Lake Coleridge Base Camp – 9-11 May 2025
Trip Report: Lake Coleridge Base Camp, May 9-11 2025
Tizzy’s invitation to stay at her cousin’s Lake Coleridge bach was eagerly snapped up NOTMC, knowing this would give us a comfortable base for exploring this magnificent area.The first group of four drove through rain and surface flooding for 3.5 hours on Friday afternoon, arriving before dark to start a fire and warm the bach for the next group arriving after work.
With brilliant weather on Saturday morning, we set off at 8am to climb Peak Hill at 1240m. It is an unrelenting climb to the top, taking 1.5 hours, with magnificent views east down the Rakaia to the coast, and west up the Wilberforce, Mathias and Rakaia Rivers to the snow covered Southern Alps. Vast and breathtaking.
Rather than descending the same way, we took the circuit back to the car park. This route takes much longer, following the west ridge down to a fence line. We found orange poles to follow on the route around the hill but had to push through bracken and matagouri.
Then, to make the most of a perfect day, the advance party of five drove around the Lake to the Ryton Track. We followed around the base of Little Mt Ida to Lake Ida, an easy, achievable track in under an hour. Deeply shaded in autumn and winter, Lake Ida used to be popular for skating.
Another clear crisp day on Sunday saw Tizzy taking us on a walking tour of the Village and hydro scheme. Lake Coleridge power station was built in 1910 and powered all of Christchurch in the early days. One group of four then headed home, stopping to walk the 45 minute track to the lookout on the Rakaia Gorge track. (We now want to walk the entire trail!)
The other group stayed on at the bach, taking time to explore further along the Ryton Track to Lake Catherine, an hour on from Lake Ida with wide open views of the Ryton river and the valley leading to the Harper River. Then back to the car for another Tizzy tour, this time to the head of Lake Coleridge and the Harper diversion, then down to the foot of the Lake to finish the day with walking the Lake Hill track, joining up to the Intake Rd just as the sun set over a gleaming, shimmering silvery Lake Coleridge. Absolutely beautiful!
Thank you Tizzy for making Base Camp possible. We look forward to more adventures exploring the hidden rivers, hills and lakes of the Rakaia.
Jenny Kitchin