| Wine tasting at Allan Scott, Marlborough, NZ |
Our bed and breakfast in Nelson is all that we had hoped for and more. It's actually in Tahunanui, across from the beach. We really thought the pics on the internet could not be real but they are. Absolute Beach Bed and Breakfast is a stunning home in a stunning location. I am writing this while sitting in the room featured on the site, but our first night we were offered the 'bridal suite" (it's occupied tonight by honeymooners) which is on the upper floor with it's own sitting room complete with television,two large red leather couches, a piano, a large window facing out to the beach, spa tub, and a private grassed-in lounge area at the back. The view across the water is to the Abel Tasman National Park which is the real subject of this post, but you know, it's hard not to be impressed by this landscape and the sea beyond.
So to the Abel Tasman Track. We bussed from just down the road to Marahau then tramped 40 km over three days with two overnight stays. It's a well-used track that takes you through forest, along beaches, and across two tidal bays which must be crossed at low tide until you reach the rather busy drive-in camping area at Totaranui.
The first day was relatively easy because you spend a fair bit of time getting there. We picked up our packed lunch (gf of course) and had coffee at the Park Cafe before heading out, with Anchorage as our destination for the day. Anchorage is just that--a sheltered harbour where boats and kayakers come in and where we stayed for the night on board a boat that slept 20 guests and crew. There was steak and sausage and salads for dinner and significant amounts of wine and beer passed the lips of a diverse group of travellers: a family of six who had kayaked in, a father and daughter from the North Island, two young professionals from Argentina and Chile both studying and working on the North Island, a couple from Belgium, and many more that we did not get to know. Some of these travelers followed our same itinerary so we had a chance to get to know them along the way. After tramping for 12km, it was no problem getting to sleep but we were awakened early to pounding rain, blistery winds and the hollers of a nearby sailor trying to alert another boat that their anchor was up and they were drifting. Just a little excitement to get us up and moving for our second day on the track.
Our agent described day 2 as the best day of the track, the most beautiful and everyone's favourite. Anyone we met described it as the toughest, and I think both descriptions were true. There is an an early low tidal crossing at Torrent Bay which you have to make by 930 so the skipper dropped us on the beach in the pouring rain at about 8 am. Once you get through the muck of the low tide, you can change into proper shoes, but it was still raining and it was a bit of a hike before we could peel off those wet outer layers at Bark Bay and enjoy the sun. The latter half of the day included a fairly steep climb out of Bark Bay, a bare foot walk along Onetahuti beach at high tide, and on to the Lodge at Awaroa.
| The beach at Awaroa |
| Awaroa Lodge |
| Low tide crossing at Awaroa |
Day three started with this load tide crossing at Awaroa. Off to bed. Day 3 to come.
I'm envious. Is a track a trail?
ReplyDeleteDon't know what to select for "Comment as" so using "Anonymous" ~alan
Yes, Alan, a track is a trail anywhere but here. Even the shortest walking trail is called a track. Thanks for being in touch!
Deleteall sounds like fun. but you are missing the Winter Vortex in eastern Canada...lol....
ReplyDeletelove the pics especially the beaches.... Syl
Hi Syl. We've had our fair share of weather the last couple of days, with storms all the way through the pass from Nelson to the coast, and off and on today as we made our way down the west coast to Franz Joseph. We head inland tomorrow, and our host here tells us the weather will improve. Margaret got out her "warm wear" tonight, and has her eye out for some Icebreaker Merino wool. We both bought Merino wool socks today just in case!
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