...feel human enough to get this typed up. Damn but whatever bug I caught over ~Sunday night has had me down for the count, glad we got out of there when we did or I would have really paid the price.
CHAPTER 1
I was a last-minute addition to the whole ride, based on SE950's invite and a round of left-leg sciatica that was slowly subsiding. In any case, with a lot of NSAIDs it cleared up about a day before, so I set about prepping and packing Friday(my 34th birthday, ironically - though I'm not a queen in any sense of the word...) night for an early morning departure:
...and redezvous with the rest of the group in Springfield for fuel and final preparations:
We had killer light underneath the clouds andon the mountains from the sunrise on the way up into Arthur's Pass:
Headed off the tarmac over towards Lake Coleridge:
....for a rendesvoux with Alfie at the turnoff for Mt Olympus:
Our fearless leader/ride organizer, ADVGD:
From there, we headed into Glenthorne Station where we payed the farmer a small fee for access. The road was a shingle-studded hoot, and I'm sure we all found ourselves sideways at least once whether we meant to or not:
ADVGD chats with one of the landowners:
...before heading into the fray of the Wilberforce river valley(note rainclouds gathering):
Rain = rainbows, with the last of the sunlight we would see for the morning...looking due South down the Wilberforce:
After wandering around the Wilberforce riverbed and a tributary of it:
...we finally found a hut that ADVGD was looking for although the rain was getting incrementally more intense:
...it was occupied by hunters, though, so we warmed up a but and ate a spot of food and headed back towards the intended route:
Enroute, ADVGD noticed via the voltmeter on his bike that the charging voltage seemed to be dropping fast - an abnormal behaviour. After some discussion, it was decided to head out to Windwhistle where Alfie had left his ute, so that ADVGD could run back to Chch to see about a replacement stator. As such, he gave us some general directions and plans and said that he'd be up to meet us at one of the huts up the Havelock river, with a route in via Erewhon Station:
A little short on fuel and playing it safe to kill time to see if he could catch up to us that day, we headed to Methven for fuel and "real" food:
It should be noted that there was much discussion about making a big, fun, afternoon-only loop back to Methven, to wait there at a warm pub/hotel rooms and see if ADVGD could catch up to ride with us the following two days. Hindsight being 20/20, with the weather forecast being what it was we would have been much smarter to do it this way. But, with out minds set on continuing the ride, we forged onward for Erewhon Station to pay the fee and head across the Clyde river and up the Havelock river valley.
Since the ride back into the hills had some dull moments, Alfie had to keep entertained:
Note more weather above the highest peaks:
On arrival at Erewhon Station:
...we chatted with the farmer about water levels, etc. I will never forget his advice to us: "...if the water looks or turns milky, turn around and get out of there." And in the same statement, he made some comment about "noise-polluting contraptions" as he lit off his tractor, which he had to shut off to talk to us...LOL...:
So, with full permission to cross his land and get ourselves into our own trouble, we headed towards the Clyde river to find a way across:
Which there was, but not by a whole lot:
Matt coaxes his XR through a deeper spot to get over the shelf of the near bank, while SE950 et al survey possibly easier routes across:
This was the deepest/main channel of the Clyde as we headed East across it to the Havelock, and while the photo makes it a little hard to tell, the water itself was pretty clear by my standards. Being a visitor to NZ, I sort of tried to read the Kiwi's take on the water, but none of them seemed to hesitate much so I figured I wasn't too far off the scale in my judgement. Looking at it all later, I realized that the Clyde would have gone milky a good while after the Havelock...especially with the approaching Norwester weather. Yet another lesson from this trip!
Looking up the Havelock, with weather clearly getting angrier(no rain, though, and dry riverbed still):
Looking back from that spot, East-ish toward Erewhon as a couple of our group traverse the riverbottom:
Further up the Havelock, looking back towards the Clyde river valley/Havelock confluence:
Looking back down the Havelock itself now; you can see someon's headlight in there for scale:
Looking across the river basin, Alfie has taken a tumble and is getting up:
By this point, there are ~4 of us out ahead of the other two, and we can't find where we expect the huts to be. We later found out we were farther up than we needed to be to get to the Growler hut. One hut(that we later found out has been destroyed by an avalanche) looked like it was up a tributary - so I rode up several only to find we were at least one tributary away. Looking up the tributary:
Eventually, we the four of us that made it up this far regroup and make it up to what we now know was, ironically, called Mistake Flats hut. We find it full of 4 hunters and pretty cozy anyway...and since we are still expecting two more riders, we obviously are too many for this hut. The hunters are unsure if anyone else it at the Curtis hut, so we decide to investigate across the Havelock River, due ~East from Mistake Flats:
Knowing that we will now be crossing multiple channels of the Havelock, I set off to find the shallowest way through ahead of the group...only to notice that the water has suddenly turned very milky, and it is hard to see the bottom in many places now.
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