Lochnagar/Snowy Saddle/Matukituki Valley

  • 1 – 2 days one way
  • Medium/hard

Information may be incorrect: you are not viewing the latest version of this page. This version ID 7087 created 31 December 200931 December 2009 by HonoraHonora.

An alpine crossing of a saddle between 2 major river valleys. Usually done as part of a circuit of saddle crossings.

Lochnagar Hut • By aardvark.
Lochnagar/Snowy Saddle/Matukituki Valley: Key information
Walking time
1 – 2 days
10 hr – 12 hr
Distance
20.0km
Type
One way
One way
Grade
Medium/hard
Some river crossings. Ability to navigate in clag may be required. Grades explained
Bookings
No bookings — open access
No — open access
Lochnagar/Snowy Saddle/Matukituki Valley: Find it
Starts
Lochnagar Hut
()
Ends
Raspberry Flat or Aspiring Hut
Maps
NZTopo50-CA11
Altitude
420m – 1,554m
Altitude change 1,134m

Follow well marked trial down to Shotover. Foot trail not always obvious but by locating standards, you will be able to keep to the track. Where Lake Creek is crossed, there is an easily operated flying fox if the river is up. (2 hrs). Make sure you leave it untied to enable other parties to wind it to their side.

route from Snowy Creek to Lochnagar via Snowy Saddle • By Honora.

Take a shortcut directly upstream to gain the 4WD track after crossing the Shotover at the recommended ford shown on the map. The 4WD track leads to the private but unlocked 100 Mile hut set aside for a commercial operation - ?horse trekkers, then carries on up the valley. Walkers can keep to the true left to avoid taking the 4WD over a terrace to Pine Creek Flat.

From here the fun begins...be very careful to locate a cattle track which is narrow but overgrown. We didn't and had to climb up to it from the start of a now scrubby narrow section of the river. This track is not cairned at all initially but has the occasional strip of insulation tape. It needs recutting. At a side creek we lost the track and had to travel a short way down a spur to regain the obvious trail (E40 663 163) after climbing out of the creek and scouting higher for it.

Further upstream, we lost and refound the track which takes you to a cairn (E40 663 173) up from the bank where a gentle isolated spur leads down to the true left of the Shotover just at the margin where Junction Flat begins. Tummel Burn Hut is easily seen from this site.

Across the river a forested spur heading NW beckons as the obvious location for a track. Where the forest meets the grassy bank by the river is a broken off and partially fallen over white post and cruise tap to indicate the start of a well marked and worn trail leading after 20 minutes ascent to the bottom of a narrow stream in a rocky shallow gully. Travel up this gully which eventually peters out with a final cairn (E40 662 181) and you will see the remnants of a fire which destroyed cedar scrub. Move east to gain the dracophyllum covered but reasonably open spur. Here there is a black pipe standing to mark the trail up this spur.

Travel up this narrow well-defined spur to the 1200 m contour line and sidle between this and the 1300m line selecting the optimum lines of travel above the scrub. We found ourselves travelling around the 1300m line but I believe there is better benching down lower but possibly more scrub. We were lucky enough to strike a meadow of narrow streams to camp at en route.

The spur between Snowy Ck and Pine Ck basin - Lochnagar route • By aardvark.

The dry stream is very narrow and dry as stated and easily crossed. The terrain is easily travelled and the level of travel is not crucial as long as you are above the scrub and avoid steep micro exposed locations. We found an animal trail around 1300m which took us over a shoulder and down to the head of the basin where multiple tributaries of the Tyndall Stream join at the 1260m contour line as recommended for the crossing in Moir's Guide North.

Access to the Shotover Saddle is easy  and obvious via a gentle climb of snow grass slopes and lush fragrant alpine herbfields north of this point. At the saddle, a scree slope leads you into a narrow long basin with 2 tarns, the western most being long and skinny. Head to the western end of this tarn then travel at the same altitude initially then sidling and descending to a spur on the western margin of an basin. Here there is a cairn to enable you to descend on the correct fall line (E40 664 236)  to avoid striking bluffy terrain on the true left of Brides Veil waterfall.

In practice, we found ourselves indeed on the unrecommended wrong spur to the true left of the waterfall but easily crossed over to the next spur west to descend to a lone tree near a small tarn on grassy lateral moraine that we had earmarked for our final descent into the Shotover Valley 4 days before. However descent routes anywhere around there seemed to be plentiful.

 

 

 

 

 

Map
ID 3315

About this track

Added 2 January 2009 by HonoraHonora. 5 revisions, most recently 31 December 2009 by HonoraHonora.
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