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{"id":24732,"date":"2015-12-16T17:18:31","date_gmt":"2015-12-16T22:18:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.theexpeditioner.com\/?p=24732"},"modified":"2015-12-17T13:43:27","modified_gmt":"2015-12-17T18:43:27","slug":"wild-things-south-island","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theexpeditioner.com\/wordpress\/feature-articles-New-Zealand-Wild-Things-of-the-South-Island\/","title":{"rendered":"Wild Things Of The South Island"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Wild<\/p>\n

This far south, the stars seem like they could fall right out of the sky. Tug the blanket of blue holding them up and they\u2019ll flutter down on our heads like snow. We sit\u2014two Dutch, a kiwi, and an American\u2014passing around a beer, looking up. The stars of the southern hemisphere are all new to me; I can\u2019t find the arrangement of constellations I grew up learning the names of. The sky is a glowing, uncharted array with the Milky Way smeared on top like finger paint.<\/p>\n

Liam points out the Southern Cross, a bright crux of four stars and a fifth that sits off-center like a freckle. Drawing a line from the top star down the longest axis points towards the South Pole. It\u2019s the same constellation on the flag he stole from the top of city hall, the one that hangs on the wall of the flat. Sailors once used the crux to find their way, and the ancient Greeks charted it before it sank below their horizon in the precession of the equinoxes, but credit for its discovery is given to the Brazilians, who dubbed it “Las Guardas.” Now, I can\u2019t un-see it. I can see the lights of the city-limits too, of Dunedin, my home, of the suburbia of flats with televisions and refrigerators and flags declaring whose land this is. The Polynesians came in their canoes around the year 1300, and the Europeans in the 1600s. I came in 2014, when the maps were fully drawn and the islands were a strange hybrid of enduring wilderness and human settlement.<\/p>\n

New Zealand was once part of the supercontinent Gondwana, a land mass that\u2019s split apart into Australia, South Africa, South America, India, and Antarctica. In the middle of the Cretaceous Period around 80 million years ago, New Zealand broke off from Gondwana and began its divergent evolution. In isolation, New Zealand bloomed into a biome of species known nowhere else in the world, including the Moa: huge, flightless birds hunted to extinction by the early peoples. Even without the Moa, New Zealand is biogeographically like its own continent. Alongside Madagascar, scientists describe the island chain as the closest we can come to observing continental-scale evolution in as extreme isolation, barring the discovery of higher life forms on another planet. There are no known living, endemic mammals in New Zealand besides bats and marine mammals, making birds the backbone of the islands\u2019 indigenous wildlife. Of the roughly 245 species of birds found at the time of human discovery, 71% live nowhere else in the world.<\/p>\n

Once without predators, many of these birds evolved to be flightless. New Zealanders chose the kiwi, a rare, nocturnal orb of feathers with a long and narrow beak, as their national symbol. It\u2019s found on coins, billboards, souvenir T-shirts, and as the name of the people themselves. Kiwis: sometimes hard to figure out if one\u2019s talking about a person, a bird, or a fruit. Kiwis eat kiwis and watch kiwis. Who\u2019s doing what?<\/p>\n

I saw one of these wee fellows in a nature preserve: a brown, feathery ball about the size of a chicken. It was sleeping.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou won\u2019t see a kiwi in the wild anymore,\u201d we were told. The birds are monogamous, choosing mates that can last for as long as 20 years, but they lay only one egg per season, a monstrosity almost a third of the size of the female. The introduction of land mammals like cats, dogs, possums and rodents nearly wiped out these slow-breeding, flightless birds.<\/p>\n

The different subspecies of kiwi range from vulnerable to critically endangered. And house cats aren\u2019t just responsible for the loss of the kiwi. 37% of New Zealand\u2019s bird populations are threatened, and countless have gone extinct. That isn\u2019t to say that conservation efforts aren\u2019t being undertaken: government groups and other independent organizations will pay up to $20 per possum. And you\u2019re no true kiwi in favor of saving the kiwis if you don\u2019t own at least one article of clothing made out of possum wool.<\/p>\n

\u201cWho wants to see some dolphins?\u201d Liam suggests casually on a sunny day before classes have started.<\/p>\n

\u201cWhat, in the ocean?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cYeah, you can swim with them.\u201d<\/p>\n

I\u2019m instantly sold. We pile into Liam\u2019s station wagon: Liam driving, Jan the Danish backpacker in the front, my roommates Colin and Roos in the back, and another Dutch girl named Lon crammed next to me in the trunk. Lon and I exchange courtesies as our knees bump together and we drive out of Dunedin, heading south.<\/p>\n

Liam has one CD in the car, a mix of oldies with a backstory I never learn. Neil Young croons \u201cHeart of Gold\u201d as Lon tells me about life in Holland. Her English is surprisingly good. The station wagon\u2019s got one of those old trunk seats that have since been phased out as safety hazards, facing backwards and forcing our legs in to our chests. Folded up against each other, we watch the yellow lines speed out from under us and disappear into the notches in the verdant hills while Neil hums in the background. Lon nudges me and sighs audibly.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou see, we never see anything like this in Holland! There are so many buildings and so many people.\u201d<\/p>\n

I can\u2019t help but share her excitement. It\u2019s in the place, the golden touch of sun that turns everything into a photograph, the harmonica warbling from cheap car speakers.<\/p>\n

\u201cWhere do you go then, if you want to get away from the city?\u201d<\/p>\n

Lon shrugs. \u201cWell, some people go to Germany. It\u2019s not so far. But did you know they are trying to build a fake ski mountain in Holland?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWhat? How?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cThey are going to dump a lot of concrete into the ocean and make a mountain,\u201d she says in her halting English, giving a chirping laugh. \u201cBut everything is fake in Holland.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"Wild<\/p>\n

Liam\u2019s CD makes a full round and is playing Neil Young again by the time we\u2019re driving through the Catlins. Sparsely populated and uncultivated, the Catlins Coast is a wilderness area where visitors can find some of New Zealand\u2019s rarest residents, whether in the temperate rainforest or along the rugged beaches. Jutting out into the Pacific, the Catlins are battered by storms in the winter months and have been the site of numerous shipwrecks. The giant swells are also a draw to fearless big-wave surfers who come with helmets, knee pads, elbow pads and a barrage of other gear to protect them from the teeth of the coast.<\/p>\n

Liam pulls off the car into a dusty embankment on the edge of Porpoise Bay. A huge U-shaped inlet peeks at us from behind cattails and sea grasses. A blue sign bearing a picture of two dolphins describes the species as Hector\u2019s dolphins, \u201cone of the rarest and smallest marine dolphins in the world.\u201d<\/p>\n

Hector\u2019s dolphin is another endemic species, and it teeters on the brink of survival. The New Zealand Department of Conservation estimates there are only 55 adults left in the wild. \u201cLove us from a distance or lose us forever,\u201d the sign warns visitors. We strip into our swimsuits, tossing clothing and bags and flip-flops back into the car. I can hear the breezy crash of the surf. \u201cNEVER APPROACH A DOLPHIN,\u201d the sign says. \u201cLet them come to you.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWe used to rent a beach house here for a few weeks in the summer,\u201d Liam tells us as we walk towards the water. Sandflies scurry around my feet. The beach extends out forever in either direction, golden sand fading into soft green hills. It\u2019s entirely empty, save for the specks of a couple and their dog a ways down. There are a few one-story huts planted in the dunes, cheery white and yellow with colored trim.<\/p>\n

\u201cLet\u2019s go in,\u201d Lon says breathlessly. We\u2019re all thinking the same thing: holy shit. Dolphins. The water temperature can\u2019t deter me this time, and I wade in resolutely while my skin prickles with goosebumps. I suck in a breath as a wave slaps my bare stomach, icy fingers pinching at my skin.<\/p>\n

\"Wild<\/p>\n

And then I see them: two shadows rippling beneath the water, flitting in little circles. They\u2019re tiny, about as big as toddlers, with silvery-grey skin. As I wade towards the forms, they recede. But there are more, deeper; I spot the curve of grey backs surfacing and then disappearing again as if turning on an imaginary wheel. The dolphins cluster in groups of two or three, sometimes four, spotted by the puff of tiny blowholes or the glint of wet skin when they break the surface. Their motions remind me of Liam, though perhaps Liam got his lessons from watching the dolphins when he was younger. He\u2019s got his flippers on again and motions for us to come deeper, at ease enough to be a marine mammal himself.<\/p>\n

I wade out. My lower body feels like it\u2019s gone completely numb, but the dolphins are closer now. I can see the bend of snouts beneath the water, the flat, half-moon shape of their tails, the nub-like fins that sprout from their backs. So close, I could reach out and brush their silk skin with my fingertips.<\/p>\n

\u201cDon\u2019t try and touch them,\u201d Liam says, as if reading my mind. \u201cThe oils from our hands will damage their skin.\u201d<\/p>\n

I don\u2019t think I could if I tried. When my arm stretches out, dark shadows dart away with unimaginable speed, propelled by flippers more powerful than my clumsy limbs. They pop up again almost instantly here my eyes don\u2019t even think to look, hovering around where the waves break, periodically shooting forward in a cloud of bubbles. I follow their lead, pointing my arms in front of my head and riding the surf. Compared to the dolphins I\u2019ve got the grace of an inner tube, but I grin when we ride the same wave. One of the only pods of Hector\u2019s dolphins in the world, and they\u2019re hanging out with me, catching waves at my side. They don\u2019t do it for any reason except pure fun. I laugh out loud from the sheer wonder of it, spitting out a mouthful of seawater.<\/p>\n

I hear Lon shriek and I tear my eyes away from the dolphins.<\/p>\n

\u201cWhat\u2019s that? Look over to the left!\u201d<\/p>\n

I follow her hand. It\u2019s definitely not a dolphin trawling through the waves. It looks like someone\u2019s dog swimming in the surf. Not a dog, I realize. Much too big. It\u2019s the whiskered muzzle of a sea lion, huffing its way through the water. As it gets closer I can see just how big it is, a fat, blubbery mass of flesh that has none of the grace of the dolphins.<\/p>\n

\u201cDon\u2019t get too close,\u201d Liam calls sharply. \u201cBastard\u2019ll charge you.\u201d<\/p>\n

This new intruder, along with the fact that I can\u2019t feel my extremities, convinces me to take a break from the water. Teeth chattering, I stagger towards the shore and flop onto the hot sand. The sea lion decides he wants out too. He lugs himself out of the waves farther down the beach, rolling on his belly like a gleaming brown log.<\/p>\n

In the water he had an odd kind of finesse, but out of it he looks like nothing more than a tubby pile of skin. The dolphins, meanwhile, become more comfortable with all intruders at a distance. They periodically jet into the air, flipping over and diving back beneath the water. The shows last no longer than a second, too quick to even catch on our cameras. It\u2019s only the radiant grins of Lon and Roos that convince me I\u2019ve really spotted the glistening corkscrew of fins. Like me, they\u2019ve never seen anything like it.<\/p>\n

It isn\u2019t until the next day that we learn about the surfer who was mauled by a great white shark at Porpoise Bay<\/a> not a week before. The shark reportedly swam up beneath the man, knocked him off his surfboard, and bit him three times before he made it back to shore. We look at each other nervously when we hear this and comment that it\u2019s good we didn\u2019t decide to go a few days earlier.<\/p>\n

Shark attacks are uncommon in New Zealand, but not unheard of. It\u2019s a risk understood by surfers down under. In Western Australia, where shark attacks are frequent, professional hunters have license to kill any of the big guys that wander into swimming beaches using baited drumlines. Thanks to human cullings, Great White populations are declining and they are considered \u201cvulnerable.\u201d But the powerful predators have a sinister allure, one of man\u2019s last great enemies in the wild, or so we like to believe thanks to the Jaws<\/em> industry.<\/p>\n

There\u2019s an uncomfortable paradox going on underwater. Kiwis and Australians see the sharks as both enemy and commodity. Shark baiting and cage diving is a growing industry. I met a Swedish backpacker whose dream it was to go on one of these “shark safaris” and stick his pinky finger out of the bars of the cage so he could later boast that it was bitten off by a Great White. \u201cIt would be fucking awesome,\u201d he stressed in his guttural accent. But cage diving leads sharks to associate humans with prey, causing an increase in shark attacks, despite the fact that humans aren\u2019t the natural pick for lunch. And the more attacks, the more cullings.<\/p>\n

I scramble to catch up with Liam\u2019s long stride, my boots digging furrows in the mud. The light of his headlamp bobs along further up the hill. Behind me, Roos has her cellphone held aloft like a torch, with Lon in close tow. I can hear the gurgling of a river to my right, though I can\u2019t see it. It\u2019s the Leith, the same river that runs through a murky canal on campus from where it starts as a dribble in the hills. We slog up a muddy trail that follows its bank. It\u2019s almost midnight and the trail is completely empty. Surprising, since we\u2019re not the only visitors who make this sort of trek in the dark. We\u2019re here to see glow worms: Arachnocampa luminosa<\/a>. Titiwai, to the Maori, meaning \u201creflected over water.\u201d<\/p>\n

We come to the place where the trail meets the river. I\u2019ve had a few glasses of wine and my head is buzzing pleasantly. The stream parts around our crooked island, following the way of least resistance and gurgling on beyond my sight. Mossy walls rise up on either side of us, a little canyon crisscrossed by a lattice of vines. The walls drip with moisture, clods of damp mud pack into cracks from where ferns and little saplings emerge. A thick canopy of branches settles overhead like a gable, closing us in to this earthen cavern.<\/p>\n

\u201cTurn off all your lights,\u201d Liam says, clicking off his headlamp. I shut mine off too, and Roos puts away her phone.<\/p>\n

The darkness is overwhelming. I can\u2019t see Liam or Roos\u2019s silhouettes at all. They\u2019ve completely disappeared. The boulder I\u2019m leaning against is only accessible by touch. I wave a hand in front of my face, shocked that it, too, is invisible. The murmur of the stream seems louder now, amplified by the loss of my other senses. And then, like the white spots in one\u2019s vision solidifying, lights begin to appear in the periphery. Yellow-bluish, clustered together, in every direction, but especially on either side of the river. If I didn\u2019t know where the walls of the ravine stood, it\u2019d appear they were floating in midair.<\/p>\n

\u201cThey look like stars.\u201d Roos\u2019s voice floats out of the darkness, voicing my thoughts.<\/p>\n

\u201cDo you know why they glow?\u201d Liam asks.<\/p>\n

\u201cBioluminescence,\u201d I begin, about to launch on a science diatribe. \u201cThey must have this chemical called luciferase\u2014\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cIt\u2019s their poo,\u201d Liam cuts me off, and then releases his high chuckle. It bounces lazily off the ravine walls. \u201cTheir shit glows.\u201d<\/p>\n

Glowing shit or not, it\u2019s beautiful. The longer we stand in the darkness, the more lights seem to wink on. No matter how I try, my eyes can\u2019t adjust to see anything but the little glowing worms, only now, hundreds of them. In truth, they aren\u2019t worms at all, but the larvae of a fly known as a fungus gnat. I like them better as stars, or maybe as the Maori see them, as the reflection of stars on water.<\/p>\n

\"Wild<\/p>\n

\u201cHow about some real stars?\u201d Liam asks.<\/p>\n

\u201cGot somewhere in mind?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cTop of Signal Hill.\u201d<\/p>\n

We\u2019re back in the car, speeding up a winding switchback. The road is gravel, and I bounce madly against my seat. Liam\u2019s got the sunroof and all the windows open and the warm summer air floods the car, tugging my hair about my face in a windy cloud. From the front, Lon stands up impulsively, sticking her head out of the sunroof.<\/p>\n

\u201cGrab my feet!\u201d she calls down to us. We anchor her, and she pushes the rest of her body from the waist up out of the car. With a shriek of delight, she thrusts her arms up into the night. Liam revs the ignition and Roos and I clutch Lon\u2019s legs tighter to hold her down.<\/p>\n

\u201cCorner!\u201d Liam shouts. We feel Lon\u2019s body jerk as the car banks around the turn, but she stays put. She\u2019s laughing loudly, a howling wild thing.<\/p>\n

From Signal Hill\u2019s bare crown, the Greater Dunedin Area unfurls. I can see the bright cluster of lights marking downtown, that ebb as they approach the city limits and then fade away into sleepy pastoral hills. Fog spills in from the ocean, painted pearly white by the moon. I can make out the flash of lighthouses as their flares revolve. Wind gusts relentlessly from the sea, that familiar, briny smell, and I zip my jacket tighter.<\/p>\n

A huge satellite dish looms above, planted on three legs and tilted up towards the sky. Its curved belly is half moonlight, half shadow. Our car looks like a toy parked beneath it. Signal towers soar upwards, needle-shaped spires of trussed metal encasing narrow ladders that taunt the brave or foolish. I can hear the wind squeezing between them, like a gust of breath whistling between teeth.<\/p>\n

We sit on the dirt in quiet contemplation, looking at the stars. Satellites trace lazy arcs, indistinguishable from the stars unless I pin my eye to one. I sip my beer. The Southern Cross is bright and obvious, winking between the other constellations. It\u2019s an emblem of man\u2019s presence here. As the Australians poem goes<\/a>, \u201cThe English flag may flutter and wave \/ where the world-wide oceans toss \/ But the flag the Australian dies to save \/ is the flag of the Southern Cross.\u201d<\/p>\n

I take another swig of beer and let my lids fall heavy, so that the Southern Cross blurs into the rest of the stars and the satellites and I can\u2019t tell any of them apart. Stars and satellites. Maybe they can coexist.<\/p>\n

\"TheExpeditioner\"<\/p>\n

<\/div>\n

By Jackie Roberti<\/span>
\n\"VanessaJackie is based in Boston, currently working as a software engineer until the day her writing pays her bills. She spent several months working and studying in New Zealand and is eager to get back to the land down under, as well as the other couple hundred places on her traveling bucket list. In her free time she enjoys hiking, rock climbing, and snowboarding.<\/p>\n

<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

This far south, the stars seem like they could fall right out of the sky. Tug the blanket of blue holding them up and they\u2019ll flutter down on our heads like snow. We sit\u2014two Dutch, a kiwi, and an American\u2014passing around a beer, looking up. The stars of the southern hemisphere are all new to […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":24736,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[2049,1,35,2562],"tags":[405],"yoast_head":"\nWild Things Of The South Island | The Expeditioner Travel Site<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theexpeditioner.com\/wordpress\/feature-articles-New-Zealand-Wild-Things-of-the-South-Island\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Wild Things Of The South Island | The Expeditioner Travel Site\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"This far south, the stars seem like they could fall right out of the sky. Tug the blanket of blue holding them up and they\u2019ll flutter down on our heads like snow. We sit\u2014two Dutch, a kiwi, and an American\u2014passing around a beer, looking up. 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