A firm favourite among tourists who come to Queenstown is to experience the might and majesty of Milford Sound. It's a good four hour drive from Queenstown, but being pretty much the nearest major town to it, except for Te Anau; a fleet of coaches leaves every morning to take tourists to see Milford Sound. The reason this place attracts so many people is the sheer beauty of the place all year round, rain or shine, snow or sun, this place is magnificent. Carved out over thousands of years and then flooded by the sea and the end of the last ice age, the flooded valley boasts some of the most magnificent sheer rock faces some 4,000ft high, and mountains closing on 5,000ft. Two huge waterfalls are present all year round, and hundreds of temporary waterfalls cascade down the mountain sides when it rains here. To hear about is enough to make you want to see it for yourself. So I booked a Coach-Cruise-Coach package in Queenstown for $155. To drive there and back in my car would have cost me a heap in petrol and as no else I knew wanted to go when I needed to it was the better choice to just book a package.
Once in Te Anau we stopped for half an hour to grab a bite to eat and go to the toilet. Our next stop was to pick up folks who had been walking the Routeburn track, one of the most popular hiking tracks in New Zealand. It takes 3-4 days to do the 32km walk, with some people just camping with their own gear or staying in specially made huts which need to be booked in advance. We carried on from there past what they call the Divide and on to Milford Road which by a long shot is one of the most immense roads I have ever been on. Sheer rock faces all the way to the Milford Sound tunnel continue high into the sky on either side with the clouds covering most of the peaks of these majestic monsters. The rain creates thin but incredibly long waterfalls pouring down the mountains. We stop to take them in, it pours with rain and not many people brave the elements, but sod it you only live once, I went out to try and take it all in. Your peripheral vision is totally ensconced with mountain sides. I thought New York was bad for my neck as I kept looking up, I think I might have repetitive strain injury from looking up and going wow so many times on this drive.
So we drove on through the Milford tunnel which was dug right through a mountain, it had been dug out in the 1930's with a single lane just big enough for a coach to get through, it was a seriously long and scary tunnel, leading out to start of another huge valley leading to the edge of the sound. Once we got closer to sea level we stopped off at our last scenic stop to have a look at a rain forest that housed a rip roaring waterfall. A waterfall that flowed so fast it had over the years bore holes in rocks surrounding it. From there we got to Milford Sound and were herded onto the cruise boats.
A much needed complimentary tea or coffee awaited us on the boat after such a long coach ride. The rain had eased off a little at this stage, so I darted up to the open viewing deck and tried to take in the size of the place. It was easy to believe it as smaller than you imagined, but then you looked out to where the other boats on the water were and how they paled in comparison to the size of the sheers faces next to them. The cruise was great taking you round both sides of the valley and getting you close to the rock faces to bask in the beauty of it all.
I thoroughly enjoyed my trip out to Milford Sound, it had been high my list of things to do out here ever since cousin Sam told me about it. It's a worthwhile experience for anyone coming out here to see this place. A true wonder of the world.
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