The journey from Gibbston to Lake Moeraki on the West Coast should take three hours. It took us seven due to the number of stops we made to take in the outstanding scenery and a detour to Arrowtown. The final part of the journey took us through the alpine Haast Pass. In addition we found ourselves in Wanaka at the same time as the local “A&P” (Agriculture and Produce) show (not as we initially though “apples and pears”). This show attracts 40,000 people over two days; Wanaka itself has a population of 8,500.









2018
Otago wines
We stayed in a studio cottage on a vineyard at Gibbston, not far from Queenstown, as a base for vineyard visits. The long hot summer here meant that our visit coincided with the beginning of the harvest, three weeks earlier that expected. We particularly enjoyed a tour of Felton Road and our lunch, with wine tasting, at Mount Difficulty. 






Dunedin to Gibbston
We headed North West from Dunedin to Central Otago, famed among other things, for its wines, especially Pinot Noir. The journey took us through valleys and by lakes. One of our stops was at Cromwell, a town that was moved in the 1970s to accommodate the building of a dam at Lake Dunstan for hydroelectric power. This resulted in the historic buildings being moved to a precinct by the Lake, taking on the feeling of a film set.





Cricket at Dunedin
The fourth of the One Day Internationals between New Zealand and England was the highlight of our cricket experience down under. The ground is the university one and was a sell out at 5,500 with most of the “seating” on the banks. Equipped with our “fun fest” low level chairs we joined the crowd of students, locals and Brits. At the beginning of the day factor 50 sun cream was being dispensed to the crowd and by the end of the day we were reaching for the waterproofs and jumpers (typical Dunedin weather we were told). We saw three batsmen score centuries and an England collapse as Ross Taylor led New Zealand home on one leg….in the last over…..as we sat on the edge of our fun fest seats.




Otago Peninsula
Only a short drive from Dunedin, Otago Peninsula has a great diversity of wildlife, including the world’s only mainland royal albatross colony and penguins on an adjacent beach.






Dunedin
Known as “Edinburgh of the South” Dunedin’s Scottish heritage is evident, together with its large student population, being home to New Zealand’s oldest university. We were there for three nights taking in a cricket match and some amazing scenery and wildlife on the Otago Peninsula. 



Te Anau to Dunedin
We took the aptly named Southern Scenic route to Dunedin, including the most Southern point of the South Island and well worth the extra miles – mountains, rivers, beaches and an unexpected suspension bridge in the middle of nowhere. 




Te Anau to Milford Sound
We took a day over the drive to and from Milford Sound taking in a number of stops for walks and views. Milford Sound itself was “atmospheric” (Fiordland gets 5m of rain a year while London gets 0.6m- we had less than our fair share over our four days); brochure picture also attached for comparison. We also saw a kea (the worlds only alpine parrot) taking a liking to a tourist’s car.







Kepler track
The Kepler track is one of the great New Zealand walks designed to take the pressure off the Milford Track. The full walk is 4-5 days; we did one section through rainforest to Lake Manapouri.




Doubtful Sound
Doubtful Sound was named by Captain Cook as he was “doubtful” that he could sail his ship out of the sound and so did not enter. It is ten times the size of Milford Sound but less accessible, requiring a lake crossing followed by a land trip before arriving at the Sound; it is therefore less visited.




