Along with the farm activities there have been quite a variety of guests that pull into the paddock late in the afternoon looking for accommodation, there are only a couple of accommodation options in this remote area. Here the guests have ranged from a number of young foreign couples on their OE, a single biker travelling the peninsula, and older English couple at the end of their three week dream NZ holiday. And last night a large group of young men who had travelled from Auckland for the night, they’re going horse trekking today.
It was a shock to our system to get back from Stony Bay
to find there was a party going on in the back yard of the cottage they had
rented which is just behind our van. They had a huge fire burning in the
outdoor fire pit (luckily I had brought my washing in, in case of rain, before
we left for Stony Bay otherwise it would have been totally covered in smoke) &
the windows all open & a stereo inside the house cranked up as loud as it
could go. Actually, it wasn’t quite as loud as it would go because after an hour
or so the volume suddenly increased to the point where we couldn’t hear the TV
inside our closed up van. I’ve never heard Indian music played so loud before,
not only was the music loud but they were singing to it too! I was waiting for
some action to come from the farm house but realised they were out for the
evening so in the end I went across to have a word. They were very nice about
it & turned it down to a reasonable volume. Going by the beautiful curry
smell coming from the kitchen I was hoping they might have offered us dinner. No such luck.
I'm not too sure who will have the more fun today, the horses or the guys. There are going to be a few sore heads going by the bottle pile & the muted noise coming from the cottage this morning.
This morning the peace & quiet was shattered again by
the sudden bellowing, barking & shouting happening outside our van. A
herd of cattle were being moved into the house paddock but once they thundered
in through the gate the guys forgot to call off the dogs. The farm bikes shot
off over the bridge to the woolshed while the dogs kept on rounding up the
cattle. The cattle went thundering past, around in a big loop and then headed
straight back towards us. The dogs were having a ball & ignoring the
farmers who were shouting & whistling from way over the other side of the bridge.
Life on this farm would never be boring.
It was time for us to hit the road again, we are headed
back to Coromandel township then across the range to Whangapoua on the eastern
side of the peninsula. We came across this guy & his mate just down the
road, no helmets either!A Man's Best Friend |
We had lunch (& a flat white that I’d been
dreaming about for days) at Umu, a nice little café right on the junction of
the high street & the main road heading south, great for people watching
& watching the passing traffic in all its forms.
I had steamed mussels in cream & curry & David had
the Mussel Chowder. Great value with good sized servings. The mussels still
weren’t as nice as mine though.
This made me smile, it was just across the road outside the liquor store where we topped up on the necessary too.
Then it was onto the Coromandel Smoke House to check out
what they had on offer. We purchased a few small portions of fish & mussels
to sample & then headed back to the van to stow everything & then back onto
the road again & off over the hill to Whangapoua.
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