Double
Two, Double Seven (2277m)
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On arrival we quickly erected our tents in the drizzly valley as the NZAC New Year's Eve BBQ sizzled in the stream bed where some steak and sausage action was taking place. Who camped in the stream bed? Well most people actually. You'd think that after last year's floods folks would have opted for higher ground. Hmmm. During the BBQ it rained a little - not enough to dampen spirits, especially not those of the chap who did a most amusing rendition of the "Kea's Ballad" (or some such hilarious tale). The fireworks weren't dampened either and we were treated to a lovely display of rockets and sparks in the night sky. I went to bed well before midnight. |
Up at 5am. Greg and I followed a faint track up behind the hut into a hanging basin. Rob was going to stay at the hut and rest his leg. In the basin we sat on a rock beneath a snow slope and admired the lovely scenery. We did the "first climb of the summer fuffing around". Everything seemed OK. I had two crampons, two tools, a rope and both of my gloves. Greg had his own harness and not Sophie's. All was well in the world. It was shaping up to be a fine day for climbing. As we sat on a rock, who should appear? (No prizes for guessing) A limping Rob Laery appeared from the bush. "It'll be fine" he tells us as he looks down at his swollen leg. Greg and I are less certain but there's no stopping a Rob when he has his mind on something. All three of us set off up the snow slope at the back of the cirque. The scenery is gorgeous. The weather is spectacularly clear and here we are (my third New Zealand season in a row) at the base of a climb. Marvellous! Below Left: Greg welcomes Rob to the hanging valley. Below Right: Greg and Rob start up the snow slope. |
Its hard going, and the slope increases as we reach a convenient rock spit on which to sit in the now glorious sun and take a swig from the water bottles. A couple of (dozen) rest stops later, a bit of crunchy rock underfoot and we are on the summit... of something. Now where are we exactly? Greg carefully studied our photocopied and expertly plastic-covered map of the region to try to identify a few peaks (Image below left). Yes! We are on the summit of 2277m, a first ascent (actually, my first, first ascent).How can it be that nobody has climbed this before? Well you see the Dept. of Conservation only just bought the valley and opened it up as a National Park. Now there is one rich farmer more, and three (or more) happy climbers. Mt Barth's north wall towered over us to the south. From here we could just make out some Barth summitters who have come up from Canyon Creek. They are in the photo (below right), but they are smaller than a pixel. Our view is stupendous in the clear air. Many of New Zealand's major peaks are layed out for us: Cook, Sefton, Aspiring. This is quite the location for lunch. So we eat it. |
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