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GUNUNG · Selandia Baru

Aoraki / Mount Cook

Aoraki / Mount Cook (Māori: Aoraki)

Source
Aoraki / Mount Cook

Photo: source

Information

Elevation
3.724 m
Country
Selandia Baru (NZ)
Location / Range
Southern Alps (Kā Tiritiri o te Moana), Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park, South Island
Mountain type
Greywacke rock peak (non-volcanic) in the Southern Alps — highest point of New Zealand
Volcanic?
No (non-volcanic)
Coordinates
-43.5950, 170.1419
Difficulty
Very technical for the summit (full alpine mountaineering: glacier, ice, and loose rock). Most visitors enjoy the non-technical valley trail (Hooker Valley) up to the intermediate alpine route (Mueller Hut)
Best Season
Summit climbing: late spring–early summer (November–January) for the most stable snow conditions. Valley day-hikes can be done year-round, best in summer (December–March)
Permits & Rules
No national park entrance ticket; huts such as Mueller Hut and Plateau Hut require booking/fees (DOC). Filling in intentions at the Visitor Centre is strongly advised for alpine routes
Hazards
Glacier hazards (crevasses, seracs) and avalanches on the summit routes, weathered and brittle greywacke rock, alpine weather that changes very rapidly, freezing temperatures, and altitude. A number of climbers have died on this mountain

Description

Aoraki / Mount Cook (3,724 m) is New Zealand's highest mountain, standing at the heart of the Southern Alps (Kā Tiritiri o te Moana) within Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park on the South Island. Its Māori name 'Aoraki' refers to an ancestral figure in Ngāi Tahu tradition, and the peak is revered as sacred. Unlike many Oceanian summits it is not a volcano but an uplifted mass of greywacke rock pushed up by plate collision and mantled by large glaciers such as the Tasman and Hooker. The summit is a serious mountaineering objective — the classic Linda Glacier route demands glacier travel, ice climbing, and navigation over loose rock — and ranks among the hardest alpine climbs in the Southern Hemisphere. By contrast, the national park offers very accessible mountain experiences for ordinary walkers: the flat Hooker Valley Track across swing bridges to an iceberg-dotted glacial lake with direct views of Aoraki, the steep Sealy Tarns staircase ('Stairway to Heaven'), and the Mueller Hut Route to a 360-degree panorama hut at 1,800 m. The landscape of glaciers, moraine, milky lakes, and alpine herbfields is among the most dramatic in New Zealand.

Routes

Hooker Valley Track

Mudah (non-teknis)
±3–4 jam pulang-pergi (±5 km satu arah ke Hooker Lake)

Jalur paling ikonik dan mudah diakses di taman nasional: menyusuri dasar Lembah Hooker, melintasi tiga jembatan gantung dan dua danau glasial (Mueller dan Hooker), berakhir di tepi Hooker Lake yang dipenuhi bongkahan es dengan latar langsung puncak Aoraki. Cocok untuk semua tingkat, tetapi tetap terbuka terhadap cuaca alpine.

Source

Linda Glacier (jalur normal ke puncak)

Sangat teknis — mountaineering alpine penuh (glasier, es, dan batu rapuh; beda tinggi ±1.700 m dari Plateau Hut)
Hari puncak ±20–24 jam pulang-pergi dari Plateau Hut; siapkan beberapa hari untuk percobaan termasuk menunggu cuaca

Jalur pendakian puncak paling umum di Aoraki/Mount Cook: dari Plateau Hut menyeberangi glasier ke kaki Linda Glacier, naik melalui Linda Shelf ke Summit Rocks, lalu memanjat es/medan campuran dan Summit Ice Cap menuju puncak. Bukan untuk pemula — membutuhkan keterampilan glasier, es, dan navigasi yang kuat, serta kerap ditempuh bersama pemandu pada jendela cuaca yang sempit.

Mueller Hut Route

Sulit (alpine; tanjakan ±1.045 m)
±10,5 km pulang-pergi; day-hike menantang atau menginap semalam

Pendakian alpine curam dari White Horse Hill Campground naik lebih dari seribu meter (sebagian lewat tangga Sealy Tarns) ke Mueller Hut di punggungan 1.800 m dengan panorama 360 derajat ke Aoraki, gletser, dan puncak sekitarnya. Pemesanan pondok wajib pada pertengahan November–30 April; daftarkan rencana di Visitor Centre.

Source

Climbing Experiences

Experiences on Aoraki / Mount Cook split clearly into two worlds. For the 3,724 m summit, climbers describe serious mountaineering expeditions via the Linda Glacier or Zurbriggen Ridge — long glacier travel, ice and mixed terrain, and narrow weather windows, usually based at Plateau Hut and often guided. By contrast, most visitors enjoy the mountain from far more accessible valley tracks: the flat Hooker Valley Track over swing bridges to an iceberg-dotted glacial lake with direct Aoraki views, the steep Sealy Tarns staircase, and the sharply climbing Mueller Hut Route to a 360-degree panorama hut. Recurring themes: stunning glacier and milky-lake scenery, and fast-changing alpine weather that makes warm layers and rain gear essential.

References

The summary above is compiled from the following sources. Click to explore them yourself.

  1. 1 Wikipedia Aoraki / Mount Cook en.wikipedia.org · EN
  2. 2 Wikipedia Aoraki/Gunung Cook id.wikipedia.org · ID
  3. 3 Wikidata Aoraki / Mount Cook (Q5059) wikidata.org · EN
  4. 4 Official Site Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park doc.govt.nz · EN