For more photos, see http://picasaweb.google.com/findthebinghams/41SheffieldToDunedin
All this wildlife is such a privilege to see. Having 30 ton whal
es 30m away was an awesome experience; equally so was being 3m away (in a hide) from rare Yellow-Eyed Penguins. They’re known as ‘noisy-shouters’ – and they were. The rarer Little Blue penguins were so dinky (25cm tall) and such a funny sight, rolling in on waves, then being rolled out again before finally making it on to the sand and waddling up to their nests in the grass. Royal Albatrosses are damned impressive too, with 3.5m wingspans.
As for this chap – 2.5m and 150kg of Hooker’s Sea Lion. He rather surprised us by flopping out of the sand dunes just in front of us and then waddling to a suitable position on the beach, to just lozz, occasionally flicking sand over himself. They can move pretty fast, so we stayed the advised 10m away!

stealer), with fields full of Merino sheep, cows and deer, we reached the magnificent glacier-fed Lakes Tekapo and Pukaki – achingly beautiful. ‘Rock flour’ (pulverised rock) gives them their beautiful turquoise colour. In the distance was Mount Cook looking suitably impressive (although it’s10m shorter than 1991, after the top dropped off.)
The Hooker Valley Track in the Aoraki Mount Cook National Park (UNESCO) is reputedly one of the best in the country. We thought it was
fabulous and we were lucky enough to have sun all the way. We walked by the riverside along valley floor, between 700m high mountains with glaciers crawling down their sides. The lake below the terminal moraine was milky-white - beautiful but very cold!
We found yet more water
We liked Dunedin’s railway station building (1906). Much to
Rick’s delight, we spent 5 hours on the Taieri Gorge Railway, the only route through the gorge-ous (sorry!)
scenery of enormous rock faces, rivers and forest, over viaducts, bridges and up hills to see the most fantastic views. You had to spare a thought for those who’d cut through the schist rock in 1879 to create 235km of track for access to gold mining country – hard and dangerous work.
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