Sunrise over the equator.
New 777-300
Top of the South Island
Sunrise over the equator.
New 777-300
Top of the South Island
The long week is over and mostly went off without a hitch. Michael and Molly's journey sounds like it was a success and I managed to survive five days in the wilderness on my own. Here is a quick run down.
Monday night I was running on fumes in the car so I was not able to make it to the trailhead because the one gas station in town closed sometime before 9pm. So I slept in the car that night. Woke up at 8am the next morning filled the car up with gas and was walking up the greenstone valley before I knew it. It took a bit longer then I was expecting with my heavy pack full of food and fishing gear but I was still the 3rd person at the hut so I got a prime bed location. I stopped just long enough to grab a quick bite and headed to the river with my fly rod for the evening in a deep gorge that might have been my favorite spot of the whole trip. I hooked up with two huge rainbows both of with broke my line so no pictures (no pictures no proof so it will stay a fish story but i saw them and was even able to touch one of them!).
The next day I walked further up the greenstone river fishing along the way with my gigantic pack but had some great success in the afternoon catching and landing seven rainbows from around 18" to 25". I wish someone else would have been around to get some pictures of me holding the fish but the ones below will have to suffice.
The third day was spent climbing up and over the McKellar saddle around 3,000' of elevation gain which was much steeper then expected and similar to Miter peak with a lack of a trail in most parts. I skipped the upper Caples hut as the river was fairly small and walked another four miles to the Mid-Caples hut. I had a quick fish in the afternoon and caught one medium sized rainbow before the sandflies chewed my ankles up.
Sandflies are nasty little small nats that seem to be impervious to DEET and love to bite around the ankles and wrists. They are fairly small so you can't feel them land on you and once you feel them bite it is to late and you can guarantee that you will be itching all night. The bites also swell up so my ankles were quite swollen most of the trip.
Day four was dedicated to fishing and funny enough I caught the least fish. The only thing I got in the afternoon was a sunburned and sandfly bites, although I did catch one in the evening.
The fifth day I was running out of food so I had a quick breakfast and was back to the parking lot at 10:30. I drove back to queenstown and booked a dorm room in a hostel just so I could use their shower to take off the layers of sweat, sunscreen, and bug spray.
The trip was a pretty decent experience. I didn't get to fish as much as I was hoping for mainly because the weather was so nice the sandflies swarmed me any time I stopped moving. So I spent a lot of time walking or in the huts reading and sleeping. The total trail length was 30 miles but with all the walking up and down the rivers it probably ended up being closer to 50 miles.
Back to work tomorrow. David comes back again on Thursday and will be here for most of the rest of our time here I just found out. I'm not sure what is going to happen then as our use of the car is pretty much gone for the weekends. So this might be the last big post…
Enjoy the pictures.
View from the top of McKellar Saddle.
Looking down the Greenstone valley. The river winds back and forth very similar to the Gallatin back home but no trees.
Some of the rainbows were spawning from the lake the river drains into. They don't look as healthy as the local fish.


On the top, Tasman sea in the background.



2nd larger trout I caught on a tiny bead head nymph. I knew there were trout in the pool but the river was a bit murky from some rain and I didn't see this fish in the deeps.
2nd larger trout
1st "smaller" trout caught sight fishing with a beetle.
1st smaller trout