Thursday, 12 July 2012

The Cape


Sarah and I finally completed a rite of passage for Vancouver Islanders, hiking the trail to the northern tip of the island at Cape Scott. We timed our trip for the summer solstice, and had long days, short nights and late dinners as a result. The hike is renowned for its muddiness. I was visualizing a sea of knee-deep mud before we started, but the trail was in relatively good shape in spite of heavy rain the previous weekend. Gaiters still proved their worth, as did hiking poles. This was the most significant hike I've used poles for, and my knees thanked me. I was a four-legged spider by the end. 

On Experiment Bight, with Cape Scott and Cox Island in the background.
First day we alternately rambled and trudged to Nels Bight, seventeen kilometres through a mixture of forest types. Sarah and I had played our spring league final the night before, and we were feeling the effects of the game during the latter stages of the hike. The trail had few changes in elevation, with long, level sections, predominately through cedar, hemlock and spruce. There were boardwalks in places, and plenty of boggy patches and mud pools. The hiking poles were great guides, testing the depths for us. Often the worst-looking mud was deceptively shallow, yet the pole-, staff- and stick-less had elected to go around. Crossing Fisherman's River was a welcome break, a torrent of cedar-stained water rushing through the forest. We passed through a nutrient-poor zone of puffy-headed lodgepole pine and spindly cedars, before hitting the open meadows of Hansen's Lagoon. Here was the heart of the historic Danish settlement, the dyke that failed on the day of its completion as a storm-driven surge tide came in, and the second dyke, in itself a tribute to the tenacity of these settlers, even if their venture ultimately failed. As we walked the cape over the following days, we understood why they had made the attempt.

Meadows at Hansen's Lagoon.
Approaching the coast, we found wolf scat and sign on the trail. There was a wolf pack roaming Cape Scott, and we came upon scat and sign multiple times throughout our time there without a sighting. One of the rangers told us about her recent encounter, bumping into several in the meadows and being approached (and checked out) by the alpha. My calves tightened up over the latter stages, and we were both pretty bushed by the time we hit the beach at Nels Bight, the clock approaching 7.00 pm. Nels was a wide, sandy bay, book-ended by rocky points and backed by forest, about five kilometres short of the lighthouse at the cape. There were a handful of tents on the beach, but sand + camping drives me a bit crazy so I scouted a sylvan little spot by a burbling stream under the cedars. The day finished with a cuppa on the beach in the light of a spreading sunset.

Hitting Nels Bight.
 

Next day we left our campsite and continued to Cape Scott, travelling along stretches of sand at Experiment Bight and Guise Bay. There was a scattered quantity of garbage on the beaches, mostly plastic and styrofoam products, driven by wind and currents. A sign at the trailhead had informed us to keep and pass on any personal items thought to be from the Japanese tsunami, but we didn't find anything significant: a small refrigerator, plastic sandals, industrial flotsam. Definitely no Harley. We followed a decaying cedar-plank road dating from the Second World War up to the Cape Scott lighthouse complex. The lighthouse keepers were an older couple, husband and wife, stationed on the cape for a week or so in relief of the regular keepers. The man was a torrent of anecdotes and yarns, rapidly moving from one tale to the next with nary a pause. He regaled us with stories of his youth, his plans to enlist in the Vietnam War effort, before his new hippy friends convinced him otherwise. He railed against the oil industry in Canada and monster multinational fishing trawlers off the coast of New Zealand. His oblique, rambling story of a campfire meeting to debate protesting the atomic bomb was, in hindsight, the foundational story of Greenpeace, and their first anti-nuclear protest of the Amchitka tests. His wife had wild, windswept hair and grey, knowing eyes. The pair were the kind of unique characters you'd imagine light-keepers to be.


Cedar-plank road to the lighthouse station.
On the lighthouse, looking south-west over part of the station complex.
Sarah and I explored the pocket bays on the exposed west side of the cape, finding a series of sea stacks, basalt rock formations shaped by wind and water erosion. The stacks were covered in flourishing native strawberries, with a heavy green crop of unripe fruit. As we ate lunch we watched a sea otter harvesting in the bay, paddling and diving amongst the kelp beds. We filled a sack with garbage from the beach, found a small window of opportunity to escape the attentions of the light-keeper who'd come down to the bay, and rambled along the coastline.

Pocket bay lunch spot.

Basalt sea stacks.
Western end of Experiment Bight.
On the exposed rocky shore we found plentiful clusters of gooseneck barnacles, which are an expensive delicacy in Portugal and Spain. We surreptitiously harvested a meal's worth and enjoyed them later that night, a salty, tender bite. Our return to Nels was along Experiment Bight, crossing from beach to beach via a tight trail over the bluffs. We celebrated the solstice with a drop or two of Bowmore 12 Year Old and a campfire.

Gooseneck barnacles, known to the Iberians as percebes.

Our last full day was spent on a secluded corner of a stretch of beach on Experiment Bight, with a rocky bluff on one side and a long stretch of sand to our west. On the walk out along the bluff trail I found a small green glass globe - an old Japanese fishing float - almost completely buried in the trail. We lit a small fire on the sand - thanks to Mark for the flint, the tides for the yellow cedar shavings, and Leslie for the idea of packing an egg carton cup with dryer lint as a fire-starter. We had a quick dip and rinse in the ocean (cold, but refreshing) and enjoyed the first day of summer sun. Sarah continued with Malcolm X's autobiography and I made my way through Herman Hesse's Siddhartha. After the mileage of the previous two days the rest was welcome. As evening approached, a Coast Guard vessel, CCGS Tanu, came into the bay and anchored for the night. We completed our day with a feast of chili con carne and polenta.



Tanu at anchor.
The weather shifted on our last day, with light drizzle in the early morning and more rain threatening. We breakfasted and broke camp, sauntered down Nels to the trail and made the return journey to the trailhead, stopping at Fisherman's River for lunch, and breaking at Eric Lake. Sarah tested me on species identification after our break - her cunning method of slowing my pace - and I worked on naming the flora mix around us. Our hike coincided with the spring blooming of forest flowers, including bunchberry, red columbine, three-leaved foamflower, Hooker's fairy bells, Indian paintbrush, fawn lily, lily of the valley, rice root and vanilla leaf. Ferns were lush. BC, like NZ, has a broad variety of fern types, including deer, lady, licorice, maidenhair and sword ferns. No pongas but.

Indian paintbrush.

Maidenhair ferns.
Still glam, nearing the end.
We reached the trailhead with around fifty kilometres under our belts, rinsed our boots and gaiters, loaded the car and set off. Soon after we were engulfed in rain. Our trip couldn't have been better timed. We returned to CR with a sense of peace engendered by the sound, scent and sight of waves curling onto a sandy shore.

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Maritanga Rendezvous

Three weeks in New Zealand flew by. Every time I return I note little changes. Of these, the most significant is the aging of siblings. Josh is now a dad: we met my little niece for the first time, Billie, one year old and just starting to walk. She gave me a puzzled double-take on first sight, trying to figure out who this guy was who looked like her dad. Dan is essentially a smoother-topped version of his younger self. Tess and Sam have changed the most, growing taller and filling out their frames.

Billie in action.
Sarah and I worked our first day back in the country, helping Mum and Dave draft lambs from ewes. Dan flew in from London the following day and Sarah and I caught up with Zara down in Outram. A week on the farm passed quickly, with Tess and Sam coming home from school, and Josh bringing Billie and Jennie up to Maritanga. With all hands on deck, we helped drench lambs and mouth old ewes, working enough to earn a few beers in the sun. 

Dan demonstrating his mastery of the elbow bar stance.
Dave mouthing a ewe: keep those teeth healthy or you're on the truck.
Conveyor in action; three brothers working together on the farm for the first time in years.
Our time on Maritanga was punctuated by two overnight trips to visit friends. During our first week we headed south to Invercargill. Dave generously lent us his HSV GTS, a chunky Australian sports car with a 6.2 L V8 and 436 horses of power. The Old Coach Road between Clinton and Mataura was a slice of driving heaven.


We stayed with Teresa in Invercargill, hung out with her three kids - all growing up fast - and visited Heather too, catching up on the past couple of years. 

Ciders on Oreti beach with Teresa.
Alex, Billea, Isaiah and Amali.
We also headed inland for an overnight tramp with John and Jess. We drove past Glendhu Bay, crossed the Matukituki River and parked up past the West Wanaka Station homestead. We hiked in to Colquhouns Beach, a picturesque and deserted stretch on Lake Wanaka. A strong wind off the lake kept the sandflies away. John cast for trout without success.

Wanaka on the far shore.
Approaching Colquhouns Beach on the hike in.
John working his way along the shore, Jess in support.
We had the requisite Friday night at the Waipiata Tavern (now with Emerson's on tap), a second Christmas with the family, including Sunday barbecue with the extended clan, and a final night at Danseys Pass, with Anna in attendance. Hard to go past the Rabbit Ranch pinot noir for nourishing family farewell dinners.





Our flight north was cancelled due to a wild wind storm shutting down Dunedin's Momona Airport. With James and Sarah Dempster in tow, we headed to Queenstown to catch another flight to Auckland, a destination wedding on the cards. My friend JD married Karen in Raglan, a sweet surf town on the coast west of Hamilton. The day was superb, bringing together old friends, a beautiful environment, and the giddy atmosphere of love. The two key pieces of my role as best man - speech and handing over of the rings - went smoothly enough. I didn't drop the rings and James's bride still talks to me. I had a beer at Josh Kronfeld's Raglan bach. The view from the reception was gorgeous. Sarah tied with Karen's brother Dave in a champion round of Eat the Box. Uncle Vinnie and I were runners-up and Sarah Dempster's efforts were commendable, for a mother of two. More yoga, Sarah.


The view from the Raglan surf club, site of the reception. Gorse!

Dyers and co.
Giant Jenga, the perfect hangover cure.
We finished the weekend with a Little Bushman show at the Yot Club in Raglan: think Jimi Hendrix meets Aotearoa roots music. The wedding crew broke up, with Sarah and I returning to Auckland to stay with Paul and Nins near Muriwai, another stunning west coast beach. We dropped in on the gannet colony before scorching our feet on black sand and swimming in the salty Tasman Sea.






Paul and his brother Cam took us out sailing off Auckland. We fished for snapper off the west point of iconic Rangitoto Island. Cam and Paul reeled in some beauties and Sarah hit a streak too. I got a participation badge (hey, one of mine was keeper-sized, just not kept).






Auckland City.
A couple of beauty snapper.
Sarah and I spent our last couple of nights with J&K, travelling north of Auckland and visiting regional parks along the coast. We had a short paddle in their kayaks at the mouth of Mahurangi Harbour, and a final lunch at Brick Bay Wines, before allowing the newlyweds to continue on their honeymoon in peace. A quick stop for supplies of Marmite and Vegemite, Central Otago pinot noir, Whittaker's chocolate and a couple of tubs of butter, and we were on our way back across the Pacific. During our three weeks in NZ I ate four pies (including a Beano's pie from Waikouaiti and a steak and oyster from Raglan), had three feeds of fish and chips (Otatara, Waipiata, and Orewa versions) and consumed numerous avocados, lamb chops and pints of beer. I was impressed by the multiplication of craft breweries in the two years since our last visit, the diversity of styles and the market saturation of Stoke. I'm looking forward to seeing what the next few years produce.


You can't get away from sheep here.

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

New Year at Moutcha Bay

New Year's Eve was spent on the west coast of the island, at the superb Moutcha Bay Resort, closed for the season but open to a gathering of friends to welcome in 2012. New Year's Day, I soothed a hangover and a burgeoning Christmas cold with a couple of beers on the water while BC spot prawns were pulled from the depths. We boated out to the head of Nootka Sound, caught a streak of sun near historic Friendly Cove, before returning to the resort. Another successful day on the coast.