|
Destination:
New Zealand
|
|
The path less travelled
Discover the beauty of New
Zealand by kayak
ABEL TASMAN PARK, New Zealand
-- Paul Kelly is paddling our bright yellow kayak so furiously, I'm
showered by sprays of salty sea water.
But the show
begins much before we coast into Tonga Island.
Chocolate brown seals with oily coats somersault in
and out of the emerald coloured waters, emitting a high-pitched
squeal and a flap of their tails as they glide beside our kayak.
High on the rocks beyond, a posse of smelly seals bask
in the early summer sun, paying no mind to eight kayakers shouting
and pointing their paddles.
"Smashing, positively
smashing!" exclaims Kelly, whose British reserve seems to melt away
for the moment.
We're so mesmerized that Steve Perry,
our 34-year-old Kiwi guide, must warn us to be prepared to
out-paddle the current and high winds; which kick up as soon as we
head around the unprotected side of the island.
But we
don't care. We're floating on air after spending two cloudless days
maneuvering our way up the coast of this national park on the
northern tip of New Zealand's south island -- as close to paradise
as most of us will ever come.
<>
|
Our group -- seven kayakers
plus Perry -- has set out the day before from Kaiteriteri, a beach
about 16 km away and six hours of paddling due south. What we lack
in kayaking muscle we make up for in sheer bravado.
If
anything, we're a worldly bunch. Kelly, a trainer for a hi-tech
company in Cambridge, England, is using the tour as a reunion with
sisters, Ruth and Fiona. Simon Shaw has traveled from Lincoln,
England while Yuji Matsubara has traveled from Japan for a five-day
getaway.
Abel Tasman Experiences manager Darryl Wilson
says the guided, multi-day kayaking tours began in 1995, but 80
percent of their clients still prefer to walk.
We have
chosen the high-end route. On this particular tour, we'll spend two
days kayaking on the Tasman Sea, and the third day hiking out of the
park on a coastal track that winds through a mountainous rain
forest.
Another 17 members of our tour group will trek
the entire route (some 35 km) on the track, which overlooks beach
after golden beach from 250 metres up. (We'll meet up at night, as
we do each night, at two rustic Cape Cod lodges with indoor plumbing
and hearty Kiwi cuisine, but no telephone service to the outside
world.)
<>
|
Guide John Glasgow, a
perennial flower child who leads the walkers in bare feet, describes
the coastal track as "practically a footpath" on which you can walk
"in platforms with shopping bags."
We discover very
quickly that kayaking is the finest way to see the park's beaches,
intimate coves and temperate rain forests that literally drop into
the emerald coloured sea.
"Walking you get to see the
vegetation," says Shaw. "But kayaking you get to see all the coves
and estuaries."
Kayaking on the Tasman Sea is "pretty
gentle" too, Glasgow believes, because much of the weather is
westerly -- meaning virtually no wind and calm seas. "It's
incredibly safe and easy to land on the beaches."
Still with kayaking comes added risk and a fear of
drowning, concedes Wilson.
Before we set out, Chris
Cartwright, an instructor for the kayak guides, shows us how to
paddle most efficiently, to properly put on our "skirts", and how to
use the Eskimo roll to right ourselves should we capsize (something
that luckily never happens).
Kelly has the harder part
in the stern, navigating our ocean-going kayak around volcanic, grey
rock by alternating between two foot pedals. I prefer the sea spray
from the bow.
On the first day we ease into Watering
Cove and devour our bagged lunches as shags, gannets, terns and
cheeky Oystercatchers try to grab our crumbs.
That
night over tea and baked goodies at Torrent Bay Lodge, Glasgow
eagerly extols the virtues of the park. His eyes shine as he talks
lovingly of every flower, the temperate climate and the Nikau palms
we've seen -- the southernmost palm in the world.
"This is a very special corner of New Zealand ... The
jewel in the crown of the south island," he says. "People say its
like Fiji."
Glasgow disapproves of the "fast boats"
that are making their way into the park:
"These waters are like paradise, but so
many tourists are in a hurry."
The sky is still a
wedgwood blue at 10 p.m. -- it's nearing the first day of summer
(Dec. 21) in New Zealand -- and the tide is out, leaving a power
boat humped in the sand.
The tide is still out by
morning and we're forced to schlep our heavy kayaks and equipment
endlessly along the sand.
The tide remains out when we
lunch at Mosquito Bay -- one of the most beautiful views of our
three-day trip -- forcing us to walk through the caves and estuaries
rather than kayak.
After ditching our kayaks at
Onetahuti and walking two hours through the rain forest into
Homestead Lodge -- lugging our kayak paddles and other paraphernalia
-- Ruth and Fiona admit needing to be somewhat fit for this high-end
tour.
"It was a bit tougher than I thought ... I'm not
sure people less fit could have done it," says Fiona.
Nevertheless, what made the tour for Ruth was the seal
show. "I got excited by the seals ... I've never seen seals before."
Shaw was raving about the scenery "You think one bay
is amazing and then you come to another ... it was far better than I
expected."
Even John Thornton, who came from Calgary
with daughter Tamara, 11 and son Kauri, 13, and walked the entire
route, couldn't say enough about what he saw.
"It
certainly beat my expectations for raw beauty ... the beaches,
forests and tidal lowlands were quite remarkable."
Between now and March 6 you can fly from Toronto to
Auckland (with a stop in LA) on Air Canada/Air New Zealand, for
$2,075 return. Best to book your trip through an agency that
specializes in New Zealand like Toronto's Anza Travel.
Abel Tasman Experiences offers three-day and five-day
guided walking/kayaking tours. The cost in the high season (October
to April) for the three-day tour is NZ $800 (about $600 Cdn.
depending on the exchange). For more information, check out the Abel
Tasman Experiences web site at http://www.abeltasman.co.nz/ or contact them at
info@abeltasman.co.nz.