NZ swim-hike-swim adventure (long, pics)

I had one hell of a day yesterday…I shall shamelessly copy’n’paste this from my blog for your viewing and reading enjoyment:


I spent yesterday in pursuit of a goal that had been looming over me since my very first week in Queenstown. Not more than a few days after arriving, I learned that the spectacular-looking peak just across Lake Wakatipu from Queenstown was called Cecil Peak, and that there were no roads or trails in the area. It looked like a fantastic mountain to hike, but it was wholly inaccessible except by helicopter or boat. Or perhaps…

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Cecil Peak and Queenstown Gardens, taken from the top of the gondola

Within a few more days, I had learned that Cecil was 1978m/6490ft high, 1670m/5480ft above Wakatipu. I had also looked up the wet part of the adventure on mapmyrun.com and discovered that it wasn’t that far:

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Doable…

From that point on, I just couldn’t let it go. As I became more accustomed to the fierce wind patterns on the lake and had time to examine possible routes up Cecil itself, two things became clear…I would need a calm day and I would need a whole day. I spent the next couple of months discouraged by the lack of windy days and the realization that the combination of a windless day and a day off may be too tall of an order. There was also the minor question of how to get hiking gear safely across the lake.

Now the days are getting short here and my time in Queenstown isn’t boundless. The lake also isn’t getting any warmer. A few days ago, I found out I had Tuesday and Wednesday off this week, the weather looked very favorable, and I got serious about the gear transport problem. I spent a good portion of Tuesday searching for a suitable solution, and after a couple wrong turns, arrived at tying a drybag to my foot and towing it behind me while I swam. I had no idea how much that would slow me down in the water, but my time estimates for the whole adventure pointed to “Oughta be able to…” I also phoned the land-owner and got his permission to be on his property, quite a simple permit process!

I did a test-pack of the drybag Tuesday night and was faced with culling some volume from my gear. After trimming back where I could, I had no choice but to dump some of my water; I’d have about 60oz. for the day.

I woke up early Wednesday morning, confirmed that the forecast called for light winds all day, dry, and warm, and decided that the green light was lit!

I scampered down to the lake just before 8am (shortly after sunrise), finalized my packing, and shoved off at about 8:15.

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Goal for the day, doing its best to look formidable

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I’m swimming with this thing tied to me? Sheesh…

Three times on the way over, I, ahem, had the opportunity to teach myself some lessons about water-worthy knots. I also had ample time to reflect on my decision to use cord instead of webbing. It was slow going, but I made steady progress and made landfall about 1:35 after I started. The extra drag from the drybag obliterated my pace. It would have been just about an hour’s swim under normal circumstances. The last half-hour or so was very cold; just too much time in cold water!

I laid my gear out on the gravelly beach, found a place to hang dry my swimming gear, and re-packed the drybag for hiking; I certainly had no room in there for a daypack. I used the same line I’d used to tow the bag as a shoulder sling and set off at about 10:15. It quickly became apparent that this wasn’t a hike: it was a scramble. There were countless livestock paths here and there, but it was tough going nonetheless. I spent a good potion of the first part of the hike crawling along hobbit-sized paths through dense underbrush.

I emerged into more open terrain, picked a route, and continued on my tour of New Zealand’s thorn-producing flora. I felt like Forrest Gump: “You got your green thorns, your red thorns, your black thorns, your big thorns, your thick thorns, your invisible thorns, your hard thorns, your soft thorns, your pokey thorns, your sticky thorns, your…”

It was fairly easy navigating the open terrain, but I had to backtrack and choose a new route more than once. About half an hour after I set out, I opened the drybag to take a drink from my Camelbak and made a grim discovery: standing water halfway up the bag. Eyes wide, I pulled out the bladder and found that the hose had somehow disconnected itself. This was a gear malfunction I had never experienced. Unfortunately, the drybag was watertight, so all my gear was afloat. I had my camera in my pocket (good), but my phone was in the bag (bad). It was cooked. Not only was it my communication, but it was also my timepiece for tracking my progress and making sure I didn’t run out of daylight. Fortunately, the drybag was watertight, and I simply poured the water right back into the Camelbak. If I had actually lost my water, I would have turned around right then and there.

Amazingly, Cecil Peak has a duty-free leather-goods shop!

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Moo

And some more cool sights along the way:

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As I watched the sun make its rapid ascent, I realized that my camera had a clock, so I was back in business. It was still on Reno time, and I had to guess whether I’d adjusted the time for daylight savings last fall…

By noon, I hadn’t yet attained the ridgeline, and I had promised myself that 1:20 was my turnaround time. I pushed -really- hard to get to the ridgeline and scrambled up its steeper sections through harrowingly frictionless dead grass.

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The Remarkables from the ridge on Cecil

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Panorama off the south side of the ridge (click picture for larger size)

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Short flight from the airport

One of the local helicopter outfits takes clients to this ledge just below the summit for champagne and nibbles.

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Wankers!

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A puff of cloud

I finally reached a little ledge not more than 300 meters from the summit where it turned from a scramble into a technical climb. It was also 1:20 on the dot. The route to the summit was passable, but it would have taken an hour each way to do it safely. So this, unfortunately, was the end of the road for me.

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What separated me from the summit

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Some tiny hidden lakes up there

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Replacing the peak with my own

I left the ledge a few minutes after 1:30 and hurried down as safely as I could. I was able to take a much more direct route on the way down, but tough footing meant that I wasn’t making amazing time. My legs were also quivering from the steep descent, and I still had a bit of a swim ahead of me!

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Queenstown in the distance and a look at my lake crossing straight-on

I got horribly stuck in some underbrush just a few hundred meters from the bottom and lost a lot of time, but I got back to my little beach at exactly 4:30. I hadn’t seen a single sandfly all day, but they had discovered my wetsuit and swarmed me instantly. In the ten or so minutes it took me to rearrange my gear and get my wetsuit on, I got dozens of bites, adding their dastardly little pinpricks to the bloody mess the various thorns had turned my legs and arms into. I drank the last ounce (literally) out of my Camelbak, waded into the water and shoved off once again at 4:45. The lake was considerably rougher than it had been in the morning, but there weren’t any whitecaps and I didn’t really have a choice.

The sun was still decently high on my side of the lake, but it was dropping fast and I was swimming into the shadow. About halfway across, the ball of light dropped behind the mountains, and about two-thirds of the way across, the light left the peaks. I was swimming towards the dark mass of the gardens, the only spot on my horizon line without lights, and the nearly-full moon was brightening just above the gardens, so I was able to navigate ok. I made landfall at 6:15, with no more than a few minutes before the last vestiges of dusk gave way to full-fledged night.

As I stood up in knee-deep water, every muscle in my legs cramped at once and I fell over. Awesome. I shook the kinks out and made my way over the rocks as gingerly as I could with my multi-blistered feet. I was cold, thirsty, and hungry, so I made quick work of changing back into dry clothes and staggered towards Monty’s in a bit of a daze. I gulped down a hot chocolate in front of the roaring fire, ate lots, and took a taxi home: my poor feet didn’t have any mileage left in them!

So it was a 10-hour solo odyssey in every sense of the word. I didn’t summit, but the available daylight simply prohibited it, and I’m not disappointed in the least bit. I’m pretty sure that 4.5mi/7km is the furthest I’ve ever swam in a day, and I’ve never gone overland on a big mountain before.

More importantly, this challenge isn’t looming over me any more! And as I sit writing this, staring out my window towards Cecil, I have to wonder if the all-enveloping shroud of cloud over there today is Nature’s way of saying “Nothing to see here; move along” and giving a quick wink in my direction.

That is a great story and great pictures as well. Thanks for sharing.

nice goggles. good to see that you weren’t wearing one of those damn scuba masks.

Badass.

What a great adventure and thanks for sharing your day with us.

damn!..that takes guts.

and i can bet the pics don’t even come close to doing it justice…congrats!

Wow… just wow! - What a great story, you just made my day - very inspiring!

Thanks for sharing and for the beautiful pictures.

Firstly thanks Eliot for smashing me on the bike ride to the end of the road past Glenorchy a few weekends back. Had trouble believing my eyes when I saw you out riding again later that day after 4 1/2+ hours going hard.

Was sitting at my work here asking myself the question again why I have stayed living most of my time in this part of the world. Then I read your great adventure and it reminded me. It is certainly a great place for challenging oneself and isn’t called the ‘adventure capital of the world’ for nothing.

Would say it was pretty safe crossing over as you did, but reckon stuffing a pair of very light racing flats down the back of a wetsuit would be more easy than dragging a bag.

About 20 years ago i had the thought to try and be good at this new sport called triathlon. One of my dreams at the time was to train along side a boat along the shores of this lake(parents and i were considering getting into a fishing tour business). Count forward 20 years and now have a boat with a friend and still have that same goal but damn that water is frozen. A local story is that there is a big ice block at the bottom. Haven’t taken the temperature myself but believe it is below 10 degrees all year round.
I did do a couple of short 10 min swims in lake Wakatipu in preparation for ‘Challenge Wanaka’, but you have inspired me to do a bit more later this year. One day recently I had my wetsuit on with the idea of swim training while trolling/fishing but the only thing that got me in the water was diving down to get hold of someone elses fishing lure they had lost snagged to a log(adjacent Cecil Peak).

Hope you wore 2 swim caps.

Is the 3 day 500-600km bike tour still on the agenda?

Too bad you are not staying on for the Winter. Still have an unfinished goal myself involving the ‘Grand Couloir’ at the Remarkables twin peaks. This adventure is lingering heavy on me, so had better get going on it. Plan to capture it in photos also.

You are an inspiration mate. Respect you for knowing when to turn back also. Adventures can and should be modified as you partake. A big part of the adventure is exploring the new territory and you certainly got a good view from the ledge you got to.

Have been back to your blog before your post here and plan to check back again.

www.triathlonshots.com

Firstly thanks Eliot for smashing me on the bike ride to the end of the road past Glenorchy a few weekends back. Had trouble believing my eyes when I saw you out riding again later that day after 4 1/2+ hours going hard.

Was sitting at my work here asking myself the question again why I have stayed living most of my time in this part of the world. Then I read your great adventure and it reminded me. It is certainly a great place for challenging oneself and isn’t called the ‘adventure capital of the world’ for nothing.

Would say it was pretty safe crossing over as you did, but reckon stuffing a pair of very light racing flats down the back of a wetsuit would be more easy than dragging a bag.

About 20 years ago i had the thought to try and be good at this new sport called triathlon. One of my dreams at the time was to train along side a boat along the shores of this lake(parents and i were considering getting into a fishing tour business). Count forward 20 years and now have a boat with a friend and still have that same goal but damn that water is frozen. A local story is that there is a big ice block at the bottom. Haven’t taken the temperature myself but believe it is below 10 degrees all year round.
I did do a couple of short 10 min swims in lake Wakatipu in preparation for ‘Challenge Wanaka’, but you have inspired me to do a bit more later this year. One day recently I had my wetsuit on with the idea of swim training while trolling/fishing but the only thing that got me in the water was diving down to get hold of someone elses fishing lure they had lost snagged to a log(adjacent Cecil Peak).

Hope you wore 2 swim caps.

Is the 3 day 500-600km bike tour still on the agenda?

Too bad you are not staying on for the Winter. Still have an unfinished goal myself involving the ‘Grand Couloir’ at the Remarkables twin peaks. This adventure is lingering heavy on me, so had better get going on it. Plan to capture it in photos also.

You are an inspiration mate. Respect you for knowing when to turn back also. Adventures can and should be modified as you partake. A big part of the adventure is exploring the new territory and you certainly got a good view from the ledge you got to.

Have been back to your blog before your post here and plan to check back again.

www.triathlonshots.com

Hey Grant! I was just going to get groceries later that day. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it. :slight_smile:

I would have liked to travel even lighter, but between just water, calories, and shoes, a bag of some sort was necessary.

This world we have is a spectacular place and we’d be fools to miss out on exploring it, even more so when we can do it under our own power!

Remind me which weekend we were talking about for the 3 day tour?

I know that there’s tons and tons of fantastic backcountry skiing here and all I can say is that I’d like to come back here for a winter someday. I trust that you’ve got avy skills and gear when you head out there on your expeditions. Much like my little adventure, knowing when to turn around (or not drop into the couloir that you spent all day hiking for) can be the biggest challenge of all…

Thanks for the kind words and keep in touch.

Thanks, guys, for taking the time to read and respond. Glad you liked it! And I’m glad to have been able to share it with people who are fired up on stuff like this.

It was a big challenge for me and soloing it was a substantial part of the challenge.

Super fun, super satisfying, and a day I’ll never forget. But man, am I sore and tired today…

Go get 'em!

I read this as I (sadly) start another 9-5 in the office and just have to say- congratulations dude- you’re living it! Thanks for sharing.

This is beautiful!

Fred.

Simply amazing. I had a hard time reading because there would be another picture and my jaw would drop, focus would be lost…

My apologies :slight_smile:
.

Geez, today there’s a fresh dusting of snow up there; now I feel lucky to have gotten a good day!

Dude, that is killer! I’m so jealous.

You have reinvigorated me and am feeling strong to kick your butt on the next long ride. The last one was just a warm up and am going better on the flats.

So am ready for the ride tour anytime, any conditions and any hardness.

Was having a good sleep in this morning listen to the rain and hail pelting down and i thought of you dragging a bag behind you swimming over my home lake.

Then I thought it was a bit crazy swimming with the bag attached. All the rest was cool. No one will ever replicate your adventure the same way.
Most people who do such adventures have a boat alongside them for assistance. Now you fit my ‘crazy’ category which means you are cool in my eyes.

Honestly early June will be best for the riding adventure as it is the start of my 4 month break.

www.triathlonshots.com

Cool, mate!

And I’m not in the least bit crazy. That’s just ludicrous. :wink:

We’ll take our planning off-line but that timeframe -may- just work out perfectly.

Now I wanna do that.

Hey that is fantastic… a real adventure and some cool training. All in one of the best places in the world to do it. Awesome!