Tuesday, 28 May 2019

Wairoa

As soon as we arrived at the Wairoa Riverside Motor Camp, chosen because we can plug our heater in and also they are on "Campsaver" for NZMCA members which gives us a winter rate of only $20 a night,
Artwork created at Waikaremoana!
we got to work trying to clean all the gritty dust off the bus - quite a mission! Then we ambled our way around the town to familiarise ourselves with the area, not having been here before. The campground is on the fenced river edge, very close to town and next door to the swimming pool where I would have gone before leaving this morning if I'd got up early enough!
Wairoa Motor Camp. 

Serene and chilly at dusk. 
The town looks quite depressed but the setting is pretty with the river, cycle and walkway across the road from the shops. We crossed over the bridge and were soon at the fish & chip shop where we bought our dinner to take back to the bus. They were quite good and it made an easy night. Another cold night, but yet another beautiful day today. We have been so spoilt with the weather.
On leaving the camp we headed back the way we came for a few minutes to play golf at the Wairoa golf course. 
T takes on the first downhill. 
On arriving we were the only ones there but by the time we had  completed the very challenging 18 holes there were a couple of other vehicles in the small car park. Well, what a course it was! 
T takes on a gully!
Not for the faint-hearted or beginner with it's numerous deep gullies and hills and impossible for anyone to think of using a cart with all the steep slopes. There were 4 par 3s on the second 9 which normally would make me very happy but oh dear - the gullies take away the magic! Len incidentally played quite well but I took more shots in my game than I have for a few years with so many balls rolling down the sides of gullies. However I kept relaxed and am pleased I managed to play it but know that I will never ever ever play it again!
A quiet night at the seaside!
We are now parked in a free overnight parking area, along with about 4 tourist vehicles, next to the sea at Oputama Beach Reserve on the Mahia Peninsula. It will be so good to listen to the waves and let them hopefully lull us to sleep which we are going to do right now!

Post Bangkok to Lake Waikaremoana

After a nice, though sweltering, 12 days looking after my granddaughters in Bangkok I returned safely to Whakatane and Len who had kept himself busy by playing golf and fishing. It was a treat to have a lovely smoked kahawai pie on my two first nights back - a successful catch in my absence!
Life in the fast lane!
After 3 days of recovering at Bill & Annette's POP which included a night out watching the excellent local production of Mama Mia we set off for Lake Waikaremoana which we had been meaning to visit for a number of years, but had never quite made it. The Great Walk around part of the lake was once on our to-do agenda but we are past the desire to carry big packs.
Lake Aniwhenua was again a good peaceful and scenic spot to stop for a coffee on the way with only one other vehicle there. After passing through Murupara it didn't seem long before we were on the windy, mainly dusty gravel road although parts of it, where the sun could never reach, were quite wet. You feel like you are in the middle of nowhere with the bush and long distances before any tiny settlements - however we now know where Ruatahuna is!
Life  in the slow lane!!
You need to watch out for horses and although there were hardly any cars any oncoming ones did seem to think they are the only ones on the road. We had a very lucky near miss from one that came straight round the corner towards us on our side of the road. It was only because we were travelling very slowly and he did a last minute swerve that we avoided an undesired head-on. A couple of other cars also had to get to their side of the road quickly to avoid us so Len was constantly on alert. We probably had a couple of hours on the gravel, much of it "corrugated" but never saw any other vehicles travelling in the same direction as us.
Unspoiled at its best!


We stayed at the picturesque Lake Waikaremoana Motor Camp as we needed power to plug our heater in seeing the night temperatures were down to 3-4°. Being the end of autumn the camp was pretty quiet but we arrived on a Friday night and there were some boaties going out fishing over the weekend. We enjoyed 2 nights there and the days were glorious with plenty of warmth if you were in the sun. 
On Saturday we did most of the shorter walks close to the camp, these including the Black Beech Track, the Hinerau Track, the Aniwaniwa Falls Track with wonderful views of the cascading water, and the longer 2 hour return track with it's steady climb of 300 metres to Lake Wakareiti and the shelter overlooking the magnificent lake, grey on this day rather than blue because of the overhead cloud.
A typical well made track leading to......

.. a beautiful waterfall!!

..and another!!
On returning to camp Len did a little spinning in the lake.
Sunday, after another fish for Len and a steep walk for me up the Hinau track which rises from the camp we set off on the road for Wairoa, stopping to do the interesting  45 minute return walk up and through rock bluffs and huge boulders in the bush to a platform giving spectacular views of Lake Waikaremoana  and Panekire Bluff.
Gorgeous unspoiled lake and bush.
The couple from New Caledonia parked next to us at the camp were on this walk as well as the one we did to Lake Wakareiti the previous day.
Next we explored the Onepoto Caves track, further down the road, theoretically 2 hours return but we were quite a bit quicker. Obviously we can't have walked far enough into the numerous caves! An interesting walk though with a range of caves from small cavities to deep recesses and tunnels as well as chunky rock overhangs.
"Quick, take the photo. I can't hold it much longer!"
There was still quite a few miles of gravel road before the tarseal finally appeared on the way to Wairoa. The bus has never been dustier!!

Monday, 13 May 2019

Ngongataha, Whakatane, Mount Maunganui, Rangiuru, Ohope, Whakatane.

2-3 weeks have passed by without writing any blog as we have, once again, been back close to home where life almost returns to normal.  After spending 2 nights at the very large, tiered, NZMCA site at Ngongataha we drove onto Whakatane for my long awaited dentist appointment and, as a result, I'm now able to smile a little wider without seeing 2 broken teeth - just the gaps behind now! 
Always a beautiful smile!
We had a night at the McAlister St carpark and then had a week at Sandra & Matts in Mount Maunganui, keeping their boys company, while they had a well-deserved holiday in Fiji. Another chance to catch up with other family and friends and play some golf, firstly at Omokoroa with my friend Pixie and her friend, Celia, winning 3 bottles of beer each in the haggle. Then, before leaving the Mount, we had a game at our old course of Omanu before heading back to Whakatane.
We spent a night at the Montrose POP which is a lovely quiet spot in an orchard at Rangiuru, then a night by the harbour at Ohope reserve after playing golf over the road at the Ohope Course. Len tried his hand at fishing down by the estuary inlet but we'll blame the old bait this time for the lack of success! Bill & Annette's lovely quiet country POP by the Whakatane airport and golf course, where we have stayed before, was our destination after fishing as the next morning I was flying out to Bangkok for 12 days to look after my 2 granddaughters while my daughter in law went to a conference in America. I'm leaving Len in safe hands while he plays golf and hopefully fills the freezer with fish!
We arrived at the POP just in time to be invited in to Annette & Bills for a fish dinner as Bill had been out in his boat with another couple of motorhomers from Tauranga and they had had an excellent catch. The crumbed fresh kahawai was delicious and luckily we could contribute with potatoes and salads. They are such an amazing, hospitable couple.
Now Bangkok here I come - - - - -