Up the dark silent lake—Dawn on Lake Wakatipu—"The
Remarkables"—Oueenstown—Chinamen gold-diggers— Lake
scenery—Von River—Greenstone Valley—The Rees and Dart
rivers—Head of the lake—Kitty Gregg —Peculiarities of the
mountains—The terrace formation —The old Scotch
engineer—Frankton Valley—Farmers' feathered foes—Lake
Hayes—Arrive at Arrowtown.
It was a
bitterly cold night, that on which we sailed up the silent
lake, through the darkness, to Queenstown. The end at
Kingston was formerly the outlet, but during some great
glacial cataclysm the moraines must have filled the
valley, and raised the level of the lake, the pent-up
waters eventually finding a fresh egress much farther up,
by the Kavvarau Falls into the Kawarau Valley.
The lower end of
the lake is not nearly so picturesque as the upper. Still
it was eerie, in the extreme. This silent gliding up the
unknown vista, with giant mountains snow-covered and
silent on either hand, like wraiths and spectres,
keeping watch and ward over the mysterious depths below.
The churning swish of the paddles alone broke the deathly
stillness. The cold was intense. But soon the fragrant
odour of grilled steak stole on the frosty air, and all
poetry was banished for a time, while we satisfied
our hunger from the choice cuisine of the Mountaineer
The Mountaineer,
I should mention, is not the least wonder in this region
of wonders. It is a perfect little craft, clean as an
admiral's launch, comfortable as a first-class hotel, and
one marvels to find a steamer of such elegance and
pretensions so far away from salt water. Captain Wing, a
son of the old harbour-master of Hobson's Bay, is a
debonair and pleasant cicerone, and takes a kindly
pleasure in showing the beauties of the lake to any passenger who betrays an
interest in his surroundings.
This dark, cold,
lonely progression up the lake, was, however, a fitting
prelude to the marvellous panorama of beauty which broke
upon our enraptured sight next morning.
My Scottish blood fired with rapture at the sight of that
wondrous vision across the lake. At our feet the steely blue expanse rippled
and gently undulated under the breath of morning. Beyond a mighty mountain
range pierces the clouds, which have settled in dense fleecy folds upon the
ragged peaks. The mist hangs midway between the upper heights, and the
steely lake below. To the left a chain of sharp peaks extend, barred and
ridgy, and flecked with wreaths of snow, which seems to have been driven and
stamped into their black, rugged sides by the stormy winds which at times
rave and howl with fury down the passes. These peaks are known as the
far-famed Remark- ables. And far away down the lake, vista after vista opens
up of the grim snowy sentinels, that looked down on us through the darkness
of the night. In a few sheltered crevices, here and there cowers a scanty
handful of stunted trees and shrubs, as if huddling for shelter from the
biting blasts that with icy breath come hurtling and howling down the
gorges from the fields of snow. What a scene of desolate grandeur! I had
heard of the majesty of the mountains of Wakatipu; but the reality beggared
all description. We are encompassed on every hand by these mighty masses,
and could fancy them djinns, guarding the valley of desolation from all
contact with the outside world.
The horizon is
crowded thick with hoary giants; and beyond their utmost
pinnacles the scene is circumscribed by a band of
black-blue leaden cloud; save where, behind us, closing in
the valley at the back of Queenstown, a drapery of
purest white has settled down on the mountains, with not a speck sullying
its absolute purity.
Down on the
little wharf two stalwart lakes- men are discharging a
cargo of firewood from a melancholy-looking ketch; and a
blue-faced teamster is vigorously blowing on his chilled
fingers. The whistle of the Mountaineer wakes the
echoes, and hastily dressing, we sally forth from Mrs.
Eichardt's cosy hotel and embark once more on the tidy
little steamer whose hospitality we have already tested.
Going up the
lake the most noteworthy peaks passed in succession are
these: Mount Cecil Walter Peak, the broad dome of Mount
Nicholas, the Round Peak, Tooth Peak, and then the
wondrous glory of the Humboldt ranges. On the
right, or Queenstown side, the ranges start with White
Point, then Mount Crighton, Mirror Peak, Stone Peak, and
Mount Larkins; while at the top of the lake stand out
prominently like very Sauls among the others, Mounts
Alfred and Earnslaw, the latter 9200 feet high. There are
a few patches of cultivation at intervals around the lake
; but several of the sheep-runs have been abandoned
owing to the ravages made by rabbits. Walter Peak
station was sold the other day for a mere song ; and
Cameron's run was similarly sacrificed only a few months
ago, the rabbits having regularly starved out the sheep.
Phosphorized oats have been laid everywhere, and gangs of
rabbitters are out all over the country; but much
of it is so wild and inaccessible to all but the bunnies
themselves that these virtually are masters of the
situation.
My sharp ear
catches the sing-song jabber of Chinamen forward. What can
have lured the followers of Confucius to this inhospitable
and out-of-the-way region? Verily, these celestials
deserve the name they sometimes get, "The Scotchman of the East," for
they are ubiquitous. Not that the canny Caledonian feels
much flattered by the comparison. These men are
gold-diggers, proceeding to the top of the lake. Lots of coarse gold
is found hereabouts, mostly from surface sluicingj
but various reefs are also being profitably worked. During
two months of the year the cold is so intense that work is
stopped.
We are evidently
destined to behold the lake in one of its sulky moods. The
clouds are hovering ominously near the mountain tops. A
mantle of thick mist is already creeping over the face of
the crags, as if to hide their gruesome nakedness.
The name of the
valley here has a grim sugges- tiveness. It is called
Insolvent Valley. So called owing to two impecunious ones
having managed to cross the lake, and elude their
clamorous creditors by threading the passes on horseback,
and getting safely away to Lumsden, and the outside world.
At Rat Point we
turn the elbow of the lake, and get a glorions view far up
its wondrous expanse. The three islands named respectively
Tree, Pig, and Pigeon Islands, nestle on the water ahead;
and beyond, the eye tries to pierce the obscurity
of a. wild glen, filled with curling volumes of mist, that
lifting at intervals, show mighty pinnacles of'rock, and
fields of snow stretching into the mysterious distance in
seemingly endless continuity.
We stop to land
a passenger at the mouth of the Von River, which comes
tearing down through the gorges, bringing with it tons
upon tons of gravel and shingle, which in its shifting
course, terraces the plain, and carries ruin and
desolation in its path. During the last few years the
stream has shifted its bed fully a mile, and in its
migration it has cut away one of the finest orchards that
was in all the lake district. The scene now is one of
unrelieved desolation.
At intervals, as
the steamer progresses, a white gleam of silvery foam
comes streaking down through the fern, and flashes over
the rocks, marking the descent of some tumbling cascade
from the melting snows on the heights. After heavy
rains the hillsides are just one chaos of hissing,
roaring, leaping water. Every gully becomes a gleaming torrent. Every rocky
buttress is enveloped in seething, churning, foam. The
crash and roar of landslips is heard above the
swishing boom of the cataracts, and the wild Walpurgis of
the angry elements is held, as earth and lake and sky
blend in one mad medley of convulsive sound and commingling strife.
Now we have the
lake scenery in all its weird presentment. Words utterly
fail to describe the savage grandeur of the hills above
the Greenstone River, which here comes rolling its brown
waters through a deep black cleft in the mountains.
Gusts of crapy mist are creeping, snaky-like, up
the gorge. The sides of the defile are wooded with a dark
forest mass, in fit keeping with its surroundings. What a
startling contrast to look upward from this funereal
sombreness, and gaze on the immaculate majesty of the
still, lone mountain crags, piercing their flaming crests
through the grey canopy of cloud.
A surveyed track
leads through the Greenstone Valley to Martin's Bay, on
the West Coast, only some fifty or sixty miles distant. My
good friend the Scotch engineer, waxes enthusiastic, too, as I
expatiate, with what eloquence I can command, on
the glorious scenery around us.
"Aye, man, it's
juist graund," he says; "it only wants some big
gentleman's hoose, and beech nuts and hazel nuts, and a
gamekeeper to chase ye, to be like hame."
Luckily there
are no gamekeepers here, though to be sure there is a
close season for the trout. One magnificent trout,
weighing upward of 30 lbs., was caught in the lake
recently, and we feasted on a boiled trout on board which
had been dried and smoked by the cook, and was as big as a
good-sized salmon. (The trout, of course, not the
cook.)
We are now
reaching the far end of the lake. The hillsides are here
heavily wooded, and have a softer aspect than the terrible
bare desolation, which marks the rugged seams and iron
ridgy bars of "The Remarkables." As we look back, too,
the three islands form a pretty foreground, and the
pitying mists 'drape the bare rocks, softening their
rugged outlines, till the scene looks like a summer pass
in the Trossachs. As ever and anon the veil is lifted,
however, the great height of the towering mountains, here
some 8000 to 9000 feet of sheer acclivity, burns in upon
the brain. The snowy peaks rise abrupt, sheer, straight
up, up, up, like a pyre of white flame. It looks as if
earth were blazing up her very mountain tops in
sublimated essence "as a wave-offering before the Lord."
How can I describe the wondrous sight?
Take this
mountain-side now, for instance. Let me try, however
faintly and inadequately, to present it to you. It displays to the beholder
an epitome of every varied feature of Alpine scenery ;
from the calm blue lake on which we float the eye
seeks the skirting of wave-worn lichened rock. The mossy
weather-worn boulders girdle the strand, draped in part by
fern, and shadowed by the hill myrtle and manukau scrub;
next the' bracken-covered slopes, with their dull, dead
greenery; the ridgy coping beyond, dipping yonder
into a warm bosom, set thick with birch and boughy trees;
above that again the silvery sparkle of a hill torrent
with a sheen and glitter at every successive step, as the
water leaps from ledge to ledge, lighting up the whole
picture ; all around and above, in swelling ridges and'
billowy bosses, the dun-brown stunted herbage
spreads, with here and there a warty excrescence as the
bed-rock bursts through the shrivelled, shrunken skin, and
presents its nakedness, which the trailing mists hasten to
cover. Now, a$ the eye ranges higher, the mists gather
thicker. The clouds kiss the bare patches. The shroud and
pall of vaporous film drapes the scarred face with its
clinging cerements ; and higher up, peeping through
the ever-shifting upper strata of the trailing gauze, the
gleaming peak itself robed in eternal snows, lifts up its
silent witness to the heavens, a mute protest one might
fancy against the smirched and sullied creation of the
lower firmament.
Some idea of the
great altitude of the mountains here is formed from the
appearance of the forests round about Kinloch. From the
deck of the steamer the trees seem mere shrubs; but as you
approach the shore, you are astonished to find them
great towering forest kings; and the trunks that seemed
slender as a woman's wrist, are now seen to be huge logs,
and the sawn planks are of a large size. Close by is an
enormous water- wheel, which works the neighbouring
saw-mill. This is said to be the largest mill-wheel in New
Zealand—indeed, some enthusiastic Maorilanders say
there is no bigger in existence. We watch the slow
revolutions, the water plashing in glittering circles, and
hear the clanging resonance of the saws eating through the
great logs. The lake here is over 1200 feet deep, and dips
down sheer from the bank. The overhanging hills are more
than 8000 feet high.
Opposite the
saw-mill, up a narrow gully called Buckler's Burn, a party
of Chinamen are at work, and succeed in getting very fair
quantities of coarse gold. Up the Rees Valley there is a
battery at work on the quartz reef known as The
Invincibles.
The head of the
lake possesses enough objects of interest to detain the
tourist for weeks. The great Lake Valley itself terminates
in a long triangular flat, through which come tearing down
the rapid waters of the Rees and Dart. The
exploration of these valleys is rewarded by the discovery
of waterfalls, cataracts, gorges of surpassing grandeur, glaciers of
fascinating beauty, and artistic peeps such as may be
equalled in the Himalayas, but surely are nowhere
surpassed on this planet of ours.
Beyond the flat
rise snowy cones and isolated pinnacles, and the eye
follows peak after peak, and snowfield after snowfield,
till vision loses itself amid the blinding whiteness of
Mount Earnslaw, uncontaminated as yet by the touch of
human tread.
A Mr. Mason owns
a very beautiful bit of fairy land here, adorned with
beauteous vegetation, and which goes by the name of
Paradise. It is not inaptly named. On the hither side a
Mr. Haynes, an Irish storekeeper, has recently purchased a
property; and, with Hibernian humour, has
christened it Purgatory, because, as he says, "you must
pass through Purgatory before-you reach Paradise."
We have just
been lucky enough to get a glimpse of Earnslaw's hoary
crown. Now a wild blinding sleet comes down, and hides all
the glorious panorama from our gaze ; and, as the
steam whistle screams hoarsely, as if in emulation of the shrieking
storm, we seek "the seclusion that our cabin grants " to thaw our icy feet
and fingers, and muse on the marvellous glory of
crag and peak, and laks and fell that enwraps us all
around.
At Kinloch, the
tourist will find every comfort at Bryant's Hotel. At
Glenorchy, on the other side, Mr. Birley has clean and
comfortable quarters at your disposal, and is attentive to
your every want.
At Bryant's, Kitty Gregg, the guide, was pointed out to
us. She is renowned through all the lake country as a daring and
accomplished horsewoman. Can handle an oar like a Beach, and an axe in a
style that would make Gladstone envious. Bred and reared amid these rocky
pastures and wild solitudes, she knows every foot of the country, and is as
free, fearless, and independent as the winds that whistle round Mount
Earnslaw. Woe betide the "rash intruding fool," who in his self-sufficiency
would presume on Kitty's sex to give himself airs, or attempt any
familiarity. We heard of one case where she left a coxcomb to find his way
home by himself, and he getting lost in the mountains was glad humbly to sue
for pardon, and accept Kitty's guidance into safety after she had thoroughly
frightened him by a temporary desertion. Kitty is evidently a lake
institution, and much respected by all the dwellers round about.
I am not sure
but that the mountains at the top of the lake are not even
in some respects more remarkable than "The Remarkables"
themselves.
They all rise at
the same angle from the valley. Their ridgy backs all
point in the same direction, and each terminates in a
cliffy point very similar in shape.. Each is a counterpart
of the other, and are all clad in the same livery of black
spots and streaks and silver scales. I could not help the
fancy being engendered that they were a school of gigantic
dolphins suddenly frozen into ice, as by the fiat of some
dev or djinn, as they were taking a ten-thousand-foot
plunge upward, from the still blue "depths of the abyss.
They look in their regularity of outline just like so many
great fish, and I do not think the simile at all a
strained one.
On the Glenorchy
side are some very perfect examples of the terrace
formation, which is one of the most extraordinary of the
geological phenomena which abound on all hands. The top
terrace is named the Bible. It has a breadth tof eighty or
ninety acres, and is as flat as a book, though why it gets
the name I could not find out. There is no doubt that each
terrace was successively the lake level, and as the waters sank, owing
to the cutting away of the rim at the Kawarau
Gorge, these steps of this giant's staircase were left in
their present regularity. Now, of course, great gaps and
chasms are being torn through them by the incoming waters,
and another terrace is forming at the present level of the
lake. The waters will again recede, and fresh terraces be
formed, until in time a valley will be left with the
conjoined waters of the Rees and Dart foaming
through it, in a deep gorge, just as the Kawarau now tears
down through its rocky channel.
The crowning
feature of the whole view is, of course, Mount Earnslaw.
He rises from the flat of two abrupt ridges, enclosing a
vast glacier between. The ridges gradually draw together,
and at the point of convergence a majestic mass
shoots up into the heavens, like a pyramid of glory, and
the great, glistening, white expanse is Mount Earnslaw.
The mighty
battlements round the lake, with their piebald ridges, and
black spots, look like the grim walls of some old Afghan
hill fort, riddled with bullets, and torn and rent by
fierce onslaughts of the foe.
Close to Pigeon
Island there is a very pretty pass between the island end
and the main land. The cabbage-trees, green sward, and
verdant bush (for there are no rabbits on this island, and
grass and sheep are consequently abundant) are charming
by contrast with the bare desolation of the snowy
ridges. The passage close to the three islands is the
prettiest peep on the whole lake. It is pretty. The rest
is grand.
The keen
mountain air had whetted my appetite, and we were glad to hear the summons
of the bell to lunch. We found the cuisine most excellent
on board the Mountaineer, and some lake trout, smoked d la
Findon haddock, a second time tempted me to make rather a
display of my gastronomic powers. Old Thomas Thompson, the
Scotch engineer, I noticed eyeing me rather dubiously, and I fancied
he was putting some constraint on his appetite. I afterwards found he had
some reason to doubt the too facile pen of the
peripatetic scribe, inasmuch as his appetite for porridge
had already been made the butt of "The Vagabond's"
sacrilegious sarcasm. It seems that on the occasion of
"The Vagabond's" I visit, poor Thompson had made the
porridge disappear with a celerity which must have roused Mr. Thomas'
envy. At all events the allusion he made to "the
porridge-eating engineer" in his letters to the Argus, was
taken hold of by the small wits of the place, and
henceforth poor Thompson's life was made a burden to him
by constant allusions to the satisfying dish so dear to
Scotchmen.
In a burst of
confidence, judging from my tongue that I would sympathize
with him as a brother Scot, and having already seen that
my own appetite was none of the least robust, "Man," he
said, with some bitterness, "Yon was an' awfu' chiel, yon
Vagabone! The beggar eevidently couldna enjoy the
parritch himsel, so he needna been sae like a dowg i5 the
manger wi' his remarks aboot me. Ma fegs," he continued,
"I'm thinkin' Athol Brose wad hae been mair i' the
Vagabone's way than guid plain parritch. Feth ! he looket
mair like a batter't gill stoup than an honest parritch
cogie ony w'y."
This deliverance
of the engineer being a criticism upon his critic, I
promised to record, greatly to the good old fellow's
delight.
We spent a
delightful time in Queenstown. Mrs. Eichardt's hotel is
most comfortable. She looks well after every department
herself, the result being that everything works smoothly.
The trout cutlets and Scotch baps were joys for memory to
linger lovingly upon. One trout was recently stranded
here which weighed 40 lbs. Surely the boss trout of
the world.
We walked up to
Mr. Murray's fruit-garden, and got some very rosy apples
from the hospitable old Highlander; and his couthie auld
wifie regaled us with delicious butter and other home-made
luxuries.
It was, indeed,
with genuine regret we turned our backs on this region of
romantic beauty and wild grandeur.
On the way to
Frankton we passed flocks of starlings, flights of
parrakeets, and hordes of sparrows and green linnets, all
destructive pests and enemies that cause the poor patient
farmers immoderate loss. At Boye's station, at the
Kawarau Falls, an army of rabbitters are employed,
and at the tariff of 3d. per skin many of them make over
12s. per diem of wages.
The poisoned
grain which is laid for the rabbits has destroyed nearly
all the quail and wild duck, of which there used to be
legions about here. Away up at the head of the lake, on
the Rees and Dart, paradise ducks are yet pretty numerous.
The Frankton
Valley is backed up by the glistening Crown Ranges—one immense expanse of
unsullied snow, rolling along to the verge of the
horizon in billowy waves of dazzling purity and gleaming
splendour. The fields are here protected by rabbit-proof
wire fence's; but times have been hard with the farmers,
and we see hundreds of acres of uncut crops beaten down by
the untimely snow, and myriads of stooks rotting in the
sodden fields. The land here is very productive; a
hundred bushels of oats to the acre is quite a common
yield.
Crossing the
brawling and treacherous Shot- over, in its deep gravelly
valley, we top the rise on the farther side, and
immediately our eyes are gladdened by the sight of Lake Hayes, lying in its
pacific beauty before us. The surroundings of
stubble and numerous farmsteads give a homely air to the
view ; but the majesty of the snowy ramparts which stretch round about like
an amphitheatre of Parian marble, brightens up the lake
with an effect which is most theatrical in its startling contrasts. The
lake is so crowded with trout that, as an Irishman would
say, "they jostle ache other;" and in the raupo selvage at
the lower end, swamp hens and ducks are at times pretty
abundant.
As night is
falling, and the mists are creeping down the valleys, we
enter Arrowtown, with its three churches and quaint old
slate-built houses, and are glad that Host O'Kane has
built a good fire and provided a cosy dinner for us, both
of which we mightily enjoy. |