Monthly Report

Club Night October 2013

Tuesday, October 15th, 2013

The monthly meeting started with a short special meeting to change some constitutional rules.

The local Mountain Safety Committee is considering going into recess.

A South Canterbury tramping group sent a letter of thanks for our work in keeping the Herbert Forest tracks in good condition.

Tickets for the 3D movie on the 23rd October of Sir Edmond Hillarys Journey to the Summit of Everest are available from Neville Corry.

A tramping skills weekend is being held early next year at Trotters Gorge. Contact Neville Corry.

The Club is purchasing a new GPS locator beacon, and it is to be taken on all Club trips.

Trip Reports:

Members rode a challenging mountain bike course in the Herbert Forest that has been set up by the local Mountain Bike Club.

Because of poor weather the Paradise trip turned into a trip to Elco hut with a walk up the river, and a 1000m climb behind the Temple picnic area on the way home.

More work by 9 members has been done on the Herbert Forest tracks, but the job is not finished yet.

The Wednesday Walkers have been on walks to Spring Creek on Pisga Downs, a round trip from the microwave behind Hampden to Pigeon Bush, Table Top via a well maintained Pack Track from the Herbert Forest, and from Andersons Lagoon to the Shag River mouth where plenty of shags and seals were to be seen.

Coming Club Trips are Mt. Kyburn, mountain biking on the Old Dunstan Road, and Bronwyn McCone’s farm walk. More details are on this website on the “what’s on” page.

We were then entertained with a quality selection of Club members tramping photos which ranged from a preview of coming tramps, to a beach and bush tramp in Western Australia where water was scarce, and then to an above 10000ft. odyssey of scaling New Zealand’s highest peaks.

Club Night September 2013

Tuesday, October 15th, 2013

As usual a good number attended our monthly meeting. Proposed changes to the constitution were read for an Extraordinary  AGM on Oct 14th.

Trips reports were given: Big Ben –where the weather proved to be most unfavourable; Station Peak- on the calmest of days; and Trotters Gorge-a good family outing with splendid views.

The Wed Walker had 3 trips: Trig L via Trotters Gorge; Ben Lomond from the Otekaieke side with various options; and  Herbert Forest trip when the weather didn’t favour other options. For the first time in 25years we cancelled a walk to support Barbara Simpson at Lindsay’s funeral.

Proposed trips are: 15th Sept a bike ride in Herbert Forest; 21-22nd trip up the Huxley to Paradise; Oct 6th –working bee in Herbert Forest.

Bronwyn McCone produced an excellent slide show and talk on her trip to NW China with 27other NZers to see the rhododendron sites often in National Parks and Nature Reserves. Travelling this area in 2 vehicles provided an experience in itself, from excellent motorways with frequent tunnels, toll gates, to the rough and then impossible. High bridges including the highest in the world , frequently crossed the valleys. Some signs proved amusing e.g. ‘don’t drive tiredly’. Bronwyn made the most of the allocated times to roam and explore the hillsides for various lengths of time each day, capturing the rhodo’s growing in the wild naturally, although giving the appearance of being nicely landscaped.

A number of aspects disturbed her from major terracing increasingly being pushed up the mountainsides for added production whilst being covered in miles of plastic, to the knowledge that a large proportion of what was being grown was tobacco in copious amounts. to seeing cannabis growing freely. But joy was gained from finding gems of plants as well as rhodo’s, to paddy fields being planted out.

She found that the state of the rivers was not good. Children swam amongst the pollution and rubbish, while others would completely disappear being piped up hills for irrigation reappearing again later. Toileting was perhaps the worst aspect of the trip.

Nights were filled with delicious foods with up to 11 courses, watching the women dancing, and lots of walking as one felt safe. A great experience all up as this massive country mixes the increasing ‘modern’ with the ‘old and traditional’. Thanks Bronwyn.

Jane Green

Club Night August 2013

Thursday, August 15th, 2013

 

North Otago Tramping and Mountaineering Club Monthly Report

The Herbert Forest tracks were damaged by the June storms, so 10 members have cleared the trees, but more track and bridge work is needed yet.

Trip Reports;

Nine hardy trampers did a round trip at Sullivan’s Dam in blizzard conditions coming back through the Leith cloud forest. An ascent of Mt. St. Cuthberts in the Benmore Range was rewarded with great views of four lakes and Mt. Cook.

Wednesday Walkers did a round trip of Rakis Table, Belmont Hill and Victoria Hill at Tapui, which included a walk through an old railway tunnel. The old Waitaki Bridges at Kurow led to a walk over the hill to Hakataramea Valley and back down the gorge with a side trip to view the old slip road that is hoped will become part of the Alps to Ocean bike trail. They also did farm walks on Matsingers and Altavady farms and up Boundary Creek from Murrays Road past the old Oamaru water race aquaducts and tunnels.

Last Wednesday they climbed Conical Peak from the Dunback side.

Coming ClubTrips are Big Ben, Station Peak from the North, and Trotters Gorge to South Peak. More information about these trips is available on the NOTMC website.

Guest Speakers were Club members John and Margaret Chetwin who entertained us with their 2012 tour of the cities and vineyards of France. It was a trip with a difference from the Paris metropolis with its majestic buildings and art culture, out into the rolling countryside of the Burgundy vineyards. It included gourmet cooking lessons, and 500 year old wineries that have seen 18 generations pass through. They stayed in Sala, a town smaller than Oamaru where 180 resistance workers were killed and another 160 taken to concentration camps in the Second World War. They marvelled at houses built into cliffs, bronze to middle age cave dwellings, stunning stalactite caves, and 17000 year old cave paintings. These 2000 paintings  of  mainly animal images were unique with their good depiction of movement.

Bordeaux was the last city visited with numerous wine shops and grand old buildings connected with a modern transport system. Then it was back to Paris on a high speed train and home.

 

 8 July Club Night

The  July meeting was again well attended.

The Herbert Forest tracks have sustained some serious damage especially with fallen trees. This will be attended to as soon as possible.

Two changes to the constitution were notified.

Bad weather again inhibited Club trips with the only one being seven members visit to Mt. Summers in waist deep snow, interspersed with climbing over fallen trees after the recent storms. The night in a warm hut with good food and company made up for it though.

Wednesday Walkers day trips were a Ngapara farm walk, the inland Timaru Walkway from Saltwater Creek, Katiki Beach and Shag Point, and an Island Cliff farm walk.

Coming Club trips are to Sullivans Dam North Dunedin, Mt. Staint Cuthbert, and the Mitchells Hut  Siberia area. Further information is available on the NOTMC website / What’s on.

The guest speaker was Belinda Mellish. Belinda spoke of and illustrated through photograghs her love of the outdoors and adventure. She spoke of her very early family trips to the mountains in places like the Kakanui Range, Arthurs Pass and the Hopkins area. From an early age she was also taking part in trips with this local club. She developed her skills in bushcraft and rock and ice climbing with the assistance of local club members and also the local Alpine Club.

With the aid of excellent photography, Belinda took us down a journey of some of the trips she had completed in New Zealand and overseas. With her skills and excellent companions she tramped and climbed to some exquisite locations. These locations included Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park, Fiordland and further afield in the Southern Alps. It wasn’t just climbing though as she also enjoyed rafting down the grade 3 Waiatoto River, and potholing down the 180m Howards Hole.

Overseas trips included rock climbing in Arapiles (Australia), Yosemite National Park (USA), and Thailand, and ice climbing in the Canadian Rockies. The frozen waterfalls she climbed were spectacular!

To finish the evening Belinda showed a range of images set to music, selected from over 20 years of outdoor adventures. Her passion and enthusiasm for the mountains shone through in her talk, and she left us enthused to get out there amongst the outdoors.

Club Night June 2013

Tuesday, June 11th, 2013

Over 40 members and visitors attended the Clubs monthly meeting.

Trip Reports. Some trips were cancelled because of the weather, however in spite of an atrocious weather forecast, the Queen’s Birthday Kepler Track trip went ahead with seven keen trampers heading down on the Friday in a mini bus.

After being dropped  off on Saturday morning at Rainbow Reach, they headed for Iris burn Hut, some 22km away. They were treated to a vibrant display of Fiordland fungi along the side of the track, which slowed the photographers down.  They were kept awake by heavy rain and hut shaking thunder that night, but there was only light drizzle as they ascended the zig zag to the first shelter the next morning. The side streams were still raging though. However across the top they were accompanied by horizontal rain and slushy snow, and Luxmore Hut was a welcome sight. The sun came out during their descent to the control gates the next morning. A trip enjoyed by all.

The Wednesday Walkers day trips have been a Tapui farm walk including the old railway tunnel and Belmont Hill, the Waiho Walkway with lunch at the Waiho Forks Hotel, the Moeraki Walkway and along the beach to the South Kaik at times watched by basking seals, and Trig L near Palmerston. The number of people walking ranged from 12 to 32.

Coming Club Trips are Mt. Orr from Station Peak Road, and the annual Big Hut trip. Further information is available on the NOTMC website .

Our guest speaker was local mountaineer Nick Shearer, who spoke and showed photos of a N Z group’s Yangma expedition to Eastern Nepal in October last year, their aim being to climb two peaks near Mt. Kanchenjunga. They were assisted by seven Sherpa staff, and 34 local porters carrying 50kg to 125kg of gear each, some of them women.

The expedition left from Kathmandu on a 25 hour bus trip followed by a 12 day walk up a narrowing valley to base camp. Yaks were used as transport for the last section. The final village of Yangma at 4200m asl. housed about 50 people and was just two days yak travel over a pass to Tibet. Base Camp was a day further on at 4400m in a lovely alpine yak pasture.

The first mountain summit of Syao Kang, 6000m was an easy gradient though altitude was becoming an increasing hurdle. The second mountain, Chaw at 6400m proved too much of a challenge mainly because of avalanche danger, however two of the party climbed to a pass looking down into Tibet.

One of the party had serious altitude sickness and stayed at base camp, eventually being helicoptered back to Kathmandu. The rest walked out via another scenic route.

We were treated to some spectacular scenery, a glimpse of the difficult country they travelled through, and an insight into the Nepalese friendly culture.

Nepal, like a lot of emerging countries is a mix of old and new, the people using yak transport and cell phones. Politics don’t affect the mountain dwellers, though new roads are bringing the benefits as well as the adverse effects of civilisation closer. For example health treatment is becoming easier to access but so are sweetened drinks such as coca cola!

Club Night, May 2013

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

There was a good attendance at the Club’s AGM with 3 new or prospective members welcomed.

In her Annual Report, President Bronwyn McCone urged members to become more active in trip planning and organising. She highlighted the schools tramping training programme that the Club ran as being a big success, as was the Herbert Forest Guided Walk day with over 80 people enjoying the tracks there.

Our Treasurer reported a small loss for the year as a result of the one off cost of setting up the NOTMC website. The subscription fees will stay the same as last year.

Apart from Jane Green becoming the new Vice President, and Karyl Robertson and Colin Wollstein coming on the committee, the office bearers remain the same.

Trip Reports
14 members headed up to The Hermitage in mid April hoping to stay a night at Mueller Hut. However this hut is a popular place and when they arrived there were only 3 beds left. Plan B was a day trip which was enjoyed by all, with some climbing Mt. Olivier as well. They stayed at the well equipped Canterbury Mountaineering Club hut and visited the Tasman Glacier the next day.

The Herbert Forest working bee was cancelled because of heavy rain even though 18 turned up to go. However another three hardy souls braved the mud to shift a heavy bridge to a better site.

The annual Guided Walk Day was again popular with over 60 visitors enjoying a day in Herbert Forest.

The Wednesday Walkers have been to Devil’s Elbow where two falcons were sighted, Mts. McKenzie and Trotter, and the Benmore Walkway on glorious autumn day even though it was foggy when they left Oamaru.Twentyseven did a circuit around the Pipeline track and up to Swampy in the Silver Peaks, and recently one group walked around Cape Wanbrow and the Golf Course, while another climbed Kurow Hill. That evening a large group of past and present Wednesday Walkers celebrated their 25th anniversary with a dinner at the Maheno Tavern.

Coming trips are to Mt Kirkleston, and a Queens Birthday clockwise circuit of the Kepler Track. More details are on the NOTMC website in “What’s On”

Dave Mellish then organised a quiz of mainly tramping topics, which provided some inspired answers.

The final task was to provide a caption for a photo of a group up in the mountains gazing into the distance, which provide some hilarious suggestions!