December 2019

  • Fiordland NP/Mt Aspiring NP, Routeburn Track, 30 Nov-6 December, Great Walk: multiday trip (I got as far as Howdon Hut before the track was closed due to flooding. Instead I walked down the Greenstone Track to McKeller Hut and then returned to the Divide via Howdon Hut. (3 huts)
  • Canterbury Foothills, Mt Grey Track, 14/15 December, day trip      (...cancelled again..rain...)
  • Banks Peninsula, Bridal Path, Lytelton side: 27 Dec: day walk



On Key Summit, Routeburn Track..before the deluge...
                                          

January 2020

  • Travis Wetlands Nature Reserve, Travis Wetlands: 2nd January, day walk
  • Arthurs Pass NP: Christmas Break: Otira Valley/JC's Track/Bealey Valley, over the Christmas break, 5-9th January
  • Hakatere Nature Reserve, Lake Emma & Lake Emma Hut: 11 January, day walk (2 huts)
  • Hakatere Nature Reserve, Woolshed Creek Hut: 18-19th January, overnight (1 hut)
  • Trotters Gorge Scenic Reserve Otago, Trotters Gorge: 26th January, day-walk (on the way to Rakuira Great Walk) (1 hut)
  • Rakuira/Stewart Island, Ulva Island: 27th January, day trip (1 hut)
  • Rakuira/Stewart Island, Rakuria Track: 28 Jan-2 Feb, Great Walk: multiday trip (also TA Section) (3 huts)                    


Arriving at Ulva Island, Rakuira NP



February 2020

  • Arthur's Pass NP, 2020 Waimakiriri River Romp, Crow Hut/Waimakiriri Falls Hut/Barker Hut, over the 2020 Coast to Coast weekend, 6-8 Feb, multiday trip...an annual event (raining in the mountains so...)
  • Banks Peninsula, Te Ara Pataka (Hilltop to Diamond Harbor via Mt Herbert): 6-7 February (I walked from Hilltop to Rod Donald Hut and then had to bail out and walk down to Little River due to heavy rain/dangerous conditions on day two...I tried...)
  • Lake Summer FP, Harpers Pass Track-mid February, TA Section, multi-day trip (raining...like a biblical deluge...850mm of rain in 24 hours!!!!)
  • Hakatere Nature Reserve, Pinnacles Hut: 29th February-1st March, overnight (2 hut)

Passing under a waterfall on the way to Pinnacles Hut

       
  So we all know what happened in March....Covid-19 arrived with a vengeance and that as they say was that for the 2019-2020 tramping season. Here in New Zealand we were closed for business from early March right through to mid May and any tramping was strictly VERBOTEN!!!!

You were still able to get out and walk so I spent most afternoons out walking around my local area....


March 2020 (Possible trips TBC) (all cancelled-Covid 19)

Nelson Lakes NP/St James Conservation Area,  D’Urville-Waiau Valley Trip: D'Urville Valley- Moss Pass- Blue Lake- Waiau Pass- Waiau Valley- Hanmer via St James Cycleway, early March, Partial TA Section, multiday trip             
Arthurs Pass NP, Coral Track/Cons Track, late March, day trip    
                            

April 2020  (Possible trips TBC) (all cancelled-Covid 19)

Kahurangi NP, Heaphy Track or Cobb Valley or Lake Matiri or Mt Arthur Tablelands, multiday trip
Abel Tasman NP, Inland Track- Anchorage to Totaranui, multiday trip
Hakatere Conservation Park, one of: Rakaia River- Rangitata River or Rangitata- Lake Tekapo or Tekapo- Lake Ohau- all TA Sections, multiday trip     


I was hoping to tramp around Lake Tekapo in 2020.....nope!!!!

May 2020:

  • Port Hills, Harry Ell Walkway: 16th May, fitness walk (the first weekend we could go walking after going to Covid-19 Level 2)
  • Travis Wetland Nature Reserve, Travis Wetland: 23rd May, day-walk
  • Arthur's Pass NP, Cockayne Nature Walk: 29th May, day trip (holiday with Karen)


On the Cockayne Nature Walk in late May


June 2020:



On the Pororari River Track/Paparoa Great Walk

I still have a couple of trips scheduled for July 2020...given the recent bad weather we will see if they go ahead. It has been raining now for 16 days straight with significant snow dumps in the Southern Alps. I am trying to get out for some winter tramping trips but you have to be realistic about tramping in bad weather. 


July 2020:still to be completed....then 2020/2021 season starts!
  • Lake Daniels Scenic Reserve: new Manson-Nichols Hut, 4-5th June, overnight
  • Kaikoura, Kaikoura Peninsula Clifftop Walkway, 18 June, day walk
  • Banks Peninsula, Packhorse Hut: 25 June, day walk
                                                                                              
 I was able to bag 15 new back country huts this season which has taken my total up to 218 huts visited.

Karen and I also bagged Woolshed Creek Hut in February

Final thoughts on the 2019/2020 season


What was gearing up to be a cracking tramping season turned into a small fizzer due to the Covid-19 crisis. What was especially irritating was that we had excellent weather right up to the end of May and all of the planned tramps could have been completed before winter rolled in. I just couldn't go as DOC closed facilities, tracks and huts and our movement was limited due to Covid 19.

A Covid-19 message at a track entrance...a common sight this year!

Oh well...that's the way things go sometimes...I still got lots of excellent tramping in this year...and bagged another 15 backcountry huts.

Port William Hut...one of 15 huts bagged this season...

I am currently working on a plan for 2020/2021 which includes two Great Walks, several multi-day trips, some MTB bike rides and a whole pile of day trips. I will be more thoroughly exploring Paparoa National Park, revisiting Fiordland, the St James Conservation Area plus the Canterbury Foothills and heading into Richmond Forest Park for the first time.

Lake Guyon Hut in the St James is targeted in the 2020/2021 tramping season..

It will be interesting to see what a season with little to no international trampers will be like....will it be Nirvana or the seventh circle of hell?

Y'all come back soon to see what I am going to be up to over the next tramping season...



Wednesday 24 June 2020

Tramping in Paparoa National Park

Fox Settlement, Punakaiki, Barrytown and Blackball as gateways to adventure...


Karen and I recently visited Punakaiki on the West Coast. It is roughly half way between Greymouth and Westport and is well known tourism hot spot.  It is also an excellent starting point for a variety of excellent adventure opportunities in Paparoa National Park.

Paparoa National Park: limestone karst country with coastline, dense forest and rivers...

I have only been in Paparoa National Park a couple of times. Back in the late 1980's I tramped to Garden Gully and the Moonlight Mine on the eastern side of the Paparoa Range. I also visited when on holiday along the West Coast and stayed at Punakaiki while exploring the local area. Going forward I envision more visits here as there is a ton of good tramping tracks I am keen to try out. 


The Pancake Rocks Reserve is part of Paparoa National Park

I thought it might be good to have a look at what this park has to offer the keen outdoor person with sight seeing, tramping, hunting, MTB riding and water based sport options. 

Paparoa National Park


Paparoa National Park has an area of 430 square kilometers of land first set out as a national park in 1987. Over the years additional parcels of land have been added to the park but it is still one of the smaller national parks in New Zealand. There have been proposals to greatly enhance the size of this park with other Crown land but this has not yet happened.

Map: Paparoa National Park
Paparoa National Park stretches from Westport in the north for nearly 50 kilometers south to near Blackball. It reaches from the Tasman Sea to the Paparoa Range approximately 20 km's inland. The main points of entry into the park are the Fox River, Punakaiki & Barrytown on the coast, and Blackball on the eastern side of the Paparoa Range.

Te Miko Beach at the end of Truman's Track

The land is mainly limestone karst- high limestone plateaus with many caves, resurgences and deeply incised river valleys. The Paparoa Range with mountains up to 1500 meters asl lies just inland from the coast and the majority of the land is either lowland forest, podocarp forest or high tussock tops.

Paparoa National Park is one of the least developed in the country and most of the land within it is only accessible by following the infrequent tracks, by helicopter or strenuous overland walking. At one time a large section of the park was a wilderness area but this has since waned as the area included was too small to be practical.

High limestone bluffs along the Pororari River Valley

Tourism is the main industry within the area with over 1 million tourists visiting the region or travelling down SH6 every year. There are many scenic points of interest along the coast for this trade as well as more backcountry style adventures in the hinterland.

Punakaiki is backed by high rugged mountains...
The area has been heavily exploited over the years and farming, forestry and mining have all occurred within the park in the past. Threats still exist as successive governments have looked to use the natural resources which lie within the park boundaries. Since the Pike River Mine disaster interest in exploiting coal has waned but the threat of mining will persist as long as money can be made by selling minerals.

The Pike River Mine portal....
If you would like more information on the Pike Mine debacle I recommend that you read Tragedy at Pike River Mine by Rebecca Macfie. I am sure you will be as shocked as I was by the total incompetence shown during the whole fiasco with blame equally shared by the mine manager, Pike River Mine, the regional council and central government. Twenty nine men died and no one was ever really held accountable for numerous breeches of protocol and regulation.

A bloody awful episode in New Zealand industrial history...

Gateways into Paparoa National Park...


So lets have a look at all of the access points around Paparoa National Park and see what outdoor activities are accessible from each.

Punakaiki: at the heart of the National Park

Punakaiki is the main access point for the Paparoa National Park...more of its tracks, rivers and scenic reserves can be reached from here than any other point. Punakaiki has few permanent residents but it is fully equipped to act as a tourism town with numerous accommodation options, several cafes, a tavern, public transport options and a DOC office.

Access to Paparoa National Park from Punakaiki

Punakaiki has few permanent residents but it is fully equipped to act as a tourism town with numerous accommodation options, several cafes, a tavern, public transport options and a DOC office.

The cafe, shops and DOC center are opposite the Pancake Rocks Reserve
Please note there are no petrol stations between Greymouth and Westport and there are no supermarkets or food shops either. Fill up and bring any alcohol & vittles you want to consume with you....

Punakaiki is the main access point to Paparoa National Park

There are many tracks that start or finish at Punakaiki and the area is well known for the various tourism attractions it has along the coastline. Probably the easiest way to break this down is by looking at some of the tracks and attractions accessible from the settlement. 


Paparoa Great Walk Track:


The Paparoa Great Walk Track opened in 2019 but has yet to see a full open season due to adverse weather and track damage. This Great Walk uses some existing track sections notably the Croseus Track, Moonlight Tops Track and Pororari River Track but the majority of it is pristine new track.

The Paparoa Track is proving prone to slippage...

The Paparoa Track can be walked or ridden by MTB...this is the default practice with any new DOC track as a means of maximising use. MTB riders begin from the Smoke-Ho car-park and ride to Waikori on the Punakaiki River. Walkers start at the same place but end at Punakaiki. As a ride it is a Grade-4 or advanced track with some narrow sections, bridges, big hill climbs and tricky descents.

MTB riders on the new Paparoa Track....

If you ride this track it will take you 2-3 days, walking the track takes 4 days with overnight stays at two brand new and one refurbished DOC Huts. You start by walking up the side of Blackball Stream, use the Croseus Track to gain the tops and head north along a new ridge top track. You then descend down to the Pororari River and follow the river side track out to the coast.

Pororari Hut...one of two new huts on the Paparoa Track (photo DOC site)

One section of this track is not yet completed...the Pike 29 Memorial Track to the site of the Pike River Mine. This track will not be opened until recovery work is finalised at the mine sometime in early 2021.

The last hour is along the Pororari river Track to Punakaiki

I am scheduled to walk the Paparoa Track in February 2021 so I will be able to give you a clearer picture of what it is like once I have completed it. I have heard from trampers I know that the track is a stunner in good weather but challenging if it is raining or windy.

We shall see...


Pororari River Track:

Karen and I walked up the Pororari River when we visited Punakaiki in early June...it is a lovely walk to a swing-bridge which connects to the Inland Pack Track. You could do this as a over night trip if you take a tent but really it is a 2-3 hour return day walk.

Stunning scenery on the Pororari River Track

You start at the car-park at the mouth of the Punakaiki River (opposite the camp ground) and head up river for about three kilometers or 1-1.5 hours. The track is mostly flat with a few undulations to avoid gorge areas where there is not enough space for a river side track.


The Pororari River swing bridge...

Return is along the same track or you can do a circuit by returning along the first section of the Inland Pack Track from the Pororari River to Waikori on the Punakaiki River. This is often called the Punakaiki Loop. There is a 2 kilometer road walk back to the car park at Punakaiki after you finish. This option is about 8 km's and takes around 3-3.5 hours. 

Estuary of the Punakaiki River at Waikori, Punakaiki

If you ever go to Punakaiki I recommend this track to you...it is beautiful and remote feeling with views of the lovely river, limestone bluffs, thick lowland forest on a excellent track. Just go as far as you like...even a 30 minute jaunt up the river is totally worth the effort. 


Watersports on the Pororari & Punakaiki Rivers

Both the Punakaiki and the Pororari Rivers are navigable for quite a long distance from their estuary mouths. You can hire canoes, kayaks and paddle boards at places near both of these rivers. The company is called Punakaiki Canoes and prices start at $45 per adult with watercraft, wet-suits, life jackets, helmets, paddles and other gear supplied. 


Kayaker seen paddling up the Pororari river from the track...

Karen and I saw a number of people out paddling in the Pororari River and we could see people in canoes messing around on the Punakaiki River from the lawn of the accommodation we were staying in. It looked like a lot of fun...


The Punakaiki River mouth as seen from our accommodation at Punakaiki

If you own an inflatable pack raft that these rivers could be for you. You could carry it up river to a point of your choosing and raft back down. The next time I visit Punakaiki I am going to look into hiring a canoe and I will go for a paddle up the Pororari River...



Inland Pack Track, Punakaiki River to Fox River:


The Inland Pack Track is a 25 km long track from Waikori on the Punakaiki River to Tirimoana/Fox Settlement approximately 12 kilometer's north of Punakaiki. The Pack Track used to be the main transport route for people travelling up and down the West Coast...high coastal bluffs, step ridges and rugged terrain between the Fox River and Punakaiki meant it was easier to do a massive inland loop than fight along the coast.


Map: Inland Pack Track, Punakaiki to Fox Settlement

The Inland Pack Track is a 2-3 day tramping trip with stays at the Ballroom Overhang on the Fox River and sometimes a second scratch camp somewhere between Dilemma Creek and the Pororari River bridge.

River travel up the Fox River to the Ballroom Overhang...
 The track was heavily damaged during Cyclone Ita in 2015 but it has now been cleared and is rated as a advanced to expert track on the DOC website. I think this reflects the many river crossings and route finding required rather than the difficulty of walking the track sections. 

Damage from Cyclone Ita...devastated forest (photo from tinytramper site)

This whole trip involves rivers...the Pororari, Dilemma Creek, Bullock Creek and the Fox River so it cannot be undertaken in heavy rain as you are walking in the river bed for a lot of the time. The Fox in particular is problematic...there are nearly 30 required crossing of this river. This is generally easy in fine dry weather but dangerous with any rain. If you find yourself at the Ballroom Overhang and the river floods you are stuck as there is no bail out option. 


Trampers on one of many crossings of the Fox River, Inland Pack Track

One place you stay is the Ballroom Overhang a massive limestone semi cave with excellent camp sites below it. This is one of the most iconic camp sites in New Zealand and is a must do for any self respecting Kiwi tramper. If you want to take it easy on the track most trampers will stop and camp somewhere along the track, usually at the Fossil Creek campsite or the clearing at Bullock Creek.


The spectacular Ballroom Overhang on the Fox river (photo tiny tramper site)

A typical trip will see you walk up the Fox River to the Ballroom Overhang on day one. Day two is up and along the bed of Dilemma Creek, over a ridge and down to the Bullock Creek area. You could stop here for the night as this is all DOC land. 

The clearing at Bullock Creek, West Coast (photo from tinytramper site)
Jon on the Inland Pack Track near the Pororari River bridge

You then travel along the Inland Track to the Pororari River and exit at Punakaiki. Alternately you can continue along the Paparoa Track and Inland Pack Track and exit onto Waikori Road at the Punakaiki River. 

Crossing the Pororari River bridge along the Inland Pack Track

I have long had my eye on the Inland Pack Track as a 'to do' tramp but my recent visit to Punakaiki has given me a renewed interest in the area. I have a trip to walk the Inland Pack Track provisionally penciled in for December or January of the 2020/2021 season.

Track Junction: Pororari/Paparoa Track and the Inland Pack Track to Waikori Road...


For more information about the Inland Pack Track see this excellent post from the tinytramper website.


Pancake Rocks Reserve:

Famous for a reason...the Pancakes Rocks at Punakaiki receive over a million visitors a year because they are stunning. They are ancient seabed accretions which are slowly eroding through sea and wind action into fantastical formations that look like....well...a big olde pile of pancakes. 

At the Pancake Rocks, Punakaiki, West Coast of the South Island

Great views up and down the West Coast with a high quality sealed track that takes about 40 minutes to walk around. On an especially clear day you can see Mt Aoraki, Mt Tasman and Mt Haast 200 kilometers away to the south. 

Looking towards Punakaiki settlement from the Pancake Rocks

If you are passing through you must stop and have a look....day or night they are beautiful.



Truman's Track, Te Miko:

This is another of the tracks Karen and I walked while holidaying in Punakaiki in early June. This track gets missed by a lot of visitors as it is north of Punakaiki and not all that well marked. It is situated on the coast side of the road a couple of hundred meters before the small settlement of Te Miko. 


Sign at the start of Truman's Track on SH6 at Te Miko

There is parking for about 30 cars in two areas at the start of the track...be careful crossing the road as it is super busy. I would stash all valuables as these car-parks have been targeted by thieves in the past. 


Cars parked at the Truman's Track car-park on SH 6

Truman's Track goes down through a reserve of mature native trees to a lovely beach with great views along the coast, sea cave and a beach of fine pebbles and sand. The bush at the back of the beach is home to a small but growing Penguin colony who are regular visitors during their breeding season. 

Looking down on Te Miko Beach from Truman's Track

The forest here is awesome..a perfectly preserved area of lowland coastal forest that was protected as there was no settlement along this coast until recent times. There are some stonking examples of Rimu, Rata, Kahikatea and Totora trees as well as the local Nikau Palms.


A mixture of species along Truman's Track


Jon in front of a large Rimu Tree, Truman's Track

You must exercise care if you visit the beach as it is inundated at high tide and in bad weather and there is only one entry/exit to the beach. There are a series of tidal pools and some small coves...no fishing please as this is a marine reserve. 

One of the small coves at Te Miko Beach, Truman's Track

There is a viewing platform at the end of Truman's Track with excellent views out to sea as well as south along the coast to Punakaiki. You can see the settlement, Pancake Rocks and Dolomite Point from here as well as the mountains down near Mt Aoraki. 

View south along the coast from Truman's Track

The trip to the beach at Te Miko and along Truman's Track takes 40-60 minutes return so it is a good option for a half day trip or a quick stop off when travelling between Greymouth and Westport. 


Truman's Track is backed by thick forest and massive limestone bluffs

Totally recommended of course...I have been here a couple of times now and it is always different...and special.


Punakaiki Cavern:


The whole of the coastline around Punakaiki is limestone karst country so it is riddled with caves, caverns, overhangs and sinkholes. There is a large cavern just before Punakaiki Settlement which goes back into the hillside for around 50 meters and is big enough to stand up inside. 


The entrance to the Punakaiki Cavern from SH6 at Punakaiki

Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Karen thinks it looks like a butt...

The cavern is free to access and there are a set of stairs to make it easier to get into the cavern. DOC have placed reflective markers in the cavern so you can follow them to the end of the two navigable arms and back to the entrance. 

There is a small parking bay near the cavern but it is actually easier to park in the Pancakes Rocks car park (which is huge...it holds +100 cars at one time...) and walk the 300 meters down to the cavern along SH6. 


The small stream through Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki

Note that once you get past the portal it is hellishly dark in the cave system so you need to bring a torch with you so you can see where you are going. Boots and a jacket can also be useful...it is a good 10 degrees colder in the cavern than outside. In times of heavy rain there is a small stream which runs along the floor of the cavern...you can still enter but it will probably be wet and muddy. 


Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Jon in the portal as seen from inside...


Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki: Karen in the cavern portal from outside...

 I must admit that I am un-easy in caves and caverns...living through the effect and aftermath of two major earthquakes has dented my faith in the integrity of caves. Look at Cave Rock and Redcliffs Cave in Christchurch..they seemed indestructible and a bastion against the ages. Both sustained major damage and Redcliffs Cave has been permanently closed as it is too dangerous to enter.

Nothing lasts forever....it is the nature of things. 



Karen at the entrance to Punakaiki Cavern, Punakaiki
A visit to the cave is a great filler exercise, you can explore the whole cavern system in under 15 minutes so this is a great experience if you are travelling through the area. 



Around Bullock Creek:

There is a gravel road leading into Bullock Creek about a kilometer north of the Pororari River bridge on SH6. There is a car-park at the end of the road and a number of tracks leading off from here to various different destinations. 

Bullock Creek gravel road to the car-park near Cave Creek

The main reason to come here is to visit the scene of the Cave Creek tragedy...back in 1995 a faulty DOC platform over the Cave Creek Resurgence collapsed leading to the death of 14 young outdoor education students. The Department was heavily criticised and fined over $2 million dollars for a number of mistakes made during construction of the platform.

As a result the whole Department of Conservation was forced to upgrade how it builds outdoor infrastructure including huts, bridges, platforms and walking tracks. There is a memorial here to those who died and a short track to the old location of the platform.  

The Cave Creek Memorial at the end of Bullock Creek Road

The Inland Pack Track continues onto the Ballroom Overhang or Waikori from here...Bullock Creek is really the half way point between Waikori and Fox Settlement which are the two ends of the track. Some people will camp near here to break the Inland Track into three days instead of the usual two day trip. 

The Cave Creek area just north of Punakaiki

Other destinations accessible from here are the track to Mt Bovis (1252 asl), the Taurus Major Submergence of Bullock Creek, Cave Creek Resurgence and of course off piste hunting/tramping trips into the un-tracked interior of Paparoa National Park.

Climbing faces along Bullock Creek road, Punakaiki

There are also some well used climbing routes on the massive limestone bluffs that line the Bullock Creek road...


Tiromoana/Fox Settlement...

Tiromoana/ Fox Settlement is a collection of houses and farms at the mouth of the Fox River approximately 15 km's north of Punakaiki on SH6. It is little more than a road junction but it does have tracks to two other places of interest within Paparoa National Park. 

There is a historic wooden bridge over the Fox River at Tiromoana
These are the Fox River Cave and the Fox River/Inland Pack Track to the Ballroom Overhang.


Te Orumata/Fox River Caves Track:

From the car-park on the north bank of the Fox river you follow a track up valley for 5 kilometers or 45 minutes  to the junction of the Fox River Track and the Inland Pack Track. You stay on the true right bank of the river for 30 more minutes to access the cave portal.


Start of the Fox River Caves Track, West Coast

The cave is big enough to stand inside and has some interesting stalactites and other water formed structures. You will need a strong torch as it is totally dark inside the cave as it reaches into the hillside for 200 meters.

Inside the Te Orumata/Fox River Cave

The return trip is a reverse of your journey in and the whole return tramp takes 2-3 hours. The trip to the cave is a good day trip or it can be combined with a visit to the nearby Ballroom Overhang on the Inland Pack Track. 

This would require you to backtrack for 30 minutes and joining the track on the true left of the Fox River. It is about an hour from the track junction to the Ballroom Overhang approximately two kilometers up river. 


The Fox River near Te Orumata/Fox River Cave

There are multiple river crossings on this trip so do not go up the valley in heavy rain as they will be impassable. 


Inland Pack Track to the Ballroom Overhang:

Tiromoana/Fox Settlement is the northern terminus for the 25 km long Inland Pack Track which starts on the Punakaiki River. Most trampers will start from this end and walk back to Punakaiki using the public transport which goes up and down SH 6 from Greymouth to Westport to connect the two ends. 


Mid part of the Fox River, Inland Pack Track
There is a bush covered forest track for about the first 30 minutes of this trip then it is all in the bed of the Fox River making your best way up to the confluence with Dilemma Creek. The river must be crossed numerous times..in fine weather this is moderate to easy but in rain it may well be impassable. 

In the upper reaches of the Fox River en-route to Ballroom Overhang (photo from blogroddus site)

The Ballroom Overhang is a massive limestone bluff with a safe and flat campsite at its base which provides excellent protection fro any bad weather which strikes. This is 30 minutes up the Fox River from the confluence with Dilemma Creek and is the end of the first day on the Inland Pack Track. 


The flat campsite at the Ballroom Overhang, Inland Pack Track(photo from blogroddus site)

Dilemma Creek is the start of day two of this track which is again in the bed of a creek for the first hour. After that it is bush track to the area around Bullock Creek and from there to the Pororari River. The crux of this tramp is from Tiromoana to Bullock Creek...all of this is river bed travel which requires good weather. From Bullock Creek to Punakaiki via the Pororari Track is an all weather track so it doesnt mater if it is rainy through here. 

The Fox River-Dilemma Creek confluence (photo from blogroddus site)
The trip from Tiromoana is about 8 km's one way and will take around three hours to complete. It is graded as advanced by the Department of Conservation but I think this is more about all the river crossings and route finding and not about the difficulty of the track. 

Barrytown as an access point...

Barrytown is a small settlement approximately 30 kilometer's north of Greymouth on SH6 (the Greymouth to Westport Highway). It was a gold dredging and service town in times past but now that the gold is gone it is a very sleepy backwater.

Barrytown is undergoing a minor resurgence as a tourism destination as it caters for the hordes of tourists who drive up and down this highway during the summer season. There are a number of accommodation options here as well as outdoor adventure guides, and some small home craft industries. 

Barrytown is on SH6 just south of Punakaiki

There is one track accessible from here, the Croseus-Moonlight Track.

The Moonlight-Croseus Track:

I have fully covered the Croseus below under Blackball as this is the main access point for this track.

The Croseus-Moonlight Track is a single or multi-day tramp from Barrytown on the coast to Blackball on the eastern side of the Paparoa Range. Parts of the old track are incorporated into the new Paparoa Track which follows the Moonlight Track to the north on existing track and then joins new track sections built over 2018/2019.

You can stay at Ces Clark Hut or the older Top Croseus Hut which are both near the apex of the track. Ces Clark is on the hut booking system as it is one of the Paparoa Great Walk huts.

One of the track signs on the Croseus Track (photo DOC site)

You can use the Croseus Track to access Mt Ryall and the poled route from Croseus Knob to Mt Leitch/Mt Watson away to the south. From either place you can follow marked tracks down to the Smoke-Ho car-park and Blackball OR retract your steps back to Barrytown.

Looking out along the poled route to Mt Leitch, Croseus Track (photo DOC site)

The track from the Smoke-Ho car-park to Barrytown can be done as a long day walk, you would be looking at approximately 15 km or 7-8 hours walking. You can ride your MTB up to the apex of the Croseus Track but the track from there to Barrytown is pedestrians only at this stage. 

Blackball as an access point to the Paparoa Range...

There are two access points for the Paparoa National Park from the eastern side of the Paparoa Range, the first is via the Moonlight Creek Track. The second is from the Smoke-Ho car-park at the end of Blackball Road, Blackball. 

The Paparoa Track runs from Blackball to Punakaiki

The Moonlight Track starts at the end of a long gravel road from Atarau just north east of Blackball. From here you can access the Moonlight Creek area, the derelict Mickles Hut, Moonlight Mine and the Moonlight Route up onto the crest of the Paparoa Range. 


On the Moonlight Tops Track to the Paparoa Range


The old derelict Meickles Hut on the Moonlight tops Track

From here you can walk south along the new Paparoa Track to the junction with the Croseus Track & from there to Barrytown on the coast. This Croseus-Moonlight Track has existed since the 1880's and was once the route miners and pack horse trains used to get over the ranges to the coast. It fell into disrepair over the years but has slowly been regaining favor as a overnight tramping route

Track conditions on the Croseus Track en-route to Barrytown on the coast

The second and more important access point is from Blackball a small settlement about 20 minutes drive from Greymouth. Blackball was once a thriving coal mining town but it has fallen on hard times since most of the mines closed. It currently has about 200 residents who mostly work in Greymouth and Hokitika.

 I used to visit Blackball in the 1980-1990's with my friends and it always had a very chill and laid back feel to it. People went here to escape from modern society and because it was a cheap place to buy a house.

The small settlement at Blackball, 22 kms from Greymouth...

Blackball also had a reputation as a notorious dopers settlement. It was totally justified..."herb gardeners" have used the surrounding hills to grow marijuana for decades. There was gold in them thar' hills but the gold was in the form of a green leafy material....

You would go visit people in Blackball living in these ratty looking houses and inside it was like some opulent Sultans palace with brand new furniture and appliances, pool tables, $10 000 stereos and 40" TV sets (huge for the time). They had to hide all the wealth inside the houses to avoid the attentions of the Police.

It was obviously a very lucrative trade!!!


Blackball is surrounded by mountains and forest...

It was always a sleepy settlement but since the development of the new Paparoa Great Walk it is slowly getting busier. There are now a number of accommodation providers, guiding, transportation and MTB related businesses. I only see this growing over time as experience with other new walking/MTB tracks like this over the last 20 years have led to minor economic bonanzas for nearby small towns.


The Blackball Hilton is one accommodation option in Blackball

The eastern entrance to the Paparoa Great Walk starts at the Smoke-Ho car-park at the end of Blackball Road. From the Smoke-Ho car-park you can walk or bike the 25 km's to Punakaiki on the new dual use  Paparoa Track and the Pororari River Track. It takes two days to cycle and four days to walk and you stay at Ces Clark Hut, Paparoa Tops Hut and the Pororari Hut en route.


The access road to the Smoke-Ho car-park near Blackball

The Smoke-Ho car-park is also good for day walks into this side of the Paparoa Range...the area around Garden Gully is about 2 hours along the track and the super keen could walk up to Ces Clark Hut as a day trip or overnight.  It is MTB heaven as they are the major users of this track network.

Remember to book your sleeping space before you go as this hut is on the hut booking system.

Approaching Garden Gully on the Croseus Track (photo DOC site)

Obviously this area is wide open to hunters right through the year, the only place you need to avoid is around the tracks especially the very busy Great Track. You must not hunt anywhere near these tracks although you are able to use the track as a way to access the country. There are deer, pigs, possums and feral goats in the immediate area, you should check with the Greymouth DOC office before hunting here. 


So there you go...a quick look at what this most sleepy of the National Parks has to offer...