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On the ice at Fox Glacier ................................... MAPS |
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![]() Sunset on Mt Tasman (3500m) and Mt Cook (3800m) |
![]() Rose-tinted cloud on Mt Copland as the sun sets in the Tasman Sea |
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The sun shone brightly as we headed of in the old Bedford bus, kitted out with our crampons and glacier climbing gear. At Fox Glacier, day trips are limited to 12 people per guide and Nigel was the leader for our eclectic bunch of Australian, American, British, Canadian, German and Israeli ice-trampers. We headed off along the morain from the carpark, past the point where the glacier had reached 30 years ago, before climbing up into rain forest that has regenerated on the steep sides of the glacial valley over that period. Crossing an exposed bluff with impressive views over the middle and lower parts of Fox Glacier, we dropped steeply down to the edge of the ice about 500m above its terminal face. |
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![]() Fox River valley - where the glacier used to be 250 years ago |
![]() Upper icefall of the Fox Glacier |
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![]() Edge of the glacier - morain on the left, ice on the right |
![]() Half-day walkers climbing up onto the glacier |
From here we climbed up steps cut into the ice to reach a point where we put on crampons, grabbed our alpenstocks and headed off. The early part of the walk was on pre-cut steps, put in place for the half-day guided walks. (NB if you really want to experience the glacier you will be disappointed by the half-day walks, which virtually enable you to stand on the ice and little else - the full day walk allows you to spend several hours on the ice and, although less than 2 km is covered, you reach areas where the power and size of the glacier can be really appreciated. Even the guides cannot get through the lower ice fall). |
![]() Finally on the ice |
Leaving the cut-steps and half-day walkers behind, Nigel led us out into a world of crevasses, moulins, ice-caves and seracs, of ice covered with rock frome fine grey sand to large boulders, and ice of the purest white and translucent shades of blue, contorted, cracked and lifted into a frozen maze of incredible beauty. For a brief couple of hours we were part of this immense river of ice moving down the steep glacial valley at an average 1m per day as it is squeezed like toothpaste out from its 30 square kilometre basin under Mts Cook and Tasman by the pressure of 30m of snow each year. Put on your sunglasses and join us on the ice at Fox Glacier. |
![]() Heading up the glacier |
![]() The big iceblock |
![]() Looking back down to the valley below |
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![]() Midway rest stop |
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![]() Nello going down into the ice-cave |
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![]() Nigel leads us up and on (Serac Falls on the left) |
![]() Seracs of the lower icefall |
![]() Close-up of the seracs (up to 15m tall) |
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![]() Descending the glacier |
![]() Jumble of iceblocks near the terminal of the glacier |
![]() Ice castle |
Eventually we descended and, leaving the glacier, followed the lateral morain down to the ice-block jumble of terminus, where the occasional crash of large blocks of ice or boulders served as a reminder of what an active and potentially dangerous place a glacier is.
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![]() Valley of the Fox River |
![]() Lichen covered boulders on the lateral morain |
![]() The tremendous pressure near the glacier terminal |
The images here barely do the glacier justice, but do give a sense of the power and surreal beauty of this frozen landscape. Moreover, these images will never be quite the same. Should you come to visit, you will be faced with a new icescape, transformed by the immense pressure and forces on the glacier due to the eternal battle between gravity and friction. Thanks, Nigel, for being an excellent guide and sharing your knowledge and love of this great place. |
![]() Fox River exiting from a cave in the 60m high terminus with blocks of freshly fallen ice |
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