(First published in the Manawatu Standard and on Stuff.co.nz, April 1).
While our fellow New Zealanders were angsting over the
escalating coronavirus crisis last month, my wife and I were on the road. It
was possibly the best place to be.
There’s something to be said for isolation, and I don’t mean
the isolation everyone has experienced over the past week in their homes. In
our case it came from being in remote places where access to newspapers, TV,
the Internet and even radio was intermittent and sometimes non-existent. This meant we were able to make our way around some of the
scenic nooks and crannies of the upper North Island largely untroubled by the
increasingly gloomy news emanating from Wellington.
And when I say scenic, I mean scenic. There is no more effective antidote to a looming health
catastrophe than the visual distraction of the New Zealand landscape.
Our route took us through Hawke’s Bay, the Volcanic Plateau,
the Bay of Plenty, the King Country, the Waikato and North Auckland. Everywhere
we went, New Zealand from the road was a joy to behold. It just keeps looking
lovelier.
It’s not just the obviously outstanding physical features, such as mountains, lakes and beaches, that make this country so pleasing to the eye. On
a more basic level, it’s something very simple: trees. Nothing transforms the landscapes so much as trees, and over
my lifetime I’ve watched as they’ve grown and proliferated throughout rural New
Zealand.
Despite the opprobrium heaped on them for supposedly raping
the land for profit, farmers deserve much of the credit for this. Early
pastoralists may have stripped the land bare in their eagerness to turn it into
grass, but subsequent generations of farmers understood the aesthetic value of
trees and we all benefit.
So where did we go? Well, we stayed at Ohiwa, a magical spot
in the eastern Bay of Plenty where the camping ground nestles under a
pohutukawa-clad bluff, at the top of which, if you don’t mind a bit of a climb,
you can see the remains of fortified pa sites, strategically located so as to
command a view of advancing enemies.
Maori history is all around us, but it’s often not obvious.
You have to seek it out, but it’s there – as in the Hukutaia Domain, near
Opotiki, where we gazed in silent awe at a massive, 2000-year-old puriri tree
called Taketakerau, the Burial Tree, under which the Upokorehe iwi interred the
bones of their distinguished dead.
Ohiwa has the great advantage of being out of reach of what
I call the Auckland Effect. No offence to our biggest city, but Auckland is
like a gradually spreading stain whose economic and cultural imprint extends
far beyond its official territorial boundaries.
As with London and the rest of Britain, there is Auckland
and then there is the rest of New Zealand. It exists in its own bubble, but one
that keeps expanding. From Auckland north to Warkworth is effectively one giant
construction zone.
Pahi, on the Kaipara Harbour, is distant enough to have
escaped the Auckland Effect too. I wanted to go there because it was where an
uncle of mine had a hideaway, and I reasoned – correctly, as it turned out –
that he would have chosen it for the best of reasons.
It’s an enchantingly pretty and serene corner of the world.
From our caravan site at Pahi we looked out over an arm of the Kaipara at a
scene depicted in a Dick Frizzell painting that hangs in our lounge. We bought
the Frizzell print years ago because the place he painted, called Whakapirau,
was so unmistakeably New Zealand. I’m pleased to report that although there are
a few more houses at Whakapirau now (and the classic Kiwi caravan on the hillside in Frizzell's painting is nowhere to be seen), its essential character is unchanged.
I can’t mention Pahi without returning to the subject of
trees, because it’s the site of a magnificent Moreton Bay fig tree
thought to have been planted before the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi. And
15 minutes’ drive away is the justly famous Matakohe Kauri Museum, which
intrigued me because while it celebrates this most majestic of trees, it simultaneously pays tribute to the rugged and resourceful men who cut them
down and milled them.
So what else did we do? We enjoyed a spectacular sunset framed by elegantly sculpted macrocarpas at Muriwai Beach. On the Napier-Taupo
road I bored my wife for the umpteenth time about what the road was like when I was
kid, when it was unsealed and tortuously slow and deer sometimes crossed in front of you. In Tauranga we missed a crucial turnoff amid
road works and I cursed the NZTA – again, not for the first time – for its
pathetically inadequate signage.
We also had one of those two-degrees-of-separation moments
when we found that another couple among the four in our tour group at the Waitomo
Caves used to live just along the road from us. Only in New Zealand …
Oh, and we were rudely woken when our caravan was rammed by
a rogue ute at 4.30am in the Port Waikato camping ground, but that’s a story
for another time.
I agree, Karl - but OOPS, under our wise Government's emergency regulations lovely trips like yours and your wife's are illegal. Alone among all democracies Sweden refuses to join this global craze. Only Sweden (by the way, a country with even more social welfare principles than New Zealand) accepts that epidemics cannot be thwarted or eradicated by us puny, powerless little creatures. Pandemics have been with humankind since time immemorial We are assured that we are in an unprecedented crisis - but manifestly we are not.
ReplyDeleteNever before in human history has such cynical, oppressive legislation been enacted anywhere. A decree is issued to 4.5 million people immediately to cease all their businesses, work, their comings and goings, their social and family life for four, quite possibly more, weeks - and do what they are told to do. If you have a dying child or friend you are not allowed to visit - you are not to decide what is essential and what is not.
This is intolerable for free people. We must reject it. But, of course, I would accept any wise advice from Government - and would without a doubt follow it whenever possible.
So what should we do? We should react to this very ordinary, not even dangerous pandemic in the time-honoured way by humbly and courageously accepting it - and try to help the many victims in the best and most charitable way. We should all return to our jobs if we are lucky enough to have one - and work diligently, saving our money so that society can afford to pay adequate compensation to the many unfortunate individuals who are losing their livelihood (but NOT try to support businesses to survive - let them go bankrupt). And while we have the time we should immediately begin to prepare ourselves for the flood of ill people that, probably within 3 or 4 weeks, will overwhelm our existing health services. This is a very nasty illness and many victims will need full hospital care for a while.
We must not be hypnotised or scared by big numbers of fatalities. Just bear in mind that we only die one death each - and that none of can escape that.
Your correspondent Mr Jesperson says that this is a “not even dangerous pandemic” and then contrarily goes on to acknowledge that it involves “a very nasty illness”. As to fatalities, he says we should not be scared by big numbers and states the all too obvious that we only die once. I stand open to correction, but to me he thus and elsewhere in what he writes sees it as OK for us to permit those who are unwitting carriers to go amongst other despite the risk of infecting them, possibly fatally. That seems to lead to the conclusion that one’s rights of freedom should include that of putting others in harm’s way despite the fact that containment could avoid that risk or reality. If I am right then I must accept that he and I seek to inhabit quite different worlds.
ReplyDeleteI apologise to Mr Espersen for my previous mis-spelling of his name.
ReplyDeleteHaving done so, and apropos his previously highlighted observation that this in not even a “dangerous” pandemic, I respectfully draw attention to an interview piece published in The Times today:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/david-nott-interview-fighting-the-coronavirus-is-worse-than-operating-in-syria-s2g9ptkq2