Over the Southern Alps.
 |
Clear to Christchurch.
 |
New Zealand is split into two main islands, the North Island with its tropical weather and geothermal attractions, and the South Island with its rugged beauty and equally rugged climate. As much as we'd like to see all of the country, Melanie and I only have time for the South Island this trip; we're all geared up for the rain, fog, and cold winds we expect to encounter in the mountains (and everywhere else, we figure). After a few smooth hours we reach the western edge of the island and cruise above the Southern Alps, the young, sharp mountain range that forms the backbone of the South Island. The peaks are rocky and forbidding, a hundred shades of gray beneath the broken clouds. It's a fairly narrow island; soon the slopes fall quickly to a wide flat patchwork of fields stretching all the way to the eastern coast and Christchurch, our first stop.
|