Fwd: Cape Reinga 34.4288S:172.6810E

SV Jenny
Alan Franklin/Lynne Gane
Wed 6 Apr 2016 10:11
-----Original Message-----
From: Lynne Gane <lynnegane {CHANGE TO AT} aol {DOT} com>
To: svjenny+597144- <svjenny+597144- {CHANGE TO AT} mailsail {DOT} com>
Sent: Wed, Mar 23, 2016 7:17 am
Subject: Cape Reinga 34.4288S:172.6810E
From: Lynne Gane <lynnegane {CHANGE TO AT} aol {DOT} com>
To: svjenny+597144- <svjenny+597144- {CHANGE TO AT} mailsail {DOT} com>
Sent: Wed, Mar 23, 2016 7:17 am
Subject: Cape Reinga 34.4288S:172.6810E
Dear Family
and Friends,
23rd
March 2016
Phew so much
has happened and I have so much to catch up upon! Well my son Josh joined us
last Friday in Auckland and it was really wonderful to be reunited with him. I
have to confess the other reasons for being so tardy with the blog have been my
health. I hope I am nearly free from a painful episode of Shingles.
But where
were we? Following the sale of our boat and awaiting Josh’s arrival, we drove
through Northland, the northernmost part of north island and New Zealand. It is most subtropical, so in March, the
equivalent of a European September, it has been most pleasantly warm, a little
humid at times relieved by the coastal cooling breeze around early afternoon
and never like the Pacific or Galapagos.
The things
that strike you about travelling in North Island is that is its familiarity and
its difference, its sense of space, of not being crowded. We find ourselves
comparing the scenery with our past experiences, perhaps because it is like
England, the green rolling hills, bordered by hedges, large herds of cows,
farmsteads every kilometre or two, (yes they have gone metric)! Perhaps the
Mendips here, the Southdowns there, but turn the corner and you could be in the
Alps. The topography is in truth utterly unique. And there is no getting away
from the deep rooted agricultural industry, with so much fertile grazing land,
more cattle and sheep than human population, (around 7:1 for cattle) although
this has declined over the last 30-40 years, it is easy to see why NZ has become
an important dairy, beef and lamb producer. Its earliest frozen meat cargoes
left NZ around 1886. It is still a major
export industry. I think if I had been a farmer I would have wanted to be one
here!
The city of
Whangarei reminds me a little of a low rise America, stores ring the outer
surburbs, customers pull up in 4WD’s and pick up trucks outside the stores, the
music playing is often the best of the last 40 or so years of pop, reinforcing
the idea of being a little lost in time. In truth this is not the case, perhaps
it is us who have lost the sense of being genuinely pleased to be of help,
polite, of having time to be relaxed and laid back, for these are things that
we have found consistently.
Outside of
the most cosmopolitan cities like Auckland, there is much less of the retail park
onslaught, so finding the choice of goods and the latest fashions might prove
harder here but there is always the internet. Not so if you want to take part
in outdoor sports, hunting, fishing, sailing and water sports are well
supported in the major towns. NZ lives outdoors.
The roads
are rarely crowded by UK standards. So much so it is a pleasure to drive them.
Amusingly Kiwi news reported road traffic as being a problem, try the M25,
junctions 10-16! The State highways are single lanes in each direction with
frequent passing places especially on the uphill sections, maximum speed limit
100km ph. In the less travelled regions, the bridges are just a single lane
width, surprising for the main highway. Secondary roads cover more local access
with ‘no exit’ tracks to individual properties in the rural regions. There is
still plenty of land that has no recognised roads. That is not to say untouched
as much of the land that is not grazing or arable is pine forest plantations.
Logging is also a major export, as we saw from the stream of logging lorries
going to Marsden Cove port, just below Whangarei.
Kiwi road
signage is altogether another thing, they are determinedly sparing with it to
the point of it being a challenge to find their tourist attractions! As for
nature reserves, almost no signage until you actually reach the spot, up
several kilometres of unmade track, only dogged persistence made us pursue what
looked like another.
Here is a roundup of the best photos:
And they will keep coming!
All our best Lynne, Alan and Josh