Sunday 4 December 2016

3 December 2016 Kiriwhakapapa DOC Camp, Tararua Forest Park





We were of several minds as to how to spend the next couple of days but the rain and cold weather in Ohakune discouraged us from spending any further time about that area. I was keen to walk part of the Ohakune Coach Road, another part of that cycleway, but wanted to enjoy it in good weather; perhaps we could do it on our way north again.
Raukawa Falls on the Mangawhero River
So we headed south, back via Raetahi where we refuelled at the Truck Stop, then on down Highway Four  through the road referred as the Paraparas, although I am not exactly sure why. We have travelled this road several times, although probably in the opposite direction, because this day it seemed a completely new experience. The countryside through here is just stunning, the farmland steep and picturesque, as the road follows the Mangawhero River for some distance. A stretch of about twenty kilometres was severely damaged during the rains about eighteen months ago; the road was closed for a while and there is still widespread repair work being done. We noted at least thirty one work sites where the road is reduced to one lane while remedial work is being carried out or will be at some time in the future. I can well imagine the road engineers surveying the damage last year, and saying “What the hell are we to do with this!” just as another batch will have been doing with the earthquake damaged roads near Kaikoura right now.

Arriving in Wanganui, we tracked down a laundry, the first two in our directory long closed. Then we settled beside one of the three bridges over the river for lunch and the early part of the afternoon, the forecasted rain having set in, discouraging us for further exploration. Mid-afternoon we made our way to the park-over-property we had phoned ahead about. Our hosts have a delightful property tucked in a little valley well away from the hustle and bustle of the town, our camp spot private and well veiled by trees which obstructed our television satellite. Chris had to be satisfied with watching DVDs while I caught up with matters on the computer.

The next morning after farewelling our charming host, we extracted ourselves from our hideaway, and headed into the city. This morning the sun was shining and Wanganui looked so different to the day before. Then one could easily have kept on driving and forgotten any previous enchantment with the place. Instead we parked and walked up the main street in search of our bank, enjoying the clean cheery centre. The bank staff were super friendly and helpful, as were the staff at the supermarket we shopped at before leaving, so we left this riverside town feeling quite buoyed, although I had been disappointed by the calibre of some when I popped into the public conveniences just next to the rather grand wooden opera house. There I was treated to all the filthy language certain people use instead of everyday polite speech. I guess you get that everywhere, especially amongst people whose families have spent longer in the region that mine. Enough said.  

We turned south east, now on the road which in a very general sense follows the coastline all the way to Wellington, but paused at Turakino where we lunched at the Domain, a spot we had overnighted at some years ago. This is no longer on our camping directory maps so apparently some of our number spoilt it for others, however that did not stop us staying for just the lunchtime hour. 

At Turakino, we turned north east toward Marton where we spent the night in the NZMCA Park, this time with just three other parties. Previous visits have seen a dozen or so members’ rigs in and drinkies-at-five part of the routine. This time we were left to ourselves. We did make the effort to wander down through the rose gardens to the main street, and found Marton to have most of the shops and services the average consumer requires. We stopped briefly to pass the time of day with the security guard outside the WINZ office; a chap certainly more senior than us and surely unable to ac cost any gun wielding angry “client” of the Crown, such as he in Ashburton who will forever be blamed for such tax paid security. I suggested that it must be a very boring job, especially if the likes of us did not stop and chat; he agreed and I was silently thankful we had no need of such employment.
James Cook of Marton
We paused too to check the staue of Captain James Cook, curious at his presence. There we found that his birthplace was of the same name as this; Marton. Later we checked this and found it to be true; Marton in Yorkshire is now part of Middlesborough.

The following morning saw us drive across the lovely rural lands spanning the Rangitikei and Manawatu Districts, passing through Halcombe, Fielding, Bunnythorpe and Ashhurst before entering the Manawatu Gorge. As we drove through the narrow gap between the Ruahine and Tararua Ranges, the road often canter levered out over the Manawatu River below us, we looked for evidence of the extensive repair work that has had to be done over the past couple of years. Slips kept the road closed for six months at one time, and this erosion prone route has been referred to when reports have come up regarding the work required to restore the road in and out of Kaikoura. This latter route, Highway One south toward Christchurch has been closed since the earthquake and not likely to reopen during the time we intend to spend in the South Island, maybe not for years.

We stopped at Woodville and found it to be much improved since our last visit, although the greater number of businesses open were either cafes or second hand goods retailers, the former incredibly busy. We find it so mind boggling how busy these cafes are; it just goes to show how brainwashed folk have become to require a fix of commercially made coffee through the day. We spent some time in one second hand barnlike establishment, “Vikings Treasure” if my memory serves me right, and browsed the shelves and bins of books, but those dog-eared editions we might have considered buying were far too expensive. We wondered whether to suggest to the proprietor he would make more sales if he lowered his prices; obviously he was not doing too well, his hair had not been cut for years.

Entry to the Gottfried Lindauer Replica Studio
We also popped into the Gottfried Lindauer Replica Studio housed adjacent to the Information Centre. We had called there before, and I have to confess that I had not realised then that these hung here are only replicas. Perhaps the name of the studio should have alerted me, or maybe the name has been changed more latterly.

Gottfried Lindauer was born in Pilsen, Bohemia in 1839 and spent much of his adult life in New Zealand, settling in Woodville in 1890 until his death here in 1926, aged 86. During that time, he did travel extensively and so in my opinion, he remained a man-of-the-world, despite having been naturalized. But we do like to claim him as ours, and it is his portraits of Maori that are currently the basis of a grand exhibition in the Auckland Art Gallery. We actually prefer Lindauer’s portraits to those by Goldie, however each to his own taste.

Directions to Woodville
Now heading south, we passed the Tui Brewery at Mangatainoka, well worth visiting if you haven’t done so previously, on through Pahiatua with its wide open streets catering well for the locals’ needs and onto much smaller Eketahuna in search of the Domain for a lunch spot. We found this on the road to Alfredton, but the gates were chained and locked, so after driving about aimlessly for a while, settled for a flat spot next to the now defunct railway station and school.  

Further south we pulled into the National Wildlife Centre at Pukaha Mount Bruce, having debated about forking out for a repeated entertainment. As two oldies we got in for $34 and I have to say, did not regret the fee, although we did not feel generous enough to add to their donation jars. The Centre has grown since we were last there; the entrance way more modern and light, and a walk-in free flight aviary has been built, although this latter should have been delayed until more money was raised to pay for a larger installation. Both the Hamilton and Auckland Zoos have free-flight aviaries, much larger than this at Mount Bruce, and given that wild keas will fly from this sanctuary to the Zoolandia one in Wellington, this small cage is almost too cruel.

Eel feeding
We arrived just in time to attend the eel feeding where a couple of visitors clad in full waterproof overalls waded into the stream to feed a dead rat and a porridge of mince and other muck to the swarming monsters, all of whom had gathered in time for this daily ritual. We also attended a talk given by a keeper at the kea feeding station, this one for the two hundred or so wild kea who live un-caged on the forested hill. Apart from that, there were large aviaries containing a hand raised kokako, stitch birds or hihi and kakariki or red-crowned parakeets. The kiwi house is also a recent addition, containing brown kiwi who could not be spotted in the gloom, and a little white kiwi named Manukura who was hatched in 2011 and has a recessive white gene. She is certainly easy to see in the artificial nocturnal setting.

Kaka feeding time
Pukaha Mount Bruce was one of the last un-felled areas this side of the Tararuas, the land cleared for farming by the Scandinavian and English settlors who were offered tracts of land in return for clearing and roading efforts. The remaining bush area was officially protected in 1889, most of the ancient trees around it having been felled and thousands of native birds having lost their habitats, gone up in smoke in bushfires or been eaten by introduced predators.

The restoration of Mount Bruce to a living forest full of birds began with the release of the North Island kaka in 1996. Since then, other birds not seen in the area for over fifty years have been reintroduced. Kaka now breed prolifically and other wild native bird populations are increasing. Kokako is again to be found in the forest after having disappearing for forty years and North Island brown kiwi, missing for one hundred years, roam the undergrowth.

The tramway track from Kiriwhakapapa
But there is even a more fascination story about the birth of this Wildlife Centre. In 1958 a Wairarapa farmer and amateur ornithologist named Elwyn Welch secretly raised four takahe chicks at his farm. The takahe had been rediscovered in Fiordland in ten years previously after being thought extinct for more than fifty years. Welsch’s innovative breeding programme rescued the species from extinction.
Welch had trained a team of bantam hens to raise pukeko chicks, then conditioned then for a trip into the wild by carrying them around his farn in specially constructed pens. In 1958 the hens were taken into Taheke Valley in Fiordland, and the takahe chicks brought to the North Island under the wings of the foster mother bantams. The New Zealand Wildlife Service took over Welch’s work in 1962 setting up a native bird management reserve here in the Mount Bruce Forest.

I should mention here that there are takahe roaming around somewhere in predator fenced pens however they were too shy to venture out into any clearing yesterday, or it may have been the rain that kept them tucked away. It certainly drove us back to the camper, and we had seen these very rare birds down at Te Anau some years ago.

Fallen Rewawarewa flowers
So by the time we tore ourselves away from this magic place, the weather had well and truly packed up. The summer started on 1 December had already ended one day later, or so it seemed. We came on a little further south then turned westward toward the heavily forested Tararua Ranges, soon arriving at this little DOC camp which has changed considerably since we were last here in December 2006. Then we spent a couple of days over Christmas, avoiding the pallaver as we try to do every year. By the time we had set ourselves up, soaked to the skin running around with levelling blocks which in the end we did not resort to, it was too miserable to explore the camp further.

This morning we woke to sunshine and bird call. The wood pigeons or keruru are not as numerous as they were ten years ago, but the season is not yet as advanced. 

Our DOC campsite
Kamahi blooms
While we considered our plans for the day, I wandered over to the route map at the start of the tracks and fell into converstaion with a pig hunter who had recently emerged from the bush. I was anxious as regards my own safety around his dogs and called out to him. He thought I was asking after the one dog he was attending too and it soonbecame clear that this large brute of a dog was far too injured to be of any danger to me, and the other two were just wanting to be patted. The leader of the pack had indeed brought down a boar, who now lay in the boot of the car. The hunter opened the boot to show me his prize, a vicious strong legged beast whose teeth, soon shown to me, had been instrumental in this poor dog’s wounds. Blood was pouring from the dog, despite the white rag that was wound around it’s head to staunch the flow, and there was another ugly gash in his side. I suggested he seek help for his hunting mate as soon as possible, and soon he did leave for Pahiatua where he was confident he would rouse the local vet from his weekend activities. Hopefully the dog has since been attended to and did not bleed to death on the way, because later when we walked up through the bush, we found bloody evidence everywhere; one wonders that there can be so much in one dog. And even later, a man who drove in for a walk, returned soon after setting off to ask if we had seen the blood; he was concerned there might have been a murder.

Speaking of which, I did consider the macabre possibility that I could have been upended into the open boot by the hunter, or taken hostage; his gun was there on the roof. How trusting I was!
Late in the morning Chris and I set off for a lovely walk up through the bush, following an old logging tram route along the stream before heading up around a loop that brought us down further up into the ranges. We were back in less than an hour and a half and had enjoyed the walk enormously; the sparkling streams, the native blooms, the bird calls, and even the mud and blood.

We have decided to stay another night to enjoy the isolation and natural beauty of the place. The weather looks like holding for now, so I have felt easy about using power to update this lengthy diatribe, although now must close and cook up a batch of bologaise sauce for tonight’s dinner and the freezer.

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