Walking Home

reveries of an amateur long-distance hiker

Hiking Time

September 16th, 2015

Hiking Time

Portions of the Te Araroa require hitching a ride on a boat. Opua to Waikare is an extra 25km if you don’t go by water. I opted for the boat not just out of laziness, but also because I wanted a different view– oyster beds, derelict boats, grand waterfront houses, and old shanties–but I had to wait in the harbor all day for high tide. Needing to rest tired bones, the waiting part was easy. I was living hiking time, in this case time determined by the moon, a natural phenomenon generally ignored by everyone except fishermen, yacht people, and surfers.

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Te Araroa is translated “the long walk,” but it is unclear if the adjective refers to time or distance. Perhaps they are the same. You can plan a walk, determine distances, make reservations, anticipate arrivals. Within the day itself, you can follow a watch and a map, but hiking time subverts all. You can cover 10 km on a forest road in the same time it takes to slog your way up 3km of a stream. You can (and will) make navigational errors that require recalibration of goals. Indeed, goals themselves are often abandoned as any day wears on, which is one reason for carrying a tent: ten square feet of level ground is a home for the night.

While waiting in Opua, I talked with a boating couple, one commented on the lengthening days (we will soon have equinox), and the other noted about how it will also be better with the coming of daylight savings time. I could only smile. The lengthening of the days with the spring is a significant change, enabling longer, warmer walks. I well remember hiking the Maine section of Appalachian Trail in August when it seemed the sun rose at 4:00 and did not set until after 10:00. That made for difficult sleeping as, on the AT, “hiker’s midnight” is 9:00 pm. Regarding daylight savings time, for those living industrial time, it means a day with more usable light. For someone living in the big outside, the day is as long as it is, regardless of time measurement devices or legislation.

Hiking time is also seasonal, not just shortened or lengthened days, but also weather patterns and temperature differentials. The ideal time to hike the TA is November –March. Then the Northland is warm and has, at least in most places, dried out from the spring rains. And the TA’s terminus–Bluff– is approached in the lingering days of summer. My calendar dictated a September start with an early January end. This meant starting out in the rain with still-cold evenings, and, on the South Island, will include wading rivers swollen by the spring thaw. Earl Shaffer, the first Appalachian Trail thru-hiker chronicled his experiences in a book entitled North with the Spring. Most AT thru-hikers still follow that pattern, commencing from Springer Mountain in March or early April in order to summit Katahdin by September. Being in the weather (significantly in French, temps is both weather and time) all day and night, raises the stakes on seasonal difference. My hike on the TA is South with the Remnants of Winter.

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Spending the days walking the big outside makes for other ways to measure time–walking pace, a measure closer to poetry than to clocks. Wordsworth famously walked many thousand miles in his lifetime, and composed poetry while hiking on paths near Grasmere or pacing in his own garden. Each two steps an iamb (with old knees, steps are never spondee, the pattern of my trekking poles is definitely anapaestic). Hiking rhythm is hypnotic, soothing, or sheer brutality. Pace shifts across the day according to many variables: trail surface, nutrition, blisters, elevation change, sheer exhaustion, or inexplicable shifts in mood. With that comes a dilation of traditional time or the production of time as difference.

Hiking time is also geological. Surface, strata, upthrusts, bogs, all insist on acknowledgment. The old lava flow stretching across a beach must be crossed carefully–a surface both slippery and sharp. Volcanic peaks are steep and often lack soil to cushion feet, or when they do, it is a hopeless mucky mess. New Zealand seems a young place geologically speaking. The terrain is in ferment, constantly rearranging itself. Roads and trails are all subverted by slips and landslides, the streams seem to be newly gouging their own paths. And so many hillsides, volcanic in origin, are stark, nearly naked rock were it not for the exuberance of plant life, clinging wildly to their sides. There is something here of the forever new, a sense that things are just getting started.

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If, as I imagine, the geology is young, the botany is ancient. I once wrote an essay about time and trees (here), but I didn’t talk about Kauri trees, those long-lived giants that proliferated in the Jurassic period but now are confined to the wet forests of the New Zealand northlands. Walking through a mature Kauri forest is something akin to walking amongst redwoods. The diameter of the trunks is unimaginable. There is a store near Awanui built around the upright trunk of an ancient Kauri that has been hollowed out to form a spiral staircase. But, unlike redwoods, Kauri’s have smooth, grey peeling bark, and they do not attain such heights, growing at most about 50 meters with large branching limbs forming an incredible canopy. Standing at the base, you feel as if you are looking at the world’s best climbing tree (if you were also a giant). Nested in its arms are epiphytes– rushes that look as if they should be growing around a bog. The TA goes through a number of Kauri forests, including a visit to one of the best loved of the trees, Tane Moana, thousands of years old. I reach down and touch eternity. At home, I have tongs made of Kauri wood. They are beautiful, rich, and red, somewhat resembling teak. With them I toss salad leaves hours old.

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T. Hugh Crawford

Day 16

September 16th, 2015

Sep 16 day 16 McLeod Bay to Waipu Cove 30 km. 8:30- 3:00 (part by boat)

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Today started much better. A sleepless night near a road–once again cars kept me up much of the night, but on rising, packing up, I noticed the The Deck cafe, which had been closed last night, was well lit, and I was soon tucking into eggs, bacon and coffee. After last night’s pack of ramen supper, it was pure delight. I then wandered down to the jetty to wait for the boat to take me across, spending a pleasant quarter hour talking with a woman walker and long-time resident of McLeod Bay about the changes over time in the village, and also how the footpaths were all being staircased. She doesn’t like them. I tend to agree, until I think back on the Herekino Forest track which could have used something, anything, to make the trail more stable and walkable. In a bit Steve Martinovitch picked me up in the Cara-J, a 38 foot cruiser he built himself– wood with fiberglass sheathing– over three years in his spare time. For the last 18 years, he has been running it as a fishing and charter boat. He too noted the changes in the area, particularly on the bay with the construction of the large (and only) oil refinery in NZ. After a throughly pleasant boat ride, he gave me ride into town so I could get money from a bank ATM (my card does not work in rural ATMs and so is a sometimes source of anxiety). Resupplied at a good grocery store (also a rare commodity on the trail) and hiked the beach down to Waipu, a wonderful little village originally populated by Scots (there is an amazing old cemetery just south of town). I had a good lunch (with salad!!) before heading down south to the campground at Waipu Cove where I got a hot shower (pure luxury) and finally did my laundry (more luxury).

Day 15

September 16th, 2015

Sep 15 day 15 Pataua South to McLeod Bay 29 km 7:15-4:00

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A day of different surfaces and perspectives. Was supposed to start out by traversing a mud flat, but would have had to wait until noon, so I took the long way around the estuary on a road. Then up and over Kauri Mountain and down to Ocean Beach, a place I had visited ten years ago on another trip. Long morning walking the beach (including a ford that was mid-thigh deep (and cold). The weather was strange, cloudy, windy, cold, then sunny and hot. Kept having to stop to add or remove layers. At the end of Ocean Beach rose a set of steep mountains, so the afternoon was a ridge hike, first up a very steep sheep path, then into the woods for a lot of up and down. Much of the steep part had wooden/gravel steps, a mixed blessing. Got to the highest part and missed a track sign (was only written on one of the plastic triangles with a sharpie). As I was climbing, the trail got narrower and more vertical. Soon I was doing serious rock climbing still carrying my backpack and poles. Turned out I was on a spur to the top of a narrow rock peak–the kind that make you tremble when you stand up. Never should have been climbing that with full gear. At the top, it was clear the only return was the way I had climbed up, and after some stressful moments, I regained the regular path and my balance. The rest of the trail was up and down until it dumped me into Urquhart bay (after a least a thousand steps). Followed the road over to McLeod bay, looking for some sort of campground or motel. Stopped to talk to a school bus driver who had just finished her route. She had found a budgie which she had in a box. She and her husband used to run a B&B in McLeod Bay, so she invited me to sleep in her basement. After tea, her husband came in, some mixed signals between them and I soon found myself out looking for a place to stay. There were some B&B s but none took Visa and my cash was short. Ended up sitting on a bench near the bay making ramen noodles, waiting for the sun to go down so I could pitch a tent in the park and not be noticed. On the upside, I was able to arrange with Steve Martinovitch for a boat ride across the bay tomorrow morning.

Day 14

September 16th, 2015

Sep 14 day 14 Ngunguru Village to Pataua South 32 km 8:45-4:00

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Not a particularly eventful day, though the weather was perfect, nearly cloudless. First half was a long road walk out of Ngunguru past the Hugh Crawford Reserve– about 15 km. not a lot of traffic and the countryside was pretty, but also boring. Saw some good livestock including some amazing bulls. There is a bird always out in the bush whose call sounds exactly like R2-D2. And there are these ducks who are always in pairs, but don’t really look alike. One has a while head and an often shrill call, feathers smooth with a russet chest. It’s partner is a fuzzy black critter with a coarse, loud call. They tend to hang out in the mud puddles in pasture land, and spend most of their time yelling at each other. You almost never see one alone, always paired. The middle of the day brought the only bush hike, which had its bright points, but was only 4 km and the entry and exit were through recent tree harvest slash. I did get to ford two rivers, and the woods in the middle were wonderfully peaceful. There I met three women hikers who had spent much of their lives walking the tracks all over NZ– were very knowledgable about how the TA was put together, and were completely engaging. The last third of the day was also road walking. I hope one day the TA Trust finds a way onto the farmland and get the trail off the road. My knees were huge at the end of today, probably need to go slow tomorrow. Got to Pataua South by crossing a footbridge across an estuary where a very old man was fishing, had a bucket full of many different fish. Arrived finally at the Treasure Island campground, running straight into Tim, the good natured proprietor on his trusty ATV. The place was deserted except for one other hiker. Tim directed me to a beautiful picnic area plateau– perfect grass and incredible view of the ocean. Got a hot shower, cooked dinner and settled in for the night.

Day 13

September 13th, 2015

Sep 13 day 13 free camp on Morepork Trail to Ngunguru Village 35 km 7:00-4:30

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A day of big vistas. The morning hike out the Morepork trail was uneventful, but full of twists and turns, quick changing environment and had to concentrate hard on following path and finding the orange plastic triangles that serve as the blazes for the TA. Even with close attention, I missed the last turn, and had to cut across a farmers field, maneuvering over electric fences and around a herd of steers– poor guys, soon on their way to a burger joint near you. After coming down off the ridge, I first followed out the Whananaki estuary, crossing a long, narrow, old wooden bridge. I walked slowly and carefully, only to turn at the end to see a pack of young boys flying across it on bicycles — youth and fearlessness. Then I found myself hiking a series of tracks that ducked in and out of all these magnificent sandy coves, many with beautiful or just sort of funky beach houses. Stopped at the Matapouri General Store for some lunch and a cup of coffee to gird myself for the last 13 k in the run through an old forest track to Ngunguru. Rewarded myself for back to back 30+days with a stay in a motel I really could not afford but also didn’t want to pass up. Will try to sleep in a bit because tomorrow starts with a long road walk (brutal on old knees).

Day 12

September 13th, 2015

Sep 12 day 12 free camp near Waikare to free camp on Morepork Trail 32 km 6:30-4:30

Although I thought I pitched my tent past the last house, there was one more just across the stream and, as it was Friday night, they had a small party, with cars coming and going until after midnight. Needless to say, I did not sleep well. Really was not sure if my tent was visible from the road. Got up at daybreak, broke camp as silently as I could so as not to disturb the dogs, crossed the ford, and was putting on my shoes at the other side when I heard the cars start up. I crossed the stile into the woods just a bit before they passed– did not really want to explain where I had camped as it probably was on their land. First part of hike was fun but hard– 4k straight up a stream. Once again it felt like the movie The River Queen. Then, as the TE so often does, I ended up with a whole lot of road walking, linking up the different forest tracks. Was not a lot of fun since there was Saturday traffic and the roads were narrow. Had lunch at Helena Bay– there were three elderly couples there having a picnic and had a good chat with them. Then walked past Teal bay, both very beautiful spots. The mid afternoon hike was on a gravel walkway past some magnificent pastureland with the ocean in the distance. Later in the day, I got to the next woodland trail, Morepork trail (think it is because they have wild pigs there) hiked in few k and pitched my tent in the woods, far from any cars tonight. Good day, but tired feet. Crawled into my sleeping bag to get warm at about 6:00. Read a brief while, and went straight to sleep.

Day 11

September 13th, 2015

 

 

 

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Sep 11 day 11 Opua to Waikare 16 km (12 by boat) 5:00 pm-6:15

 

Today was the first true rest day. Slept in at the Opua Motel, a really wonderful place, read, wrote, relaxed, and rested some strained knees. Resupplied at the Opua Store, a classic place which also had coffee and assortment of ever-present meat pies. Went to sit by the harbor and even though the sun was shining, it was cool and windy. John, at the Cruising (yacht) Club invited me in, so I spent the afternoon in comfort reading and writing on the couch with the harbor spread out in front of me, Marie came in and opened the bar just in time for me to have a pint and talk with a boating couple from KeriKeri. Dusty, the grizzled water taxi pilot showed promptly at five to take me over to Waikara, which is only accessible at high tide. On the way he told me of his plans to sell his business and next summer mountain bike the Rockies from Banf Canada to Mexico. The entrance to Waikare was a narrow channel winding through trees and finally bumping against a clay cliff where I not so nimbly jumped ashore and gave quick thanks to Dusty who was heading back out with the tide. I got ashore near 5:30 and made my way up the road and out of the village. It was Friday night, so everyone was out and about. After about 5k I came to a river ford, decided not to get wet feet just before bed (plan to cross in the morning in sandals before putting on shoes) so I free camped near the river it what I thought was a deserted area. Only after I started pitching my tent did the dogs at the house across the river put up a racket. Hope I can keep my low profile through the night.

Solitude

September 10th, 2015

Solitude

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On the second day out from Cape Reinga, the trail led up from Twilight Beach over Scott Point and down to Ninety Mile Beach, named not because it is ninety miles long (more like eighty couple kilometers), but because Captain Cook, on his circumnavigation of the island named it the Ninety Mile Desert. Hiking it calls up cinematic deserts– flat sand, no landmarks to measure progress, heat puddles distort the distance. It is vast, open, and finally, even with the ocean and the dunes, blank. What the distance tells is absence– complete solitude. I walked most of the day without seeing a trace of humans. Not until late afternoon did the tour buses roar past, all the passengers waving. In New Zealand, the beach is part of the public right of way (at low tide) so the tour buses take their load to Cape Reinga, then to the dunes to sand surf, and end the day barreling down the beach on their way home.

Apart from those rushing vehicles, I was alone in the open. Solitude, like being, is spatial and temporal. It is easy to spend time in a closed, familiar space without feeling alone. People do it in offices every day, but hours in a vast open space produce an uncanny sense of solitude. The OED definition of alone includes: a combination of “all” plus “one,” emphasizing oneness essential or temporary…wholly one, one without any companions, one by himself. How strange that solitude–the “all-one”– begins as a multiplicity. “All” is more than one, and the non-distracted experience of solitude can be a multiplication of being.

One writer who comes to mind in understanding what it means to be alone is Thoreau, whose experiment at Walden Pond was a two-year exercise in solitude. Of course he was only a mile or so from town and did not lack for companionship when desired, but he also found himself isolated for stretches of time that exceed most people’s experience. In Walden, he regularly imagines people posing questions he just happens to be happy to answer. When queried about solitude, he responds: “I love to be alone. I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude.” There is a strange doubling here. He first claims to love being alone, but then immediately marks being alone with a companion–his own solitude. He goes on to detail a range of nonhuman companions that keep him both alone and accompanied.

Emerson, Thoreau’s friend and mentor, saw the ability to experience solitude as an important positive virtue, a way of avoiding falling into the unquestioned values of society. He notes, though, that it is easy to experience solitude in empty places. It is more difficult, and by implication, more profound, to be truly alone in the midst of society. I find myself at conceptual loggerheads here: solitude as a way of experiencing a profound sense of oneness (Emerson), and solitude as a way of living human multiplicity (Thoreau). That day, on ninety mile beach, Thoreau was the more felicitous guide. It was a drama of contending selves asserting and receding with the waves and tides.

T. Hugh Crawford

Day 10

September 10th, 2015

Sep 10 day 10 KeriKeri to Opua 27 km 7:30-1:30

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Wandered up the streets of KeriKeri before 7:00 and found a bake shop open, so started the morning with a sausage roll. It would be hard to be a vegetarian on this trail, as the quick, cheap, convenient food nearly always includes some sort of meat in a baked crust. As it was a long walk just to get out of town, I also got a McDonalds coffee– here they have a barista and do not sell drip. Walked past the Old Stone Store, an original building that’s pretty imposing, then through orange groves, with little honor boxes, selling kilo bags of oranges and lemons. It poured rain all day, but I was all rain-geared up and, except up on the ridges in the Waitangi Forest where the wind blew strong, it was warm enough. Much of the path was lined with gorse bushes, something I associate more with Winnie-the-Pooh than with NZ (though perhaps they were introduced to make the place more like England). When the wind blew lightly you could smell that tropical odor the gorse flowers make. Track was solid and fast, and I soon got to Waitangi, the place of the treaty. Tried to get a picture, but my phone was too wet to use. Wandered through Paihia, a happening place with lots of restaurants, but I pushed on to Opua, where tomorrow I take a boat over to Waikare and the beginning of the Russell Forest. The only motel in Opua was closed for repair, but Leah, the proprietor, opened us a room for me– everybody has been so great. Opua is a port town, with a large ferry dock, and marina. Wandered down in the evening to the yacht club who let a poor wandering landlubber join with the wandering sailors. Had steaming bowl of chowder while listening to 4 men who had made the crossing from Fiji in very foul weather, laying up in Opua as the closest safe port though eventually they need to make it back to the South Island. All were exhausted and energetically addressing themselves to their steak dinners. Looking forward to spending most of the day tomorrow lounging by the docks, waiting for high tide and the trip to Waikare.

Day 9

September 9th, 2015

Sep 9 day 9 Puketi Camp to KeriKeri 25 km 7:15-1:00

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Hiked hard and fast, but was short, fairly easy day. The highlight was crossing a large set of pastures toward the end of lambing season. Most of the ewes had already lambed (most with twins) though some were about to. A lot of afterbirth in the fields, and I had to walk very circumspectly so as not to disturb the new ones. Arrived in KeriKeri, headed straight to the Holiday Camp to shower, shop and do laundry– all those domestic chores– and a night in a dry bed!