Saturday, January 28, 2023

Hamilton Gardens, 1

We've seen our share of gardens: botanical, Renaissance, French, landscape, roomed, specialized, and many more. Hamilton Gardens is unique in our experience, providing a sort of history of gardens on a compartmentalized basis. That is, Hamilton displays some twenty or so different gardens, each depicting a different garden style, nationality, age, or purpose. The emphasis is on plants, of course, but also on what humans have done with plants, practically, aesthetically, and otherwise. It is one of the best and certainly most interesting gardens we have seen, whether national, state, municipal, or private, and it will take more than a couple posts to convey even a little of its richness. Thanks, Rebecca, for finding this gem on your sabbatical visit to New Zealand.

On the banks of the Waikato River (New Zealand's longest), almost
within the city center

Intro depictions of the various gardens represented; click to enlarge

In the Japanese garden


Moving right along...


In an almost white room, reminiscent of Sissinghurst


Now in the Chinese Scholar's Garden; reminding us of Suzhou




As thick as we've ever seen bamboo

Celestial turtle

Overlooking the Waikato


Modernist's garden...or possibly any backyard in North Dallas

The signage throughout was excellent, and I'll let it describe
some of the pix




Of course "Mughal" means Muslim...







Next post...



Friday, January 27, 2023

Waireinga/Bridalveil Falls

Next stop, nearby, was Waireinga/Bridalveil Falls. Actually the ten minute walk through the bush was as interesting as the 55m falls themselves. Not far from Raglan.











Thursday, January 26, 2023

Ruapuke Beach

Our next stop, down the coast, was Ruapuke Beach, which we visited from the Motor Camp there.

The views reminding us a bit of the Big Sur coast



Not like California


Typical NZ
At the Ruapuke Motor Camp
Hiking from the camp out to the beach




Cows: stiles and electrified fences to cross


It's a three mile beach, tiny by NZ standards

Low tide

Distant island, not on Google Maps

Down in the hole there, the campground

Cruciform tent

Campground decor and signage mostly old surfboards

Fisherperson's abode: the red thing in the center is a fishing
torpedo, an electric motor-powered device for getting your line(s) 
out beyond the surf and into deeper water; pretty handy on the
Tasman side; learn more about this fascinating practice by Googling 
"torpedo fishing" or "drone fishing"; the YouTube video demos
are cool too...
Next morning we were heading for the beach again


Around here it's a black sand beach; with a black rivulet...


As far as we got here


Raglan

After MOTAT, we drove on south of Auckland and eventually west and back to the Tasman coast and, after a night at the Onewhere Rugby Club freedom camp, the town of Raglan. Raglan was one of New Zealand's earliest European settlements, but is best known now for its surfing and appearance in the classic Endless Summer. Surfers and surfboards still abound as well as much of the world's tie dye inventory and other 60s paraphrenalia. The vibe is friendly and small town. We explored on foot until the rain forced us back to the camper and on down the road to Whale (?) Bay to watch people surfing in the rain.

Among the older buildings, the Harbor View Hotel


A few instances of art deco
Some very big old trees



Commemorating the first Methodist missionaries to arrive...1830's...
possibly first use of the expression "missionary position" in the 
South Seas

More really big old trees


Fun on the harbor

More Cooke Island Pines

Main drag


Now on the Bay, watching surfers, mostly waiting, not surfing


Looking out upon the Tasman Sea

And on to Ruapuke Beach and the "motor camp" there