The wispy mist clung to the grass, to the tin hut, to the grooves of the mountains that towered around us. It gently floated as the rising sun seared holes through it. I was confident the sun would succeed. It had to. Because today was an important day. Stag Saddle, in the Two Thumb Range, beckoned, followed by a ridgeline rumoured to have sublime views across Lake Tekapo. Today I would get my first glimpse of Aoraki/Mt Cook.
But, it was cold. Gloves and leggings cold – colder than it should be for a morning in late February. But then, we were about 1400m above sea level, in a hut reputedly visited by Prince Charles and Princess Anne as children – by all accounts, it’s how Royal Hut got its name. We stood at one of the small, grimy windows, looking out at the curling mist, willing it to evaporate whilst rubbing our hands together.
The excitement was palpable. A motley crew of Southbound Te Araroa walkers about to embark towards the highest point on the trail. Stag Saddle. A lofty 1925m. And then a glimpse of New Zealand’s tallest mountain from a ridgeline. We just had to be able to see where we were going.
And that was definitely proving a problem. The sun was losing. Mist had been replaced by thick, claggy cloud. Visibility was 10-metres at best.
“Should we leave later?” a girl from Belgium asked. We waited. Impatiently.
As the minutes ticked by, the cloud swam until, poof, it lifted entirely in a sparkling reveal. The valley of yellow tussock glowed and the sky rang clear blue. Off to the west, the scree-clad cliffs beckoned. It was time to go.
“I’m so excited, I just can’t hide it, I’m about to lose control and I think I like it.” I sang at the top of my voice as I strode along the trail, slowly warmed by the sun and the pumping of my blood. Within an hour, gloves and leggings had been peeled off and I was sweating profusely.
