Sunday 18 December 2022

ZL3/CB-534

 This un-named summit lies above Lake Rubicon just South East of the Torlesse Range. It's surrounded by private land belonging to Brooksdale Station and accessed from SH73 near the historic Roadmans Hut. Dave happens to know the station manager so permission was secured and off we set on a mild December morning. It starts with a 2km walk up the riverbed or farm track, your choice, before finding a suitable spur to climb to the ridge and along to the generous-sized 4 point summit at 1261m.

We chose the farm track and, only about 1km from the state highway, were rewarded with seeing 3 chamois nannies only 40m or so away. As we both reached for our cameras, they took off, bounding up the hill with graceful ease. A great way to start the day!

Once you leave the riverbed, the first part is tough with a bit of scrub bashing up a steep section. Once above the scrubline, it's a straightforward slog up to the ridge.

Dave climbing up through the Spaniard and Matagouri. Kowai River below and SH73 Porters Pass in the background

The summit is a good size so we were able to find some shelter from the gusty (but dry) Nor Wester on the lee (Christchurch) side. Dave started on 40m SSB and I hit 2m and 70cm. A great run and 18 contacts in the log before I returned to the HF setup. I then worked some HF CW, local and DX (2 USA and 2 JA).

Antenna (EFHW on 6m Tactical Mini) with Mt Torlesse in the background

We both had evening appointments and wanted to take a circuit route home so packed up around 1130am, had some lunch and set off along the really nice ridgeline traverse to Pt1230. We then dropped down a spur to the riverbed. More bush-bashing involved and a descent down a creek. Back across the river and down the farm track towards the car. A bee sting to my hand forced a quick stop for an anti-histamine and then back to the car. 

NE View from the ridgeline, Lake Rubicon in the middle.

Another great day in the Korowai-Torlesse Tussocklands Conservation Area (this brought up my 500th QSO for this park).

Permission: Conservation land starts above the 900m contour. Before that you are on Brooksdale Station land - permission required, contact Dave ZL3DRN for details.

Getting there: Heading West on SH73, past Springfield but before you start climbing Porters Pass, there is a layby on the right with a little red historic Roadmans Hut on the left. Park in the layby and cross the fence by the gate. Follow the farm track up the valley. GPX file is on the SOTA summits site.

Time: Ascent - 2.5 hours, 5.7km and 700m vertical gain

Descent - there are a number of options but the one we used on our second visit on 10th June 2023 is probably the best. It's on the SOTA Summits tracks page (or contact me for an emailed copy).








Mt Isobel and Dumblane double

 Mark ZL3AB and I have discussed this potential double for a while but this was my first opportunity to try it. The two mountains are opposite each other with Jacks Pass in between. Another weather window presented itself, between 30 degree days late in the week and a wet period beginning Sunday - let's do it!

Conservative as always, I allowed a couple of hours for the trip to Hanmer and 1 1/2 hours for the ascent of Mt Isobel from Jacks Pass. As it turned out, I was way too conservative as we were walking by 7:40am NZDST and on the summit an hour later. A full hour prior to our alerted time. Mt Isobel is acknowledged as Canterbury's most climbed peak and today was proof of that. There were 4 cars in the carpark when we arrived and we met 2 parties heading up and one coming down on our ascent. We got set up on the summit, well away from the trig to minimise annoyance for others, sent out some alerts and text messages and go into it. I got my 4 contacts on 2m and Dave had a nice pile on 40m. Thanks to those who were listening early - we really appreciate it. I jumped on HF and worked Phil ZL1PSH (strong from his new home station) and Chris F4WBN on both 40m and 20m! By this time, the heat was building and several more parties were arriving at the summit so we decided to get moving to avoid climbing Dumblane in the heat of the day. Sadly we missed Warren ZL2AJ on his summit by a few minutes - we were walking off the summit when his message came through... (I might need to make a loaded, telescopic whip for 40m situations like this)

View back towards Christchurch from Mt Isobel, Hanmer springs in the foreground 

We carefully picked our way back down to Jacks Pass, a quick stop at the car to replenish water and take on some calories and off to Dumblane, adjusting our Sotawatch alert time to on the way. 

I had promised Dave that we wouldn't be bothered by the same number of visitors on Dumblane as it is not so well known... Now fully poled and obviously well used, we encountered two parties at the summit! The climb was uneventful however hot in places, my temperature sensor recorded 30 degrees C in one section. Average temp was 23, we wouldn't have wanted it to be any warmer.


View from Dumblane back to Mt Isobel. Jacks Pass road with the car park (left) and the start of the Mt Isobel track visible.

Set up here was the same as the previous, EFHW and KX2. We worked Rick ZL3RIK at his Castle Hill Park and locals on 2m and 70cm. Good conditions on the higher HF bands saw contacts with Taiwan, Japan (S2S) and USA.

Worked the UTC rollover, had lunch at 1:30pm NZDST and headed down.

A big day but very rewarding and good fun. The views back over Hanmer Springs and into the back country are great.

Summary:

Permision - none needed, both summits are on Conservation Land. Dumblane is also in WWFF - ZLFF-0044 and POTA ZL-0269 Hanmer Forest Park. Careful location of the operator at Mt Isobel could also place you in the park and SOTA AZ but we did not try this.

Timings:

Jacks Pass to Mt Isobel - 1 hour, 3 km, 500 m vertical

Mt Isobel to Jacks Pass - also 1 hour, there are several sections where extreme care is needed descending.

Jacks Pass to Dumblane - 1 hour 10 minutes, 3.3 km,  466 m vertical

Dumblane to Jacks pass - also 1 hour - tired knees by this point!

Total - 12.54 km and 1051 m vertical

Wednesday 16 November 2022

ZL3/CB-514

 This un-named summit sits within the Hakatere Conservation Area, WWFF ZLFF-0128/POTA ZL-0131. This is a separate set of references from the Hakatere Conservation PARK - see ontheair.nz for details as it can be a bit confusing. Matt's excellent overlays make it easy! 

I'd had my eye on this one for a while and, as there is access completely on public land, it's a good one to have in the bag. The Hakatere is one of our SOTA playgrounds with a range of summits to suit all fitness levels and seasons. With Friday being a public holiday in Canterbury(Show Day), Francie and I were keen to get down to Mt Somers Domain camping ground for the long weekend. 

Dave commuted across from Timaru early Saturday morning and we were under way just after 7am. The forecast was for a change mid afternoon and thunderstorms so the aim was to get up, activated and down in good time!

There's a 4WD easement track to the Conservation Area boundary but it is not maintained and is very deeply rutted. Currently "closed to vehicle access". We walk in anyway as it's not far and is a good warm-up. This forms part of the Te Araroa trail so is quite popular. 

Routing for this one is easy - as soon as you are through the gate into the Conservation Area, turn right and follow the boundary fence up the spur to the top and keep following the fences until you reach the summit! 

Making maximum use of the Conservation Area!

There are a couple of patches of bracken and Matagouri to negotiate on the way but it's not too bad...

Matagouri fun. Note how clear it is on the other side of the fence (private land)...

We arrived at the summit about 45 minutes before our alert time so had a nice leisurely look around and set up. The views are great, 11 SOTA summits within a few km and many more on the westerly horizon.

5 SOTA summits in the foreground of this photo!

2m coverage was poor with just the 1/4 wave whip - nowhere near as good as predicted. I only worked Jim ZL3ND (Methven) and Norm ZL2IR in Rakaia. I had worked Dave while he remained outside the AZ (to get the FA contact done) so was sweating on the fourth to get the points! 40m was full of static crashes from the approaching storm so I was very relieved when Roly ZL1BQD answered my CQ! Of course, then the floodgates opened and I worked Chris F4WBN, W4JKC, Adam K6ARK (S2S on W6/CT-016) and JH1MXV plus our usual loyal VK Chasers. Dave had also worked a pile of VKs on 20m SSB including some keen to get the park. 

Equipment was KX2 with the 20m long EFHW (resonant on 40/20/15/10m) rigged Inverted Vee style.


Operating position looking SE to Mt Somers and CB-649

Come 1130 am and we decided it was time to get moving so packed down the gear, wolfed our lunch and headed down.

Lake Emily on the descent

Our timing was perfect, just a few spots of drizzle as we approached the car and by the time we got back to the coffee stop in Mt Somers (highly recommend the General Store coffee, it's excellent) it was raining hard! An hour later, we were in the midst of an impressive electrical storm, safely tucked up in the Faraday shield (caravan).

A really nice summit as long as you have decent gaiters/pants to get through the Matagouri. Definitely one to add to the regular list!


Permission: None needed, Hakatere Conservation Area (as long as you stay on the left of the fence going up)

Trig: None, just a pipe with a wooden stick in it.

Time: 2.5 hours - 6.6 km 700m vertical gain

Repeaters: Canterbury hilltop repeaters available but no simplex to the city/North Canterbury 

Photo Credit: Thanks to Dave ZL3DRN


Thursday 27 October 2022

Staces Hill ZL3/CB-463

 One of my favourite areas to do SOTA is the Ashburton Lakes/Hakatere Conservation Park area. There are some very nice summits around there for a wide range of abilities. I recently read a trip report in the NZ Wilderness magazine that described an overnight excursion to the tarn below Staces Hill and realised that it was a SOTA summit. This one is on private land - Lake Heron Station so I made contact with the owner to seek permission for a day trip on Labour Weekend and held my breath. It was granted :-) Really impressed with this as high country stations rely heavily on tourist income now and Lake Heron is no exception. North Island or Australian readers considering a South Island SOTA expedition would do well to consider basing yourself here for a while, there are many SOTA summits on the 19,600 ha property and, of course, in the adjacent Hakatere Conservation Park.

A southerly front had swept up the South Island on the Thursday preceding the weekend leaving a fresh dump of spring snow around. Upon arrival at Mt Somers Domain Camping Ground on the Friday evening, the nip in the air was noticeable (and impressive snow on Mt Somers itself for this time of year!). 

Saturday morning dawned fine and clear, -1 Deg C when we set off at 7am. The road to the start point is mostly shingle but in good condition - we made good time and were tying on our boots and walking just after 8am. 

Staces Hill from the road. Peak behind and to the right is Middle Hill CB-418, a future target

The first thing to do is cross the Cameron river, we decided to stay in our boots/gaiters  as it wasn't too deep. Both got a bit of water over the top but not too bad. Rather than lug them all the way, we stashed our reef shoes in a Matagouri bush and marked a GPS waypoint for the return. Scrambling up the bank out of the river valley is the steepest part of the trip and needs care, especially in cold, icy conditions.

We made our way up the spur, a bit of up and down through here and then crossed over a valley onto the main spur and made good progress. There is no marked track but plenty of animal tracks to follow.
  
One of the many Tarns seen from the ridge

We made the summit after  2-1/2 hours and set up right on top to maximise our (slim) chances on VHF. Equipment of the day was KX2 and EFHW (with switchable 60/30/17m loading coil) for HF and Dave's brand new FT-5DR and vertical coax dipole for 2m.

Hood on for sun protection. EFHW matching transformer/winder suspended on walking poles

As is our practice, Dave stayed out of the activation zone and waited until I was within and worked me for the first contact. He who talks to the owner/researches the trip gets the FA credit! Once we were set up and on air, contacts flowed freely with excellent NZ support on 40m the length of the country. Many operators out doing Parks, Lakes and Island activations - thanks guys! We managed one VHF contact with Rick ZL3RIK who had driven down to Tinwald to assist if we needed help spotting (to our surprise we had weak but effective cell coverage). Australia and more NZ on 20m and then up to 15m where I worked two USA stations and two JA's, one Summit to Summit. Pushing my luck, I tried 10m and was called by WB6POT in California. Dave had good fun on SSB too, working ZL and VK on 40/20m and New Caledonia and Japan on 15m.

Lake Heron and at least 6 SOTA summits in this shot!

The wind was coming up so we decided to pack up and head back down to one of the tarns for lunch. It was nice and sheltered in there, a great place to stop. 

The Tarn where they camped in the Wilderness Magazine article and our lunch spot. Beautiful.

An uneventful descent back to the river where we decided to change into reef shoes so we didn't end up with wet boots for tomorrow. The snow-fed river was certainly bracing with no boots or gaiters on! 

Back to camp, debrief with Francie and Julie (who'd spent an enjoyable day in Geraldine), showered and changed and dinner out at the Stronechrubie Bistro - a great way to finish the day.

Permission: Private property - permission is required from Lake Heron Station. Contact details are on the website www.lakeheron.co.nz  Make sure you request access a few days prior to when you want to activate. This is a working station, certain times of the year access may not be given due lambing/calving etc.

Getting there: Take the Hakatere-Heron Road and turn left immediately after the gravel pit (approx 3km from the road end). Go through one gate and park at the end near the DOC signage for the Cameron Hut route.

Time: It took us 2-1/2 hours with a few stops to empty boots, take photos etc. 

Distance: 5.5km and 773m vertical gain. GPX track is on the SOTAMaps site

Trig: - none. The summit is obvious but take your GPS!

Photos: Thanks to Dave ZL3DRN for the great set of photos - you outdid yourself on this trip.

Monday 26 September 2022

Russell Range (East) ZL3/CB-731

 Having driven past this summit dozens of times on the way to other activations, we thought it was time we climbed it! Dave ZL3DRN did the research and contacted the farmer to arrange access which was readily granted. Saturday dawned cloudy and generally yuck in the city but got better as we headed further West. 

Access is from the end of Springfield Road and we ran into the farmer moving stock along the road. Just as well Rick wasn't with us when he asked: "did you see a cattle beast on the road?"!

Access gate to the right, summit centre-left. Route along paddock and up gully past the sheds


We parked near the yards and set off. Dave had planned two routes and we chose the slightly longer one to avoid a paddock full of heavily pregnant ewes. They lamb fairly late up here and this is the last week of access until after lambing. I christened Dave's new boots by leading us straight through a bog... It's a nice walk up a gully to the ridge and along to the summit past one falsie. Just a couple of steepish bits to keep you honest... We arrived at the trig nice and early (as is our custom), taking us just on an hour (as predicted by our planning app).


Dave at the top, Torlesse Range in the background

Weather was great, just a very light breeze and plenty of blue sky. The plan was for me to try a contact via the ISS repeater so I stepped back out of the AZ and we made a 2m contact to ensure Dave gets the First Activation credit. As it turned out, the ISS repeater hadn't been turned on after docking of a re-supply rocket so that was a bust.

HF antenna of the day was the faithful 44' doublet, erected roughly North-South with the trig used to support the pole. The feeders ran down to a nice sheltered spot out of the breeze.

Getting the doublet set up. Private summits are great, it's safe to use the trig!

Dave got stuck in on 2m and worked a good pile of stations. I tried 70cm but only worked two so headed to HF. 40m produced plenty of customers around NZ including Summit to Summits with Phil ZL1PSH, John ZL3MR, Warren ZL2AJ and Rick ZL3RIK, Kevin ZL3ABY, Roly ZL1BQD portable in Parks. 20m was fairly quiet but worked Australia and Japan. Moving to 15m  things were better with a couple of contacts into Japan and one to California. 10m produced another couple of JA contacts.

Nice operating spot

The wind came up around 12:30pm as predicted so we packed up and had lunch just down off the summit in a bit of shelter and then headed down to the car. The compulsory coffee stop at Springfield tied the ribbons on a great day on a new summit, definitely one to add to the regular list.

Quarry bottom-left. Car is parked where the road turns sharply to left. City obscured by cloud. 

Getting there: Drive right down Springfield Road to the yards at the end and park out of the way

Permission required: Contact Dave ZL3DRN for details

Time: 1 hour - 2.6km and 440m of vertical gain

Trig Marker: Yes

Cellphone: Spark and Vodafone good, Skinny patchy



Friday 9 September 2022

Mt Crawford ZL1/WL-153

 The NZART annual conference was in Wellington this year, a perfect opportunity to get my first WL summit activation under my belt. Pete ZL2SLD offered a lift and Wynne ZL2ATH was keen to join the fun so after checking in at the Brentwood, Pete and Annie picked up Francie and I and we were off!

Upon arrival at the summit, Wynne was there to meet us and show where he normally activates. Being a weekday the carpark was empty and, as it is in the activation zone, he threw a rope through a convenient tree and strung up Pete's Sotabeams Linked Dipole.



The seats and camp table were set up (completely foreign to me!) and we were on air - 40m CW was a bust, not a single contact to be had. I switched to SSB and worked ZL3MR, ZL3RIK and ZL3QR. With that, Pete asked if I wanted to work parliament on 2m?! Steven ZL4CZ popped up from his courier van and gave us a solid 4th contact (using Pete's nice Diamond 5 element 2m Yagi). 

Pressure off, I went to 20m CW and worked VK2IO, VK3PF and VK5HAA, all good signals to me but I was obviously really light with them.

See, I can use a mic!!

About this time, a security guard arrived and we all thought - "here we go!" As we were right beside the prison walls, he asked us what were doing, said "cool" when Pete explained and went away happy, wishing us good luck!

Guard departing happy with our operation (behind the gum tree)

Pete then hooked up his KX2 with new Digirig interface to try some FT8. After a bit of messing with settings he was away and made plenty of contacts throughout VK and ZL. He was being reported in the US and EU using just 5W. He also worked Brendon ZL1ALF on 2m - that yagi works very well.

Pete in action on FT8 (and multi-tasking!)

This is a really unusual summit - you can catch a bus to the top!! In fact we had a bus-jam up there with two head-to-head!

Bus stop outside the old prison wall, in the AZ!

The guys caution that although this is a good one to do if you are in Wellington for a business trip etc, it's very tricky on 2m only unless you pre-aarange contacts and have a good antenna - bring your portable HF gear.

Thanks to Pete ZL2SLD and Wynne ZL2ATH for their hospitality and welcome - Francie and I enjoyed our afternoon out immensely.


Getting there: drive up - follow the sign to the summit from Miramar or catch a bus!

Permission: Not needed, public carpark

Notes: Busy summit, be prepared to explain what you are doing and try not to have wires all over the place!


Sunday 21 August 2022

Mt Alexander ZL3/CB-758

 Mount Alexander is a very nice private summit in North Canterbury, near Waikari. Contact John ZL3MR for access details. I worked John when he did the first activation in July 2021 so it was a good opportunity to Complete it and add another Unique.

The weather around the country had been terrible during the week but Saturday dawned calm and with no rain so off we went. After checking in with the farmers, we headed up the well maintained farm track to the top. It's an easy 35 minute walk with about 300m height gain.

Upon arrival we were greeted with expansive views from an unusual perspective, looking back to Mt Grey, Amberley and the curve of Pegasus Bay. 

Left: Amberley, Pegasus Bay and the Port Hills in the distance, Right: Mt Grey

There was a stiff, warm NW wind on the top but finding shelter was easy, there are a few buildings and towers up there and plenty of large Matagouri.


Trig photos taken we set up two HF stations, John picked a lower site for SSB using his G90 and 40m EFHW while I used the trig to bungee my pole to for the KX2/40m EFHW for CW.

We both worked the locals on 2m FM to qualify the summit. We had a few bursts of data breakthrough from the commercial installations but 2m was still usable. I switched to 70cm, called CQ fruitlessly for a while until Roger ZL3RC called and said I had lots of people calling me.... He had turned on the amp and pointed a beam at me to get through! The FT70DR front end was obviously being blocked by the high power  commercial equipment on UHF. Definitely not a site to take your Baofeng folks!

On to HF and the bands were much better than the solar figures of SFI = 117   A = 26   K = 4 would suggest with contacts on bands from 40 through 10m including VK, JA and W6. In fact I clocked up a PB of 50 contacts for the activation. 


View from the lunch spot showing the Hurunui River 

Weather was soo good we worked the UTC rollover on HF and VHF before packing up and having lunch on-summit looking West over the Hurunui to the foothills and Southern Alps. An uneventful walk back down, another chat with the farmer and off to the Waikari Cafe for debrief! A very pleasant day out in late winter.

Repeaters: Didn't try but all Canterbury should be accessible

Access: Private farm (Mt Alexander), contact John ZL3MR for access details.

Time: 35 minutes from the farmhouse, 2.5 km and ~300m gain.


Sunday 26 June 2022

Matariki 2022 - ZL3/CB-617

To celebrate the new Matariki public holiday we decided to arrange dawn activations of SOTA summits, parks and lakes around New Zealand.
Dave and I chose CB-617, an un-named summit behind Mt Thomas in the North Canterbury foothills. Juggling the need to be on summit at dawn (2004z) and have a chance to see the Matariki cluster pre-dawn was tricky so we focused on the arrival time and hoped for the best.
Dave arrived at my place at 5am to a -2 deg C frost and when we arrived at the start point, Wooded Gully campsite at 5.40am, it was +11 degrees!
Headlamps on and we set off, my first night hike. I loved it. The headlamp made it easy to follow the track and the beech forest is very quiet at night. A downside of the balmy temperature was that there was a cloud bank out to the East so no chance to see the cluster low on the horizon.

We made good time to the summit, temperature steadily dropping as we climbed. We arrived at 7.30am, 3.6 deg C and patchy snow around. Photos taken in my flash new T shirt (thanks Francie) and we set up the gear in a nicely sheltered spot out of the breeze.
Not my best pose but hey, I just climbed a mountain!

The bunker - nice and sheltered


Antenna de jour was an 116' doublet. Theory being that we would need 80m at this hour of the
morning. It takes up a lot of space - one of the reasons we chose this summit! Dave started on 80m and quickly worked a few stations with very good signals while I worked the locals on 2m FM. When I moved to 80m CW I was surprised to hear VK1ACE call me, we didn't complete but he was a good signal. 40m was productive, with 5 summit to summit contacts logged. Australian chasers were up early and had good signals on 40 and 20m. Chris F4WBN was booming in, always nice to work him.
Doublet with open wire feeder on right - long feeder means you can pick a nice operating spot.

Around 9am it got very cold having sat still for an hour at 3 degrees so we packed up and headed along the ridge for the Mt Thomas summit. We met a hunter heading up who was surprised to find someone had beat him in to the carpark! After a brief chat and a pat for his dog, we were away again and climbed up to the summit. Views are great from here of all the Canterbury plains and it's well worth the detour. We headed down the summit track and Dave jinxed it. He was telling me how this track isn't used much as it is steep, boring (pine forest) and direct. With that the first of many (about 15) walkers came past heading uphill! We stopped for early  lunch at a little clearing and worked John ZL3MR on his second summit. Dave then gave Paul ZL3PA another contact towards his 50 and we carried on down, arriving back at the carpark just after noon. A really pleasant circuit and one I'll  do again.

Access: Wooded Gully Campsite, Mt Thomas Forest
Permission: not required but check the DOC website as the Ridge Track is sometimes closed for logging ops.
Time:    1:50 to CB-617, 1 hour along the tops to Mt Thomas and 1 hour descent.
VHF: easy to qualify this one on 2m simplex and all Canterbury repeaters accessible.


Thanks to all who took part in this inaugural Matariki event, hopefully it's the first of many.  

Wednesday 11 May 2022

Red Hill ZL3/CB-411 May 2022

 The run of fine, settled Autumn weather in Canterbury continues! Red Hill was the target summit this week, located in one of our favourite SOTA playgrounds - Korowai/Torlesse Tussocklands Conservation area near Porters Pass. We have noted a marked increase in calls from Australia when we alert and spot on SOTA summits that are also located within WWFF.co designated parks/conservation areas. The excellent Parks n Peaks website has a variety of tools and information. Give it a try and see if it bumps up your QSO total? The only caveat is to please ensure you send in your log to Paul VK5PAS for upload to the WWFF system, otherwise the Hunters don't get credit for the park. If you use VK Portalog (Android) or Parks & Peaks (Apple) it's easy, they automatically produce the required ADIF file for you after you enter the WWFF reference.

Due to hooligans, 4WD access to the reserve is now prohibited so you need to park on Lyndon Road and walk in - an extra 2km on the round trip. We arrived to a frosty start just after 8am but soon warmed up as the sun rose and energy expended. It's a steady climb up the valley to Point 936m before turning left up another valley and following the river up before turning uphill and making for the ridge. This was quite a steep scramble through scree, patches of bush and tussock but once on the ridge, fairly easy going for a while.

The first ridge and reason it's called Red Hill - iron deposits

A steep spur awaits before attaining the final ridge and along to the Red Hill summit 

Wait, there's 2 people up there?! We really didn't expect to see anyone today (TBH it's always slightly disappointing) as this is well off the beaten track. It's a nice summit with spectacular views down to Lake Coleridge and across to Mt Cook on the South West side and across the Canterbury Plains  and down to Oamaru on the other.

Lake Coleridge with SOTA summit Peak Hill (other side of lake, left)

The predicted "Light" NorWest wind was actually gusting around 30 km/h so we found a sheltered spot in the lee and piled on the outer garments.

I got HF set up in quick time whilst Dave played SOTA spokesman and photographer for the other party on summit. As usual, he started on 40m SSB and I hit 2m FM. With a good view of the plains, I managed a quick-fire 16 contacts (a record for me) including Richard ZL4ES down in Kakanui (south of Oamaru), 218 km away.

Dave got his 4 on 40m and I worked 4 on 40m CW. A switch to 30m produced 3 Australians - very light and the wind certainly didn't help but in with the earbuds and it was much easier! For what it's worth, I use Koss "The Plug" buds - they are fantastic on noisy/windy summits as they mould to fit your ear and isolate external noise. A few calls on 20m produced nothing so, as I was getting cold, we decided to pack up and head to a sheltered spot for some lunch. A quick call on 2m just after 0000z before leaving the summit gained another 4 in the log for a total of 20 contacts on 2m.

After dropping steeply down a spur, we found a sheltered lunch spot along the ridge with great views of the mountains around us, many of which I have now summited. It's a great feeling.

The scree Dave selected was nice and soft, it provided an excellent way to lose a lot of height quickly. There is significant erosion up there from the big weather events in 2021, at one point on the scree, a huge portion of the gut had simply disappeared - certainly keeps you on your toes.

Be careful running down the scree toward this....

As we arrived back to the bush-line at the top of the valley, the Bellbirds were out in force. Dave pulled out his caller to see if he could entice them closer and sure enough, we were visited by a couple of very curious birds. It's great to see and hear so many of them in the area.

Getting there: Drive to Lake Lyndon and turn onto the Lyndon road, pass the Lyndon Lodge (and Lyndon Lump) turnoff and park on the side of the road beside the DOC signs at -43.329548, 171.677985


Permission: Much of this route is through Brooksdale Station and permission is required.

Ascent: 6.6 km and 913m vertical gain (it's harder than these figures suggest) 2 hours 45 min. 

The circuit is 13.6km and 1019m vertical.

Sunday 1 May 2022

Hamilton Peak ZL3/CB-267

 Located above the Broken River and Craigieburn skifields, Hamilton Peak offers great views of the alps, foothills and plains. 

Saturday 30th May forecast was for a nice Autumn day with light winds, even at 2000m so off we went, arriving at the locked gate on the Broken River access road just before 8am. First vehicle there which is always a good thing! A brisk pace up the skifield road and track soon had us at the tow base. We elected to walk up the line of the rope tow and then climb Nervous Knob to achieve the ridge that would take us to Hamilton Peak. Three quarters of the way up I decided Nervous Knob is well named... Hearing "three points of contact at all times Geoff" from Dave reinforced that this was a bit more than a hike up a hill!  Well outside my comfort zone but eventually I arrived on top and just for good measure, took a slight detour back up to the summit of the knob.

Recovery at the top of Nervous Knob!

The walk from there across the ridge to Hamilton Peak was fine (in comparison!) and we arrived at the summit 30 minutes prior to our alerted time 11am NZST. There was quite a strong Westerly wind blowing 30 km/h gusting 39 km/h so we set up in the lee of the summit where a convenient outcrop served to hold the pole and shelter us from most of the wind. Air temperature was 3 degrees Celsius (-2 to -3 wind-chill) so we got stuck in, knowing we wouldn't be hanging around too long. The temperature and wind we could handle, the ominous looking cloud coming across the alps ahead of the Nor-wester was the concern.

Looking West at the cloud building 

Following our now established pattern of Dave starting on 40m SSB and me on 2m FM, we both quickly had the requisite 4 contacts to qualify the summit including a couple of S2S. 

14 contacts on 2m FM - a great spot

I then jumped on 40m CW and worked the North Island regulars before trying 20m. No calls from VK after 3 minutes and an RBN spot. Dave was watching the weather and made the call, "we should go" so, knowing we had a long exposed ridge to traverse on the way home, we packed up quickly and set off. Total time on summit was around 35 minutes - apologies to anyone we missed.

View from the operating site. Craigieburn Ski-field in the valley (left), our descent route along the ridge (right). Mt Oxford in the far distance (left) and Castle Hill Peak/The Gap (right)

Wherever possible we choose a circuit route to avoid going back the way we come so we headed down the SE spur looking for a nice scree to join up with the Camp Saddle track back to Broken River. It was a great route with 100 m height gain. The scree selected was a ripper, long and deep - great fun!! As we jumped into it we spotted a party on Camp Saddle and speculated how jealous they would be watching us surf the scree down! The end of scree met the track and we found a nice spot to have lunch with great views down the valley and across to Castle Hill Peak and "The Gap"

Lunch view - Castle Hill Peak (centre) and "The Gap" (left)

The party of 6 we had seen on the saddle arrived for a chat, all older gentlemen led by a very sprightly 84 year-old! The walk back down took us across the last of the scree and down into the beech forest along a wide and well marked track back to the road and on to the car.

A good walk - 11.6 km and 1131m of vertical gain in the spectacular Craigieburn Forest Park Conservation Area.


Getting there: SH73 to the Broken River skifield access road. Drive in until you reach the locked gate and park (don't obstruct the gate or the other road). Walk up the road and then take the walking track to the bottom of the ski tows. From here, there is no track. Make your way up to the ridge. I don't recommend the Nervous Knob route, maybe skirt it but beware having to climb the scree!

Permission: None need, Craigieburn Forest Park Conservation Area.

Time: Ascent - 2.5 hours up (5.8 km and 1042 m vertical gain)

Cell coverage: Spark/Skinny 4G






Thursday 28 April 2022

Coal Hill ZL3/CB-419 and Blacksmith Spur ZL3/CB-440 circuit April 2022

 I've been looking at doing these two 6 point summits as a circuit for a while. Mark ZL3AB did them first as an "out and back" in 2019 and documented it here

I managed to talk Francie into acting as shuttle driver - dropping Dave and I off at the start point of the Coal Hill track easement at 8am on a frosty April morning. That necessitated a 5am alarm but as a bonus, she got to spend the day shopping in Ashburton with her mother. Good deal!

The track starts through farmland across a couple of small gullies and then a steady climb to Coal Hill summit. It's a well marked route (poled) but basically you simply follow the fence-line straight up a spur to the summit. We were on the top in 2 hours, only stopping to chat to a couple of hunters stalking Tahr just below the summit. We exchanged planned routes and moved on to set up on a sunny but still chilly summit around 10 am local time. HF antenna was the 44' doublet and on 2m, the Signal Stick 1/4 wave with counterpoise ("rats tail"). 2m was line-of-sight to Christchurch so I qualified the summit quickly on 2m (including summit-to-summit with Ian ZL3GIG on Saddle Hill) while Dave hit 40m SSB. Once Dave had worn out 40m, I took over and worked the ZL chasers on 40m CW before switching to 20m. Caught up with the usual VK team and then a mini-pileup of Europeans ensued with Finland, France and The Netherlands in the log in quick succession - happy days! 

Conscious of the need to keep moving (and the fact that my fingers were frozen) we packed up and headed across the ridge towards Blacksmith Spur. Plenty of gunshots echoing around the valley - hopefully our mates had got onto their target species!

Looking back along the ridge to Coal Hill

The ridge has about 280m of vertical included but we made good time and were on the next summit 30 minutes early at 12:30 pm local. A convenient boundary fence post supported the antenna and we were away again with plenty of contacts back to Christchurch on 2m and NZ and Australia on 40/20m. 

Mt Cook, Mt Tasman and friends from Blacksmith Spur

We chose our operating positions on both summits to ensure we were inside the Mt Peel/Waikari Hills Conservation Area ZLFF-0022 and it paid off as we worked a number of VK stations chasing the WWFF reference which adds to the enjoyment. 

6m pole bungeed to the post 44' doublet antenna and open wire feeder.

Conscious of Mark's warning about the state of the return track down through Rawle Gully, we grabbed a bite of lunch and set off down. The first part is straightforward, follow the park boundary fence down the spur towards the gully. The last bit is near-vertical and, combined with wet grass and mud, very slippery. Both of us ended up on our backsides and ended up holding onto the fence most of the way down!

Hanging on to the fence was a good option down here...

The entry point into the riverbed is well marked but poles are a bit sparse after that and after some bush bashing, we found the markers again just before arriving at the exit point and our ride home! It's a good 2 hours down from the summit.

A really good day out. 12 points in the bag, 12km and 1360m of vertical into the legs.

Getting there: Past Peel Forest and into the Rangitata Gorge Road. Drive past two "Z" corners and along a straight to the Coal Hill track start (DOC Sign). -43.755163 171.159353

Climb is 2 hours to Coal Hill (DOC sign says 3 hours), 3.2km and 1074m vertical gain.

Ridge to Blacksmith Spur is 1 hour 15 minutes, 4km and 276m vertical

Descent from Blacksmith Spur to Rawle Gully bridge took us 2 hours (wet), 4.6 km and 992m descent

Cell reception is patchy on both summits. Sometimes 4G and sometimes not even SMS.