Travelling to Fiordland in New Zealand's South Island, first to Lake
Manapouri, then over the Wilmot Pass to Doubtful Sound, by boat to Dusky
Sound, scuba diving, exploring old wrecks, fishing, and visiting sites
where Captain Cook, sealers, prospector William Docherty and bird-lover
Richard Henry had been - these all contributed to a unique holiday.
Annual family get together
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Dusky Sound photographed from the boat
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I have three sons, one living in Canada, the other two living in NZ.
Because I live overseas, we don't have many opportunities of getting
together, so when Nils, my youngest son, suggested that it would be nice if
"we boys" could have a "get together", maybe once a year, we all thought
that was a good idea. Unfortunately my son in Canada, Cameron, does miss
out at the moment because of his location, but the other three of us, have
carried on.
Cruise to Dusky Sound
This year we decided to take a cruise on Dusky Sound. On one
occasion, when we were all together in Dunedin, my eldest son Hadyn
commented that he had always had an ambition to visit Dusky Sound.
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Typical native bush scene with waterfalls
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for a larger version)
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It
offered so much by way of history, fishing, excellent scuba diving because
of the clarity of the water and a pristine fiordland landscape which is
reputedly the most beautiful of all the Sounds. So we all agreed
to cruise Dusky Sound in about twelve months time, and our eventual charter
was eventually arranged to start on February 21 1998.
The original idea was that it was a trip for Hadyn, Nils and myself but to
avoid trying to find people to fill the boat, I said that I would pay for
the boat and it would be just for us. With my partner Nancy and Hadyn's
son and daughter we had a party of six.
We would dine on hapuka, blue cod, crayfish and shell fish for a week and
follow the antics and activities of Captain Cook, the sealers and the few
dedicated and solitary souls who chose to live a lonely life in such a
remote part of the world.
And so we did!!"
Dunedin to Manapouri
We stayed overnight in Dunedin then, after meeting up with my youngest son
Nils, my eldest son Hadyn and his two children, Katie and Sam, we drove by
two hire cars to Lake Te Anau where we had to drop off the cars. This is
where we faced a transport problem - how to travel the 21 km (13 miles) to
Lake Manapouri.
The motel owner solved the problem and when we arrived and dropped off the
cars he drove us from Te Anau to his Manapouri Motel. Then, since we knew
the problem, I asked the cruise owner to take us to Te Anau to pick up the
cars, after we arrived back at Manapouri after our cruise. He managed to
"con" someone else to do it actually, so it can be a problem, which needs
to be recognised and the cruise owner offered no solution. ( It was
necessary to involve Te Anau because that is where the rental agency has
its office. There is no agency at Manapouri.)
Incidentally, the tour operators could do a lot better with their
information on how to get to Manapouri, especially for overseas tourists
who are not familiar with the location of certain places and especially of
travel arrangements and alternatives.
If you are planning your budget for this trip note that the car hire for
about five hours cost a total of $200 and the same applied to the return
trip from Te Anau to Dunedin Airport. I recommend getting several prices
for this section of the journey.
Manapouri to Deep Cove
We stayed overnight at a motel at Manapouri and the next morning were taken
by small boat to the Power Station at the end of the Lake. A landrover
then took us over the Wilmott Pass to Deep Cove on Doubtful Sound where our
charter boat was waiting.
A wet start
After refuelling, we were finally under way about 1.00 p.m. but spent the
afternoon in Doubtful Sound. It had been raining intermittently all that
day but it poured down in the afternoon. We had our "wet gear" and did
manage to do some fishing for bait, while two of the party did some scuba
diving.
Trip to Dusky Sound
To get to Dusky Sound we had to travel down the coast in open sea for three
and a half hours, passing Dagg Sound on the way. Incidentally, this Sound
was named after one of the sea captains of the "sealer" era and had nothing
to do with sheep!
This journey was quite rough and several were seasick but we made it. We
were told that many charters never left Doubtful Sound at all because of
high seas.
Breakwater Island
We reached Breakwater Island at the head of the Acheron Passage which leads
into Dusky Sound. This island was named by Captain Cook and has been
cleared of rats and vermin so as to be used as a bird sanctuary. As its
name suggests it gave a welcome relief from the waves of the open ocean.
Fishing
We anchored just inside at the Gilbert Islands, in very calm water, for
lunch and some fishing, catching some fine blue cod and trumpeter. The
boat only had hand lines, which I hadn't used since childhood, but the fish
were so plentiful that they could be caught with only a lure. I had never
done that before!!
The Acheron Passage
Then we proceeded through the Acheron Passage to Dusky Sound, which also
opens to the sea further down the coast past Five Fingers Peninsula. The
Passage is another glaciated valley and was the way Cook sailed in 1770
when he first named the Sound, "Dusky Bay". He had just spent a rigorous
voyage in Antarctica and spent the next five weeks in "Dusky Bay" anchoring
in Pickersgill Harbour, which is near to the mouth of the Sound. We were
actually able to see the very distinctive tree limb, to which Cook moored
the Resolution, still living today.
Sportsmans Cove - great fishing
The day was fine and we continued deeper into the Sound to Sportsmans Cove,
a truly beautiful spot, peaceful and pristine, where we spent the evening.
It was also a great fishing spot where I caught the
first of about fourteen hapuka ("groper" to others) I managed to catch
during our cruise. I also caught some terakihi, another good eating fish
and that evening Hayden made a chowder with fish, crayfish, scallops and
mussels.
Historic sites in the sunshine
We spent the next three days in sunshine and calm water fishing, diving and
visiting sites of historic interest. We saw where Cook had his first
encounter with Maori, where he carried out his astronomical observations,
where the first boat, of 65 tons, was built in NZ, and where the first
house, for sealers, was built by Europeans, both in Luncheon Cove.
Seals in abundance
We passed Seal Rock with seals basking in the sun and recalled how they
had been virtually wiped out by the old time sealers. One day we saw some
seals on a small cove so I went with Hadyn and his children to feed them
some fish. A young seal was playing in a small gut and the children were
able to lean over and stroke it as it played around. The children, I am
happy to say, were not restrained by the caution which comes with age. I
could appreciate their beauty, their speed and their agility but I could
also see their teeth!!
Diving around shipwrecks
Hadyn and Katey also dived on two old wrecks, or what was left of them.
The oldest was the Endeavour in Facile Harbour - not Cook's Endeavour but
an East Indiaman wrecked about 1795. It had a very colourful history. The
other wreck was a Union Steamship Co. vessel, the Waikari, of 3,071 tons,
which hit an unmarked rock during a tourist cruise, in the passage between
Indian Island and Passage Island. It was on Indian Island where Cook met
his first Maori.
More history
But there are so many places of interest. Apart from Cook and the sealers
and whalers, there was William Docherty, a Scot who prospected for
asbestos, tin and copper. He lived in Dusky virtually alone for 25 years.
While he was there Richard Henry, an Australian carpenter and Engineer with
a love of birds, came to live at the other end of the Sound. The
Government appointed him "Curator and Caretaker at Resolution Island". We
saw the site of his house and the compound where he kept birds before
releasing them in selected areas which were supposedly free of rats and
vermin. After years of dedicated work transporting 700 birds such as wekas
and Grey Kiwi he became a broken man, when a weasel was found on Resolution
Island.
The lasting impression
For me, the beauty of Dusky Sound is unique. Like the Norwegian Fiords it
has the high steep walls and waterfalls of glaciated valleys, but it also
has variety of smaller valleys and islands with an endless variety of
pristine scenery. I hope it stays unspoiled. I hope it stays well guarded
as part of the Fiordland National Park. The only change I would love to
see would be the end of the sandfly. Even Cook had trouble with them and
they have outlasted us all.