(draft) Trip: My Trip
Distance: 30.8 km (20.5 DOC hours) - Unmarked route, clear - Moderate-hard terrain
Altitude: 633m to 1953m. Gain: 2611m. Loss: 2722m . Gradient: 10 deg (Moderate-hard)
Skills: Prolonged scrambles (4/7) - Prolonged rivers (4/6)


From Shotover Saddle to Tummel Burn Hut via high route
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Distance: 7.2 km (6.0 DOC hours) - Unmarked route, clear - Moderate terrain
Altitude: 783m to 1760m. Gain: 429m. Loss: 1200m . Gradient: 13 deg (Moderate)
Skills: Occasional scrambles (3/7) - Occasional rivers (3/6)
GPX info source: Uploaded from GPS

Route courtesy of Dan Clearwater.

From the Shotover Saddle on, you’re on Branches Station, and permission is required: See the ‘planning and permission’ section for more info.

This heads east from the saddle, almost to .1731.

The route then follows the ridge, staying just to the west of the crest.

A the .1690 feature, a line of tussocky bluffs is a crux, but there are several steep ramps to choose from.

If you can’t get through there, its easy to descend to about 1450m then sidle back to the ridge. In spring there can be lots of hard snow fields on this route, so consider that in your planning.

At 1100m, the two routes combine on the spur overlooking the bluffs into Tummell burn. Looking carefully, you’ll stumble accross a ground pad through the waist high scrub, and a few cairns.

Continue down to 1020m contour to a lone waratah (iron pole) as mentioned in Moirs guide.

If you get the next bit right, its about 1hr from here to the hut.

Head west roughly 50m or so through a short bit of thick scrub, until you emerge into a relatively open gully. Descend the gully, which has a few cairns to the bushline. Up till this point, it is reasonably easy to go the right way…..

When the gully meets the bush, you might see a bit of permolat in a tree to your left, but either way, sidle east, aiming for the shallow gully on the east side of the lower Tyndall Creek gorge. There are some serious bluffs around if you get off route, so take it easy.

There are sparse markings through the moderate scrub and forest but expect you’ll be following your nose most of the way, and occasionally stumbling on a marker here and there. A GPS is handy, to help guide you into the shallow gully, which leads through relatively open scrub to the flats by the hut.

See: https://www.packraftingtrips.nz/shotover-river/ for more details

Created by: Madpom on 2023-01-08. Experienced: 2022-08-12

NZTM2000: 1256159, 5055923 (alt: 775m)

A private unlocked hut ( 2 mattresses but sleeps 4 on the floor) near the head of the Shotover River. Permission should be sought to use the hut. Theres good camping outside or anywhere on Junction Flat.

Created by: Yarmoss on 2016-03-08. Experienced: 2016-02-08

From Lake Creek Junction to Lochnagar Hut via Lake Creek and Goatel Rock Biv
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Distance: 4.2 km (3.5 DOC hours) - Unmaintained track - Moderate terrain
Altitude: 635m to 1124m. Gain: 517m. Loss: 60m . Gradient: 8 deg (Gentle)
Skills: - Streams (2/6)
GPX info source: Drawn on map

Head up the old farm track child climbs the northern side of Lake Creek and sidles it upsteam for 1km before returning to the creek. An old cage may help the crossing, but it;s wheels were siezed when I visited (2017) so fording the creek was preferable (knee deep, late summer low flows).

There is no visible track on the southern bank, but head generally upstream climbing spurs onto terraces on the southern bank in grassy open country. The track becomes clear once the scrub is reached - a platformed old farm track cutting into the scrub. This is the lower of the two tracks shown on topomaps.

Follow the track as it sidles flat, the river rising to meet it. The track becomes rougher (uncut for some time in 2018) as it climbs the southern side of the rockfall dam towards the lake. Scrub is thick and encroaching on the track until you reach the large overhanging rock known as the Goatel. Exit the goatel through the hole in its ceiling towards the rear to find yourself on flatter tops of the rockfall dam, in sparse low scrub. The track is poled from here with white canes, cutting towards the northern side of the valley and climbing through a basin before dropping to Lochnagar Hut near the lake outlet.

Last updated by: Madpom at 2018-01-21 00:23:32. Experienced: 2018-01-12

From Lochnagar Hut to Rees Saddle via Snowy Creek
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Distance: 12.7 km (8.0 DOC hours) - Unmarked route, clear - Moderate terrain
Altitude: 1121m to 1953m. Gain: 1637m. Loss: 1294m . Gradient: 13 deg (Moderate-hard)
Skills: Prolonged scrambles (4/7) - Streams (2/6)
GPX info source: Uploaded from GPS

Note: The sidle from the large basin at the head of Pine Creek to the ridge line overlooking Lochnagar is extremely steep and exposed and almost entirely on snow grass. You have to go through two sets of bluffs. A slip would be serious. Only attempt this crossing in perfect conditions and carry an ice-axe or other means of arresting a fall.
From Lochnegar Hut, follow the lake shore north and cross the lake outflow. Climb the spur on the other side. Going is scrubby at first but once the spur becomes more clear a good ground trail exists. Follow the spur upwards until the left (western) side starts to become bluffy, and then sidle left (west) off the spur, round the base of a brief bluff and into the gully west of the spur. Follow this gully up to the saddle between pt1865 and pt1896. The climb is steep in places, but generally good going with only brief scrambles.

Cross the saddle onto the faces above Pine Creek to the north. Sidle the faces above Pine Creek NW for 200m until going becomes difficult due to bluffs descending from pt1896. Descend approximately 20m down the snow-tussock spur just before (SE of) the tricky bluffy section and sidle into a basin below the bluffs. This is a very steep descent on slippery snow-tussock with exposure to serious falls - take care and use an ice-axe.

Sidle the steep faces above Pine Creek at your current altitude north past pt1896, past the next saddle until a scree terrace appears below you - just before you come level with pt2000. Descend to this terrace early, before impassable bluffs develop below you. This is another steep scramble down.

Follow the screen terrace east of pt2000 and into the basin at the head of Pine Creek. These are broad desolate gravel and ice flats. Once int he basin you can drop to Pine Creek and follow the TR of it north up to the saddle at pt1950.

Beyond pt1950 is the vast Snowy Creek valley. Several spurs appear from the top to be good routes down, but most bluff out at their base, so follow the route described here. Head north from the saddle for 2-300m, crossing a small but steeply incised creek flowing west. Follow the spur to the north of the creek west and down into the Snowy, passing a cairn marking the start of the descent. One set of bluffs at 1800m can be avoided by dropping south of the spur towards the creek, and then sidling back onto the spur once beneath the bluffs. From there it is an easy tussock descent to the Snowy, with amazing views of the hanging glacier opposite the whole way.

Follow the Snowy downstream - the entire descent can be made easily on the southern (TL) bank, though crossings would be easy enough in low flows. Just prior to the Rees Saddle the Snowy enters a gorge. Do not follow it into the gorge - which Moirs says is impassable. Instead, climb the faces to the south to the easternmost saddle of the three visible. Here you will find a small tarn, and the Rees Dart track 50m beyond it.

Last updated by: Madpom at 2018-01-17 06:53:26. Experienced: 2018-01-12

From Tummel Burn Hut to Lake Creek Junction via Shotover River
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Distance: 6.7 km (3.0 DOC hours) - Unmarked route, clear - Moderate-hard terrain
Altitude: 633m to 781m. Gain: 28m. Loss: 168m . Gradient: 2 deg (Flat)
Skills: - Prolonged rivers (4/6)
GPX info source: Drawn on map

From Tummel Burn hut, head down Junction Flat, crossing the Shotover to the eastern bank. Follow good deer trails down the eastern bank through the following gorge, keeping close to the river. The old cut track further up the face is overgrown and unusable.

Once at Pine Creek Flat, pick up cattle tracks heading downriver and climbing onto a low terrace on the eastern valleyside, where the 4wd farm track commences. This can be followed all the way down the valley to Lake Creek, passing the locked, private Hundred Mile Hut. A crossing of the Shotover is required - ankle deep in late summer flows but easily impassable after rain.

The turnoff to Lochnagar is not marked, but you can see the track climbing to north face of Lake Creek soon after the ford and aim for it if that's your desination.

Last updated by: Madpom at 2018-01-21 00:17:22. Experienced: 2018-01-12


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