Route #6 took us on north to Westport and then a bit beyond to the Charming Creek Walkway, a pleasant hike into the northwestern South Island bush, up as far as Mangatini Falls. The track is interesting particularly in that it simply follows a 19th century private railway, tracks and all, used first for logging and then later mining, abandoned only in the 1950s. There was more than flora and fauna to see...
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Punakaiki Rocks
We drove on from Motukiekie Beach, sticking to route #6, the one road that covers that part of the west coast that is not roadless--maybe half the coast--stopping for the night at a motor camp at Punakaiki. Next day we visited the Punakaiki Rocks, a site we had enjoyed in 2009, but had seen at low tide rather than the recommend high tide.
Anyhow, the Punakaiki Rocks are a small peninsula jutting out into the Tasman Sea, featuring weird rock formations (pancake rocks) and blowholes and such |
Thus |
And thus |
Looking south down the coast; note pancake structure |
Stack |
Alas, even though we were there precisely at high tide, there were no blowing holes this day; next time... |
Looking north |
As elsewhere in the bush, cicadas provided most of the background music |
But there was plenty more west coast to see |
Motukiekie Beach
Driving north from Hoki, over a hill, we noticed some great-looking sea stacks and such and, looking at our NZ Frenzy guidebook (our constant companion), determined they were just off from Motukiekie Beach, one of the author's many excellent recommendations. At low tide, one can walk out on the beach and get quite near them. So we parked, looked over the tide situation, and waited an hour or so for the water to subside. Then we walked a mile or two along the beach, gawking at it all, from the driftwood and beach pebbles, to the cliffs and waterfalls above, to the pounding surfs, to the sea stacks just beyond reach. One other person was there, initially, a young woman from Vienna, about to start vet school in Edinburgh. Later a fisherman appeared on the rocks. Great New Zealand experience!
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Hokitika, 2014
You have to love a place that calls itself Hoki, and especially if it is home to the Museum of Sock Manufacturing Machines. Hoki is all this and more, featuring itself as the artsy-fartsy capital of the South Island. Anyhow, we like it, and spent a morning visiting its several shoppes and boutiques before lunch on the beach.
But before Hoki, Okarita, setting for one of New Zealand's Booker prize winners |
Okarita Lagoon |
Hokitika town clock |
The world famous Hokitika Sock Manufacturing Museum |
Thus |
Thus, up closer |
Larger machines; we bought Penelope some kiwi socks... |
In one of the greenstone (jade) workshoppes |
In another, looking at a pile of raw material, which they will not sell...the supply is limited, and this is what the jewelry comes from... |
Old town free library, now town museum |
Hoki has lots of outdoor sculpture, this being some...sort of |
Driftwood sculpture is big here |
Thus |
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