Tasman Glacier calving provides voyage of a lifetime

Posted on 12. Feb, 2009 by in Inside New Zealand

Tourists at the Tasman Glacier terminal face, in Aoraki Mount Cook National Park, witnessed a three-metre high wave as a giant iceberg plunged from the glacier into the terminal lake on Tuesday (10.02.09). The wave surging down the lake was the first indicator of the largest single ice ‘calf’ from the glacier in 25 years.

The huge slab of ice, measuring around 250m by 250m wide by 80m high, ‘calved’ into the lake in the early afternoon. A second iceberg about quarter of the size slipped off the face shortly afterwards.

Big splash

Glacier Explorers operations manager Bede Ward, whose company takes visitors on boat trips to view the Tasman Glacier face from the water, said the calving happened between trips but made quite a splash. “The terminal face of the glacier is in quite an active phase at the moment so passengers are getting the trip of a lifetime,” Ward said. Last week passengers on board Glacier Explorers boat trips witnessed the calving of ‘The Bomb’, an 8m by 30m chunk of turquoise ice.

Sir Edmund Hillary

“We thought that took the cake but this new iceberg, which we’ve christened ‘The Perfect 10’, is absolutely massive and a truly impressive sight. It supersedes the last significant one ‘Sir Ed’ which was on 11 January 2008, the day Sir Edmund Hillary passed away,” Ward said.

“We’re getting more and more icebergs now so we’re naming them in order to track and communicate changes and locations. It also makes for fascinating stories for our passengers.” Since the Terminal Lake began forming in 1973, the glacier’s retreat had noticeably quickened, as the expanding lake caused more rapid melt of the terminal face. “I think we may be looking at major calving from the terminal face as an annual event now,” he said.

Floating iceberg

The big iceberg is now floating in a boat-free “safety zone” that will stay in place until conditions settle. However, visitors can get up close and personal to the smaller iceberg which has floated away from the terminal face. The new icebergs can also be viewed from the air. One happy couple, Craig Chambers and Ruth Watson from the United Kingdom, were “over the moon” to get a bird’s eye view as they flew back from their wedding location on Liebig Dome which stands at 7600ft at the edge of Aoraki Mount Cook National Park. “It’s a once in a lifetime occasion for us in more ways than one,” the new bridegroom quipped.

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Many of our New Zealand self-drive tours include the Glacier Explorers experience within the itinerary.

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