rom
Arundel the road continues across the plains to Geraldine. After
passing through foothills now being turned into yet another pine
forest the road descends into Beautiful Valley, followed quickly
by Cattle Valley and then Fairlie. It then travels along the foothills
of the Two Thumb Range, all stock-raising land, into the MacKenzie
Country.
With so many place names glorifying politicians
and businesspeople, it makes a change to find a place named for
a sheep thief. Britain has its Robin Hood and Australia its Ned
Kelly, and we have our James MacKenzie, with his rather innovative
method of training his dog to help him rustle sheep.
The MacKenzie Country is made up of the drainage
basins of Lakes Tekapo, Pukaki and Ohau as well as the tributaries
of the Upper Waitaki and covers more than 16,000 hectares of land,
once all in tussock. It has a few claims to fame: a giant weta,
the scree weta, and an endemic butterfly, the southern blue. This
is in danger of being hybridised into extinction by a recent Australian
immigrant, the common blue, and as such is seemingly destined
for the same fate as the black stilt.
The
black stilt, or kaki, was once our most common stilt, but predation,
combined with the opening up of the country which better suited
its relative the pied stilt, or poaka, has meant a sharp drop
in numbers. This decline has forced the black stilt to take pied
stilts as mates, resulting in an increasing number of hybrids
called 'smudgies' and today only about 120 pure kaki survive.
Nesting enclosures for the black stilt have been
built by the Forest and Bird Society near Lake Tekapo to keep
out predators and black stilt eggs are being given to pied stilts
for fostering. However, this has led to some behaviour changes
by the fostered chicks, which may reduce the effectiveness of
the foster-care programme: these black stilts now migrate north
with their foster parents instead of wintering in the MacKenzie
Country with other black stilts.
Parallel to Lake Tekapo is Lake Pukaki and by
following the shores of this lake you arrive at Mt Cook, our highest
mountain and centre of probably our best known national park,
the Mt Cook National Park. On a clear day the drive up to Mt Cook
is breathtaking, with the huge mass of the mountain dominating
the landscape. Although the view from any direction is tremendous
my favourite is across Lake Pukaki, with the mountain soaring
above the vivid, turquoise waters of the lake.
Mt Cook is a good place to stay for a couple
of days while exploring the park but make sure it is not in the
skiing season. Then you stand a good chance of being skittled
by a skier while watching birds and, anyway, all the interesting
plants are under several metres of snow.
At this height above sea level all the birds,
except the kea and the rock wren, spend the winter at lower altitudes
where the pickings are presumably better, but in summer migrate
back to the higher reaches. Paradise ducks and harriers can both
be seen around the park in summer together with black-backed gulls
and pipits. Even pukeko stray up from time to time and look very
much out of place in the snowfields.
The monarch of the mountains is undoubtedly the
kea. He struts around with a proprietorial air, sticking
his beak into anything left unguarded. Heaven help the campers
who go off and leave their packs or tent unattended. Its sabre-like
beak is not ornamental and even windscreen-wiper rubbers, the
roofs of convertible cars and motor-bike seats are an easy target
for a kea with its heart set on mischief. Department of
Conservation staff at tourist resorts have a campaign to discourage
travellers from feeding kea in the hope that they will move away
from settled areas and start foraging for themselves again. Some,
unfortunately, have learned to kill sheep. Mt White Station near
Arthurs Pass is said to have lost some 200 sheep to this
bird in 1987 and with stud Merino sheep worth as much as several
thousand dollars each, the loss of even one is a serious blow
to a farmer.
But despite their failings, kea have a raffish
charm shared by few other birds. Gerald Durrell was much taken
with them on a visit to Mt Cook, writing: 'Their strutting pompous
walk, their general attitude of being lords of all they surveyed,
combined with [their] oft repeated and never varying cry, made
them remind me irresistibly of a small group of fascists'. Since
reading this description I have never been able to look at a kea
without thinking of Benito Mussolini. From a distance their plumage
appears a drab olive colour but close up it reveals a marvellous
range of shades with the orange undersides of their wings like
flashes of flame.
Around the Mt Cook environs are other animals
that, like the kea, are not universally popular: the chamois and
the thar. In 1904 the Duke of Bedford sent six Himalayan thar
from his herd at Woburn, in England, which were liberated at Mt
Cook and these were followed by three other liberations. Eight
chamois arrived at Mt Cook as a gift from the Emperor of Austria
in 1907 with a further two in 1914.
Both have thrived and spread over a great part
of the Southern Alps. Hunting pressure on these animals is considerable.
Over 50,000 thar have been killed by private and government hunters
since protection was removed in 1930, but this has only slightly
checked their numbers and in the meantime the damage they do to
alpine vegetation is calamitous. Not only is much of this
vegetation unique but its removal is worsening an already serious
erosion problem. Unfortunately, the removal of the animals entirely
is almost impossible and, even if it were not, pressure from hunting
interests would probably prevent it.
Yet the vegetation around Mt Cook is particularly
good as browsing animals are more easily kept under control here.
The Mount Cook lily, actually a buttercup, is well known and deservedly
acclaimed but there are also many other plants which, even if
not quite as spectacular, are beautiful and worth seeking out.
Among these are the large mountain daisy or tikumu, the alpine
buttercup, the snow gentian, the New Zealand eyebright, or tutumako,
and the various marguerites and bluebells.
The tikumu was prized by the early Maori, as
the pellicles of the leaves were plaited into headbands and the
white soft wool used as hair ornaments. The stiff, spiny leaves
of the speargrass were also valued as a source of aromatic gums
for use in scented oils.
From Mt Cook we travel along State Highway 8
via the quaintly named town of Twizel to the Lindis Pass. On the
frequent cold, clear days of this part of the South Island, the
pass offers magnificent views and links the alpine scenery of
the MacKenzie Country with the varied splendour of Central Otago
and there can be very few places in the world where such a wide
range of dramatically different landscapes can be encountered
in such a relatively small area.