Grade: Hard. Really hard.
Length: 34km.
Time: 6hrs, 7hrs, 7hrs (Macetown to Wanaka, excludes the Arrowtown to Macetown stretch, which took us 5hrs over the hill).
Getting to the start of the walk: We based ourselves in Wanaka and caught A-Class Shuttles across to Arrowtown ($20/head). They also picked us up from the Fern Burn car park at the trip’s end ($25/head – you need to book).
Transport tips: If you can time the Arrowtown end of your trip to coincide with a weekend, you will increase your chances of hitching a ride in to or out of Macetown.
Would you do it again: Nope. But I would consider walking into Rose's Hut and out, and into Highland Creek Hut and out. The middle day is 95% meritless, with the only positive being the view up the Motatapu Valley.
DOC/other information about walk: DOC track info. We did find it difficult to get much detailed information on the track. I suspect that is improving, as more people walk it. And there is an information board dedicated to the Track at the Wanaka Information Centre, which is worth reading prior to departing.
Map/s: F40 and F41.
Other tips worth sharing:
- Not a tramp to break in new boots. It is incredibly hard on your feet.
- We drunk a lot of water on the middle day in particular, despite the weather being a very kind. There was a stream about midway through the day, when we dipped down a beech forest, and we did re-fill at this without any negative consequences.
- Huts are $5/night.
- We would not recommend attempting in bad weather. The ridge on the south-west side of Jack Hall’s Saddle would be a challenge in a moderate wind, especially if you were approaching from the Fern Burn to Highland Creek Hut direction.
Author: Febbett
Month/year walked: October 2008
Indoor friends often ask me what is the appeal of tramping? My reply is always the same: that is reduces your usual bevy of worries down to the basics. You are hungry, you eat. You are thirsty, you drink. You are tired, you sleep.
After walking the Motatapu Track from Arrowtown to Wanaka
To be fair, we tackled slightly more than the DOC-described “demanding three day track”. Like many regular trampers, p
Our second mistake was to approach Macetown via a “short cut” over the aptly named Big Hill, rather than the flat route around the road. Five hours later, we realised that – not only would the road have been quicker and easier – we would have very likely man
Twelve hours later, we awoke to frozen socks and boots.
And so the day began. First up, we tackled the short but near vertical climb out of the Arrow River bed, towards Roses Saddle. It was during the following two hours o
It was on the top of this hill that we enjoyed the tramp’s highlight – the magnificent Motutapu Valley, stretching back towards Arrowtown in one direction, and boldly making for Lake Wanaka in the other.
Four hours after hitting the fence line out of Roses Hut, we had returned to a similar altitude as the Hut and were standing with yet another endless tussock-encrusted hill before
It was 6pm when we dragged our weary bodies to the top of a promising, shall
Identical in layout to Roses Hut, Highland Creek Hut is in a breathtaking setting. Tucked alongside Highland Creek, the hut looks out towards a multitude of ridges and hillsides – various shades of brown and grey, all converging towards the hut. We could have been the only people left on the planet, as we sat on the verandah and enjoying our smoky cups of Lapsang Souchong.
The hut book, while only up to the fourth page of entries, made for interesting reading. There was much debate about the difficulty of the middle day’s terrain and under-estimation of the timeframe; there was also passionate commentary around the old “to bench or not to bench” chestnut.
It was an hour or so of sidling, before a steep climb up a razorback ridge to Jack Hall’s Saddle. To be honest, after the previous day, the ridge did not faze us. It was a cold, snowing
After the obligatory photo at the top, we made our way down the Fern Burn. This two-hour stretch of the trip – all of it along the side of the hill and on top of the previous day’s hill hugging – was surprisingly hard, especially on our feet.
Halfway back, we came across the partially-constructed Fern Burn Hut and thre
From there, it was three hours back to the car park. We enjoyed a small stretch of benched track before entering the Stack Conservation Area. The beech forest is beautiful an
The final half hour through the Stacks was a pleasure and the 40 minutes onflat grazing land alongside the Fern Burn provided a much-needed opportunity to free up the contracted muscles in our legs.
It was a good feeling to see the car park materialise around a corner. We happily kicked off our boots and rested under a watery sun for two uncommitted hours.
Any challenging tramp takes a few days to digest mentally, before rose-tinted glasses bring into focus the beautiful views and moments of awe, blurring the ugly climbs and snoring hut companions. However, my memories of the Motatapu are dominated by watching my footing across steep tussock faces in the pursuit of a mocking trail of orange poles. I suspect this is one tramp that, for me, may never enjoy the rose tint of time.