RECREATION WALKING and CYCLING TRAILS
New Zealand Walk:
Queen Charlotte Track
Here we come Northland Experiences:
The Old Chooks Tour of Northland
MAY JUNE JULY 2020 ISSUE NO 268
Auckland Walk:
A ramble on Anzac Day Point England Walkway
Photo Contest winners NZ $8.50 inc GST
Australian Walks:
Burleigh Heads National Park walks www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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2 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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CONTENTS
Issue 268 - 2020 2 Pak - A - Roo Walking Jacket 3 Contents 4 Walk Talk 6 New Zealand Walk: Queen Charlotte Track - Here we come! 10 New Zealand Walk: Walking the Track 11 New Zealand Walk: The Queen Charlotte Track - why walk it when you can ride? 13 Lockdown Activities: Walking and biking around Papamoa - Training up Mt Wash-ington. 14 Northland Experiences: The Old Chooks Tour of Northland 17 News: A billion-dollar opportunity for walkers 18 Walking New Zealand Monthly Photo Contest 20 New Zealand Walks: Bookable huts - a Summer success 23 Need2Know: Walking on private land 24 Auckland Walk: Mt Hobson Walk for panoramic city views 27 Covid-129: Travel faces a reinvention 28 New Zealand Walk: Lindsay Scenic Reserve Walk 30 My Favoutite Walk: Cardiff Centennial Walk through natural bush and farmland 34 New Zealand Walk: Beat the heat - do the Donald Drift 37 Australian Walk: Burleigh Heads National Park walks 40 Auckland Walk: A ramble on Anzac Day - Point England Walkway 44 Books: God’s Cocaine - the addiction of the Camino 45 Coming Events: New Zealand 48 New Zealand Country Breaks 52 Northland Experiences
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Cover – The Queen Charlotte Track, where you can create memories in your own style and at a budget that suits your wallet.
WALKING New Zealand Published Monthly
PUBLISHER/EDITOR: Frank Goldingham: Phone 06-358-6863 CONTRIBUTORS: JIll Grant, Bob Hodgson, Mark Weatherall, Stephen Day, Judy Eva, Tracey Mackey, and Daniel Haddock ADVERTISING MANAGER: Frank Goldingham 0800 walking (925-546) 027-274-0726 Email: walkingnz@xtra.co.nz COMING EVENTS ADVERTISING: Frank Goldingham 0800-walking (925-546) Email walkingnz@xtra.co.nz SUBSCRIPTIONS: Phone 0800-925-546
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES: New Zealand Residents; 24 issues $159.00 posted, 12 issues $84.50 posted, 6 issues $51.00 posted DIGITAL $29.00, 12 issues Australia: 12 issues: $122.00 Rest of World: $138.00 NEWSAGENT DISTRIBUTION: Avato Ltd WALKING NEW ZEALAND LTD, P O Box 1922, Palmerston North Telephone 06-358-6863 - Fax 06-358-6864 E-Mail: walkingnz@xtra.co.nz
Website: www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
The information and views expressed by contributors are not necessarily agreed to by the editor or publisher, and while every effort will be made to ensure accuracy, no responsibility will be taken by the editor or publisher for inaccurate information.
You can now view and enjoy the latest issue of
Walking New Zealand
magazine online for $2.50 at
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14 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Walk talk Free tours of Pukaha Wildlife Centre
While the world focuses on Covid19, Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre at Mt Bruce in the Wairarapa is turning its attention closer to home and encouraging locals to visit, to connect with nature and forget the worries of the world. We’re offering free daily tours of the reserve. These are available each day at 12.30pm, for around 45 minutes. As an immediate priority, we’ve put proactive health and safety measures in place for all who visit and work here at our national wildlife centre. You can now view and enjoy the latest issue of
Walking New Zealand
magazine online for $2.50 at
http://www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Keep Waikaremoana pristine or risk limiting access
People have a duty to care for the land and its kaitiaki when they visit Lake Waikaremoana, says Walking Access Commission Ara Hīkoi Aotearoa Chief Executive Ric Cullinane. Cullinane says news that freedom campers and visitors are dumping rubbish and felling trees at Lake Waikaremoana is deeply saddening. “Te Urewera is a unique and beautiful place. It now holds its own legal personhood status. We should treat it with the same respect and care that we treat people,” says Cullinane. Cullinane says Ngāi Tūhoe, who care for the land, should not be picking up after disrespectful recreational users. “If we do not treat land with respect then the people who care for that land will increasingly call to limit public access,” says Cullinane. The Commission’s role to is increase and support public access to the outdoors. Advocacy for better public access is much more difficult if people do not show respect and care with the access they already have. One of the responsibilities of the Commission is promoting rights and responsibilities of recreational land users and landholders. It publishes an Outdoor Access Code and regularly provides advice and education for recreational land users. Above: Lake Waikaremoana.
DOC photo
Your favourite walk could win you a free subscription Only
$59.95 Plus $7.00 P&P
We are looking for readers’ favourite New Zealand walks. Many of us go out regularly walking on a route which we class as our favourite, for a number of reasons. Perhaps because for it’s scenery, it’s safe, it’s challenging, it’s flat, it’s hilly, it’s varied, or for whatever reason. We would like you to tell us in your own words what is you favourite walk and why. Email us a story from say 250 up to 1200 words including a photo or photos. We will now give you a FREE subscription (six months or more, depending on the article), or extension to Walking New Zealand magazine for walks published. You can also post an article to Walking New Zealand, Freepost 78863, P O Box 1922, Palmerston North, or fax 06-358-6864. If sending a photo by email please make sure photos are in high resolution.
Our email address is: walkingnz@xtra.co.nz. Please put “My Favourite Walk” in the subject line and include your name and postal address.
4 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand digital edition
Walking New Zealand magazine has just gone digital on our own website. Viewers can read through the lastest issue for only $2.50 an issue, paid by credit card before viewing. Go to www. walkingnewzealand.co.nz and mouse over Shop and Subscribe and then click on Latest Issue - Digital. Enjoy!
Well known Waiheke host passes
It is with great sadness that we have heard of the recent passing of Waiheke Walking Festival friend Sir Rob Fenwick. A wonderful openhearted man, filled with wisdom, kindness and a love of our unique land and marine environment – and a champion for native trees. Sir Rob and Lady Jennie so generously gifted a large piece of their Te Matuku land to create a stunning section of the Te Ara Hura walkway and provide wonderful walking opportunities for everyone. Sir Rob also hosted walks through their private land during the Festival for many years, leading walks through the native bush, visiting his favourite puriri tree, and enjoying oysters and wine on the foreshore.
Issue number
The cover only on the last issue had the wrong issue number. It had 276 instead of 267. The inside pages had the correct issue number. You can now view back issues of Walking New Zealand magazine, two issues back from the latest, FREE at : http://issuu.com/walkingnewzealand.
Walk talk Fiordland area roads status
The Milford Road was heavily damaged during the floods on 4 February 2020. Since then, it has partially reopened to bus convoys. As to 16 March 2020, the road is reopening to all vehicles, at night only (5pm to 7.30am). During the day it will be bus convoys only while road repairs continue. The situation can change at short notice depending on weather and conditions. You are encouraged to check on the state of the road here prior to starting your trip. The Hollyford Road (not managed by NZTA) remains non-driveable.
Niue now a whole country Dark Sky Place
Niue is the world’s first whole country to become a Dark Sky Place. It has received formal accreditation from the International Dark-Sky Association (IDA) as an International Dark Sky Sanctuary and International Dark Sky Community, thus covering the whole country with Dark Sky protection and recognition and deeming it a ‘dark sky nation’. Niue now has formal protection for its sky, land and sea with the IDA International Dark Sky designations adding to its existing marine reserve that encompasses 40% of Niue’s exclusive economic zone and the Huvalu Forest Conservation Area which contains some of the most threatened flora and fauna in the world.
IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO OUR READERS AND SUBSCRIBERS
Issue 268 was unable to be printed at the usual time of the month due to the Covis-19 Lockdown, but an online link to the digital copy was sent at the beginng of April to all subscribers that we had email addresses for. If you did not receive an email with link to APRIL issue 268, please send your email address, name, address and customer number to us at walkingnz@xtra.co.nz with the EMAIL ADDRESS in the subject line.
This issue you are reading now is the updated 268 print edition.
As more readers would like to read the magazine on line we have now changed the font and increased the size to be able to be read on all devices. You can subscribe for 12 months for the digital edition for only $29.00. That is only $2.50 an issue). The digital edition is the same as the print edition. http://walkingnewzealand. co.n z/produ ct/digit a l subscription-12-months/
Due to the down turn of advertising especially from big walking/running events due to the corona virus lockdown the next issue of Walking New Zealand 269 will be published in early August. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Queen Charlotte Track
Queen Charlotte Track . . . We’re all going on a summer holiday No more working for a week or two. Fun and laughter on our summer holiday, No more worries for me or you, For a week or two. We’re going where the sun shines brightly We’re going where the sea is blue. We’ve all seen it on the movies, Now let’s see if it’s true.
T
hey say that a change is as good as a holiday and if COVID-19 has taught us anything at all, it’s that change can remind us of what is important in life. Family, friends, good times, fun in the sun and laughter. And, of course, the importance of being kind. The operators behind the Queen Charlotte Track in the Marlborough Sounds know something about most of these things, fun in the sun being one of them! Located in one of the sunniest regions in New Zealand, the great summer
climate is one of the attractions they are keen to encourage New Zealanders to come and experience for themselves this coming summer. There’s also history here too. The Queen Charlotte Track offers a spectacular 72km hike from the historic Meretoto/Ship Cove through to picturesque Anakiwa. Ship Cove is a place that features high on the list of most iconic historic places for New Zealanders to visit as it was here the first sustained contact between the New Zealand Maori and the European took place.
Cruise and Walk – Queen Charlotte Track Marlborough Sounds CRUISES for SENIORS In a controlled and safe environment
Affinity Cruises have been cruising with the NZ 60+ age range since 1996
What is a ‘Cruise and Walk? Live-a-board the vessel Affinity and go ashore each day to walk the different sections of the track. Fully catered, no heavy packs to carry, hot showers, comfy cabins. Departs from and returns to Picton.
www.affinitycruises.co.nz 0800 862 334 sales@affinitycruises.co.nz CRUISES also available for groups of FRIENDS or FAMILY
6 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
Words by Juliet Gibbons, photos by Richard Briggs Photography and Daniel Forster. This came to national prominence earlier this year as New Zealand commemorated 250 years since the arrival of Captain James Cook in what became the precursor to European settlement in New Zealand. Meretoto/Ship Cove was the epicentre of English navigator Captain James Cook’s explorations in the South Pacific – a snug cove in the outer Queen Charlotte Sound where he replenished water supplies, rested his men and repaired his ships on five different visits between 1770 and 1777. Above: Skyline ridges along the track offer unrivalled views of the unique sunken river valleys of the Marlborough Sounds. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Queen Charlotte Track
. Here we come!
British sovereignty was first proclaimed by Cook over the South Island when the British flag was formally raised on the summit of Motuara Island, opposite Ship Cove, on 31st January 1770. As well as its historical connections, the Queen Charlotte Track is a truly unique New Zealand walk due to its variety of landscapes as the well-defined track passes through lush coastal forest, meanders around tranquil
bays and traverses skyline ridges affording unsurpassed views of the Queen Charlotte and Kenepuru Sounds. The terrain is regarded as undulating with hills ranging from sea level to just over 400 metres and most of the track is wide and benched which makes for a pleasant stroll. The trail crosses a mixture of public and private land, a unique partnership between the
Depar tment of Conser vation, QCTLC (Queen Charlotte Track Land Co-operative) and Marlborough District Council, and visitors are required to have purchased the appropriate pass if crossing the private land sections. You will find real New Zealand here – where friendly locals welcome you to their door, your bags are transferred each day and the access is easy while you adventure. This is a walking track
Visit the Official Website of the Queen Charlotte Track www.qctrack.co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Queen Charlotte Track
Queen Charlotte Track . . . Here We Come!
where you can create memories in your own style and at a budget that suits your wallet. T h e t r a c k c a n b e w a l ke d year-round thanks to that great Marlborough Sounds’ climate with the most popular season being from November to May. It is also a popular trail for mountain bikers with some sections open all year to enjoy. The majority of visitors access the track by boat from the port of Picton but day walks are available where the road meets the track
Quality Picton accommodation at great rates.
Above left: Queen Charlotte Track Inc. chair Rob Burn (pictured) plans to ‘walk the talk’ this winter and get out in his own backyard. Below right: Water taxi options provide access to the start at Meretoto/Ship Cove and end at Anakiwa, adding to the experience. such as at Anakiwa, Torea Bay and Te Mahia Saddle. You can camp at Department of Conservation campsites, private campsites and farm stays, or opt for accommodation in backpackers, home stays, bed and breakfasts, retreats and lodges or hotels along the way all while taking advantage of the water transport services which allow your luggage to be transferred each day. Cook for yourself or take the
night off, if staying at or near accommodation with restaurants. Many of the smaller lodges offer catering options too. For those with a little more time, or seeking something a little different, there are many other activities that can be enjoyed along the way. These include swimming, fishing, sailing, sea kayaking, bird and dolphin watching, diving and historic side trips. Glow-worm grottos add to the nightlife. There are guided and unguided packaged walking options available too and both can have their packs carried for them from any of the access points along the track by arrangement with transport operators. The sheer pleasure of arriving or departing the track by sea adds to the experience and with its historic interest and many comfortable accommodation houses along the way serving good food and wine, it could easily be called the ‘gourmet’s trail’. Come and experience the breathtaking ridge top panoramas of Queen Charlotte and Kenepuru Sounds and enjoy the company of friendly hosts and superb food and wine. For more information on how to book your ‘summer holiday’ see the official track website at www. qctrack.co.nz
Package deals available. Make us part of your plan.
Book direct and save. Ph 03 573 7116 www.tombstonebp.co.nz
email tombstonebp@xtra.co.nz
8 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Queen Charlotte Track
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Queen Charlotte Track
Walking the Talk
Q
Queen Charlotte Track walking packages Let us arrange it all for you Includes: • Private, en suite rooms • Luggage transfers • Restaurant meals available • Daily packed lunches • Pre-trip briefing • Private Land Track Pass • Information kit and map Locally owned and operated family business based in Picton
ueen Charlotte Track Inc. has championed the virtues of the Queen Charlotte Track since 1993 and COVID-19 is a challenge the organisation is ready to meet and overcome. Chairman Rob Burn is set to ‘walk the talk’ of supporting local when he and his wife Carolyn retrace the steps she last walked 25 years ago, completing most of the Queen Charlotte Track this winter. “I have promised Carolyn a walk on the Queen Charlotte Track the first chance we get, seeing our own backyard, especially with our Autumn weather still good,” he says. “Most of our operator members have not had an easy time over the last few months and without international flights our tourism businesses will likely just be welcoming our fellow Kiwis who we hope will explore our local offerings to get us through this coming Winter and Summer,” he says. Rob and his wider committee are motivated to ensure New Zealanders are aware of the wonderful experience the Queen Charlotte Track offers. “Our other ray of sunshine could be the ‘TransTasman Bubble’ concept being worked on now. We all know our Aussie cousins and expat Kiwis love to walk, cycle, eat and drink and that is what the Queen Charlotte Track can offer in abundance,” he says. So fellow New Zealanders, there has never been a better time to follow in Rob’s footsteps, to support local New Zealand walking trails like the Queen Charlotte Track and venture out into your big backyard. What are you waiting for New Zealand? Below: The track is well-defined and passes through stretches of lush coastal forest with punga ferns creating a canopy overhead.
Natural Encounters Walks www.natural-encounters.com info@natural-encounters.com Ph: 021 268 8879
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www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Queen Charlotte Track
The Queen Charlotte Track – Why
walk when you can ride?
T
he Queen Charlotte Track is one of New Zealand’s bestloved walking trails, but it is also a popular destination for mountain bikers as one of New Zealand’s Great Rides on the Ngā Haerenga New Zealand Cycle Trail. It offers a unique combination of beautiful coastal scenery, native bush, stunning views and New Zealand history. The natural appeals are complimented by easy access, an outstanding choice of hosted accommodation, pack transfers and a wide variety of flexible options for day or multiday trips, including all-inclusive packages from local providers. It offers bikers an exhilarating
and challenging experience over 72km and is able to be biked comfortably in three days. The Queen Charlotte Track has long been regarded as one of the best single tracks in the country. The track is graded as advanced/ grade 4 for mountain biking although some sections are easier than others and lend themselves to day rides for those not wanting to attempt the entire track. The demographic of those riding the track is also changing as biking grows in popularity amongst older age groups. Most riders will find some sections of the track easier to walk and you will likely need to push your bike in certain parts.
Above: Meet the friendly locals along the way! If you are fit and experienced at mountain biking, most of the track is very rideable, albeit steep and challenging in certain sections, especially when rain has rendered it slippery and muddy. Less experienced riders may prefer to avoid the ridge-top sections of the central part of the track by riding along Kenepuru Road between Kenepuru Saddle and Portage Bay, still enjoying
The Queen Charlotte Track The iconic Queen Charlotte Track, stretching from Meretoto/Ship Cove to Anakiwa, is a journey from past to present, via panoramic ocean views, thriving native bush and encounters with the likes of weka, fantail, wood pigeon and even seals. Visit to find out more.
Book your water taxis, accommodation and track pass with Marlborough i-SITES on 0800 777 181 www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Queen Charlotte Track
The Queen Charlotte Track – Why walk when you can ride?
wonderful Sounds views. The Marlborough Sounds is an iconic New Zealand destination - an intricate land mass, making up one fifth of New Zealand’s coastline, of numerous bays and coves caused by the drowning of river valleys by rising oceans over the past 10,000 years. It is through this awe-inspiring landscape bikers can test themselves against a trail which takes them from shoreline to skyline, through magnificent virgin native forest at
the track’s start at Meretoto/Ship Cove as well as regenerating forest and farmland along the rest of its length. Mountain biking is one of the best ways to explore this stunning area and learn about its fascinating history. Although challenging in parts, the Queen Charlotte Track experience is made all the easier with the thought of comfortable lodgings awaiting each evening from backpackers through to lodges and even hotels. And the
12 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
Above left: As recreational cycling grows in popularity, more and more visitors are choosing two wheels to tackle the track. Above right: Meretoto/Ship Cove, South Pacific base of Captain James Cook and start of the Queen Charlotte Track, is an iconic historic place all New Zealanders should visit. best part is your pack is transferred for you between your night time stays, by one of the water transport operators, so all you have to do is ride. Important Footnote: You can bike the whole track from Ship Cove to Anakiwa between 1 March and 30 November each year. From 1 December to the end of February, the track is open for mountain biking between Kenepuru Saddle and Anakiwa. As the track is a shared use track and popular with walkers, you will need to ride in control and be prepared for walkers around each corner. Riding in the same direction as most others, from Ship Cove to Anakiwa is advised. For more information visit www.qctrack.co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Lockdown activities
Lockdown Activities
With everyone staying in their bubble during the lockdown, our local streets have more people walking and cycling for physical activity and getting to the local supermarket. Communities across the country have found creative ways to encourage more local physical exercise. The placement of teddy bears, and later Easter egg pictures, in windows as a form of physically distant scavenger hunt have been fun for big and little kids alike. Many have used chalk on the ground to draw pictures, write words of encouragement or develop obstacle courses for local residents. If you’ve doing anything active in your neighbourhood to encourage exercise, like walking etc, using our currently quiet streets, please share your story with us. Just email walkingnz@xtra.co.nz with a story from say 100 words with one image and if published you could win a free six month subscription or extension to Walking New Zealand magazine. Include your name and postal address. Here are what some readers have been doing during the lockdown.
Walk and biking around Papamoa
Most mornings we start our day by biking down the waterways in Papamoa. We are lucky to have a 24 km circuit of shared walking/ biking trails.There’s always something different to see. Because there are so many well marked exits, it is easy to combine a beach walk with part of the trail. For the past month there have been so many people enjoying the beach, and these trails, each in their own little bubble and often with their dog. Let’s hope it continues. From Barbz Lower, Papamoa
Training up Mt Wash-ington
Thanks for this issue, it’s great to have something to read while we’re in our ‘bubbles.’ I thought you might get a laugh out of what I’ve been up to since our season finished early - Not everyone has a mountain in their bubble, so I’ve been keeping up the pack training in the back yard with twice daily ascents of ‘Mt. Wash-ington.’ From Cathy Taylor, Walking Legends Guided Walks, Te Puke.
Your favourite walk or bike ride could win you a free subscription
We are looking for readers’ favourite New Zealand walks. or bike rides Many of us go out regularly walking on a route which we class as our favourite, for a number of reasons. Perhaps because for it’s scenery, it’s safe, it’s challenging, it’s flat, it’s hilly, it’s varied, or for whatever reason. We would like you to tell us in your own words what is you favourite walk or bike ride and why. Email us a story from say 250 up to 1200 words including a photo or photos. We will now give you a FREE subscription (six months or more, depending on the article), or extension to Walking New Zealand magazine for walks published. You can also post an article to Walking New Zealand, Freepost 78863, P O Box 1922, Palmerston North, or fax 06-358-6864. If sending a photo by email please make sure photos are in high resolution.
Our email address is: walkingnz@xtra.co.nz. Please put “My Favourite Walk” in the subject line and include your name and postal address. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Northland Experience
The Old Chook’s Tour of Northland
Above: What a view in the Bay of Islands! Below: Incredible views from cycling on our ebikes.
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14 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
By Tracy Mackey
A
n adventure of a lifetime always starts with anticipation, a pinch of the unknown, an exciting unusual experience, and not really knowing the outcome. I was very fortunate to host the Old chooks on our tour immersing ourselves in Northland’s history, culture, sampling local delicious produce and exploring its hidden treasures. The Old Chooks arrive in Paihia, Bay of Islands and enjoy the luxury of Edgewater Apartments set on the waterfront. The next day they set off on their timeless adventure by catching a boat out to the wildlife sanctuary of Urupukapuka, one of the seven pest free islands of Ipipiri, www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Northland Experience
situated in the Eastern Bay of the Bay of islands. We were welcomed with the wonderful sounds of the many species of birdsong, and the endless flutter of the tuis wings as they sailed past us. We trekked our way through some of the most prime real estate for the re-introduced native bird species, such as the curious toutouwai [North Island robin], bronzed beauty tieke [saddleback], the cheeky popokotea [ whitehead] , and the sensational birdsong of the tui. Our mission was to spot the elusive, very rare, but incredible beautiful kakariki [native green parakeet] and it lived up to its expectation. This spectacular bright red green parakeet, and with the other rare species delighted us with their presence, cruising in and interacting with us, such a treat. We came out of the bush to Paradise Bay, which certainly lived up to its name with a delightful picnic lunch freshly made from local produce, then a swim in the tranquil waters. Leaving this behind we made a small detour to the see the brown teal duck, before tackling the hike up the endless steps and overlooking sheer cliff drops to take in the spectacular views looking out across the Bay of Islands. The day ended watching the sunset overlooking the water www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
sipping a well-deserved drink, contemplating how wonderful our day was, and indulging in the outstanding feast of local delicacies from the deck of the Iconic Duke of Marlborough in Russell. Just Magic. The next day, was like stepping back in time. So tranquil and peaceful following the Waikare Connection River Trail, Russell Forest section of the Te Araroa Trail. The native bush forest there is flourishing, seemingly undisturbed and untouched for hundreds of years. Magnificent old kauri, puriri, totara trees and nikau palms make this walk outstanding. Getting our feet wet, this track twists and weaves its way along the river, climbing over, through and around boulders, trees and rocks following the natural course of the river. stunning, and teaming with native bush and wildlife. A well-kept northland hidden treasure. Another wonderful end to the day, sampling some of the delicious local delicacies and wine, NORTHLAND
Above left: At the Maungungu Mission at Horeke. Above right: Wandering through the Wairere Boulder at Horeke. buzzing from our days adventure, at the lovingly restored old establishment Left Bank Hotel in Kaikohe. Our last days adventure we traded our hiking shoes briefly, for electric bikes to sample a leg of the Pou Herenga Twin Coast Cycle Trail. For most of the group this was their first time on electric bikes, let’s just say they just loved them and had such a wonderful day cycling some of the most spectacular, off the beaten track, sights that only Northland can offer. Taking in the stunning views on this off road trail, traversing down valleys and following the riverbanks before stopping for a picnic lunch EXPERIENCES
Unique biking and hiking tours
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Northland Experience
The Old Chook’s Tour of Northland beside the river. Then back on the bikes to traverse along the gravel backroads before cruising along one of Nz’s longest boardwalk over the mangroves, finishing at the picturesque place that time has forgotten, Horeke, on the Hokianga Harbour. Later in the afternoon, we explored the unique geological phenomenon of Wairere Boulders. A wonderful unique privately owned farm who has created a walk which allows interaction without deterring from the ecological restoration of the native forests and bushland. This native bush walk celebrates the native subtropical habitat, alive with the songs of bird and lush with vegetation narrow pathways through the basalt rocks carved by nature. Afterwards, we finished this trek sampling the farmer ’s home cooked delicious treats. Our last stop for the day was at the magnificent Mangungu
Mission House on the Horeke Harbour. This was the largest signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, with over 3000 chiefs present, also a magnificent viewpoint. Our last night we found ourselves in the unique House over the Water sitting out over the Hokianga Harbour where we relaxed and happy, sitting on the deck over the water, reflecting on our astounding adventure, and sampling the chilled wine and local cheese before heading over to New Zealand’s oldest surviving pub, Horeke Hotel. Whilst indulging in succulent pork belly, and delicious thick juicy steaks from local farmers, we listened to all the colourful local tales, stories and entertaining characters brought to life by the publican. A world that time left behind and a fitting end to our adventure sipping drinks, laughing, and watching the spectacular sunset over the Hokianga Harbour.
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Above left: Cycling the Pou Herenga Tail Twin Coast Cycle Trail. Above right: Always smiling! I was lucky enough to share this experience with a wonderful group of eight ladies calling themselves the ‘old chooks’. We have shared some memories of a life time, from helping each other over the obstacles, to the many laughs, I thoroughly enjoyed their company and I have made new friends to share many more adventures with. A great escape exploring our untouched by time landscape, wonderful company, stunning food and meeting some colourful locals all put together in one Northland Experience package. Thank you old chooks I had a blast with you all! Northland Experiences have an all-inclusive 5 day cycle trip that runs weekly, cycling from coast to coast. Or you can create a bespoke tour of just walking or cycling or a mix as the Old Chooks did. www.northlandexperiences. co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
NEWS
A billion-dollar opportunity for walkers
Budget 2020 has opened some exciting the economy. Good tracks bring visitors and oppor tunities for tracks tourists, they improve people’s mental and physical health, and they build stronger more connected around the country.
Walking Access Commission chief executive Ric Cullinane says if New Zealanders use Budget funding wisely it will be a major step towards a comprehensive nationwide network of tracks. By Stephen Day The Government plans to spend $1.1 billion to create 11,000 green jobs in the hope of jump-starting “a sustainable recovery” from the COVID-19 crisis. The package includes: * $433 million for new jobs in regional environmental projects * $315 million biosecurity, including weed and pest control * $200 million for the Department of Conservation’s Jobs for Nature Fund * $154 million for new jobs enhancing biodiversity on public and private land While none of that spending is for public access to the outdoors, much of it will rely on good tracks and trails to succeed. All those people removing weeds, cleaning waterways and saving birds will need to walk into the wild to do it. And, symbiotically, New Zealand’s tracks will be better as a result. Walkers, bikers, horse riders and other outdoor recreationists will hopefully have access to land that has fewer pests, cleaner waterways, and more native animals. Walking Access Commission chief executive Ric Cullinane says there is a close relationship between many of the people who enjoy our outdoors and those who care for it. “The people who tramp or mountain bike New Zealand’s amazing trails are often the same people who volunteer their time to protect and enhance our environment,” says Cullinane. The government has also said that part of its COVID-19 recovery plan is to invest in ‘shovelready’ infrastructure projects. The Walking Access Commission, as well as many local authorities and other agencies, have been working to make sure that that list of shovel-ready projects includes new walkways, bike paths and public access opportunities to the outdoors. “Building a network of trails will stimulate the economy for a few years,” says Cullinane. “But after we build them, they will still contribute to www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
communities.” He also notes that building and maintain tracks is an investment in the whole country — north and south, urban and rural, rich and poor — because every town and district has tracks. The Walking Access Commission Ara Hīkoi Aotearoa will receive an extra $1.8 million for each of the next two years — double its existing funding of $1.8 million. This funding increase follows an independent review of the Walking Access Act 2008 which recommended an increase to the Commission’s funding. The review noted that the Commission’s funding, which had not increased since it was set up in 2008, was minuscule. It also found that people involved in recreation, the primary sector, te ao Māori and local government all valued the Commission’s work. Cullinane says the review showed widespread support and appreciation for the Commission’s work. “Without this extra funding, we would have needed to cut our work alongside community trail building groups, councils and other partners. This work includes creating, improving and promoting tracks, trails and other forms of public access to the outdoors for walkers, cyclists, horse riders, hunters and anglers.” With luck, a well-resourced Walking Access Commission can use this nationwide focus on the outdoors to help local communities build a growing network of tracks and trails.
Above: A new loop track extension by the Hokitika Gorge in Jan 2020. Photo by Inger Perkins Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Photo Contest
We are looking for the best digital photos each month depicting walking Now the time to get your digital camera out or look through your digital images and enter the
Walking New Zealand Digital Photo Contest
Monthly Photo Contest The image could be a scenic scene, a walk on the beach with the dog, a bush walk, a street walk or anything walking that takes your fancy. The rules are simply: there must be a person or persons walking in the picture either front, side or back on, and can be in the distance. We require an emailed image in high resolution mode, in jpeg format as an attachment, and NOT embedded in Word or in the email, and NOT a link to a website to be downloaded. The subject line must have the words “Walking New Zealand Photo Contest” and the email must include the NAME, POSTAL ADDRESS and phone number of the person who took the photo and a small caption. In this contest ONLY ONE emailed photo accepted per month. Entry in the contest automatically allows us to print the image. The person who has their photo published will receive a six month subscription or a renewal to Walking New Zealand magazine of six months. If a picture is chosen for the cover page the person will receive a 12 month subscription or renewal.
Above: Day One on the 800km El Camino de Santiago, the toughest of the 40 days, leaving St Jean Pied de Port in France, heading up the relentless Pyrenees mountain range (1,427 metres), towards Roncesvalles in Spain, 24km a w a y. P h o to by Lorraine T h o m s o n , Auckland.
Email your entries to: walkingnz@xtra.co.nz with s u b j e c t l i n e “ Wa l k i n g N e w Z e a l a n d P h o t o C o n t e s t ” Only EMAILED entries will be accepted.
Below left: Dave at 88 flexes his muscles with a Nikau Palm on the bush walk to the Bridal Veil Falls near Raglan. Photo by Vicky Ross, Red Beach. Opposite page above: Gill Green on the Te Paki Trail Northland Diana Ward, Pt Chevalier Auckland.
Walking New issue no no 268268- 2020 18 Walking NewZealand, Zealand, issue 2020
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Photo Contest
Right: Walking through the river on the Oroua Farm Walk on David Grant’s farm. Photo by Cynthia Steiner, Fairbanks, Alaska. Below right: Crossing the bridge on the Totara Reserve Fern Walk. Photo by Barbara Gillespie, Linton Below left: Group amazed at the impressive landslide on the Oroua Farm Walk. Photo by Jay Raghavan, Wellington.
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Manawatu Walking Festival Photo Winners
Walking WalkingNew NewZealand, Zealand,issue issueno no268 268--2020 2020
19 19
New Zealand Walks
Bookable huts
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By Department of Conservation
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Above top: The view down to Woolshed Creek Hut. Photo: Becs Crilly Above: Lead Hut Warden, Becs Crilly, managing wasp control. Photo: Becs Crilly
ount Somers Track is a very popular 26 km circuit track located in the beautiful Hakatere Conservation Park, Canterbury. Due to the trail’s proximity to Christchurch and the relative ease of the walk, the 26-bed Woolshed Creek Hut and the 19-bed Pinnacles Hut were often the unwitting destinations of the ‘Weekend Surge’. This is best described as a frenzy of keen-as trampers heading up the hill on a Saturday (as many as 60 people) hoping to secure a bed at the end of their hiking day. To help combat the weekend overcrowding and the resulting frustrations, the two huts were added to DOC’s booking system on 1 October 2019. Within eight weeks of the online launch, at the beginning of what the Geraldine based DOC staff consider to be their summer season, bookings were 173% higher than for the same period for the 2018-2019 summer. These projections were validated when the actual figure reporting was released earlier this month, confirming 729 visitors during January, up from 420 visitors in January 2019. This includes an increase in trail-runners, day
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- a summer success walkers and hunters utilising the area. Staff have reported other notable benefits such as less jostling on the track, compliance checking is now much easier and record-keeping is significantly more accurate. Rebecca (Becs) Crilly, nearing the end of her second summer season as the Lead Hut Warden for the area, echoes these benefits. “Having bookings has taken a lot of stress out of the warden role. We are able to spend more time with trampers, sharing information about the local area and interesting landmarks to visit while they’re walking. Trampers are more engaged with us too, as we’re not perceived as ‘just compliance’ anymore. The interactions are a lot friendlier now”. Working alongside a second Hut Warden and a bevvy of volunteers, Crilly stated that including the Mt Somers facilities on the booking system had been well overdue and the response from trampers to date had been one of “overwhelming joy”. “Trampers are now able to pace their walk and enjoy the outdoor experience without the time pressures of needing to get to the hut first. “They know they have a guaranteed bed at the end. There is clear signage at both entrance carparks informing people they have to book a bed before they head up, but we won’t ever turn anyone away either. We just make it clear that bookings will always get priority. There hasn’t been any issues so far this season.” Both the Woolshed Creek carpark and the Sharplin Falls carpark have reception, providing www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Abvove top: Mt Somers Track. Andy Osborne
Photo:
Above: A quiet Woolshed Creek Hut. Photo: Becs Crilly
Right; Dads and Lads. Photo: Andy Osborne
the opportunity for a booking to be placed from a mobile device. And further up the hill, Hut Wardens use their mobile devices to complete online check-ins, confirming exactly who is onsite. As a direct result of having certainty of visitor numbers, Crilly says she has been able to gain some more structure and productivity from her days. She plans to be available at the Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walks
Explore our beautiful botanical world Discover the first-rate walking tracks and spectacular scenery at New Zealand’s national arboretum, a unique park sanctuary for all ages. Eastwoodhill offers over 25km of graded and marked walking tracks set amongst 13,000 exotic and rare trees, shrubs and climbers. Immerse yourself in the beauty of our botanical wonderland and plan to stay - accommodation, self-contained campervan sites.
“A nature lover’s paradise” “This place is truly amazing” “A must see in autumn” P: 06 863 9003 E: enquiries@eastwoodhill.org.nz A: 2392 Wharekopae Rd, RD 2, Ngatapa, Gisborne
www.eastwoodhill.org.nz
Bookable huts - a summer success huts around the times walkers will start arriving and is able to schedule track maintenance activities for the quieter days. When queried about the downsides of the booking system, Crilly reported very few. Some ‘Back Country Hut Pass’ holders are still learning the huts must be booked first although many are already familiar with the process for claiming their refund. The booking system itself has some quirks too. There is currently no self-cancellation option, meaning folks who aren’t able to make the trip become ‘no-shows’, if they haven’t rung DOC to cancel. Sometimes there is a ‘sameday booking’ glitch when using a mobile phone to book from the entrance carparks, although this is resolved quickly by the wardens at hut check-in. Another feature Crilly is happy to utilise. “We have noticed a shift in the demographic of people who are walking too. This walk is the perfect introduction to overnight tramping. Families have confirmed accommodation so they can travel with less gear, at a pace that suits them. Woolshed really isn’t the party hut it used to be.”
22 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
Following a recent ‘Dads and Lads’ tramp, Andy Osborne agrees with this comment. He and a family friend took their respective sons (aged 7 ( just) to 11) for an overnight stay at the Woolshed Creek Hut. “We knew that the hut needed to be booked prior and the system worked well. Everyone who was staying in the hut overnight had also booked, so there were no extras sleeping on the floor.” Of the experience itself, Osborne said they walked in via Rhyolite Ridge, commenting it was “a bit tough for the boys with packs on” so they cooled off in the waterfall gorge swimming hole about 20 minutes from the hut, before heading back to the hut for the evening. “It was a great experience overall”. DOC is continuing to improve the booking service it can provide to customers and in April all existing bookable campgrounds and huts, that sit outside the Great Walks, will transition to the new booking service. More information is available from booking.doc.govt.nz. Above: Chatting with trampers. Photo:
Becs Crilly
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Walking on
private land
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ou can see the river across the paddock. It looks like it might be a great swimming hole. But how do you get to it? A common question that people ask the Walking Access Commission Ara Hīkoi Aotearoa is ‘can I walk across private land?’ The answer is no. There is no general right of public access across private land. This is different from many northern European and Nordic By Stephen Day countries. For instance, in Scotland, Finland, Iceland, Sweden and Austria people have what is known as the ‘right to roam’. They can wander on private land so long as they are not disrupting the landowner’s business, or exploiting the land for their own economic gain. New Zealand has a culture of allowing people access to the outdoors and encouraging people to wander and explore – but we do not have a ‘right to roam’. Landowners have an exclusive right to their property, protected under the Trespass Act 1980. But there are strips of public access land in New Zealand that adjoin private land that people can walk on legally. The most common of these are the 20-metre strips to the side of coasts, lakes and along rivers. These public water margins, known colloquially as the ‘Queen’s Chain’, are incomplete. Generally, they are a mixture of marginal strips, formed and unformed legal roads, esplanade reserves and other public reserves. While you can walk along many water margins you can’t walk along all of them. The right to walk around the coast, above the foreshore, or beside a river or lake depends on whether a reserve exists. Finding one of these strips might be your best chance of getting to that swimming hole. One type of public access land that often www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
adjoins private farms or forests is unformed legal roads (sometimes known as paper roads, because they are visible on paper but, being unformed, are not otherwise visible). You have the same legal rights on an unformed legal road as you do on a formed public road. The adjoining landowner cannot refuse you access across such a road. But it is not easy to stick to an unformed legal road without wandering onto the adjoining private land. If you are unsure and there are no signs showing access, ask the landholder first. Farmers may have valid reasons to deny access across their land. So you should accept refusals with good grace. If you have doubts, then you should check with the local council, DOC or contact the Commission. The Walking Access Commission mapping system shows unformed legal roads, marginal strips, esplanade strips and other areas of public access. Many farmers I’ve talked to will happily grant access across their land if people ask politely first. Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020 23
New Zealand Walk
Mt Hobson walk for panoramic city
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ount Hobson Short Walk is a 0.8 km 20 minute there and back track just a short walk from the Remuera shopping centre and is one of Auckland’s most well-preserved volcanic cones From the walk there are many scenic views and is good for all fitness levels. The trail is primarily used for hiking, walking, and nature trips. Formed some 25,000 years ago, Mt Hobson is 143 m high and the expansive, panoramic view of Auckland from the summit is well worth the walk. Enter the pa t h w a y to the summit from RemAbove: One of the panoramic views from the track. Rangitoto is seen uera Road. In over the city in the background. Springtime the lower field along the path is filled with jonquils, commemorating the Remuera boys who lost their lives in WWII. Further up, terraces and kumara pits are still evident from the Maori occupation of Mt Hobson in pre-European days. From the summit you can enjoy an uninterrupted 360 degree views of Auckland City, the Waitemata Harbour and Rangitoto Island. Kids will enjoy this walk too, as Mt Hobson is also a working farm with cattle grazing nearby.
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Below left: The start of the walk from Remuera Road.
24 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
views
not a formed path, so for those with knee issues should begin at the top of Pere Street. There is limited parking on Pere Street, more on Remuera Road, but easily walked to from Above right: Looking towards Newmarket. Right: Mt Hobson is a working cattle farm. Below left: Flowers in bloom add colur. It is good quick walk for Below right: The track is popular with runners.
visitors as well as locals to see panoramic views of the city without needing to hike for a long time. Fact file The initial ascent (from the entrance way at the bend in Pere Street) is very steep and
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Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
Mt Hobson walk for panoramic city views the Newmarket train station. There are well maintained seats strategically placed along the way for enjoying the view. Distance: 0.8 km: Elevation Gain: 54 m: Route Type: There and back History Mount Hobson (Remuwera in Māori) is a 143 m high volcanic cone in the Auckland Volcanic Field in Auckland, New Zealand. Located in the Remuera suburb, to the east of the Newmarket commercial suburb, it has been extensively modified by human use, first to supply the surrounding area. by Māori for use as a Pā (fortification) and later An additional, partially buried, water reservoir was by use as quarry and pasture land before finally built on the low southern side of the mountain in having a water reservoir installed in its cone 1955. Mt Hobson is named after Captain William Hobson who was the first Governor of New Zealand Above and below photos: The walk is popular and co-author of the Treaty of Waitangi. with Remuera folk as it is only .8km, suitable for alll fitness types and so close to the town.
26 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Covid-19
Travel faces a reinvention
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hat can we expect travellers have less necessity to and how will travel socially distance themselves as be different when we their playground is nature rather find ourselves on the than the crushing crowds and other side of Covid-19? queues at busy A well-publicised paper from stores, popular Imperial College London has tourist spots described the pandemic as and resor ts. “a unique crisis prompting Lucky for them, government reaction to the destinations less threat posed to their health to u r i s te d a re services”, It also goes on to say their domain. that “governments may need to Af ter living turn lockdown measures on and through a global Jill Grant pandemic, the off in order to keep demands Jill isBy an Auckland based journalist and photographer on health care systems at a traveller will manageable level.” want more D o m e s t i c t r a v e l w i t h n o reassurance. Number one would border controls will be the first be a vaccine which is bound to sector to return. New Zealand’s happen some time in the future. accommodation and ser vice However, new technology is providers, accustomed to catering being trialed by Etihad Airways to the now-absent inbound market, in conjunction with an Australian would do well to consider offering company to help identify travellers ‘resident rates’ to lure local Kiwis with medical conditions. Potentially and get some traffic through their it tracks ear, temperature, heart rate doors. Neighbouring countries like and respiratory rate of any person Australia may be next to join our at an airport touch point such ‘bubble’ when both countries get as a check-in facility, bag drop, on top of the virus. immigration gate etc… The system If 2020 sees many confined will automatically suspend those to home, spending a lot of time services if a passenger’s vital signs indoors, 2021 could be the opposite indicate suspected symptons of with people getting active, cycling illness. On hand will be qualified and walking. Outdoor active staff or teleconferencing to make www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
further assessments and manage travellers as appropriate. It will be socially unacceptable to travel with a cold or signs of illness. Coughing or sneezing at an airport or on a plane will be frowned upon. Traveller packs of sanitisers, wipes and face masks will be the norm. With three quarters of the world’s airlines’ livery parked, seats on flights will be at a premium until they recommence schedules to pre-2020 levels. The human element helped many travelers through the minefield of cancelling and postponing travel arrangements. The crisis has shown how important the role of a personal travel agent to talk to and engage with is at a time when airlines and government intervention changed the rules adopting credit vouchers instead of refunds. You may expect a travel insurance policy to cover all contingencies before and during travel however none include cover for an epidemic and pandemic. Whether we will experience another crisis like this in our lifetime is arguable, however the re-emergence of travel for all its’ purposes will happen, just differently.
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
Lindsay Scenic Reserve Bush Walk
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hen driving through Waipukurau in Central Hawke’s Bay on your way north or south, there is the Lindsay Bush Scenic Reserve walk, a short walk in the area, that can break the journey. An average or moderately fit person should have no trouble doing it. Lindsay Bush Scenic Reserve (also known as the Tukutuki Reserve), is only five minutes out of town. To get there, take the Hastings road (SH2) north, and immediately after crossing the bridge over the Tukituki River, turn left into Lindsay Road. Keep going until you arrive at a t-junction, turn left into Scenic Road, and follow this until you arrive at an entrance way by a stop-bank. Turn right on the stopbank and the car park is just 200m further on, on the left. Entrance to the reser ve is through the farm gate at the car park, where there are some picnic Above: The track is well formed.
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tables and seats. Two toilets are provided about 50m into the reserve on the left. Access can also be had to the Tukituki River via the track that continues past the car park. The main track through the reserve is the Titoki Track, and there is another track off to the left about halfway through, the Totara Loop track (signposted). The bush in the reserve is made up mostly from kahikatea, titoki, tawa and a few scattered matai and totara. On the eastern side of the reserve is a magnificent stand of cabbage trees (Cordyline Australis), well worth a second look. Many of the kahikatea trees are quite impressive, and are estimated to be between 250 and 500 years old. Lindsay Bush is small, just 9.2ha, but is a treasure trove of flora and fauna – a tiny remnant of the lowland podocarp forests that used to cover most of the inland plains and valleys of Central and Southern Hawke’s Bay. The reserve is owned by the Central Hawke’s Bay District Council, and is looked after and maintained by the CHB Branch of Forest & Bird.
Above: A grass section of the trail. Right: Signs say it all. An epic story by Aucklander, Lorraine Thomson, of her solo 800km trek from St Jean Pied de Port in France, over the relentless Pyrenees, across Spain, to the ancient burial place of St James – Santiago de Compostela. Lorraine outlines her trials and tribulations, the medieval landmarks and diverse people she meets along the way. This is a must-read for anyone contemplating the Camino adventure. Available from the publisher: www.pegasuspublishers.com
Or directly from the author by emailing: Lorraine@LVLT.co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
By Judy Eva
Cardiff Centennial Walk through natural bush and farmland
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ucked away on Opunake Road approximately 6kms from Stratford, Taranaki is a delightful and pleasant walk through farmland and natural bush and following the Waingonoro River is the Cardiff Centennial Walkway.  It gives access to points of local historical significance and was developed by members of Above: Mt Taranaki from a rural area of the walk. Below left: The track alongside the weir.
30 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
Above right: Entrance to walkway from road. Below left: Two sets of steps on the bush track.
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the Cardiff branch of Federated Farmers to coincide with the centennial of the Cardiff School and district in May 1986. Adequate supplies of water for the nearby Cardiff Co Operative Dairy Factory sunk after the factory was built in 1891. Ultimately supplies were established by a well from water from the Waingongoro River and by a bore, thus making the area one of the first dairy factory water supplies in New Zealand. The factory closed in 1951. This walkway is an attractive and tranquil river bank stroll, changing direction and elevation while also providing variety as there are steep
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Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
Harper Womens Cardiff Centennial Walk through Fitted Rain Jacket natural bush and farmland
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steps and slopes and river flats. The path is well maintained through the bush with some steep gradients following the natural contour. One minute you are in a beautiful bush surrounding beside the peaceful sound of the flowing gurgling river only to discover that you have then stepped out into a rural setting walking across a paddock with fantastic views of Mt Taranaki. Visit the sites of the two weirs situated by the river (signposted) built to run a double ram system which pumped water to the Cardiff Co Operative Dairy Factory. It is exciting and nostalgic to be able to explore remnants from days gone by and is a reminder of just how hard the men of that era worked to build and fit machinery from days gone
by, all by hand, tears and sweat. This part of the walk also features a recently constructed exciting rustic swing bridge. At this point of the walk where the old machinery is signposted you can either take the loop track back to the carpark (signposted) or climb the steep stairs and take a short detour to the lookout platform in a large paddock which has views of the surrounding countryside and the 55m natural gas pipeline. A short stroll back to the fork where you diverted to the lookout you can take the loop track back to the carpark. This track has different scenery and is a pleasant walk. Along the way is a recently constructed steep sturdy wooden staircase up to the top level of a bank which after following a short
Above: Remains of the double ram system.
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32 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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New Zealand Walk
Above left: The Swing bridge.
Above right: Look for the “W” signage on the fences.
track you will exit back onto the road further along from where you entered. The signage when crossing the rural areas leaves a lot to be desired but look for the small green squares with a yellow “W” on the fence posts on the right, which indicates Walkway. This is a very pleasant and interesting walk following the river and experiencing different and changing scenery. The stairs are very steep due to the terrain and there are wooden platform seats along the way but due to being in the bush have mould on them and when we did the walk they were damp. It would be advisable to perhaps take something waterproof to sit on if you wish to take a break. The loop walk is 3kms and takes about one hour 30 minutes. The carpark is situated on Opunake Road and consists of a grass area off the road in front of the walkway sign. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
There is a picnic table with seats there and also a short walk down to the river from the carpark but goes nowhere else. The letters on the map “A” is the entrance to the walk. “B” is the two old weirs. “C” is the lookout platform. “D” is the natural gas pipeline and “E” is the swing bridge. The walk is dog friendly. I would rate the walk medium. Take Celia Road from the main road that goes through Stratford which also has a signboard stating that it is the road to Dawson Falls, and driving straight through it then becomes Opunake Road. The Centennial walkway is on the right just past the Cardiff Road turnoff.
Ouch! Sore feet while walking? Hikers Wool is 100% New Zealand wool. Cushion your feet to prevent pain, rubbing and blisters. Buy online or at selected stockists For more info visit www.hikerswool.co.nz Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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My Favourite Walk
By Daniel Haddock
Do the Donald River drift!
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Beat the heat:
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n what was to be the hottest day ever recorded in Napier, February 2, 2020 a group of six Heretaunga Tramping Club members had an early start from Havelock North. Our destination was the Lawrence Road End trails in the Kaweka Forest Park about an hour’s drive up the Taihape Road, west of Napier. Peter and Colin decided to take the six hour option and go down the Tutaekuri River Gorge. Above: Daniel on the Tutaekuri swing bridge. Photo by J. Love Left: Frogs in a shrinking eddy on the Donald River, Photo by D. Haddock
Right: Enjoying a swim on a hot day. Photo by D. Haddock
34 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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My Favourite Walk
Tramping Socks
Above: Anne, Daniel and Glenda on the trail toward Loktow Road. Photo
by J. Love
The other four, Glenda, Anne, Janice and Daniel, opted to go towards the Lotkow Road end and then down the Donald River which flows southeast eventually reaching the Tutaekuri River. After we walked down the steep metal Lawrence Road, there was the dramatic swing bridge crossing the Tutaekuri River. After crossing the bridge, you take the track upwards towards the Mackintosh Track which drops steeply at first and then steadily to the Donald River. “Follow the Donald River downstream for an hour, to where it joins the Tutaekuri River, about five minutes upriver from the Lawrence swing bridge. The walk along the Donald River is unmarked, but access along manuka terraces is not difficult.” (DOC brochure) The wind was raging on the ridges as we started but it always seemed to be above us especially when we were walking along the river. Glenda was right, it was a www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
great day to be criss-crossing the Donald which we did over 15 times. Spotting the first of many inviting deep pools, it was in ‘boots and all’ drifting down the current back to the start and drifting down again. What a refreshing way to beat the heat. It was hard to keep Glenda out of any of the pools after that, and you had to admit it was a great way to cool down especially before the long drag back up to the cars at the Lawrence Road end. The crystal clear, fastflowing water did the trick for any ailments. Coming across a small eddy, we saw a tadpole convention in the shallow water. Amongst the teeming tadpoles were a few small green frogs on the fringe and cameras were whipped out to record the moment. The sides of the canyons were covered in plants as they soared straight up to the tree-line. At the Donald/Tutaekuri River junction, we travelled up river to see if we could spot Colin and Peter trying to prove they were just as quick as last time they did this trip 30 years
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Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
35
My Favourite Walk
Do the Donald River drift Above left: Daniel on the Tutaekuri swing bridge. Photo by J. Love Above right: Glenda, Janice and Anne cooling off in the Donald River. Photo by D. Haddock
Photo by D. Haddock
Left: Sign for the swing bridge.
ago. The only people we saw in our five and half hour sojourn were a father and son carrying fishing poles. They had spent the night being blown out by the wicked winds near the ridges and had dropped down to escape. We turned around towards the swing bridge and over towards the bottom of Lawrence Road. It was a fair climb back up the road to the parked cars. Janice found another gear and motored up the road with Daniel. Good weather, amazing scenery, strenuous at times/cruisy at others, great photos from Anne, brilliant company: just another day at the HTC office.
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New ZealandWalks Walks Australian
Burleigh Heads National Park walks
ď Ž
B
urleigh Heads National Park is a scenic rain forested headland at Tallebudgera Creek estuary in the heart of the Gold Coast. in Queensland, Australia. Burleigh Heads National Park is a quiet retreat for walkers and wildlife watchers. The Oceanview Walk (1.2km one way) is a track leading around the rocky headland from Tallebudgera Creek to the southern edge of Burleigh Heads
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
township. You can look at the tumbled masses of six-sided basalt columns, and relax by the creek at Echo Beach. Either return by the same path or via the Rainforest Circuit path and Tumgun Lookout. This National Park is one of the many celebrated national parks in Australia. The park covers around 25 hectares and is the coastal extreme of an ancient volcano that was active over 22 million years ago.
The Burleigh Heads National Park, extends a peaceful area to the visitors. It houses littoral rainforest that are reminiscent of the Kombumerri people’s culture. Kombumerri were the local people of the region and they knew Burleigh Heads as Jellurgal. The area deemed Above: Burleigh Beach with tall buildings on the Gold Coast in the background. Below left: You may even see a bush turkey.
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
37
Australian Walks
Burleigh Heads National Park walks As you walk down the park you will also notice fringing mangroves, windswept tussocks or open forest. One can also walk to the top of Big Burleigh. You can also have a bird’s eye view of the northern seascape from the Burleigh foreshore. For the safety of visitors, sections of this track coastline may be closed during wet weather, due to the risk of rock falls. Check at the QPWS Burleigh Head Information Centre for the latest information on track closures. The Rainforest Circuit (2.3km return) is a track featuring the Tumgun Lookout. The lookout is a good place to watch for
humpback whales splashing offshore in winter and spring. The Burleigh Heads National Park ocean view walks lives up to its name, offering stunning vistas up and down the Gold Coast, Queensland. Australia. Where can a hiker find a 4.3km track that winds through mangroves, traces a creek to its mouth, and encompasses a climb through rainforest overlooking the ocean? The unlikely place is Burleigh Heads, and there are two main tracks to choose from.
Ocean View Circuit
Don’t leave the Coast without walking the Ocean View Circuit. You can star t out from the carpark at Burleigh
headland or from the southern entrance at Tallebudgera Creek near the QPWS Burleigh Head Information Centre. This safe and easy track skirts a beautiful stretch of the river teeming with bird and fish life, past Sandy Cove and Echo Beach and beneath the giant basalt columns that form Burleigh headland. Expect stunning views up and down the Coast on one side and rainforest remnants of Burleigh National Park on the other. Return along the same path back or stretch your stamina a little more on the rainforest circuit. Distance 1.2km one way. Time 30 minutes, The pinch: It’s a breeze.
Rainforest Circuit
From the carpark on Burleigh headland, this track heads up into the rainforest of Burleigh National Park. This one will stretch the calves in sections but the views from Tumgun Lookout will make it all worthwhile. Catch your breath and glimpse whales during the migration season. The mangroves and the Burleigh Heads National Park represent an oasis of wildlife right in the middle of the city. On the headland, it is not unusual to find bush turkeys, brahminy kites, sea eagles and a variety of fruit-eating birds. Even a few koalas remain in the area but most grounddwelling creatures have sucAbove left: Great ocean views for the track. Below left: The track is popular with families.
38 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Australian Walks
cumbed to attacks by dogs and cats from surrounding suburbs. Distance: 2.3km one way, Time: 45 minutes, The pinch: Brief inclines may be a liitle tough for some.. At Burleigh Heads National Park, ancient volcanic columns meet the sea. The Kombumerri people named this prominent rocky headland ‘Jellurgal’. Today, its northern side is one of Australia’s most famous surfing point breaks. Walk to Tumgun lookout, where migrating whales may be seen. dmire the coastal vista to Surfers Paradise across Burleigh Beach, the venue for many international surfing tournaments. Burleigh Heads national Park
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in Gold Coast is located between Coolangatta and Surfers Paradise and houses the famous ‘Burleigh Barrel’ and other major international surfboard competitions. There are some great picnic areas along with barbeque facilities and playgrounds of the foreshore at Burleigh Heads. Walk the 1.2 kilometre track through a living museum of plants, many of them rare. See Australian bush-turkey nesting mounds, seabirds and water dragons. Picnic on Burleigh foreshore or relax on Echo Beach. A ramp to the fishing platform provides access for wheelchairs. Visit the information centre to learn about the park’s interesting history.
How to get there From Surfers Paradise, travel south along the Gold Coast Highway to Goodwin Terrace, Burleigh Heads. The car park is at the end of Goodwin Terrace. To reach the southern entrance at Tallebudgera Creek, turn off the Gold Coast Highway at the traffic lights near the Queensland Parks & Wildlife Service Burleigh Head Information Centre. Above left and right: Looking out towards Tallebudgera Creek from the track. Below left: Old trees take a battering from the weather. Below right; The track is flat and easy to walk along.
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
39
Auckland Walk
A ramble on Anzac Day
Hugh P. Kemp and Bonnie take on the Point England Walkway
W
hile living in England, I learned to ramble. The English can talk incessantly about the weather, but this is not the rambling I mean. To ramble: to find paths, ancient and modern; to succumb to the primal urge to explore, to discover new horizons of culture, history and geography; to spend a day with nothing more than a map, sometimes a compass, a bird identification book, good walking shoes, and curiosity. Tired of Covid19 lockdown in Auckland for all of April, 2020, it was now time to ramble. But why not a Ramble? Big R. Like in England. I’ll improvise. I could join up the parks, green belts, coastal strips, lookouts, rugby fields, and children’s playgrounds.
I choose ANZAC day, a Saturday, inviting a compliant and enthusiastic member of my bubble, Bonnie, to join me. Bonnie drives her shoulder into a fresh pile of horse poo as soon as we are through the first kissing gate of Meadowbank Pony Club, at the beginning of the Point England Walkway. “She’ll wash off in the tide” I console myself. The horses stamp in protest at her presence, and I put her back on her leash. The rising sun, glorious in its ANZAC memories invites us down the hill. A distant bugler’s Last Post drifts across Glen Innes below. We drop down Apirana Reserve, into Eastview, then Taniwha, and along Tom Court Memorial Walkway in Maybur y Reser ve, a grand
40 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
Above: Pretty colours of Glover Park in Autumn. avenue of firey gold and orange trees saluting us. We are then confronted with a construction site: the council is working on drainage and stream rejuvenation. “Find a path” I command Bonnie, who jumps into the creek. Improvising, we push around through tall wet grass, emerging on Elstree Ave, just short of the Glen Innes swimming pool. Its vacant carpark is a memorial to days of human contact and hurried fitness. We discover a lake behind, teaming with birdlife: mallard ducks just sitting, juvenile gulls learning to fly, kingfisher slyly surveying the scene and two herons standing guard on a log. Indignant plovers screech in protest at Bonnie, while a squadron of pukekos lifts awkwardly into the air, their legs trailing behind them. We now have a choice: www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Auckland Walk
take the northward track through bush following the tidal creek and broken back fences or cross the fields to the new cycle way on the Tamaki Estuary. Today we choose the latter. We stride out across the vast acreage of playing fields, now silent in their viral neglect. “We need our space”, signs diplomatically inform us, on behalf of groundnesting dotterels. Our fence-line route takes us beside intimidating and creaking macrocarpas to a congested shared cycleway, that now winds its way from Point England to Wai O Taki Nature Reserve. “Ah the ocean”, thinks Bonnie, pointing her nose to the beach, and disappears to grab a lengthy piece of driftwood, which she hauls up the bank to show me. She trots down the middle of the cycle way, log firmly in mouth, creating a two metre bubble of her own. Cyclists skirt around her, pedestrians pause and wait, and children in pushchairs point. Bonnie drops it at the foot of the seabird pou at the end of the walkway, an offering to the mythical guardian of the coast. Ta m a k i E s t u a r y h a d o n c e been the main route between the Waitemata Harbour and the Manukau Harbour. Many waka would have travelled up this body of water that I now pause to survey. I imagine canoes of Maori warriors paddling in rhythm, disappearing up under the Panmure Bridge, to the portage route of Otahuhu, New Zealand’s narrowest point. In the old days, when no virus was around, I kayaked several times up the same route, past the waka ama jetty, waving to intense rowing crews from local colleges. “You have to touch the motorway bridge with your paddle” I tell my kayaking partners: “for the journey to count”. Once a pod of dolphins emerged www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
and then they were gone. I survey this sparkling body of water: it is eerily quiet. No movement. Boats sit lifeless in the still morning air, tied up in the channel over at Half Moon Bay. The sandspit of Tahuna Torea draws me, a band of white sand, layered over with dark green pohutukawa separating ocean and sky. Teaming with birdlife, dogs aren’t allowed, so I turn up the hill amongst the houses. I walk now by intuition, searching for a gapin-the-fence back down to the coastal track. I find a path off Vista Crescent, but No Dogs Allowed. “Your registration fees pay for those signs”, I inform Bonnie. We circle down to Rober ta Reser ve, to discover it is an “off leash” area. “I take it back”, I apologise, and Bonnie races for the water. I look longingly at the closed patisserie on Roberta Avenue: in better days
Above: Looking towards Auckland City from Achilles Point. Below: Dawn at the beginning of the Point England Walkway. this will be a good breakfast stop. The tide is lapping the rock wall, and I ask a local if I could have come down the Vista Crescent walkway to the coastal track. “Oh yes, and there’s a nice little beach there for the dog”, he replies. His white Labrador greets my black Labrador. We keep two metres apart. Bonnie and I stick to the coast and head around past the Glendowie Boat Club: the road becomes a pathway of concrete slabs pushed up at awkward angles by old pohutukawa roots. There are stairs down to secluded scraps of beach on my right. Locals look after this track like it’s their own private yard. I emerge onto Clouston Street where people
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
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Auckland Walk
are milling around as if something has just happened. Two men in black suits are greeting people from a distance. I wonder if someone has just died, and they’re waiting for the hearse. Large red poppies decorate the fences. “Have you just had an ANZAC day service?”, I surmise. “Yes”, someone replied: “out here on the street.” I dodge a skateboarder and ask if there’s an entrance to Churchill Park nearby. This vast expanse of green on my map belies the housing crisis in Auckland: how could so much land be set aside for so much park? The notice on the gate calls it a farm. I’m delighted. Churchill Farm is surrounded by Glendowie and St Heliers suburbia. I drink in the views back across the city, westward. The Skytower and the container wharf cranes reach for the sky in celebration of nothing to do. “This corona virus must be good for the planet”, I muse to myself: “she can breathe for a while”. I call out to a boy on a mountain bike to check which path will lead me to Glover Park . “ Top one. Past the school”, he shouts and disappears into a fold of land amongst the macrocarpas. I recruit
the St Heliers water tower in the distance as my navigation point. Biddy-bids stick to Bonnie’s fir. I meet a man who confesses “my dog’s a farm dog, but he’s scared of cattle”. I see the Huntaway pacing nervously at a gate in the distance. “He won’t come to my call when there are cattle around”. Bonnie trots by a dozen steers and the whimpering Huntaway, head held high, still reeking of horse poo. I take a wrong path and emerge back into suburbia too far east. Karaka Bay is down the cliff: it’s a place I’d like to visit some time, as it was where local Ngāti Whātua hapu thumb-printed their endorsement of the Treaty of Waitangi. I’ll leave that for another day: the history that beckons me at Glover Park will be enough. One of Auckland’s 49 volcanoes, Glover Park is a crater that was a swamp long ago, now drained, filled and turned into an athletics track. The rim on the ocean side was a lookout for Maori monitoring movement on the harbour, and up the Tamaki Estuary.
42 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
.
A ramble on Anzac Day
Two pa once dominated the volcano’s rim, and the terraces are still visible, although now mown to a crisp green. I take the long route around, stopping at the flattened summit and watch a young boy show off his back flips to his Dad. Te Pane-o-horoiwi – the head of Horoiwi is to my left, known also as Achilles Point, but I can’t see it because of the dense housing that covers the headland. I breathe in, noting the land I stand on is drenched in blood: a battle once took place here between Ngāpuhi from the north and the local Ngāti Whātua. I loop around again and arrive at Achilles Point. Bonnie drinks enthusiastically from a half full water bottle left on a bench. A family wanders up Cliff Road to the point, and I watch from a distance. Forced isolation and a recommended daily walk – “within two kilometres of your house” – has brought families together. I have broken the rule: I check my phone and note that I have walked 14 kms. They gather under the nikau palms and chatter about the view: Skytower backed by the smudge of the western Waitakere Range on the horizon; around near North Head reefs are appearing with the receding tide, brown flecks amongst the sparkling expanse of water. There is not a boat on the harbour, this “City of Sails”. Rangitoto immediately north of us and Tamaki Estuary opening now on our right, filled with kai moana and memories. A breeze rustles unswept leaves at my feet. Bonnie can smell the salty welcome of St Heliers Beach below us and gets restless. Now exhausted, s he trots along, Above: Half Moon Bay Marina from Tahuna Torea. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Auckland Walk
ignoring people and other smells: we cross Vellenoweth Green – where Christmas happens, and the Round the Bays annual coastal run terminate. I stop and vicariously join in with two parents who have just-walking twins and are lightly kicking a football around. The chuckles of the children are a reminder that our humanity will return, and all will be well. We push up The Parade to Dingle Dell Reserve. A pungent waft of horse manure surrounds us: the tide has not cleansed the dog. Dingle Dell supplements St John’s Bush and Kepa Reserve, a trinity of native bush across East Auckland. The smell of the earth, the texture of the bark, the shape of the trees and the song of the tui ground me firmly in this place. We enter reverently, dog and man revived by the coolness and the shadows: nature’s cathedral, in all its jumbled glory. I twitter to two fantails, dancing by the track. I discover on exiting
that our track had technically been closed due to Kauri die back. But no disinfectant to walk through or brush to scrape boots on. “It’s the pigs in the Waitakeres, not us”, I say conspiratorially to Bonnie. She wags her tail. The way home is now all asphalt, houses, and closed shops. South along Long Drive, right onto St Helier’s Bay Road, and eventually left on to St John’s Road, and we’re back at the beginning. If it had been open, I’d have bought myself a large smoothie at Sunhill Fresh Market. But it isn’t, so I don’t. We have walked 19 kilometres, stitching together official tracks and improvised routes. The neighbour commends me over the fence, as I boast of my ramble. “But your dog rolled in something”, she announces. It takes two days to scrub the dried horse poo out of the dog’s collar. Above: Point England walk information board.
Fact File
Estimated Walking time and distance: 19 or so kilometres, or around four hours. Attractions: Urban and rural contrasts. Farmland and bush. Coastal walkway and views. Maori cultural history. Birdlife in abundance. Where to start and leave the car: You can enter the circuit described above pretty much anywhere you decide. However, there is plenty of parking at Sunhill shops (Sunhill Garden Centre and Sunhill Fresh Market) by the beginning of the Apirana Reserve and Cycleway, near the Meadowbank Pony Club. Opposite Stone Direct. The beginning of Point England Walk is clearly marked on a notice board. There is an unobstructed spectacular sunrise view from the beginning of the walk. For more information, visit the Auckland City Council website: https:// www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/ parks-recreation/get-outdoors/ find-a-walk/Pages/point-to-pointwalkway.aspx
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Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
43
Books
God’s cocaine
- the addiction of the Camino
T
h e C a m i n o Wa y i s a pilgrimage of 800 kilometres stretching from St Jean Pied de Port in France across northern Spain to the city of Santiago. Ever y year thousands of walkers set off to conquer this extraordinary journey but one Palmerston North man walked it three times in twenty two months. Terry Wilson, worked mainly in the New Zealand timber industry before retiring. After experiencing a crisis of faith he sat down to flick through Netflix and came across a film called “The Way’ starring Martin Sheen as a father whose son died on the first day of walking the Camino This film inspired Terry to travel this journey and seek the answers to his crisis. It was also a catalyst to fund raise and seek awareness of Cystic fibrosis, a disease which tragically took the life of his seventeen year old granddaughter Maddie. Before she died he was able to
gain her support for the venture but sadly she passed away before he left. Wisely Terry trained hard before he left, knowing he had to cover 25 kilometres a day regardless of the weather, sore muscles and injuries. He chose to stay at albergues where he often shared bunk rooms with up to sixty other people as he had a strict budget which had to cover a mandatory beer each night at the local cafes! During this first journey Terry met with pain and passion, love and loyalty, hope and healing. When he reached Santiago after four weeks, he’d made some lifelong friends. Returning to New Zealand, Terry was approached by an Australian documentary producer and asked if he would be keen to walk the Camino again for a film. After some thought and the opportunity to include Maddy’s father on the trip, Terry agreed to travel the Camino once more. The film called ‘Camino Skies’ was shown all over New Zealand with Terry and some of the other participants talking about their experience at various venues. Back home from this trip, Terry was hard pushed to settle down to a routine retired life so when the eldest of his four daughters expressed a wish to walk the Camino he set off with her for a third time. Every journey was different for Terry and he decided to write an honest account of the three pilgrimages. His book ‘God’s Cocaine - The Addiction of the
44 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
Camino’ not only offers practical advice but a very subjective travelogue. It gives a true insight into the spiritual, mental and physical strength required for this walk. His extraordinary fortitude in the face of personal loss and his pragmatic attitude make for a compelling narrative. The Camino Way brought out the best and the worst in people he met. He encountered some extraordinary situations that might be termed miraculous by some readers and plain coincidence by others but above all he remained stalwart in his ambitions to complete a trio of truly remarkable journeys. Below left: One of the albergues where Terry stayed.
Above right: The destination in Santiago., Spain. Available from Rangitawa Publishing,
rangitawa@xtra.co.nz,
Kindle, Amazon books or order from any book store. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Coming Events
NEW ZEALAND
JULY 2020
1 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 1 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 2 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Auckland 4 Kennett Cup Steeples & South Island Cross Country Champs, Christchurch
Please note that because of the Covid-19 lockdown some events advertised in New Zealand may be rescheduled, posponed or cancelled. 4 Parkrun in New Zealand 4 The Punisher Paihia, CANCELLED 5 Cougar Trail Run, Tokoroa 5 Dargaville Fun Run/Walk, Dargaville 5 Forest Run Fest: Frost Edition, Bottle Lake Forest, Christchurch 5 Wellington Marathon, Half Marathon, Wellington. PAUSED 5 Sri Chinmoy Auckland Series 2020, 21km, 10km & 5km, Auckland. PAUSED 7 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 7 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 8 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 8 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 9 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 11 Captain Cook’s Landing Trail Run, Ships Cove, Marlbourough. CANCELLED 11 Moonlight Mountain View Events, Moonlight, West Coast 11 Parkrun in New Zealand 12 Cape Egmont Half Marathon, Taranaki 12 Gizzy Trail Run Series: Manutuke Retreat, Gisborne 12 Run Auckland: Waiatarua Reserve, Auckland 14 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 14 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 15 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
15 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 16 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 18 Canterbury Cross Country Championships, Christchurch 18 Mackenzie Half Marathon, Fairlie 18 Parkrun in New Zealand 18 WUU-2K Marathon & Ultramarathon, Wellington 19 Sri Chinmoy Christchurch: Sumner Esplanade, Christchurch 19 XTERRA Auckland: Totara Park, Auckland 21 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 21 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 22 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 22 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 23 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 25 Lakeside Relays, Lake Roto Kōhatu, Harewood, Christchurch 25 Parkrun in New Zealand 26 Sri Chinmoy Auckland Series 2020. PAUSED 26 Gizzy Trail Run Series: Otoko Walkway, Gisborne 28 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 28 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 29 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 29 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 30 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston
AUGUST 2020
Night Run, Rolleston 8 Meridian Hydro Half Marathon, Te Anau 8 Parkrun in New Zealand 9 Gizzy Trail Run Series: The Pines Okitu, Gisborne 9 XTERRA Auckland: Waiuku Forest, Auckland 11 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 11 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 12 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 12 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 13 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 15 Clyde to Alexandra Road Races, Clyde 15 Governors Bay to Lyttelton Scenic Road Race, Governors Bay, Canterbury 15 Parkrun in New Zealand 16 2 Hour Race Track Run, Hamoton Downs, Te Kawhata 16 Craters Trail Run, Taupo 16 Mukamuka Munter, Catchpool Visitor Centre, Rimutaka Forest Park, Wainuiomata 16 Woodbourne Half Marathon, Blenheim. CANCELLED 18 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 18 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 19 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 19 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 20 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 22 Parkrun in New Zealand 22 U18 Cross Country Races, Christ-
1 Parkrun in New Zealand 1 We Run the Forest, ROTORUA. PAUSED 2 Run Auckland: Western Springs, Auckland THINK SAFETY 2 South Island Half Marathon, AshTHIS SUMMER burton including OnlyOnly $449 2 Summit Forests Kaitaia Run/Walk, SPECIAL SPECIAL $479P&Pincluding P&P ACR ResQLink PLB 375 Kaitaia ACR- ResQLink PLB - 375 Includes Free gifts with purchase including 2 Taupō Marathon, Taupo FREE 167 pice 1st aid$449 kit, LED torch, Only P&P SPECIAL HD Pouch ACR ResQLink PLB - 375and more! 4 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Includes Free giftsawith Have Safepurchase and Happy Summer Night Run and Walk, Lincoln COVER ALL YOUR BASES $15 - 1 day 4 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday $15 - 1 day Now available in 41 outlets 3 days Night Run and Walk, Darfield $40 -7 Available for sale/hire $30 $30 3 -days -week 17day $40 days $30 for$15 every after Farm Safe and OSH are now pushing for 5 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednes- COVER ALL YOUR BASES $40 7 $30 3 days $30 for- every week after all farmers who work on their own to $30 for every week after Now available in 41 outlets day Night Run and Walk, Leeston your first week of hire have one of these ALL in their safety kit COVER YOUR BASES foravailable sale/hire Now in 41 outlets 5 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland Available Ph (03) 226 6341 Farm Safe andAvailable OSH are nowfor pushing for sale/hire or (027) 412 2925 who work their to pushing for Farm Safeon and OSH own are now 6 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday allhavefarmers all farmers who work on their own to one of these in their safety kit www.locatorbeacons.co.nz have one of these in their safety kit
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
45
Coming Events
church 23 Gizzy Trail Run Series: Longbush Eco Sanctury, Gisborne 23 Run Auckland: Ambury Regional Park, Auckland 23 Seddon School Tussock Run,, Seddon. CANCELLED 25 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincoln 25 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 26 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 26 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 27 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 27-29 The Great Naseby Water Race Ultramarathon, Nasby, Otago 29 Forest Run Fest: Moonlight Marathon, Bottle Lake Forest, Christchurch 29 Fullers Greatsights Bay of Islands BEAST, Haruru, near Paihia 29 Mount Maunganui Half Marathon, Mt Maunganui 29 Parkrun in New Zealand 29 The Dun Run, Maitai Dam to OK Corral, Nelson
29 The North Range Trio, Ballance, Manawatu 30 Hawke’s Bay Trail Run Series: Riflemans Vineyard, Puketapu, Hawkes Bay 30 Heart and Sole Women’s Only Fun Run/Walk, Papamoa 30 XTERRA Auckland: Hunua, Auckland
SEPTEMBER 2020
1 Lincoln Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Lincolon 1 Malvern Road Runners Tuesday Night Run and Walk, Darfield 2 Ellesmere Road Runners Wednesday Night Run and Walk, Leeston 2 The Rat Race in Milford, Auckland 3 Rolleston Road Runners Thursday Night Run, Rolleston 5 Kaikōura Whale Run, Kaikoura 26 Rotorua Marathon, Rotorua
OCTOBER 2020
3 Aoraki Mt Cook Marathon, Half Marathon, 10K and 5K, Mt Cool Village 3 Cole Murray Cape Kidnappers Trail Run, Clifton Beach Hawkes Bay
To list your event coming events, send details to walkingnz@xtra.co.nz
The H215 Professional 4 Function Pedometer The H-215, 4-function pedometer is a superb, reasonably priced pedometer that counts steps, calculates distance, calories burned and has a 12/24 hour clock. This is the model that has sold over a quarter of a million worldwide. It has the largest display of any pedometer we tested and is very accurate. Dimensions: (L) 5.6 * (W) 3.7 * (t) 2.7 cm Phone 0800-925-546 for bulk prices
Available now from:
Walking New Zealand Shop
P O Box 1922, Palmerston North - Phone 0800-925-546 Fax 06-358-6864 or email walkingnz@xtra.co.nz. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
46 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
3 Great Barrier Island Wharf to Wharf,, Great Barrier Island 16-18 Bay of Islands Walking Weekend, Northland 17 Pink Star Walk: Christchurch, Christchurch 17 Rotorua Ekiden - Team Marathon Relay, Rotorua 17 Santoft Forest and Beach Half Marathon, Santoff Forrest near Bulls 18 Crater Rim Ultra, Christchurch. PAUSED 18 Gizzy Trail Run Series: Eastwood Hill Arboretum, Gisborne 18 Jennian Homes Bay of Islands Fun Run/Walk, Paihia 18 MTF Silverdale Get Moving Festival, Auckland 18 Omokoroa Coastal Challenge, Tauranga 18 Run Auckland: Millwater, Auckland 18 Wild Auckland: North East, Auckland 24 Kaikoura Mountains to the Sea, Kaikoura 24 Ross Goldtown Fun Run and Walk, Ross
NEW ID115 PLUS Activity Tracker, Heart Monitor
Easy to use activity tracker, that’s at a great price with so many features Tracks steps, distance walked or ran, calories burnt, heart rate monitor, sleeping monitor, alarm clock, etc
• 15 sports modes, walking, running, cycling, swimming, yoga, hiking, climbing, rope skipping, basketball, badminton, tennis, football, treadmill, spinning and dancing • Intelligent sleep monitor function - measures your sleep quality • Well appointed communication tool - receive calls, message, calendar and notification of App • Excellent wristband performance - remote camera, anti-lost function • Life waterproof (sweatproof dustproof) • Available colours: Black or Blue • Compatible OS Android 4.4 / iOS 7.1 and above system • Standby time 5-10 days Charging time 1-2 hours • Connects to Yoho Sport app from Play Store or Apple Store Phone 0800-925-546 for bulk prices
Availablle now at
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or 2 for $55.00 plus $7.00 P&P
Walking New Zealand Shop
P O Box 1922, Palmerston North - Phone 0800-925-546 Fax 06-358-6864 or email walkingnz@xtra.co.nz. www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Coming Events
24 Twizel Hard Labour Weekend, Ben Ohau Station, Twizel 25 Back Paddock Lake Off Road Challenge, Central Hawkes Bay 25 Cromwell Half Marathon, Cromwell. PAUSED 25 Huntly Half Marathon, Huntly 26 Rotorua Marathon, Rotorua 31 Devil’s Dash, Bottle Lake Forest Christchurch 31 Mission Mt Somers, Staveley, Canterbury 31 Pūtauaki Prince & Princess of the Mountain, Kawerau
NOVEMBER 2020
1 Auckland Marathon, Auckland 1 City to Surf and Surf to Surf, Tauranga 1 In the Footsteps of the Marines, hareroa Farm, Near Paekakariki 1 The Nelson Half Festival of Running, Nelson 4 Corporate Challenge 5K: Christchurch 6-7 Taranaki Steelformers Around the Mountain, New Plymouth 7 Feilding Marathon and Roy Lamberton Memorial Half Marathon, Feilding 7 Lochmara Lodge Half Marathon, Queen Charlotte Track, Marlborough 7 Pink Star Walk: Wellington 7 The Taniwha on the Waikato River Trails, Whakamaru Mi-Camp, Waikato 7 Woodbury Hill Country Challenge, Orari Gorge Station, Woodbury, South Canterbury 8 Boulder Bay Classic Trail Run, Taylors Mistake Beach, Canterbury 8 Coastal Classic MTB & Trail Run at Taieri Mouth, Otago 8 Sri Chinmoy Pegasus Bay Classic, Bottle Lake Forest, Christchurch 11 Corporate Challenge 5K: Wellington 14 Alpine Lodge Loop the Lake Trail
Run, Lake Rotoiti / St Arnaud, Nelson Lakes 14 Eukanuba Tails & Trails, Riverhead Forest, Auckland 14 Pink Star Walk: Auckland 14-22 Get Outdoors Week - throughout New Zealand 15 Round the Bridges, Hamilton 15 Wild Auckland: Tāpapakanga, Auckland 20 WAI2K, Tauherenikau Racecourse, Tauherenikau 21 New Zealand Sotheby’s International Realty Queenstown Marathon, Queenstown 21 Valley Ultra 57km, 24km &10km, Craigieburn, Southland 21 Northland Waste Kerikeri Half Marathon, Okaihau to Kerikeri 21 The Molesworth Run, Molesworth Cob Cottage, Molesworth 21 Valley Ultra, Castle Hill Village, Canterbury 21 XTERRA Trail Challenge Waihi, Dickey Flat Campsite, Karangahake Gorge 22 Greytown Rail Trail Wai Not? Tauherenikau Racecourse, Tauherenikau 22 Julians Berry Farm and Cafe Toi’s Challenge, Whakatane 22 Rotorua Running Festival, Rotorua 29 Heart and Sole Women’s Only Fun Run/Walk, Tauranga 29 The Moa Experience, Summerhill Farm, Papamoa
Auckland 6 The Gazuntite Trail Run/Walk, Atiu Creek, Tapora, Auckland 12 Raglan Karioi Trail, Raglan
Kiwi on the Camino by Vivianne Flintoff 900kms along an ancient pilgrimage trail in Northern Spain Available from independent book sellers or directly from author E-mail : vivianneflintoffbooks@gmail.com Web: http://www.vivianneflintoffbooks.com/
NORDIC WALKING
DECEMBER 2020
1 Harcourts Cooper & Co Beach Series, Takapuna Beach, Auckland 5 Hanmer Holiday Homes Alpine Marathon, Lake Tennyson to Hanmer Springs 5 Pauanui Half Marathon, Pauanui, Coromandel 5 The Kepler Challenge and Luxmore Grunt, Lake Te Anau 8 Omaha Half Marathon, Omaha,
Ouch! Sore feet while walking? Hikers Wool is 100% New Zealand wool. Cushion your feet to prevent pain, rubbing and blisters.
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Upper body workout while walking Burn 40% more calories Less impact on joints Release tension in neck and shoulders Improve posture and breathing Fun to do, easy to learn, for all ages
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Buy online or at selected stockists For more info visit www.hikerswool.co.nz www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
47
GISBORNE
WAIHEKE ISLAND
GREAT COUNTRY BREAKS to DREAM ABOUT NORTHLAND
Walk Waiheke Island 3 day 3 night Walking Holiday from $875 per person
* Breathtaking coastal paths and bush tracks * Delicious food and wine * Relaxing accommodation * Book now for summer 2019/2020
vicki@iwalkwaiheke.co.nz www.iwalkwaiheke.co.nz
TARANAKI
Two or Three Day Unguided Coast Walk
Dave & Carol Digby Ph: 06-765-7482 Fully licensed owner/operators (since 2001)
TRAMPING - CYCLING - TRANSPORT
Whangarei Heads, Northland, N.Z.
Private and public tracks, ocean and harbour beaches Return to new, purpose-built accommodation each night Fabulous, fresh food Only three hours from Auckland CBD Check out our specials on-line
Phone: 09 434 0571
www.coastwalks.co.nz
GREAT BARRIER ISLAND
Country Breaks
the place to promote for more customers contact Frank Goldingham walkingnz@xtra.co.nz 0800-925-546 (walking)
You can now view back issues of Walking New Zealand magazine,
two issues back from the latest, FREE at :
KAPITI COAST
http://issuu.com/walkingnewzealand. KAPITI COAST
BE NATURE-INSPIRED ON KĀPITI ISLAND! Day tours or overnight kiwi spotting tours Fantastic birdlife Incredible bush and coastal walks
“Older & Bolder”
Cabins & luxury tents
by Judith Doyle
TO BOOK:
Published by New Holland Publishers.
Send cheque for $25 (this includes P&P) to: Judith Doyle, #3, 14 Oriental Tce Oriental Bay, Wellington.
0800 527 484
kapitiisland.com
You can now view and enjoy the latest issue of Walking New Zealand magazine online for USD.99c at
48 Walking New Zealand, issue noissue 268 - no 2020 48 Walking New Zealand, 268 - 2020
http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/viewer.aspx www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
WAIRARAPA
GREAT COUNTRY BREAKS to DREAM ABOUT
Whareama Coastal Walk Fully catered 2 or 3 Day Walking Adventure over private farmland and isolated Wairarapa coastline.
Phone (06) 372 3722
www.whareamawalk.co.nz
MARLBOROUGH
Unique walking experience over private farmland and Wairarapa Coastline, with two or three day options. Awesone scenery, rustic accommodation and delicious meals. For further information visit www.oruiwalk.co.nz
MARLBOROUGH
KAIKOURA COAST TRACK Awesome 2 days getaway to go home refreshed
Explore the Rimutaka Cycle Trail
Discover new landscapes BESPOKE ITINERARIES
Fully supported, best bikes, great food, comfortable accommodation BOOK ONLINE OR CONTACT US tours@greenjersey.co.nz
021 0746640
WWW.GR E E NJE RS E Y.CO.NZ
Farm accommodation Bags transferred daily Hike into nature
03 319 2715 www.kaikouratrack.co.nz WAIRARAPA
You can now view and enjoy the latest issue of Walking New Zealand magazine online for USD.99c at http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/viewer.aspx
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz
Walking New Zealand, 268- -2020 2020 49 Walking New Zealand, issueissue no no 268 49
MID CANTERBURY
GREAT COUNTRY BREAKS to DREAM ABOUT
STEWART ISLAND
A unique four days walk or mountain bike ride in idyllic South Canterbury
NELSON * Heaphy Track * Abel Tasman * Cobb Valley * Old Ghost Road
Phone 03-685-4848 Email: info@walkfourpeaks.co.nz
‘Carry less, enjoy more’ ‘Come explore with us!’ www.kahurangiwalks.co.nz
Phone 03 391 4120
STEWART ISLAND
Please tell our advertisers you saw it advertised in Walking New Zealand magazine. SOUTHLAND
CANTERBURY
Banks Track Self guided multi option walk through Banks Peninsula’s wildside.
STEWART ISLAND
* Fully equipped cosy accommodation within two penguin colonies * Diverse scenery from craggy tops, bush, birdsong and waterfalls, to dramatic coastline and beautiful bays.
For info on this Kiwi favourite track
* Freedom $245 * Prime $545 * Guided $1695
www.Bankstrack.co.nz
You can now view and enjoy the latest issue of Walking New Zealand magazine online for USD.99c at http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/viewer.aspx
Subscribe or renew your subscription to Walking New Zealand today and you can save up to 22% off the cover price. Subscribe today - just freephone 0800-925-546
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Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
51
Northland Experience
A group hiking Urupukapuka Island guided by Nothland Experience.
52 Walking New Zealand, issue no 268 - 2020
www.walkingnewzealand.co.nz