Saturday 7 March 2020

Lightweight food options....self heating Omeal range

Omeals....no cook tramping food...


My partner Karen and I tried something new on our tramp on the Rakuira Track, the new range of self heating meals called Omeals. Omeals are a product new to the New Zealand market and are basically like a US military MRE...you have the pouch of wet food, a water activated heating element and an outer bag to contain the meal.






Using them requires no external heating or even hot water as you simply add about a cup of cold water to the pack, add the food & unwrapped heater pack and wait as it chemically heats the food. This means you can potentially eat in the back-country without carrying the extra weight of cooker, gas canister and cooking pot....usually a saving of 500-700gms. 


No cook tramping...forgo the cooker, gas canister and cook pot!!!


There are a variety of meals available for both breakfast and main meals including gluten free and vegetarian versions. These meals are currently only available from Hunting and Fishing stores ($15 per meal) but I could see more shops carrying them as an option if the demand was high enough. 


Review of the meals I have tried from the Omeal range...

We tried a couple of different varieties of these meals including a breakfast option and two of the main meal options. Here is a list of all of the options currently available from Hunting and Fishing stores:

Hashbrown Potato, Oatmeal, Vegetable Stew with Beef, Chicken Creole, South West Chicken, Spaghetti Bolognese, Red Lentils with Beef, Cheese Tortellini with Tomato Sauce and Pasta Fagioli...


Another option: vegetarian Pasta Fagioli

There are a number of other meals but they are not yet available in this country, have a look at my comments on the meals we have tried below..... 


Southwest Style Chicken

We tried these meals as an experiment on the second night of our Rakuira Track walk...I thought it would be a good option after a tiring seven hour day. Karen chose one meal for herself and I chose one for me. My choice was the Southwest Style Chicken....stewed chicken, rice, beans, corn and other vegetables. 






It was well cooked without being over soft and you could clearly make out all of the flavor profiles of his very popular SW American style dish. The sauce is tomato based but was rich and dark with the slightest touch of chilli flavor to it. It was very nice and I would have no problems eating this one again...

Hashbrown Potatoes

We had the Hashbrown Potatoes for breakfast and unlike other all day breakfast options I have tried (Back Country and Mountain House) this one is bloody good. This hashbrown mix is really good and has distinct flavors of potato, onion, green peppers (capsicum) and bacon. It is absolutely beautiful and I have subsequently used it on two further tramping trips.




It is grated and cooked potato with additions and while intended as a main meal or meal accompaniment but it is at breakfast where it excels. I have always had problems with breakfast meals..I like porridge and muesli but it does get boring after a couple of days. I have so far paired this with salami sticks, spam and cold sausages and it is awesome with all of them. 

While this would not totally supplement the usual morning staples it is certainly another excellent no mess breakfast option when planning meals for your tramps. I will be using this into the future.....


Lentils with Beef


Karen had this for dinner as she enjoys lentils and it has a mixture of beef pieces, lentils, cubed carrots and a tomato based sauce in a thick curry like meal. It has a rich savory flavor and smells really delicious. 





The carrots and lentils were well cooked without being mush and there were plenty of chunky pieces of slow simmered beef which flaked to the fork. The flavor was strongly of tomato but with a deep beef essence, coriander, onion and garlic. It was really nice...probably better than the South West Chicken but not by far..I would buy this one again.

Are there down sides to Omeals?


There is not a lot wrong with these..generally they tick all the right boxes for nutrition, ease of use and general weight savings. They do have a number of down points mainly the waste associated with them, cost and weight of the packs.

There is a lot of waste packaging with these meals but then there is with all food and dehydrated meals in particular. They do weigh 227 gms which is heavy for a single meal but this can be partially addressed by removing the enclosed spoon, napkin and salt and pepper pack. They cost $15 which seems a lot though any dehydrated meal will currently set you back for $12-$19 anyway.

All of the commercial freeze dried meal ranges available in New Zealand

It is all about choice really....you get to choose what you will carry...this is just another option. 



These are another option when meal planning for your outdoor adventures and you should give them a try at least once to see if they fit into your tramping style and dietary requirements. I am really pleased to see these meals as another tool in the outdoor cookery chest.  I will add a review for any other meals I use from this range so make sure you check back in the future to see what other options I have sampled.


Wednesday 4 March 2020

Rakuira Great Walk Track: 21-23rd January 2020: Oban to Port William

TA extension...Rakuira Great Walk

I have several sections of the Te Araroa Trail on my to do list for the 2019/2020 season. The first I have completed is the extension tramp of the Rakuira Great Walk Track on Rakuira/Stewart Island. This is not a part of the official TA trail but just a personal section I have added. On this trip I had my partner Karen who often goes out on tramping trips with me. 

Oban is the start and finish point of the Rakuira Track


This is also my second Great Walk tramp for the summer of 2019/2020. The first was a trip to the Routeburn Track which was rained out by extreme weather on the second day. I knew this trip to Rakuira would be a good one but it went so much better than my expectations.

We had several days of stunningly good weather and one day of rain which only started as we walked off the track. It was the best possible weather conditions for notoriously fickle Stewart Island, we could not have asked for better...  

Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira: Lee Bay at the start of the track
 Neither Karen or myself had ever visited the island and I would thoroughly recommend a trip here if you have any desire to do so. It was fun visiting the island ( in Oban, Ulva Island and the rest) but our main focus was walking the 36 km long Rakuira Great Walk Track. It is a circular track which can be walked in either direction...we choose to walk Oban - Port William - North Arm - Oban or counter clockwise. 


View along Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

The track has everything you might want in a good tramp...good but challenging tracks, decent huts, great scenery and plenty of mud. I specifically brought Karen a set of gaiters for Christmas because I have heard many stories about the mud on Rakuira. It wasn't as bad as I expected due to the dry conditions but there was enough...


Some of that legendary Rakuira mud....Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

We stayed at both Port William and North Arm Huts which were about 80% full with a mixture of Kiwi trampers, locals and Internationals. Both huts were excellent and North Arm Hut became the 200th back-country hut I have visited so adding to the auspicious nature of the tramp. 


At North Arm hut at the end of day two....Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

I really cannot express just how awesome Rakuira is and I am already planing a return for a tramp on either the Northern or Southern Circuit Tracks at the end of this year or early 2021.

Anyway here is how our Te Araroa Trail/Great Walk tramp progressed...


Day One: Oban To Port Wiliam Hut

 I have wanted to get down to Stewart Island/Rakuira for decades but never had the time or finances to do so. I decided to just go ahead and plan a trip despite a few logistical problems because if I don't do it now when will I?


Looking out into Lee Bay at the start of the Rakuira Great Walk
Karen and I spent five days down in Rakuira including three days walking the Great Walk...we were walking in the usual counter clockwise direction Oban-Port William- North Arm- Oban. The trip started with a taxi ride out to Lee Bay at the start of the track. Aurora Cab Company cost us $25 dollars and saved a boring five kilometer road walk from Oban so it is well worth spending the money.


Getting our gear ready at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Lee Bay is the start of the track and has a number of information panels as well as toilets and a small campsite if you wanted to stay at the road-head. From the start of the track you can see far to the southwest and in fact you can just make out your destination for the day at Port William in the distance.

The Rakuira Track along this coast reminds me of the Abel Tasman Coastal Walk as it has beaches inter-spaced with headlands you need to climb over. 


DOC information panels at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

DOC information panels at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

DOC information panels at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Port William is visible as the last headland in the far distance...

The information panels talk about the track, flora and fauna, Mt Anglem (the highest point on Rakuira) and this is also the place where the old telephone cable came ashore from Mainland New Zealand.  It is by far the nicest start to any of the Great Walks I have tramped on...


Karen gets ready to walk at Lee Bay, Rakuira

The old phone line coming ashore at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira
DOC track map at the start of the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

A saying attributed to a Stewart Islander.....

The famous chain link sculpture sits right at the start of the track so you pass through it on your way to Port William. The other end of the chain sculpture is at Bluff thirty odd kilometers away across Foveaux Strait and the artifact celebrates the lasting connection of Rakuira to the Mainland of New Zealand.

The famous road sign at Stirling Point, Bluff...chain sculpture is right next to it....


The Anchor sculpture comes ashore at Lee Bay, Rakuira

Detail of the the chain sculpture at Lee Bay, Rakuira
Detail of the chain sculpture at Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

There is a stile at the official start of the track...a fence to keep cattle etc out of the National Park...then it is straight into the tramping. The track quality if very good along this part of the track...dry, benched gravel with bridges over all streams and creeks. It makes for very quick travel for the first couple of kilometers. 


The official start of the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Rakuira is covered in mixed podocarp forest and low land forest so the tree types range from massive Totora, Rimu and Matai right down to ferns and other low laying scrub. The forest is rich, verdant and earthy smelling as you would expect from such a wet climate. Because the bush is so thick you only get occasional views along the coast but the positive is that it protects you from the elements which can be savage this far South. 


Large Fuschia Tree on the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Detail of giant fern on the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

View along the coastline near Lee Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

After the first hour you will find yourself at Wooding Bay where there is a track across the first significant water barrier the Little River. There is a high tide track around this bay but we had arrived at low tide so were able to walk across the mud flats to regain the main track. 


First view of the bridge over the Little River, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira


Little River Bridge, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Jon crossing the mud flats near Little River, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira


Tidal bay on the Rakuira Great Walk reminiscent of the Abel Tasman

The track was quiet at this time of the morning it was only as we approached Maori Beach that we saw our first trampers heading out to the road end. We climbed the first of a multitude of steps as we crossed over the next headland to get to the next beach. I hope you like climbing stairs because there are frickin thousands of them to climb over the next three days....I not kidding either!!!


Mudflats at the Little River, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

The Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira at Little River Bay

First of a great many steps on the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

The climb over Peters Point headland takes about 35 minutes and is through some particularly dense bush. Most of this forest is virgin as it was never logged so you regularly pass trees that might be between 400-800 years old. Some of the land on Rakuira belongs to the local Iwi and you pass through a section of this land as you make your way down to Maori Beach. 


Nice track quality on the way to Maori Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Much of Rakuira is owned by the local Iwi...

Karen is looking at some interesting ferns along the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Much like the Abel Tasman Coastal Track you get some good views along the coast from the high points of the track. It was a cracker of a day to be walking as it was sunny, about 20 degrees and only a slight wind was blowing.


View of the beach at Peters Point, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Looking across Wooding Bay to Port William, Rakuira

On the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira near Peters Point


Small stream flows over the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Eventually you start to descend down to Maori Beach where there is a campsite with a shelter, water and toilets. There is a low and high tide track...if the tide is in follow the high tide track to avoid wading through the surf. 


Descending down to Maori Bay from Peters Point, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Descending to Maori Bay from Peters Point, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

At the Maori Beach high tide track junction

Maori Beach was the site of a sawmill for most of the early 20th century and there are a number of relics of that era scattered around a clearing in the forest. Follow the short sidetrack to access the clearing, it is at the end of the high tide track backing Maori Beach. 

There are several good information panels which give you some idea of what working in this remote spot must have been like....in a word...hard!!!


The side track to the Maori Beach saw mill site

DOC information panel at the Maori Beach Mill, Rakuira
Looking at the old mill at the back of Maori Beach, Rakuira

Once you have finished at the saw mill site follow the high tide track over the bridge to get to the campsite and shelter at Maori Beach campsite. We stopped here for a 30 minute break...a snack and something to drink as we had been more or less on the go for 1.5 hours to this point. The shelter is very nice and looks to be only a couple of years old...there is a toilet and water tank here so make use of them if required. 



The High Tide bridge to Maori Beach, Rakuira

Maori Beach Camp shelter, Maori Beach, Rakuira


Shell collection in the Maori Beach camp shelter, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Maori Beach camp shelter, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira


Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira: track sign at Maori Beach
We had a talk to a nice Australian women who was day walking from Port William back to Oban..one of the topics of conversation was the bush fires in Australia as she came from near Sydney. After talking to her for about 15 minutes we packed up our gear and set off along Maori Beach on the last leg of the track to the hut at Port William. 

To start with you walk along the beach to a swing bridge over an estuary at the end of the bay..again this reminded me of Abel Tasman. 


Back on the Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira at Maori Beach

View west down Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

View of Wooding Bay from Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

View east along Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Karen wrote her name in the golden sand but look who else was tramping this track....Prince William!!!

Karen visited Maori Beach......

...and so did Prince William.....

You can see the swing-bridge once you get half way down the beach..it is quite a large affair and connects the sand spit with the last ridge you need to climb over before stopping for the day. I'm not quite sure what you do at this beach at high tide...there is no high tide track so I imagine you just walk along the verge of the ocean...


First view of the Maori Beach swing-bridge....

Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira: swing-bridge at Maori Beach

Last view of Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

The swing-bridge is about 5 meters above the creek and is the classic wire bridge style with a wooden platform to walk along. I see that DOC Southland have gone crazy with the safety warning signs here as well...the bridge was festooned with images of people falling off the bridge, the wires snapping, boards breaking, alligators eating you etc. etc.

You know...the usual stuff.


The swing-bridge at Maori Beach, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Karen on the Maori Beach swing bridge

Tidal estuary at Maori Beach....much deeper at high tide

Tidal estuary empties into Wooding Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Jon on the Maori Beach swing-bridge...

Once over the bridge it is hump, hump & hump to get to the top of the ridge...you will be climbing a LOT of steps. While this assists with limiting track erosion they are a right pain to walk up as they are high and or long so require some effort. 

We just plodded up here taking a break every 20 odd meters as we walked from one anchor point to another. Karen was heard to reflect a bit caustically about "...more bloody steps..." and I was none too happy myself but it is what it is.....


More steps at Wooding Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira


Climbing to the ridge between Maori Beach and Port William

Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira....more stairs...

Open forest between Maori Beach and Port William
You are climbing for about 20 minutes and then break out onto a small plateau along the top of the ridge. Midway along this plateau you will come to the side track to North Arm Hut which is where you are headed on day two. 

It is 1.9 km's from here to Port William Hut so this is all track you have to cover again tomorrow....but...the hut is only 40-45 minutes walk from here so woo-hoo!!!



At the Rakuira Great Walk and Port William hut track Junction

At the Rakuira Great Walk and Port William hut track Junction

At the Rakuira Great Walk and Port William hut track Junction


Heading down to Port william, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira....Karen heading down to Port William
The track descends easily through some very impressive podocarp forest as it winds down to Port William. We passed the hut warden along here as she was doing a bit of track maintenance at the site of a small slip on the track.

The track through here is a bit rough and gives you a good indication of what the second day's travel will be like. There are small slips...there is mud....there is windfall on the track...


First view of Port William wharf, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Looking out to Port William Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Port William wharf from near the campground

Eventually we made it down to the coast and the Port William campsite which is right at the end of the forest track. This campsite also has a nice shelter with toilets but no water tank so you have to go to the hut for your water supplies. From here it is only a couple of minutes walk to the hut...a great sight after walking for a couple of hours...


Five minutes to Port William Hut, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Nearly at Port William Hut at the end of day one....

Errr....right!!! Helicopter hovering over Port William Hut

And what did we find when we got to the hut....a helicopter dropping off bags of firewood as an under slung load. It had been a nice days walking from the track end and proved to be the easiest day  out of the three days we spent on the track. 


At Port William Hut-end of day one

We dropped packs and sat under a tree as we waited for them to depart as you shouldn't be walking around under a helicopter if you can help it. The helicopter was flying back and forth for about an hour after we arrived dropping off what looked like the huts firewood supply for the next two years. 

I counted the bags when they finished for the day and there were 23 bags about 1.5 meters by 2 meters...that is a whole passel of wood!!!



Helicopter flies away after dropping off wood at Port William Hut

We saw where it had come from on day three of the tramp...a couple of huge trees which had fallen on the track...been cut up and bagged for transport. This is how most DOC huts get their wood..fallen trees as one big Red Beech or Matai tree has enough wood for a years worth of fire. 

Some poor bastid has to stack the stuff though.....


Bagged firewood waits for transportation half way between North Arm and Oban

Port William Hut was built in the late 1980's so it is getting along in years now but it was a very nice hut...clean and well maintained. It has 24 bunks with internal water supplied and has a separate attached hut wardens quarters. There are wardens at these Great Walk huts for most of the period from October to April after which they revert to serviced hut status. 



Port William Hut, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

The veranda at Port William Hut, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

Port William Hut from the bank near the shoreline...

There is a very nice looking bay right in front of the hut and several people went down for a swim as they walked off the track. It would be damn cold in that water...even though it was sunny we are at the bottom of the South Island...

It would probably have some good fish stocks (Blue Cod, Snapper and shellfish) but you would need to check the status as I think it might be a marine reserve. 


Looking out to Port William Bay, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

We stayed in the hut for most of the rest of the afternoon with the regular intrusion of the helicopter returning with another load of wood. They only stopped at 3 pm as it had started to rain making it too difficult to fly...


Helicopter with under-slung firewood at Port William



Madness....helicopter hovers over Port William Hut

The hut has had a recent make over ...the interior is newly clad in varnished plywood with new tables, benches and cooking surfaces. There was a wealth of informative panels about the local area as well as some useful information about hut etiquette and trampers manners. 


Port William Hut: showing the interior of the living area

Cooking benches inside Port William Hut, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira
Port William Hut: wood-burner and clothes rack...

There are two 12 person bunk rooms with a mix of bunks and sleeping platforms..we were in the bunk-room facing the veranda and beach. As we arrived at about 2 pm we got the good bunks head to head in one corner of the room. By the end of the day the hut was about 80% full so there were only a couple of free spots left. 


Karen's pit set up in the bunk-room at Port William Hut

It rained quite heavily for about 40 minutes around 3 pm...this was good as there were notices around the water taps about the lack of rain water filling the tanks. Rakuira has had a long dry summer just like the rest of the country and with no alternate water source a full rain tank is vital. 


The bank along the shoreline at Port William Hut


Instructions about spotting Kiwi at Port William Hut

Hut wardens quarters attached to Port William Hut


View of Port William with Bobs Point in the distance...

Later in the evening we went for the obligatory Kiwi search and although Karen and I heard a Kiwi we never saw one. It is really the luck of the draw as the hut warden told our group that two nights earlier a couple of Kiwi were walking around in the clearing the hut sits in. 

We did see some of the introduced Whitetail Deer..a doe and a couple of younger deer were walking around eating the grass close to the hut and we could get quite close to them (about 10 meters) before they spooked so we got a good look at them. 


Some of the wild Whitetail Deer near Port William Hut

Peters Point from near Port William Hut, Rakuira Great Walk, Rakuira

So that was the end of the first day on the Rakuira Great Walk...we had walked from Lee Bay to the hut and had covered the first and easiest section of the track. We still had two more days of fine tramping to look forward to as we tramped to North Arm Hut in Patterson Inlet and thence to Oban. 


Come back soon and see what day two and three of the tramp were like.....


Access: From Oban take Horseshoe Bay Road and then Lee Bay Road to the start of the track at Lee Bay. There is a taxi service to the track ends, it cost us $25 for two people. 
Track Times: 3-3.5 hours from Lee Bay to Port William Hut. If you walk from Oban to the start of the track add an additional 2 hours. 
Hut Details: Port William Hut: Great Walk, 24 bunks, tank water, toilets, woodburner with wood supplied: Rakuira Track Biodiversity Hut, DOC Staff hut between Port William and North Arm Huts, no overnight stay, toilet, water tank: North Arm Hut: Great Walk: 24 bunks, tank water, toilets, woodburner with wood supplied. there are campsites at various locations along the track. 
Miscellaneous: Great Walk so huts/campsites are on the DOC hut booking system, must be booked for overnight visit. Hut wardens in residence over summer season (October to April).