Showing posts with label main beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label main beach. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6

Mt Maunganui Roundup

Catch-up

Well, so much for catching up, I've had all the time in the world but somehow I've managed to get further behind! Oh well, no worries, I'm back here now and I should be able to move through the last month or so quite quickly due to us having stayed put for longer periods and not exploring so much.


It was great to be back 'home' at the Mount and parked up on the harbour side of the Mount Campground. We would have preferred to be in the section just below us but as it was the end of term, the bottom section was reserved for a number of school camps. 

Our Tauranga family towed their caravan across the bridge and joined us for the first weekend which was fabulous; we didn't have to fight the traffic back and forward to catch up with them (we had enough of that later in the stay- the traffic problem has grown ten-fold since we left the Bay over 5 years ago and we even noticed a big difference in just the few months since our last visit). 


It was lovely to see Maddie & Joel again, they've growing up so fast. Here they are watching the smoker do it's business; our tenting neighbours caught a kahawai of the Pilot Bay wharf, they were going out for dinner so passed it on to us which was very kind of them. We smoked it and shared it around at happy-hour.


The weather wasn't the best for the first couple of weeks; cloudy, cold and very windy but it often cleared each evening just as the sun went down; a golden strip of sunshine lighting up the ships berthed across the harbour.


There were  a couple of days when the prevailing westerly wind turned gale force and created a bit of havoc in Pilot Bay, blowing the hire catamarans out onto the road and crushing a couple of signs in the process. A hire boat company's trailer was also blown across the carpark and into the side of a parked car and a dinghy washed ashore from one of the moored yachts. 

There was a mad scramble in the school camp below us to get their 20 odd tents down before they were blown to smithereens. They managed about a half of them before the storm and heavy rain hit with full force. Sadly the camp was cut short and they had to call up the buses from Rotorua to come and pick them up.


Once the school camps had finished and school holidays started we were able to shift down to our preferred site on the lower level and that is where we stayed for the duration...


...watching all manner of RVs and boats coming and going around us. And as much as we love being out the back of beyond there's nothing quite like being right in the middle of the hustle and bustle of a busy Mount (for a short time anyway).

Photos; Clockwise- 1)What a beast! A brand new American job, 2) The ocean-side camp was full most nights, a definite trend with more RVs (both private & hire) on the road year round now, 3) A ute & trailer combination camper for a family of four, 4) Another beast, it's not often you see a tractor and trailer unit with a large boat travelling down Pilot Bay, it's mostly tinnies and jet skies. 5) A school group prepare to cross the harbour (just before another storm blows in) & 6) The car-carrier Courageous Ace came and went several times during our stay.


This Sealegs needed it's own photo story; it was parked on a small traffic island near the boat ramp, the occupants had climbed out and wandered off down the road. I saw them later at one of the cafes on the Main Beach. I like to think they motored over from Tauranga (beating the traffic), pulled up on the kerb and met friends for lunch!  


The Mount Hot Pools were busy morning, noon and night helped along by cool weather, school holidays, regular aqua aerobics and 'Soak'n Sunday Sounds when patrons could enjoy a relaxing soak while listening to a live music from a local artist. I took this from up the top of the camp when I went to check the moon rise (clouds in the way).


We were due to leave the Mount the week before ANZAC day but had an appointment change which meant we'd have to stay a little longer, something I was secretly pleased about. I'd always wanted to attend an ANZAC Dawn Service at the Mount but had never managed to do it when we lived in Tauranga. With the campground just around the corner from the Cenotaph it made perfect sense to finally attend. 

My girlfriend who lives just across the road from the camp said she'd come with us and invited us back for breakfast afterwards and I made ANZAC biscuits to have with our coffee later. Whenever we stay at the Mount, I text her and say 'Howdy neighbour' and she knows I'm back in town and there's a wine waiting.


It was a very mild morning (even though most came wrapped up warmly) with thousands of people quietly making the pilgrimage through the dark streets towards the glowing red Cenotaph which sits on the sand dunes opposite Mt Drury, overlooking the most perfect beach and coastline.


The parade was led by a lone piper, Angela Dixon and Mt Maunganui College's Ella Cox sang the New Zealand national anthem and later a beautiful rendition of Chris Skinner's 'Sons of Gallipoli'

"We sang - God of Nations at thy feet.
As we stood on that sacred shore
With a heartfelt pride
Somewhere deep inside
For the sons of Gallipoli...."

The 6am service was shorter than we'd expected and there were a few chuckles from the crowd for such a sombre occasion- it started 5 minutes earlier than stated and one of the singers hadn't managed to push her way through the crowd to the stage. Then a sound speaker died and crackled in and out of speeches. And later when it did spark back into life, a stage whisper was caught from the 'top table' which set us all off giggling. 


Shades of blue and black gave way to a deep orange sunrise as dawn broke over the horizon and the service finished as a lone Harvard bomber with its throaty roar, flew in from the ocean straight over the top of us. 


Later in the afternoon, with many people out enjoying the sunshine,  I wandered back along the Main Beach...


...back to the Cenotaph to check out the floral tributes that had been left.


There'd also been a 9:30am Memorial Service and more planes had flown over while we were having breakfast.


Later in the week, and feeling sorry for myself because I was missing Central Otago's wonderful autumn colours this year, I thought I'd head up to McLaren Falls to see if there was some colour up there. 


Fifteen minutes from Tauranga and just off the Kaimai highway, McLaren Falls Park is 190 hectares of beautiful parkland popular for camping, fishing, kayaking, picnics and bush walks. It is also home to one of the best botanical collections of trees in New Zealand.

There are two branches to McLaren Falls, one is fed over a dam wall from Lake McLaren which is inside the park (above) and the other from the nearby Namuwahine River (below). Three days after I took these photos there wasn't a rock to be seen as a raging torrent of brown water roared over the falls as another rain storm hit the Bay of Plenty- a video of it was posted on a Facebook page I belong to.


And just to get perspective did you see the children playing on the rocks in the first photo (there are four- look for the boy under the girl in blue) and the two boys on their bikes in the photo above. Click on the photos to enlarge.


There was some subtle colour inside the park.....or perhaps I have just got used to the amazing golden yellows, bright oranges and fiery reds of a Central Otago autumn.



Even the Swamp Cyprus' didn't seem as rusty orange as I remember them.


Coromandel here we come...




Sunday, February 4

Mount Roundup

Catch-up (early December 2017)

Here's one last post from the Mount to tie up a few loose ends.


The Mt Maunganui Holiday Park is a very popular camp, especially during the run up to Christmas. Although many of the permanently parked caravans stayed shuttered up, most probably waiting for their owners to arrive over the traditional December/January holiday season.


Over on our side of the park things were hotting up too. Several school camps arrived during our second week...


... so we had to shift up to the level behind our original site. This wasn't a problem once we confirmed that we couldn't fit into the site allocated to us. Luckily it wasn't too busy and we were able to fit sideways over two smaller sites. Even though it doesn't look like it, it was actually quite a private site with our outdoor area tucked in below the bank of the next level.


While I didn't manage to walk to the top of the Mount this visit (due to my foot injury) I did manage to hobble up the 4WD track a wee way to take some photos overlooking the Summit Track...


...and the Main Beach. A continuous stream of people (over 1 million a year), both locals and visitors use the Mount tracks for their daily exercise and scenic walks. 


On one of our previous stays at the Mount, I located a auto-counter registering every person that passed through the Main Beach boardwalk gate. Over 12 days, 39,200 people passed the counter, that was mid September and it wouldn't have picked up every person as some of the tracks can be accessed from other entry points. 


The 2017 International Surf Rescue Challenge was held on the Main Beach one weekend.



As previously mentioned, the Pohutukawa were putting on a brilliant display all over the Mount and along many of the town's streets, where I also came across several rare yellow flowering pohutukawa. All yellow pohutukawa descend from a pair of trees discovered in 1840 on Motiti Island, the large flat Bay of Plenty island located 10kms off the Papamoa coastline. You can see it on the horizon in the photo above. The yellow species is a taonga (treasure) to Maori.


Tucked under the shadow of Mauao, the sheltered west end of Main Beach is very popular with families, kids can explore the rock pools at low tide while parents can watch from nearby.


A busy Main Beach as people watch the Surf Rescue Challenge. I say busy but in fact that's relative to the time of the year and the event that is on. It's just a small crowd compared to how the beach looks once the summer holidays are in full swing.


And it was a very deserted beach away from the surf rescue activity.



Visitors to the Main Beach have had to share the sand with some brave local residents; a pair of endangered NZ Dotterel and two pair of Variable Oystercatchers. New Zealand has over 16,000km of coastline available for shorebirds but these birds decided to try and raise their families on the busiest beach in the country. 

Their nests are nothing more than a scrape in the sand so it was inevitable, with the amount of people visiting the beach, that the nesting birds would be disturbed. Several of the nests (rebuilds also) were abandoned, or destroyed by the tide. The dotterel pair did managed to hatch one chick in the end although it was lost in a storm just a week or so later.


The Oystercatchers have certainly adapted to their busy beach lifestyle, they are usually quite shy birds. These ones spent their time checking out vacated beach towels for sandhoppers; listening carefully before stabbing their bills into the material. And this one below had worked out where he could find shelter from the hot midday sun.


Some more photos from Mt Maunganui- Main Beach


Moturiki Island (Motu= Island, Riki= Small) once known as Leisure Island, forms the east end of Main Beach. In 1966 Marineland opened an aquarium here where dolphins and other marine life were on display. Fifteen years later it was replaced by another attraction, Leisure Island, which had large swimming pools, bumper boats & hydro slides. That closed in 1990 and the island has been allowed to revert to it's natural state. Many people still refer to the island as 'Leisure Island' though. 


Just a few steps east of Moturiki is Motuotau Island, also known as Rabbit Island. Named either because of the shape of the island from its southern side or from the 'rabbit burrows' seen by early Europeans. The 'rabbit burrows' are in fact burrows of the Grey-faced Petrel, Common Diving Petrel and a few other seabirds. Motuotau is one of New Zealand's closest offshore pest free islands, it's also home to dozens of Little Blue Penguins who roost at night in amongst the rocky shoreline.


Resting in the shade of an old Pohutukawa Tree, Moturiki Island.


The view back over Main Beach from Moturiki Island.


The east end of the beach is a popular surf spot, although there wasn't much happening this day.


Of course if the busy Main Beach doesn't appeal to the visitor there are many kilometres of golden sand beach stretching east around the long Bay of Plenty coastline- this is Tay Street Beach, Mt Maunganui.


My Mount blog wouldn't be complete without mentioning the grandchildren- one of the main reasons we were back in the Bay before Christmas. 

The Strand- Tauranga Waterfront
Amongst many visits and activities, we took Joel (4) along to the Tauranga City Santa Parade to see his sister Maddie (8) on one of the floats- that's her waving at us from the back of roller-derby float. And we also went along to watch Maddie compete (along with over 1000 other kids) in the Weetbix Kids TRY-athalon on what turned out to be the hottest day of the early summer!


I take my hat off to the organisers and volunteer helpers though, the event ran as smooth as clock-work. Which, if you'd seen the huge mass of bikes, you'd have thought otherwise.



Friday, November 13

Around The Mount

Things must be getting desperate when I have no local blog to post. I've been using all my free time to catch up on my "to do" list which had grown in leaps and bounds over the last few months with the knowledge that once we were parked up at Mum & Dads' I could update and download at will, with a free connection to their wi-fi. It also helps not to take too many photos while you're trying to process dozens of folders from the past few months. 

With just a few small things left to do on the van over the weekend, we're getting ready to 'hit the road' again on Monday. Out time in Napier is coming to an end and our feet are getting itchy, it'll be sad to say goodbye but it's time to continue on with our wandering. We also need to make it to the MacKenzie Country by the last week in November, I've missed the mass lupin flowering the last two seasons, this time I'm making sure we will be there.

So, here are a few more photos from our time at the Mount-

These first two are long exposure (1.6sec) shots just before dawn. Long exposure lets more light in and smooths the rough water out. It was quite rough in amongst the rocks with choppy waves bouncing up and over the rocks, you can see remnants of water on the rocks behind. You also need a tripod if you're doing long exposure otherwise it the whole scene would be blurred.


A ship leaves Tauranga Port-


Starting as they mean to go on- daily exercisers begin the steep climb to the top of Mauao (the name given to the extinct volcano cone itself). 


The Red Beacon-


The bulk carrier ship 'Foochow' leaves Tauranga Port-


Different views of Mt Maunganui's Main Beach-





Dawn over Pilot Bay-


Calm before the storm- Pilot Bay ahead of the summer influx-


From the top of Mauao with Karewa Island behind and the Coromandel Penninsula and islands on the horizon. And hats off to the ladies on the summit with their 20kg+ toddlers on their backs! One of them is my daughter-in-law Sophie with grandson Joel, they carted the kids all the way to the top in the carry packs on their backs. That's Maddie and her friend in front.


The iconic view from the top of Mauao- looking down on Mt Maunganui with the Main Beach on the left and Pilot Bay on the right. The camp ground and the salt hot water pools directly below. It's no wonder that this is one of the most popular holiday resorts in New Zealand.