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Saturday, 28 July 2012

Omanawanui Skyline Traverse





The Omanawanui Ridgeline is one of my favourite stretches in all of the Waitakere Mountain Ranges. I first discovered the glorious trail on my first experience of the Hillary Trail on the very special opening day, way back in January 2010. It was approaching noon and our group of ten runners were dripping with sweat as we picked steps up a rocky section to the 241-metre trig station. Great views are always enhanced when you struggle to stand or see under the choking grip of oxygen-debt. But with thorough brow-sweeps with a swollen forearm, the sparkling Manukau Harbour is revealed, and the smile widens.


Rosalie takes in the Manuakau (Photo: Franky Weber)

Today was no different. With masses of new members of the Auckland Uni Tramping Club buzzing after the Hunua Re-Orientation trip, they were brimming with keenness to get out there again. A simple advert to the club yielded seventy sign-ups within the space of 48 hours! An answer on the sign-up form told the story: "I am so excited about caving and getting muddy that I slapped my Rubik's cube so it fell down on the floor and solved itself." Luckily thirteen cars were also volunteered, including the infamous 'Daft Vader' Land Rover - barely legal but uncomfortably fitting twelve. The adventurous riders of Andrew Draper's black truck got more than their $5 worth through the twisting hilly roads of Huia en route to the Donald McLean carpark...

Complete with fully working safety air-bags and speedometer! (Photo: Joe Delnero)

Organising 70 trampers into 10 groups all going slightly different directions  required a good footstool!
It was a daunting task being in charge of the record numbers who had shown up on such a fine Saturday. Several members of the AUTC committee were doubtful over the safety aspects of such a huge group, but I saw the chance for ten leaders to advance their skills in a reasonably safe environment. To avoid congestion on the trail, half of the groups first headed up to Mt Donald McLean to check out the primo terrain - Huia, Cornwallis and Auckland Central to the east - Whatipu and the West Coast to the West. A delectable taste-test for the adventure ahead!

Mt Donald McLean with Ingunn Sandbakk


A short stretch of the muddy Puriri Ridge track led us to the views were waiting for. Thick streams of fog blew through, drawing the curtains on the wildly oscillating Omanawanui Ridge. A great feature of so many groups along the same track: at each high point on the ridge, each roughly one kilometre apart, other bunches were visible and just within hollering distance.

Whatipu swamp stretches out the West Coast. Other groups approached from the Valley
Eric Lin isn't satisfied with just 241 metres!
Scott captures his shadow in the salty Whatipu stream

Clambering up Ninepin Rock - the southern most point in the Waitakeres

Ploughing through the swamp en route to the Whatipu Caves

One of several refreshing stream crossings up the valley on the Kura Track

Winter Waitakeres has never looked so good

The cavers were chest deep in it! 
The Whatipu Caves made for a sweet explore


Joe Delnero captured some great footage of the caves and the euphoria of the day
The effort to organise this trip for 70 people would have been the same had there only been 10 on the list. So it was so hugely satisfying to facilitate so much adventure, and share with the club one of my very favourite places near Auckland. The exhausted, beaming and appreciative faces of everyone who came made it such a worthwhile day out!

The Omanawanui Skyline Traverse

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Karekare 12 Hour Rogaine


After a long, hot summer the AUTC 12 Hour Rogaine returned to the Waitakere Ranges in the murky depths of winter. At the stroke of Midnight, forty-one blinding headlamps from fifteen teams raced out from Karekare Beach on a wild mission:

The Karekare 12 Hour Rogaine.

JJ Wilson, Tim Farrant and Ryan Thompson arrive from Christchurch ready to blitz the field

Les Marauders des Montagnes race off into the night



After the initial success at the Bethells 12 Hour Rogaine in July 2011, I was determined to set this event into tradition. This year Leighton Watson headed up the organisation of the event - with the help of several other members of AUTC, he set an incredible course incorporating the very best of the Southern Waitakere Ranges. From Piha’s roaring surf, Lion Rock and Kitekite Falls; from Karekare’s coastal tunnels, dunes, and high cliff-top tracks; from Whatipu’s caves, trig station and swamps - and even to the highest point in the ranges, Te Toiokawharu.


The Med Marauders only too glad to see the sunlight after a long night

This year’s clues took on a more cryptic feel, but teams could taste the change in control-setting styles as they journeyed between different areas, and experienced the different flavours that the setters had injected into the course. ‘Undecided’ was a clue for a control on a fence, ‘Call Me Maybe’ a broken telephone pole, ‘Gorse course with a view’ – the wide expanse of the Whatipu Swamps was an eerie abyss for teams arriving in the pre-dawn murk. 


Matt powers back from Whatipu along the western sands

Most teams chose to tackle the controls on the coastal dunes past Pararaha in the final five hours before noon. The warm black sands and salty swamp-water crossing enticed some to ditch their muddy foot-coffins, arriving barefoot at the Karekare finish on a summer-like morning. Teams were rewarded with extravagant slices of ganached chocolate cake, washed down by pumpkin and vegetable soup. Everything was ravaged, and after everyone sobered up from their Rogaine-hangovers Karekare was left without a trace.



The Med Students put on a great show!

Teams travelled from far and wide for the event: Team BG’s made the 3 hour trip from Dargaville and Tim Farrant’s team Rogaine Badasses flew up from Christchurch – only to take out the title with a solid margin. Anna Gray was a pivotal leader in rousing twenty Med students from the University of Auckland to get stuck in. Safety standards were maintained: all teams left intentions at the base, and each group included an experienced member. At six minutes past noon all teams had arrived back at base, all numbers were accounted for.


Matthew Lillis arrives back to camp shattered but gleaming - a great adventure

Full Results:

1. Rogaine Badasses (Tim Farrant, Jj Wilson, Ryan Thompson) 2700 
2. Les Marauders des Montagnes (Matthew Lillis, Ben Duggan) 2320

3. BGs (Graeme Ewenson, Barry Ruddel) 2280

4. North & South (Rob Jarvis, Emma McCosh) 2060

5. Team Yoohoo (Thomas Goodman, Nic Harper, Alice Mason and Vanessa Somos) 1830

6. Med 1 (Sarah Liley, Karyn Schischka, George Wallace, Rach Goodwin, Alice Hawkins) 1740

7. Hastie’s Retreat (Tony Hastie) 1710

8. Med 3 (George Shand, James Klassan, Anna Gray, Rachael Bentall) 1620

9. Team Type 1 (Alan Dobson, Claire Dobson, Dennis Wakefield) 1510

10.Mechanics (Harriet Peel, Hamish Chen) 1480

11.Teamo Supremo (Anna Bergin, Joel Gibson) 1320

12.SBC Rogaining Division (Jonathon Chan and Dean Rawlings) 1240

13.Med 2 (Jimmy Chancellor, Sam Burridge, Ivan Robertson, Gareth le Grice) 1220

14.The Lost (Casey Bell, Stefan Milosevic and Lan Yin) 310

15.Crunchy Whitakers (Dan Roberts, Penny Kirkwood) 270






Tuesday, 10 July 2012

To the Higher Mountain

"Winter is Coming" means many different things to many different people. For me, it means a call to the mountains, a call that strengthens as the temperature drops. Determined to gain more mountaineering skills for the higher mountain, I made the tough decision between a transalpine epic in the Ruahines with Matthew Lillis, and a 5-day advanced snowcraft course on Mt Ruapehu...

Welcome to the Mountain

Education or fun? While the Ruahines would have been a true adventure, I chose to invest some time learning skills in alpine rope work, pitching, abseiling, anchor-setting, ice-climbing, and snow-caving. Preparing for the higher mountain! When we spun the weather-pokie-machine, we were over the moon  with the result: a straight flush: five suns. Epic!

The striking silhouettes of the Pinnacles and Ngauruhoe

The luxurious NZ Alpine Club hut on Delta Ridge was our base for the next 5 nights. Every night the sunset over Taranaki was clean and claer, and the Pinnacle Ridge sliced into Ngauruhoe's cone without fail, a deathly silhouette by dusk and dawn. So sensational that I couldn't resist photographing the same view at least once at each end of the day.

'Ice climbing' en route to the Summit Plateau, via Glacier Knob

Clinging for dear life on the side of a 60 degree ice slope, it's nice to have something to lean back on. Hence the first lesson was how to set a good anchor. Depending on the snow conditions- dry & powdery, or hard & compressible - you would set a lightweight aluminium snow stake into the slope vertically or buried horizontally. Ideally, a deep layer of ice beneath the snow layer would set up a bomber anchor with fifteen whacks of the ice-hammer. Solid - hang off that all day. And just as well, as we began practicing the routines of pitching, we could be waiting as long as an hour per pitch as our climbing partner progressed up the slope.

Life could be worse: during the belay sessions I had one eye on the rope, the eye gazed over the snow-covered Kaimanawa and Ruahine Ranges and picked out Ruapehu's most aesthetic peaks... Girdlestone, Tahurangi, Te Ataahua, Ringatoto...

Nico basking in the final few rays on the Plateau
We seized the next day of clear weather to set up base camp on the summit plateau. The easy three-hour stroll was just a warm up for the next 5 hours of more intense exertion: digging a snow cave. We chose the western flanks of Cathedral Rocks to start the grand dig, but we only had a two-foot thick layer to play with, thick ice barring the way deeper. We scratched our heads, meanwhile Owen took this as an excuse to ski-tour the entire plateau to scope out a better slope.

A snow cave - once made it is a fantastic shelter from the elements
Instead we shovelled masses of snow into a mound, and tunnelled into it from either side. The advantage of this, we now had smooth snow to dig into and no ice blocking the way. The effort invested in the snow mound paid off, and the two tunnels were soon connected, and enlarged into a just enough space for three cold mountaineers to sleep out the night...

Tunnelling in from the north

Minimising heat loss and maximising heat gain!

Owen's Himalayan tent shelter
While our efforts seemed mammoth, Owen "Sherpa" Lee managed to whip up a quick three-walled shelter to keep the wind off his ultralight single-skinned tent. And camp wouldn't be complete without the adornment of Joseline's colourful prayer flags, more often seen at a Tibetan Base camp under the likes of the towering Annapurna...

7:45pm and ready for sleep in the very warm snow cave
A quick but satisfying meal of cous-cous and weiner dogs bode us well for the night in the snow cave - we were well-wrapped in 7 layers of fleece & down and just warm - tucked in well before eight. But just as we started to congratulate ourselves, we realised our ONE COSTLY MISTAKE: as I rolled over, a cold gust carrying small particles of snow breathed onto my face - we had forgotten to cover up the other end of the tunnel! Cramped under our 50cm high roof, and thick sleeping bags, any slight movement would scrape handfuls of snow from the roof all over us, down the neck, over the face... finding any leverage on the snow shovel to cover up the tunnel was impossible...

Melting the day's water under a surreal solar glow at dawn
However, in the morning after a chilly night of only several hours sleep, we decided it was better to be cold and dry than warm and wet. At least to minimise embarrassment in front of the instructors! In the morning we faced the many challenges of living in a -11 degree environment. I was smart and slept with my bottle of starch flavoured water next to my chest, but just about everything else was well frozen through. A few pressups and the arrival of dawn soon began to melt our frosty world.

Ruapehu's summit arena (www.nztopomaps.com)
To practice pitching for real we descended the Whangaehu Glacier to the southern face of Cathedral Rocks. The route began with a two-pitch traverse in deep snow, followed by three ice pitches up an icy fifty-degree chute. The deep snow slowed our progress however, and only Helen was lucky enough to complete the climb with the two instructors, Max and Owen - the descent to the NZAC hut still awaited us in the fading light, so we made a quick getaway via a 30m abseil.

Helen on the crux pitch. Feel the exposure! (Photo: Owen Lee)

A perfect descent on dusk
The descent back to the hut was stunning, cloud hovered over Tama Lakes and the lower reaches of Tongariro, and a pastel glow darkened to dusk.


Nico squatting on Taranaki

Working the 6-1 pulley system to save Nico from falling into the Whakapapa Ski-field 'Crevasse'
Crevasse rescue was the second in the series of complex rope routines: the first skill is roping up for travel over glaciers, but in a rare 'Touching the Void' moment, if someone tied into the rope plunges into a crevasse, the partner must be able to save him from an eternal frozen grave... I dig my heels into the snow, brace the fall, transfer the weight onto the ice axe, set up a stronger snow-stake anchor, set up an auto block and attempt an assisted 2-1 pulley system. But if my climbing partner is unable to help? He must be unconscious. Prusik down to him, steal his gear, make sure the rope isn't strangling him, re-climb to the surface and build a 6-1 un-assisted hoist system. Hard work! Falling into a crevasse is definitely a good way to ruin the day, and delay the summit bid.

Abseling off Delta Corner (Photo: Roman Amman)
The Prussik Challenge involved team work, knot-skills, and intense facials!
The prussik challenge finished off the week with a hilarious alpine flavour, and a great way to work up a sweat! The team challenge involved partners prussiking up either ends of the rope, and traversing past each other - harder than it sounds! If the partners weren't friends before squeezing past each other in some compromising positions, they definitely were afterwards. To cap off the night, fellow AUTC legend Thomas Goodman burst into the doors at 9pm covered in sweat and snow, happily announcing his personal-best 70 minute speed climb up the hut. Congrats Tom!

Taranaki Ice Glow

The Short Walk out

Advanced Snowschool 2012 - The Team:
Owen, Roman, Helen, Phillipa, Rowan, Joseline, Nico, Alastair, Anton, Max

Advanced Snowschool - so many new strings to our alpine bows - about time to shoot up some sweet summits! À la haute montagne!