Time on the Road
Taking the Long
View
~~~
Gord
Stewart
Time
on the Road
Advice for those looking to
explore and discover New Zealand: Do it at less than 20
kilometres an hour, and with a breeze in your face.
I
made a start on it myself recently with a 12-day cycling
trip setting off from Cape Reinga.
If I had a bucket
list, Cape Reinga to Bluff by bike would be on it. From the
Cape, travels in Northland, through Auckland and into the
Waikato would be my start.
Most people expressed
surprise when they learned I was going alone. But you are
never really alone. You always have your thoughts.
I
thought about the Christchurch tragedy. (I set off two days
after it.) I thought how fortunate were those affected to be
consoled by a prime minister like Jacinda Ardern. And how
lucky we all are to have her as our face on the world at
such a sad and difficult time.
I thought about Robin
Treadwell, retired physician and grandmother, and her Carbon
Neutral Waiheke group making their way to Wellington by
e-bike and EV in support of the proposed Zero Carbon Bill.
Grandparents love their littlies to bits but few of them, I
suspect, think much about – or are even aware of – how
degraded a planet we are bequeathing to them. Fewer still,
it seems, are prepared to do anything about it.
I
thought about our current tourism model. Airbus A380 after
Boeing 747 after 777 deposit tourists on our fair shores.
Other than our neighbours across the Tasman, these visitors
have flown 12 to 24 hours to get here. Given that planes
won’t be running on vegetable oil anytime soon, nor will
there be any move to limit arrival numbers, a push for more
eco- and other low-impact tourism makes sense. At least do
what we can once they are on the ground.
Hence my vote
for walking and tramping and cycling. Even into a stiff
headwind.
I faced one the first day of my trip on
Ninety Mile Beach. A veteran of the beach ride said to me it
will feel like you are pedaling uphill. It might as well
have been Nine Hundred Mile Beach. To pass the time, I got
to thinking about how the beach got its name. As we all
know, it’s nowhere near 90 miles long.
I reckon the
conversation went something like this:
“I guess we
should call it Fifty-five Mile
Beach?”
“That’s totally boring,
not awesome at all.”
“So maybe we
should call it Hundred Mile
Beach?”
“No one would believe
it.”
“How ‘bout Ninety Mile Beach
then?”
“Ah, good
one.”
One café owner, when
she learned of my adventure, asked, “Is it a fundraiser
for something or just madness?”
Just madness, I
guess. Everyone who takes on an extended physical challenge
has their own personal reasons for doing so, and I had mine.
For the record: Twelve days cycling, one rest day.
760 kilometres pedaled; countless (it seemed) metres
climbed. Forty-six one-lane bridges crossed, four ferries
taken, two punctures, no cramp.
But that doesn’t tell the story at all. It was the friendly, encouraging and helpful people encountered – you couldn’t call even one of them a ‘stranger’. It was special Northland spots revisited and new ones explored. It was rugged hill climbs and sweeping sea views. Backroads and ferry rides. Sun on the face and tailwinds (thankfully, I had some of them too).
I didn’t blog or post or tweet. I just pedaled
along. I planned one day ahead. Each morning I got up, had
some breakfast, packed my stuff, and set off.
It’s
been said that life’s just a series of moments. A bike
ride is too.
Heading out from the Ahipara Holiday
Park on my third day, I rode by a little guy walking to
school. He called out to me: “Can you do a wheelie?” No,
I thought, but with luck I’ll make it to
Kaikohe.
Later that morning I was at a cross roads up
in the hills, on the way to catching the ferry to Rawene. I
was having a break, enjoying the scenery, and taking a
photo. An older Maori women pulled up to the intersection,
put down her car window and said to me, “One can never rob
you of these memories.”
“Have a lovely journey,”
she added. Then she rolled up her window, and was off.
Gord
Stewart is an environmental sustainability consultant. He
does project work for government, industry, and non-profits.
Information
& Inspiration
Classic
New Zealand Cycle Trails: A guide to 46 fantastic
holidays, written and published by The Kennett Brothers,
2013. See also www.touraotearoa.nz
Te Araroa: A
Walking Guide to New Zealand’s Longest Trail, by Geoff
Chapple, Random House, 2011. See also
www.teararoa.org.nz