After the library, we headed towards a campground in Totaranui. It's huge! It can fit 850 campers, or so the DOC book claims. We had a relaxing evening and decided to do a section of the Abel Tasman coastal hike the next morning. One option was the whole loop, which would have been around 20k, part of it going up to around 450 meters. Otherwise, we could hitchhike to the start and hike back to the campground.
We found a ride pretty quickly, so we started hiking. It was a bit more up and down than I was expecting, but it was still a very nice hike. Most of it was in the forest and it had some great views of the coast and some beaches. We made the hike in 4 hours. It was around 13k total.
From there we headed back into Takaka to use the library's internet for an hour. Our goal from there was to maybe get to a free DOC site, but it was looking a little far and we were due for a shower, so we stopped in Motueka at a holiday park and are staying here for the night. It's super packed because the fruit pickers of the season are here, but a shower is definitely nice.
-Miranda
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We headed back north, aiming for Abel Tasman National Park. Yesterday we drove within 35km of Takaka, down a narrow, gravel road. It was 11km long, but not too bad of a drive. A cheap campground was at the end. We went for a short walk to Harwood's Hole, which is the deepest hole in New Zealand. 175 meters down. There isn't much to the cave down there though, from the sound of it.
From there, we headed up to a view point that was gorgeous. The rocks were weathered from the rain, which looked very neat. I didn't get any photos of the view, because the sun was coming right from that direction, so it wouldn't have shown anything anyway.
That night was super cold. Joe even broke out the second sleeping bag to put on top of us. After breakfast, we headed to Takaka and have been using the free internet at the library. Unfortunately, we only get an hour, and we've already exceeded that, so, off we go!
-Miranda
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We drove south of Picton for one reason only. To go whale watching. Off of Kaikoura is the main place to see Sperm Whales. There is a deep canyon (about 1000 meters deep) where they dive to feed. We headed out and they spotted a whale pretty quickly. The whale we saw, we ended up seeing him 3 times, was named Tiaki. They sit at the surface for 5-10 minutes, filling up on oxygen, then dive for, normally 45-50 minutes to feed.
After seeing him a couple times, we went over to check out the Dusky Dolphins. They were very fun to watch. They're pods are typically around 100-500 dolphins. We watched them for quite a while before heading towards some rocks where Fur Seals were hanging out. We watched some seal pups for a bit, then headed back out towards the canyon and got another view of Tiaki before he dove again.
We're back at the free spot just 28km from Kaikoura for the night since we're both tired and don't really feel like driving.
-Miranda
Tiaki's tail.
A Dusky Dolphin.
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We sat in Wellington for a couple nights. They have the 3rd largest bell-tower-organ-type thing in the world we were pied-pipered to it without knowing what it was. Someone can play all the various 77 bells with a keyboard. (biggest was several tonnes) Stayed in the van parked behind a hostel for $30/night... The hostel was crazy, 50+ rooms in this smallish old home. staggard floors and second story walkways, hidden bathrooms. . . crazy. We had an amazing Morrocan
fancy dinner (Who knew apricots, figs, prunes, onions, carrots,rice
and sauces went well together...)
We took the Ferry from north Island to south island for $200. Not
cheap, but it's a 3 hour tour. Picturesque views of the sound for
the last hour of travel.
-Joe
The ferry.
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We re-met a German couple at a campground near Tihape. Upon talking we were both thinking of going to "Gravity Canyon" where they have a bridge with bungy/zipline/swing setup. We also talked a solo traveling german woman to join us as well for fun and to hope to net some group discounts. The Zip line was over a kilometer long, and started 500+feet in the air!. Miranda And I were hooked into that directly and after some jarring attachments, literally and completely like birds flew our way down and through the large river canyon. (This was the same canyon river used for some of the Lord of the Rings Giant King-statue river filming. After That, I went for my first bungy jump with the German friend Jens... It didn't really dawn on me how wrong it all was, until standing on the precipice you are ordered to completely swan dive off the platform towards your definite death... At this point we were aboout 280' in the air. As the ground quickly approached I had a very strong feeling that there was no reason this was a proper or even acceptable activity in life. The rope stopped you 20 feet short of bottom and bounced you all about. So, yeah, survived, but I don't know as I'll need to do that again ;)
-Joe
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