Monday 23 October 2023

Dorset and Carkeek

Labour weekend and time for Janine's birthday trip.  These are typically slightly over-ambitious efforts to knock a peak or a hut or two off her bucket list.  

A few old maps and cold beers and we have a solid trip design.  Which changes the day before we leave.

Thursday after work into Atiwhakatu, Friday the party splits with Mike and Janine following the tops around the Kings to Girdlestone and on to Dorset Ridge while I descend the spur near South King to Dorset Creek and up to Dorset Hut.  Saturday - spur to the Waiohine River and up to Carkeek Hut.  Sunday - spur to Park Forks, down river and up to McGregor Biv.  Monday - stroll out via Jumbo.

Janine gets to tick off the Kings and a couple of huts and there's a couple of spurs and a bit of new ridgeline for me.  

It's a good plan on paper, but I'm at pains to point out that there's a few biggish days involved and with a few climbs everyone will be glad of every kilo they don't pack.  (i.e no bags of carrots and spare stoves Mike)   


 


But, actually ...

We stop at a pub in Carterton for a cheap and cheerful dinner - the clientele is a little dodgy though with Ron Marks stooging around looking for a loose electorate or mayoral seat to purloin.  

We're under headlights by the time we get to Atiwhakatu Hut around 9pm.  The occupants are all in bed, so Janine finds a bunk while Mike and I doss down on the deck - there's a bit of wind but it's a mild night. 

Friday: over the top

We get away about 7am and head up valley along a track that is a little less of a highway than last night.  Mike surprises a couple of large goats that stay just out of sight ahead of us for the next kilometer or so.  







At the swingbridge marking the short climb to the saddle I leave them having a snack as I'm keen to push on to give me good time to navigate my route.  We confirm contingency plans including Tarn Ridge Hut and what to do if anyone doesn't turn up when expected.  

The DOC sign in the saddle says 1 hr to the bushline which raises an eyebrow.  It takes me 1:10 - I'm not fit but I think it's a bit of an optimistic estimate for many parties climbing 500m. 

It's windy above the bushline but a beautiful day.  I sidle the top of Baldy and head up to the ridge just south of South King.  It's been a while since I've been here - other times have been in clag so it is quite nice to see for a change.  I get a good buffetting on the way up but the wind fades at the top.  

At the ridge a figure is coming down from South King.  It's a DOC hut inspector (Harvey) - he has just come from Mid King Biv.  He visited Tarn Ridge Hut yesterday and notes the tap is broken (still) and he had to use water from a bucket.    

He and his colleague do the entire Lower North Island between them and I'm interested that they are still allowed to travel solo in these safety conscious times.  He can't confirm if Tarn Ridge Hut is being replaced although notes that a business case has been submitted which is a good sign.  

After a good yarn he heads off for the Pinnacles and McGregor while I tuck into the tussock out of the wind for a snack and wait for Janine and Mike to appear on Baldy.


Looking down on Baldy

The wind drops away while I snooze in the sun.  At last, two tiny figures crawl over the top of Baldy and start heading for the saddle.  It's about 1.45 and I'm keen to keep moving so I flick them a Whats App message to note the Tarn Ridge water situation and I'll see them at Dorset Hut tonight or near Tarn Ridge Hut in the morning.  I'm thinking the latter is more likely given it will probably be after three by the time they get to the ridge.  I'm not too worried as the weather forecast is good, they have a tent and the common sense to fill up at a tarn if their water gets low. 

The spur I'm after is marked as a route on the old maps and it is easy to find on such a clear day (there's a wee tarn just before it, so it would be pretty straight forward in clag too).    


Looking westish - McGregor on left, the spur is behind the hummock on right


Looking down the spur - the other spur runs up to Dorset Hut on the bushline, just right of centre

It's about half an hour easy travel down to the bushline and there's enough foot trail to suggest this route receives a bit of traffic.  I'm interested to get a bit of a view across the face below the Broken Axe Pinnacles.  This is supposedly where the Sutch party came down after one of them had a fall on their epic crossing from Levin.  Having climbed a fair way up one of the streams I know parts of it would be pretty tough to get down, but there looks like a spur just past the last pinnacle that could have been a goer.  Maybe another time.  


Northern face below the Pinnacles

In the bush it is typical goblin forest with lots of cutty grass.  There are permolat markers but it's surprisingly easy to wander off line and miss the next one.  It's not difficult but also not fast as you have to be careful with your footing.  



About 50 minutes from the bushline the markers head right to a side spur and there's even an orange triangle.  From here it gets steep and the last 20 meters sees me hanging off trees (there may have been an easier route that I missed at a fallen tree).  All up it takes two hours from the ridge.
 



Somewhere above, Mike and Janine get to the ridge and start heading along past the Kings - while I cool my feet in Dorset creek.  






There are some markers for the crossing point - on the true right there are a couple of permolat markers on a tree marking where you start a steep clamber onto the spur to Dorset hut.  On the true left an orange triangle marks where you leave the creek and head towards the steep spur I've just come down.  

I take a good break and start the climb about 4pm.  The bottom is a bit of a scramble and then it's just a slow grind.  Again, it's easy to miss the markers - but no particular hardship if you do as the bush is reasonably open.   At about 1060m there's a gully in the spur (you can see the flatter spot on the contours) and the markers take a turn left to cross it to join the spur proper for the last 80m (vertical) to the hut.   

It has taken an hour 25 from the stream and the hut has just lost the afternoon sun.  

I check-in on the Inreach and peer across the valley to see two small dots inching their way towards Adkin.  I settle into the empty hut and periodically gauge their progress and work out that they will either be camping on the ridge or coming off Girdlestone in the dark.  I'm just composing a message to home base to text Mike when the Inreach beeps: "M&J camping on ridge, see you tarn ridge hut tomorrow."  Perfect.


Dorset Hut on a sunny morning

The hut is one of my favourites - it's tidy, dry and well looked after (mostly by hunters I suspect).  The vestibule is closed in with a sink - wonderfully civilised.







I've lost sight of the figures on the ridge but afterwards learn that they had water from a tarn and, while I am enjoying the evening sun outside Dorset hut, they are watching clag forming on the east side of the ridge and closing in around Girdlestone.





Yeah, let's stop now.

They find the last flattish spot on the ridge and set up camp.  Although not entirely to plan, the upside is the clag delivers the conditions for a Spectre of the Brocken.  




Mike has smuggled a birthday cake for Janine in his pack and they settle in on the cusp between the cloud and a spectacular sunset.  Janine reports not much sleep - not because of Mike's feet in her face but the limited space means the tent can't be pulled tight and it flaps in the wind all night.  



Saturday:  A change of plan 


The morning is a pearler and I can just make out the orange dot of their tent on the ridge as I head out from Dorset hut around 7.30.  I follow a trail up through the tussock but then lose and find it again as I make my way to the ridge top.  There's a cairn where I hit the ridge top so I must have been following about the right line, although Mike and Janine later report there is a signpost further west on the ridge.   


M&J's eerie - Dorset ridge on right


Up Dorset Ridge - Girdlestone at centre

As I potter up the ridge I note that the orange dot is still there - they're clearly not in a hurry this morning.  However, as I pass the tarn I hear Mike hailing me from across the valley.  I can't reply as I have started developing a cold and have no voice.  I wave cheerfully and head on up to just short of Girdlestone to wait for them.


Dorset Ridge - the hut is at the bushline on the far spur that runs left 




Although it's a beautiful day, I'm aware that the wind has changed and low cloud is forming to the west and spilling over the main range - it could be a bit claggy by the time I get around to Carkeek Ridge.

It takes about an hour and a half to get from the hut to the ridge and I have a pleasant hour snoozing in the tussock waiting for the rest of the party to make their way off Girdlestone.  

When they arrive, they've reached the same conclusion as me - dropping down the old tracks from Dorset Ridge and back up to Carkeek is no longer an option given the time, and there would be a mutiny at the prospect of following the tops to Carkeek given the long day they had yesterday.   

We change the plan - they will head to Dorset hut for a short day and bag the hut then head to Mitre Flats tomorrow.  I'll follow the tops to Carkeek and follow the original plan to exit at Holdsworth on Monday and pick them up at the Pines.  

We part our ways again and I head towards Tarn Ridge while they have their sights set firmly on a cooked lunch by the Dorset tarn.  


Tarn Ridge towards Lancaster


Time for lunch

It's hot work under the sun and I'm almost glad when the threatened clag starts to coalesce around the pinnacles.  Conscious of the lack of water on Carkeek Ridge I fill up at a tarn on Tarn ridge and chuck in a couple of aqua tabs.  



The clag spills up from the Arete Stream valley and toys with the Waiohine Pinnacles.  Views into a sun dappled upper Waiohine River Valley and Carkeek Ridge come and go.
  





I'm in clag on the top of Lancaster so take a bearing for Carkeek Ridge and after a few seconds see a cairn.  The second cairn is a bit off-line to the right and could lead to dropping towards an outcrop off the ridge - quickly remedied by another glance at the compass.   

I'm soon in clear air again and stop around 2pm for lunch on the flanks of Thompson looking back at a miraculously exposed Lancaster.  Across the Park Valley chainsaws in the mist indicate a track crew are hard at work - on a Saturday. 


Lancaster from Thompson


Carkeek Ridge

It's good travel along the ridge, there's enough ground trail to keep things flowing although you have to keep your eyes peeled in places to find it amongst the tussocks.  This time through I get to see some spectacular erosion chutes south of Carkeek - last time they just plunged away into greyness.  




I figure the rest of the party are comfortably ensconced in Dorset Hut by now tucking into whatever other illicit (and weighty) contraband they have smuggled in.  I continue along the ridge under a higher cloud ceiling that promises to be set for the duration.   Across the valley clag is now spilling over the length of Tarn Ridge.   
   


Point 1285 marks where I left this ridge last time through to do the down and up to Dorset Ridge.  I don't recall much of the route beyond seeing some old permolat markers on the way up to Dorset.  I suspect it is quite well travelled though as the trail from here to Carkeek Hut suddenly becomes fair more obvious with cairns and, in the scrub, tape.  

The route ducks in and out of the bush edge with some pretty wee clearings and, just before the hut, pieces of the helicopter that crashed here are stacked beside the path.  It's 4pm - about 2 hours from my lunch stop on Thompson and 8 and a half hours from Dorset Hut (including that long snooze below Girdlestone). 







The hut is in good nick and the last visit was in July.  Usually this just means people haven't been using the logbook, but I'm inclined to believe it as I walk through a few cobwebs inside.  The last visitor reported flying in to a snowclad ridge, shooting some deer on day one and then spending three days snowed in before flying out again.   Like Dorset, it is well provisioned, well cared for and no signs of rats chewing the food.   

It's not sunny, but warm enough and it's pleasant to lie on the cool moss in the clearing before the hut as I wait to ping a checkin message back to base and receive an updated weather forecast.

After that I have a leisurely evening and hit the sack.

Sunday:  I think I can ...


Sunday is the day there's supposed to be the odd shower - around 3pm according to Garmin.  However, as I get under way around 7.30 there is already a prickle of moisture in the air.  There wasn't any noticeable rain over night though so I'm expecting the river section to be fine.  

I'm looking forward to this next bit.  I have been along as far as pt 1080 and recall some of the most gorgeous goblin forest I'd ever seen.  I assume this ridge cops all the moisture and rain from the north and west as well as anything that spills across from the south or east.  This supports a mass of moss and lichens on the gnarly trunks.     




I've not been down here to the river, so this is another bit of red line for the trip.  There are markers and the track is mostly pretty obvious, but you have to keep your eyes open.  A little bit under an hour and a half later I'm at the improbably green point between the Waiohine and Park rivers.  Park Forks.  





Park on the left, Waiohine on the right

Meanwhile, Mike and Janine have left Dorset Hut on a similarly drizzly morning (not surprising as they are less than 3km away).  They follow a different route from the hut to the ridge and find the signpost to the hut.  Their route is up and over to Mitre then down to the flats for the night.  They've done most of it before and provided Mike doesn't fall over again they should have another leisurely day.   




For me, the section of river is marked as gorgeish on the map - I came up it some years back and don't recall any problems so I'm hopeful there won't be any swimming.  





It turns out to be pretty good travel.  Lots of river crossings and care needed but I manage to avoid the deepest pools only getting in up to my waist.  It is pretty, and even though there is a steady drizzle I'm within my comfort zone and enjoy the wander about 40 minutes downstream to Dorset Creek.  

There are markers for where to start up the spur.  It's steep and initially requires a bit of a scramble.  Then it just goes unrelentingly up with indifferent permolat marking.  I take it slowly as I figure there's plenty of time to get to McGregor and assess options for the rest of the day.  

I've travelled parts of this ridge a few times now, including in the dark, and there's always a few bits where the marking is easy to lose.  For some reason I get a bit turned around at pt 1000 but sit down for a snack and check the compass and I'm soon back on track.  About seven years ago I came down this way and had exactly the same experience.  

I've slowed somewhat today so it takes 2hr 45 from the river to the bushline.  

I drop down to McGregor hut to get out of the drizzle and have a bit of lunch.  It's exactly a year ago that Janine and I stopped here on a trip to take in the plane crash on Shingle-Slip Knob.  Another terrifying birthday adventure.   

It's not yet 1pm so I'm thinking that if it is not too bad on the tops, I could skip Jumbo or even just head all the way to the car.  I've always thought Carkeek was doable in a day with a weekender pack so it would be interesting to see.   I chuck on another layer though as it's cooler and the drizzle isn't letting up. 
 



At about the same time that I'm contemplating my next move, Mike and Janine are experiencing the clag on the way over Brockett and Mitre.  


Mitre

It's a little windy and claggy on top but once past Angle Knob it's easy going and I'm at Jumbo in about 1 hr 35.  A couple of groups are in loc trying to get soggy firewood to light.  I have a berth booked but at 2.30 it's too early to stop so I head on down to Atiwhakatu.  The drizzle has now turned into light rain.

About 10 people come up hill as I make my way down and I'm pleased not to have stayed at Jumbo. 

An hour ten from Jumbo and Atiwhakatu is heaving.  I take one look in the door and leave them to it.

By 5.10pm I'm at the carpark.  Under 10 hours from Carkeek and I'm definitely not fit so it is easily a weekender trip.  

And that's that.  I have takeaways, a shower and a comfortable bed at brother number one's place while Janine shares the Mitre Flats Hut floor with a hoard of others and Mike camps outside in a bog. Not my idea of an enjoyable evening but they bump into people they know and have some good yarns. 

In the morning I dry sodden kit, before heading out to pick them up at the Pines.  It's a nice sunny day and there's a party from HVTC waiting for a pick-up.  Mike and Janine eventually turn up and we head off for a late lunch at The Offering in Greytown (which is looking more and more like a boutique shopping street in Khandallah).






All up a successful trip.  Mike and Janine bagged some new peaks and a hut, I ticked all my boxes, and some valuable lessons about optimism bias and how to camp on ridges.


Thursday 5 October 2023

Rainy River - Richmond Range

A long weekend - a Sounds Air 10 trip to Blenheim to use up.  Richmond Ranges it is.

Where:  Wakamarina / Pelorus Bridge
When:    6-8 October 2023
Who:      Solo
What:     Wander over the ridge between Wakamarina and Pelorus Bridge


Previous trip along ridge through pt 1330 in blue

It's tiresomely familiar now - the access into the range from Northbank Road is largely closed so it's going to have to be something in the Pelorus area.

The plan:  Start at Butchers Flat at the end of the Wakamarina Road (from Canvas Town), pop over the ridge and drop into Rainy River, follow down to the Hoiere/Pelorus River, pop out at the cafe by the Pelorus Bridge.  Iona and Col are trapping in the bridge area on Sunday so we have an elaborate plan for cars and pick ups.  

It's a hot Friday afternoon when I park at Butchers Flat.  The campsite has a toilet, lots of grass for camping and one occupant.  It's on a terrace at a bend in the river and the DOC signboard tells its (post European settlement) history as a mining community.     





Gary comes hurrying over when he sees me arrive and is immediately full on and ever so slightly unhinged.  He expounds at length on the evidence he has been finding in the surrounding bush of Māori fortifications and weapons, and his theories about how they repulsed attackers.  He enthusiastically shows me a range of pieces of wood that show careful crafting by Māori carvers to fit the hand for stabbing.  They look like bits of driftwood to my untrained eye and the landforms seem to bear the imprints of colonial engineering.  But what would I know.

He's from Auckland and is camped up with his van, his dog, and his gold mining equipment.  He shows me a tiny amount of gold in a vial - it doesn't appear to be a lucrative enterprise.  I get the impression of someone that has not had an easy path but is eager to engage with others.   

I head up the road and around 1pm pass the DOC sign to Wakamarina Track - it promises 7km / 2 hours to my destination - Devils Creek Hut. 

It starts as a 4WD track and is easy travel all the way.  I pass a few couples and an Outdoor Pursuits group coming out and arrive to an empty hut around an hour forty later.

It's a standard hut in a large clearing - an ideal spot to chill out for the afternoon.  I have the luxury of a can of beer and a snooze in the grass, disturbed only by a goat sneezing loudly at me from the shelter of the trees.


Doom Creek




Perusing the log book I note that Gary was through a couple of years back and had a wee story about giving up the smokes to join the army and leaving his phone number in case someone had work for him.

Saturday - over the top

It's a quiet night and a bit damp in the morning.  The order of operations is to drop to the river, find a way onto the opposite spur and grind my way upwards. I get underway at a leisurely 7.40.

The slope at the end of the clearing is navigable - in retrospect I wonder if it would be easier to follow the track to the swingbridge on the side creek though.  I cross the river with dry feet but a route onto the spur isn't obvious.  I just make my way up as best I can - zigzagging to find the least manky faces and testing every foot hold with care.  


Wakamarina River

Mouth of Devil's Creek

Then it's just climbing - initially quite steeply then easing considerably.  I'm definitely not in shape so take it easy.  There's the odd ribbon to be seen and a few white triangles in strategic places - I assume these are from the Outdoor pursuits center - there is probably an easier way onto the spur for those in the know.   There is some foot trail in places but mostly just picking your way up through the usual mix of forest but without any bluffs to worry about.  

Around 9.10 I am probably around pt 585 as I come across an orienteering marker with a hole punch.  It's a bit of a surprise but I figure it is further indication that the Outdoor Pursuits people frequent this route.






Taking a short break I can hear a pig grunting - it sees me and heads off but stays nearby making noises.  There's fresh sign about and as I get underway again I flush out a couple of piglets. It was probably mum that I saw so I keep a weather eye out and move out of the line between her and the disappearing piglet tails.

Around 11.00 I come across another orienteering station so I guess I'm at point 1211.



When the trees take on that interesting stunted look with moss and a few rocky outcrops I take a lunch break before hitting the tops.  It's 12.30 and somewhat drizzly.   



At 2pm I'm on pt 1330 - it's taken 6hr 40 to climb 1200 odd meters.  Not fast and I'm feeling the burn.  

I have phone reception so take 20 minutes to sit down and knock off a couple of priorities (doing Wordle and texting home). As I sit the clag clears and I can see where I've come from and also that the spur on the north side of Banks Creek looks eminently navigable - probably all the way from Butchers Flat.

Pt 1330

The route up - starting to clear


Ridge up running from left

Spur to Butcher's Flat on left

This is now territory I've travelled before.  Last time through I was pretty knackered as I tried to find a flat spot to sleep out of the wind.  This time - knackered again but at least it's downhill.


Leaving pt 1330 - pt 920 in cloud to right and target saddle on left

I head down the steep ridgeline towards pt 920.  There's a nasty moment at the bushline when an apparently solid boulder suddenly gives way - it smashes down through the bush but I manage not to follow it and get away with just a few bruises.  

The ridge through here is good travel - steep and the odd scramble or sidle but all fine.  Something silver catches my eye on one scramble and turns out to be a discarded walking pole.  It's been there a while but is perfectly functional and proves to be quite useful.    

I'm slow on the climb to pt 920 and sidle across the west face below the top to pick up the ridge running to pt 782 above Rainy River.  New territory again.

It drops steeply and there's some sign of travel.  A little before where the slope eases, white triangles mark a route north off the ridge.  I figure they must be going somewhere so follow them down hoping it's a clever Outdoor Pursuits route to Rainy River.  

It's steep and pretty rough going and there's little signs of use as I search out the next marker.  Eventually they deposit me in a dry water course and hook around a corner where there is a passable rock bivvy.  It would do at a pinch but I'm not ready to call it a day so I follow and lose the markers before finding my own way back onto the ridge where it flattens before dropping to the saddle.  

I take a bearing to leave the ridge and follow a spur down to Rainy River.  It's ok going in open beech much of the way but at the bottom there are some bluffy bits that require a bit of avoiding.  


Random bush on the spur


Rainy River

About 6.15 I'm at the bottom next to a pretty wee stream - Rainy River at last.  It feels like a long day and it's getting a bit dim so I find the nearest flat spot and set up the fly.  The Inreach fails miserably to get a message out from the valley floor. 

I sleep the sleep of the unfit and over extended.

Sunday - a bit of swimming

Away around 7.15, I have some concern that it might be gorgy or swimmy although the contours generally don't look too bad.  The contingency plans are not entirely pleasant prospects of steep climbs out of the valley or painful sidles. 

It turns out to be generally pretty good travel down river and I reach the major junction with a stream from the east around 8.20.  Half an hour later though I am contemplating my first swim.  The river has quite a few pools from here on down and I have a few more short swims.  

 

First Junction


First chest-deep wade




About 3 hour 20 after leaving camp the valley ahead opens suddenly into bright light and the Hoiere River.  Rather than try to navigate the narrow opening into what will likely be a large, deep pool, I scramble up the true right for a high sidle around to the face above the river before dropping down to the edge.  



Hoiere

It's mixed travel downstream. I start along the river edge and things are going fine until it bluffs off and I find myself swimming again.  I'm not so keen on this with the main current swirling a meter from my elbow so after this, look for points to clamber up the slope.   

   

Old road

It's a curious mix of bush bashing and finding old logging/mining roads that whisk you along before disappearing.  There's signs of wilding pine poisoning and pest control tape in places, but it's easy to lose the trails.  

Eventually I'm on a solid pest control trail that spits me onto the marked tracks from Pelorus Bridge to the waterfalls.  Things speed up and I see the first people.  I reach the first (from the carpark) waterfall around 1.40 and the carpark 25 minutes later after pleasant travel through the beautiful forest near the bridge.



Jean, Allan and Iona are enjoying homebaking and coffee by the closed cafe when I wander up and we have a good old natter as we wait for Malcolm and Col to make their way back from the K line trap circuit.  As well as the usual rats etc they've found a large and largely decomposed bird in one of the traps.  We pore over the grisly photos and conclude that it might be a weka chick ... or not.

Wrap up

It could be a weekend trip but plan your water.  I'd be inclined to follow the spur from opposite Butchers Flat.  There are flat spots but I wouldn't rely on finding something suitable on the ridge - last time I tried to drop to a stream at one point to get water and had to give it away.

There's always the Biv but the water course next to it was dry and I don't think the climb down and back is worth it compared to pitching the tent somewhere.

The spur down to Rainy River was ok.  I had to sidle right off the spur to avoid some steep bits near the bottom.  It didn't look like it was a route anyone used.         

All up, it was 6 hour 40 from the camp to get down Rainy River to Pelorus Bridge.  Rainy River requires some wading and swimming but it's not big water although I would avoid it in the rain and  I wouldn't think about trying to sidle it. The trip down beside the Pelorus was a bit mixed and messy but not difficult - it's not pretty bush and it gets a bit aggravating finding and losing trails as you just sorta wanna be out of there.