The Beauty of New Zealand

Hamner Springs New Zealand

Every corner is different: volcanoes, crater lakes, lava plateaus, majestic mountains, geysers, geothermal wonders, greenery, glaciers, sheep, more sheep, Mount Doom and other Lord of the Rings references, etc.

Over a month in late January 2018, I road tripped nearly the entire country via Transfercar, a rental company aggregator for car relocation (AKA you get the car for free up to 7 days – read more about the simple process here).

Here are some highlights of the journey. For all experiences along the way, check BookMe for cheaper prices.

Queenstown

The journey began here in an Airbnb with a balcony overlooking Lake Wakatipu — and a lovely host with a wealth of travel stories herself.

Bungee jumped with AJ Hackett. Found a good discount on BookMe for the ledge swing bungee: $83 NZD instead of $165+ NZD. If you’re not keen on diving head first either (go figure, I’ve been skydiving three times and loved it), fear not, as it’s essentially a gigantic flying swing while you’re in a harness.

Queenstown has so much to offer that I didn’t get to do, too: zipline tours, Lake Wakatipu cruises, 4WD off-road adventures, ATVs, wine tasting, etc. In winter, snowboarding and skiing are huge.

Queenstown Lake Wakatipu New Zealand

Milford Sound

I drove from Queenstown on a day trip. Yes, a 4 hour drive each way, but I had only one day, and was determined to experience it. You should stay longer and go kayaking.

Milford Sound Kea Bird New Zealand Alpine Parrot

Keep a lookout for Kea in the various turnouts you’ll want to stop in anyway to appreciate your surroundings. They’re cheeky alpine parrots only found in New Zealand. I drove through many clouds and intermittent rain.

Milford Sound New Zealand Cloudy

Milford Sound was far bigger than I imagined. It had stopped raining but the purple grayness pervaded.

Within 10 minutes of arriving, though, I watched as the clouds began to part for the first time in hours, and blue started to peek through...

Looking to the right of the above photo, the below photo was taken, only 10 minutes later.

Milford Sound New Zealand Sunny Waterfalls

Lake Wanaka

Explored twice — firstly as yet another day trip from Queenstown, and then once while heading north for good. You’ll wind up well-paved and incredibly fun roads. Many of the view points along the way are spectacular, particularly Lake Hawea.

Stop at Blue Pools, an easy 1.5km walk from the parking lot with stunningly clear water. Strongly recommend to wear long sleeves, pants, and closed toed shoes if you don’t want the relentless sand flies to land on literally any available skin.

Lake Wanaka Drive Blue Pools New Zealand

Franz Josef Glacier

Check out the 2.5km valley walk — follow instructions here.

Before 2008, you could safely hike by yourself to the glacier with proper equipment. Sadly, this now requires a helicopter landing to accomplish due to glacial recession. Book it at least a week out.

Even though you can’t go right up to the glacier in the valley walk, it’s still mesmerizing.

Franz Josef Glacier New Zealand Hike

And now for the North Island…

Rotorua and Redwoods

Tons of geothermal activity — yes, the town does smell rather sulphuric. Explore Kuirau Park, and visit Kerosene Creek 30 minutes south if you’re looking to swim.

The Living Maori Village has bubbling mud pools and the 30 meter tall Pohutu Geyser.

My personal favorite: the Redwoods in Whakarewarewa Forest. I did the Quarry outlook track (green track, 4.8km / 3mi), and it was a nice walk through the forest — only with Redwoods at the beginning, actually.

Redwoods Trees in Rotorua, New Zealand | Photo by Taylor Parrish

Tongariro Alpine Crossing

Still one of my very favorite hikes [as I update this writing 5 years later]. Throughout the 19.4km / 12 miles, you’ll traverse almost every terrain: a swamp-like start, climb up “devil’s staircase” to a mountain (Mount Doom from Lord of the Rings), continue along volcanic terrain until you reach the Red Crater Summit at 1,886m / 6,188ft, slip-slide down the scoria until you reach the emerald lakes for a lunch break, hike past the sulphurous steam vents, descend down into the valley, and finally, finish with a walk in a forest alongside river rapids.

Check out their website on how to best accomplish this hike. You’ll need to arrange a shuttle as well as it’s a one-way track — find that info here. There is limited parking at the end (Ketetahi Rd.), so you may want to book a return shuttle instead of just a morning one. I did so through BookMe again.

Tongariro Alpine Crossing Emerald Lakes in New Zealand | Photo by Taylor Parrish

That absolutely isn’t all — but it is for now.