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Maori were here early and recent archaeological work has revealed
that a series of extensive settlements were in South Westland
in pre-Pakeha days. Jackson Bay (Okahu) was once the centre of
a major trading network in greenstone taken from the Red Hills
further south along the Cascade River.
Greenstone was of major importance to the early
Maori, both for the manufacture of ornaments and weapons and also
because of its value as a wood-working tool. The demand for greenstone
would have grown in importance when pa began to be built because
even though the palisades could be made with other tools, the
detailed carvings inside could be made only with greenstone.
Far from being the 'mosquito-infested swamp
of popular imagination, Westland is rich in natural resources
and has much to offer the visitor. Among the places to visit around
Haast alone are seal and penguin colonies, kahikatea swamp forest,
sand dune forest and the many waterways lined by flax and kowhai.
Each of these has its own unique combination of animals and plants.
Twenty kilometres south of Haast are the Waiatoto
Swamps and these are particularly good for wetland birds. Bitterns
are here in good numbers but are hard to see. However, their distinctive
booming can be heard on most summer evenings.
Kiwi in South Westland, as in so many other places,
seem to be faring badly. A number of years ago, volunteers in
the Jackson Bay-Haast area heard only two kiwi calls in 1000 hours
of listening and none at all at Okarito - both once kiwi strongholds.
This compares with an area such as north-west Nelson where 10,000
calls were logged in 1000 hours of listening.
The road north between Haast and Fox Glacier
follows the beach for the first 20 kilometres or so. Watch out
for little blue penguins, or korara, crossing the road towards
their nesting burrows in the bush, especially in the evenings
- they have abysmal road sense! At Knights Point these are joined
by Fiordland crested penguins, and a colony of these can be heard
in the scrub near the shore, adequately protected in the middle
of a clump of giant nettles. The thickly padded coat of the crested
penguin makes it impervious to the vicious spikes of the nettle.
When last down here, we stayed a night in some
cabins not far from Lake Paringa and here I was more aware of
the sounds of the night than in any other part of New Zealand.
No sooner had the crickets stopped chirping than the bitterns
started booming in the nearby swamp. This sound, too, faded away,
to be replaced by the noise of countless whistling frogs from
all directions, with the green tree frogs adding a deeper resonance
from the ditches and swamp, and moreporks and kiwi calling continuously
from the nearby bush.
From Paringa north to the glaciers, the road
runs through glorious country. There are headlands soaring over
raging seas far below. There are lonely driftwood and pebble-covered
beaches and tiny gem-like bays where fur seals loaf the day away.
And there are beautiful patches of forest everywhere with the
trees swaying gently in the inshore breezes. Everywhere, too,
there are tree ferns.
The side-road up to the Fox Glacier is steep
and winding and at most of the stopping places choruses of bushbirds
can be heard. Bellbirds are plentiful and you may be lucky enough
to see a weka. Kea are here, too, and often drop in on parked
cars. Again, watch your windscreen wipers and tyre valves. The
glacier itself is spectacular, perhaps even more so than the Franz
Josef Glacier further north - a great 13-kilometre mass of blue-green
ice slowly inching its way towards the sea. Stand at the foot
of the glacier and a solid wall of ice curves away above you.
Another no-exit road runs out to the coast at
Gillespies Beach from the Fox Glacier Headquarters and passes
Lake Matheson. Together with Mitre Peak, it is one of the most
photographed spots in New Zealand. From the car park just off
the road a boardwalk leads around the lake and from this rimu,
kahikatea, koromoko and lancewood can be seen with a riotous assemblage
of smaller trees and shrubs. Stop anywhere along the boardwalk
and, especially in the early morning, you will hear tui and korimako.
Fantails follow the visitor, not so much for their company as
for the bugs the visitors disturb.
Lake Matheson appears suddenly through a leafy
curtain and the steps down to a moored raft will give you the
best views of the lake. judging by the enthusiasm with which the
Japanese tourists were using up film, I would estimate that half
the slide-evenings in Tokyo and Nagasaki are devoted to Lake Matheson,
all with Mr and Mrs Yakamura smack in the middle of the picture.
On a really clear day the lake and its reflections are so perfect
that it is difficult to tell which way is up in a photograph.
From Lake Matheson there is a walk of a little
over an hour to Lake Gault and, although Matheson is more picturesque,
Lake Gault is richer in birdlife. The great crested grebe can
be seen here and in the surrounding bush kaka, riflemen and other
birds are not uncommon.
After Lake Matheson the road continues down to
Gillespies Beach, site of an old gold-mmmg settlement. This beach
is wild and covered with an amazing variety of driftwood. The
beach itself is made up of bands of gravel decorated with white,
quartz pebbles and patches of black sand with golden stripes.
From the car park take the track along the beach to the north
and this will bring you to the fur seal colony.