Mountains, Gold, and Petrified Forests
From Canterbury Plains to the Edge of the Subantarctic
9 stops
multi-day
A journey down New Zealand's South Island, from earthquake-shaken Christchurch through whale-rich waters and glacier-carved valleys to the gold rush settlements of Otago and a petrified forest older than the Andes at the southern edge of the habitable world.
Itinerary
- The Garden City, Shaken — Christchurch was New Zealand's most English city -- until the earthquakes of 2010 and 2011 leveled its cathedral and killed 185 people, forcing a reinvention from the rubble.
- Where Mountains Meet Whales — A coastal town where the Seaward Kaikoura Range plunges directly into a submarine canyon teeming with sperm whales, dolphins, and albatross.
- 30 Million Years of Layers — Limestone formations at Punakaiki that look exactly like stacks of pancakes -- thirty million years of marine sediment compressed, uplifted, and sculpted by wind and wave into surreal towers.
- The Glacier That Advances — While most of the world's glaciers retreat, Franz Josef periodically surges forward into temperate rainforest -- a river of ice ending among tree ferns and nikau palms.
- Cloud Piercer — New Zealand's highest peak at 3,724 meters -- called Aoraki by Maori, who see it as an ancestor turned to stone -- rising above the Tasman Glacier in a wall of ice and rock.
- The Forgotten Miners — In the remnants of a Chinese settlement along the Arrow River, the story of New Zealand's gold rush reveals itself -- not through the fortunes made but through the lives discarded.
- Gold, Hydropower, and Vertigo — A canyon so narrow and deep that the road carved into its walls in the 1880s is still considered one of the most dangerous drives in New Zealand.
- Named for Ducks, Famous for Tolkien — A pastoral valley at the head of Lake Wakatipu, named for the paradise shelduck -- and later chosen by Peter Jackson as a filming location for Middle-earth.
- 180 Million Years, Exposed at Low Tide — On a windswept beach at the southern edge of the South Island, a petrified forest from the Jurassic Period lies exposed at low tide -- trees that were alive when dinosaurs walked this coast.
geology
glacier
earthquake
gold-rush
indigenous
natural-wonders
paleontology
film-location