6 Responses to Trip: Heritage towards Tunupo

  1. john says:

    Wow. Nice pics of the snow – that’s quite a dump to see it down so low.
    Was planning to do a similar sort of trip that weekend – but put off by weather (luckily) – the plan was to head to Iron Gate (stay night) then up to just SW of point 1519 – back (south) down the range to Tunupo and out. Any idea on how long it would be down that range – and how long did your decent off (nearly) Tunupo take – still keen to do this but may wait for some snow melt – but again great pics Mike and this blog would make a great book – (A Trampers Journey II) so much great material, resource and piccies – cheers john

  2. Mike McGavin says:

    Hi John. Thanks for the comments again. :)

    Yep, here’s something similar to what you’ve described, although on that occasion we’d walked along from Howletts earlier that morning and it was in summer conditions. From the notes I wrote (for which times tend to base on photo timestamps) it took roughly 2 hours from spot-height 1519 to (the one that’s not Otumore) to Tunupo. That was a reasonable sized group of people, but as groups go it wasn’t an especially slow group of people. From Tunupo it was another couple of hours down, which is fairly consistent with how things went last weekend, albeit from a little below the top most recently (but with snow around).

    Cheers. Mike.

  3. john says:

    Hi Mike – great thanks for the link through to that trip.
    Another one really keen to do (again in warmer climes) is Purity/Waterfall/Waikamaka/Waipawa Saddle/Te Atuaoparapara/Sunrise – and from reading your trip reports for (Purity/Pourangaki/Kelly) and (Waterfall via Tussock) – this looks like it would be a ripper – just need to sort transport – one can’t dismiss the benefits of loop trips….. Any way – this is a fantastic blogg – Choice 1.

  4. Mike McGavin says:

    Oooh, you’ll have a great time.

  5. Fraser says:

    Turning back on Tunupo was very wise. I did a similar trip the other day. At Heritage Lodge, the weather was calm, and mid-summer sweltering. On the ridge heading to the spur down to Iron Gate Hut, it was blowing a gale, and cold cold cold. I wouldn’t want to try it in marginal conditions.

  6. Mike McGavin says:

    Hi Fraser. Yes I’ve noticed the Ruahines can be like that. Not a cloud in the sky and brilliantly sunny in the valleys, yet it can be blowing a gale in the exposed places on the top and very dangerous. It seems to be one of the characteristic differences from the Tararuas one step further south, probably because they’re further inland and just that little bit higher. Cheers.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>