The Cook Mountain National Park is about 60 minutes from the Shepherd's Church. It's all the way west and turns right at the T-junction at the source of Lake Pukaki. Then it winds along the blue Lake Pukaki in the Beech Forest of Silver Mountain. This area is a World Heritage Site in southwestern New Zealand. It consists of Westland National Park, Aspiring Mountain National Park and Fjord National Park. At the end of the journey is the Cook Mountain National Park Camp, which looks like a magnificent landscape. There are five best short-distance trails: Governor's Jungle Trail, Bowen Jungle Trail, Glenko Trail, Parrot-pecking Corner Trail and Hooke Valley Trail, all of which start from Cook Hill Village and have beautiful and pleasant scenery. One of the most popular trails in the park is the Hooke Valley Trail, which is longer and more challenging than the other four trails. The other is the rugged rocky and dense meadows on the way. It is also one of the pleasures of taking pictures through three suspension bridges. The starting point of the trail is near the Baima Mountain Campsite, with a wide view. Originally this place was the Villa Hotel. In 1913, it was destroyed by a mountain torrent. Now some relics can be seen. In 1957, the rebuilt hotel was moved 2 kilometers away from the plain area. It was surrounded by bushes and bushes. It crossed the "Luohansong Arch Arch" and began to walk 9 kilometers along the trail of Hooke Valley. There are also wooden paths between rugged and complex alpine meadows. In summer, daisies are everywhere in the mountains. Velvet grass and buttercups resemble lilies are beautiful. A memorial to the victims of the first mountaineering accident was built on the footpath. Near the site of the Villa on the Hooke Valley Trail, inscriptions show that three climbers died in an avalanche in 1914. Only one body was found. Twelve years later, due to the melting of the glacier, the second body was found at the bottom of Hochstetter Lcefall, 2,000 meters below where the team was buried. The speed of movement. Walking up the hill, the temperature is getting lower and lower. There are also rubble landslides on the hillside. The traces of erosion of meadow vegetation are dim. Finally, we reach the lake. There is a viewing platform on the hillside. The wooden seats are simple. The next step is Lake Hooke. On the glacier cross-section, there are ice-blue faults, flashing blue light. There is also a boulder attraction on the trail, with a photo showing that she is the first woman in the world to successfully climb the Cook Mountains. After climbing the top, Freda left behind her cool grace in a skirt and holding a climbing rod in front of the boulder.