Showing posts with label Waimangaroa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waimangaroa. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 July 2013

Pioneer Trail - Thursday 18 July


Pete has very kindly agreed to drop me up to the Denniston Plateau for a head start on the Denniston short cut. We leave in the dark and drizzle just after 7am and drive through a Westport that is sending the next shift up to Stockton.

The road climbs steadily and steeply up the ridge away from Waimangaroa, with the coastal plain opening grey and wet in the gloom below. The odd coal truck rumbles down the hill.

We don't pause at the top but the various relics of old settlements are scattered along the route. The landscape is shrouded in clag and it doesn't take much imagination to picture a fairly bleak existence up here. The road branches and winds getting rougher and we're pretty pleased to be in the Hilux. Eventually we get to what must be pretty close to the top, the drizzle has let up so I shake hands with Pete and pedal off into the clag as he executes a u turn.

Two electricity utes come in the opposite direction as I start down a steep descent. At the bottom there's a bit of straight and I'm feeling uneasy about the direction of travel when a section of road clicks and I realise we came up this way. Sure enough a minute later Pete drives around the corner; "How the hell did you get here!" You can only laugh. The bike goes back in the tray and Pete performs another u turn.

The road executes a long loop and in the clag the power lines can't be seen to give a bearing. There are a number of turn offs that could be possible routes off the top. We end up checking a couple of duds including one that follows a new line a long way down. As a pylon service road there are regular side roads to each structure. Most are clearly minor but when you can't see the wires it isn't always obvious. 

Eventually we have the right one (it is marked with a loose rock cairn that you pass on your left) but Pete's not about to let his guest head off into the mist down the precipitous track so keeps going saying he'd better check out the ford at the Mackley River (officially: "Orikaka or Mackley River"). The track drops and winds and drops. It takes longer than either of us expected and is fairly steep in places with a few stiff climbs out of Stevenson and Mt Williams stream gullies.

The service utes are still in front of us somewhere so we know the route is passable (or that we will have company if not).

Eventually we drop to the river, it's sizeable with a bouldery approach but a good drivable line. The exit is via the mouth of Blue Duck Creek and looks undrivable. However we see the other utes have got through so we chuck some rocks in appropriate places then Pete launches his pride and joy at what amounts to a wet boulder pile. The Hilux bucks and bounces over the bank into the stream and attacks the steep exit. Pete's head is rocketing around inside like a blonde pinball but it carries through.

There's no way we're about to go back through all that so there had better not be any locked gates.

It's still a fair old way out and the service ute tracks we are following have turned up all the side tracks so there are a few intersections we have to check. However, after the climb from the river the track is smoother and less steep. There's old coal mine workings and eventually farm land at New Creek and a sealed road that takes us to the iron bridge over the Buller River.

At 11.30 I once again shake hands and say good bye to Pete feeling guilty about what we've put his truck through.  We're both a bit sheepish about the morning's navigation but it was a pretty good adventure.  He and Wendy get many visitors from off the Coast who are all treated to their generous hospitably so I'm also conscious I have taken up a day and a half of his time without the courtesy of a pre-warning.

The drizzle has cleared as I head up the gorge while Pete turns for a long but somewhat smoother trip back down the road to Westport, Cass and his Wekas.

Having time and supplies to get a bit lost for awhile, I was relaxed about the shortcut but there are a few lessons. Some of the written descriptions of the route are not easy to relate back to the landscape you see so I recommend taking the 1:50,000 map(s). The road is steep up and down and winds around the craggy ridges so it's very hard to keep a bearing in clag if you can't see the wires.

The trip up the gorge is straight forward. 2-3 K after the Iron Bridge is Lyell and the start of the Old Ghost Road then it is through the Upper Buller Gorge, past the fault scarp at White Creek, past the intersection with SH 65 and on to Four Rivers Plain (I assume these are the Buller, the Matakitaki from the south, the Matiri from the north and the Mangles from the south-east. The Rain has been through but the cloud is broken and there's occasional glimpses of sun. The tearooms in Murchison supply lunch again before the long stretch beneath the Blue Cliffs Ridge to Owen River.

There is no sun in the afternoon as I pass the Owens Junction pub, the Road beside the Gowan River to Lake Rotoroa and Kawatiri junction with the remnants of a failed railway link to Nelson. Last time I came through (1989) the pub was an obligatory stop for a beer and I ended up sleeping the night in the disused railway tunnel (nothing to do with the beer).

Kawatiri Junction; left to St Arnaud, right to Murchison

North from Kawatiri Junction is the long road over the Hope and Spooner Saddles to Nelson but today it's 25k to St Arnaud and maybe 20K further to the DoC camp site at Kowhai Point.

It's about 4.30 and starting to get dim as I ride into St Arnaud so I'm happy to call it quits. At the petrol station/store I have just discovered that the Takeaway wont be open today when a voice from behind asks; "Where've you come from today mate?" I turn and we recognise each other. Ashley is an erstwhile work colleague, a mad keen cyclist and an all round good bloke. He casts an expert eye over my set up, makes the right comments and enquires about my route in detail. He's coming up to the Lodge restaurant later so promises to shout me a beer.

I have a dorm room to myself again. After watching the pink light drain away west from the (now) sparse snow on the ranges there's time for a shower and to set sweaty gear to dry, all much better done in a room than a tent.

My blue cod and chips is generous and tasty, and with a glass of Neudorf Chardonnay cycling catering doesn't get much better than this.  Ashley pops over for a chat, as does mine host and before long it's time to turn in. I'm intending to head for Picton tomorrow and although there's no hills it could be a bit of an effort.

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Pioneer Trail - Wednesday 17 July

A day off. After bacon and eggs for breakfast Pete and I say good bye to Wendy who heads off for golf. We have a walk around his garden (an inadequate word as it is also land rehabilitation and a bit of a wild life sanctuary).

We set off up the coast towards Karamea; it's probably 30 years since I came through here in the mail van after tramping the Heaphy. I can't say any of it rings a bell though.

North of Westport, Waimangaroa marks the turn off to Denniston, the incline and some of the better known West Coast coal mining history (the book Denniston Rose is a good starter). Towards Ngakawau the presence of the active Stockton mine pervades the landscape, much as it pervades the Westport community. A cable way can be seen bringing coal down and the area is busy. The houses along this stretch are a bit mixed (some quite run down) although there is some spin off business; Pete points to a row of cabins behind the pub set up for workers from "away."

The flat coastal strip has narrowed as we travel north until some flats at the mouth of the Mohikinui river where the road ducks in land then up to the Karamea bluffs (420m).  We ignore the sign to Seddonville which provides access to the Old Ghost Road which follows much of the river's course as it drains a substantial area of real estate.  A long windy time later we emerge onto the rich green pasture with Karamea in the distance. Things look prosperous and there even seems to be a better class of weather.

10 or so K up the road from Karamea we take a gravel road to the Oparara arch. Near the start a derelict saw mill has tumbled into ruin but used to be one of many processing native forest in the area. Pete knew the bloke when it was operating and his son still lives in the area.  The confrontation and acrimony that accompanied the demise of native logging in the area is still fresh in the memory but does not appear to have sounded the death knell of the local community.

It's a long drive on a well formed gravel road to an immaculate DoC set up with information boards. A short walk through beautiful bush following a beer coloured stream (some prefer tea coloured) takes us to the Oparara arch. Granite and lime stone boulders line the stream as the track skirts above. Rounding a corner the arch comes into view hanging high over head (37m).

Some bloke pretending to be Craig Potton

Rock hovering over head in a way it shouldn't

The limestone looks hard but the stream has cut a large passage through and down into the granite below. The juxtaposition of the two rocks one being 6-7 times as old as the other is intriguing. The green of the bush, golden brown of the stream and the different rocks make it an unlikely and beautiful scene.

Granite below, limestone above


Another bush walk takes us to a tarn hemmed in by bush where black, still water reflects the trees above.

Returning to the coast we drive the last few kms to the Kohaihai river; the end of the road and the start of the Heaphy Track. On the way Pete points to a row of Nikau standing in a paddock; forlorn but iconic. Apparently these are the subject of more than one artists and photographers efforts.


At the Kohaihai river we walk a little way up the Heaphy track under a blue sky. Nikaus are now ubiquitous. Fantails flick above the trees and land at our feet, Weka lurk about around the track. The low forest is dominated by Nikau and in the bright sun it has the look of a tropical island.

Bridge over the river Kohaihai


I'm getting itchy pedal feet knowing that there is 70 and more K of single track between here and Golden Bay. Maybe I could change plans and start a South-North traverse tomorrow...

You want to bike the track? Here's the deal ...


We head back as the evening light streams under a cloud bank and across the sea casting the green farm land into vibrant relief against the dark hills behind. There's a strong sense of the wild and rugged expanse of the Kahurangis squeezing this narrow strip of coastal communities against the sea.

It's mild in Karamea despite clouds on all horizons. Pete feigns offence at the implication that I might be surprised the Coast gets any good weather. Of course Longitude wise Karamea is on a par with Wellington and Nelson.

We stop at the Last Resort for a very good coffee and pie ("of course it's good, don't you think we've heard of coffee down here? Bloody townies!").  The owners come by the table for a chat, both are local and have brought the place not so long back. They seem to have a good formula in place with a cafe/restaurant one side of the large wood beamed space and a bar on the other. A group of older locals are ensconced already so hopefully they can keep the regulars as well as catering to travellers. You can't help but wish them all the best with the venture.

One of the chaps at the bar recognises Pete and there is some good natured banter based on historic rugby club rivalries as we leave ("Go the Stars!").

A little further down the road is Little Wanganui, then off the road a bit a subdivision. We pop down to see a mix of baches nestled below limestone bluffs catching the very last of the sun. With the estuary nearby this looks like a whitebaiter's dream.

The sun has dipped below the horizon now and catches the clouds on the Radiant Range as we climb the bluffs road again. Lights at the Stockton mine are visible scattered across the plateau to the south but it's dark when we drive through Ngakawau and see processions of vehicles leaving and arriving as the shift changes. All vehicles are numbered and everyone on the street are wearing overalls with reflective strips; it's a visible reminder of the reach of the mine into the local community (and its importance).

We join the queue heading back to Westport passing a single light high on the dark hills marking the location of Denniston.

After another very good meal and yarn over another good bottle of wine; my day off is over.