I’ve spent the last 2 weeks frantically packing up the house
in readiness for the movers who are booked to shift our gear into storage four
days after we get back to Tauranga. We’ll sleep in the fifth-wheeler in our
drive when we get home so I can give the house the once over before settlement.
It still feels a little strange but from now on in this is our full-time home
& I’d have to say that inside it’s packed to the gunwales! There is still a
bit of gear to add; a nice little pile in the garage is awaiting our return,
most importantly the golf clubs & fishing gear, but we have the space for
those sorted. I’ll do a blog soon on a couple of things we have added to the
ute & fifth-wheeler which will make life a little easier & safer.
Of course we couldn’t leave until after the America’s Cup
racing finished but with the 2nd race cancelled we were able to get
away just after lunch. Lunch being the time not the food. It was a fairly easy run through to Miranda
although we had to stop at Katikati for groceries as I had run out of time to
do any shopping during the week. And you know how it is when you’re hungry, a
few necessary items turned into a trolley load! Then of course I had to fit everything
in the already bulging cupboards & fridge. So my orderly packing which I
was very proud of then became a free for all. Things shoved in here &
there, wherever I thought they’d be safe, or not as the case may be; the
cupboard door burst open at some stage during the trip empting a number of bottles
of wine onto the floor to roll around unimpeded & then it conveniently shut
itself to stop any further escapees. Thankfully none broke; it was my favourite
Chardonnay.
A little further on as we entered the Karangahake Gorge we
decided we were in fact now hungry & that we’d pull into the first sizeable
rest area for a bite to eat. Just as we finished the discussion a rest area
appeared & with lighting quick reactions David zoomed in to a quick halt.
Hmmm……not something he’d be wanting to do too often, I think he forgot we had
our 9 metre rolling home attached. We had another laugh when we went to leave, while we have
enough room to move down the fifth-wheeler when the side is in, I usually push
it out a couple of feet in a situation
like this just to give me room to open the fridge & prepare lunch. We had a
quick lunch & I climbed back in the ute ready to go. That was until
David appeared at the window asking if I had forgotten something. The slide out
was still out! Now that would have been fun, passing through the narrow gorge
with the slide out over the centre line! Not that that would ever happen, as
soon as David looked in his rear vision mirror it would have been very obvious.
Thankfully.
We decided it does take a bit of time to get back into our
“on the road” routines.
The rest of the trip was uneventful, we arrived in good time
& secured a level spot at the northern end of Rays Rest although it is
closer to the road noise but then there are only half a dozen vehicles passing
in the night. We drove down to the bird hide for a quick look but the tide was
on its way out & the birds a fair way away. There are still a good number
of birds that winter over here at Miranda but the numbers are set to increase
shortly as the godwits return from their non-stop epic journey from the other
side of the world where they have been breeding.
Godwits, Oystercatchers, Red Knots, Terns & Gulls arrive to feed on the mudflats |
Once back at the fifth-wheeler & with the temperature dropping we were both keen to see if our new diesel heater delivered
the goods, it worked brilliantly and we were lovely & cosy all evening. There
was no smell, no noise, other than the initial start-up, & it switched
itself off & on when required. This is great news for us, we now know we
have enough heat power for those cold South Island winter nights.
Rays Rest, Miranda |
Great to see you're on the road at last. Re an inflatable boat just another option you most likely already have looked at is a Portaboat. A friend of ours has one and loves it, as does everyone else who owns one. They're very easy to set up and put away, strong and really stable so much so, fly fishing from it is no trouble.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to regular updates with the great photos of course. Have fun Brian & Sue
Hi Brian, yes we did in fact have a Portabote up until 6 months ago when we sold it. A fantastic little boat & a great idea (we know this for real because many years ago we made a rotationally moulded plastic foldup dinghy for the American market) Sadly we couldn't find a suitable place to stow it without it costing an arm & a leg hence we need an inflatable.
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