Monday, January 13, 2020

Hokianga - Backroads and Boulders

Rawene on the Hokianga Harbour


The Hokianga Harbour is known in Māori as Te Hokianga Kupe A Nui: the great leaving (or returning place) of Kupe.  Kupe was the legendary Polynesian voyager who first discovered Aotearoa New Zealand.  It was around 925 AD that the Matahourua canoe arrived in the Hokianga, where Kupe and his crew settled for a while.  Kupe eventually left the harbour and returned to Hawaiki, but his grandson, Nukutawhiti, returned—following Kupe's sailing instructions.  Later European missionaries, traders and settlers arrived in the Hokianga and for a while it was a busy place with shipping and logging industries.  Nowadays the Hokianga is a sleepy place, less visited than popular tourist areas like the Bay of Islands but with a charm of its own.
            We began our journey to the Hokianga at Kaitaia, where we parked Tangaroa at the RSA, close to the town centre.  We were keen to visit the Te Ahu Centre, which is home to the town's i-SITE, museum, library and art gallery.  The doors into the atrium were etched with the figures of a Māori and Pakehā greeting each other with the hongi—a touching of noses and foreheads where the breath of life is exchanged.  Like the area just to the north, Kaitaia has a population made up of Māori and Europeans with Dalmatian ancestry—many of the gumdiggers arrived from what is now Croatia.  Māori nicknamed them tarara, meaning fast-talkers, other Europeans called them Dallys.  Many of these emigrants sent for wives and families to follow them; their descendents still live in the area and their surnames appear on street names and businesses.
At the Te Ahu Centre



            Inside the circular atrium we admired the carved pou that represent the local iwi (tribes).  There was also one that celebrated the Dalmatian community.  Upstairs a walkway encircled the building and we were able to examine the tops of the pou at close quarters, as well as the flock of godwits that were suspended from the ceiling.  Godwits gather along the coast north of Kaitaia prior to migrating to Siberia and Alaska in the autumn.
            We took the car and went exploring the North Hokianga, heading west on the Kaitaia-Awaroa road for Ahipara, at the foot of Ninety Mile Beach.  Actually fifty-five miles (88 kilometres) long, it is a beautiful stretch of sand.  Officially a public highway, tourist busses drive along it, taking customers to the huge dunes near Te Paki Stream and on to Cape Reinga.  Once the beach was famous for toheroa (a large shellfish), but gathering is now banned because they came close to extinction.  The smaller tuatua can still be found though, and are usually cooked up in fritters.
            Shipwreck Bay, to the left of the township, is aptly named.  At low tide some of the wrecks are still visible.  Above Shipwreck Bay the Ahipara Gumfields Historic Reserve stretched inland.  In the late 1800s these gumfields were home to 2,000 people, and boasted three hotels and several shops. Bullock teams carried the gum to waiting ships at Shipwreck Bay.  As we drove through the scrubby, featureless, empty landscape it was hard to imagine the area in its heyday. 
            We took the Kaitaia-Awaroa Road to Herekino township, which is on one of two small harbours between Ahipara and the Hokianga Harbour.  Herekino Harbour was marked as 'False Hokianga' on early charts because of the similarity of the entrances.  The H.M.S. Osprey was lost here in 1846 when the captain mistook the features at the heads. Dalmatian immigrants began growing grapes at Herekino and in the early years of the twentieth century there were more than a dozen vineyards.  As late as the 1960s Herekino was a thriving township but then the highway was sealed through the Mangamuka Gorge, leaving Herekino stranded in the backblocks.
            Driving these windy roads through bush-covered hills, we were traversing a landscape devoid of people.  An ancient villa set back at the edge of some trees caught my eye and I wondered who lived there—and who had lived there in days gone by.  Broadwood, another 21 kilometres east of Herekino had a store.  A pair of old men sat outside leaning on their walking sticks, watching the world go by.  There was not much world going by.
            We moved Tangaroa to the area known as the 'top of the harbour', back to our old spot by the tavern at Horeke.  We had previously visited when we completed the Twin Coast Cycle Trail and when we checked out the Mission Station.  This time we wanted to explore the Wairere Boulders. 
At Wairere Boulders


            We took the car along the Taheke-Horeke Road, turning at McDonnell Road.  In the nineteenth century there was a village called Wairere in this valley, which is the site of the first water-driven sawmill in New Zealand.  When Rita and Felix Schaad bought the property in 1983 they had no idea that there were huge boulders in their jungly bush.  After discovering the fluted basalt rocks they researched their history and geology, discovering that the fluting was caused by the leaching of acid from the kauri trees that used to grow all over the surrounding hillsides. The couple built pathways amongst and around the boulders, eventually opening the park to the public.  We spent an hour or two walking the tracks that looped up the valley sides, marvelling at the size of the boulders.  Some are stacked above and beside others, giving the impression they may fall at any moment, though in reality they have been in that position for centuries.  There is free overnight parking for self-contained motorhomes and, since our visit, the owners have opened a cafe.  All the more reason to make another trip out that way!
At Wairere Boulders


            Back on SH 12 we journeyed west and took the turn off to the harbourside settlement of Rawene.  This is New Zealand's third oldest European settlement and it had a post office as early as 1845.  Some of its early buildings survive, clustered around the waterfront.  Many of these are galleries and cafes; our favourite was the Boatshed Cafe, sitting on piles over the water. 

            After a coffee and cake we crossed the road to look around Clendon House.  This lovely old building was built in the 1860s for James Reddy Clendon who had been a witness to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, a magistrate and the American Consul.  Clendon made and lost his fortune several times and on his death in 1872 left his wife, Jane, in straitened circumstances.  We learned how the plucky woman managed to keep the creditors at bay, hanging on to possessions and keeping the family together until her death in 1919.  The property remained in the family until 1972 and is now in the care of Heritage New Zealand.
Clendon House

            The Hokianga Ferry plies the harbour waters from Rawene to Kohukohu, on the northern bank.  We joined the short queue and were soon safely aboard the ferry enjoying the 15-minute trip.  Seeing the settlements from the water was quite magical.
            Just over a century ago Kohukohu had a population of around 1,000, and the timber milling and ship building industries of the Hokianga were centred here.  Now there are about 150 inhabitants, many of them artists and writers.  Strolling around Kohukohu's historic precinct we really got the sense of how big and prosperous the, now tiny, settlement once was.  Fire has destroyed many of the old wooden buildings but enough remain to give a good impression of the wealth that the people once enjoyed here.  We walked across a little footbridge, discovering it was built in the 1840s from Sydney sandstone and was the first stone bridge built in New Zealand.
Kohukohu

            Back at Rawene we headed toward the mouth of the Hokianga Harbour and the settlements of Opononi and Omapere.  On the way we turned off to look at, what are probably one of the most unexpected things in the Hokianga.  These are the Koutu Boulders, sometimes described as Hokianga's best kept secrets. 
            We found these huge spheres along the beach between Koutu and Kauwhare Points, after turning off SH 12 a few kilometres east of Opononi.  Like the more famous boulders at Moeraki in the South Island, these are concretions and have taken around five million years to grow.  There is a small car park off Koutu Loop Road near the beach.  We parked here and made our way along the beach finding that the further we walked the larger the rocks became.  Some specimens were enormous—more than five metres in diameter.  The walk was about an hour's return trip and we went at low tide—it is possible, but trickier, at high tide.  What was truly magical about visiting the Koutu Boulders was the fact that we were the only people there, unlike Moeraki which is always crowded with visitors.
Koutu Boulders



            Opononi and Omapere are twin settlements and from their sandy beaches we looked across to the huge dunes of North Head—it was like looking across to the Sahara.  Constantly shifting, forming sculptural towers, ridges and overhangs the dunes are of spiritual significance to Māori.  The dunes can be visited by boat from the wharf at Opononi.  We stopped to photograph a small statue near the Opononi Hotel.  A child and a dolphin are shown frolicking together in the shallow water, commemorating the dolphin known as Opo.  Back in 1955 a female dolphin swam into the harbour and stayed.  She was happy to play with beach-goers and became famous.  Locals named her Opo.  Unfortunately at the end of that summer Opo's body was found.  It was assumed she had been accidentally killed by fishermen who had been using dynamite.
            From Omapere we walked up the hillside to the Arai-Te-Uru (South Head) Reserve.  From here there were views in all directions, though our eyes were drawn to the ocean and the headlands at the harbour mouth.  Legends say that Arai-Te-Uru and Niua (North Head) are the names of taniwha (water monsters) that Kupe left to guard the harbour entrance when he sailed back to Hawaiki.  Māori mariners called on the taniwha for protection but Europeans built a signal station.  Remains of the signal station, pilot house and boatshed can be seen at the reserve.
            From Omapere, SH 12 headed south through the Waipoua Forest.  We would return later to explore the kauri forests of Waipoua and Northland's west coast.
View from South Head


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