Cosy new huts offer respite from winter blues
Date: 11th June 2010
Cosy new Orongorongo huts
offer respite from winter
blues
Families, groups
and trampers can shake off the mid-winter blues with a stay
in one of two new 10 bunk huts, available to book
exclusively in Rimutaka Forest Park’s Orongorongo Valley.
The new huts replace the old Haurangi and
Shamrock huts which came to the end of their serviceable
lives, Department of Conservation visitor assets programme
manager Peter Blaxter said.
The new Haurangi hut has been rebuilt in its current location and the old Shamrock hut has been renamed Papatahi and rebuilt close by in a sunnier position with good views of the mountain range, including the Papatahi peak.
Donations totalling $26,000 from the Gilbert McCaul Bequest administered by Federated Mountain Clubs of New Zealand and $4000 from Hutt Valley Tramping Club - allowed for the provision of 10 bunks in the Papatahi Hut instead of the six originally planned. Gilbert McCaul, who joined the Hutt Valley Tramping Club in 1946 and later became a member of the Tararua Tramping Club, left a bequest to FMC when he died in 2004, "for the improvement of amenities and tracks in the valleys and lowland hills of New Zealand"
“We are very grateful to the clubs for their support. These are going to be fantastic winter huts- with log burners and good insulation,” Mr Blaxter said.
From the Catchpool car park it takes around 2.5 hours of walking to get to Haurangi and around 3.5 to get to Papatahi, but once there walkers are rewarded by the new warmer, brighter and more spacious huts. Built over the summer from new sustainable materials, they are well-insulated and equipped with heaters, mattresses, composting toilets and tap water. Haurangi hut also has cooking facilities, crockery and utensils.
They are among six huts for hire at the end of the Orongorongo track- a couple of hours from the Catchpool car park- which are an ideal introduction for families and groups to the valley.
“All the DOC huts in the valley are well-equipped, but these new huts offer a little more comfort for those wanting to walk a little further into the forest park,” Mr Blaxter said.
The Department of Conservation manages the park, maintaining the network of walking tracks and visitor facilities. It also runs and supports programmes to regenerate and conserve the area’s native wildlife and enhance recreation opportunities. Each year thousands of visitors walk into the Orongorongo Valley from the most popular entrance- Catchpool Valley, which has recently been enhanced by a new ford over the Catchpool stream.
The Orongorongo track offers easy walking through
some spectacular lowland forest to the Orongorongo Valley,
from where people can stay in a booked hut close to the
track end or venture further afield. Those staying
overnight might even be lucky enough to hear the call of
kiwi.
All the DOC huts in the Orongorongo Valley
are available to be booked exclusively.
For details and
to book visit http://www.doc.govt.nz/parks-and-recreation/places-to-stay/backcountry-huts-by-region/wellington/poneke/
To
enter a draw for up to 18 people to win a free night in an
Orongorongo Valley hut contact the Wellington Visitor Centre
on 04 384 7770, wellingtonvc@doc.govt.nz.
ends