2348 lines
137 KiB
Plaintext
2348 lines
137 KiB
Plaintext
The Slopes of Te Aroha
|
||
|
||
`I haven't felt so relaxed in months,' said Dianne as we walked hand-in-hand
|
||
along the dirt road. We had just spent most of the day paddling around in
|
||
the Waiorongomai Stream, which runs out of the valley of the same name.
|
||
Dianne was an Australian hosteller, now on her third day at the hostel. The
|
||
hostel had been unusually busy the night before (eight people) and she
|
||
wanted to spend her last day at Te Aroha away from people. I had suggested
|
||
she try the Waiorongomai for a bit of skinny-dipping and soul-searching, but
|
||
she didn't want to go alone. Since it was a warm March day and Dianne was
|
||
well-spoken -- and was tall, blonde, and attractively built, with a sweet face
|
||
besides -- I had gone along. (Well, what else could I do?)
|
||
|
||
The Waiorongomai Valley lay about six kilometres south of the hostel. I
|
||
was wont to go there frequently, alone or in company. When I went alone,
|
||
I generally cycled. When I went with hostellers, I generally walked. The walk
|
||
this day -- out of town along the road that hugs the feet of the Kaimais, then
|
||
turn off and walk along a dirt road through farms until the car park near the
|
||
site of the old gold battery --took about an hour. At the car park, we
|
||
climbed over fallen rocks and forded the icy stream (a six-metre journey that
|
||
washed away all the dust and sweat that the six-kilometre journey preceding
|
||
it had coated on us) and struck off up the valley along one of the many
|
||
paths that thread the area. Before long this brought us back to the stream,
|
||
at the point where most local picnickers would stop. We did not stop,
|
||
however, for my favourite spots were reachable only by people willing to
|
||
wade upstream a considerable distance, and involved a bit of scrambling over
|
||
rocks besides. This was not a drawback, for without these obstacles there
|
||
would have been nowhere in the valley worth bathing nude. Too many casual
|
||
passers-through would have spoiled it.
|
||
|
||
Eventually we reached the nearer of my two preferred spots -- a swirl-pool
|
||
about ten metres across, with a wide area in the middle where the water was
|
||
too deep to stand in. When I first came there it was much smaller, but I
|
||
could see the ruins of a rock-dam at the downstream exit. With great labour
|
||
I had rebuilt the dam, replacing the large boulders that some flood had
|
||
washed away and filling the interstices with smaller rocks and gravel. Some
|
||
boulders bigger than a bull had been so balanced that with just a little
|
||
sapping I was able to topple their round bellies into the holes dug for them
|
||
and so bring their flat tops into perfect position for sunning on. Although
|
||
several paths ran along the valley walls on either side, I had satisfied myself
|
||
that this spot, at least, was overlooked by none of them, unless someone
|
||
cared to scramble down a muddy slope with no guarantee of getting back up
|
||
again.
|
||
Arrived, we stripped off and dived in. I was first out again, and was vastly
|
||
amused by Dianne's expression as she waded out after, goose-pimpled and
|
||
puckered all over. The wading we had done on our way upstream had not
|
||
prepared her for the coldness of the deep pool, and I had not warned her.
|
||
But I grinned at her and dived back in to show that it wasn't that bad.
|
||
|
||
That bad or no, despite vigourous swimming and paddling, ten minutes of
|
||
the water was more than enough, and we crawled out. I had arranged two
|
||
rocks side-by-side, with a third facing them, all within easy distance for quiet
|
||
conversation. After the water, the sensation of sun-warmed rock against my
|
||
back and mild autumn sun on my face was bliss. And so we lay there, in the
|
||
green-walled grey stone valley, baking slowly, talking in the relaxed way that
|
||
the location allowed. There was something about the calls of the birds and
|
||
the occasional crackles and louder rustling of the greenery, and the chuckling
|
||
of the water as it flowed over rocks and falls, that denied the outside world
|
||
access to the valley. Problems and worries washed away with the water, down
|
||
and away, out of sight and out of mind.
|
||
|
||
Dianne was in NZ on the first stopover of a trip that would take her to
|
||
the US and back via the Pacific Islands. She had just broken with her
|
||
husband, and hoped to use the trip to regain her own identity and rest up
|
||
preparatory to building a new life when she returned to Oz. She was strongly
|
||
anti-male at this time. `I'm a man,' I said. `Yes,' she said, `And that's been
|
||
worrying me.' `Then relax,' I said. `Think of me as a Boy Scout on a Bob-a-
|
||
Job Day. My Job is to be cheerful company, and my Bob is the pleasure of
|
||
your company. Today is for relaxing. I promise to be a good boy no matter
|
||
what. Scout's Honour.' And I made the Scout salute with my toes, as nearly
|
||
as I could, a position so foolish that she had to laugh. And after that she was
|
||
open to the aura of the valley and we talked more and more freely and
|
||
openly, while her cares fell off her and slithered dryly into the stream and
|
||
were washed away.
|
||
|
||
The afternoon wore on, pleasantly. She shifted to the facing-stone to
|
||
change the angle of the sun. We had been discussing the effects of travel on
|
||
body and nerves, and she mentioned that before her separation she had been
|
||
quite a bit overweight. Since beginning her trip, the excess weight had
|
||
dissolved, and she now weighed less than she had for years. She did look
|
||
good, with just a little looseness of the skin at waist and thigh and upper
|
||
arm, and I said so. I wonder about the therapeutic effects of travel
|
||
sometimes -- for hostellers seem to me much healthier than the average
|
||
person. Is it that the hostelling way of life attracts healthy people, or is it the
|
||
way of life that attracts the health? From conversations with Dianne and
|
||
other hostellers, I suspect the latter. And I certainly couldn't complain while
|
||
facing this nude, golden woman with her bronzed skin and translucent yellow
|
||
hair. Consideration of which led me to go for another swim to help me keep
|
||
my Scout's Promise to her. (It's a tough life.) When I came out I rubbed her
|
||
neck and scalp, stopping only when she fell asleep. Then I went back to my
|
||
own rock.
|
||
|
||
The sun fell below the valley rim, and the breeze blowing up the valley,
|
||
pleasant in the sunshine, became cool enough to encourage activity. So we
|
||
gathered up our gear and waded downstream. At the first bend we stopped
|
||
to dress, for we were no longer in that small spot which was safe from
|
||
random eyes, and then continued downstream, hand in hand. We held hands,
|
||
in fact, until we were out of the valley and partway down the dirt road.
|
||
Then, shazoom! I felt myself become a hostel manager again, and Dianne
|
||
remembered that she didn't like to be touched by men, and our hands fell
|
||
apart.
|
||
|
||
The next day Dianne moved on, and although I have a contact address for
|
||
her, I have never seen her again. Yet for that single day we were just two
|
||
people, not a man and a woman (though we were aware of our natures), and
|
||
I think that I would not have swapped the experience for a month of sex. I
|
||
think that she felt the same.
|
||
|
||
Before writing this account, I had many doubts. Not about the experience,
|
||
but about the retailing of it to others. It is a memory very close to my soul.
|
||
Telling such to others can spoil the memory. But it is just one of many (well,
|
||
a number), and rereading it now, it does not seem to me that it has lost any
|
||
true value for having been put on paper. I only curse my clumsy way with
|
||
words, that I have not been able to bring it to the same glowing life that the
|
||
memory possesses within me.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
`History'
|
||
|
||
Part Five
|
||
|
||
This is the fifth episode of `History', my autobiographical account of what I
|
||
did during my gafia. To put the previous episodes in a nutshell: In mid-1983
|
||
I left New Zealand for Australia. At the end of 1983 I left Australia for New
|
||
Zealand, having spent most of those 5 1/2 months in Melbourne. In NZ I
|
||
went back to my old job with the PO in Wellington. At the end of 1984 I left
|
||
the PO in order to trek NZ. In January and February I `did' the South
|
||
Island. In March and April I `did' the North Island. In May I worked on the
|
||
Kiwifruit. And on the 3rd of June 1985, I found myself the temporary
|
||
custodian of the Youth Hostels Association of NZ hostel in the town of
|
||
Whakatane (Fahk-ah-tah-nay) in the Bay of Plenty in the North Island.
|
||
(There. Now you don't have to write and ask me for the earlier sections of
|
||
this long-drawn-out scribble.)
|
||
|
||
This segment of `History' follows my career from 3rd June 1985 to 19th of
|
||
September 1986, when I left New Zealand for Australia.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
Guide To Names:
|
||
|
||
In this `History', I am trying to render a pronunciation guide for each
|
||
Maori (Mah-oh-ree) word as we reach it. These guides are as close as
|
||
I can get to correct Maori. Kiwis (kee-weez) tend to mispronounce
|
||
them, and the poor foreigner is completely lost. Take Paraparaumu, a
|
||
perfectly respectable place near Wellington. The system I am using here
|
||
would render this `pah-rah-pah-rah-oo-moo' (`ah' standing for long `a'
|
||
as in `far'). The typical kiwi will rhyme the `a' with `sat' and say `pa-rah-
|
||
pa-ram'; the locals will say `p'ram'. Te Aroha (Tay-ah-roh-hah) tends to
|
||
dribble out of the locals' mouths, becoming something like `T'roah'. My
|
||
home town of Wanganui (fahng-ah-noo-ee) is `wong-gan-new-ee' to
|
||
most locals (and `wann-gan-noo-ee' to most foreigners). `F' and `wh' --
|
||
the sound signified by `wh' in Maori is nearer `f' than `w'; hence my use
|
||
of `f' in the guides to pronunciation. It's close enough. Finally, the
|
||
combination `ng' is as in `twang', but with more bite to the `g' following
|
||
the `ng' sound. I hope this info is useful.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Acting Like A Man:
|
||
|
||
Whakatane YHA hostel was supported by the Tauranga (Towr-rahng-ah)
|
||
Branch of YHA. An official of the Branch ferried me down the coast and
|
||
stayed a few days to show me the ropes, then left me in sole charge, to sink
|
||
or swim.
|
||
|
||
The hostel was located in King Street, a fair walk from the centre of town.
|
||
The building was an old two-storey wooden structure, long overdue for
|
||
demolition. But the nature of YHA's tenancy on the site was such that if it
|
||
attempted to replace the building, the land would revert to the local council
|
||
-- which was unlikely to grant a new lease on terms which would leave the
|
||
hostel a financially viable proposition. Since the hostel was already losing
|
||
money just about as fast as YHA could afford, Whakatane hostel drifted
|
||
along from year to year while necessary work piled up because the Tauranga
|
||
Branch preferred to put its effort into the local (and profitable) hostel.
|
||
|
||
The hostel provided 24 beds, in six rooms, but rarely had more than half
|
||
a dozen travellers at any one time. Whakatane was regarded as a dead spot
|
||
tourist-wise: a way-stop for travellers exiting or entering the scenic East Cape
|
||
region, or benighted on their way from Gisborne/ Napier to Tauranga/
|
||
Rotorua (Roh-toh-roo-ah).
|
||
|
||
This attitude that there was `nothing to see or do' at Whakatane was
|
||
mistaken. In fact, there was an excellent beach at nearby Ohope (Oh-Hope-
|
||
ay) (a five-kilometre walk, unfortunately); there was a good walkway with
|
||
several Maori sites along it; and Whakatane was a natural gateway for
|
||
trampers wanting to get into areas not much frequented by other trampers.
|
||
In addition to this, it was a good base for exploring the coastal side of Mt
|
||
Tarawera (Tah-rah-weh-raa) and its little cousin Mt Edgecumbe, provided
|
||
you had access to a car.
|
||
|
||
Whakatane itself was the landing-place of one of the seven great canoes
|
||
of the legendary Great Fleet (circa 1325 AD). It took its name from an
|
||
incident connected with that landing. It seems that when the canoe landed,
|
||
all the men jumped out and rushed ashore, leaving the women and children
|
||
aboard. The canoe, inadequately beached, started to drift offshore. But
|
||
Maori tradition made it tapu (tah-poo -- sacred or forbidden according to
|
||
context) for women to paddle the canoe. Problem! But a chief's daugh-
|
||
|
||
|
||
ter grabbed a paddle and, crying `I will act like a man!', quickly brought the
|
||
canoe back to shore. `Act like a man' in Maori is whakatane, and so the
|
||
place was named. (This naming of places after events rather than people was
|
||
usual Maori practice, leading to such intriguing names as `Kai Hau O Kupe'
|
||
{kye-how-oh-koo-pay <Where Kupe Ate The Wind>}.) One of the Maori
|
||
sites in the area, mentioned earlier, was almost the earliest pa (pah {fortified
|
||
village}) site in NZ, and the whole Whakatane area is spotted with historic
|
||
places.
|
||
|
||
I remember relatively little about my time at Whakatane -- except for
|
||
details that are just as true for my next hostel and hence, perhaps, best left
|
||
for now. Every attempt to dredge a single memory of everyday life at
|
||
Whakatane also
|
||
brings up several similar but better memories of the later hostel. On the
|
||
other hand, a few distinct events do stand out.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Three Volcanoes
|
||
|
||
One day the hostel had a single visitor -- a German, Kurt. I am unable to
|
||
place the memory precisely in time: the YHA person who had brought me
|
||
down to Whakatane was there, but it was probably a later visit for him.
|
||
Anyway, we had been sitting round talking about exciting things to do the
|
||
next day, and the suggestion was made that we should make an excursion to
|
||
nearby Mt Edgecumbe, for Kurt's sake.
|
||
|
||
Mt Edgecumbe is a solitary mountain, almost directly inland from
|
||
Whakatane and about 35 kilometres away by car (a trifle less by pigeon --
|
||
if passenger pigeons were not extinct and therefore unavailable for taxi
|
||
services). It is only 821 metres in height, but the absence of tall nearby peaks
|
||
allows it to command the rolling hill-country that surrounds it. As is usually
|
||
the case with such mountains in New Zealand (and in this area of New
|
||
Zealand in particular) it is a volcano. A dormant one.
|
||
|
||
In the morning, we all piled into a car and headed off. Down King Street
|
||
and left onto Highway 2. Six kilometres and right onto Highway 30. Twenty
|
||
kilometres and we took the left turn to Kawerau (Kah-weh-row), a town
|
||
mentioned briefly in the last `History' in relation to the temporary job I took
|
||
while waiting for the Kiwifruit to start. It is a town of heavy industry,
|
||
boasting two major pulp & paper mills -- Caxton and Tasman. The former
|
||
produces most of NZ's toilet paper; the second produces the bulk of NZ's
|
||
newsprint. Both are hulking complexes of concrete buildings and mazes of
|
||
noisy machinery, employing thousands of workers between them, and they
|
||
are the main reason the town exists. Because of this, the town looks a bit
|
||
different to most NZ country centres, with its grid of uniformly utilitarian
|
||
company houses and its odd lack of other signs of personality.
|
||
|
||
The town is set in -- or surrounded by, if you prefer a better term -- the
|
||
great pine forests that provide the paper for the great maws of the two mills.
|
||
Hundreds of square kilometres of Pinus radiata. Dull, dull, dull to drive
|
||
around in. The older plantings stand in rows and columns; more recent
|
||
plantings straggle in a less boring randomness. Here and there, there are
|
||
sudden areas containing trees of uniform height: legacies of clear-felling or
|
||
fires. Elsewhere, sections of tall and short trees alternate -- the result of
|
||
strip-logging.
|
||
|
||
We went through the town and took a side-road towards the mountain on
|
||
the far side. Somewhere around here we stopped to check in with the Forest
|
||
HQ, since Mt Edgecumbe is located in the forest, most of which is privately
|
||
owned by the mills. The mountain looms over Kawerau like an enormous
|
||
pyramid, drawing the eye towards it as an escape from the endless rows of
|
||
spiky trees.
|
||
|
||
The forest road led us partway up the mountain, then ended in a parking
|
||
lot. A wide gravel road continued on the far side of a locked gate, and we
|
||
walked up the road. The day was warmish, despite the increasing height and
|
||
the fact that it was mid-winter. Kurt later sent me some photos he had taken
|
||
at the top. They show me wearing T-shirt and thin trousers. Some clouds
|
||
were scattered around, but not so many as to shut out the warmth of the
|
||
sun.
|
||
|
||
We eventually crossed the edge of the crater, but the highest point of the
|
||
mountain was across the crater from where we did so. So we got to walk
|
||
around the small weed-grown lake that fills the lowest section of the crater.
|
||
The entire interior of the crater was heavily overgrown, and it was hard to
|
||
reconcile all this life with the aridity that must have prevailed in the days
|
||
when the volcano was active. I said earlier that Edgecumbe is dormant.
|
||
Extinct would probably be a correct description, but Kiwis have become wary
|
||
of that word since the time `extinct' Mt Ruapehu (Roo-ah-pay-hoo) decided
|
||
it had slept long enough, and proceeded to drop ash on towns hundreds of
|
||
kilometres away.
|
||
|
||
We finally reached the top -- actually the highest point on the rim of the
|
||
crater. From here the mountainside dropped away in a grand sweep, down
|
||
into the dwarfed foothills carpeted with their peculiar spiky green `grass'.
|
||
Kawerau was a grey blot, details blurred by the steam and smoke from the
|
||
mills. Spires of this smoke rose above it, some overtopping us where we
|
||
stood atop the mountain.
|
||
|
||
Looking up from the mountain's foot to the horizon, above and left to the
|
||
town, I saw a huge green lump. Mt Tarawera, 1111 metres tall, twenty-five
|
||
kilometres off. Readers of SECANT 4 may remember my review of Alan
|
||
Dean Foster's MAORI, a book which contains a description of the eruption
|
||
of Tarawera in the late 1800's. Turning right and looking along the coastline
|
||
of the Bay of Plenty, I thought I could see the distant pimple of Mt
|
||
Maunganui (Mowng-gah-noo-ee), 232 metres, near Tauranga, but I may
|
||
have been mistaken. Turning right and looking out into Bay of Plenty, I
|
||
could see another mountain -- this one low-lying and well up on the lip of
|
||
the horizon. A pall of white cloud was rising from it. White Island is an
|
||
active volcano about fifty kilometres offshore in the Bay. Once it was used
|
||
as a quarry for sulphur, but increasing volcanism in the early years of this
|
||
century rendered it too dangerous for anyone to reside and work there.
|
||
Today it suffers occasional forays from planes and boats filled with curiosity-
|
||
seekers. In 1985 the price for a boat-excursion was, if I remember rightly,
|
||
NZ$55, with a $10 surcharge if you wanted to go ashore there. Turning right
|
||
and looking towards East Cape, the land broke into a jumble of woolly green
|
||
hills -- the Ikawhenua (Ick-ah-fen-oo-ah) Ranges, covered by native bush.
|
||
This green land was quite distinct from the `grassy' pine forest; NZ's native
|
||
trees tend to the blobby, not the spearhead pine shape. Turning right again
|
||
brought me full-circle.
|
||
|
||
I found myself looking at a spine of rock extending from the mountaintop.
|
||
It rose a little higher than the rest of the summit. Not being afraid of
|
||
heights, I immediately clambered out onto it and had my photo snapped,
|
||
standing astride the end of the spur and pointing grandly in the direction of
|
||
Whakatane. `There are some hostellers waiting on the front porch of the
|
||
hostel!' I shouted back to the others, jokingly. Actually, although the town
|
||
was quite distinct, it was too far away for me to make out more than a
|
||
couple of the bigger buildings -- and those only as minute patches of
|
||
different colour. The hostel was quite invisible.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ohope Beach:
|
||
|
||
Six kilometres from Whakatane, over a sizable hill, is the white-sand beach
|
||
of Ohope. It is a long crescent in shape, about four kilometres long, washed
|
||
by gentle waves and shelving quite slowly in many places, so that the water
|
||
warms quickly on sunny days. Elsewhere it shelves more rapidly and provides
|
||
good if rather insipid surf. Backing the beach is the resort town of Ohope
|
||
Beach, and backing the town are high cliffs. These are bush-covered and
|
||
dotted with cottages.
|
||
|
||
My main memory of Ohope does not actually date from my hostel days,
|
||
but rather from a fortnight's holiday my family spent there many years ago.
|
||
I still possess a small phial of water and another of sand, collected during
|
||
that visit. (The water, by now, has lost enough substance through the small
|
||
cork used to close the bottle so that it is brine rather than water. But who
|
||
cares?) My father worked for the NZ Post Office and had managed to
|
||
secure one of the PO's many holiday cottages for this vacation. Ohope in
|
||
summer was paradisiacal for the younger me. I would spend the long days
|
||
exploring the beach and the surrounding area, and paddling and swimming,
|
||
and building huge sand castles with this strange pale sand. (The sand at
|
||
Castlecliff Beach, which is the suburb of Wanganui my parents live in, is
|
||
black (well, grey when dry) and heavy because of the presence of large
|
||
quantities of iron. Remember the physics demonstration which involves a
|
||
magnet and a handful of iron filings? We didn't need iron filings for that --
|
||
just a pail of sand.) I was very sad when the time came to leave, back to
|
||
school and homework and `Get up, you'll be late!' (I never have liked getting
|
||
up early.)
|
||
|
||
Perhaps that holiday has stayed in my memory so long because of a
|
||
gimmick my parents used to reduce the monotony of the homeward trip. We
|
||
waited, car packed, until dawn lit the sky at the right-hand end of the bay.
|
||
When the sun rose above the peaks of the East Cape, we all piled into the
|
||
car and started the homeward trip. We drove across the island via Rotorua,
|
||
Taupo (Tah-ow-poh), and National Park, arriving in Wanganui before sunset.
|
||
Then we went down to Castlecliff beach and watched the sun go down into
|
||
the sea. From water, to water.
|
||
|
||
After a somewhat uncertain start -- I needed time to adjust my viewpoint
|
||
from that of the hosteller to that of the Manager -- I got the hang of the job,
|
||
and even began to feel that perhaps this job provided an interesting new
|
||
slant on the Youth Hostels and the way that they operate. Somewhat to my
|
||
surprise, I found myself worrying over the future of the hostel, even though
|
||
my own time there was likely to be short.
|
||
|
||
All things end. At the end of July, the new permanent manager arrived
|
||
and I had to go. But where? I liked the life; I didn't want to stop being a
|
||
hostel manager just yet. Fortunately, my work with Whakatane had found
|
||
enough favour so that I was offered a chance at running another one, as a
|
||
permanent position.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Mountain of Love:
|
||
|
||
On 1st August I left Whakatane and hitched to Tauranga. I stayed a night
|
||
in the hostel there, renewing my friendship with the managers. I also talked
|
||
with the other hostellers staying that night -- Kurt from Germany (already
|
||
met at Whakatane) and Karen from England. (I have decided, after some
|
||
thought, to use the true given names of the people I meet in this section.
|
||
Privacy will be maintained by withholding the surnames of those who will not
|
||
be known to fans.) The next day I travelled on by bus via Waihi (wye-hee)
|
||
and Paeroa (Pye-roh-ah) to Te Aroha.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
Te Aroha is a small dairy-farming town, about 3,500 people and several
|
||
hundred thousand head of cattle. It perches on the knees of Mt Te Aroha
|
||
at the eastern edge of the Hauraki Plains. (How-rah-kee) It is in an old
|
||
gold-mining area of the North Island. There are hot mineral springs there,
|
||
and many good tracks for tramping in the Kaimai (Kye-mye) Ranges behind
|
||
it. The town was established in 1880.
|
||
|
||
The mountain after which the town is named stands 953 metres (six tenths
|
||
of a mile) tall, and its peak is the site of a TV/radio retransmissions tower.
|
||
The summit may be reached by either a long (10 km {6 mile}) winding dirt
|
||
road, or a short (2km {1 1/2 mile}) bush track. From the summit the
|
||
successful climber can see for hundreds of kilometres around: as far as East
|
||
Cape and White Island out to sea, to Mts Ruapehu, Tarawera, and
|
||
Edgecumbe south, to Mt Pirongia (Pih-rong-ee-ah) west, and to the
|
||
Coromandel (Coh-roh-man-dell) Ranges and the Firth of Thames and Little
|
||
Barrier Island north. (The view north is hindered somewhat because the
|
||
Kaimai Range becomes the Coromandel Range that direction. Te Aroha
|
||
being part of the Kaimai Range, vision is naturally blocked by the tall peaks
|
||
in the distance.) Mt Te Aroha stands a little way out from the ranked ridges
|
||
of the Range, and is a conspicuous landmark for anyone approaching the
|
||
town. It is also, incidentally, the highest peak in the Kaimais. The nearest
|
||
higher mountains are Pirongia (962 metres), 85 km away on the far side of
|
||
Hamilton, and Tarawera (1111 metres), 100 km away, the far side of
|
||
Rotorua.
|
||
|
||
If you have trouble with the geography just named, refer to the map
|
||
(1994: or any map of NZ). All will become clearer. (Would I lie to you?)
|
||
|
||
I came into Te Aroha from the north on a cloudy day. From my bus-seat
|
||
I was able to look out through the driver's window, craning for my first
|
||
glimpse of the town that might become my new home. The weather south
|
||
looked unpromising: there was a huge black cloud directly ahead, its base
|
||
apparently resting on the ground. The wind being in the west, I guessed that
|
||
the cloud-mass was squeezing its way through a gap in the Range. Never
|
||
mind that my open map-book did not show any such gap. It was only as the
|
||
bus approached the phenomenon that I realised my error; for suddenly I
|
||
noticed a slender silver spire atop the cloud's height and realised that my
|
||
`cloud' was a mountain -- the very mountain, in fact, that the town took it's
|
||
name from. A kilometre doesn't sound like a great height for a mountain,
|
||
but New Zealand has a habit of starting mountains from near sea-level. The
|
||
Hauraki Plains were low-lying swamps when the pakeha (pah-kay-hah) came
|
||
to New Zealand, and so Te Aroha's modest kilometre of height represented
|
||
something like 900 metres (1/2 mile) rise from the plain to the summit -- a
|
||
bulk many a `taller' mountain might envy!
|
||
|
||
The size and prominence of the mountain, in fact, is largely responsible
|
||
for its name. A long time ago, a Maori chief named Mamoe (Mah-moy; add
|
||
a twist to the `moy', half sounding both `o' and `e': mo-ay) left his home near
|
||
Mt Maunganui to go and visit relatives near the modern site of Hamilton.
|
||
But on the way home, he and his party became lost in the boggy plains.
|
||
Winning through the swamps, they made their way instinctively to the highest
|
||
mountain in sight in order to locate themselves in relation to their homes.
|
||
From the summit of this mountain they could look over the ranges and into
|
||
the Bay of Plenty. There they saw the unmistakable silhouette of Mt
|
||
Maunganui. So happy was Mamoe at this sight of home that he named the
|
||
mountain he was on `the great love of Mamoe', Te Arohanui a Mamoe (Tay-
|
||
Ah-row-ha-noo-ee-ah-Mah-moy.) Nowadays this is shortened to `the love',
|
||
making it `Te Aroha' (also known as `the Mountain of Love' -- a beautiful
|
||
name).
|
||
|
||
Once off the bus, I followed my hostel handbook up the slope of the
|
||
mountain toward the hostel, approaching my new home as if I was just a
|
||
newly-arriving hosteller.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Hostel:
|
||
|
||
Te Aroha hostel, when I ran it, boasted a mere ten beds in two rooms. My
|
||
accommodation consisted of a single room off the kitchen area & the run of
|
||
the hostel during the day. Since Te Aroha was traditionally open all day, and
|
||
I had no objection to the idea, I usually shared that day with any hostellers
|
||
who were staying and who did not feel like going out to see the local sights.
|
||
|
||
Staying in was not unpopular. To see much of the local area you needed
|
||
walk no further than the front door. The hostel was located on a knee of the
|
||
mountain, on the northern outskirts of town. From the hostel's porch you
|
||
enjoyed an almost uninterrupted view across the plains. Distant landmarks
|
||
visible from the hostel included Mt Pirongia and the marching ranks of the
|
||
Kaimai Ranges. Spectacular sunsets tended to be routine rather than
|
||
unusual. One artistically-inclined visitor watercoloured a lovely picture in the
|
||
visitor's book (see illo), and I photocopied it when I left. Sadly, the town had
|
||
no colour photocopier; I had to satisfy myself with shades of grey and
|
||
memories.
|
||
|
||
The hostel was very homey. The local YHA Branch had put a lot of work
|
||
into making it so, with help from the fact that the building was originally a
|
||
house anyway. NZ has what appears to be an unusual habit: often, instead
|
||
of building a house on a site, they will load it on the back of a truck and
|
||
bring it in from elsewhere. (Big houses may be cut in two or more pieces and
|
||
transported severally.) The typical NZ house being a sturdy wooden structure
|
||
supported on piles, rather than a brick structure or one built half into the
|
||
ground, with a basement, this is quite a convenient way of avoiding spending
|
||
on building costs what you save in land price by buying an out-of-the-way
|
||
block of land. In the case of the Te Aroha hostel, the house was about sixty
|
||
years old. But such is the nature of the town, I met a member of the family
|
||
that once owned the building and whose parents built it. If memory will
|
||
serve me again, the hostel building cost YHA #64 to buy and transport, back
|
||
in the 60's. The land was a perpetual free lease from the town.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Hostellers:
|
||
|
||
I got my first inkling of what Te Aroha hostel was all about the moment I
|
||
walked in. There was a part-open door to my left. A dormitory, with three
|
||
two-tiered bunks and another door visible in the facing wall. I poked my
|
||
head in, looked around the door -- and a head poked out of a huddle of
|
||
blankets and looked blearily at me. `Oh,' it mumbled, `You must be Greg.'
|
||
This was around noon.
|
||
|
||
The head belonged to Peter, a regular visitor (being a Kiwi). He had been
|
||
told by Dannie (the relieving Manager) that I was coming. Dannie would be
|
||
along that evening to book any new arrivals in and to tell me what was what;
|
||
meantime I should make myself at home.
|
||
|
||
Peter was a retired social worker -- retired on health grounds. He now
|
||
spent his time migrating around the North Island. His passion was chess and
|
||
people; he habitually wore Irish green clothes, needing only the cap in order
|
||
to resemble a leprechaun. We had a number of long debates during his
|
||
various visits, covering a wide range of topics. Later on he came by less
|
||
often; he had a project of some sort going on up in Northland that was
|
||
taking up a lot of his time. I never found out what it was.
|
||
|
||
This pattern of repeated visits lasting several days was quite common for
|
||
Te Aroha's visitors. The average stay was about two days, but this figure
|
||
includes cases such as half a dozen people in a car stopping for the night,
|
||
having been caught out half-way to Auckland. Ignoring these occurrences,
|
||
the typical stay was three to four days. (The official limit of stay in a YHA
|
||
hostel was three days; however, only the busiest hostels in the busiest seasons
|
||
stuck to this.) The record stay during my time was fourteen days, for a young
|
||
Japanese chap. Long stays and repeat visits made the difference between
|
||
existence and nonexistence for the hostel: it was so out-of-the-way, and
|
||
located so close to several other highly desirable places for long stays
|
||
(Tauranga, Opoutere, Rotorua) that it had to make the most of anyone who
|
||
came along. Fortunately, as I'll show later on, the area had enough
|
||
interesting things to see and do that between these and the homey hostel,
|
||
achieving these goals was relatively easy.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Interlude:=================================
|
||
|
||
Skit Gubbe:
|
||
|
||
One card-game that hostellers had introduced me to at Whakatane proved
|
||
very popular at Te Aroha on rainy days. This was a Swedish game known as
|
||
`Skit Gubbe' (`Shit, Old Man'). See the diagram below. The game is played
|
||
with a full deck, sans Jokers. The best sport is with four or more players.
|
||
Each player receives four cards, laid out in a square on the table in front of
|
||
them. Each player may look once at each of the two cards closest to them
|
||
after the initial deal, and once at each new card they are dealt after the
|
||
initial four.
|
||
|
||
Most cards possess their face value, with the King and Queen worth ten
|
||
and the Jack zero. The object of the game is to achieve the lowest point-
|
||
score from each deal. Hence Four Jacks (score zero) is unbeatable, while
|
||
four picture cards and/or tens (score forty) is hopeless. The hands can be
|
||
played individually, or else an overall score with upper/lower limit may be
|
||
kept. (The normal limits are +100 and -100.)
|
||
|
||
Cards after the initial four are dealt one to each player in turn. The player
|
||
looks at the card dealt them and decides whether to discard it immediately
|
||
(face-up on a `discards' pile) or to replace one of their present four cards
|
||
with it. (In this case the old card is first removed and placed face-up on the
|
||
discards, and the new card is then placed in the vacant position.)
|
||
|
||
Dealing continues until any player, after completing their turn but before
|
||
the next player has their turn, knocks twice on the table. After a player
|
||
knocks, the other players each have one more deal. When the turn returns
|
||
to the knocker, the knocker has no turn; instead all players face all their
|
||
cards up in turn, starting with the knocker. The points are counted. The
|
||
winner is the player with the lowest score. That person has their score
|
||
subtracted from their points total (if an overall score is being kept). Joint
|
||
winners neither gain nor lose, except as below. The other players have their
|
||
score added to their points (if an overall score is being kept). If the knocker
|
||
is the winner, the subtraction from their score is double their points on this
|
||
hand; if the knocker is a joint winner, they neither gain nor lose, but the
|
||
other winner(s) subtract their points from their score(s); if the knocker is a
|
||
loser, the addition to their points is double their score. The cards are
|
||
collected and a new hand dealt. Any player whose score gets too high (i.e.
|
||
exceeds the {100?} limit) is `out'. The game continues in this way until either
|
||
one player drops below the lower limit, or only one player is left. That player
|
||
wins the game.
|
||
|
||
A very simple game to play, mechanically speaking, Skit Gubbe's skill lies
|
||
in tactics and strategy. Luck is minimal; deciding when to knock is vital. An
|
||
element of uncertainty is added by not knowing the value of two of the
|
||
initial cards dealt in each hand. When one of these cards is discarded and
|
||
proves to be a Jack, the normal comment is `Oh shit, a Jack!'; hence the
|
||
name of the game. (In English it is usually called `Oh, Shit'.) It is best to
|
||
knock before your point score reaches zero because, after all, while zero is
|
||
an unbeatable score it does not reduce your own overall score; and while you
|
||
are trying to achieve it, someone else may knock and catch you with too
|
||
many high cards! On the other hand, unless you have had time to ensure
|
||
that you know all your cards are low, those two `unknown' cards can ruin you
|
||
if they turn out to be high. And it is wise not to knock if you suspect
|
||
someone else has a lower score -- double subtractions and additions can
|
||
change the strategic situation very quickly!
|
||
|
||
3
|
||
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
<20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
<20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
2 4
|
||
<20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
<20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD> <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
<20><> <20><> <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
stack <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
<20><> <20><>
|
||
<20><> <20><> discard <20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
<20><><EFBFBD>
|
||
1
|
||
|
||
In the above diagram, Player 1 deals. After the deal but before play begins,
|
||
each player can look once at each of their own two cards closest to them
|
||
(the player being represented above by the appropriate number). The other
|
||
two cards may not be peeked at until they are placed on the `discards' pile.
|
||
After a card is discarded it may be replaced by a new card from the face-
|
||
down `stack'. The player may look at this card before placing it in the vacant
|
||
spot before them; thereafter they may not peek at it until it, in turn is
|
||
discarded.
|
||
|
||
Have fun!
|
||
|
||
End Interlude===============================
|
||
|
||
|
||
The hostellers made the hostel, for me, and their endlessly cheerful -- or
|
||
troubled -- or thoughtful -- or annoying -- nature completed the healing
|
||
process that `History' has spent so many words documenting.
|
||
|
||
When I came to Te Aroha, I had myself well sorted-out. If I hadn't, I
|
||
couldn't have handled the comings and goings of so many people. What
|
||
remained to be done was to live my new ideas, to find out which were
|
||
unworkable or needed adjustment and to become at-home with the
|
||
philosophy detailed in SECANT 3. Over the next fourteen months I did so,
|
||
gradually learning how to cope with the various tests that life threw at me.
|
||
|
||
One thing that I held in abeyance during this period was sex. Not always
|
||
or entirely by choice -- but it happened that the times when I was open to
|
||
temptation rarely coincided with the times when the sort of person I would
|
||
be attracted by, or who would be attracted by me, was present. Once I was
|
||
attracted strongly enough by someone to speak to her about it. (She turned
|
||
me down.) Once someone was attracted by me strongly enough to make a
|
||
pass. (She chose the wrong time and place, and when we reached the right
|
||
time and place for me, her interest had cooled.) Apart from these instances,
|
||
and the sort of non- or half- serious flirting that is a routine part of adult
|
||
life, however, I was celibate during my time as a hostel manager.
|
||
|
||
The longer I was in contact with hostelling, the more one comparison
|
||
forced itself on me: the similarity between hostelling and fandom. Hostellers
|
||
average above the average in intelligence, they see themselves as a group
|
||
apart from the main stream of travellers, they congregate, and they
|
||
participate in various group activities. Many parallels can be drawn between
|
||
the two groups.
|
||
|
||
But in fact this similarity is deceiving, for hostelling, even more than
|
||
fandom, is a way of life for those practicing it while they are practicing it.
|
||
Whether fandom can be considered to be a way of life at all is open to
|
||
doubt, for the number of fans who participate in fandom to the exclusion of
|
||
almost all else is small. Career, family, other groups of friends, other
|
||
interests, all lay claims on the time of most fans. No matter how serious the
|
||
individual is about their fanac, fandom remains a part-time affair and
|
||
therefore cannot be said to rank as more than a hobby -- regardless of their
|
||
claims to `FIAWOL'. But when you travel, you travel completely from the
|
||
time you leave home to the time you return. I'm not talking about holidays
|
||
touring, here, but about going off and living in another place for a time, with
|
||
no intention of settling down and for no particular reason other than that it's
|
||
what you want to do. This is an attitude that is particularly noticeable among
|
||
hostellers.
|
||
Of course, even hostelling can be seen as a part-time or temporary way of
|
||
life, for relatively few people choose to spend their whole lifetime travelling
|
||
(probably about the same proportion as manage to spend all their waking
|
||
hours on fandom). But travelling has a lot more in common with `true'
|
||
countercultures such as the old hippies than does fandom. Even hippies
|
||
rarely devoted their entire lifetime to their alternative way of life; but while
|
||
they followed it, they lived it completely.
|
||
|
||
After getting to know hostelling, I found that I could no longer see
|
||
`FIAWOL' as any more than a quaint and plaintive assertion, a squeak
|
||
against the thunder of reality. I'm unsure whether this is a loss or a gain. At
|
||
any rate, I am left to `live' fandom as best I can, unable any longer to see it
|
||
as the great and Serious matter that it once seemed to me to be.
|
||
|
||
Either way, I was preoccupied for a long time by my own internal
|
||
redevelopment and with observations such as this. I arrived at Te Aroha with
|
||
my new ideas fully developed, but I still lacked confidence in them and in
|
||
myself. The hostel and the hostellers at TE Aroha gave me that confidence.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Outside:
|
||
|
||
There was plenty else to do at Te Aroha than sit around and chat in the
|
||
hostel. The area had many attractions. Mountains and valleys, farms, hot
|
||
springs. Most hostellers went to explore at least some of these things.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Valley:
|
||
|
||
Six kilometres south of the hostel lay the Waiorongomai (Wy-oh-rong-go-my)
|
||
Valley. This valley was the setting of the anecdote that opened this episode
|
||
of `History'. That story is not entirely unique. Perhaps it was something in
|
||
the Valley, but I noticed, time and again, that if I went up there with just
|
||
one other person, male or female, all the barriers would drop away just for
|
||
that day, and not return until we left the Valley.
|
||
|
||
My other preferred spot in the Valley was further upstream, and the
|
||
swimming pool was very small -- perhaps four metres across -- but was very,
|
||
very deep. It was the basin for a waterfall of sorts -- perhaps a `sluice' is a
|
||
better description, for the water flowed on the stone until it was about two
|
||
feet above the pool, so the free-fall section wasn't much. But with a little
|
||
scrambling it was possible to reach the top of the fall, and then slide down
|
||
the smooth rock on your ass, to land in the middle of the pool with a huge
|
||
splash. A path did overlook this spot, but it was not much used and I soon
|
||
found that the typical hosteller who was willing to join me in nudity was, like
|
||
me, not much bothered by the possibility of being overlooked.
|
||
|
||
The stream is not the only attraction of the valley. There is a gold-bearing
|
||
quartz-seam running through the northern wall of the valley, and in the later
|
||
years of last century and the early years of this, the town of Waiorongomai
|
||
boasted 6000 people and dozens of gold companies. Few made money, for
|
||
the ore was low-grade and required a lot of work to refine. Today the town
|
||
is gone completely, though it is possible to find signs of where it once stood
|
||
provided you know where it was. And there are still many tunnels around,
|
||
so many that it is dangerous to wander off the beaten tracks in case you
|
||
`find' a hidden shaft the hard way. But a favourite walk is to follow the
|
||
pathway of the horse-powered railway line that was made to bring the ore
|
||
to the crushing batteries. The construction of this link had been no mean
|
||
feat -- as the modern explorer learns when they try to follow the track up
|
||
Butler's Incline. The rusted tracks make good hand-holds for the hardy
|
||
person braving the slope. Unfortunately, there is rather a long length of
|
||
track to traverse before you reach the top...
|
||
|
||
For those willing to climb up out of the valley, there were stands of Kauri
|
||
trees, never milled, in the crinkles of the Kaimais; and the walking tracks
|
||
that took you to those trees could take you on over the ranges to the coast,
|
||
a stiff 25-kilometre hike. I explored the valley and the area around it
|
||
throughout my period at the hostel, but when I left I had not exhausted the
|
||
variety of the area.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Easter Comet:
|
||
|
||
The cold wind blew up the mountainside and rattled the loose top of the
|
||
billy. Birgit tapped the lid to reseat it. Fran<61>ois measured instant coffee into
|
||
the cups. I lay on my back nearby, peering up through Dannie's binoculars
|
||
in search of the elusive fuzzy Comet.
|
||
|
||
The return of Halley's comet was an event that I had been looking
|
||
forward to for many years, my anticipation rising with each year that passed
|
||
and brought no comet worth the title into naked-eye sight. Kahoutek had
|
||
been a null, and no other comet in my lifetime had lived up to the stories I
|
||
read about the monsters of the past. So I had built my hopes on Halley's,
|
||
which had a good track record.
|
||
|
||
Easter 1986 had been listed as a good time to see the comet. Mountains
|
||
are good places to see comets from. Here I was with a major comet coming -
|
||
- and me living on a mountainside. All I needed was a reason to get up at
|
||
1am to climb the mountain. A hostel-full of hostellers would surely yield a
|
||
group interested in comet-watching? And so I scheduled a major weekend
|
||
event for Easter at Te Aroha, including all the usual attractions of the area
|
||
plus a barbecue, a walk around the Waiorongomai, etc. I arranged for
|
||
overflow accommodation in the town in case more people turned up than
|
||
could fit in the hostel. I bought enough food for a small army.
|
||
|
||
In the event, there were never more than eight people staying at the hostel
|
||
on any given day over the weekend. They were: Birgit and Fran<61>ois
|
||
(Canada), Margaret and Michael and Andrew (US), Derek (England), Ina
|
||
(Germany), Joerg and Madelene and Marilene (Australia). (That's ten
|
||
people, but Madelene and Marilene stayed only one night.) However, two
|
||
out of the three that arrived on Thursday were interested in the walk, so that
|
||
worked out. And here we were, halfway up the road, brewing a cup of coffee
|
||
against the cold.
|
||
|
||
I finally spotted a fuzzy dot, more or less where the comet should be. So
|
||
far so good. The next step was more trouble, since I had to describe where
|
||
it was to the others. By the time we were all agreed that each had seen the
|
||
same (possibly cometal) object, the coffee water was about as warm as it
|
||
was going to get and our hands were turning blue.
|
||
The temperature was not surprising, since it was about 2:30 am of an
|
||
autumn morning and the weather was not clement. The major obstacle to
|
||
finding the comet had not been its dimness and small size, but drifting high
|
||
cloud -- the forerunners of a rain mass. We were all wrapped up as warmly
|
||
as possible, but no matter how we huddled into our coats, the wind slid
|
||
icicles into the corners of our eyes and lapped a frigid tide around our
|
||
ankles.
|
||
|
||
We had paused for coffee and comet at a point where the road bent
|
||
around the back of the mountain and the wind was cut into eddies. Now,
|
||
coffee downed and binoculars back in their case, we resumed our ascent of
|
||
the mountain. The road was gravel, and existed to link the tower at the
|
||
summit with the rest of the world. It started at the northern edge of the
|
||
town and wound its way up and south around the back of the mountain
|
||
before switchbacking northwards and winding al the way back again, to reach
|
||
the summit just as it reached the front of the mountain. It was a ten-
|
||
kilometre trudge, and the only reason we had chosen to climb the mountain
|
||
this way was because the other way -- straight up the track from the Domain
|
||
-- was too dangerous in the dark and, since it lay across the front side of the
|
||
mountain, was liable to interference from the town's lights in any place
|
||
suitable for comet watching, which would tend to dim the comet slightly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Requiem -- Easter '86. In case I'm not here
|
||
and anyone wonders, the final score was:
|
||
|
||
27/3 THURSDAY. Three hostellers. Hot tubs,
|
||
early to bed.
|
||
28/3 FRIDAY. Manager & 2 hardy Hostellers
|
||
arise at 1am and climb the mountain for
|
||
the sunrise. Stop partway to view Hal-
|
||
ley's Comet (success!). Very cold at the
|
||
top, but the beauty warmed our souls. On
|
||
the way back we walked the new Tui Domain
|
||
track -- excellent value! A short-cut
|
||
back to the hostel from the old reservoir
|
||
finished it all off with a good laugh
|
||
(but only later). Rest of the day used to
|
||
recover in. Six hostellers this night.
|
||
29/3 SATURDAY. Rained morning but afternoon
|
||
fine. Manager and five foolhardy hostel-
|
||
lers set off to explore part of the Waio-
|
||
rongomai -- Water Race Track, Butler's
|
||
Incline, Stables, Buck Rock, then down to
|
||
Bulldozer Track and back, in time for the
|
||
barbecue. With locals, seventeen people
|
||
(Manager, 8 Hostellers, 8 locals) enjoyed
|
||
this everyone-join-in feast. A high
|
||
point. Blessings to everyone. Last night
|
||
5 people crammed into a 4-person spa.
|
||
Tonight we managed to get 9 into the 8-
|
||
person tub. Brilliant fun.
|
||
30/3 SUNDAY. After sundry changes of plan...
|
||
a party of 10 (6 Hostellers plus Manager
|
||
plus driver's children plus driver --
|
||
thanks, Helen!) set off to challenge
|
||
Wairere Falls and picnic atop the de-
|
||
feated obstacle. Probably the most suc-
|
||
cessful event yet, apart from the barbe-
|
||
cue. Must repeat this some time soon --
|
||
it can stand the repetition. 8 people in
|
||
the 8-person tub was neither as cozy nor
|
||
as crowded as 9, come the hot spa time. 8
|
||
Hostellers here tonight.
|
||
31/3 MONDAY. The mass exodus left us with 4
|
||
Hostellers to climb the mountain (threat-
|
||
ening weather canned the hope of a sunset
|
||
picnic). The main party made it to the
|
||
top in 1 hour 31 minutes, and the Manager
|
||
was the first to the trig point after
|
||
beating off some determined challenges
|
||
from American quarters. Excellent view --
|
||
White Island, Mt Edgecumbe, Mt Karioi, Mt
|
||
Pirongia, Hamilton, Thames, Matamata.
|
||
Back via Tui Domain track (none of the
|
||
present party had been there on Thursday)
|
||
and a raucous, laughing visit to the
|
||
Pools.
|
||
-- from the Visitor's Book
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
We climbed. Every so often we could look up and see the gleam of lights
|
||
in the blockhouse that served the tower. They seemed invitingly close, but
|
||
approached with horrible sloth. Then they were cut off entirely as we
|
||
approached the switchback, and thereafter we climbed in inky darkness until
|
||
the final few metres, where the gravel turned to asphalt and the lights cast
|
||
a faint gleam over the damp surface.
|
||
|
||
By the time we had rounded the blockhouse and clambered up the small
|
||
fragment of original summit, atop which the trig point perched, the cloud
|
||
had covered the sky and had lowered to brush the mountain. We debated
|
||
going straight back down, then decided to wait for the dawn: sunrise on Te
|
||
Aroha, with the red globe sizzling from the sea in a fury of pink clouds, was
|
||
not a sight to be missed.
|
||
|
||
We huddled together like seals, mingling what warmth we could and
|
||
draping ourselves in blankets brought with us from the hostel. We laughed
|
||
and talked and told jokes and cursed the cold and shivered. We were more
|
||
than half mad from fatigue. And the grey mist lightened and lightened, took
|
||
on a rosy glow -- and never did let us see the sun rise.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
That easter gave me plenty of other memories, which -- alas! -- I simply can't
|
||
fit even in the monstrously bloated space available here. See the sidebar at
|
||
left for a concise account, taken from the account I wrote into the Visitor's
|
||
Book later. Although the group was much smaller than hoped-for, everyone
|
||
participated to the full, so that we got a good turnout for most events
|
||
anyway.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps I should amplify on some points mentioned in the sidebar,
|
||
though. Helen, the driver on the trip to Wairere Falls, was Dannie's wife.
|
||
The Falls themselves are about 25 kilometres south of Te Aroha, and drop
|
||
about a hundred metres in one step. The water level was low when we went
|
||
there, but the volume of water was still quite impressive -- especially con-
|
||
sidering the fact that the stream responsible ran only a few kilometres before
|
||
leaving the Kaimais via the Falls. The area is covered by particularly good
|
||
forest, and is very beautiful. Most hostellers did not go there, however,
|
||
because of the distance involved.
|
||
|
||
The `tubs' and `Pools' refer to Te Aroha's major tourist attraction other
|
||
than the mountain, and that is the exceptionally fine hot mineral waters that
|
||
rise in the town's park, the Domain. In one place, close to the start of the
|
||
track up the mountain, there is a soda-water geyser that spouts about every
|
||
half hour. Water is siphoned from below the geyser and elsewhere to fill the
|
||
tubs in a set of bath houses. There are six tubs in use: one old, large,
|
||
rectangular one and five newer, circular ones, each in its own private room.
|
||
Two are designed for two people, two for four, and the central one for eight
|
||
people. The price in 1986 was $2.00 per person per half-hour period. The
|
||
price was very reasonable. The water was cleaner and much less sulphureous
|
||
than that at Rotorua. Meningitis amoebae had never been detected (though
|
||
it is routine precaution not to duck your head in any hot pool in NZ).
|
||
Visitors could warm or cool the water by manipulating a pair of taps. Pumps
|
||
forced air through leaky tubes, so that visitors could enjoy a spa or a soak
|
||
at the flick of a switch. Louvre windows allowed control of ventilation. Each
|
||
pool had a cold shower adjacent to it, for those wanting to rinse off (strong
|
||
hearts required!).
|
||
|
||
The pools were visited by pretty nearly everyone who came through the
|
||
hostel, and it was common practice to collect as many hostellers as possible
|
||
and go as a group. No two groups were identical, and the experience was
|
||
different every time. Sometimes people would be modest and wear swimsuits;
|
||
more often everyone would strip off; occasionally some would do one thing
|
||
and others the other. Sometimes the groups were all-male, sometimes all-
|
||
female, most often mixed. The nationalities were the most mixed of all,
|
||
though after a time some national traits did stand out. For one thing, a
|
||
mixed group never had two Japanese of opposite sex (though Japanese
|
||
couples would go together). Many US men clung grimly to their trunks, even
|
||
if the rest of the party was nude; others would hang back until they saw what
|
||
the rest of the group was doing. US women were less hesitant, and tended
|
||
either to cling to their swimsuits no matter what, or be the first to throw
|
||
them aside. Few European men thought twice about stripping down, while
|
||
European women would usually go topless but less frequently nude. The men
|
||
were more likely to use the cold showers (and to do so more than once in
|
||
a visit). The groups would usually arrange themselves around the tub in
|
||
alternating male-female-male order. Sometimes the group would sprawl, legs
|
||
and arms mingling in a snaky mass in the middle of the tub and over the
|
||
sides of it; other times people would sit primly, arms and legs tucked in, as
|
||
if avoiding contact with their neighbours. Topics of conversation depended
|
||
on the makeup of the group, but conversation tended to dwindle after the
|
||
first fifteen minutes, as everyone relaxed. Sometimes the cold tap would be
|
||
on, sometimes the hot, depending on the preferences of the most
|
||
temperature-affected people in the group. Whatever the group, the walk
|
||
back to the hostel afterwards always took much longer and was much more
|
||
sociable than the outward trip. The hot water performed miracles of barrier-
|
||
breaking between the participants.
|
||
|
||
Te Aroha's hot pools have a long history. They fertilised the town's
|
||
settlement in 1880, providing not only better water than Rotorua, but being
|
||
closer to Auckland as well. People travelled long distances to enjoy the
|
||
`therapeutic' waters. I came across a reproduction of an old poster
|
||
advertising the spas, which labelled them the `southern Bethesda' and
|
||
illustrated itself with various semi-clad bodies floating in bliss in the steaming
|
||
pools. The gold-mining period must have been a boom-time for the pools,
|
||
which, alas, barely make their expenses today.
|
||
|
||
A final item that deserves mention here is the farm run by a couple of
|
||
local YHA members. They welcomed hostellers interested in seeing a day on
|
||
a NZ dairy farm. Sometimes they would invite the hosteller to stay for
|
||
dinner, too, though by no means always. NZ and Australian hostellers
|
||
weren't too interested in this trip, but most other visitors who did it came
|
||
back rosy-eyed and singing its praises.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Cycle-Tour:
|
||
|
||
Around the beginning of 1986, I bought a second-hand bicycle. I used it for
|
||
local (i.e. within a five to ten kilometre radius of Te Aroha) travel for a
|
||
while before I bought a set of pannier bags and other accessories and
|
||
converted it for cycle-touring. Now I could begin the exploration of the
|
||
nearer North island that I had been looking forward to for so long!
|
||
|
||
One pleasant aspect of the job of managing Te Aroha was that my relief
|
||
manager -- Dannie --was always keen to take over the job for a while. (As
|
||
mentioned, he had long contended that a resident manager was an
|
||
unnecessary expense on the hostel's slim funds.) He was quite happy to have
|
||
whoever was resident at any time go away for a few days and let his family
|
||
and the local Branch run things. In fact, he encouraged this. It fitted in with
|
||
my own plans, so I was only too pleased to do so.
|
||
|
||
My pattern was to work seven days a week for a month or so, then take
|
||
several days off at once -- joining the `saved' weekends together. Whereas a
|
||
mere two-day weekend could never have allowed me to go very far away, a
|
||
four- or six-day one would.
|
||
|
||
In sitting down to check dates and places for this section of `History' I
|
||
discovered that I had been on rather a lot of trips on my bike. To talk about
|
||
all of them would require more space than even SECANT makes available.
|
||
Besides which, some of them tend to blur together in my memory. So I've
|
||
decided to talk about a few of the major ones, and drag in occasional refer-
|
||
ences to events that happened in the ones that I'm not reporting. In the case
|
||
of my Opoutere visits in particular there is a certain element of
|
||
`reconstruction' in the tale told here. Everything I report, I did; but I don't
|
||
guarantee it happened on that particular trip! Memory is a wonderful
|
||
process.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Coromandel:
|
||
|
||
My very first tour was quite cautious in terms of daily distances; but given
|
||
the shape of the land I intended to explore, an ambitious milage would be
|
||
asking for trouble.
|
||
|
||
The Coromandel Peninsula is the northern end of the group of fold-
|
||
mountains that Mt Te Aroha figures so prominently in. It projects from the
|
||
body of the North Island like the dorsal fin of a shark; eighty kilometres
|
||
north to south and from twenty to forty kilometres east to west. The spine
|
||
of the peninsula reaches forested peaks of three-quarters of a kilometre, and
|
||
except for small pockets of alluvial plain where streams and rivers come
|
||
down to the sea, the spine makes up the entire area of the peninsula. On the
|
||
east it is beaten by the Pacific Ocean; on the west washes the tranquil Firth
|
||
of thames. The Firth is gradually shortening as the rivers running down from
|
||
the Hapuakohe (Hah-poo-ah-koh-hee) & Ruahine/Coromandel Ranges silt
|
||
it up and add the new land to the Hauraki Plains.
|
||
|
||
There are five main towns on the Peninsula, which is rather more densely
|
||
populated than the Marlborough Sounds I talked about in `History' Part
|
||
Four. Thames, the largest, has about 6000 people year-round. Whangamata
|
||
(Fahng-gah-m'-tah), next largest, has a variable population of about 2000 in
|
||
winter and 25000 in summer (yes, a twelve-fold difference between seasons).
|
||
Whitianga (Fitt-ee-ahng-gah) is about the same size as Whangamata is in
|
||
winter. Coromandel and Pauanui (Pow-wah-noo-ee) are both around or
|
||
below the thousand mark. Apart from, and scattered around, these towns,
|
||
there is a large but variable number of people who cannot be said to live in
|
||
any -- retired, holidaymakers, the rich and the poor, the dropouts and the
|
||
hermits.
|
||
|
||
Travel on the peninsula is hindered not only by the landform (the shortest
|
||
route from Thames to Whitianga involves cresting a 448-metre pass just eight
|
||
kilometres inland) but by the condition of the roads. Despite mammoth
|
||
efforts by the Ministry of Works, most roads -- including sections of State
|
||
Highway 25 -- are not yet paved. Dirt roads are bad enough in a car; on a
|
||
bike they cause agony!
|
||
|
||
I set out from Te Aroha on the 3rd of february, two days after my 28th
|
||
birthday. I whizzed down the hill from the hostel, made a tricky speed-turn
|
||
onto Highway 26, and headed north. I was quite pleased with a 55-minute
|
||
run to Paeroa (21 km from Te Aroha), and started to feel that perhaps this
|
||
cycle-touring business was not as hard as the hostellers made it out to be. I
|
||
had a drink and pushed on, following the highway along the base of the
|
||
Coromandels. I was in new territory, now. I had been through Paeroa many
|
||
times in the past, but always via State Highway 2.
|
||
|
||
My second hour was not quite so easy, and I was glad to stop for a rest
|
||
at the hamlet of Puriri (Poo-rih-ree): a petrol station, a small store, and a
|
||
handful of houses. Forty kilometres from Te Aroha, two hours fifteen
|
||
minutes used. Not so good, and the day was getting very warm.
|
||
But on average there was a slight seaward slope to the land. That helped a
|
||
lot. When I moved on from Puriri I dropped down a gear from five in high
|
||
ratio to four in high ratio (or ninth to seventh out of ten gears). The land
|
||
was starting to fall and rise a little and I needed the help that the lower gear
|
||
offered. Shortly I crossed Highway 25 at Kopu (Koh-poo). The map says I
|
||
was close to the Waihou (wye-hoo) River, but I don't remember seeing that.
|
||
But even without looking at the map, I could tell that I was nearing Thames:
|
||
there was a rapid increase in the density of houses, and I was passing
|
||
occasional factories.
|
||
|
||
It took me three and a half hours to cover the 55 kilometres from Te
|
||
Aroha to Thames -- a miserable average! But I felt quite good as I filtered
|
||
through lunchtime traffic to Sunkist Lodge, a private hostel where I planned
|
||
to stay the night. My modest first step in cycle-touring had proved successful.
|
||
|
||
I remember little of this particular stopover at Sunkist; I ate, worked on
|
||
my bike, went downtown to look around, and then went to bed. If anything
|
||
else happened, my memory has not bothered to record it.
|
||
|
||
Thames cramps itself into the narrow stretch of flattish land that separates
|
||
the mountains from the water. I was able to walk the width of the town in
|
||
five minutes. But it rambles along the shore for several kilometres, as I
|
||
noticed the next day when I cycled on. _
|
||
|
||
The morning was cloudy, but that later cleared and the day became very
|
||
hot and cloudless. The road undulated along the shoreline: there was only
|
||
a narrow strip of `flat' land between the water and the slopes of the
|
||
mountains. The first 30 kilometres went quite smoothly, though my legs (and
|
||
my bum!) were sore from the effort the day before. A painful derriere is the
|
||
price a cyclist pays when setting out after a break of more than a few days.
|
||
I don't remember how long the first section of this day's ride took, but I do
|
||
remember a break at Tapu (Tah-poo) for a drink.
|
||
|
||
This `honeymoon' 30 km ended at the base of a hill. The road swerved
|
||
inland and climbed (it seemed, looking up from the base) vertically into the
|
||
sky. Hot, sweaty, and not at all eager to face this ogre, I wheeled my bike
|
||
down onto a nearby beach and went for a swim. The water was in icy
|
||
contrast to the steam my body had been exuding. Ten minutes left me
|
||
refreshed and ready to tackle the hill.
|
||
|
||
I had a speedometer on my bike. So I know that the first grade was 2
|
||
kilometres of grueling climb. I walked my bike most of it: the first hundred
|
||
metres convinced me that either (a) I needed a finer first gear for the bike
|
||
or (b) I needed to fitten up before attempting hills with the insouciance of
|
||
the experienced cyclists I'd seen while hitching around...
|
||
|
||
Half a kilometre of glorious downhill travel, then another 2 km climb. I
|
||
had to stop half way up this one and rest: I overexerted myself and felt quite
|
||
faint from the heat. But I had my reward -- a four kilometre freewheel down
|
||
to the flats around Manaia (Mah-nye-ah) Harbour. Then a short stretch of
|
||
level riding before a three-kilometre hill (three up, three down). (A side
|
||
note: on the downgrades I hit 60 kph, and thought this noteworthy. If
|
||
someone had told me that within a couple of months I would be coasting at
|
||
up to 95 kph I'd have told them they were nuts. But it happened, and why
|
||
I am still alive to tell about it I don't know!)
|
||
|
||
I cruised into Coromandel feeling tired but exultant. I had handled some
|
||
hills! Following a set of signposts I took the `Long Bay' road at a crossroads
|
||
and found myself a tent site and all the salt water I wanted in a motorcamp,
|
||
for the very reasonable sum of $3.50 per night. Ten cents in a slot gave me
|
||
a very good shower, and after resting up on the stony beach till after
|
||
sundown (the sunset was beautiful -- brilliantly coloured, with a few wisps
|
||
of high cloud to add contrast) I went to my tent and fell asleep.
|
||
|
||
The next day I declared to be a `rest day'. My bum was too sore to let me
|
||
ride far. Instead I went into Coromandel and had a look around. There is
|
||
a small museum devoted to the gold and kauri days. I enjoyed the three
|
||
hours I spent wandering and looking. I bought a few small fragments of gum
|
||
as keepsakes. Then I went back to the camp and had a laze on the beach.
|
||
The holiday season was well-advanced but there were still many families
|
||
staying in tents and caravans at the camp. I spent a while talking to a young
|
||
couple from Auckland, but the details of the conversation have slipped away.
|
||
All small talk, I suppose; but it passed the afternoon pleasantly. Another
|
||
good sunset, and again to bed and sleep early.
|
||
|
||
So far the road had been good -- well maintained and, more importantly,
|
||
topped with asphalt. My next day's effort showed me the other face of the
|
||
Coromandel. I had been hoping to cycle north to Cape Colville, but had
|
||
foolishly set out from Te Aroha with no spare tyre. Since all my gear was
|
||
stored in a pair of rear panniers and an overnight back secured above them,
|
||
my back tire was carrying quite a load. If it became irreparably damaged
|
||
north of Coromandel, I faced an inconvenient delay and a humiliating
|
||
dependence on hitching back to Coromandel for a new one. (Why I didn't
|
||
just buy a new one before going north, I can't remember. I wasn't
|
||
particularly short of cash, as I proved later on when the back tire did die
|
||
under me. It's a mystery to me today.) So I decided to go to Whitianga.
|
||
Hearing that there were extensive patches of gravel on Highway 25 between
|
||
Coromandel and Whitianga, I said `whatthehell' and took the scenic route -
|
||
- the secondary road which follows the courses of the Waiau (Wye-ow) and
|
||
Mahakirau (Mah-ha-kee-rah-ow) Rivers. More fool me. Instead of isolated
|
||
gravel, I found myself on almost twenty kilometres of almost continuous dirt!
|
||
What's more, the road climbed much higher than Highway 25 would have
|
||
demanded of me. I lost almost an hour on the far side of the pass, repairing
|
||
a punctured tire (I'd hit too large a stone too hard while enjoying the
|
||
freewheeling downgrade). But I did enjoy the sensation of isolation and
|
||
independence. There were many beautiful views as the road crawled along
|
||
the face of the mountain with deep, green, forested valleys and deep, sun-
|
||
faded sky.
|
||
|
||
When I met Highway 25 on the other side of the peninsula, I turned left
|
||
and made my way into Whitianga to look around and have a rest. The place
|
||
was dead, so I hailed a taxi and -- well, actually I did hail a taxi of sorts: to
|
||
get me across a very narrow gap of water I used a ferry. 90c/ to cover 200
|
||
metres of water. But it cut more than 10 kilometres off the distance I still
|
||
had to travel that day. I followed a set of winding dirt roads through
|
||
moderately-well-settled holiday area, that finally brought me to Hot Water
|
||
Beach.
|
||
|
||
Hot Water beach is an otherwise ordinary beach that has as its sole
|
||
distinction a couple of springs of thermal water which trickle their boiling
|
||
liquid up through the sand near the bases of some boulders. The springs are
|
||
covered by the sea at high tide, but when the sea withdraws the area is
|
||
rapidly covered by an alternative tide: one of people busily digging the pools
|
||
in which they hope to enjoy a relaxing salty wallow. By the time the sea
|
||
returns, the area near the springs resembles a relief map of Venice with the
|
||
intricate network of little sandy canals that have been dug to divert the water
|
||
(hot from the springs, cool from the sea to keep the temperature bearable)
|
||
where it is wanted. On occasion latecomers, desperate to fend off the
|
||
advancing waves as long as possible, rear massive dikes of sand on their
|
||
seawards side. I'm sure we're all familiar with what one small child can do
|
||
to sand between one tide and the next; imagine fifteen or twenty adults,
|
||
equipped with full-size shovels and spades, cooperating frantically in a similar
|
||
endeavour, egged on by their bonelessly relaxed friends. And all their efforts
|
||
in vain: the sea rises inexorably and crashes through the barrier, flushing the
|
||
bathers from their holes and erasing all signs of human works -- until the
|
||
next low tide.
|
||
|
||
Here I stayed two nights. Nights -- ah, yes, that brings to mind the after-
|
||
dark frolics. For by day the population of the wallows would be families, in
|
||
full bathing attire; but by night the young adults would make the area their
|
||
own. Torches were forbidden, and the typical attire was the skin one was
|
||
born with. Not that much happened that Mrs Grundy could have called
|
||
`promiscuous'; sand and hot seawater worked together to discourage that!
|
||
But in the anonymity of the darkness, hands and feet found their way into
|
||
very strange places, even if you were perfectly motionless and in a wallow
|
||
you'd thought you had all to yourself.
|
||
|
||
The beach itself is set in a beautiful semicircular bay, surrounded by green
|
||
hills and open to the Pacific. I can't remember what I paid for the tent site
|
||
I used, but I believe it was about $5.00 per night, which in NZ at that time,
|
||
especially considering the 20c/ showers, was quite a high tariff. On the other
|
||
hand, the cost of supplying the amenities in such a remote location must
|
||
have been quite high -- perhaps this balances the equation somewhat.
|
||
Certainly, it was nice to be able to rinse away the salt with a hot shower.
|
||
|
||
Rested and thoroughly refreshed, I rode away on the 8th of february. My
|
||
first three sections of cycling -- 55 km to Thames and 54 to Coromandel,
|
||
then 48 rough ones to Hot Water Beach, had hardened my muscles. I now
|
||
intended to try another small 48-kilometre stage, but this one involved
|
||
features from all three earlier stages: flat, undulating, hilly, and dirt road. An
|
||
interesting challenge.
|
||
|
||
I'll pass over most of that ride -- you've read similar passages already. The
|
||
only incident that stands out in memory is discovering, while coasting down
|
||
a long slope near Tairua (Tye-roo-ah), that my back tire was going `flat'. I'd
|
||
hit 60 kph a couple of times and assumed that in one of those peaks I'd
|
||
pinched the tyre on a stone. You can imagine my horror when I got off the
|
||
bike at the bottom of the hill, only to discover that the reason it had gone
|
||
flat was that the tire had worn through in places, and in one such place
|
||
contact with the road had finally worn through the inner tube as well! I am
|
||
here today to bore you with my adventures only because the air escaped
|
||
slowly. If it had `blown out' while I was doing 60 on a turn, I'd have reached
|
||
the base of the hill the fast way -- over the edge.
|
||
|
||
But my luck held, and a man stopped and gave me a lift in to Tairua,
|
||
where I managed to find a garage that stocked both tires and tubes. My only
|
||
loss was the $30 that these necessary replacements cost me. (An indication
|
||
of the wear that cycle-touring adds to a bike can be gained by considering
|
||
that the tire had been new when I bought the bike, and that when I left Te
|
||
Aroha it still looked practically unworn. About 175 km of Coromandel roads
|
||
had simply destroyed it.)
|
||
|
||
Towards sundown I turned off Highway 25 to take a familiar road to my
|
||
day's destination: the YHA Hostel at Opoutere (Oh-poo-teh-ree). It felt like
|
||
coming home; for if the hostel at Pittwater (north of Sydney) is my favourite
|
||
Australian hostel, that at Opoutere is my favourite in New Zealand.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Opoutere:
|
||
|
||
Opoutere YHA is located by the Wharekawa Harbour, a tidal estuary of the
|
||
river of the same name. It is quite popular, registering four to five times the
|
||
usage of Te Aroha, which puts it into the small-medium range for NZ
|
||
hostels (which range from less than 1000 hosteller-nights (`overnights') to
|
||
more than 22000). Even more than Te Aroha, however, Opoutere survives
|
||
because those who come there stay several days; the hostel is somewhat
|
||
difficult of access for those without wheels, since the bus service is infrequent
|
||
and the hostel is several kilometres off the main road.
|
||
|
||
The hostel comprises three dormitory buildings, a house for the Manager,
|
||
and a fairly large set of grounds. It is rated at 32 beds but can fit quite a few
|
||
more people at need. It snuggles beneath a moderately high cliff, from which
|
||
some good views of the area can be obtained, and is set in native bush. (One
|
||
interesting feature of the grounds is the two young kauri trees planted by the
|
||
manager in around 1981 and 1983. In 1986 the latter was a slender sapling
|
||
a bit taller than a man, and the former was a solid young tree about four
|
||
metres high. Kauris are slow to grow but are enormously long-lived. These
|
||
may outlast the hostel.)
|
||
|
||
Walk left out of the main gate and down the road a hundred metres or so,
|
||
then turn right past the public outhouses. Down a track to a car park, cross
|
||
a bridge slung over a branch the estuary, walk through the pines -- and you
|
||
emerge on my favourite NZ beach. Opoutere Beach: four and a half
|
||
kilometres of golden sand backed by dunes and trees and cliffs, one end the
|
||
mouth of the estuary, the other a rocky prominence.
|
||
|
||
There is a bird sanctuary at the estuary end, facing onto the estuary. The
|
||
estuary itself is a cornucopia of edible shellfish. The waves on the outer
|
||
beach are gentle or rough as the mood and the tides take them, but on the
|
||
estuary side the surface laps gently on only slightly muddy banks. The hostel
|
||
boasts a couple of kayaks (usually out of commission) with which the
|
||
estuary's corners can be explored. (But watch out for the rip at the mouth
|
||
on the ebb!) An afternoon with a pair of binoculars will prove rewarding for
|
||
the birdwatcher.
|
||
|
||
The surf-lashed outer beach is often almost deserted on weekdays (at
|
||
weekends, particularly on Sundays, families move in), maybe four people in
|
||
the whole length. As a bonus, by tacit agreement of most of the locals,
|
||
clothing on the beach is optional. The pursuit of the all-over tan is thus
|
||
simplified.
|
||
|
||
Towards the north end, a small stream comes down to the sea. Cross the
|
||
stream and the remaining sand, and suddenly cliffs draw in close to the
|
||
shoreline. Follow the cliffs around and you will find a quiet retreat, built
|
||
partly into a cave, where you might spend a night or two if you're short of
|
||
money or just want to be away from civilisation for a while. (Definitely slum
|
||
quarters, unfortunately, but you can always sleep outside if you don't trust
|
||
the filthy sponge-rubber mattress.)
|
||
|
||
The sunsets are pretty, too, to me, who was raised to watch the sun
|
||
descend into the sea. At Opoutere the sunset is behind anyone gazing out
|
||
to sea, but the constantly changing play of the light as the night creeps up
|
||
the eastern horizon is endlessly fascinating. The subtle golds and greens and
|
||
blues in the sky, reflected by the water and merging with the water's own
|
||
darker swirling and the fading pink sea-foam, framed by the gold sand and
|
||
the heavy green trees, are very lovely.
|
||
|
||
Several islands are visible from the dunes. The closest is a group of three:
|
||
in order of proximity Rabbit, Penguin, and Slipper. The largest and farthest
|
||
is Slipper, and this island figured in world news a couple of years back when
|
||
possible graveyards for the Rainbow Warrior were being considered. At one
|
||
time it looked as if the ship would be scuttled in shallow water near Slipper
|
||
island, where people could come and see it, a perpetual reminder of an
|
||
infamous deed by a country `friendly' to NZ.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A Walk in the Dark
|
||
|
||
The night was sultry. After tossing for several hours in my little room in the
|
||
corner of the big building, I gave up. I pulled on my togs and scuffed into
|
||
my jandals; stuffed towel, t-shirt and shorts into a bag, along with a torch,
|
||
and stepped out.
|
||
|
||
I paused, listening, a moment on the planking of the covered walkway that
|
||
joins the hostel buildings together. The night-sounds were muted, stifled by
|
||
the heavy air. A faint wind-sigh, a rustle of leaves. Somewhere an opossum
|
||
grunted. Through the open door of the dormitory behind I could hear the
|
||
snores of hostellers not cursed by an attack of insomnia.
|
||
|
||
Leaving the door open to allow the almost nonexistent breeze what
|
||
circulation it could, I stepped forward, off the walkway, towards the main
|
||
gate. The cloud overhead blocked off the stars, the moon was elsewhere,
|
||
flirting with the sun, and except for the hostel lights the darkness was nearly
|
||
absolute. I didn't have any particular place to go, but there was a half-
|
||
formed idea of walking down to the beach. In this dark, I preferred the open
|
||
gape of the gate to the overgrown short-cut past the Manager's house that
|
||
was my usual, daytime, route.
|
||
|
||
I crossed the area of lawn that lies in the shallow triangle formed by the
|
||
hostel buildings. My left foot came down on a protruding foot of a wooden
|
||
table, and I stopped to rub it. I remembered sitting in this very spot this
|
||
afternoon, chatting with the others and sharing travel stories with them. I
|
||
had recounted my own recent experiences at Hot Water Beach, and the
|
||
moment of shock when I discovered my worn-through tire. Others added
|
||
stories about hitching, about driving, and about the odd goings-on when they
|
||
had camped for the night in a field full of heifers. (This last item involved
|
||
dim light and a beast that decided the tent ropes made a good place to
|
||
scratch. Seeing the small horns and the absence of an udder's silhouette, the
|
||
two incautious Canadians had sprinted ingloriously for the fence for fear that
|
||
the `bull' might decide to rub up against them. The heifer, startled by the
|
||
eruption of two noisy and unexpected humans from the tent, ran hastily in
|
||
the opposite direction.)
|
||
|
||
My foot was still sore, but I hadn't left my bed in order to squat at a
|
||
picnic table. I suffer these attacks of sleeplessness from time to time, and
|
||
have learned through experience that the only way to deal with them -- short
|
||
of slugging myself with an unhealthy dose of aspirin -- is activity, since
|
||
otherwise I fret and toss and get up in the morning with aching muscles and
|
||
a pounding headache.
|
||
|
||
Leaving the table, I walked carefully into the dark until my toe brushed
|
||
one of the logs that mark off the driveway from the lawn. Previous Managers
|
||
had nurtured a bamboo hedge on the grounds. This hedge, left to itself for
|
||
a long time, had spread its children across the hostel grounds. Ken, the
|
||
present Manager, was gradually reducing the upstart growth, but here and
|
||
there in the lawn there remained sharp spikes of bamboo, tips shorn off by
|
||
the mower. By day it was safe enough to wander around in jandals, or even
|
||
barefoot, but I was not game to risk a needle in the dark.
|
||
|
||
I drifted down the driveway, past half-sensed trees and bushes. At the
|
||
younger kauri seedling I paused, to stroke its trunk and leaves a while,
|
||
wandering how long it will live after I am gone and forgotten. Or will it be
|
||
cut down in its prime by some as-yet unknown agency? I hope not!
|
||
|
||
Down the slight slope to the gate, left open by some late-arriving hosteller.
|
||
Cross the road and carefully clamber down the rude track to the graveyard
|
||
made by generations of hostellers disposing of the attire of their latest meal
|
||
by dumping the empty shells into the estuary at this closest point to the
|
||
hostel. I sat on a hummock of grass by the edge of the water, listening to the
|
||
gentle waves and sniffing the pungent odour of that mud not presently
|
||
covered by water. I could see a couple of lights gleaming on the far bank.
|
||
One of them was moving -- another mid-night walker, perhaps, or a possum-
|
||
hunter.
|
||
|
||
The breeze felt cooler here, perhaps because it had lost heat in its passage
|
||
over the cool water. I would have liked to stay here a while, thinking, in the
|
||
dark, but after the muggy hostel this cool tingle was almost unpleasantly
|
||
cold. Rather than pull on a t-shirt I pulled out the torch, using it to light my
|
||
way back up the tricky bank. At the road I put the torch away again: my
|
||
mood was still for darkness and the privacy of the night.
|
||
On impulse, I pulled the idea of a walk along the beach out of the
|
||
forgotten corner of my attention where it had been festering. The breeze
|
||
would be cooler still down there, and maybe stronger, but the activity of
|
||
walking would counteract that, and -- well, I did have some clothes to pull
|
||
on if required.
|
||
|
||
So I walked down the road, moving faster and straighter now that I had
|
||
a destination in mind. Everything was changed in the dark, and only
|
||
familiarity with the route stopped me from getting hopelessly lost. Through
|
||
the picnic area near the toilets (there was a caravan there, and the sound of
|
||
snoring). Down through the car park and onto the small footbridge that
|
||
arched so picturesquely over the tidal waters.
|
||
|
||
There was a ritual to crossing the bridge, for when I was young I had been
|
||
exposed to the game of poohsticks. In crossing this bridge, I would drop a
|
||
small twig over the edge and see which way the tide was running. Habit led
|
||
me to drop a twig, now. I couldn't see it fall, and the sound of its impact on
|
||
the water was lost in the whispering night. A pointless exercise, really, and
|
||
I laughed at myself. But I suppressed the impulse to get out the torch and
|
||
relocate my emissary twig. Instead I stumbled on over the bridge and down
|
||
onto the sand on the far side, entering the trees.
|
||
|
||
Until now I had thought that the night was dark. Under the pines lay a
|
||
shadow that defied penetration. I suddenly realised how dependent I was on
|
||
what faint visual cues there had been: the white road-edges, the white sand,
|
||
a half-sensed sheen from the light of those stars that occasionally managed
|
||
to send a glitter around a corner of the clouds. Now the last trace was gone,
|
||
and I was truly blind. But I pushed on for several minutes, stubbornly
|
||
refusing to push back the dark by recourse to my torch.
|
||
|
||
The darkness lay around me, but I found my ears, my nose, and my
|
||
questing limbs were able to pour into me such a volume of information that
|
||
I was unable to process it all: a whole world of sensation that my normal
|
||
dependence on sight blocked away. Trees sprang into existence before me
|
||
and faded away behind, each a breath of echoing stillness, an area of dead
|
||
air. My toes felt after the sand of the track, testing the texture for twigs and
|
||
grass-clumps, shuffling cautiously along the true route. My out-stretched
|
||
hands encountered bushes and tree branches, warning me when I strayed to
|
||
one side of the path or another. Through the trees ahead of me came the
|
||
sound of the surf. Stretching my hearing, I could hear the calls of the night
|
||
life: the `more pork!' of an owl, the grunt of a hedgehog, a distant crashing
|
||
of tree-branches that was probably opossums at play. Once a dog barked.
|
||
|
||
The belt of trees that backed the beach had long fascinated me. Although
|
||
in places there was a healthy native undergrowth, elsewhere the trees rose
|
||
from ground clothed only in fallen needles. This in itself was not so
|
||
wonderful, but the nature of the trees made it so: for I am used to the
|
||
bulbous silhouette of the native NZ forest. To walk through these stands of
|
||
tall pine was an eerie thing, and where the pines stood alone was strangest
|
||
of all. By day it reminded me of a cathedral, all tall spaces and arches,
|
||
carrying a stillness and time of its own. I would walk on the fallen needles
|
||
and fantasise about sleds fleeing through the European forest, wolves
|
||
slinking around the trunks, a young love walking to meet me. The birds
|
||
would sing and the wind would blow, and the trees would hold this place
|
||
apart from the rest of the world, my imagination expanding the forest across
|
||
half a continent and populating it with ents and elves (and hobbits). Science
|
||
fiction cannot entirely free us from the fantasies of our youth, particularly
|
||
in such an alien place.
|
||
|
||
I did not take the track that would carry me to those long open avenues.
|
||
By night, even with the torch to help, I could not do other than get
|
||
hopelessly lost. In my present mood, I would soon be fantasising dangers
|
||
creeping towards me from behind, dropping from above, or waiting beside
|
||
the track for me to come past them. In younger days, I was deathly afraid of
|
||
the dark. I can remember that when I was a Sea Scout, the only routes to or
|
||
from the scout den from my parents house would take me through lightless
|
||
streets. One route took me along a houseless street, lupin-lined and spooky;
|
||
another took me past a junkyard which had a particularly nasty watchdog
|
||
that sometimes got out and once chased my bike, snapping at my heels; and
|
||
the third was the route I took, through an industrial area, deserted and silent
|
||
but the best route left to me. It was a long time before I outgrew this fear,
|
||
and to this day it can be invoked by the right circumstances. So I stuck to
|
||
the thread of sandy track that led through banked undergrowth to the sea
|
||
by the shortest route.
|
||
|
||
Finally I did resort to my torch, at a fork in the path. Once the light was
|
||
present the sounds and sensations of the darkness receded, and I became
|
||
timid, clinging to sight like a castaway to a broom handle. I did not turn the
|
||
torch off again until I came out of the trees and started up the shoreward
|
||
side of the dunes.
|
||
|
||
So I came over the last crest with my night-sight weak and my other senses
|
||
only slowly picking up the slack. In front of me was a vast, continuous roar,
|
||
taking up half of my world. A coldness that had nothing to do with the
|
||
breeze was coming to me from out of that sound: perhaps a psychological
|
||
feeling, perhaps a phenomenon connected with the heat-sink represented by
|
||
the Pacific Ocean.
|
||
|
||
The clouds were breaking up slowly, and there were more stars out now.
|
||
As I walked down to the edge of the tide and scuffed my jandals through
|
||
stranded sea-froth, I watched out of the corners of my eyes, gradually picking
|
||
out the pale glimmer of the overlapping arcs of foam left by the waves. Then
|
||
the sea itself came up, a darkness that heaved and shuddered beneath a frail
|
||
lace garment.
|
||
|
||
I took off my togs and jandals, putting them carefully into my bag. Naked,
|
||
I saluted the sea, lover to loved.
|
||
|
||
I stepped on a stick of driftwood. On impulse, I picked it up and began
|
||
writing in the invisible sand with it. My name, first, then sentences half-
|
||
intended for whoever might walk here in the morning before the tide
|
||
banished the scratches with an offhand wave. Banal phrases, worthy of
|
||
neither recollection nor record here. Then, bored already, I trailed the stick
|
||
behind me, an unseen plow, as I walked north along the shoreline. Finally,
|
||
half an hour later, I climbed a dune and stuck the stick into the sand beside
|
||
me when I sat down, claiming the beach for my own with an imaginary flag.
|
||
|
||
Seated, I pulled on my t-shirt to avoid a chill; the temperature had fallen
|
||
several degrees since I started my walk, and even in the lee of an enfolding
|
||
dune I felt a bit chilled. But it was an automatic action; my mind was out in
|
||
the darkness, musing, playing with ideas. People I had known, places I had
|
||
been, people I had not known, places I had never been, people I could never
|
||
know and places I could never go. My life had been a pilgrimage; I was
|
||
never satisfied with wherever I was; I always wished to be beyond whatever
|
||
horizon I might walk within; and I did not know my destination.
|
||
|
||
One close friend confided once that I had always seemed to her to be
|
||
someone who was pretty sure of what he wanted to do. I found it hard to
|
||
explain the difference between the series of plans that I worked on from
|
||
moment to moment and the long-term blankness that lay beyond them. Once
|
||
I envied those who planned out their life in adolescence, and spent the next
|
||
thirty or forty years working out that plan. But I must confess that by the
|
||
time I found myself sitting on a sand dune above this lovely night-time
|
||
beach, that envy had turned to pity. Those people had security, and options
|
||
were open to them with their high-paying jobs and special skills that were
|
||
not available to me. But few of them ever used those options! They'd chug
|
||
along in their career, perhaps even marry and raise a family, and then one
|
||
day they'd wake up and find that they had run off the end of their track. It's
|
||
called `mid-life crisis'. But my whole life had been a mid-life crisis. I was
|
||
used to it, and resigned to the comparatively wretched old age that faced me
|
||
unless I Did Something to mitigate it. A good part of my internal search,
|
||
1985--86, was spent in thinking through just how I could accomplish the
|
||
things I wanted to do and yet set up a lifestyle that would help me when I
|
||
got too old to travel.
|
||
|
||
I jerked myself out of my reverie. The clouds were gone, and a cold wind
|
||
had sprung up. The sky over the eastern horizon was lightening to the
|
||
coming of the sun, still hours away. And now I felt sleepy. Whatever had
|
||
been going on in the back of my head to keep me awake all night had
|
||
resolved itself during this walk. My next step was obvious -- to return to
|
||
Australia and, this time, make a success of transplanting myself to a new
|
||
country; then use Australia as springboard to travel on around the world.
|
||
How to go about the later stages of this plan, and what I would do after the
|
||
five years or so allocated to its accomplishment had expired, I still did not
|
||
know. But I would think of something.
|
||
|
||
Rising, I turned my back on the beach and the sea and walked through the
|
||
dunes into the forest; needing no torch in the growing light that trickled in
|
||
through the ranked trunks behind me, turning everything into a cut-out
|
||
shadow-play; feeling no imaginary dangers in the darker reaches of the
|
||
forest.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Home Again:
|
||
|
||
The morning came when the last of my hoarded weekends for this trip ran
|
||
out and I had to go back to Te Aroha to be a hostel manager again. I was
|
||
not unwilling: I loved the job, and I loved Te Aroha, and even Opoutere was
|
||
best taken in carefully-rationed doses. So I loaded up my panniers and
|
||
stuffed my sleeping bag into the overnight bag, piled the load on my hapless
|
||
bike, said goodbye to Ken and Karen Griffin and the various Griffinlets, and
|
||
set out. This leg would be some 86 kilometres, my longest day's ride yet. But
|
||
I was confident: for I would be retracing my normal bus/hitching route
|
||
between Te Aroha and Opoutere, and I knew the terrain well. Hah! Now
|
||
was the time to discover that a section of road that looks fine from a car or
|
||
a bus can be a horror to a cyclist.
|
||
|
||
The lesson was not long in starting: a few kilometres down the highway,
|
||
I found myself in an undulating section of road. Somehow the downgrades
|
||
never seemed so long nor so steep as the upgrades; and what was more, a
|
||
breeze had come out of nowhere to blast itself into my face -- strengthening
|
||
if I went downhill, dying out entirely on the slow uphill slogs when I most
|
||
needed the ventilation. I was learning one of the oldest cycle-touring
|
||
maxims: the wind always comes from ahead. The cyclists hail -- `May the
|
||
wind blow up your arse!' -- took on true life and meaning to me for the first
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
Down to Whangamata, through the new bypass, then on to Waihi, where
|
||
I turned right onto Highway 2. This brought me into the beautiful
|
||
Karangahake (Kah-rang-gah-hak-kee) Gorge, which divides the Coromandel
|
||
from the Kaimai Ranges. It is an old gold-mining area, and in recent times
|
||
steps have been taken to help preserve that heritage. But more immediately
|
||
important: the river that runs through the gorge provides good swimming for
|
||
overheated cyclists!
|
||
|
||
Paeroa...left over the bridge and slog 21 kilometres uphill...left and up the
|
||
mountain to the hostel. 6 1/2 hours from Opoutere. Home.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Interlude==================================
|
||
|
||
Friendship Bands:
|
||
|
||
`No,' said Rosemarie, `Push it up through the loop of the "4". Then pull it
|
||
tight.'
|
||
|
||
We were sitting on the porch of the hostel on a sunny February day.
|
||
There were a few clouds scattered around the corners of the sky, chasing
|
||
their shadows across the slopes of the distant ridge-lines. We were the only
|
||
people around the hostel, unless Rosemarie's friend Esther was back from
|
||
town. Duncan, I think, was up the mountain, while the two Australians had
|
||
set out for the next hostel.
|
||
|
||
Rosemarie had promised to show me how to do a special form of
|
||
macram'e. I had seen many hostellers wearing cotton bracelets made of
|
||
hundreds of tiny knots. When several colours were used, the result was often
|
||
beautiful. Ever since I saw the first wristband and learnt that the making of
|
||
them was a simple skill, quickly learned, I had wanted to learn how to make
|
||
them myself. But all my plans had fallen through: I never seemed to find the
|
||
time and place to pump the technique out of a skilled knotter.This was
|
||
Rosemarie's third and final day here, and while we were chatting in the
|
||
hostel common-room the night before she had offered to show me the trick.
|
||
And she was as good as her word -- but then, the Swiss often are.
|
||
|
||
The trick of the bands is repetition. The same knot is used, over and over,
|
||
the pattern being formed by the sequence of strings tied together. Start with
|
||
about half a dozen strands of embroidery cotton, each as long as your arm.
|
||
Tie them in a tight single knot close to one end. Tie another knot about a
|
||
centimetre further up the length. slip a safety-pin through the threads
|
||
between the knots and attach the pin to a firm anchor -- such as the leg of
|
||
your jeans. (I use a wire device which I slip over my big toe, working with
|
||
ankle crossed over knee. This increases my control over the amount of
|
||
tension I put in the tightening of the knots.)
|
||
|
||
Now. Spread the strands out, fanwise, towards you across your thigh. Pick
|
||
up the second one from the left in your left hand. Reach over your left hand
|
||
and pick up the left-hand thread with your right hand. (*) Still holding the
|
||
thread, use a spare finger of your left hand to push the midsection of the
|
||
thread held in your right hand to the left. Move your right hand right so that
|
||
the right hand's thread crosses over the left hand's thread, creating a `4'
|
||
shape. Loop the right hand's thread around the left hand thread and bring
|
||
it up through the middle of the `4'. Shift your hold so that you can pull the
|
||
knot tight by pulling on the loose end of the right hand's thread while
|
||
keeping the left hand's thread taut. Use a firm pressure -- too tight or too
|
||
loose makes a bad knot. Now repeat from the (*) above.
|
||
|
||
Drop the left hand's thread and pick up the leftmost thread of those still
|
||
on your thigh. Keep the right hand's thread and go through the motions
|
||
from the (*) above again. Repeat this process of knotting twice and picking
|
||
up a new thread until you have held every thread in your left hand except
|
||
the one you originally picked up (and should still have) in your right hand.
|
||
|
||
You have now completed the first row of the wristband. If you have been
|
||
neat with your threads, you will still have the ends fanned across your thigh.
|
||
The thread that was on the left edge is now on the right, and has been tied
|
||
around all the others in sequence. The pattern of the wristband is now set:
|
||
from now on you simply repeat the above instructions, making sure that you
|
||
take each leftmost strand in turn and tie it around the others in sequence
|
||
until it is at the right end.
|
||
|
||
I find that between 60 and 70 rows will do for a band to fit a female wrist,
|
||
while 70 to 80 will fit a male wrist. This is a generalised measure based on
|
||
the size of my knots -- the best way to find your own measure is to keep a
|
||
count of the number of rows of knots you have done and frequently hold the
|
||
band around your own wrist. Once you know your own wrist's size, you can
|
||
easily gauge the wrists of others and adjust your measures accordingly.
|
||
|
||
Rosemarie was a good teacher. She pinned the thread to a leg of her jeans
|
||
and did some rows to show me how to do it. Then she let me continue,
|
||
correcting me as seemed necessary. Within half an hour, oblivious of the
|
||
beauty of the day, I had mastered the basic technique and had already
|
||
discovered a couple of twists to the art that Rosemarie hadn't shown me.
|
||
|
||
This small art, so quickly learned, has stood me in good stead ever after.I
|
||
have always had a problem knowing what to do with my hands while my
|
||
mouth and mind are occupied elsewhere. One solution was to learn several
|
||
massage techniques. This is useful only in limited circumstances. The bands
|
||
are more generally useful, since once the basic technique is mastered, the
|
||
portion of my mind required to keep track of one is not the portion of my
|
||
mind required for conversation.
|
||
|
||
End Interlude===============================
|
||
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
`All is quiet ... motionless.
|
||
Suddenly!
|
||
A blanket stirs,
|
||
A head peeps out,
|
||
Everything is crazy!
|
||
Sheets are ripped from beds,
|
||
Clothes are crammed into packs,
|
||
Sound explodes all around.
|
||
Vacuum cleaners, brooms, running water,
|
||
The clanking of utensils, cups, & plates,
|
||
Every now and then the toaster pops.
|
||
This busy scurrying continues until
|
||
All is spotless,
|
||
Then;
|
||
One by one,
|
||
Packs on backs,
|
||
They leave.
|
||
All is quiet ... motionless.'
|
||
|
||
-- `Sarah P.'
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Waiuku:
|
||
|
||
At Norcon `84 I had fun. I had plenty of money and plenty of time and I
|
||
spent the 1984 NZ National SF Con having a Real Good Time. Somehow,
|
||
very early one morning late in the con, I found myself walking the streets of
|
||
sleeping Auckland with a blonde woman of compact build and round, impish
|
||
face. I think that we had happened to leave a late room-party at the same
|
||
time for a breath of air, and had started talking. I cannot now remember
|
||
anything much of what we said, except that it was all pleasant and
|
||
entertaining and that conversation was all that passed between us. Her name
|
||
was Maree, and she had come to the con from a place called Waiuku. We
|
||
talked about our respective hometowns, and somewhere along the way she
|
||
mentioned that I must come and see Waiuku some time. Naturally I said
|
||
that I would do just that -- but I must admit that I didn't expect to go
|
||
through with this promise. The con ended and I went back to Wellington
|
||
and then I quit my job and started the wandering which has filled so much
|
||
of `History'. I thought of Maree every now & then, but there didn't seem
|
||
much hope of getting around to visiting. Waiuku is quite isolated on one of
|
||
the peninsulas that bound Manukau Harbour, and I saw no easy way to get
|
||
there.
|
||
|
||
But then I bought the bike, and started cycle-touring. And one day I
|
||
looked at the map and realised that I was now fit enough so that the
|
||
distance from Te Aroha to Waiuku by road -- some 127 kilometres --
|
||
represented no more than a single hard day's ride to me. So I wrote Maree
|
||
a letter and told her what I planned and when I planned to do it, and she
|
||
wrote back and gave me exact directions on finding her place, and one day
|
||
I loaded up the bike and set out to cycle to visit Maree.
|
||
|
||
I'll gloss over the standard details. What started out as a long but not-too-
|
||
hard-looking jaunt became a nightmare. I had left Te Aroha at 8am, but with
|
||
rest stops and hills that demanded I stop and walk, night fell about the time
|
||
I was passing through Waiuku. (If I could remember exactly when this
|
||
happened I could place this trip more precisely in time, but I can't.) Maree
|
||
lived about 10 kilometres out on the far side, and I perforce pushed on into
|
||
the darkness with the aid of a torch. (I had no lights on the bike, since I
|
||
hadn't envisaged doing any night riding.) Fortunately there was little traffic.
|
||
But it was with some relief that I finally picked out -- having gone past it
|
||
once and having a moment of panic when I suspected I was lost (suspected?
|
||
I was certain!) -- the box-thorn hedge that marked the turnoff to the farm
|
||
where Maree lived with her mother (I think it was her mother -- an older
|
||
relative, anyway. Sorry, another memory glitch). My state of mind -- and
|
||
exhaustion -- can be gauged by the fact that try as I might, I cannot bring a
|
||
single memory into focus to help me with retelling my arrival. As I wheeled
|
||
my bike around the back of the house, did a door open and spill warm
|
||
yellow light onto the grass? Or did I prop the bike against something and
|
||
knock? I have half-images of doing both these things, and they are mutually
|
||
exclusive.
|
||
|
||
About other events I can be more circumstantial. Maree had just returned
|
||
from an overseas trip (another reason it had taken me so long to get around
|
||
to dropping in) during which she toured parts of north America and Europe.
|
||
At a moment when conversation was flagging a bit, her mother suggested
|
||
that she should get out her photo albums and tell me about her trip. `Ah!'
|
||
I said, `this is one of the reasons why I came here!' And so Maree brought
|
||
out several huge volumes packed with photos.
|
||
|
||
Looking at photos of someone else's trip is the sort of thing that I
|
||
normally do as much as a duty as because I am particularly keen to see one
|
||
more shot of my friend standing self-consciously in some spot that I would
|
||
prefer to have been standing in myself. When Maree shows you her photos,
|
||
however, the experience is something as far above that as STAR WARS is
|
||
above a still shot of a tomato. Normally somewhat placid, suddenly she lights
|
||
up. Although you can participate in a conversation with her if you like, you
|
||
can equally well make nothing save the standard encouraging sounds and let
|
||
her enthusiasm carry you away for an hour or two. This is not a trip report,
|
||
a travelogue, or a recounting of events; this is a story -- a coherent narrative
|
||
illustrated by the photos, having beginning, middle, and end, dotted with plot
|
||
twists and surprise guests and odd characters. It was easy for me to recall
|
||
now how it was that I should forget what we talked about in 1984 but
|
||
remember how pleasant it all was. Then to my sleeping-bag on the floor, and
|
||
a deep sleep.
|
||
|
||
The next day passed in very lazy fashion. I was stiff and sore after the
|
||
ordeal the day before, so we spent the day wandering around the farm in
|
||
leisurely fashion, meeting the sheep, the chickens, and the other resident
|
||
critters. We wandered down to the beach that looks out onto an arm of the
|
||
Manukau. Mud, grey and slimy, dotted here and there with mangroves
|
||
migrating onto the property from a neighbour's attempt at land reclamation.
|
||
Maree found the presence of these self-sown seedlings offensive, and as she
|
||
walked along she would bend down and pluck out any that came within
|
||
reach. This activity proved infectious, and soon we were both hunting back
|
||
and forth across the beach, pulling out the invading plants like birds after
|
||
worms. Then we stopped, flushed and laughing, and sat down on a driftwood
|
||
log for a while to rest, and Maree talked a bit about the area while she put
|
||
her shoes back on.
|
||
|
||
One of our shared interests is Leslie Charteris' `Saint' books. That night
|
||
we rediscovered this mutual interest, and spent much of the evening
|
||
discussing the books, the Saint, Charteris, and the club that is named after
|
||
the character (set up after WW II to help build and support a hospital in
|
||
blitzed London). (I have a recent card from Maree which has her new
|
||
address in Auckland and also a note to say that she is now a member of the
|
||
Saint Club. ***Green*** I never got myself that far together -- but maybe
|
||
while travelling in 1989 --) Winnie-the-Pooh and other abiding loves got
|
||
dragged in, and we dug out the various Saint and Pooh books and started
|
||
quoting favourite passages at each other. All very silly, perhaps, but it was
|
||
fun. I didn't get to my sleeping bag until after 2am.
|
||
|
||
The next day I started home. Maree, wearing a straw hat, saw me to the
|
||
gate, and my last view of her was a slouched country yokel leaning on a
|
||
wooden stock-gate, chewing on a stalk of grass. All carefully posed, of
|
||
course. She works as a librarian and is doing quite well at it, and if she is any
|
||
less at-home in the city as in the country, she conceals it well.
|
||
|
||
I decided not to tempt fate by trying to cycle all the way back to Te Aroha
|
||
that day. I'd only reached Waiuku in a day because I had the broad flat
|
||
Hauraki Plains to speed across while my legs were fresh. Going back I would
|
||
reach the plains tired, and still with the legacy of the outward trip hanging
|
||
on me. But I had heard of a motor-camp at a place called Miranda Hot
|
||
Springs, over on the western shore of the Firth of Thames. It was about 65
|
||
kilometres from Maree's place and about 75 from Te Aroha, a perfect two-
|
||
stage journey since the short stage was hilly and the long stage flat. So I
|
||
retraced part of my outward route, then struck left up a side-road as I
|
||
descended the hills towards the plains. This took me into more hills, but the
|
||
views from the peaks were wonderful! I stopped at one point when I saw a
|
||
movement in a tree beside the road. A possum, blinking at me with sleepy
|
||
day-time eyes.
|
||
|
||
Most of the route was in bush, but towards the end I came out onto naked
|
||
summits and rutted farm-tracks. Then the final peak, and suddenly I could
|
||
see the Firth of Thames below me, with the long green-grey dragon-back of
|
||
the Coromandels beyond. It amused me to think that I might be standing on
|
||
one of the very spots that I had looked at with so much curiosity during my
|
||
Coromandel excursions. The scene inspired me and I sketched it on a card,
|
||
which I addressed and later posted to Maree. I wonder if she got it? I'd like
|
||
a copy of that card -- I recall that the drawing was, by my standards, quite
|
||
good, and I added notes commenting on the various shades and colours.
|
||
|
||
Down a twisting road and onto a narrow stretch of flat land that divided
|
||
the Firth from the hills. I had taken the wrong road and found myself about
|
||
six kilometres north of where I wanted to be. Turn and ride until I found the
|
||
signpost, then up a stone-strewn road to the Miranda Hot Springs Motor
|
||
Camp.
|
||
|
||
The tent site cost me $5 for the night, but I paid it cheerfully, for that
|
||
price included access to the hot pool that was the camp's main attraction --
|
||
entry to which was normally $3.50 anyway!
|
||
|
||
The pool turned out to be a huge rectangular basin with a number of steps
|
||
leading bathers from the shallow edges to the deeper centre. It was an open-
|
||
air affair, which proved amusing when it rained (as it did, just after dark).
|
||
In one corner was a huge tv-repeater-screen. The hot water (not really hot,
|
||
just warmer than tepid) came up through many small vents in the concrete
|
||
that sheathed the pool. Apparently there was not one major spring, but
|
||
rather hundreds of small seepings through cracks in the underlying rock. The
|
||
pool-builders had tracked down the larger cracks and channelled them into
|
||
the pool.
|
||
I made the acquaintance of the camp's owners, and we got on quite well.
|
||
I told them about Te Aroha and they told me about the relatives they had
|
||
in the area. I admired the T-shirts advertising the camp that were selling for
|
||
$15 from the camp store. `You like them? Have one! -- all you have to do
|
||
is promise to wear it every now and then!' I told them that I planned to go
|
||
back to Te Aroha the next day. `But it's going to rain tomorrow. You'll get
|
||
soaked!' Well, yes, but I had to be getting back. `Well, we're going shopping
|
||
in Paeroa tomorrow. If you can wait until midday, we'll give you a lift that
|
||
far.' And so it happened. Very nice people and a very nice camp.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
Through The Heart:
|
||
|
||
I went and worked on the Kiwifruit again in May, using my annual leave for
|
||
the purpose. Nothing like being paid twice for my time, huh? But
|
||
unfortunately the story of the kiwifruit will just have to wait for the
|
||
solicitation of some material-less faned; I have no room for it.
|
||
|
||
I did not, however, spend the whole month of my leave picking fruit.
|
||
Towards the end, I got pissed-off with the way my employer was running his
|
||
teams of pickers, and decided that enough was enough!, and cycled off into
|
||
the sunset. Well, not the sunset exactly, but in the same general direction.
|
||
I had been working near Te Puke (actually some distance out on the far side
|
||
from Tauranga). When I left the orchard I went back to Tauranga for a few
|
||
days. So I decided to make my first day's staging the approximately 85 km
|
||
from Tauranga to Rotorua.
|
||
|
||
The first part was relatively easy -- cross the small peninsula that central
|
||
Tauranga squats on, cross the harbour via a railbridge (shorter than using
|
||
the main road), up a connecting road to Highway 2, then along to the
|
||
Rotorua turnoff at Highway 33. But then things turned difficult.
|
||
|
||
I found myself dropping gears for no obvious reason. I was used enough
|
||
to cycle-touring by now that I could judge my progress fairly well even
|
||
without looking at the speedometer and doing mental calculations of time
|
||
versus distance. It soon became plain that I was not making as much distance
|
||
for effort as I thought that I should be. It took a longer period of
|
||
observation before the reason came to me: I was climbing up from sea level
|
||
onto a vast plate of volcanic debris, vomit of ancient activity by the volcanic
|
||
zone that reaches from Rotorua to Ruapehu. This `Volcanic Plateau' (as it
|
||
was called in my schoolboy geography lessons) surrounds the mountains and
|
||
stretches east to the sea, forming the coastline of the bay of Plenty. But the
|
||
layer of debris thins very gradually as you leave the volcanoes behind. There
|
||
is no noticeable slope by very reason of the gradual nature of the change:
|
||
the land is tilted. The horizon matches it. Lacking the means of comparison,
|
||
the eye assumes that the landscape is horizontal -- but it isn't.
|
||
|
||
I persevered. The vegetation gradually changed from the lush green of the
|
||
coast to the darker green of inland forest. Then I passed between two lakes
|
||
and entered the region of thermal activity that surrounds Rotorua. I
|
||
cheered to myself as I passed through Te Ngae (Tay-ngye), the turnoff to
|
||
`Hell's Gate' at Tikitere (Tih-kee-teh-ree) -- the milestone that told me I was
|
||
almost there. To my right lay Lake Rotorua, with a green island set in it --
|
||
Mokoia, setting of a famous Maori love story. At my left, tall pillars of white
|
||
steam marked thermal areas.
|
||
|
||
Rotorua is a city of about 58,000 people, built on the shores of a volcanic
|
||
lake. If the reader is familiar with any part of NZ at all, that part is probably
|
||
Rotorua. (The next most likely places are the Bay of Islands and Queens-
|
||
town.) So I won't go into much detail here. The place is a tourist trap --
|
||
prices high, and everything of honest culture sacrificed for the Tourist
|
||
Dollar. The air reeks of sulphur. The inhabitants are very proud of their
|
||
geysers and mud pools, but are also addicted to having their own private hot
|
||
pools in their back yards, with the result that the water table is dropping
|
||
disastrously, killing off the geysers and mud pools. Sad (but all too human).
|
||
|
||
I had been here before, of course. The trip after this (and my final visit
|
||
before leaving NZ) yields me very pleasant memories, for I met up with a
|
||
German hosteller, Inge, and we spent three happy (and quite platonic) days
|
||
exploring the place together. Inge is bright and is one of those people who
|
||
can walk into a strange place and, in ten minutes, strike up a friendship with
|
||
someone. (She visited me in Melbourne in 1988, before setting out on a
|
||
month's bus-back exploration of the country. The day she went to Adelaide,
|
||
I left her at the bus terminal cheerfully -- and sure enough, in the twenty
|
||
minutes or so between the time we parted and the time the bus left, she met
|
||
up with an interesting German couple living in Adelaide. The man had a
|
||
passionate belief in the evil of Supermarket waste, and had gotten into
|
||
trouble several times for his habit of salvaging goods from supermarket
|
||
rubbish and giving the still-edible or usable items to poor people who
|
||
couldn't afford to buy them new.) She made the perfect foil to my own
|
||
reserve, given that I was in travelling mode at the time and so somewhat less
|
||
staid than normal. So we went to the fisheries at Rainbow springs and
|
||
soaked at the Polynesian Pools and visited Whakarewarewa (Fahka-ray-wah-
|
||
ray-wah), the major thermal area closest to the city, and which also has a
|
||
Maori Arts Centre.
|
||
|
||
This trip I only stayed two nights before pressing on the 82-kilometres to
|
||
Lake Taupo (Tow-poh). Rugged countryside, red soil (an unusual colour for
|
||
NZ, though common in Australia), climbing into the centre of the island,
|
||
then a swift descent to the shores of Taupo. Taupo, filling the blasted-out
|
||
roots of ancient volcanoes, is the largest lake in NZ, and it is famous for its
|
||
trout fishing. On the way into Taupo city I stopped at the Honey Village, a
|
||
complex dealing with various varieties of honey and the odd combinations
|
||
resulting from adding such things as fruits and nuts. Samples are laid out on
|
||
tables, with wooden spatulas supplied in jars nearby. Take a spatula and dip
|
||
it in whatever honey takes your fancy, lick the specimen, dispose of the stick.
|
||
Not a place for gluttons! Some hostellers I've spoken to went there and
|
||
made themselves quite sick by pigging out on the free tasting. (Similar to
|
||
getting drunk on wine-tasting expeditions, I suppose.) If you want to, you can
|
||
finish the expedition by purchasing jars of your favourite flavours when
|
||
leaving.
|
||
|
||
At Taupo I stayed in Rainbow Lodge, a private hostel built and run by a
|
||
couple who once ran hostels for YHA. In 1986, the two best non-YHA
|
||
hostels in NZ were run by ex-YHA Managers. (The other was in
|
||
Christchurch.) Rainbow Lodge was very new when I was there; the interior
|
||
was not completely finished (it had opened in order to get some cash coming
|
||
in).
|
||
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
`Thanks Greg -- thank you for the music in
|
||
Rainbow Lodge -- I enjoyed! Thank you for
|
||
advising me to go to Te Aroha. It's really a
|
||
comfortable and nice hostel. GOOD MUSIC.
|
||
Friendly people -- only two Australians and
|
||
I are here this night. Great.
|
||
|
||
-- Only in silence the word
|
||
Only in darkness the light
|
||
Only in dying life
|
||
Bright the hawk's flight
|
||
On the empty sky --
|
||
(Ursula LeGuin)
|
||
|
||
-- Christa (Denmark)' (Te Aroha V. B.)
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
It started raining, so I stayed two nights at Rainbow Lodge. By the time
|
||
the rain eased, the visitors had formed a tight-knit little community, and
|
||
everyone was sorry when it came time to move on. (Several of these people
|
||
later came through Te Aroha, some while I was away, a couple while I was
|
||
`in residence'; which made for several pleasant nights of story-telling and
|
||
comparison of notes.) Of course, like any group, not everyone liked everyone
|
||
else, and there was the inevitable untidy element who would leave dirty
|
||
dishes lying around, not bathe for days, or come noisily back from the pub
|
||
in the early hours and throw up on the floor, leaving the mess to others to
|
||
clean up if they themselves weren't caught and firmly made to clean it up
|
||
themselves. (Such creatures are found less in YHA hostels than `private'
|
||
ones -- the YHA system polices and eventually purges itself of persistently
|
||
offensive characters, before these individuals can do real damage. In the
|
||
private area, supposedly `mature' `adult' people will do the most amazingly
|
||
antisocial deeds before the community bands together to get rid of them --
|
||
and even then, the offenders will often turn up again and again elsewhere.)
|
||
|
||
Now came the day of folly: I set off into the drizzle, determined to try the
|
||
137-kilometre leg from Taupo to Ohakune (Oh-hah-koo-nay). I should have
|
||
known better: 137 kilometres is a long day's cycle at the best of times, but
|
||
now it was approaching the shortest day of the year, I wanted to pass the
|
||
highest mountains in the North Island, and I compounded it by setting out
|
||
late in the morning. (I was not totally bereft of wit -- I did intend to leave
|
||
Highway 1 at Turangi (Too-rahng-gee) rather than follow the main highway
|
||
down the desolate Desert Road on the east side of the mountains to
|
||
Waiouru (Wye-ooh-roo). That area has a reputation for being dangerous to
|
||
benighted travellers.)
|
||
|
||
I cruised easily along Highway 1, following the rolling shoreline of Lake
|
||
Taupo, admiring the beauty of the lake in the rare moments of sunshine.
|
||
The far shore (or rather, the hills behind it) was barely visible on the
|
||
horizon, and the waves that came in were larger than you might expect from
|
||
a lake. I made good time for the first 50 kilometres -- just over two hours.
|
||
But then I decided to take the scenic route, Highway 47a instead of Highway
|
||
47, to pass by the western slopes of the mountains. I had forgotten just how
|
||
high the first step of the mountain-base was: when I passed through Tokaanu
|
||
(Toh-kah-noo) and saw what was waiting for me, I quailed. The road climbs
|
||
to 745 metres to cross the Te Poninga (Tay-poh-ning-gah) saddle. (Of
|
||
course, the land was something like half a kilometre high already, so I had
|
||
only a few hundred metres to climb, but most of the extra height comes in
|
||
a single winding slope about four or five kilometres long.)
|
||
|
||
Nothing for it. I pushed my bike up. Took me three hours, which put me
|
||
past 2 pm, with perhaps three hours of usable day left and almost seventy
|
||
kilometres of hostile up-and-down to cover if I wanted to reach Ohakune
|
||
that day. Couldn't be done.
|
||
|
||
Well, having reached the saddle, at least I had a couple of kilometres of
|
||
coasting ahead of me. I climbed back onto my bike and pushed off, the
|
||
peaks on either side (1160 and 1325 metres) acting as starting posts. I bent
|
||
low over the handlebars, holding the lower grips fiercely, flicking occasional
|
||
amazed glances at the speedometer as it swung around and around, finally
|
||
quivering on 95 kph -- terminal velocity, I guess. The wind was vicious, even
|
||
with sunglasses protecting my eyeballs from the worst blast. I swung wide on
|
||
the curves and prayed that I didn't meet a car at the wrong moment. Gentle
|
||
tests with the brakes assured me that there was no way I could stop other
|
||
than catastrophically before I reached the bottom. What slowing I had to do
|
||
from time to time was sufficient to overheat the pads, leaving a thin black
|
||
circle of rubber on the wheel-rims, even though I tried to alternate between
|
||
front and back to minimise the friction. I certainly had no desire to pull back
|
||
with full force: I have a vivid memory of my childhood, when I tried that on
|
||
a hillside in Wanganui. The rubber shoes popped out, leaving me to
|
||
accelerate horribly and finally crash through a corral-type fence at the
|
||
bottom, knocking myself out but -- by some fluke -- collecting only a few
|
||
bruises and scratches otherwise. I could hope for no such happy ending here!
|
||
|
||
Even so I had time to watch the scenery and to note the green waters of
|
||
tiny Lake Rotopounamu (Roh-toh-poo-nah-moo) as I passed high above it.
|
||
|
||
I made it down safely, and stopped to pee at the roadside, feeling shaky
|
||
at the knees, when I finally halted my mad career on the flats near Lake
|
||
Rotoaira (Roh-toh-eye-rah).
|
||
|
||
I pushed on, but the road was crossing the long ridge-lines that radiate
|
||
from the mountains. Already tired from mounting the saddle, I found myself
|
||
walking more and more. Then dusk fell, and I finally found a small flat area
|
||
well off the road to use as a camp.
|
||
|
||
Snug in my thick sleeping bag and windproof tent, I slept well. Next
|
||
morning I stepped out into -4 degrees of heavy frost... When I rode on, I was
|
||
so well-wrapped against the cold that I looked like a ball.
|
||
|
||
The land was wide, covered with brown tussock, plunging in one direction
|
||
into a distant complex of hills, rising in the other into an intricately-
|
||
patterned and snow-capped wall of stone: the three volcanoes at the heart
|
||
of the North Island -- Tongariro (Tong-gah-rare-oh), 1968 metres;
|
||
Ngaurohoe (Ngarra-hoh-ee), 2291 metres; and Ruapehu, 2797 metres. The
|
||
latter two are classified as `active', but this day only a slight steam from
|
||
Ngaurohoe showed it.
|
||
|
||
Although there are three major mountains in the group, only about three
|
||
kilometres separates the peaks of Tongariro and Ngaurohoe, with a wide,
|
||
relatively low saddle between them and Ruapehu. (The higher of the two
|
||
peaks flanking the Te Poninga saddle is called Pihanga (Pih-hahng-gah), and
|
||
Maori legend claims the mountain is female -- the wife of Tongariro. It
|
||
seems that a third mountain, Taranaki, once stood nearby, and he coveted
|
||
his neighbour's wife. Angered, Tongariro fought with Taranaki and finally
|
||
drove him away with fire and rocks. Taranaki fled to the sea, wounded foot
|
||
digging the valley now filled by the Wanganui River; then he waded up the
|
||
coast and finally settled down in the centre of the western `fin' of Maui's
|
||
`fish'. Today, after many years of being known as `Mt Egmont' (so-named by
|
||
the white man) he is again ruling his wide domains under his own name.)
|
||
|
||
After a while my eyes adjusted to the scale of the countryside -- I thought
|
||
-- and I suddenly noticed a child's toy house standing on a hillside some way
|
||
off the road. It had obviously been patterned after a European manor-house.
|
||
It was blocky, multi-storied, and slope-roofed. I was surprised that such a
|
||
beautiful and detailed toy should be left out in this desolate place --and then
|
||
I realised my error. I should have realised earlier: I was looking up the long
|
||
flank of Ruapehu at the Chateau Tongariro. What looked small and close
|
||
was really more than fifteen kilometres away, and was the only man-made
|
||
element in the landscape capable of making itself noticed against the
|
||
grandeur of the mountains.
|
||
|
||
I slogged away until I met the turnoff to the Chateau. On impulse, I
|
||
essayed the six-kilometre uphill climb and spent a couple of hours looking
|
||
around the ski village that has grown up around the imposing building
|
||
(which is a ski-hotel run by the Tourist Hotel Corporation). Someday I shall
|
||
stay there. The family went there once on holiday, but I was too young to
|
||
remember it very clearly.
|
||
|
||
My back tire had gone flat, so I fixed it. I left my pocket-knife lying on
|
||
a step beside where I fixed my bike. Didn't realise it until I wanted to use
|
||
it to shave some kindling for the fireplace at the Ohakune YHA.
|
||
|
||
The return trip to Highway 47 flew by, and I laughed into the wind. This
|
||
random side-trip was proof to me that my long nights and days of
|
||
introspection and self-analysis were not going to waste -- the person I had
|
||
been in 1984 would not have turned aside from their pre-planned route to
|
||
snoop around the Chateau! Now I could settle down to killing the 44
|
||
kilometres that separated me from Ohakune.
|
||
|
||
The YHA hostel at Ohakune is an older structure, somewhat run-down,
|
||
and relies on the ski travellers in winter to keep it profitable. When I was
|
||
there this trip, it was being run by Tomoko, a Japanese hosteller who had
|
||
been supplementing her NZ trip by relieving at various hostels. I'd heard
|
||
about her through the internal communication of YHA and by reputation
|
||
from hostellers, and was very pleased to meet her at last. She had a very
|
||
sweet, somewhat `lost' personality that was very appealing. Not surprisingly,
|
||
she was very popular with the visitors at the various hostels she ran. We
|
||
spent quite a while talking about our various adventures. (Some time later,
|
||
in her final days in NZ, she came to Te Aroha. We still keep in touch.
|
||
Someday I shall get to Japan and visit her in her own country.)
|
||
|
||
Two nights at Ohakune, and it was time to attempt the final leg: Ohakune
|
||
to Wanganui via `the Parapara' (Pah-rah-pah-rah) and Highway 4. 100
|
||
kilometres of winding hill-road, with the three great hills of the Parapara
|
||
looming at the gates of my home town. It was hell, though I made it through
|
||
as planned. I was in familiar territory and so couldn't lose myself in the
|
||
scenery the way I had elsewhere, but some interest was provided by playing
|
||
leap-frog with a Japanese traveller (Joichi? His name slips my mind) riding
|
||
a 50 cc motor-scooter. He would pass me as I walked or cycled upgrade;
|
||
then I would catch and pass him on the far side. He didn't finally leave me
|
||
behind until we reached the willow-covered banks of the Wanganui River.
|
||
|
||
Although I took no particular notice of the scenery, Highway 4 is
|
||
nevertheless one of the prettier roads in NZ, with its steep hillsides and
|
||
many rows of stately poplars.
|
||
|
||
Wanganui. I cycled in along the riverbank, relaxing as the suburb Aramoho
|
||
(Ah-rah-moh-ho) appeared on the far bank. The River is about fifty metres
|
||
wide, filled with very muddy brown water. When the tide is on the ebb it
|
||
flows placidly to the sea. When the tide is on the flood it flows placidly from
|
||
the sea! I came in through Wanganui East and crossed at the City Bridge,
|
||
cycled up Victoria Avenue (main street) and made the final easy section to
|
||
my parents' home in the seaside suburb of Castlecliff.
|
||
|
||
I stayed a few days, then, not having time to cycle north before an
|
||
important appointment, bussed to Hamilton, cycling from there to Te Aroha
|
||
in the early hours of the morning, arriving home to an empty hostel. Sigh.
|
||
But My satisfaction at having completed this odyssey was enough. Now I was
|
||
a real cycle-tourist.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
The three trips I've talked about here were three of the four main cycle-
|
||
tours I went on. The one not recounted was the Rotorua trip, in August,
|
||
mentioned briefly above, in which I met Inge. Now that was a hard-luck trip
|
||
if ever I had one. Before I even got out of Te Aroha I discovered that two
|
||
of the struts supporting my rear wheel (the two diagonal ones that meet the
|
||
frame near the seat) had come loose, requiring a quick stop at a local garage
|
||
to get them welded back into place. Then I'd left my cheque-book in Te
|
||
Aroha and had with me only my Post Office Savings Bank passbook -- with
|
||
almost nothing in it. If I hadn't been able to arrange with Dannie and Helen
|
||
to telegraph some money through to me, I would have been forced to make
|
||
an ignominious return to Te Aroha. (Inge had offered to lend me money,
|
||
but I didn't want to ruin my trip by worrying about getting it back to her
|
||
later. Better to cancel the trip and try again later.) Other things went wrong
|
||
on the way from Rotorua to Tauranga, and the final section, back to Te
|
||
Aroha via the Karangahake Gorge, saw me: (1) hit a stone and destroy a tire
|
||
(as well as denting the metal rim, leaving the bike with a permanent `bump-
|
||
bump-bump' sensation when in motion); (2) try to turn too sharply, resulting
|
||
in the bike stopping dead while I cruised on to skin my palms on the road;
|
||
(3) swerve too wide on a turn and come within a few centimetres of going
|
||
under a truck. In short, if it hadn't been for those three idyllic days in
|
||
Rotorua, I'd have come out in worse condition than I entered the trip.
|
||
|
||
Apart from these four main trips, there were a number of lesser ones,
|
||
mainly into the Coromandel and starting or ending at Opoutere.
|
||
|
||
I think that discovering the pleasures of touring by bike was one of the
|
||
best discoveries I made at Te Aroha. With my bike, and with the extended
|
||
weekends made possible by the setup at Te Aroha, I was able to get the
|
||
feeling of travelling, even though I never really went anywhere. The
|
||
environment -- surrounded by travellers from all over the world -- was pretty
|
||
much what I could have expected had I been travelling myself, yet if I'd been
|
||
confined to the hostel area all the time it might soon have palled somewhat.
|
||
But whenever things started to feel closed-in, I could load up the wheels and
|
||
take a spin someplace else.
|
||
|
||
The cycle-touring idea was helped along by the nature of the area. The
|
||
region covered by the maps on pages 8 & 15 is one of the most scenic in the
|
||
North Island, packing in more goodies per square kilometre than almost any
|
||
other area of comparable size in the world -- so the various visitors from all
|
||
over told me. I was very fortunate to have the opportunity Te Aroha's
|
||
location offered me.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
`Well folks, two of the NZYHA National
|
||
Executive came for a visit yesterday to
|
||
discuss the future of this hostel. Essen-
|
||
tially the YHA wants to close uneconomic
|
||
hostels such as Te Aroha and 8 others, or
|
||
at least make arrangements so that they are
|
||
not an economic drain on YHA finance. It
|
||
seemed to me that they would be going ahead
|
||
with this decision even though many of the
|
||
National Executive are supporters of the
|
||
small hostel. It appears that the YHA may be
|
||
willing to allow the smaller hostels to
|
||
operate outside the present Warden's Agree-
|
||
ment (which sets wages and conditions) and
|
||
arrange their own local employment contract
|
||
and supervision arrangements. In this sense
|
||
Te Aroha should continue as it has good
|
||
local support, but where this is not the
|
||
case you can expect closures such as Whaka-
|
||
tane. I believe it is essential to maintain
|
||
the smaller hostels as they provide the
|
||
character and local flavour of the system,
|
||
unlike the large accommodation centres type
|
||
hostels. To maintain these small hostels
|
||
they must receive a regular flow of people
|
||
so that means we should try and visit some
|
||
of the other smaller hostels around this
|
||
country and extol the virtues of them in
|
||
other day books.
|
||
|
||
Enough for the news bulletin. Te Aroha
|
||
is a great place to rest, relax, or be
|
||
active in a great countryside -- all the
|
||
comforts of home except a TV (an essential
|
||
item with the World Cup at the moment), even
|
||
sheep outside the bathroom windows.
|
||
|
||
-- Kevin (Australia) 3/6/86'
|
||
(Te Aroha Visitor's Book)
|
||
________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Auckland and Out:
|
||
|
||
As I've already said once in this long, long chapter, all things end. There is
|
||
a great deal yet unsaid about my time at Te Aroha -- the Kiwifruit, the
|
||
Managers conference in Christchurch in early June; all sorts of odd
|
||
occurrences and observations. But to tell it all would double the length of
|
||
this episode. I especially regret putting aside the story of my fortnight's
|
||
training at Kerikeri YH in August 1985, since that provided plenty of
|
||
adventures and also would provide an insight on the operation of a relatively
|
||
busy hostel.
|
||
|
||
Another thing I especially regret is the necessity of leaving out anecdotes
|
||
about other hostellers; such as Klaus from Germany, who had a penchant for
|
||
interminable sentences which would go on and on for several dozen words,
|
||
all constructed with excellent grammar except for such characteristically
|
||
German features as `I have still to go to...' and `I am taking six months so
|
||
far...', using multisyllabic words and ordinary words in novel ways, and all
|
||
spoken with a machinelike precision and rhythm that sometimes made the
|
||
actual meaning of the sentence impervious to the listener, who would find
|
||
themselves nodding in time to the syllables and listening to the sound rather
|
||
than the meaning. The sentence you have just read is an attempt to recreate
|
||
a sample.
|
||
|
||
Wayne came from Canada. He was a regular feature at the hostel, six
|
||
months of the year. Alas, he was not allowed permanent residence in the
|
||
country he loved most, and so would have to spend the other six months of
|
||
the year in North America. He drove around in a yellow mini, which he
|
||
would leave with someone in Auckland during the interregnums. His obliging
|
||
nature extended to such features as taxiing a concerned hostel manager
|
||
thirty kilometres in the dusk once in order to track down a missing hosteller
|
||
(who turned up back at the hostel while we were out searching the roadside
|
||
for him). (He took note of my interest in seeing Canada and, when he went
|
||
back there in 1986, he posted me a copy of a booklet about Canadian
|
||
National Parks -- including one of my particular dream-places, Lake of the
|
||
Woods. Now maybe in 1989...)
|
||
|
||
But I haven't space to tell a story about everyone I met and liked. I need
|
||
to leave someone out somewhere. Let it stand...
|
||
|
||
I've also said less about the actual mechanics of being a hostel manager
|
||
than I might. The job itself is quite simple -- book people in, book people
|
||
out; keep track of the money and account for it to Head Office with a
|
||
monthly report; keep the hostel clean and safe from fire and other disaster;
|
||
be a host to the hostellers -- give them a shoulder to cry on if they need it,
|
||
point them at the best places to go and the best things to do. It's
|
||
challenging, not in the sense of being complex, but in the variety and nature
|
||
of the things you are called upon to do in the course of executing the above-
|
||
mentioned simple duties.
|
||
|
||
One thing I could never quite escape was the feeling of impending doom
|
||
that hung over Te Aroha and a number of other small hostels. YHANZ was
|
||
the battleground of several conflicting factions. Some wanted to cut off all
|
||
unprofitable hostels; others thought all should be kept, and as many `private'
|
||
hostels as possible should be persuaded to affiliate; still others thought the
|
||
employment of professional managers a mistake and that YHANZ should
|
||
return to the more casual system of years gone by. All these plans had
|
||
inherent problems. A major spanner existed in the form of the new Mt Cook
|
||
YHA project, which was expected to cost upwards of $750,000. To raise this
|
||
sum -- and nobody disputed that the new hostel was necessary and that the
|
||
money must therefore be made available -- budgets for several years had
|
||
been slashed, maintenance programs on smaller hostels held up, and fund-
|
||
raising ventures had been embarked-on.
|
||
|
||
Te Aroha really couldn't afford a permanent manager's salary, even a
|
||
salary as small as mine. I did my best to push the usage of the hostel up,
|
||
but even at 100% capacity all the time, the hostel would lose money. Yet
|
||
it was accepted as a legal requirement that the hostel could not operate
|
||
without a resident manager. By mid-1986, however, ways had been found
|
||
around this obstacle. Larger hostels would continue much as before, but
|
||
medium-range hostels would go over to a `leasing' arrangement between the
|
||
managers and YHA, an arrangement designed to stop YHA bleeding into
|
||
money-losing hostels and give the managers an incentive to make them
|
||
profitable. Smaller hostels would either close or (where possible) find ways
|
||
to provide live-in supervision without paying salaries. This meant that hostels
|
||
supported by local YHA Branches would probably survive, especially with
|
||
the help of local fundraising for repairs, etc.
|
||
|
||
This did not mean I would lose my job. There were enough hostels around
|
||
whose managers were unwilling to operate under the new conditions so that
|
||
I would be able to transfer to one of them if I liked. I thought very seriously
|
||
about taking up this option, for I enjoyed the job very much.
|
||
|
||
But in the end, travel won out. I realised that whatever new hostel I went
|
||
to would be busier than Te Aroha and would necessitate a more structured
|
||
approach towards weekends. I would be working harder but the recreation
|
||
I enjoyed so much would be cramped into a series of two-day segments. At
|
||
least until I got my round-the-world ideas out of my system, I would
|
||
probably be better off getting out of the job while it was a pleasure, thereby
|
||
`saving' it as an option for years to come rather than burning up my interest
|
||
now.
|
||
|
||
Since a dark night on Opoutere Beach in February, my vague ideas
|
||
regarding travel had taken on shape and structure. Serendipity stepped in,
|
||
and I acquired a cheap air ticket to Australia. On the 19th of September
|
||
1986 I again boarded a plane to Australia. How this came about, what I
|
||
planned to do there, and what actually happened between then and 1st
|
||
January 1987 is the subject for `History' Part Six. It will bring the tale up to
|
||
the publication of SECANT 1, which, as endings, beginnings, and returns go,
|
||
has a nice Ouroboros ring to it. See you then.
|
||
-- Greg Hills, 1/89
|
||
|
||
|
||
`This is my morning, my day begins:
|
||
rise up now, rise up, great noontide!'
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
|
||
I appended the following to this article in SECANT 5:
|
||
|
||
SECANT 6: `The Happy Return'
|
||
|
||
THE next issue of SECANT will bring the conclusion to `History'. (`And not
|
||
before time!' I hear you cry.) Since it is concerned with my return to
|
||
Australia, and what I found there, I have given it the title `The Happy
|
||
Return'. After some thought, I have decided that will be the theme of that
|
||
issue of SECANT, too.
|
||
|
||
###
|
||
|
||
That chapter was never written.
|
||
|
||
-- Greg Hills, 20jun94
|
||
|
||
END OF FILE! |