Wellington Road Trip

Author:  Pete
Location: Wellington, New Zealand

 

After a couple weeks slowly bobbing out to the Bay of Plenty and back, Miranda and I were ready for a little zip in our giddy-up.  We rented a ‘flash’ ride from the local Rent-a-Dent (that’s seriously what the place is called) and took to the open road to Wellington.  Much to Miranda’s chagrin, I did weasel a little boat work into our fun trip.   Dinghy required a little gluing that was beyond my capability, so we crammed the front third of her into the rear compartment of the SsangYong for the short drive to Terminator Boats. 

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With poor, overworked Dinghy in the shop, our ride was a good deal more spacious and streamlined, and we zoomed unobstructed south.  It’s really novel to move more that five miles an hour, and even more novel to be speeding along on the wrong side of the road!  We broke the drive into two pleasantly uneventful days.  Just like navigation afloat, I worked collision avoidance and Miranda worked charts.  We floated serenely by rolling hills, cow pastures, and volcanic massifs with nary a touch of sea sickness.

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Wellington is not only the seat of the nation’s government, but also the coffee and cultural capital of New Zealand.  Wellingtonians are pretty hip.  I saw a guy who was so hip, he couldn’t see over his own pelvis!  In their defense, it is a cool city.  One can’t saunter more than a few paces without stumbling over a brew pub, free museum, coffee shop, or funicular.  It’s like the Seattle of the Kiwis.

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After wandering our way into town from the Airbnb, we hit up Wellington’s fabulous Te Papa museum.  It seemed like a good way to get acquainted with the local ethos.  Maori artifacts, larger-than-life war memoirs, and colossal natural history collections filled the better part of a day.

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Our sailing friends Martin and Lexi from s/v Pao Hana were serendipitously in Wellington at the same time we were.  We met up with them for an afternoon of partaking in the local cuisine, café, and ice cream.  We blamed our sloth and gluttony on the rainy weather, but really it’s the city itself that encourages indulgent wanderings with friends.  Lunched at a great Vietnamese place.  Noodles in hot broth sounded good on the blustery day, and we jumped in line to get a bowl.  You know the place is going to be good when there’s a pho ‘queue’ out the door.

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We spent a few days enjoying the fineries of the city.  We went to performances in black-box venues and grand theaters.  We slept in a fluffy, motionless bed like normal folk.  We ate, drank, and people watched.  It was a marvelous, much needed city fix indeed.  

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Our way back north was speedy smooth.  As we drove we relished the ease of motion and the lackadaisical attitude we took towards passing squalls, temperature fluctuations, and the darkness after the setting sun.  Twilight be damned!  Zoom on!  Got to get back to our five-knot life.

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Tauranga and White Island, NZ

Author:  Pete
Location: New Zealand

 

The girls and I boldly cowered from the gale for three days in Tauranga.  For ye purists out there, gales are generally classified as having 30-40 knots of wind, where storms have roughly 50-60, almost a hurricane at 70+ knots.  Since wind power increases exponentially with velocity, gales are rough, but storms are serious bad news.  When people talk about storms, they generally mean gales.  But I digress…  After ripping in from Mayors Island we had a heck of a time tying up to the slip with uncooperative current and twenty stubborn knots of wind yanking on Tayrona.  It might be said that this was the worst job we’ve ever done.  At one point, the dockhand helping us wrangle the boat said, “What are you feeding this beast!?”  A steady diet of rusty docking skills drizzled with adverse weather conditions!

Once Tay-Tay was properly secured with every line aboard, the finger pier looked like it had been descended upon by Spiderman on a meth bender.  Good thing too; the gloomy forecast didn’t disappoint.  Concerned yachtsmen showed up from a hundred miles away to add more lines and fenders to their beloved vessels.  Hushed whispers of the fifty-knot gusts predicted haunted the wharf.
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The wind built steadily through the night and into the next day without sign of easing.  Tayrona was not in optimal position with the brunt of the wind blowing rudely in from aft.  Her high windage gave purchase to the gusts, and all day our lines grumbled audibly under the strain.  I added a few extra just for kicks.  As the gale progressed, the rain adopted a trajectory more commonly seen from an open fire hydrant.  We watched nature’s fury from the comfort of the salon over coffee.

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There was a pronounced hour in the night where the raging wind subsided leaving only biblical rainfall.  Mixing with darkness, the torrents so completely engulfed poor Tayrona that at some point I assumed we had sunk at the dock and were in fact underwater.  Finally the morning skies cleared.  Though some low clouds still clung child-like to Tauranga’s skirts, the sun peeked out and dried the decks. 

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We walked three kilometers into town to stretch our legs and enjoy the prodigal sunshine.  On the way back we stopped at Bobby’s, a legendary fish market dive that fries up big platters of battered seafood and french fries.  “Bes fushn’chups n’a country!”, a passing gent with a tray of crispy goodness said to us as we wafted into the market.  Consulting our Kiwi-English translator we realized that he meant, “Best fish and chips in all the land!”  We translated, “Thank you very kindly, sir”, and replied, “Cheeyas mayte!”

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We were up before sunrise the next morning, making coffee and throwing off dock lines. Tayrona eased out of the slip without recollection of the ordeal it had been to get her in.  We made for the pass and snuck out of port like a thief in the night, heading east towards White Island under favorable winds.  Named Whakaari in Maori, which means ‘dramatic island’, the island is the Kiwis’ most active sea volcano, constantly spewing gasses from its active crater.  We were going to keep the drama queen company for a day or two.

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The day couldn’t have been more perfect.  We had a gorgeous fifty-mile spinnaker run, escorted by dolphins, and trolling for kingfish.  Morning wind from astern started light built throughout the idyllic day.  Soon we were making eight knots, almost expecting the hulls to clear the water as we barreled over the long-period rollers.  The only marring of the blue sky was a lone cloud at the horizon, eventually a dark mass appeared beneath it, Whakaari belching its vapor plume.

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We already had permission to tie to a mooring in Te Awápuia Bay, content with the pleasant passage and our interesting anchorage.  The air of elation aboard was quickly replaced by noxious fumes from the venting island.  Seems we were directly downwind of the crater.  Nostrils puckering and eyes watering, we took refuge in the boat and dogged the hatches.  Eventually the wind shifted and the the island ceased its chemical attack on poor Tayrona.  One never fully lost the drifting scent of sulphur from the unapologetically off-gassing island.  I thought the situation might lend itself to an evening of my own unapologetic off-gassing, but Miranda thought differently.

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The next morning the gannets from the nearby colony flew formations overhead.  The bay was clear of the green sulphur plumes sometimes ejected into the waters by the island’s volcanic vents.  Apparently they come and go in a dance depending on the swirl of the currents and the gastric temperament of the island.  The rippling bottom of the anchorage is a dark volcanic sand, low density that would make anchoring a pain.  I was glad to have been on a mooring the previous night.  Fish and rays hugged the bouldered drop off.

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The island is privately owned and under close scientific study due to its activity, which makes landing prohibited without a guide.  We organized to meet up with White Island Tours here before we left Tauranga. They picked us up in a RIB in the afternoon and ferried us to the pummeled remnants of a wharf to explore.  The crumbling remnants of an nineteenth century sulfite mine haunted the flats near the landing area and great pillars of steam stood tall in the crater.  Craggy terrain painted up with yellows, oranges, and reds stretched from crater floor to rim.  We slapped on gas masks and hard hats and followed our guide into the plumes.  Even through the respirator the air’s bite made one’s throat scratchy.  We poked around the mud pools, steaming vents, and hot runoff rivulets.  In the center of the island a lake of acidic mud roiled, throwing blue sulphur dioxide plumes that rose several hundred feet into the air.  We explored the volcanic island and the old mining site for a few hours and then were ferried back to the boat.

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Woke in the middle of the night to an onshore wind and building chop.  The anchorage wasn’t exactly cosy to begin with and now our gassy host was shaking us awake and telling us to get lost.  Under a full moon we ditched out of the bay and happily rode the twenty-knot downwind breeze back towards the Coromandel.  Ducking rocky islets and freighters along the way we covered what had previously taken us three days’ sail in sixteen jostling hours.  We dropped hook on Great Mercury Island and slept like the dead in the flat anchorage.

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Dragged ourselves begrudgingly out of our berths the next morning for a fifty-mile run to Motuihe, just off Auckland.  The wind was still providing us a favorable run, this time more comfortable (read: slower) under spinnaker.  The leisurely pace gave us time to address the significant corrosion wrought by volcanic gasses on the stainless.  All our glittering steel had turned to russet corduroy.  It thankfully came off, but not without a good deal of scouring.  It’s glamorous, the life of a sailor.

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After a quick stopover night in Motuihe we motor-sailed back to our comfy Beach Haven mooring.  Just as we were coming into the harbor the starboard engine overheated at the exact moment that we were descended upon by a thousand race boats from the Wednesday night Auckland regatta.  I shut down the engine and jumped in the pit and Miranda took the helm, slaloming through the oncoming traffic.  I’m glad she was driving; I’ve never been too adept in an arcade, and it felt like a giant game of Tayrona Asteroids.  Fast moving ferries, maneuvering container ships, and a bottleneck at the Auckland Harbor Bridge added to the maelstrom.  It was all very exciting. 

By the time we reached our old mooring I had replaced the impeller on the raw water pump and the thermostat and we were back in business!  Still, we tied up on only one engine until I could verify all was well with Belinda.  The next morning I tore down the whole cooling system and also went up the mast to scour the rigging back into shiny shape.  Always something fun going on aboard Tayrona!

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Western Bay of Plenty, New Zealand

Author:  Pete
Location: Bay of Plenty, New Zealand

The wind gods must’ve been just still breakfasting when we departed in the morning from Great Mercury because the seas were pancake flat.  We motored lazily to the Alderman Islands sunning ourselves like fat cats on the deck.  Navigation is dangerous in the jagged chain which abounds in rocky upwellings and is only to be anchored in overnight during settled weather.  Sticking up like shark teeth.  Full sun and flat seas yielded water the hypnotic kind of blue that if gazed upon too long could lure a sailor right off the bow and siphon him down to the bottom.

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Dolphins welcomed us to the island like overly energetic Walmart greeters and distracted us as we anchored gingerly in the kelpy boulder field.  We suited up for snorkeling along the broken coast and once we were in the squirrelly porpoises came to see us.  They’re not your standard, Caribbean dolphin. These guys are beefy, thick and powerful.  Swimming amidst the pod brought me back to my early childhood.  Everyone is bigger than you, faster than you, and laughing at you for being uncoordinated.  I’m sure they’re smarter as well.  With some of the clearest water since Fiji we were in sub-tropical paradise.  Made it back to the boat in time for a gorgeous sunset over the island.

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With no wind to speak of the following day, our next passage was as flat as the previous.  Mayors Island, also known as Tuhua, is an old hunchbacked island with a long history of volcanism; it hides a massive crater and hot springs in its interior.  It’s also a protected island as introduced pests have been completely eradicated for some time.  Landing is allowed only with permission from the department of conservation care taker on the southeast bay of the island.

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After going ashore and obtaining permission to trek we hiked through the tall canopy along the crater rim to the Devil’s Staircase, a craggy traverse flaunting exposed seams of shiny obsidian.  The Maori tribes used to wage war against each other over possession of the island as a source of material for making stone blades and implements.  The glittering sable glass has a remarkable presence and even without the need to fashion tools from it we felt the urge to hoard the multifaceted stones we found along the trail.  Some of the pieces, even raw off the ground were sharp enough to fillet a kingfish.  Pretty as they may have been, I did have the good sense not to put any of those pieces in the pockets of my hiking pants.

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In addition to terrestrial interests, Tuhua sits in clear water that incubates a good deal of marine life.  I tried my best to soak up the superb snorkeling and spearfishing.  I picked up a couple of tasty crustaceans for dinner.  Saw a few stingrays hoovering the sand; hammerhead and bronze whaler sharks passed at a distance.

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We intended to return the following day to find the hot springs but the wind had kicked up and seas were too rough to land the dinghy. We were sorry for missing a hot Valentine’s Day soak but made up for it with heart-shaped chocolate chip cookies made from beer-can cookie cutters.  Classy, I know.

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The weather was predicted to turn ugly for a few days.  Glassy-eyed mariners spoke of two tropical lows that were soon to be moving over the Tasman Sea, obliterating the calm for several days.  Miranda and Tayrona were ready for the fight, but as captain I gave the order to bravely turn tail and run for the cover of Tauranga, a nearby booming port town.  Batten down the hatches!  Fetch me a burger!

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