Sunday, March 30, 2014

Kouto Boulders

Beyond Hokianga, still on the Tasman side of Northland, we stopped to take a low-tide look at the Kouto Boulders in the bay there. We're getting pretty bold about the tides now. The Kouto Boulders are similar to the Moeraki Boulders, on the Pacific side of the South Island, north of Dunedin, which we saw in January.
Northland coastal view...waves coming in seemingly at right angles...
















The boulders appear near the end of the bay, at low tide, and they go on for
perhaps a kilometer



















































































































































Kauris But No Kiwis

The Kauri tree is, after California's giant sequoia, the largest of all living things. The North Island had many Kauri forests until Europeans, that is, the British, showed up in the 19th century and began hacking them all down. There are pockets here and there now, and, of course, they are protected. We stopped at the Trounson Kauri and Kiwi Preserve, one of the pockets of Kauri forest, toured the little forest by day, and then walked much of it again by night in hopes of viewing a kiwi.
New Zealanders, well, their Department of Conservation, are
nearly fanatical about protection and preservation of both
natural and cultural resources; when you visit a DOC Kauri
preserve, you disinfect your boots both coming and going...


















At Trounson, much of the trail is on board-
walk--to protect the trees' roots--so there are
few opportunities for photos with humans
or other perspective-lending objects; suffice
to say, these trees are very large 























Thus




















And thus




















Perhaps the largest at Trounson















And thus




















More




















After dark, we wrapped red cellophane around our headlamp
lenses--kiwis supposedly don't see the red bit of the
spectrum--and headed out in search of the rare birds--we
heard their distinctive "eek, eek, eek" cries but never saw
one (we think we've seen others elsewhere); we did see rats
scurrying about in the trees and attempted to photo them;
ick





















Next day we drove on to another big preserve
and saw Tane Mahuta, Lord of the Forest, the
largest remaining Kauri; it's impossibly huge....





















Click to enlarge...worth reading




Friday, March 28, 2014

Ripiro Beach

From the dune lakes at Kai Iwi, further up and inland from Bayly's Beach, there is a track, a bit more than 2km, across hills and grazing lands, then down the short cliff to the beach. The beach is perhaps 200 feet wide at low-tide (now), it is all yours, deserted for miles, with no access other than what you've just walked. It's sunny and warm. Oh yes, there's a water-fall just where you come down the cliff.
One of the dune lakes at Kai Iwi; land-locked but only a couple miles from the
sea, resting on ancient dunes...
















The track and some of the terrain















One of the hills; Vicki counted 98 steps




















Perhaps a dozen stiles to cross




















And of course you must respect the bulls (not pictured) and the electric fence
















But then you're there and Ripiro Beach is all yours, at least until high tide
















Looking north















And south















The waterfall















Panoramic view from waterfall to sea







Me, testing the waters















Vicki, testing the waterfall




















Definitely a bucket list kind of thing

Horsing Around On Bayly's Beach

One of Vicki's bucket-list items has been riding a horse on a beach...and where better than Bayly's Beach?!
The great beach that morning, low tide















Vicki, riding















Thus















Thus















And thus; she actually got the horse up to a canter, which
I understand to be the equivalent of 2nd gear, and of which
I have a couple of videos, to be posted some day (stay
tuned), and which have given me much increased appreciation
for the camera work behind Western cinemas; the videos are
at http://youtu.be/fcqjGftSqCMhttp://youtu.be/nlsTcRFbCI4,
http://youtu.be/cV_Hj4sTgrg, and 
http://youtu.be/j8wayyd0gUs



















My view of the adventure















Us, en cheval















Torpedo-fishing on the Tasman; they also do kite-fishing
when there are north-easterlies; all the subject of future posts

Bayly's Beach

We spent a couple nights in a cabin on Bayly's Beach, NZ's longest beach, 60-some miles of uninterrupted, undeveloped beach, broad golden sands, great Tasman surf...
En route, the Kauri Museum















More on the great trees in a later post...















Always interesting clouds in NZ















Looking south on Bayly's Beach















And north















NZ's low-tide beaches are all considered roads, thoroughfares,
wherein all the usual traffic laws and customs apply (keep
left, when convenient; drive as fast as possible; always act
surprised to see other vehicles on the road...)


















Tasman sunset















Thus















Thus















Ditto















Ditto















Houses in a cove accessible only via low-tide beach















Most rental car companies do not permit driving on beaches