traveller
Thrill of the Hunt
w
hen the southerly
urges me north from Wellington I have two choices, forced upon me by the lower North Island’s distinctly pleated geography. I can go east of the main divide or west. Today I head west. The sun breaks through the clouds as I reach Paekakariki. I bump across the railway and find myself in the kind of sun-bathed village where locals park their cars on the centre line while they pop in to the café to pick up their coffee. I call into the tiny, but perfect village vege store. There are eggs from Levin, organics from Te Horo and jams from Mick, the preserves man. The locals bring in the excess from their gardens – apparently there is always a bustling trade for lemons. After a few minutes of disorientation in a kind of brown, beige and grey Bermuda Triangle of suburban housing near Paraparaumu, normal transmission resumes: grass verges and flaking paint walls flank the road. Then, at Otaihanga, my highly trained eye picks out a little sandwich board 66 AA Directions Summer 2013
proclaiming ‘Antiques and Curios’. Beyond a hedge lies the Chimney Pot Rest, the meticulously spic and span shop tucked away under Adele O’Brien’s house. “This is all I ever wanted,” Adele tells me. “On my seventh birthday
my mum asked me what I wanted. I led her to a junk shop downtown. It was a parrot honey pot. I have a passion for pretty things.” Delving through the lovingly laid out array of treasures is like climbing through the back of a wardrobe and finding Narnia. I lose myself in a box of paper dress-up dolls and sift through neatly stacked piles of vintage fabrics. The sounds of cicadas and birds chirruping outside fade into irrelevance. Locals are keen and regular visitors, but Adele also sees foragers from the UK, Sweden and throughout Europe. “They tiki-tour the back roads; they’re quite adventurous.” So, there’s more to Otaihanga than a car museum. I’m too early in the season to fill a bag from the wild apple trees that I spy along the verges as I head for the highway, but berry picking seems a good alternative. The avenues of raspberries at Windsor Park Orchard are tucked away between towering windbreaks and feel far away from the world of traffic and noise. Here, in the hot sunshine, the most important decision to make is whether the next berry goes in
PHOTOGRAP HY: nicola edmonds
Nicola Edmonds forages her way up Kapiti Coast