Road to Milford Sound.
Cascade Creek campsite is so busy because it's the closest campsite to Milford Sound except for a very pricy commercial campsite right at the sound.
We got up early so we could drive the very windy road before the tour busses from Te Anau and Queenstown showed up.
There's a kilometer-long one-way tunnel you have to go through and we didn't want to get stuck there and miss our cruise.
We got some great views in the morning light.
Lots of birds along the path.
Money shot:
That's the iconic Mitre Mountain in the centre of the photo.
Money selfie:
Spirit of Milford
There were about 10 different cruise boats at the wharf.
It's very scenic with the mountains shooting straight out of the sound. Ahem, fjord. The captain gave us commentary as we cruised, including an explanation of why the Sound is really a fjord.
We sailed by waterfalls
Fjords are deep narrow valleys formed by glaciers. Sounds are wider and formed by river valleys flooded by the sea.
We sailed out to the ocean and then turned back. Captain Cook sailed right by the concealed entrance to Milford Sound. Europeans didn't discover the Sound until 1812. There was no road access until 1948 when the Homer Tunnel was built.
Outlet of Milford Sound
A highlight of the trip was seeing a pod of bottlenose dolphins. We also saw fur seals hunting fish.
We'd opted for a package that included a water taxi
Our water taxi. The pilot just ran the boat up on the gravel beach.
over to the Milford Track, a four-day hike from the head of Lake Te Anau to the aptly named Sandfly Point.
We had to rush back along the foreshore trail to make it to the water taxi wharf on time. The pilot was just about to leave when a German couple with the same package arrived just in time. Another couple missed the taxi.
Our pilot informed us that it was a 3 hour return trip to a scenic falls and that the last taxi would leave in three hours. So it was a mad hike to the falls
Sandfly Point. The hiker in the photo is wearing a mosquito net.
It was quite a beautiful hike with views through the tree ferns to Milford River below.
We stopped for lunch at a bridge.
Bridge shenanigans.
On we raced until we finally reached the suspension bridge with a view of the waterfall.
I declined to cross the suspension bridge.
We met many hikers on the last day of their trek. Most of them were in their 60s and 70s. I was impressed. (But they don't have to carry tents as they have to stay in the three huts on the track.)
On the way back we stopped on our lunchtime bridge. Leo spotted something down on the rocks. It was his cellphone!
We made it back to Sandfly Point in plenty of time to experience the flies and catch the taxi. We bonded with the German couple over the stress of having to meet the time schedule. Our pilot was impressed that we oldies made it to the falls.
On the drive back we stopped at several viewpoints. They all had signs warning of aggressive keas. However, we failed to see any Kea, aggressive or otherwise.
Lots of these rocks with red lichen in Homer Pass.


























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