Monday, January 23, 2023

Waimere Boulders

After the beaches and an overnight at the Lions' Club freedom camp in Whangarei, we decided it was time for something new and headed toward the Waimere Boulders over toward the west coast and the Hokianga estuary. We overnighted at the Waimere Boulders camp, then did the boulders/bush walk the next morning. It was the beginning of a big five-event/scene day. And the best of it too.

The Waimere Boulders are a private natural reserve, featuring a set of enormous basalt boulders cascading down the mountainside, but, most unusually for basalt, fluted by aeons of acid drip from the ancient Kauri forests that surrounded them. (Acid drip, not trip). Normally we'd not be enticed by a private reserve, but the reviews were enthusiastic, and we never pass on an opportunity to see fluted basalt. We concur with the enthusiasm: an excellent, educational, and entertaining visit. Plus you have to do bush walks in New Zealand.

The walk has three variations, of which we did the easiest--with
fluted boulders, ample interpretive signage, and some NZ whimsy

Some of the boulders and the creek that flows through them


Ample plant identification, in Maori and in English too


Some baby Kauris...the giant trees of the North Island,
more about which anon

Some fluting
Nice tidy trail punctuated by catwalks and stairs up and down and
around the boulders



More flute-like erosion


Vicki exploring

Some of the whimsical bits

Excellent signage

More fluting



Fairy houses...to entertain the little explorers

In New Zealand, in order to survive, trees sometimes have to be 
very flexible

Executive summary of the science





More whimsy...a horse's head


Fairy apartment building

Basalt tower atop the mountain from which it has 
all cascaded


Saturday, January 21, 2023

Karikari Beaches

Next day we drove further north to the Karikari peninsula and beaches and occupied ourselves with a couple beach walks. Turns out the first of them, Maitai (or maybe Merita?) we'd done before, but no matter, they're still beautiful. 

This was once the great watchtower of Amon Sul; wait, no, it's
St. Paul's Rock, above Manganui; for the real fake great watchtower
of Amon Sul, look here


Sand, sea, lava, flora

Another pano of the big tree we saw in 2018

Seaweed in the lower branches

The tree

Boulders on the beach, just in this one spot

Pano looking right

Left

Now, a few miles up the peninsula, Karikari Beach

It's high summer, high tourist season


There can't be 10 people in sight, for miles, mostly a few fishing

Lots of interesting shells on the beach, especially
some good-sized scallop shells...St. James must
have popped over this way on his voyage from
Galilee to Galicia...


Mahinepua Coastal Walk

We did the Mahinepua walk in 2018, and thought it was one of the best day hikes we've done in New Zealand. We did it again January 15th.

Among the bays on the way

Pohutukawa on Mahinepua Bay

Nice swimming cove to rappel to

Before the bigger uphills, Vicki decided to save her knees for
bigger things and waited in the shade of another cove (right of
center)

It's sort of a ridge walk out on a peninsula; here looking left

Right, across the bay

Left again closer up

Ahead, the end of the peninsula and a small island beyond

The trig; end of walk

View from trig

Me, there

Trig documentation

Among the several long staircases that constitute this
walk

Blue waters

Someone's beautiful Norfolk Island Pine wind break

The Fishbowl, we call it; right on the beach parking lot, every room
with a picture window view...in as well as out