Categories
Blog

South Island Road Trip 2022

Those people who are familiar with my website or my passions know that I enjoy driving around the South Island. I normally take a 2 week trip around my birthday in August as a treat to myself. The thrill is not just in the photography but driving a fast, good handling car on the many empty winding roads. The problem then is speeding tickets and demerit points.

I love small cars, especially great handling hot hatchbacks. These are particularly suited to the narrow sealed roads with lots of bends which are a feature of the South Island. The Ford Fiesta ST is one of those cars. It is what car people would call a Q car. It looks like an unassuming 5 door hatchback which your grandmother would drive or an older Chinese person would have. No Asian driver jokes please. Having said that some people would have muttered those words when they saw some places I parked to get a photo. Driving around Wellington the car feels like a stallion penned up in a corral. I just want to “floor” it, rev through the 6 speed manual gear box , and hoon around the corners. That opportunity came when the wife went to Canada and I was all alone…… Fortunately the 2 weeks were blank in my appointment schedule and I didn’t want to go to Canada as we were just out of Covid. So I booked the ferry to cross Cook Strait and off I went.

My itinerary was not the normal tourist routes as I have been there, done that. I wanted to visit places I haven’t stayed before. So off the ferry at Picton, turn right and go along the Queen Charlotte drive (windy road) to Nelson. Stay at Mapua one night and do wine tasting. Then through the Takaka hills (windy road) to stay at Collingwood 3 nights. Then down to Reefton for 2 nights (windy roads). Along the West Coast to Franz Josef 2 nights. Down to Queenstown via Haast pass (that didn’t happen see “worth a detour”). Then Glenorchy for 3 nights. Then along more winding roads to Geraldine. Visit Rangitata again . And finally to home town Blenheim via one night in Christchurch.

Surprisingly I did not speed much as most times I was doing 80 km/hr. This is the ideal speed when you are looking for shots along the route. I often had to pull over to let camper vans and trucks overtake me. Yes I was mostly driving like a senior. Lunch was easy to. I love all the little 4 Square stores in each small town Most of them sold cut lunches . That, plus my prepared thermos allowed me to have lunch in the most remote places. I just enjoyed the solitude with my 3 legged companion and camera beside me. And they never got car sick.

Comments

Categories
Blog

Where I Go in Singapore

If you like books, cameras (old and new), drones, street photography, check out my latest video. taken March 2023

Comments

Categories
Home Images

Worth a Detour ?

This was my last night in Franz Josef. The next day I was planning to go to Queenstown via the Haast Pass. Unfortunately it started to rain that evening, and that was an under statement . In Wellington we do have very heavy rain but that tends to last less than an hour. Here in the West Coast it was pelting down and the sound was as loud as a jet taking off! It didn’t help having an iron roof at the motel. Apart from not being able to sleep I was thinking of flooding blocking the roads and whether I could get to Queenstown. I reassured myself that this is the West Coast and they are use to heavy rain and “she will be right”. The rain was continous all night and all morning. My favourite government website at the time -“Waka Kotahi” gives up to the hour transport conditions. The news was grim. There was flooding at Haast Pass and the road was blocked. There was no indication on how long it would take to open so I assumes it would be all day considering it was still raining heavily.. Honestly I cannot recall being in such heavy continuous rain before.

So what does an impatient photographer do. He just wants to shoot something (very american). He also hates waiting and queuing. Does he keep on driving south to wait near Haast . Does he find a pub in Franz and wait out the rain drinking water all day?

I rang my friend Ricky who I was meant to pick up at Queenstown airport and said he would have to make his own way to Glenochy where I booked 3 nights. Then I decided to make my way to Queenstown the long way around, back through Arthurs pass, down to Tekapo , traverse the Lindis Pass to get to Queenstown . I said I might have to stay a night half way as it was over 800Km!

1. iso 100     70mm   f6.3   1/40sec   Nikon 24-70 f2.8
2.iso 100   24mm   f8     1/15sec
3. iso 100   135mm   f6.3   1/80sec   nikon70-200f4
4. iso 100   150mm   f8.0   1/15sec  
5. iso 100   24mm   f2.8   0.4sec   Nikon 24-70f2.8
6. iso100   24mm     1/3 sec  Nikon 24-70 f2.8
7. iso 100     f5.0   1/4sec   Nikon 70-200 f4
8. Nikon D800   iso 100   98mm   f4   1.6 sec  nikon 70-200f4

The Journey

It was constant rain all the way to Hokitika and through the Arthurs pass. The little Ford Fiesta handled the conditions very well with the Michelin tyres remaining grippy in all the puddles. I met a truck driver at the Arthurs pass toilet stop (I know what you are thinking…) and he said he hadn’t seen this much rain before. The braided river that runs along the pass (Waimakariri) looked more like a lake! The rain stopped on the Canterbury plains. Then I had to contend with a fallen tree on the highway and snow on the Lindis pass. But I made it to Glenorchy around 10 pm that day.

If I had a lesser car I probably would have stayed at Tekapo one night. But the Ford Fiesta is one hot hatch that chews up miles for breakfast. It handles well and has enough power to over take long trucks. It also helps to have only a few cars on the road and many breaks. The photos I managed to get were between Geraldine and Lake Tekapo. Worth the detour ? “Oath !! ”

Comments

<
>