S/V Tethys North Island Photos
Photos taken here and there that didn't make to the Journal pages. Enjoy!

Funky Fish wine menu

Funky Fish Toilet

 
Chariot to Amalthea We toured parts of Northland in company with Milan and Adrian of AMALTHEA and Tom and Nancy of EQUINOX. The Chariot to AMALTHEA!

The two photos above were taken at the Funky Fish restaurant just outside of Dargaville. The wine list was hand printed on the inside of a cardboard wine case spacer. The toilet facilities (unisex) are funky, don't you think? Shows what you can do with broken tile. The owners are aging hippies and the food and service are great.

 

Kerikeri Pagoda

Kerikeri Inlet schooner

Our first campground was 'the Pagoda' in Kerikeri. The property had originally belonged to an Englishman who arrived to New Zealand from China after the Boxer Rebellion. The main building is restored and has several small en-suite rooms for rent.

The campground is by the side of a small creek that opens up unto the Kerikeri inlet. Even though the inlet is narrow and shallow, large boats anchor in the sheltered waters.

Tasman/South Pacific waves

The awesome power of the sea. Here off Cape Reinga, the swell from the Tasman crash against that of the South Pacific
  creating haystack like mounds of white water. And this was on a calm day!

 

Rambling rose

Flower fence and friends

Wild rosebushes growing along a fence, mixed in with NZ flax and other flowering shrubs. This is a scene just outside Waipoura Forest where we walked among the huge kauri.

 

Waimate Mission House

Waimate Mission house kitchen

The Waimate Mission house is one of the three originally built on this property by Maori to house the missionaries. The kitchen is a marvel of warm kauri wood floor, walls and ceiling. The photo is a composite of 3 or 4 that I took to cover the entire area.
St John the Baptist lych gate St John the Baptist church organ

The church of St. John the Baptist at Waimate Mission, surrounded by a cemetery, has an elaborate stone lych gate into the grounds. Inside the kauri church we spotted a fairly large organ. The organ, installed in 1885, made by Bevington and Son of Soho, bought for the princely sum of 240£, is probably secondhand. It is still in regular use for services.

Waimate Maori gravestone

St John the Baptist Church, Waimate

The cemetery surrounding the church has many Maori headstones, this being the most elaborate. The surrounding farms are still owned and worked by descendants of  the early pioneers, many of whom are buried in this cemetery.

Vineyard pond

Vineyard lunch

Wine country, a lily pond, with dinghy, and vines in the background. We tasted wine at two vineyards, and had a delightful lunch at the Cottle Hill Winery. Cottle Hill Winery was established 5 years ago by a San Diego cruising couple.

Pruning vines

Pruning the vines is hard work. About 9 acres of vines have been planted. The buildings were built using wood from the large trees on the property. This apparently is a common way to build in NZ as long as the trees are not protected NZ species such as kauri and rapa.

Te Matua Ngahere

Paula at the 4 sisters

Te Matua Ngahere, Father of the Forest is the second largest living kauri in NZ. Although shorter than Tene Mahuta, this massive tree is 15 meters in diameter, and approximately 2000 years old. The photo is a composite of 3 or 4 that I needed to get a complete view. Paula is sitting on a handrail, while Vlad takes a picture lying on the boardwalk. In the background are the Four Sisters.

Stick Insect

One of the several species of stick insects in New Zealand. This specimen was actually perched on a 4x4 porch post but I decided to turn the photo 90º for your viewing pleasure. the head is on the right side about half way from the end. The insect has lifted its two front legs and has stuck them out front parallel to its body, perhaps to make it appear longer!
Hokianga Beach Hokianga beach scene. Rock formations along the Tasman coast. There is a pool of water in the large rock with people basking in the warm water.

There are various types of shellfish along the beaches, green-lipped mussels, pippies (a manila-like clam), oysters and abalone just waiting to be picked.

Ferntree

Giant fiddleheads

There is an overabundance of ferns in NZ, some are the size of small trees. Giant fiddleheads anyone?

Blue Lily_like flower

White Lily-like flower

These clusters of lily-like flowers grow everywhere, along the sides of the roads, and in gardens.

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