There are a few ways to get to Milford Sound from Queenstown. You can drive, take a bus, or fly. Last March, 1.1 meters of rain fell on the South Island in a 48-hour period. That’s more than 42 inches! Many of the roads to Milford Sound were washed out or damaged, so getting there now by road is a challenge. I flew. In a 12-passenger Cessna over some of the most scenic mountains I have ever seen. We flew over glaciers and craggy mountaintops, alpine lakes and waterfalls. As I was looking over the mountains, I started thinking about how fortunate I am to be living this epic journey. About all the experiences I’ve accumulated as I set out to step on all the continents. The gravity of it all settled in, and I started to cry. Grateful, sloppy, messy tears. The kind that make you feel good after you’ve wiped them away.
I pulled myself together by the time we arrived in Milford Sound, and we headed over to the docks to board our boat, which would take us around the narrow, 15-km long bay that feeds into the Tasman Sea. The sunny, cloudless day we were experiencing is rare. This is one of the wettest places on earth. It is a temperate rainforest; one without soil. The cliff faces are covered with trees that cling to the rock; their roots finding cracks to grab hold. They lace their roots with other trees around them, creating a tangled latticework structure. This is good, mostly. Until you get 1.1 meters of rain in 48 hours. Then, one tree lets loose and collects a slide of debris cascading down the slope. There were a number of these “slips” evident along the way.
What a day. What an incredible, unforgettable, magical day.
