My 2021/2022 Great Walk season....
I am planning to walk sections of three Great Walks this year if I am able to secure hut bookings. The bookings for the coming season open next week with the Heaphy Track opening on Tuesday 15th June...Routeburn Track opening on Wednesday 16th June and Abel Tasman Coastal Track opening on Thursday 17th June.
Abel Tasman Coastal Track:
I have an overnight trip on the Abel Tasman Coast Track planned for late July- early August 2021 or in about six weeks time.
|
Totaranui Beach with Gibbs Hill to the rear, Abel Tasman NP |
The Abel Tasman can be walked right through the year as the weather and conditions are fine for much of the time. By utilising the huts you can have a comfortable and much warmer nights sleep in winter as they all feature wood burners with a good supply of fuel.
|
Wharewharangi Hut in Abel Tasman NP |
I will only be walking a short section of the track from Wainui Bay to Wharewharangi and from there to Totaranui. The first day is about 6 kilometers over 2-3 hours and means you climb up and over Gibbs Hill to the hut down on the coast.
|
Start of the Abel Tasman Coast Track at Wainui Bay |
The next day I will walk 10 kilometers of the Coast Track back along the coast via Mutton Cove & Anapai Beach to a water-taxi pick-up at Totaranui.
|
Anapai Bay from the Abel Tasman Coast Track |
I have walked both of these sections before BUT I have no photos of my 1993 trip from the Wainui end of this track.... I would like to complete the full Abel Tasman Great Walk and feature it on these pages.
Update: There were huts available for my chosen date but no transport. Therefore this trip will take place on the 15-16th October 2021.
Heaphy Track:
Let me say up front that planning a tramp on the Heaphy Track is really difficult. Booking the track itself is not that difficult if there are places available but organising transport to and from the track ends is diabolical. I will be writing a post about booking the Heaphy Track soon as I found it so bloody difficult to organise so watch for that...
|
Brown Hut marks the northern terminus of the Heaphy Track |
I have actually walked the whole of the Heaphy Track before but have long wanted to have a second bash at it. Back in 1990 I was doing an Army exercise near Karamea when they asked if anyone wanted to walk the track so we were dropped by helicopter at Perry Saddle and walked out to the Kohaihai road end.
|
On the Gouland Downs, Kahurangi NP |
Later in the early 1990's my then girlfriend and I walked in from Brown Hut to Perry Saddle Hut for an overnight trip.
|
View down to the old Perry Saddle Hut, Kahurangi NP |
I am looking at walking the Heaphy Track in November 2021 from Brown Hut (Tasman end...) to Kohaihai (West Coast end...). I am going to fly to Nelson and then Karen is going to come collect me from the Karamea end of the track. This will make getting back to Christchurch a lot easier...
|
Nikau Palms along the coast en-route to Kohaihai, Kahurangi NP |
I will be taking five days on the track staying in Perry Saddle, Saxon, James McKay and Heaphy Huts. This will mean I have one short day of roughly 3 hours walking and four days where I am walking from 5-7 hours. The shortest distance will be 7 kilometers and the longest on day four will be just under 20 kilometers.
|
The Kohaihai bridge marks the southern terminus of the Heaphy Track |
I am really looking forward to revisiting this gem in the north west of the South Island.
Update: booked for first week of December but only just....bloody DOC Great Walk booking system!!!
Routeburn Track:
I have unfinished business with the Routeburn Track...when I attempted to walk it in December 2019 a massive storm blew in so I didn't get any further than Howden Hut. The rivers flooded so the track closed and so much rain fell that DOC had to helicopter people out of Lake Mackenzie, Routeburn Falls and Routeburn Flat Huts.
|
Howden Hut on the Routeburn Track (damaged and removed in 2021) |
Admittedly I did get to go down the Greenstone Valley to McKellar Hut for a couple of nights so that was something. It is only two odd hours from Howden Hut and I spent two days there with about 15 other people before walking out to the Divide Shelter and a shuttle to Te Anau.
|
Heavy rain falling in the Greenstone Valley, Greenstone-Caples Recreation Area |
I would like to...as the man once said.."...knock the bugger off..."
|
DOC weather report at Howden Hut...spot on!!! |
I am looking at the Grand Traverse...you start at Routeburn Shelter walk the Routeburn Track to the turn off to the Greenstone Valley and then walk right down the Greenstone Track to a shuttle pick up point near Lake Whakatipu. It is almost a circuit albeit with a 30 odd kilometer gap between the two trail heads.
|
McKellar Hut in the Greenstone Valley |
Depending on hut availability I will be walking the track in mid February 2022 (...man that sounds so wrong...2022...). I will probably start from and finish in Queenstown if I do the Grand Traverse but if I decide to just do the Routeburn I would start and finish in Te Anau.
|
The Routeburn Track starts near Glenorchy on Lake Whakatipu |
Update: I am booked to walk the Routeburn Track the first week of March 2022. I am walking the standard Routeburn Shelter to Divide option....
So those are my plans for the Great Walks this year...come back later to see how each of the trips progressed.