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Nelson Tramping Club September 2013 Newsletter of the NELSON TRAMPING CLUB Founded 1934, Nelson, New Zealand www.nelsontrampingclub.org.nz MEMBER PROFILE > Chris Louth 1. Country of origin: Hertfordshire, England 2. Occupation: very retired Graphic Artist. 3. Been a member for: 2 years. 4. How has being a member benefitted you? It gets you to places you haven’t known about and probably would never go to. Then there’s the good company with a few laughs along the way. Also keeps my impatience and impetuosity Our club Programme Co-ordinator above Blue Lake in check a bit. > CHRIS LOUTH PHOTO 5. Best trip: Can’t go past one I did many times the hut axe! He had no food for them and said while living near Cairns, Australia: that when they got hungry enough they’d kill 4–5 easy days down the seaward coast of something. Hinchinbrook, a mountainous island off the coast All the while he was banging around he kept up of Far North Queensland. Magnificent beaches, a continuous conversation. Not to me though – warm weather, warm water and loads of wildlife. it was like he vocalised every thought that went Even a saltwater croc or two. through his head. 6. Worst trip: Coming down from Rintoul Hut, When he finally went to bed at about 2am, typi- over Bishop’s Cap and into the Lee Valley - a very cally of the inconsiderate ones, he fell asleep in- erroneously DOC-designated bad weather escape stantly and started snoring like a farting camel. route. Halfway down, the track was obliterated by Shortly after, there was a huge bang in the hut windfalls and I spent the best part of two hours to and we both jumped up thinking someone was the valley floor pushing through gorse and bush shooting through it. A firebrick had exploded. lawyer. Fell over countless times and got ripped to Back to bed for a while till he started scream- shreds. Had to stop at a creek on the way out to ing like a banshee. He’d got cramp in his legs and clean all the blood off before my wife Carole, who was tangled up in his sleeping bag and couldn’t was meeting me, saw it and banned me from ever get out. leaving the house again! At first light I packed in record time, edged past 7. Funniest moment: A long night with a nutter the mangy mutts in the doorway and was out of (it’s one of those “it wasn’t funny at the time” there. events). 8. Scariest moment: The answer could be the I was spending the night before New Year’s at same as to the last question! Roebuck Hut. Thought I had the hut to myself un- I’ve had a few, usually caused by making bad til at about 9.30pm there was a thud, thud, thud decisions or not stopping to think for a minute. Af- up the steps and the door banged open. It was terwards I always think “You silly sod, that could a big, fat, hairy bikie-type and his two ugly pig have ended badly. Be careful”. dogs. No gun though, thank God. 9. Favourite hut: I like to be comfortable after He introduced himself without a word by puk- a hard day so any one that is warm and not too ing in the middle of the floor. crowded. So began a very long night. 10. Bucket list: I’ve seen a fair bit of the top of He lit the wood burner to cook on and ramped the South but there’s still a lot of country left to it up to blast furnace intensity (in an already hot visit further afield. hut) and alternated between baby-talking to his dogs and abusing and kicking them. At one time WELCOME TO NEW MEMBER > Phillip Palmer he was chasing one of them around outside with 2 September 2013 > nelson tramping club son made this happen. Our trio met on Robinson Rd, off Brook Street. A cheery volley of braying from a large male donkey greeted us as we began walking up the Translator Road. The morning was a little chilly but we soon warmed up. At least it was fine, but a layer of cloud prevented the sun’s warmth from coming through. After joining the track from Collingwood St on a flat, open plateau, we branched left along the shady Kanuka Track. There was some rather nice bush there. We stopped for refreshments at the clearing that follows the pylons up from the Brook Valley. We had a good view of The Doubles. We continued on the shady east side through open manuka, passing the occasional ring-barked dead pine. At a junction with two roads we chose Dion Pont, Mark Stevens & Ian Morris at Ellis Basin Hut, mid-winter the summit one. More good views over to Jenkins PHOTO > RAY SALISBURY > RAY PHOTO Hill and the upper Brook Valley. Further on, a 15-minute grunt up a firebreak took TRIP REPORTS us to the top where we had a good look around the June–August 2013 broadcasting building and tower structures. Lunchtime was looming, so we headed down the road to the lookout platform, enjoying views across 29–30 June – Ellis Hut – Kahurangi NP Tasman Bay. Leader: Dion Pont Heading off again, we took the steep road adja- cent to Mahoe / Fuchsia Track, a left turn into Kahi- Postponed from the previous weekend, Dion katea Track which returned us to the eastern side. cajoled us into a second attempt. It was mid-morn- A steep gravel trail led us to the saddle between ing on a Saturday when he ferried us further along Sugar Loaf and The Grampians. We descended the the farm road from the Baton Valley in his trusty road down the gully, despite it being closed. We got Suzuki jeep. back on the lower section of the Translator Road. A While the old track began on an easy gradient, slow descent to the cars completed the loop. the stream crossings got deeper and trickier. 2.5 Participants were: Christine Burn (Waimea TC), hours of good going put us beneath the crux: a Robyn Walsh (scribe) & Ted Brooks. vertical climb of some 30 metres hanging onto a steel cable. Thankfully there were ample rooted 29 June – Mount Stanley – Marlborough Sounds hand- and foot-holds. Leader: Silvano Lorandi This was the start of a two-hour sidle, high above the Ellis River, which slowed progress somewhat. A In the puzzle of sea and land that is the cold crossing to the true right, another gnarly sidle Marlborough Sounds some fortunate mountains track, and a final ford of the frigid stream. are high enough to promise a spectacular view. Mt. A rather steep ascent had our legs screaming for Stanley (971m) on the map appears as a distinc- 20 minutes until the spur broadened and our jour- tive peak possibly high enough to conquer the veg- ney settled into a steady slog through the snow. etation and peek out in the sky. Once in the Ellis headwaters, somewhere below The popular Nydia track wanders around its the various peaks of Mount Arthur, we marvelled at slopes and offers a well-formed track that gets limestone outcrops, before reaching the six-bunk close to the top but from Nydia Saddle the map hut. It had taken nearly six hours’ hard tramping. shows just a green patch which could mean some Inside were NSC maps detailing the entire Ellis bush-bashing might be required to reach the top Basin cave system; 37km of passages. and the prize of a great view. On Sunday, we made tracks back down-valley, It’s four of us on a misty and chilly Saturday shooting a few photos of the gorge, and returning morning when we start walking the Nydia Track to the jeep in five hours. from Duncan Bay in the Tennyson inlet. Hardy trampers were: Dion Pont, Ian Morris, With a good walking pace we reach Nydia Saddle Mark Stevens and Ray Salisbury (scribe). in a couple of hours and then enter the bush ready for some route-finding and bush-bashing, but to 29 June – The Grampians – Nelson our surprise we find a reasonably good path very Leader: Robyn Walsh well marked with pink ribbons that lead the way. “Surely that it is not the way to a girl’s birthday There wasn’t much interest for the Saturday party?” But we follow it until we reach the main walk – only one plus an invitation to another per- ridge at 680m. nelson tramping club > September 2013 3 Don Morrisey, Pat Holland, Chris Louth and Silvano Lorandi – guess who was added later in Photoshop? PHOTO > CHRIS LOUTH PHOTO Here another surprise is waiting for us: a brand new and very comfortable looking DOC hut, un- fortunately not for public use but probably for the purpose of some research, perhaps on giant snails of which we will find plenty of shells. However, for public use and very important in PLAN A–Z the summer months is the hut’s water tank which is the only source of water up here. THE TRAMP THAT NEVER WAS An even nicer track marked with blue DOC tri- angles follows the ridge up and down, left and right 6–7 July – Lake Chalice, Mt Duppa, whatever! for a few km to the top. The track continues down- Leaders: Kate Krawczyk, Chris Louth & Dion Pont hill but we didn’t feel like continuing the exploration.

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