Tag Archives: 6CWC

Rainy Return to Nelson

Rain fell on the iron roof of my little cabin much of the night; a slow start to the day was in order with a cooked breakfast and plenty of tea. The rain was consistent, but at least it was light as I rode a few miles of highway before turning off and heading up the Mangles Valley. The pleasant and gradual climbed steepened as my route (the first part of the day was on the Kiwi Brevet route I remember from 2015) headed up the good gravel to Braeburn Saddle. The wetting continued from above, the multiple large stream crossings thankfully were all rideable.

With nothing in the distance but clouds, there was plenty of time and attention to focus on the immediate surroundings – which I thoroughly enjoyed. After an hour, I was over the pass and concentrating on the descent to Lake Rotoroa. With the extra speed and spray, I was fair soaked through and barely comfortable from the air movement. I found a shelter at the lake (no sandflies today!), had some food and pondered whether I should take the much higher option of the Porika Track and put myself in the clouds for a couple of hours.

Eventually I figured an hour of pushing my bike three kilometres up a rugged track would probably warm me up a fair bit – and really, it wasn’t raining heavily and there was little wind. Perfect day to take my bike for a walk up a hill. It was not unpleasant and the rain never worsened, I kept a steady pace and finally got back on my bike at 1000 m high for the slightly mellower descent. Going the reverse direction in February will be interesting, will be a wild drop down to the lake.

Lake Rotoroa. Oh.

Out onto the minor highway to St Arnaud, it was much busier than usual as the main road from the Buller to Nelson was closed in part. The traffic wasn’t too bad on a Saturday afternoon, but with the spray and low visibility it wasn’t particularly fun. Also, it was one big false flat; I’m surprised now to check and see that there was almost two hundred metres of climbing in that seemingly flat stretch of road. In no real rush, it was just a case of continuing to move through the moisture – of course, most of it came with me as I was wet through. In town I found a cafe, sat outside and enjoyed a pie, tea and cheesecake – a strange mix looking back, but any combination of desirable food makes sense at such moments.

Rejoining all the rerouted traffic heading back to the city, I was now at the point of the return to sea level that almost any climb I now did would take me to the highest point I would be on for the rest of the trip. Which is a rather long way of saying, it was almost all downhill from there. At Golden Downs I was surprised to be reading history boards about a once thriving timber town, obviously that wasn’t only a thing closer to my North Island home. Here I turned off for a longer route home, leaving the traffic behind, and heading for a section of the Great Taste Trail I’d not ridden (even more has since opened in the month since).

The attraction on this part of the trail is Spooners Tunnel – it’s certainly not any tasty treats, I don’t think I’ve ever tasted anything great on the trail; I may be missing the point. At over 1300 m long, it’s the longest disused tunnel in New Zealand and has only in the last few years been accessible. At the carpark nearby it was cool to stop and chat to a family with young kids going for a ride in the tunnel; I was impressed that this is their go-to rainy day activity. “It’s dry in there and we can ride our bikes!” – can’t fault that logic.

Back into the rain and gloom after the darkness of the tunnel, the long gradual rail-gradient descent to sea level commenced. Of course, decades since the railway closed, it is not as simple as following the rail corridor; things change. But it wasn’t too tortuous and the main road was mostly avoided. Somewhere around seven o’clock the rain began to back off and it finally stopped! Twelve hours after setting off I somehow found a way to add a large order of Indian takeout to my luggage and was on the final stretch of my little tour, looking forward to a big meal and getting dry.

What a fantastic two weeks! My first solo tour of more than a long weekend in years was thoroughly enjoyable. While the weather delayed and changed plans a little, it was such a luxury to have the time up my sleeve to change plans around the storms and it meant I had many excellent days riding in the areas I really wanted to ride – most excellent to spend time with friends old and new too. I certainly hope it’s not another five years before I’m back biking on the West Coast – so much to offer.

Old Ghost Road again, to Murchison

Late the night before leaving Reefton for the trip back to Nelson and the airport, I decided that was a silly and wasteful idea when I could go riding on the Old Ghost Road again. With the weather due to close in over the weekend, Rachel was keen to make the most of a sunny Friday – so off I rode thirty kilometres north to meet near Inangahua. There may have been pies for second breakfast at the recently reopened store.

Ditching the overnight gear from my bike, for the second time in the (non-)working week I was riding up to Lyell Saddle in excellent weather. A good pace was set, it was just as well I didn’t have the need to stop all the time and take photos. There were some big groups on the trail and we chatted to many of them, especially at the first hut – where we enjoyed a long snack break in the sun gazing over the south branch of the Mokihinui.

Things looking familiar indeed, I’m unsure one could tire of these views.

Out of the trees and onto the tops, for a change there was someone on a bike to snap pictures of.

The judicious use of fencing certainly helps make some of the riding less nerve wracking.

Reaching the highpoint, the snow had cleared from earlier in the week and the trail was all rideable.

Murchison can just be seen left of centre; my route there after the descent would far more circuitous.

Yes, it’s not just my bike escaping for these trips without me.

I’ve had far worse lunch spots.

Nothing for it but two hours of downhill on the gentle gradient we’d just climbed. Much fun and I didn’t ache too much from having no suspension. While I missed riding over Maruia Saddle, which is ever so pretty, it could hardly be said that I missed out with the Ghost Road day-trip option! Now I just had to finally start making my way back home. The thirty-five kilometres to Murchison started off lumpier than I was expecting, I may have been a bit lethargic from the previous two days of singletrack.

But it flattened out and I arrived in plenty of time to restock for the ride to Nelson, have dinner, find and check-in to the wonderful Riverview Holiday Park – where I bumped into Mike the Scout, whose house near Nelson I stayed in on my Tour Aotearoa almost five years ago. Much bikepacking talk ensued before I finally went to sleep in my wee cabin thoroughly satisfied with an unexpected day. It’s hard not to love the Old Ghost Road, and it’s definitely better with company.

Waiuta and Big River Day

A day waiting out the forecast rain (didn’t really eventuate until late) was well spent cleaning gear, walking the dog, planning the rest of my little tour, popping into town and really doing very little – there may have been a lot of tea. The following day was only marginally less restful, with a four hour ride on quiet, flat highways to Reefton. It was wonderful to be welcomed by friends I’d met when they were some of my very first warmshowers guests five summers ago; as is prone to happening in New Zealand, they just happened to know well the friends I’d just met and stayed with in Westport.

I figured I could either have one day in Reefton riding and then a relaxed two days getting back to Nelson before flying home, or two days riding in Reefton before a big rush to get back, pack my bike and catch a flight. With the weekend weather looking woeful, I was tending towards the relaxed option with plenty of time to dry out. Either way, I couldn’t wait to ride the Waiuta to Big River trail again. It was easily the highlight of my first bikepacking event, the Kiwi Brevet in 2015, and my Tour Aotearoa the year after.

Starting at the abandoned, and mostly gone, former gold mining town of Waiuta I remembered the trail being closer to a hiking trail with plenty of technical challenges and pushing on the old pack track, in dense forest where all the water is tainted brown. Twenty-odd kilometres on the highway preceded the gravel climb up the valley through Blackwater (a few houses, and a long since disused school room) to Waiuta. There was still a bit of snow to be seen in the distance and a few ruins briefly caught my eye.

Reaching the trailhead proper, the gradient kicked a little and the bush closed in around the track. Perhaps my memory tricks me, or I’m more experienced in such places or both – but I was most disappointed in the first hour of trail. It seemed to me that the trail had been heavily sanitised with a lot of gravel laid and it was easily rideable. That just gave more time to admire the surrounds, a vividly green, mossy, gnarled primordial looking forest.

Beginning to wonder if I was in the right place, very easy riding.

Dropping sharply through two tight switchbacks, suddenly the trail was back to the part I liked best.

The moss closes in…

Finally, the best part – the trail is literally the creek. Good fun trying to keep dry feet, and plenty of time to stop for photos.

I was even more underbiked this time around, but that hardly mattered – loaded only for a day trip certainly helped make the trail easier.

That short section had me grinning and satisfied all my expectations for the day.

In some places, granted, the trail was barely discernible.

Reaching the highpoint after climbing out of the creek, I was surprised when it started hailing for some time – I didn’t think it was that cold. Big River Hut was only fifteen minutes away, so I cruised down and sheltered for a short time from what was now rain. Fond memories of dotwatching best-sister switching shifts, travelling all the way from Westport and riding bits of my TA with me (in between shuttling her own vehicle) and staying in this hut together. We don’t get enough trips together and they’re always memorable – that one particularly so.

From the hut to the old gold treatment plant for the Big River Mine.

In continuing the trend, Big River is now bridged – which is entirely sensible as it tends to flood easily. Just twenty kilometres of four-wheel drive track out remained. Hard packed stone, I’m not sure a four-wheel drive is necessary and it’s quite a tedious descent being shaken to pieces for long periods – I definitely prefer to climb this section. That was the wettest I got all day, plenty of spray from the surface even though there were barely any puddles.

Back in Reefton with plenty of time to dry things out and poke around what is a charming little town – a good day out seeing a favourite place, albeit it in a different light to what my memory had me expecting.

Old Ghost Road loop

I could get used to the touring life of making the most of the good weather and resting during the awful. While the first week had involved sitting out a fair few days, it was interspersed with absolute crackers and great riding. So I was not going to waste the quickly-closing clear window, despite having ridden the entire Paparoa Track the day before. With the fluidity of my plans, I’d also not booked any huts on the Old Ghost – so it made sense to attempt to ride all of it in a day, and I’d have to carry less too.

Possibilities of getting a lift to the start didn’t work out, so well before dawn I set off for three hours of quiet road up the Buller. The day lightening, plenty of mist was revealed.

Hawks Crag; for some reason I still vividly remember stopping here for photos on my first trip to the South Island in 1994.

The day brightened and the mist showed signs of clearing.

At the Lyell trailhead, the parking lot was filling up with a few large groups – they looked fast. Snacking briefly, and avoiding the midges snacking on me too much, I left the busyness and was surprised not to see these people again. I’ve long waited to ride the whole trail, last time I was here (mid-2015) the middle section had not been put through – so James and I just rode to the tops and returned in a day trip. There was much anticipation of a long, but fantastic, day on one of the country’s best long distance mountain bike routes. Really, with the Heaphy and Paparoa, the West Coast is quite the place for such things; what assets.

The almost-four hours of climbing through the native forest was relatively unchanged and it was great to see it again. Edge protection where the trail traverses the big slips was an addition, and certainly reassuring.

Just the standard West Coast track come waterway.

Blue sky and sun becoming more prevalent, twas lovely in trees for the climb.

Heading for Lyell Saddle, and hut, centre background.

Still a fair bit of snow around for October after last week’s storm.

Noon and time for a snack at Lyell Saddle Hut. The day certainly turning out as forecast, no wind either.

From the saddle, a series of well-spaced switchbacks gave most of the remaining five hundred metres of ascent under a thick canopy.

A glance down to the valley of the south branch of the Mokihinui.

Soon I was out of the trees for the sensational section across the tops. In the shaded sections, I started to find patches of snow which necessitated small amounts of walking. But really I spent most of the time looking at the view, interspersed with some riding.

Heaven’s Door, looking east.

All that riding of the tops couldn’t keep going, switching to the other side of the ridge it was back into the bush where there was considerably more snow; that made the descent to Ghost Lake Hut interesting.

Reaching the hut, time for more lunch in the sun. Suddenly a helicopter arrived dropping off supplies. It did rather break the serenity, but was something of a curiosity at least. Not even halfway through the trail, it was now half-one; I was still comfortable of finishing in daylight, but I did have some sleeping gear if it was needed. I’d done most of the climbing, but I knew the next section would be slow – including as it does The Staircase. One just has to try and pick the trail out of the two pictures above to see it’s not going to be straightforward.

Ghost Lake, from the hut.

Hut siting is top notch.

So begun a steep, switchbacked and barely rideable (at least for me on a loaded, rigid bike) section of trail in pretty poor condition. Unsurprising considering the terrain, the trail crew was out in force trying to improve it.

Not long before, I had ridden over the shoulder on the right.

That ridge riding turned into a rather ugly part of trail for the descent to the staircase; this part from Ghost Lake the only part of the trail I was under-biked, so that’s pretty good going considering the bigger picture of my tour. But walking didn’t matter as the views constantly took my attention. The staircase of was a welcome relief, carrying my loaded bike down a hundred-odd steps to drop sixty metres was a nice change.

The end of the Matiri Range is one big rocky slip zone. The trail past Stern Valley Hut can just be made out in the open section on the left. It then zig-zags up to the right underneath that big slip, to my surprise; that area is rather ominously called The Boneyard.

But first, a lovely descent through dense bush to the hut. As I’d been doing all day, I stopped whenever I came across anyone to chat to – a good chance for a rest and hear what other people are up to.

Making my way up to The Boneyard.

Very rocky and strangely dry in here, even on this mild spring day it was a bit of a heatsink.

With lots of twist and turns through the field of rocks and keeping a wary eye on the huge boulders precariously perched above, I climbed to Solemn Saddle and was pleased to get back into the bush and out of the slide path. That was the last real climb of the day, after dropping off that saddle I was down near Goat Creek which flows into the Mokihinui. Of course, it certainly wasn’t flat for the ride out – with plenty of little climbs to keep the legs honest. But I still had plenty of daylight and there was no need to stop for the night at the three remaining huts.

Riding through the gorge as the sun sunk was a complete delight, water everywhere and much to look at.

And just like that, it’s over. What a trail and what a day I had on it with brilliant sunshine, no wind and only a little snow to push through.

Would love to ride it again; maybe I’ll get more organised and take days, stay in the huts and share the experience with others. But this way certainly was amazing.

To my relief, the pub at Seddonville awas open on a Monday night. With that strange feeling of being thrust back into civilisation after a long tiring day in the wilderness, I did my best at chatting at the bar while I waited for my dinner. Refuelled satisfyingly, it was such a still and clear night it seemed a shame to waste it. I mean, it was only a flat fifty-five kilometres home – why not make the most of it before the weather arrived? So off I went south for a few hours, surprised to be welcomed after eleven (but maybe I go to bed unusually early) with tea and second dinner. That certainly ranks up there for incredible and memorable days I’ve had on a bike. Wow.