n alternative route north from Lumsden takes
you to Queenstown via State Highway 6. The road passes through farmland much of the
way, but there are good patches of bush to be seen in the on the forested flanks of some
of the ranges. The road goes first through Athol, past yet another CastleHill, and then
reaches Kmgston on the southern shore of Lake Wakatipu.
This is a z-shaped lake more than 77 kilometres long. Only Te Anau to the south and
Taupo to the north are larger. Despite its area its depth is surprisingly consistent.
Queenstown is about 47 kilometres from Kingston, situated at the head of Queen Bay where
the lake takes a sharp turn west. Situated at the foot of Ben Lomond, it is one of the
prettiest of our towns and is nearly always thronged with tourists. Queenstown deserves a
leisurely exploration, so take your lunch and sit on the wharf and watch the enormous
trout in the clear water. Along with these are black teal scooting along the lake floor
with their distinctive swimming action and black-billed gulls sitting on the water, the
blue emphasising their pristine white-and-grey feathers.
Although there is not much evidence of it today, this area was once
thickly forested. Moa seem to have been quite common and several notable archaeological
finds have been made. At Hawksburn, west of Alexandra, a thirteenth-century midden
containing the charred remains of nearly 700 moa was found, together with the typical
stone blades and choppers of moa-hunting sites. One of the best preserved moa remains
comes from Queenstown - the dried head of the moa Megalapteryx didinus which was
found in a cave near the town.
For the tree-fancier, the largest known conifer in New Zealand, a
Californian big tree, grows a short distance from Queenstown just off the Frankton road,
and at around 40 metres it is only half-grown. Particularly in autumn, the many exotics
around the district are most remarkable - a mass of glowing golds and reds.
From Double Cone, the highest peak of the Remarkables, a few kilometres
south-east of the town, extraordinary views can be had of mountains and vales stretching
off in all directions. The most prominent are Mt Earnslaw and Mt Aspiring to the
north-west and, far to the north, Mt Cook.
A trip to Lake Hayes, just out of Queenstown along State Highway 6, is
essential for any naturalist, even for the less energetic. If you can, go in autumn when
the exotic trees around the lake are in full colour. The sapphire waters of the lake
behind the golden rim of poplars and willows and the rugged hills rising behind them are
an unforgettable sight. The lake itself is a wildlife reserve noted for its waterfowl.
Large numbers of Australian coots are found here, together with black teal and pukeko.
There is also good fishing with large brown trout and perch being caught.
Although there is some dispute about this, Lake Hayes seems to have
been named for the notorious pirate and blackbirder 'Bully' Hayes who was on the nearby
Arrow goldfields in 1863. He was an unsavoury character so there would seem to be a good
case for giving it back its Maori name Wai-whakaata - 'water that reflects'.
Arrowtown, some 25 kilometres north of Queenstown on the west bank of the Arrow River,
dates from the heady days of 1862 when William Fox found gold here. Nothing much remains
today of the boom-town that existed in the days of the rush except for a few restored
buildings, a few historic houses and some interesting trees. A very fine cedar of Lebanon
grows at Thurley Domain, about seven kilometres from Arrowtown. At almost 40 metres tall,
this tree has easily surpassed anything in its native Asia Minor where 25 metres is
considered to be a tall tree.