The nether regions of New Zealand are among the farthest-flung parts of the planet.
Campbell Island, our southernmost extremity, has the loneliest tree in the world according to the Guinness Book of World Records – but the island has also been the focal point for a flurry of radio contacts from all round the globe.
The tree is a 106-year-old Norwegian spruce, planted by homesick Scandinavian whalers – and the communications emanated from a group of DX amateur radio operators who travelled to the island on the expedition yacht Evohe.
A truckload of equipment: radios, antennae, computers, personal effects, camera gear, generators, tools and jerry cans of fuel arrived on the wharf beside Evohe in Bluff and, spurred on by showers of sleet, all hands turned to, chain-ganging it aboard,…