Yesterday we were also buzzed by the Red Checkers. The Checkers
are the aerobatic flying Team of the
Royal New Zealand Air Force. They fly Pacific Aerospace CT-4E Airtrainers &
were doing some practice work over Whitianga for the Super V8 opening in
Pukekohe. We were having our lunch on the beach & a young foreign tourist
came to ask us what it was all about. He thought they were doing a show just
for him; there was no one else about! J
I cheated, these are my Napier Art Deco Checker shots... :) |
As you can see from my last post we did a bit of tiki-touring
around the beaches on the north-eastern side of the peninsula that forms the
top of Mercury Bay. These are all beautiful
ocean beaches & it would be hard to pick a favourite, I think I
liked Otama for its isolation but Opito would be my choice to holiday at &
if I wanted to get totally away from the world for a bit I’d have a bach in
Matapaua Bay. We’ve anchored in most of the bays of these beaches at various times
over the years but this was the first time I had visited them by road. Black
Jack Road is world famous in New Zealand, well, world famous if you visit the
Coromandel regularly. It’s another winding narrow gravel road up & over a ridge,
for us, after all the winding narrow gravel roads we’ve been over lately it wasn’t actually that bad. And the views
were spectacular.
I wanted to take the very narrow winding road to Matapaua
Bay, a bay that’s always fascinated me because it’s actually on the inside of
the peninsula & part of Mercury Bay & facing Whitianga & Cooks Beach but
to get to it you have to take the long drive over and around the top, right to
Opito and then over the top again and down into the bay. As already mentioned, we have anchored &
overnighted in this bay ready for our run home to Tauranga in the morning, it has deep
water & is a beautiful sea green colour.
We had lunch (when a cock pheasant strutted past us) at Otama Beach which looks out over another one
of our happy boating areas, Great Mercury Island.
I think we need a new sun umbrella, this one is a little short! |
We then headed back past Kuaotunu
to look at Gray & Rings Beaches which we hadn’t been aware of before. They
were both smaller lovely white sand beaches which looked to have been the old
traditional holiday spots of this part of the Coromandel going by the iconic
kiwi baches lining the roadside. The rocks & boulders
piled in the corner at the end of Rings Beach made an interesting pattern, it
looked like they’d been blown there in a big storm. No doubt they’ve been there
for thousands of years.
The road continued around the point to Matarangi Beach, a
very popular holiday “resort”. I never like calling them resorts in New Zealand
because they are nothing like the beach resorts that we’ve visited overseas. These
just happen to be more popular holiday spots & sometimes they come with a
flash golf course. And no, we didn’t play Matarangi Dad.
Bluff Road probably shaved about 10 minutes off the trip had
we taken the normal route to Matarangi, back along the main road. This wasn’t
called Bluff Road for nothing, now this was a winding, narrow road. Used more
by locals than anybody I would think. It had some great fishing spots in
amongst the rocks.
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