Between finishing our housesit and heading back to our flatting situation we decided to drive up to Coromandel for a couple of days. Getting out of Auckland felt amazing. If we didn't have interviews to get back for, I'm not sure I would have wanted to come back, ever. Through our car windows we watched the view change from urban harbors and freeways to vistas of rolling technicolor hills, one car bridges, and finally a long spine of blue mountain peaks. We camped in our car the first night. We arrived at the campground after dark; the gate had a sign tacked on: "Camp Manager will be back tomorrow afternoon," but it seemed pretty likely it had been there for a long time. That suspicion was confirmed when I used the bathroom by the entrance. It was the kind of scene a horror movie crew would drool over: no lights, nobody for miles, and behind a squeaking wooden door, a toilet seat covered in flies. Not flies that move away at the slightest woosh in the air, but ones that stick hardily in place in a really unsettling way. I know I shouldn't have, but I peered down into the septic tank with my flashlight and saw all the waste down there was alive, teeming with maggots. We didn't spend a second night there.
We spent the last week house/dog sitting in a very suburban area of the North shore, which meant a week without rent! We've landed an extremely laid back subletting situation. The owner is off in Germany without a care in the world, so he's been fine with us coming and going, renting the place a week here, a week there. Sweet as! It turns out a lot is based on personal connections here, but not always in ways you'd expect. Apparently the reason for this super chill arrangement is that we're friends of a friend of the owner, which is funny because we'd only actually known his friend for two weeks when we started the sublet. Before that one of the owner's flatmates had put forth a candidate she knew really well, but got turned down. Somehow as a pair of foreigners he's never met, but sort of know this friend of his, we were good as gold. Oh well, I'm not complaining! Between finishing our housesit and heading back to our flatting situation we decided to drive up to Coromandel for a couple of days. Getting out of Auckland felt amazing. If we didn't have interviews to get back for, I'm not sure I would have wanted to come back, ever. Through our car windows we watched the view change from urban harbors and freeways to vistas of rolling technicolor hills, one car bridges, and finally a long spine of blue mountain peaks. We camped in our car the first night. We arrived at the campground after dark; the gate had a sign tacked on: "Camp Manager will be back tomorrow afternoon," but it seemed pretty likely it had been there for a long time. That suspicion was confirmed when I used the bathroom by the entrance. It was the kind of scene a horror movie crew would drool over: no lights, nobody for miles, and behind a squeaking wooden door, a toilet seat covered in flies. Not flies that move away at the slightest woosh in the air, but ones that stick hardily in place in a really unsettling way. I know I shouldn't have, but I peered down into the septic tank with my flashlight and saw all the waste down there was alive, teeming with maggots. We didn't spend a second night there. In the morning we drove up to Hot Water Beach, where we found a few people hopelessly digging in the sand for the underground hot spring. We dug a few ourselves, but we had missed the window of opportunity. It turns out the hot spot is only accessible for a couple of hours around low tide. A girl at a cafe gave us the local paper with the high and low tide times for the week, so armed with the knowledge that the next low tide would be at 9:45pm, we went out to find a place to stay for the night. We passed over one place for being way overpriced before heading down the road and discovering what I'm guessing is the nicest hostel in New Zealand. (Maybe even in the former British Empire.) It felt like a hotel, but with a communal kitchen, which, let's be honest, is a better offering than most actual hotels. Plus, they'll lend you spades for digging at the beach. (Other places make you rent.) Either way, get some spades! It's much nicer not to have to burn your hands scooping up palms full of steaming hot sand. After dinner we headed back to the beach. The moon was so intensely bright we cast crisp shadows on the sand, which felt unreal. It's a short walk to the spot, maybe 10 minutes, but the world feels so much bigger at night that it seemed to take longer. The waves sounded more ferocious, and in its night clothes the sky felt huge and heavy, as if at any moment it might swallow you whole. We felt so keenly aware of how alone we were in all that quiet and dark, but not afraid, exactly. It was a strange sense of communion with the hugeness of the world but also alienation from it. A part of me did feel a little relieved when we saw a pair of flashlights further down the beach, and we saw we weren't the only ones out. We dug ourselves a little spa pool, sat back and enjoyed the ocean and the stars. And actually, our timing wound up being pretty good because just as we were happy and boiled pink, twenty people showed up to look for a spot. We wrapped up and let them get to it, but not without taking a few pictures because they looked so cool digging in the dark. In the morning we went back for the day time experience--also fun, but I'm glad we got to do it at night when there are fewer people out. When we got there at 8am the only place still available was right on top of the hot spot, so our pool was practically boiling until we got a nice douse of cold water from incoming waves. Actually, several. Once the tide started coming back in we had to devote a lot of time fortifying our sand wall. It was a losing battle, but it was one of the best times I've ever had on a beach. As a redhead the beach is my natural enemy, so that's high praise. After that we hopped over to Cathedral Cove while the tide was still low. It's a beautiful hike and a gorgeous beach. If I wasn't already married I'd be planning my wedding there right now. Not only that, it had the nicest outdoor bathrooms: built out of nice-smelling wood, and elevated, with a view of the beach! Seriously, what outdoor toilet have you ever known to have a view? Or smell good!? Must have been the universe rewarding us for all our bravery against those maggots.
lisa gianattasio
8/31/2015 10:29:58 pm
Such a great description of you travels. Keep writing you are so good at it. Comments are closed.
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