New Zealand - 4WD Adventures!
By David Ellis
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New Zealand |
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David Gatward-Ferguson delights in telling people, particularly his fellow Brits, that he’s a drop-out.
“Wife’s
one, too,” he cheerfully adds. “I dropped-out of marketing computer
systems, and Amanda dropped-out from being an accountant.
“And
now we spend our days in the most beautiful terrain in the world.
Fellow Poms turn greener than the hills around here when we tell them
that people actually pay us to take them into the these mountains, to
get them into the old gold-mining sites down by the rivers, and by
four-wheel to places just so incredibly rich in history and folklore.”
‘Here’
for David and Amanda is the spectacular alpine country around
Queenstown on New Zealand’s south island. “We’d become sick and tired
of boardroom back-stabbing and bitchiness in London,” David says.
“So one day in 1993 we walked-out, bought two air tickets to New Zealand, and we’ve been here since.”
On
arriving in Auckland, David and Amanda decided that a “nice long drive”
would be a good way to see the country, so they bought a campervan, and
weeks later ended up in Queenstown.
There they came upon an
opportunity to take over a company called Nomad Safaris that
specialised in 4WD tours into the stunningly beautiful mountain terrain
behind Queenstown – taking adventurous tourists along roads that were
once little more than foot-tracks for early sheep farmers.
Later
these same tracks became pathways to the stars for thousands of
hopefuls who flocked to the area when cries of “Gold!” rang out from
creek beds at the bottom of 75-degree ravines topped by razor-back
peaks.
“Some visitors find the roads heart-stoppers,” says David
as he inches his Landrover across a muddy washaway on a section of
mountain pass that’s 100m directly above the Shotover River.
The
32km road took 200 men ten years to build, including two years for a
mere 300 metres around the almost-vertical Pincher’s Bluff: to
build this white-knuckle section in 1888, men were lowered on ropes to
plug dynamite into holes they drilled into the schist, and would then
yell to their mates at the top to haul up like crazy as the cliff face
blew away below them.
David and Amanda’s tours take people
through the incredibly beautiful Skipper’s Canyon, so-named because
when gold was found in the early 1860s, not only did crews jump-ship
from vessels calling at Dunedin – so too did the skipper of one, who
simply telegraphed his boss in England that as his entire crew had gone
to make their fortunes, he might as well too!
At one stage the mountains and rivers were yielding as much gold as the fabled Yukon.
The
first miners into the region, Thomas Arthur and Harry Redfern had
originally walked 350km into the mountains from Dunedin to work as
shearers. But when Thomas Arthur found a huge nugget in the Shotover
River they pinched the frying pan from their boss’s kitchen to go
panning for more gold, and never returned.
“Mr Arthur and Mr
Redfern told of picking up gold by the pound,” a Dunedin newspaper
reported at the time. “They were laden with gold that they said lay
everywhere in the canyon…”
It sparked the gold rush and twelve
thousand hopefuls flocked to the area, but their new-found wealth
proved fatal for Arthur and Redfern: both died of alcoholism a few
years later.
Nomad Safaris shows visitors the remains of such
historic old ruins as the Welcome Home Hotel that catered first to the
miners during the ‘rush,’ and later horse and carriage tourists who
were as enchanted then by the rugged beauty of the mountains as
visitors are today. The hotel finally closed in 1940.
There’s
also the little mountain cottage of John Balderstone and his wife
Fanny, an Irish dancer who came out to entertain the miners. They
retired after the ‘rush’ to the quiet of the mountains, but Fanny
yearned for the bright lights of Queenstown. So John struck a
compromise: he built a new cottage for them half-way between their old
home in the mountains, and those bright lights….
There’s also a museum at the old Skipper’s Town that once boasted over 1000 residents.
Half-day 4WD safaris start from NZ$165 per adult. For details visit www.nomadsafaris.co.nz
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