10. Mangawaiiti – Tieke Kainga (WRJ 5) with excursion to Bridge to Nowhere

Monday, February 18: Cloudy to begin with, becoming hot & sunny

Kayaking: 20.2 km
Walking: 5.2 km

Tieke Kainga Marae (Doc, $32)

I had woken up once at around 1:00 and the one set of AA batteries had been charged completely. I then saw to it that the other set went into the charger. Apart from that, the combination of airbed + leaky pillow worked a small percentage of the time. Even though I was in the sleeping bag it did feel cold, although I myself was quite warm. In any case got some sleep and awoke around 6:30 to birdsong and the humming of wasps.

All the food was gradually disappearing & breakfast was quickly dealt with. Then the long trek with the stuff down to the boat, and getting ready to go. Everything worked as planned and I was quite proud of my start before 9:00. Progress was also quite rapid and I was a little surprised when “The Rock” turned up, complete with a cyclist awaiting his jet boat on top. It was much larger than what I had in memory, and much more daunting. How those dozens of Canadians managed to moor here is beyond imagination. Anyway I wanted to do the right thing and disembark at Mangapurua Stream. Had to find it first, it was perhaps a little further than the 500 m mentioned elsewhere. Anyway I was up the creek, and there was a nice landing place where I didn’t need to tie up the boat. Decided I would do some brackets of the Bridge to Nowhere, that meant dismantling the gimbal & tripod (good practice) and with lunch in the bag I set off first for the landing where I had a chat with the cyclist, and then to the Bridge itself. Quite a long walk, but fun anyway. Went to the lookout and took a couple of shots, then onto the bridge. Shots from either side, then lunch as two couples, one German, the other Belgian, then a whole troop of tourists including our cyclist arrived for their lunch with a tour guide.

Slide Show

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A couple of brackets from the bridge were taken as well, then I was back along the path to the stream. By the way, the sidetrack between the stream and the main track is marked as closed (under construction) and had two very steep step sections more like ladders that had to be taken backwards on the way down. Noticed the jetboat (source of the tour guide & tourists) moored at the mouth of the stream, then set about getting my equipment working on the boat again. Boat had to be dragged a little way to the river, then I was set to go.

Youtube Video

The river here is less vigorous, and the sweeping amphitheaters give way to milder hills. Was overtaken by three jetboats and at the first sight of real farmland (some banks look like they could be or were once used for grazing) Tieke turned up, and I was the first arrival. No sign of anyone present, although cleaning devices for the floor were propped up here and there and all the windows were open. Sent off a spot OK to Gavin, then flicked through some of the pictures. Stability looks good, contrast is quite high, position is also quite good. Dragged all of my stuff up except the tent and at 3:45 claimed a bunk and started today’s chores, which involved airing the sleeping bag, drying some sox and undies, and starting on the diary.

Interactive Map
Easy paddling day and a brief walk. GPS quality: 30/30, coverage: 100%
Change to tramping track
Can’t see map? Click here!

In the meantime the Belgian couple arrived, and bit later the warden, Boyd, who is quite a source of pseudoscientific folklore (Kangen water). Will now see about photographing the faces on the tekoteko before dinner.

More people arrived and Boyd put them all (!) into the dormitories instead of tents, so tents were dried and packed up again. He also provided a powhiri of sorts around 6:00 with little speeches of his own in Te Reo & English, then asked us to contribute a word or two & I took the lead by telling everyone about the birds that I had seen along the way and nearly everyone else followed suite. It was getting quite late for dinner, but mine (rice, instant noodles & tomato for a change) took only twenty minutes and was just as quickly consumed. Chatted away with Manfred and his wife from Zürich and am now fully considering a plan for tomorrow. One set of batteries was marked as “dead” although they must have been full, so the first step apart from boiling water will be to see what happens when I put them into the powerbank again. Then I need a shooting plan and a rapids plan for tomorrow.

Today’s timetable:

Where When
Leave Mangawaiiti 8:45
Arrive Mangapurua 10:45
Arrive Bridge to Nowhere (lunch) 11:55
Depart Mangapurua 13:10
Finish @ Tieke Kainga 15:00


9. Ohauora – Mangawaiiti (WRJ 4)

Sunday, February 17: Fog very early in the morning lifting to patchy cloud; quite warm & sunny by the afternoon

Kayaking: 22.8 km

Mangawaiiti Campground (Doc, $20)

Sleep was more fragmented last night; don’t quite know why. The pillow has a(nother) hole in it and the mattress is barely comfortable. Went through the stages of lying on the sleeping bag, lying under it, and then finally in it, and just after 6:00 it was bright enough to get up, have breakfast, and get packed, long before Ross & Sasha were up and about.

Technical challenge of the day was to get the camera shooting @ zoom 6 (35 mm/52°), then to get rawopint started. First, the gimbal had to be ready except for the batteries; camera, camera mount & screw ready to go. Second, get into the life jacket and spray skirt. Third, start the camera, set the zoom, switch to rawopint, attach the camera to the gimbal, level. Doing this I discovered that the camera height screw on the gimbal was loose, and had to be tightened. Now the tricky part: If the boat is level on the ground the next stage can be done there, otherwise the boat has to be put into the water. Next, put the batteries into the gimbal, activate it and switch to “follow” mode, & finally start the camera shooting. Today’s shooting was @ M size to fit more onto the card. Read more…


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