Burnside Church: a sweet stop on the road. Travel COASTING WITH THE POST Liz Light explores Wairarapa’s South Coast with the postie. Wairarapa’s long-distance postman Gordon Wyeth. G ordon Wyeth, a postman for nine years, reckons he has the world’s best job. Six days a week, he drives 220km through one of the most beautiful areas of New Zealand: the gentle, fecund, flat lands of the Wairarapa and its wild, rugged South Coast. He loves the changing seasons, whatever moods the weather puts on this landscape and the tempers of the sea, be it a Southern Ocean thrashing or, occasionally, simply sloppy. But this long-distance postman also likes a good chat, a shared joke and a hearty laugh and some days, he says, it can be lonely. When Gordon found out that, as an independent Rural Post contractor, he’s allowed to take passengers, it was problem solved. Now he runs a little tourism venture on the side, taking up to three people along on his run – charging them $85 each for a seat in the van. They happily help him do his job and he tells them everything he knows about the South Coast and the people who live there. And believe me, after nine years of delivering all sorts of things, that’s a lot. My husband, Sam, and I meet Gordz (he also answers to Gordo and Flash) in Featherston at eight in the morning. He’d started work at 6.30: sorting mail and picking up milk, papers and the other things that need delivering along the way. Then it’s zoom, zoom – the red van heads east out of Featherston for Kahutara School, where Gordz’s run begins. Half-round barns full of bales, four-wheelers with dogs on the back and drivers without helmets, utes loaded with farm stuff, and plenty of dairy farms with, on one LIZ LIGHT IS A NORTH & SOUTH CONTRIBUTING WRITER. PHOTOGRAPHY BY LIZ LIGHT. 108 | NORTH & SOUTH | NOVEMBER 2014 The fishing village of Ngawi is squeezed between steep hills and the sea. occasion, the cows ambling under the road through their private tunnel; we’ve left Wairarapa grape vines behind and are driving south. Gordz gives us an on-the-job lesson on letterboxes. “Plastic letterboxes are efficient, but impersonal,” he says, deftly slotting in mail. He pulls up at a wooden box sitting on a pole, “This is the dumbest letterbox on the run. It doesn’t have a lid and the mail gets wet.” A few kilometres later we admire his favourite letterbox. Three cream cans, lying on their sides have been welded together to make three letterboxes and each has a spring-loaded lid; imaginative engineering and dry mail forever. The first stop that doesn’t involve mail is Burnside Church, standing alone on the edge of a flat field. It’s little changed in 140 years. “It doesn’t have electricity or a toilet and that’s the way people like it,” says Gordz. He knows where the key is hidden. The interior is dark wood, with no-nonsense wooden pews and pulpit, built in 1875. It’s shadowy and cool inside, simple and respectfully sombre. The windows, with wonky old glass, become individual bright pictures – of sheep grazing in breeze-blown grass, a neatly trimmed settlers’ cemetery with white marble headstones, 110 | NORTH & SOUTH | NOVEMBER 2014 agapanthus flowering blue in the garden and, not quite so quaint, the recently gravelled car park. Gordz is a good-as-gold type. There’s a post-it note stuck to a stamp-less letter. “Dear Gordon, I haven’t got any change but can you post this for me? I will give you the money on Tuesday after I have been into town. Thanks lots, Pam.” He runs accounts for milk, stamps and a few other things but says everyone pays their bills. “It makes no sense to fall out with the postie.” The van pulls in to Pirinoa general store where Gordz unloads a crate of milk, a box of bread, a few newspapers and a bunch of mail. I’m a sucker for heritage buildings and this one, which opened in 1882, is like an old-style country store stocking a little bit of everything. There’s a noticeboard with drawingpins spiking pieces of paper – sports practice times, embroidery group get-togethers, lost kittens. And there are charming local photos, including one of a seal companionably sitting on a park bench next to a man. They seem to be grinning at each other. Lake Ferry, a bach village, straggles along the road that edges the lake. The village is known for its pub, the fishing in Palliser Bay and windsurfing on the lake. The housekeeper at Lake Ferry Hotel is Onoke Spit, where the fish are biting. pleased when the post van arrives with big bags of freshly laundered sheets. It’s Friday and she was running low on linen for the weekend. The action is on the nearby beach. Onoke Spit, a massive pebble bank, separates Lake Ferry from Palliser Bay, where the lake breaks through and empties into the sea. The wind comes from the north, flattening the waves, peeling a curtain of spray off behind them. The waves make a noisy riff, up and down, millions of grey pebbles rolling in unison. And, the South Island’s snow-capped Kaikouras hover in the sky above blue-green sea. Two seals rest at the end of the spit, two surfers try for the rivermouth break and eight fishermen, spaced out along the beach, cast from the shore with long rods. A couple of big kahawai are caught in the few minutes we watch. Gordz doubles back a few kilometres and turns east into Cape Palliser Rd. The post van zips along, deviating down gravel side roads to deliver mail. The dairy farms are long gone and this is farmland as it used to be with sheep – heads down and grazing – and paddocks of maize. Palliser Bay, with a 20km sweep of beach, takes a great bite out of southern Wairarapa. And it’s still biting. Today the Cute, whiskered baby fur seals play in a rock pool near Ngawi. sea is benign, but ferocious storms sometimes roar in from the south and the waves roll up the beach and eat away the land. The fields all end in steep cliffs and are, over time, slowly feeding the sea. The folk in the seaside settlement of Ning Nong know this well. In Ning Nong, there were once 12 houses perched on the cliff top, with prime views over eons of ocean and the Kaikoura mountains, but slowly the cliff slipped away, bit by bit after every storm, the front yard going, and then the verandah, then the house. Now there are six. It’s weird to stand on the beach looking up; bathroom plumbing is suspended in the air while the house around it has gone, a corner of broken house protrudes over the cliff edge and, on the beach, there are crumbled remains of abandoned, fallen homes. The folk remaining in Ning Nong are not without humour; one of them has built his bach in the shape of a boat. From Ning Nong, the road clings to the rugged coast and hills rise steeply behind it. It’s a fine road, sealed mostly, nice tarmac, but there is a sense of impermanence, as if the hills might slip down upon it or the sea might, at any moment, undermine it. Ngawi, a fishing town, is built around a sickle-shaped bay and a It’s weird to stand on the beach looking up; bathroom plumbing is suspended in the air while the house around it has gone... graveyard for old bulldozers. Here tractors aren’t big or strong enough to pull boats up the beach so bulldozers do the business. Fishermen seem unable to share so each has his own bulldozer, with a large boat and trailer attached. Thirty bulldozers line the beach, blade to blade, and a few more are parked nearby. We watch a rusty yellow one fire up, chuffing smoke rings, to reverse a massive trailer into the sea. A fishing boat, Rhapsody, roars in and mounts the trailer. The bulldozer hauls it slowly up the beach into its road-side parking place. These fishermen have had a successful morning and proudly hold up two 10kg groper to prove it. S am and Gordz are so busy raving about bulldozers and fishing, we nearly forget to deliver the beer. And it’s Friday, so there would have been hell to pay if Ngawi Community Hall hadn’t received its kegs. The van ambles around Ngawi’s three streets with Gordon popping post into letterboxes and talking flat out. He clearly loves this place, with its bulldozers, big sea and harsh hills, and hopes to buy a bach here one day. The tarseal ends at Ngawi and the fur seals begin. We see a few solo seals sunning themselves on rocks, but the colony home base, where the mothers keep their pups, isn’t easy to find. There are no signposts but, of course, Gordz knows exactly where the babies are. The van heads down a dirt track, bumping through large potholes, and stops by a rocky inlet. I smell them first, a pungent mix of rotten fish, ammonia and sulphur, then hear them; heavy breathing and yelping. After clambering around rocks I see seals, a few grownups, a couple of lazy lolling teenagers and lots of babies. Bear with me while I go gaga. Baby fur seals are adorably cute. They have huge brown eyes, fully surrounded by dark eyeliner, little down-facing ears, cute black pointed noses and lots of whiskers. And NORTH & SOUTH | NOVEMBER 2014 | 111 Greytown also has designer shops, excellent cafes and bars, and pleasant walking and cycling in the country lanes nearby. Hire bikes from Green Jersey Cycle Tour Company. Ph (021) 074-6640, www.greenjersey.co.nz TO STAY MARTINBOROUGH THE MARTINBOROUGH HOTEL is part of the Heritage Boutique Collection (www.heritageboutique.co.nz) and this Victorian heritage delight is the classiest hotel in the area. Rates from $160 per night. The Square, ph (06) 306-9350, www.martinboroughhotel.co.nz GREYTOWN THE SADDLERY, an 1868 historic bed and breakfast that once belonged to Greytown’s saddler, is tastefully renovated, comfortable and quiet, with a beautiful garden and great breakfast. Double room $165. Above: Whangaimoana Garden Retreat – “the Castle” – on Cape Palliser Rd. 174 Main St, ph (06) 304-7228, T A H P N S www.thesaddlery.co.nz 1 3 1 0 1 4 1 2 0 1 4 - 0 9 - 2 6 T1 2 : 2 4 : 5 3 + 1 2 : 0 0 Palliser Bay’s sweep of beach takes a great bite out of Southern Wairarapa. while the rest of the colony lie about, the babies play. They clamber over rocks to peep at me, have swimming races in pools, and chase each other around, before flopping together in damp furry, flippery heaps. Meanwhile, Gordz and Sam, both of whom got over the seals before I did, are happily munching sandwiches and slurping cups of tea. Lunch with baby seals nearby; not much beats that. Cape Palliser Lighthouse, perched on a rocky prominence 78m above the sea, is the exclamation mark at the end of the road. This coast was, still is, notorious for its Cook Strait gales and back in the days of sail and steam many ships were wrecked and lives lost. The tower was finished and the light lit in 1897. Sam and I puff up 253 steep steps to pay homage to the red-and-whitestriped monolith whose white flash every 10 seconds still keeps mariners safe on this perilous coast. The van points west and we are on 112 | NORTH & SOUTH | NOVEMBER 2014 the no-stops home run. Gordz asks us how he could improve his tourism venture. Magnificent scenery, seals, an insider’s stories and plenty of post hilarity – I can’t think of a way to make this great day better. But Sam can. He suggests including driving a Ngawi bulldozer along the beach; perhaps moving around a few tonnes of pebbles would turn a very good day into a perfect one. TO DO GORDON WYETH, South Coast postman, does the post run Monday through Saturday. Book a seat in his van for $85 per person (three people maximum), lunch and snacks included, plenty of photo opportunities. Ph (027) 430-8866 or email tothecoastwiththepost@xtra.co.nz THE FOUR-DAY Wairarapa Balloon Fiesta is held on the middle weekend of March each year. The balloons take off from Masterton, Carterton and Martinborough spreading the fun around the district, www.nzballoons.co.nz. During the fiesta you can take a long balloon ride ($350 per person), www.kiwiballooncompany.co.nz and www.ballooningcanterbury.co.nz Be in to WIN* a luxury holiday for 2 to Rarotonga! Includes return flights, 5 nights luxury accommodation at Crown Beach Resort & Spa with breakfast daily and transfers. CYCLE AROUND the Martinborough wineries: flat roads, great wine, good fun and no need for a sober driver. March Hare Cycles has old-style bikes, with big comfortable seats and baskets (for the wine bottles); $40 per person per day, www.march-hare.co.nz. For information about the many wineries in easy cycling distance of Martinborough, www.winesfrommartinborough.com, and www.wairarapawines.co.nz EXPLORE GREYTOWN, New Zealand’s most architecturally complete Victorian town. The main street is a treat of prettily titivated heritage buildings. Visit Cobblestones Early Settlers Museum, especially on Sundays when a market is held, www.cobblestonesmuseum.org.nz. Call 0800 840 787 To enter: Sign up to get the latest deals from Travel Associates by 30 Nov 2014 at travel-associates.co.nz/rarotonga *Terms and conditions: To be eligible, entrants must register their details at www.travel-associates.co.nz/rarotonga prior to 5pm, 30 November 14. Competition entrants must be 18 years or over at the time of entry to qualify. The winning entrant shall receive a prize of two return economy class flights to Rarotonga from Auckland, Wellington or Christchurch which is subject to availability and at Travel Associates’ discretion. Prize also includes 5 nights’ accommodation at Crown Beach Resort in a Courtyard Pool Suite with breakfast daily & return shared airport transfers for 2 people. Accommodation is subject to availability. Travel must be taken between 24 January-31 March or 16-30 April 2015 (blackout dates apply), subject to availability. Travel must be booked before 20 Dec 14. All incidentals including, but not limited to airline taxes, travel insurance, domestic airfares if required, meals, extra sightseeing or activities, additional accommodation, personal spending money, passports, travel visas, transport to and from departure point and all other ancillary costs as well as obtaining any of these, are the responsibility of the traveller. Winner & companion must travel together. Any alterations to the prize are at the cost of the prize winner but at the discretion of Travel Associates. By entering this competition you agree to receive promotional offers from Travel Associates via email, post and/or TXT of which you can opt out at any stage. Employees of any travel agency, airline, Flight Centre (NZ) Ltd & members of the employees’ immediate family are not eligible to enter. Winner will be drawn at random on 3 Dec 14 & will be notified by phone or email. Judges decision is final. Prize is non-transferable & not redeemable for cash or foreign exchange. Travel Associates reserves the right to verify the validity of entries & to disqualify any entry that is not in accordance with these terms & conditions. Prize is subject to Flight Centre (NZ) Limited trading as Travel Associates. For standard terms and conditions please refer to www.travelassociates.co.nz/company/legal/booking-conditions and those of the service provider. TAHPNS131014 LAKE FERRY LAKE FERRY HOTEL has motel-style accommodation and excellent pub food, on the shores of Lake Ferry/ Onoke and close to Martinborough and Palliser Bay. The Thursday evening music night rocks. Bring your guitar or fiddle and prepare to dance. Double room, $75. Ph (06) 307-7831, www.lakeferryhotel.co.nz TO EAT Best Drives with Mitsubishi T he “PHEV” in the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV stands for “plug-in hybrid electric vehicle” and while there are other vehicles that use some of those words in their names, the Outlander is the first production car on sale in New Zealand – and the first SUV anywhere in the world – to use all of them together. With its 2L petrol engine and two electric motors, the PHEV offers remarkable versatility and fuel efficiency (combined, it sips a miserly 1.9L per 100km). Plug the PHEV in to charge its batteries overnight (for as little as $1.41) and when you head out in the morning on your work commute or round-town errands, you have an electric-only range of up to 52km. Demand more of the vehicle, however, and it determines the optimal power to use, flitting imperceptibly and quietly between petrol and electric power. One of three clever drive modes is automatically selected, depending on the driving conditions, to ensure maximum fuel efficiency and peak performance. The Outlander PHEV comes with a five-star safety rating – and Super All Wheel Control (S-AWC), which regulates the braking system to further improve driving stability and handling precision. The car also comes with an app for Apple and Android users which lets drivers set the 6.5-hour charging time for off-peak power, start the air-conditioning remotely, check vehicle information and even turn on the headlights when looking for your car in the dark! All this, plus comfort, good looks and a surprisingly modest price tag. Castlepoint From Masterton head east, into the hills. The sheep-farming land is spring green with woolsheds, rows of poplar trees and willows in the valleys. Stop at the heritage village in Tinui; there is a museum, craft shop and, on weekends, Devonshire teas served from a country cottage. The hills get steeper; the road winds along the Tinui River valley. There’s a ridge to cross and another valley to follow before you get a sniff of sea. The road ends at Castlepoint. The geography is extraordinary. A long, fossil-filled reef juts from the sea and, at the end of it, Castle Rock thrusts up, a massive buttress between ocean and sky. To the north and south, sandy surf beaches sweep to infinity. A lighthouse on the reef adds a tall, elegant extension to nature’s already dramatic creation. Distance 65km. Lake Ferry to Cape Palliser The road from Lake Ferry passes through farmland, hills on one side and flat land on the other. From Ning Nong, a bach community being gradually undermined by the sea, the road is squeezed between steep hills and the sea. Although it’s sealed, it has been washed out in parts, so roadworks are a regular occurrence. The views over the wild waves of the Southern Ocean to the snowy Kaikoura mountains are spectacular. At Ngawi, a fishing village, rows of ancient bulldozers are lined up at the road’s edge. These launch fishing boats over the steep, stony beach. Beyond Ngawi, stop to view a fur seal colony at home in the rocks. Cape Palliser Lighthouse, and the end of the road, is around the corner. Distance 40km. 114 | NORTH & SOUTH | NOVEMBER 2014 GREYTOWN BAR SALUTE. A restaurant with an award-winning tapas bar, full meals also. Nice vibe, attentive and fast service, with wide choice of food you wouldn’t think to cook at home. 83 Main St, ph (06) 304-9825, www.salute.net.nz SCHOC CHOCOLATES is housed in a former colonial grocery store. At the chocolate-tasting bar try curry, lime and chilli, apricot and rosemary, carrot and coriander, fennel, salted caramel and many more left-field, sensational chocolate flavours. 177 Main St, ph (06) 304-8960, www.schoc.co.nz CARTERTON THE GOODNESS OF FOOD cafe is gluten- free – all the sweet treats, bagels, croissants, pies and pasties are made without wheat flour or other gluten products. Boasts possibly the only chef in New Zealand who can make gluten-free croissants and flaky pastry look and taste like the usual flour-based versions. 75 High St, ph (06) 379-7778, www.frillys.co.nz MARTINBOROUGH THE MARTINBOROUGH HOTEL (also see “To Stay”) has a formal dining room, as well as a hip cafe. Both options have imaginative menus and reasonable prices. The Square, www.martinboroughhotel.co.nz MURDOCH JAMES, vineyard, bar and restaurant. Fun wine tours, fine wine and a restaurant with pretty rural views and fresh, tasty food. 284 Dry River Rd, ph (06) 306-9165, www.murdochjames.co.nz +
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