The Queen Charlotte Track is one of the great walks in New Zealand that has a very important advantage over the others, you can do the multiday walk and have your gear transported by water taxi from one location to the other. That was perfect for us, a 25 kilometer walk is quite enough without a heavy pack on our back. In addition, our lodging is not in a tent but in a charming lodge that is perhaps accessible only by water and can still serve up wonderful accommodations and meals.------------------------------ We began our adventure from Picton, a wonderful small port town on that serves as the southern Island port for the InterIsland Ferry between the North and South Islands. We stayed at a great B and B just above the port where we left early Friday morning on a sea taxi to Motuara Island, one of the predator free islands in New Zealand that serves as a bird refuge. It took decades to eradicate the mammals, mainly possums and stoats, that have devastated the New Zealand bird populations. We did get the chance to see the New Zealand Saddleback, that has recovered from near extinction with only 37 individuals to a population of several thousands now, as well as Little Blue Penguins in their nesting boxes,An account of two Family Doctors from Boulder Colorado working 6 months Locum Tenens in Westport New Zealand
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Queen Charlotte Track, Part One
The Queen Charlotte Track is one of the great walks in New Zealand that has a very important advantage over the others, you can do the multiday walk and have your gear transported by water taxi from one location to the other. That was perfect for us, a 25 kilometer walk is quite enough without a heavy pack on our back. In addition, our lodging is not in a tent but in a charming lodge that is perhaps accessible only by water and can still serve up wonderful accommodations and meals.------------------------------ We began our adventure from Picton, a wonderful small port town on that serves as the southern Island port for the InterIsland Ferry between the North and South Islands. We stayed at a great B and B just above the port where we left early Friday morning on a sea taxi to Motuara Island, one of the predator free islands in New Zealand that serves as a bird refuge. It took decades to eradicate the mammals, mainly possums and stoats, that have devastated the New Zealand bird populations. We did get the chance to see the New Zealand Saddleback, that has recovered from near extinction with only 37 individuals to a population of several thousands now, as well as Little Blue Penguins in their nesting boxes,
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