New Zealand was the last country to be colonised by man. It
now has a population of nearly 50 million – most of which are sheep. It is
famous for the invention of bungee jumping, jet boating and highway drifting –
all semi-dangerous activities. Meanwhile it has no snakes and by far the most
dangerous animal there is man.
We drifted from Auckland to Christchurch over a period of
nearly three weeks, mostly in a motor caravan. I saw bubbling mud and smelt it
(very bad eggs). I saw geothermal sawmills and an active volcano spewing smoke
into the sky above Lake Taupo and burned my feet in the hot sands surrounding
that cold lake. I discovered that the Maoris are mostly physically integrated, by
interbreeding, with the second wave of colonials from Europe (and that they are
big people). I actually hunted down a kiwi bird. In fact, I think I saw two of
them in the artificial gloom of a special enclosure, but I’m not sure – it was
pretty dark and they’re shyly nocturnal. I did see and befriended a couple of
fantails – my favourite bird in NZ - one of them nearly perched on my shoulder.
I also admired the tui with its smart silver ruff and so-white bow tie. I did
not enjoy the beer from the brewers who have stolen the tui’s name – but let’s
not get on to NZ beer. But, let’s not
forget the silver eye bird or the blue swamp hen. I shall miss them.
I was encouraged to hate the possums. They destroy the
environment for other creatures and steal birds’ eggs. Enjoined to squish them
if I spotted one on the highway, I neither spotted nor squished. They are sweet
looking creatures and NZ is the only country where you can legally hunt them.
I love trees and New Zealand has plenty. I became familiar
with lancewood, whiteywood, the different beeches and the enormous totara. Also
the strange cabbage and fern trees and the two species of tea trees.
I visited my first glacier and sailed through my first fjord
– you can do so much in this little country. I paddled my feet in the Pacific
and the Tasman, drank rum and coke, coughed a lot and itched unmercifully
because of my attractiveness (to sandflies).
I was both hot and cold, wet and dry, and I got nicely brown
on the exposed bits. I drove nearly three thousand kilometres, but it seems
like much more: roads in NZ are narrow, mostly twisty and steep, and dual
carriageways are solely for the cities. Along the way the patterning on many
roads intrigued me. At first I thought that there had been many accidents, but
no, those tyre marks were deliberate. Some zigzagged up the road, others showed
that the driver had performed a full 360 turn whilst burning rubber. Our only hitchhiker,
Raj, told me that drifting is a national pursuit for young drivers. It’s easy:
you build up a lot of speed, pull on the handbrake and … drift. It’s also cheaper
than bungee jumping and drier than jet boating.
I can now speak like a Kiwi (not the bird). How’s this for
‘ten hard men’: “Tin haad min.” Sadly, I think that the famed winky-wanky bird
of a certain rugby song becomes the winky-winky bird, which sort of spoils the
point. And ‘ten tin sheds’ becomes tin tin shids. What can I say?
Of the Kiwi people? Lovely: friendly, helpful, smiley,
talkative, polite – one man volunteered the parking lot in the front of his
paint spray business as a night stop for our motor caravan. How kind.
Our trip ended in Christchurch. It was a shock to be there. You
can watch disaster clips on TV and get some appreciation of a major earthquake,
but to see the destruction with you own eyes is quite, quite different. At
first we thought that there were a massive amounts of rough surfaced car parks
until we learned that these are the plots where crippled buildings have been
razed and removed. Then we thought it amusing to see an antique shop operating
from a container until we came to astrange part of the city where all manner of
shops and restaurants operate from garishly painted containers whilst the
owners await new premises. Then we wandered unawares into the vicinity of the
crippled cathedral where street after street is fenced off, the fences enclosing
tottering buildings and propped up facades. We became trapped in this awful
wilderness and, tired and hungry, came across a park where some worthies were
distributing hot dogs to the homeless – we had one.
There are two hundred empty white seats near that park,
itself near the TV centre which collapsed causing the greatest number of
casualties. Each of those white seats are empty, they represent those that died
in the Christchurch earthquake of 2011. They overlook a strange and massive wigwam
affair made of steel and cardboard which is a temporary replacement for the cathedral.
Life goes on; rebuilding has started.