Sunday, 1 December 2013

More than clean air and a great view


In 1986 Milton Rotary Club took a small party (24) on an “independent” tramp over the Milford Track. This was so successful that in the following season 2 trips were run. This project has now grown into a huge enterprise, with more than 16,000 people having participated over the past 27 seasons. In 1990 the Otago Youth Adventure Trust joined Milton Rotary Club to help run the trips, and a few years later the independent “stand alone” Tramping Club was formed.



In the current season (2012-2013), now completed, some 750 trip places were filled. People came from all parts of NZ , Australia and further afield,  participating in 6 Milford Track trips,  4 Routeburn Greenstone tramps, 1 Kepler Track tramp, 3 groups Cycling the Central Otago Rail Trail, 2 “Aspiring” trips, 1 Hump Ridge Track tramp, 1 Catlins trip and 4 new trips to Stewart island, tramping the Rahiura Track.  Also 3 special trips on the Milford, Routeburn and Cycle Trail for overseas Rotary Youth Exchange students.  A total of 26 trips.  All these trips are the “freedom or independent walks” as distinct from the commercial guided walks available on some of the tracks, and each was of 3 – 5 days duration.


Some 60 volunteer leaders and organisers give many hundreds of hours to organize and lead the trips (usually 3-4 leaders on each trip), and attend to the logistics of transport, food, “bookwork”, communications etc. All helpers and Leaders are volunteers, and NOBODY receives any remuneration whatsoever for their efforts. A mammoth task!!


The trips are now well known throughout NZ, Australia, USA, UK etc.  We have had many enquiries for next season when another 28 trips are planned, and half are already full.  Apart from informing the Service Clubs (Rotary & Lions), other Tramping Clubs, past member participants, and responding to requests for information, there is no public advertising, and the fact that our trips fill up so quickly shows that there is a real need for this voluntary service. A significant percentage of people return year after year to join another trip.


Our volunteer Leaders and Helpers originally came from the Milton Rotary Club, and the Otago Youth Adventure Trust, but now other local people, who may have participated in some of our trips, and have expressed an interest, have showed ability in helping. Most are middle aged “Mums & Dads”, with a love for the outdoors, who derive tremendous pleasure from assisting others to experience these truly magnificent adventures. We are proud of the fact that out amateur Leaders have always been able to cope with the occasional emergencies that can happen when taking a large group into what can be difficult terrain or unpleasant weather conditions. Leaders Outdoor First Aid Courses are run bi-annually
     

Those working behind the scenes – attending to the trip bookings, financial accounting, liaising with DoC, the food ordering & packing, organizing transport, boats etc and the general planning contribute many hundreds of voluntary hours in the “office”. We are proud of the fact that over the past 27 seasons, with 16,000 + participants, there has never been a trip booking of any sort messed up by our actions.


We operate as a Tramping Club, and as such DoC insist that we must run our trips at “cost”. We are not a commercial operator, and do not seek to become “concessionaires”..  Consequently the only funds we raise from our activities are from donations, Tramping Club membership subscriptions, and “non-trip revenue”.                                


The benefits to the community are twofold.

(1)    There are literally thousands of New Zealanders, Australians and others,  who have always had the wish to  tramp some of our well known tracks (Milford, Routeburn, Kepler etc.), but who find the excellent commercial guided  trips out of their price range, and who possibly lack the experience to undertake a “freedom” walk by themselves.  We provide a low cost alternative, that  allows people to walk these trips in groups,  with     “ low key” leadership. For many it is a “first time” experience, or a re-introduction into the outdoors. Many of the participants are middle aged, and very many continue tramping, by joining tramping or walking clubs, and by participating on other trips with us in subsequent years. It is always a humbling experience to witness a bus load of people, on the journey to the tracks, subdued and doubtful with a “what have we let ourselves in for” attitude, and then to see them on the journey home, buzzing with excitement and high spirits, thrilled with their achievements, meeting different people, and making new friends.  The Hillary Commission spent millions of dollars getting people into the outdoors, and we feel that we are assisting this cause.


(2)  Our constitution states that at the end of each financial year, all surplus funds held by the Tramping Club are to be split equally between the Otago Youth Adventure Trust, and the Rotary Club of Milton. Funds are generated principally by the requirement that those participating in a trip become financial members of the Tramping Club, and pay a subscription. Also we point out that a DoC requirement is that we must run our trips at “cost” but that we would welcome donations. Many people are happy to do this, in appreciation of the service we provide, and donations are the major source of our annual income.   .  As all our activities are run on public land and Dept of Conservation demand that we must run our trips at “cost”, purely as a Tramping Club.


Over the years our surplus funds have been of great benefit to Milton Rotary and the Otago Youth Adventure Trust, and most of them have gone back into the community.  Milton Rotary provide substantial funds for the local Youth Worker, for  the High School, for special needs and grants for students, for bursaries, and the many community and international projects that all Rotary Clubs are involved with. The Otago Youth Adventure Trust has been able to add many facilities and improvements to their 3 Outdoor Education Camps, which would not have been possible without the financial assistance of the Tramping Club. The refurbishment of Tautuku Camp, in the Catlins, the addition of a Gymnasium and  Community Hall at Berwick Camp, and recently the  complete renovation  and rebuilding of the newly acquired Sutton Camp, near Middlemarch, a “specialty” camp, to be used principally  for “at risk” families and children., are examples. 

 
See our Web Site    www.otagorotarytrusttramps.org.nz    

Also see the December issue of Rotary Down Under magazine at www.rotarydownunder.com.au