Difference between revisions of "2023-01-11 -43 171"

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<!-- If you did not specify these parameters in the template, please substitute appropriate values for IMAGE, LAT, LON, and DATE (YYYY-MM-DD format)
+
[[Image:{{{image|Geohash 2023-01-11 -43 171 02 View.jpg}}}|thumb|left]]
  
[[Image:{{{image|IMAGE}}}|thumb|left]]
+
{{meetup graticule  
 
 
Remove this section if you don't want an image at the top (left) of your report.  You should remove the "Image:" or "File:"
 
tag from your image file name, and replace the all upper-case word IMAGE in the above line.
 
 
 
And DON'T FORGET to add your expedition and the best photo you took to the gallery on the Main Page! We'd love to read your report, but that means we first have to discover it! :)
 
-->{{meetup graticule  
 
 
| lat=-43
 
| lat=-43
 
| lon=171
 
| lon=171
 
| date=2023-01-11
 
| date=2023-01-11
}}<!-- edit as necessary -->
+
}}
 +
 
 
== Location ==
 
== Location ==
<!-- where you've surveyed the hash to be -->
+
800m south of the road near Arthur's Pass, South Island, New Zealand.
  
 
== Participants ==
 
== Participants ==
<!-- who attended: If you link to your wiki user name in this section, your expedition will be picked up by the various statistics generated for geohashing. You may use three tildes ~ as a shortcut to automatically insert the user signature of the account you are editing with.
+
*[[User:Stevage|Stevage]]
-->
+
 
 +
== Expedition ==
 +
=== Hope ===
 +
[[File:PXL_20230110_210158033.jpg|thumb|300px|The hash is up there! No fear!]]
 +
On paper, the hash bore a striking resemblance to [[2023-01-03 -41 173|the one from a week or so earlier]]: a steep climb up a hill beside a highway. Nothing too complicated. Right? Oh boy.
 +
 
 +
Giving EB the choice between hanging out in Arthur's Pass or waiting in the car below, she opts for the latter, cheering me on as I head off. To last week's kit of gaiters and backpack I add hiking boots and a trekking pole, hoping to really sell the look of "confused trekker" rather than "malicious trespasser" should the need arise.
 +
 
 +
The hill looks...foreboding. A gentle slope and then suddenly...UP. Where exactly would the hash be? I can't make it out.
 +
 
 +
<gallery mode="packed" heights="300px">
 +
File:PXL_20230110_210949708.jpg|The hash is just out of sight, over the top of that ridge.
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
=== Disillusionment ===
 +
[[File:PXL_20230110_210901724.jpg|thumb|300px|Impenetrably thick wall of doom.]]
 +
 
 +
I hop the unbarbed fence and stroll blithely up to the clump of bushes that stands between me and glory, eager to assert myself from the outset. My heart sinks as I take in the magnitude of the clump, a vast tangled wall of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discaria_toumatou matagouri] and other shrubs. The word "impenetrable" doesn't do it justice. Even if I possessed the masochist desire to shred myself to death through its thorny defenses, I can't imagine how I could possibly make any headway through this thing. I'd bounce off, repelled like from a spiky force shield.
 +
 
 +
I retreat and consider another way, shamefacedly avoiding eye contact with EB. Circling around, to my surprise, I learn that the defensive wall is not infinite. A few stomps through a muddy stream (I try not to consider what beast has muddied it) I reach the base of the hill and start upwards. Looking back, I see a tractor with slasher attached turn into the driveway opposite.
 +
 
 +
<gallery mode="packed" heights="300px">
 +
File:PXL_20230110_211030360.jpg|Thistles add to the experience.
 +
File:Geohash 2023-01-11 -43 171 04 Scrub.jpg|"Intimidating" doesn't begin to describe it.
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
=== Determination ===
 +
[[File:PXL_20230110_211449818.jpg|thumb|300px|Tantalising gaps in the scrub.]]
 +
It is '''hard'''. It is steep. It is very prickly. The scrubby vegetation is dense. It is maddening. You know there are paths up and through, but you can't see them. There are gaps in the foliage where the ground is lined with rocks, as if a small stream sometimes flows. You take a step up, then slide back. You resist at all costs the urge to wildly flail at vegetation when you slip, for fear of grabbing thorns, or worse.
  
== Plans ==
+
For it is not just ''matagouri'' that lurks. But blackberry, too. As nasty as the matagouri thorns are, there is a sort of honesty to them. They are visible. You grab the thorn, it's going to hurt. And this is their home. But the blackberries? Half the time you don't even see them until they suddenly rip a hole in your leg or claw a gash into your forearm. Thank god for the gaiters.
<!-- what were the original plans -->
 
  
== Expedition ==
+
[[File:PXL_20230110_211956892.jpg|thumb|300px|Briar roses]]
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
 
  
== Tracklog ==
+
And then there are thistles. Who invited these bastards? It wasn't me. And for sheer hilarity - roses. Yes. Briar roses roam these hillsides, ensnaring the unwary traveller with thorns every bit like their domesticated cousins. Ouch.
<!-- if your GPS device keeps a log, you may use Template:Tracklog, post a link here, or both -->
 
  
== Photos ==
+
<gallery mode="packed" heights="300px">
<!-- Insert pictures between the gallery tags using the following format:  
+
File:PXL_20230110_213503214.jpg|Foxgloves
Image:2020-##-## ## ## Alpha.jpg | Witty Comment
+
File:Geohash 2023-01-11 -43 171 03 Back.jpg|So much bracken
-->
 
<gallery perrow="5">
 
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
== Achievements ==
+
=== Despair ===
{{#vardefine:ribbonwidth|100%}}
+
 
<!-- Add any achievement ribbons you earned below, or remove this section -->
+
So I climb, I dodge, I wince, I stop for water. I watch the tractor below, slowly doing laps of the paddock, working towards the middle. I'm progressing so slowly, I wonder how much longer I have to keep doing this before I can honourably give up, defeated. There's clearly no way I will reach the top.
 +
 
 +
I plod on. I start to pay more attention to the small tracks through the shrub, and try to follow a few. I suspect sheep, duly confirmed by tiny clumps of wool here and there. The progress improves a bit.
 +
 
 +
The maddening gambling game continues: look up the hill, and try to guess which way will be easiest. There's a right answer and a wrong answer, but it's very hard to predict. Climb a bit. More water. a snack.
 +
 
 +
=== Enlightenment ===
 +
 
 +
[[File:PXL_20230110_211754890.jpg|thumb|300px|Through the worst of it.]]
 +
 
 +
Spot a patch of grass, and aim for that. Yes! Now I'm moving faster. Push, push. The views are incredible.
 +
 
 +
Climb to a lip of sorts and feel the gradient ease off. This starts to feel like a hike, not just some masochistic hell-dive through a briary thornfield. I'm smiling now, as the sheep tracks lead up the slope, towards my goal.
 +
 
 +
There are trees now, and they are pretty. I'm on an unexpected embankment - natural? Man-made? I can't tell. The sheep lead me down to a kind of channel. I'm happy to follow, until they head under some low branches that are decidely inconvenient for a human to follow.
 +
 
 +
The walking is very enjoyable now. I'd be happy to find myself here on a hike. Interesting vegetation, great views, good weather, what a day!
 +
 
 +
[[File:PXL_20230110_221301934.jpg|thumb|300px|What a view!]]
 +
 
 +
I'm expecting to find the hash just this side of a dense forest high up on the hill, but actually it's a few metres inside. It's a slight let-down, this hash deserves a view, not to hide in the sombre woods. But I'm thrilled to reach the point, and to step back out where a convenient mound offers a perfect viewpoint. I only wish I'd brought a beer.
 +
 
 +
<gallery mode="packed" heights="300px">
 +
File:PXL_20230110_221301934.jpg|What a view!
 +
File:PXL_20230110_221211534.jpg|Looking right...
 +
File:PXL_20230110_221200886.jpg|...and left.
 +
File:Geohash 2023-01-11 -43 171 02 View.jpg|More!
 +
File:PXL_20230110_221013028.jpg
 +
File:PXL_20230110_220830352.jpg|The hash is just within these beech trees.
 +
File:PXL_20230110_220304247.jpg
 +
File:PXL_20230110_215601701.jpg|This deer obviously ran into some pretty ferocious sheep.
 +
File:PXL_20230110_215452522.jpg|The hiking is getting much more interesting.
 +
File:PXL_20230110_215158862.jpg
 +
</gallery>
  
__NOTOC__
+
=== Reflection ===
<!-- =============== USEFUL CATEGORIES FOLLOW ================
+
[[File:PXL_20230110_230352419.jpg|thumb|300px|Thoroughly harrowed]]
Delete the next line ONLY if you have chosen the appropriate categories below. If you are unsure, don't worry. People will read your report and help you with the classification. -->
 
[[Category:New report]]
 
  
<!-- ==REQUEST FOR TWITTER BOT== Please leave either the New report or the Expedition planning category in as long as you work on it. This helps the twitter bot a lot with announcing the right outcome at the right moment. -->
+
The descent is every bit as harrowing as I'd imagined. Foolishly, I thought I could find a better route than the way up, but only succeed in finding even denser brambles. In frustration, I use my aluminium hiking pole as a machete. It responds by snapping in half. I'm unable to find the bottom piece. The tractor has almost finished the paddock. Someone in a ute has come to chat to him.
  
<!-- Potential categories. Please include all the ones appropriate to your expedition -->
+
My lightweight hiking pants are ripped in many places, and there are scratches all over my hands, but I'm filled with a delightful feeling of accomplishment. Back to the car with EB to celebrate!
<!-- If this is a planning page:
 
[[Category:Expedition planning]]
 
-->
 
  
<!-- If all those plans are never acted upon, change [[Category:Expedition planning]] to [[Category:Not reached - Did not attempt]]. -->
 
  
<!-- An actual expedition:
+
== Tracklog ==
[[Category:Expeditions]]
+
[[File:2023-01-29 20_59_29-Geohash _ Walk _ Strava — Mozilla Firefox.png|400px]]
-- and one or more of --
 
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions with videos]]
 
[[Category:Expedition without GPS]]
 
-->
 
 
<!-- if you reached your coords:
 
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 
  
 +
== Achievements ==
 +
{{#vardefine:ribbonwidth|100%}}
  
--><!-- or if you failed :(
+
{{one with nature| latitude = -43| longitude = 171| date = 2023-01-11}}
[[Category:Coordinates not reached]]
+
{{velociraptor geohash| latitude = -43| longitude = 171| date = 2023-01-11}}
-- and a reason --
 
When there is a natural obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Mother Nature]]
 
 
 
When there is a man-made obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - No public access]]
 
  
When you failed get your GPS, car, bike or such to work:
+
__NOTOC__
[[Category:Not reached - Technology]]
 
   
 
When you went to an alternate location instead of the actual geohash:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Attended alternate location]]
 
  
(Don't forget to delete this final close comment marker) -->
+
[[Category:Expeditions]]
 +
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 +
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 +
{{location|NZ|CAN}}

Latest revision as of 14:25, 2 April 2024

Geohash 2023-01-11 -43 171 02 View.jpg
Wed 11 Jan 2023 in -43,171:
-43.0388145, 171.6755386
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

800m south of the road near Arthur's Pass, South Island, New Zealand.

Participants

Expedition

Hope

The hash is up there! No fear!

On paper, the hash bore a striking resemblance to the one from a week or so earlier: a steep climb up a hill beside a highway. Nothing too complicated. Right? Oh boy.

Giving EB the choice between hanging out in Arthur's Pass or waiting in the car below, she opts for the latter, cheering me on as I head off. To last week's kit of gaiters and backpack I add hiking boots and a trekking pole, hoping to really sell the look of "confused trekker" rather than "malicious trespasser" should the need arise.

The hill looks...foreboding. A gentle slope and then suddenly...UP. Where exactly would the hash be? I can't make it out.

Disillusionment

Impenetrably thick wall of doom.

I hop the unbarbed fence and stroll blithely up to the clump of bushes that stands between me and glory, eager to assert myself from the outset. My heart sinks as I take in the magnitude of the clump, a vast tangled wall of matagouri and other shrubs. The word "impenetrable" doesn't do it justice. Even if I possessed the masochist desire to shred myself to death through its thorny defenses, I can't imagine how I could possibly make any headway through this thing. I'd bounce off, repelled like from a spiky force shield.

I retreat and consider another way, shamefacedly avoiding eye contact with EB. Circling around, to my surprise, I learn that the defensive wall is not infinite. A few stomps through a muddy stream (I try not to consider what beast has muddied it) I reach the base of the hill and start upwards. Looking back, I see a tractor with slasher attached turn into the driveway opposite.

Determination

Tantalising gaps in the scrub.

It is hard. It is steep. It is very prickly. The scrubby vegetation is dense. It is maddening. You know there are paths up and through, but you can't see them. There are gaps in the foliage where the ground is lined with rocks, as if a small stream sometimes flows. You take a step up, then slide back. You resist at all costs the urge to wildly flail at vegetation when you slip, for fear of grabbing thorns, or worse.

For it is not just matagouri that lurks. But blackberry, too. As nasty as the matagouri thorns are, there is a sort of honesty to them. They are visible. You grab the thorn, it's going to hurt. And this is their home. But the blackberries? Half the time you don't even see them until they suddenly rip a hole in your leg or claw a gash into your forearm. Thank god for the gaiters.

Briar roses

And then there are thistles. Who invited these bastards? It wasn't me. And for sheer hilarity - roses. Yes. Briar roses roam these hillsides, ensnaring the unwary traveller with thorns every bit like their domesticated cousins. Ouch.

Despair

So I climb, I dodge, I wince, I stop for water. I watch the tractor below, slowly doing laps of the paddock, working towards the middle. I'm progressing so slowly, I wonder how much longer I have to keep doing this before I can honourably give up, defeated. There's clearly no way I will reach the top.

I plod on. I start to pay more attention to the small tracks through the shrub, and try to follow a few. I suspect sheep, duly confirmed by tiny clumps of wool here and there. The progress improves a bit.

The maddening gambling game continues: look up the hill, and try to guess which way will be easiest. There's a right answer and a wrong answer, but it's very hard to predict. Climb a bit. More water. a snack.

Enlightenment

Through the worst of it.

Spot a patch of grass, and aim for that. Yes! Now I'm moving faster. Push, push. The views are incredible.

Climb to a lip of sorts and feel the gradient ease off. This starts to feel like a hike, not just some masochistic hell-dive through a briary thornfield. I'm smiling now, as the sheep tracks lead up the slope, towards my goal.

There are trees now, and they are pretty. I'm on an unexpected embankment - natural? Man-made? I can't tell. The sheep lead me down to a kind of channel. I'm happy to follow, until they head under some low branches that are decidely inconvenient for a human to follow.

The walking is very enjoyable now. I'd be happy to find myself here on a hike. Interesting vegetation, great views, good weather, what a day!

What a view!

I'm expecting to find the hash just this side of a dense forest high up on the hill, but actually it's a few metres inside. It's a slight let-down, this hash deserves a view, not to hide in the sombre woods. But I'm thrilled to reach the point, and to step back out where a convenient mound offers a perfect viewpoint. I only wish I'd brought a beer.

Reflection

Thoroughly harrowed

The descent is every bit as harrowing as I'd imagined. Foolishly, I thought I could find a better route than the way up, but only succeed in finding even denser brambles. In frustration, I use my aluminium hiking pole as a machete. It responds by snapping in half. I'm unable to find the bottom piece. The tractor has almost finished the paddock. Someone in a ute has come to chat to him.

My lightweight hiking pants are ripped in many places, and there are scratches all over my hands, but I'm filled with a delightful feeling of accomplishment. Back to the car with EB to celebrate!


Tracklog

2023-01-29 20 59 29-Geohash Walk Strava — Mozilla Firefox.png

Achievements

OWN Ribbon.jpg
This user earned the One with Nature Geohash Achievement
by reaching the (-43, 171) geohash on 2023-01-11.
RaptorGeohashing.png
This user earned the Velociraptor Geohash Achievement
by reaching the (-43, 171) geohash for 2023-01-11 with highly visible raptor claw marks.