Tramping in New Zealand

Tramping, known elsewhere as backpacking, rambling, hill walking or bushwalking, is a popular activity in New Zealand outdoors, especially the forests, mountains and other wilderness areas. Tramps range from day walks to multi-day hikes, sleeping in huts or perhaps camping out. Most national parks in New Zealand are administered by the Department of Conservation (usually abbreviated to and often just called DOC). DOC offices and their web site are very useful sources of information.

Tramping is defined as a recreational activity involving walking over rough country. Trampers often carry a backpack and wet-weather gear, and may also carry equipment for cooking and sleeping.

History
Alpine climbing has been a recreational activity from the early days of European settlement, and possibly earlier. From the 1950s tracks, huts and bridges were built in the forested areas of New Zealand to support hunters culling introduced deer species which had become a threat to the biodiversity of New Zealand. As tramping became popular these facilities were increasingly used by trampers. In later years tramping has become popular for both local and foreign tourists.

Tramping clubs were formed in many towns, cities and universities with regular trips being organised. The clubs sometimes own a bus to transport club members to the tracks.

Tramping tracks
A network of tramping tracks has been developed throughout New Zealand of varying lengths and difficulties. A small number of tramping tracks cross private land either in part or in full. All of the major tramping tracks are on public land that is administered by the Department of Conservation.

Among the best-known tracks are the nine Great Walks and the ultra-long-distance Te Araroa.

Huts
There is a network of more than 950 backcountry huts throughout New Zealand operated by the Department of Conservation (DOC) on public land. Some areas have privately owned huts on public land used for commercial tourism operations. The majority of the huts were built by the now defunct New Zealand Forest Service for deer culling operations. Other huts were built by alpine clubs, schools, and ski clubs. Some of the buildings on public land that are readily accessible by vehicle, are generally “baches” or “cribs” built by private individuals when control of the use of public land was less stringent. These baches are not made available to the public. Some public huts are associated with a local club and volunteers from clubs will perform much of the maintenance on these huts. In the Tararua Forest Park north of Wellington huts are managed in a partnership between DOC and various lower North Island clubs. In the eastern Southern Alps near Christchurch some huts are managed solely by the Canterbury Mountaineering Club and they rely on fees from these huts to help pay the cost of maintenance.

Amongst experienced trampers there is a strong culture of looking after huts. The phrase “hut etiquette” encompasses looking after any hut that is used and showing consideration for other hut users. Most huts on the conservation estate are open to the public and the state of a hut depends on the care by those who use it.

Environmental care code
This environmental care code promoted by the Department of Conservation contains a 10-point checklist of things that can be done in the outdoors to help minimise impact:

1 Protect plants and animals Treat New Zealand’s forests and birds with care and respect. They are unique and often rare.
2 Remove rubbish Litter is unattractive, harmful to wildlife and can increase vermin and disease. Plan your visits to reduce rubbish, and carry out what you carry in.
3 Bury toilet waste In areas without toilet facilities, bury your toilet waste in a shallow hole well away from waterways, tracks, campsites and huts.
4 Keep streams and lakes clean When cleaning and washing, take the water and wash well away from the water source. Because soaps and detergents are harmful to water-life, drain used water into the soil to allow it to be filtered.
If you suspect the water may be contaminated, either boil it for at least 3 minutes, or filter it, or chemically treat it.
5 Take care with fires Portable fuel stoves are less harmful to the environment and are more efficient than fires. If you do use a fire, keep it small, use only dead wood and make sure it is out by dousing it with water and checking the ashes before leaving.
6 Camp carefully When camping, leave no trace of your visit.
7 Keep to the track By keeping to the track, where one exists, you lessen the chance of damaging fragile plants.
8 Consider others People visit the back country and rural areas for many reasons. Be considerate of other visitors who also have a right to enjoy the natural environment.
9 Respect our cultural heritage Many places in New Zealand have a spiritual and historical significance. Treat these places with consideration and respect.
10 Enjoy your visit Enjoy your outdoor experience. Take a last look before leaving an area; will the next visitor know that you have been there?
Take nothing but pictures – leave nothing but footsteps

Stay safe
Tramping the New Zealand bush (forests) can be extremely dangerous if you are not properly prepared and equipped. The weather can change without warning. If you don’t have the right equipment you may die from hypothermia. Additionally, rivers and streams often rise rapidly during rainstorms and you run the risk of drowning if you try to cross them when they are in flood.

NZ Mountain Safety Council has some information on-line but it is recommended that you visit a local DOC office before setting out on a trip. You should always ensure you tell someone reliable of your plans, and inform them when you return. You can do this at a DOC office.

The New Zealand bush is very dense in most places. Unless extremely experienced, you should not leave marked tracks.

Listen for the weather forecasts, especially the mountain forecast, broadcast by most AM and FM radio stations, normally every hour, just after the news (and also in the evening TV news). This means having a pocket transistor radio and perhaps a few extra metres of wire to boost the aerial. Also, if you are going into the backcountry for a few days you may want to hire a mountain radio or emergency locator beacon.

In most back country areas, water can be drunk directly from streams. In some areas, such as the Mangatepopo Valley in the North Island’s mountain plateau, diseases such as Giardia are present. The safest options are to use a water-purifying tablet, such as iodine, or to boil water for at least 3 minutes.

Due to the highly variable nature of the weather and the rough topography, be prepared for anything. In higher areas, snow is common even in summer, and extremely heavy rain is common in the backcountry. The New Zealand bush is spectacularly beautiful but very unforgiving. Each year there are deaths while tramping, often due to hypothermia, falls, drownings. Make sure you do not stretch yourself beyond your abilities. If in doubt, check at a local DOC office, the staff are friendly and have lots of good information and tips.

Sleep
Many of the national parks have basic accommodation called huts, which range from a basic roof over your head with large bunk spaces and a “long drop” toilet, to the deluxe huts on the Milford Track with individual bunks, electric lighting and flush toilets. The hut system is one of the treasures of the New Zealand backcountry. Usually huts are spaced a day’s walk apart, and they can be found on most tracks and in all of larger tracts of native bush. Many of them date back to the 1960’s and 70’s when the Forest Service, as it was then known, built accommodation for government deer cullers in the remote bush areas, and linked the huts via a system of tracks.

There are four main classes of hut:

Great Walk huts are found on the Great Walks and have mattresses, water supply, toilets, hand washing facilities and heating with fuel available. They may have solar lighting, cooking facilities with fuel and a hut warden. During the on-season (mid-October to end of April), they must be booked in advance. In the off season, no bookings are required but some facilities may be removed or downgraded (e.g. no wardens, no cooking facilities). Fees vary from $22 to $70 per night in the on-season and $15 per night in the off-season.
Serviced huts are found elsewhere and have similar facilitates to the Great Walk huts. Some huts may require booking in advance. Fees are $15 per night (1 serviced hut ticket or 3 standard hut tickets).
Standard huts have mattresses, water supply and toilets. Wood heaters are provided at huts below the bush line. Fees are $5 per night (1 standard hut ticket).
Basic huts provide very basic shelter with limited facilities. They are free to stay at.
For Great Walk hunts and other huts requiring booking in advance, hut fees are payable upon booking. For other huts, hut tickets can be purchased from DOC offices and from some information centres and outdoors stores. Hand the required tickets to the warden or place them in the honesty box at the hut. Alternatively, you may purchase a Backcountry Hut Pass, which allows unlimited stays in most serviced and standard huts for the validity of the pass. These cost $92 for 6 months or $122 for 12 months.

For non-reserved huts, bunks are allocated on a first come, first served basis. Occasionally on busy weekends you may find the huts full, but the general ethic with huts is that nobody is ever turned away, and even if the bunks are all full you should feel welcome to sleep on the floor, porch, or table rather than spend a night out under the stars. Huts are a great place to socialise with other trampers and meet genuine kiwis, and more often than not food and stories are shared long into the evening.

Back country huts are often maintained by tramping clubs on a volunteer basis whereas DOC tend to maintain most of the great walks huts. Please treat the huts with respect as they are offered to enable people to access the national parks and no one is paid to clean up after you.

It’s a good idea to sign the visitors book that you will find in most huts. If you get lost, it helps narrow down where you last were.

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There are a lot of places for tent camping while tramping. Almost all of the Great Walk huts have dedicated tent sites adjacent to them, and taking a tent tramping allows a degree of freedom in choosing where to spend the night. If the weather is good it can be a great experience to spend a peaceful night out in a tent on the mountain tops instead of a hut. As a rule of thumb though, if there are huts on the track you choose to walk, you won’t need a tent, but keep in mind that if the hut is dirty, full, or the occupants are snorers, you might be happy you brought a tent along.

Tracks and Routes
DOC identifies tracks and routes by their difficulty. Their classification is:

Easiest: Easy access short walk; duration up to an hour, suitable for all people including those dependent on wheeled vehicles like wheel chairs and baby strollers.;
Easiest: Short walk; duration up to an hour, suitable for most ambulant people;
Easy: Walking track; gentle walking of up to a day, for the moderately fit and capable, in places tracks may be steep, muddy, rough and cross bridged streams, they are clearly marked and sign posted;
Intermediate: Great Walk/Easier tramping track; multi-day tramping for people with limited remote area experience, in places tracks may be steep, muddy, rough and major streams are bridged, they are clearly marked and sign posted;
Advanced Tramping Track; challenging multi-day tramping for people with moderate to high level remote area experience, the tracks are mostly unformed, and may be rough, muddy, steep with unbridged streams and river crossings. Track markers may be triangular markers, poles and rock cairns.
Expert: Route; challenging multi-day tramping for people who can be completely self sufficient and with a high level of back country skills and experience, both navigation and survival skills may be required, the tracks are mostly unformed and natural , and may be rough, muddy, steep with unbridged streams and river crossings. Track markers may be triangular markers, poles and rock cairns due to remoteness and lower levels of maintenance, track markings may not always be clear.

Great Walks
New Zealand has nine ‘Great Walks’, which are very well maintained, cover some of the most beautiful scenery, and can be quite busy in the peak season, requiring bookings with DOC well in advance. More information is available at DOC’s Great Walks website.

The Great Walks are:

Milford Track (about 4 days), which runs from Lake Te Anau through the McKinnon Pass in the Southern Alps, leading out to Milford Sound. This is often considered one of the most spectacular walks in the world.
Routeburn Track (about 3 days), which starts at the northern end of Lake Wakatipu near Queenstown in Glenorchy, coming out at The Divide on the road to Milford.
Kepler Track in Fiordland National Park.
Heaphy Track in Kahurangi National Park, between Karamea on the West Coast and Golden Bay, on the northern tip of the South Island. This runs through some rain forest on the west coast, through beech forest, to tussock in the higher altitudes.
Rakiura Track, on Stewart Island
Abel Tasman Coast Track in Abel Tasman National Park at the northern end of the South Island
Whanganui River Journey, actually a river trip by canoe or kayak
Tongariro Northern Circuit in Tongariro National Park, in the central North Island’s volcanic plateau. The Tongariro Crossing is part of it.
Waikaremoana Track in northern Hawke’s Bay

Other walks
Careys Creek Track, near Blueskin Bay, north of Dunedin
Greenstone Track and Caples Track
Rees-Dart Track, parts in Mount Aspiring National Park
Tutoko Valley Track
Wangapeka Track and Route
Whirinaki Rainforest Track. Whirinaki is one of the great rainforests of the world. Such a global comparison is required to put it in its deserved ranking. While relatively small in area – at 60,000 hectares (600 square kilometres) the size of Lake Taupo or the island of Singapore – it is the finest of New Zealand’s remaining giant podocarp forests.

At Whirinaki – New Zealand’s 11th forest park – rimu, totara, matai, miro and kahikatea, the five great podocarp species, reach gianthood. This occurs in few other parts of this country, and certainly nowhere else in the world. Unlike many northern hemisphere pine forests, Whirinaki is not a single-species forest, nor is it confined to only a few sorts of trees. It has many more species of trees within its bounds than occur in equivalent areas of the evergreen and deciduous forests of Europe. Again unlike its counterparts in Europe, Whirinaki is essentially a forest without seasons – there is no one time of the year when the foliage is shed together and the forest floor is opened up to full light. And almost without exception, the foliage is evergreen.

It is one of only two podocarp forests in New Zealand which show their primary canopy in such completeness. The podocarps evolved more than 200 million years ago – in the Jurassic era – long before the flowering plants arrived. They are distinguished from the pines by not having a female cone, but in its place have a small succulent pedestal ‘foot’ or bright berry attractive to birds. The podocarps outstrip most of the true pines in their prolonged age, and in size and majesty. Whirinaki Forest Park has been a rich garden for the Maori tribes who have lived within its boundaries for centuries.

Its dense podocarp timbers host high numbers of birds, including the endangered karearea (New Zealand falcon) and whio (blue duck). Then there is the kaka, the screeching North Island parrot, red and yellow crowned kakariki and the kereru (native wood pigeon), to name but a few. Brown Kiwi can also be heard calling at nights on occasions. This haven for nature enthusiasts and bird watchers alike is located on the northern and western end of the Urewera ranges, the mountain chain which lies between the Kaingaroa Plains and the East Coast of the North Island. Rainforest experiences can be accessed from the main tourism centres of Rotorua and Taupo. View www.whirinaki.com.

Tramping equipment
New Zealand tries hard to prevent introduction of unwanted flora and fauna. Make sure you clean the mud from your boots, tents, groundsheet and stoves before you enter the country. Tramping equipment will be inspected on entry into the country. If you have any type of sports equipment in your luggage, declare it; there is a $200 instant fine for having undeclared (and dirty) equipment or sports footwear in your possession.

You will need sturdy boots or trail shoes. You will probably get wet feet, even on the tracks.

Wet weather gear is essential, even if the forecast is fine. It rains heavily and often in the backcountry. Snow is possible year round. It can also get very very hot in summer.

Most huts are not serviced, you may need to bring your own stove, and always bring your own cookware and cutlery.

Basic foam mattresses with plastic covers are standard for huts, there is no bedding provided so bring a sleeping bag.

Packs should be sturdy and weatherproof. Keep your gear inside a plastic liner if your pack does not have a rain cover.

Plan on getting cold and possibly wet. Bring clothing that will keep you warm if it gets wet, such as polypropylene or wool thermal underwear, fleece insulation layers, and a waterproof outer shell.

There is not much to eat in the bush, and nowhere to buy food once you’re out there, so carry plenty of high energy food and allow a little extra in case you are delayed by bad weather.

Many routes for more experienced trampers may cross high alpine passes, so an ice axe and crampons may be necessary even in summer.

You can obtain good quality outdoor gear in most larger towns, usually at a reasonable price. Outdoor brands tend to be more expensive than in North America and Europe, so bring your own gear if you have it. Fuel and food are easy to obtain anywhere in New Zealand. Most outdoor shops provide good service and advice, Bivouac Outdoor and R&R Sport stand out as leaders in their field and have stores in all of the main centres.

Source from Wikipedia

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