Hannah lured me into another adrenaline activity for the following morning, so another early morning as we headed down to breakfast at 7. After a quick glance at the brochure, I agreed to be Hannah's canyoning partner, not quite sure what I had gotten myself into. Probably a good thing, as the next 4 hours may have been the scariest thing I have ever done in my entire life. After a short drive from the hotel, we were dropped off in the middle of a parking lot with only helmets and wet suits in sight! With five minutes to get dressed, I changed into 10 mm of wet suit, booties, a safety helmet, buoyancy jacket and a harness. The gentlest part of the morning came in our five minute bush walk into a scenic lakeside reserve. I knew the staff was a tad bit nutty as they led us into chest high glacial water for our safety briefing! Little did I know this was only the beginning of the insanity. Our guide Andrew led us in a rock climb to the top of the Queenstown canyon where a zipline was waiting for us. Being a fellow American (Andrew was from Oklahoma), he volunteered me to be the first to zipline the forty meters across the canyon. Never one to shy away, I grabbed on with two hands, latched a safety and off I went! By the second zipline (50 meters this time) I was able to look down to truly take in the stunning views. The four ziplines were just getting us ready for the real excitement. Andrew warned us that due the rain, the ledges were quite slippery, but we had to test that as we needed to abseil/repel down to the bottom of the canyon."Katie, have you repelled before?," the guide asked. "Only on a rock wall" I responded. Apparently that was all he needed to hear and within seconds I was strapped up to lead be the first to repel down the 20 meter (60 feet) canyon wall. "Oh and there's not a guide down there yet. You are going to have to do all the safeties and latches yourself!". Definitely not the words to hear as I turned around and took my first step down the wall. Luckily I survived and was ready for the next adventure. We reached the water at the bottom and began rock scrambling and sliding head first through the current to reach our first waterfall. The true adrenaline came when we reached the 8 meter (24 feet) gushing waterfall. What was our way down you may ask? Jumping! Yes, I stood on the ledge of the rock face and plunged myself into the 8 meter waterfall. What a thrill! More jumps came along--including a 6 meter butt jump, a 10 meter standing ledge jump and a 2 meter backwards jump into the canyon water. We even ziplined ourselves across to the middle of the canyon to only release our safety to plunge ourselves into the water!Even the swim slides provided excitement, as our guides yelled for us to turn on our sides so we could squeeze through the rocks! After a full three hours in the canyon, we finally reached the finish. My body was utterly exhausted, but I could not wipe the smile off my face! For three days my body would be paying for this adventure, but I would do it all over again. What a morning!!
After an adrenaline filled morning from both parties (the rest of the crew went luging!), an afternoon winery lunch was certainly in order. Amisfield Winery, just oustide of Queenstown, provided the perfect setting, yummy lobster risotto and flights of pinot noir. After our four hour lunch, we returned home to spend our last night in Queenstown! Sad to say goodbye, to both Queenstown and my dad and Cathy, we were off the next morning to Waiheke Island.
**Although I would like to take credit for it, I took the canyoning jumping photo from their website, not my photography work :) **

Sounds like an incredible day for someone who used to be afraid of heights. You are a ballsy woman, Katie! I couldn't be prouder. Love you.
ReplyDeleteI would have loved the canyon hike! Crazy!
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