Sunday, February 23, 2020

The Abel Tasman and Coastella

The week after I got back from the Masters Games, it was off to the Abel Tasman for 4 days of Year 11 camp. The school needed an extra person to help look after the girls, and I had done this camp on many previous occasions. I love camp, so getting paid to go was a real bonus!
After taking the ferry from Wellington to Picton, then boarding a bus, the first stop was at Pelorus bridge where the girls enjoyed a welcome dip in the river as an escape from the heat.
We spent the first night at Marahau, then the following day we headed off on the first leg of our walk: Marahau to Anchorage. It really is such a stunning part of the country, particularly on a gorgeous summer day.
Anchorage is a beautiful golden sanded crescent-shaped beach and it was nice to arrive in good time, set up camp, then take the girls for a swim.
Bark Bay was our next overnight destination, but on the way we had to pass through the stunning Torrent Bay where we stopped for lunch.
If I'm a bit hot and sweaty looking in the pic below, it was because I'd just conquered the big hill that leads you out of Torrent Bay. Of course the trade-off for the uphill slog is always gorgeous views...
The approach to Bark Bay offered up more beautiful scenery. The girls were just awesome on the walk. I had a fantastic group and there was minimal whinging about the hills, and the weight of their packs.
Bark Bay is my favourite campsite in the Abel Tasman. You camp on a narrow spit of land with the sea on one side and a tidal estuary on the other. The previous year there had been a massive storm which deposited  sand all over the campsite, and it it still an issue today. It does make it rather difficult to get the tent pegs in! I love my little Macpac home away from home, it has been my sanctuary on many an adventure.
 Bark Bay also usually puts on a pretty good sunrise.
The last day was a short day of walking to Onetahuti beach. We had time for lunch and a quick swim before taking a water taxi back to Marahau. From there it was a bus to Nelson before flying back to Wellington, happy but exhausted after another fantastic camp.
Near the end of February Will and I attended Coastella, a very cute little boutique music festival held on the grounds of the Southward car museum in Paraparaumu.
One of our first acts was to check out the 'Tiny Town' stage. This was essentially a ten foot shipping container in which a stage had been set up. There is room for up to 5 audience members, and you stand and watch the performers (in our case a charismatic country duo) do a couple of songs. It was a very intimate and very cool experience.
C.W. Stoneking was another highlight. I had first heard of this guy a couple of years earlier, so I enjoyed getting the opportunity to see him live. I LOVE his cover of the White Stripe's Seven Nation Army.
It was very nice listening to some good music and chilling out in the sunshine over a couple of ciders. By the looks of things, Will was in desperate need of some RnR!
 You can't beat a bit of Trinity Roots kiwi-style reggae on a balmy summer evening...
The headline act was a band called Bullhorn, who I had never heard of. They were awesome!!! They consisted of 7 brass players, a drummer and an MC, and they played the most incredible energetic set. I loved it! You can get a taste of what they are about here.
Will and I really loved our first Coastella experience. Unfortunately the festival didn't run in 2020 for financial reasons, but if it resurrects itself in the future we would definitely be keen to return.

Fat Freddy's and the 2019 NZ Masters Games

On 2019 Wellington Anniversary Day Will and I headed to Eastbourne for a Fat Freddy's Drop show. We've seen them live quite a few times now, but we never get sick of them and they always put on a great show. A public holiday is a great excuse to have ice-cream for lunch!
We met up with my badminton partner Stephen and some of his friends and family, and had a great afternoon/evening, topped off by a lovely sunset on the way back home.
 
A couple of weeks later it was off to Whanganui for the NZ Masters games. At the end of 2018 I made the decision to resign from my permanent teaching job and do some relief-teaching instead, mostly for the greater freedom and flexibility it offered. It was very nice not having to worry about taking time off work to play some badminton.
Us Wellington players managed to put together two teams, with my team picking up the bronze medal and the other Welly team taking out the silver. I wasn't initially in any of the teams as it was a bit hit and miss whether I 'd be recovered enough after my infection dramas from the end of the previous year. However, unfortunately my regular doubles partner Isla injured her calf, meaning I was able to take her place in one of the teams.
 
Stephen and I like busting out our 'Welly Tigers' strip every now and then! 
We had 6 days in Whanganui, and had a fantastic time. It was super hot, so the outdoor pool at our accommodation got plenty of use, and plenty of pink gin was drunk in the interest of staying hydrated! We had one totally free day (when the hard-core players were playing singles) so we took the opportunity to embark on the Stephen Nelson tour of Whanganui.
First up was the Durie Hill elevator which is an underground elevator that is the only one of its kind in the southern hemisphere. A long tunnel took us to the elevator itself, where for $2 each we were taken up to through the hill to the top.
 
Once up the top we climbed the 176 steps up to the top of the Durie Hill memorial tower.
At the top we were rewarded with lovely views over Whanganui.
Next was a visit to Cooks Gardens, where Peter Snell set a new world record and was the first kiwi to run a sub 4-minute mile. Obviously we had to reenact the occasion!
Next on the tour was a visit to Virginia Lake park.
We enjoyed a walk through the free-flight aviary
As well as the winter garden, inside a very cool old-school greenhouse.
After that, we dropped a couple of people back at our accommodation and the rest of us headed out to Jerusalem, about 66km out of Whanganui. On the way we stopped to check out a hand-carved culvert in the bush.
Jerusalem is a tiny little settlement centred around a church and convent where Suzanne Aubert (known as Mother Mary Joseph) founded the Sisters of Compassion Order which is still active in Wellington. The NZ poet James K. Baxter also founded a commune and lived there in the 70s.
The church was beautiful inside. A bible had been left open on the altar so I decided that Martin was in need of a sermon... I was impressed by how attentively he listened!
The surrounding grounds were also beautiful
It was a baking hot day, and just as we were leaving the settlement we saw a sign advertising cold drinks and ice-cream. It turned out to be an enterprising local running a small shop out of one of the rooms in her house! I can't imagine she gets a huge amount of walk-by business.
On the way back to Whanganui we stopped at a couple of viewpoints for photo ops.
Apart from the badminton and tour of Whanganui and surrounds, another highlight was our team's performance in the Masters Games quiz night. The Tigers ended up first-equal at the end of the quiz, but unfortunately we lost the tie-break question. Nevertheless, we still ended up getting loads of free stuff as over the last few days we had befriended Tasha, the games organiser, and she looked after us well!
So there it is, another NZMG done and dusted, and a new appreciation of what a cool place Whanganui is with a surprising amount to offer.