Saturday, 18 December 2010

Ahipara to Kerikeri

And so the second leg of our epic Te Araroa journey is complete. We were all very happy to finally be off the beach and very excited with the prospects of seeing some of the other flora and fauna (appart from sand and shellfish) that New Zealand has hiding in the deep, dark, dense bush.

Day 9 - After a very late start at the Ahipara YHA with our fully restocked  backpacks we set off toward Ahipara center and toward the Herekino Forest. We found restocking in Ahipara was satisfactory for the next leg to Kerikeri. The store has many assorted dried items and methylated spirits can be bought from BIDZ (takeaway/store/fish and tackle).  The road walk to the beginnning of the Herikino Forest is a little boring but nessesary. Being in the forest is refreshing and fun...the first 15 minutes in the Herekino, however, is neither. It is steep and ehausting. Having left late we didnt get far before setting up a cozy little camp, complete with dead leaf cushioned flooring :) It's exciting being in the forest, eerily quite, that is until it gets really dark, then it just seems to come alive! We lay there that night just listening.


Day 10 - Had a lot of fun walking the rst of the way through the Herekino Forest. The forest has some really awesome kauri trees (well we thought so anyway...possibly because we had spent the last week on a beach where the trees are non-existant or small). It wasn't long before we had finished the forest and were onto the next track of the day, the Takahue Connection track. This was a pleasant track that took us through some nice forestry sections, apparently owned by The Crown.  Upon reaching the road again a man, a car and his dog were noisily trying to guide some escapee cows back home. We chatted to him for a bit and he bid us farewell on our way towards Takahue. The road section was quite boring but it wasn't very long till we reached Takahue Hall, the end of the Takahue Connection. There is not a lot in Takahue. A man called Timothy (a hippy, possum catcher and sustainable builder) with Jah the dog, pulled up and offered us a place to camp for the night, only 5km down the road and incidentaly along the track we needed to take tomorrow. He was a little excentric but very nice, he shared what he could and was a great story teller. We learnt a lt aboput possums that night...but not before shooting some arrows with his composite bow and drinking some nice bourbon & colas. Best thing to hapen that day: Timothy gifted us a mini crossbow to help us with our own possum catching! AWESOME!

Day 11 - We left lateish that morning accompanied with Timothy, his rifle and Jah. He wanted to come part of the way to catch some rabbit for us (he was was a nice guy). After missing a few rabbits we finally parted ways. Him back home and us into the Raetea Forest. This is when it got HARD. Along with it being very steep for the first few miles it is also very very dense. The floor is a mat of tripping roots, there are choking vines hanging everywhere and it's very very muddy. This was one of the low  points of our journey so far. Even when we finally reached its peak (and peak exhaustion) our only views were totally obscured by cloud. Wonderful. On top of that the weather started to worsen so we quickly decided to make camp on the trail (because nowhere else is clear or flat enough!). We ended the day in sour moods.



Day 12 - As soon as we could we broke camp and hot footed it out of the Raetea Forest ('See ya...hope i see you never!'). The walk out was thankfully quite tame and it wasn't long before reaching Mangamuka Gorge Rd. Along this road there is the Mangamuka Gorge Picnic Area, this is a place that anyone on the Te Araroa should either goto or even camp at. It is really really nice! We rested, made lunch here, washed and played in the stream(s) and tested out our new toy (the crossbow!). 3 hours went by much too quickly and we finished the rest of the mundane walk to Mangamuka Bridge. First things first: a cold Speights at the pub. Second things second: three more than delicious burgers and chips at the Mangamuka Bridge Store (this is my second recomondation to anyone on the Te Araroa. Go get a burger here. It will brighten ANY day). Some people have said that this is a poor resupply point, but we found it satisfactory, at least enough to get to Kerikeri (3 days away). It was getting dark and we ad no where to stay yet. We walked up a hill and ended up camping in a road margin hidden by some trees.



Day 13 - We woke up early and left our camp before having breakfast just in case we hadn't actually been allowed to camp where we did. Further along the road we stopped for breakfast. Recharged and full of porridge we blazed a trail of dust and rubble as we made record pace along the road. What a great day! That is until we sat down for a water break, broke out the good ol' GPS and 'What do you mean we're NOT ON THE MAP?!' That's right, we burned rubber 5 miles down the wrong road and off our map. Worst day ever! Only thing to do was to go back. It turns out that we had actually missed the road we needed (Omahuta Forest Rd) th night before when looking for a campsite. After not scoring a hitch we were back in Mangamuka Bridge, severely demoralised. We need more burgers. So back to Mangamuka Bridge Store we went and more delicious burgers we did eat. At least we felt a little bit better. We chatted to the owner (Tye) and told him our story. He found it quite amusing but then offered us a lift to where we would have been, had we taken the right road (i dont think that's cheating...do you?). He drove us into the Omahuta Forest and dropped us just before the Kauri Sactuary. The day had been saved and we were back on track. After having done a 10 mile detour we didn't walk for much longer before stopping at the Apple Dam campsite. A nice campsite with a small lake and nice clean water but also the scariest toilets.

Day 14 -  After a relaxed start we continued along the track that took us into the Omahuta Forest. The trail soon started thickening with tall cutting grasses (that hurt like hell!) until we came to a logging skid, this is where we lost the trail. It's very very dense here and there aren't any orange markers to help you. We HIGHLY recommend having a GPS for this section, you will use it often, it is very easy to stray from the track. After busting out our GPS, finding where we were and checking which direction the Mangapukahukaha Stream was in, we were off...straight down the face of the gorge. For 30 mins we hacked and pushed and fell down the gorge towards the stream but we did finally get there. The track then followed down stream until we came to Waipapa River. The river being quite wide and deep left us only one option, to swim. We took our packs off and bagged all our belongings to make them as waterproof as possible then waded in. A little chilly but very fun. And the packs do actually float very well. On the othe side we lit a small fire to dry ourselves and eat snacks then continued on the trail along the Waipapa River Track. This track is a lot of fun but actually quite challenging with a steep left hand slant the whole way. Shortly we stopped for the day on a pebbled stream. Before bed we lit a fire andsmothered it with pebbles to make a hot rock bed, we used this to dry some of our clothes and boots over night.



Day 15 - Worst morning ever! Woke up to find that our hot rock clothes/boots drying bed had infact singed a bunch of our clothes and infact burned a huge hole in the side of Anders' walking boots (he is so so angry :D), he will have to buy some in Kerikeri. The rest of the day was spent finishing the Puketi Forest along the Pukatea Ridge Route that dropped us off at the Puketi Forest DOC Hut. A short detour was made enroute a short distance along the unmaintained Takapau track to see a huge 40m tall Kauri simply called 'Takapau No.2'. At the hut we were geeted by a school trip load of children (really the last thing you want at the end of a long day). To finish the day we each carved some wood and ate a very very bland dinner.



Day 16 - To date today was our longest day, 15 miles (I know not a huge distance...but hey! were still training!). We left Puketi Hut earlyish and made super-fast-pace toward Kerikeri at about 4mph! and had covered about 8 miles before having lunch. Lunch was forced on us more than anything else due to us coming across a sign reading "Chicken and Duck eggs for sale" we stopped and bought 15 eggs for $4.50! from a nice old lady and went straight to eating lunch. You better believe we ate those eggs. We mixed them in with some noodles and boiled some others, whatever we didnt eat we saved for breakfast the next day. For the rest of the day we followed the very pleasant Kerikeri River track (although quite short and not challenging at all it is actually one of our favourite tracks...it was just very calming and a joy to walk). Before reaching Kerikeri we took a short but awesome detour under the Rainbow Waterfall. Recomended, but beware it's very slippery, we took our shoes off. In town we stayed at Aranga Backpackers before storming the town for some dinner. To our good fortune we found the 'Asian & Kiwi Buffet' ($17 ALL YOU CAN EAT!) If you are in Kerikeri and are hungry...GO HERE!



Day 17 - Today was our long awaited rest day where at camp we washed clothes, blogged, hung out, emailed, phone called and such. Later on we went into Kerikeri. Here we got some business cards made (which we're very excited about (designed by Damienmarc)), re-supplied at the supermarket. Verdict: Kerikeri is a very excellent re-supply point. We also bought some bolts for the crossbow and enquired about new boots for Anders. He decided not to get any in the end and wait till Auckland. Back to the camp again and we spent the rest of the nice sunny day hanging around on the grass and swinging on the rope swing over the river. Again this is campsite that we definately recommend.

So after our second leg, what did we learn?

1.You NEED a GPS to do the Te Araroa. You will use it more often than you think. And check your map often to avoid 10 mile detours in the wrong direction :)

2. If you get lost and can't find the next trail marker. Go back to the last one and double check which direction it is pointing. If you DO get seriously lost in the bush up here. Don't worry! Walk in one direction and you will eventually reach a road or a village. This piece of info was given to us by a local in the area. I tend to believe him.

3. Carry quite a bit of cash with you on this section. There aren't any cash machines and many shops won't take cards.

4. Try your hand at collecting bush food. There is soo much to get from the NZ bush. Big grubs in decaying logs, eels from most streams and lots of wild animals like possums and pigs. Ask any locals about hunting in the bush and he/she will usually be very keen on divulging information.

For this section we used with 15.3kg of food between the 3 of us (including what we had leftover from 90 Mile Beach and including the few things extra we bought in Mangamuka Bridge) and we had completely ran out by the time we reached Kerikeri. Perfect. In terms of water, there is plenty along this route, so there is no great need to carry lots with you.

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

90 Mile Beach Summary

We all set out with high hopes and spirits ready to tackle arguably one of the most difficult sections of the trail. No long distance hiking experience, unfit from summer deskjobs and heavy packs... couldn't wait. After Abe Witana dropped us off at Cape Reinga we walked down to the Lighthouse. Signposted along the way were tid bits of Maori religious beliefs and customs, which we had already read about, however being there hightens its significance. The coolest thing, in my honest opinion, was the lone Pahutakauwi tree that grows out of the hillside at the point. This tree, unlike all the other Pahutakauwis, doesnt bloom in the weeks leading up to Christmas. Quite poinent no?


Back to walking. Day one. Pumped up on excitement of things to come, went pretty quickly to begin with then Herangi Hill. In retrospect, not that big but considering we over estimated the food allowance are bags weighed around 25kgs which is a bit too much, anyway the hill tired us out mostly because walking on soft sand is, ironically, very hard. Camp 1 was awesome and we slept well.

Day two. Realized we used too much water on Day 1 (5 of 8 ltrs). Ate some taste porridge and walked on to Te Paki to refill our water bottles. More beach. Still excited though. Dinner was awesome. Tuatua (shellfish) are delicious and Anders nearly blew himself up with methylated spirits (if by blew himself up you mean singed the hair on his arm). Our amazing TarpTent fell down (pegs don't hold well in the sand) and our 2C hats lit up the ground to put it back up. Getting sore and a couple of blisters but so far so good.


Day three. The beach is boring. Very hard walking now, quite sore, feet hurt, nothing to look at. Busted on the ipods and walked super fast (3+ mph) and ended up at The Bluff (not Bluff!) super exhausted. Nice Oriental guy brought us BEER! and FISH! YES. moods lifted and we made camp and slept amazingly well.

Day four. Packs are light as a feather after that sleep. Kudos to the LuxuryLite sleeping bags for being sooo comfy. Ran out of water pretty quickly though and the aches and pains returned along with the crushing weight of the backpacks (the EagleCreek Truist 65ltr packs have soo many features, still trying to get a good handle on customizing it to our backs for maximum comfort but getting there, also super easy to pack each morning). Nice oriental guy gave us some apples and crisps to have for lunch so that was a good pick-me-up. Met some Argentinian guys and a French girl at lunch and chatted to them for a bit. They were walking with flipflops or barefoot and had no blisters! We thought we would try it... but thats when the problems began for Landey. After walking an hour or so without boots his Achillies tendon started to feel sore and we were becoming weary from the lack of water. We ended up stopping short of Utea Park campsite which we knew had water.


Day five. Short, hard, walk to Utea Park. Getting there though was amazing! lots of water, comfy sofas and lots of nice grass to pitch our tents. Just an awesome place! Paul and Tania (the owners) are really awesome as well. They run the whole campsite by Koha (donation) and have operated the site for nearly a year now. Truely a godsend after that brutal stretch of partched beach. Days are starting to run together.

Day six. 11 mile walk seems daunting, dont want to get out of bed. Talked about all sorts on the beach and before we knew it we were at Waipapakauri in a deserted campsite. Not too fond of this campsite. Nothing here, and a little bit expensive considering what it is. But there is water! and internet and television, wasnt really expecting that. Feeling very very sore now. Lots of blisters and walking is tough.

Day seven. 9.5 miles to Ahipara. Late start. Boring walk. Went quickly in the morning and slowly in the afternoon, this seems to be the trend.
That's week one done and the first track under our belt, feeling stronger for it and ready to take on the forest, after a rest day though!



90 Mile Beach is hard, not much water, better to come prepared and ready to do it in 4 or 5 days, a week was too long, but considering our experience a good warm up and baptism by fire. Note: From Te Paki to Utea Park there is little to no drinkable water.

We carried 20.48 kgs of food and used ~15kgs of drinking water over this section. (we are going to put up a spreadsheet of the food we use on the planning page soon). This was too much food to carry for this first bit, we had about 4.5 kilos left over food (mainly cous cous and porridge) so we would suggest taking less. A 1.5kg bag of porridge will probably last 10 days...and that's coming from 3 strapping hungry men! In terms of water we each carried about 3 litres. This is probably not enough. Although carrying more is heavy, it will probably be worth it. Also some of the streams on 90 Mile Beach in summer time ARE dried up or are pretty manky, we would also recommend using purification tablets and/or boiling the water should you need to get water from said manky streams.

Herekino Forest here we come!

Monday, 29 November 2010

Russell Onwards

Ricky Morton gave us a lift into Auckland in the morning with no complications, like pile-ups etc! After walking around to try and find a few last minute things, we had a kebab and headed down to catch the bus to Paihia. The Naked bus arrived! Fortunately or unfortunately depending on how you see it, no one was naked. 3 and a half hours later we were in Paihia waiting for the ferry to arrive. Our personal shuttle (no one else was there) to Russell arrived and we paid $21 (~£10 pounds) to cross. An awesome sunset and moon lit our way across the water where we were met by Jane and Jeff Hindle. Back at their awesome house (complete with half built yacht in the yard) we were given free reign of the downstairs guest house. After a delicious dinner of sausages and potato salad, we all crashed out on the floor (beds were available but we thought we’d try and get used to the sleeping on the ground).

The next day we milled around in the morning, mainly doing website things and building beer can stoves out of cans of Speights (Anders’ new favorite beer!). After breakfast we thought we’d give our legs a stretch on a short walk. We walked down into Russell to get some food for the day then continued on to Long Beach. We ate our lunch on some rocks, in the audience of 20 or so really annoying seagulls and then attempted to fish for whatever we could catch. After not catching anything we went exploring. All the way along Long Beach, around the headland, over more rocks, along another small beach and finally up some small track at the back of the beach. We didn’t really know where it would take us but the sun was up and the weather looked good, so we didn’t fear. And BEHOLD what it provided!





After an early start on the 23rd, if by early you mean 8am, we wandered down to the wharf where a Tall ship was waiting. If you don’t know what a tall ship is, it’s a pirate ship. 




This particular Tall ship is called the R. Tucker Thompson and it is run under a charitable trust, taking tourists out for day sails to pay for berthing costs and in the winter months running week-long leadership and teambuilding cruises for less fortunate children. Greeting us was Tom (the first mate) a legend hailing from Canada who fell in love with Tall ships after climbing around on the rigging a couple of years back. Skipper Beast, destined to be a farmer turned to boat building and then discovered that he could get paid for sailing Tall ships, a lifestyle choice that is serving him well. Both awesome guys that handle the ship well and gave us a great day out, jumping from the rigging, swimming to shore and handling the ropes. Gotta say that this is a wicked thing to do if you’re around Russell, we just had the best day!


Jane became even more awesome by driving us all the way… to Kaitaia, which definitely had a Pak-N-Save. Tank I need food, lots of food. After shopping we were introduced to Jane’s friend Bronwyn Hunt (a regional counselor for Northland) which was cool. Re-structuring our backpacks to handle so much taste took a while and just as we finished Abe Witana pulled in. We threw our backpacks in the trunk said thank you to Jane and Abe drove us Northward. We were all pretty excited to talk to Abe because he was the first Maori that we had the time to get to know and from what we heard he knew. Abe has an amazing knowledge of bushcraft and tucker, of which we absorbed as much as we could. Saying bye to Abe at the Cape was pretty crazy, we were now ‘unsupported’ – everything is carried by us. Lucky we are more prepared than some kitted out with great gear from our sponsors which up until this point we haven’t really used.

A quick chicken later and we walked down to the Lighthouse. It was getting late and as we walked down it began to hit home that we were walking 1800 miles and are packs are HEAVY. (Landey) "I think we took way too much food but Anders insisted on butter etc. needless!" An inaccurate estimation put our packs at around 25kgs. Lots of spiritual-ness on the Cape which we paid more attention to this time, which has nothing to do with our walk but was awesome to learn a bit about Maori’s religious beliefs (the Cape is protected land because that is where the Maori dead enter the afterlife, there is also a Pohutukawa tree that never blooms). Anyway got a picture of the Signpost and we took off towards Bluff… TASTY TREK GO!

Saturday, 20 November 2010

Kia Ora!

First off we apologize for not writing in ages, but we've been so busy that there has been no time to write. 
Secondly let me tell you the purpose of this blog. We have re-thought our ideas for the website, and this blog is going to have shorter, day-based, entries whilst the interactive map will have more points designed to pin point points of interest and longer, track based posts. Having said that I think we'll just write whatever and see what happens (i think we all are starting to feel that loads of videos and pictures are a better way to tell our stories). 


Soooo. Auckland.
Oh and I forgot to say that we are going to try and write our blogs as close to how we would say it as possible, in an effort to make it less dull. So there will be bits of our slang mixed in, but we have done our best to remove any swearing or potentially offensive words (if taken the wrong way).

What has happened? Saxon Tint and Caia Dominicus drove Anders and I to the airport where we got on a ridiculously long flight. 25 hours flying and we are in Auckland. Chilled on the grass in the parking lot for 5 hours and met up with DM, who flew from Dubai via Singapore. Unfortunately he had a gruelling 14 hour wait in the airport before continuing onto Auckland.


Ricky Morton (old friend of the Fords) showed up and drove us to his house in Castor Bay, which is sickness. Quick trip to the supermarket and we were eating some choice cuts and let me tell you, Stephan (an adventurous, traveller) and Dave (Ricky's brother) know how to cook a steak, super taste.
Day 2 and we cruized into Auckland to spend money and take it all in, still kinda jaded bout being in NZ. Spent a load of money but got most of the shiz we needed. 
Day 3 and we headed back into Auckland to get the DOC hutpasses setting us back $92 dollars each (better be worth it!). Then, back in Castor Bay, Dave drove us to a volcanic lake which the locals use for cliff diving. Totally sweet. havent lept off a rock in some time and that was the business. cliff jumping video


Motivation to get stuff done kicked in on the 20th and we packed a little and headed with Ricky on a trip to Piha beach. One car crash later... no seriously we were in a 6-car pileup. Ricky though, has the skills and avoided the crash only to have some guy slam into the back of us. Unfortunately he's gunna have to have the back bumper and maybe door replaced but thankfully no one was hurt, at all. Carried on to Piha beach which was taste. 




It was low tide so we could walk out to Lion Rock - a massive rock which was a local hangout for spiritual Maori's, or something... there was a Pou (wooden totem, a guardian) and some  plaques and stuff. Should've probably learnt a little more about the significance of it but there was some sweet volcanics and rock pools to pay attention to. On the scenic drive back we managed to miss our turn by 50 miles or so... still the vegetation (lots of ferns and palms and huge trees (still cant wait to see a Kauri tree though) here makes drives that much more fun. Back at home we had a sick party and...well, you know...
In between all that stuff happening we've been getting the tents prepped for some serious rain (which actually came on Saturday night) by 'sealing' the seams with a silicone paste mixed with petrol, smells pretty terrible but now the tents are fully watertight and have grippy bases (thicker silicone).


Everyone here is pretty awesome. Massive huge thank you to Helen, Ricky and Dave Morton for putting us up for 4 days!
On the bus now to Paihia to catch the ferry to Russell and stay with Jane Hindle (an old friend of Anders and DM's mum) for a day or two, where we will pack up some food and water before finally starting the TASTYTREK! 



- Landey

Thursday, 21 October 2010

Te Araroa maps & info

Maps
For a long time we were debating how we were going to navigate ourselves throughout New Zealand on the Te Araroa trail. There are a few ways of doing this:

1) You can buy all the maps you need. I have read that the 1:50,000 Topomap 260 series is best for tramping, and it covers New Zealand in 295 sheets. The 1:250,000 Topomap 262 series covers the counrty in 18 sheets, however, for tramping they lack the detail required and only really useful for us to get some scope of the trail ahead. Paper maps are expensive, to purchase every map for New Zealand would cost you about $3000. Going digital is an inexpensive way of obtaining a lot of TOPOs. A good place to get this is Map Toaster TOPO where you can buy all the maps for the country for just $199-$289. They are GPS compatible, have integrated aerial photography and has a road name and place search tool.

2) If you dont feel you want to buy any maps, you can get them all for free from the Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) website. They say "LINZ will provide digital files free of charge. Send us a portable hard drive and a list of the files you require, the format you require them in and a self-addressed postage paid return envelope...". You can also download them to your computer from the webiste.

3) Alternatively, and also what TastyTrek will be doing is this - An englishman named Simon 'Cookie' Cook has saved a lot of people, a lot of time. He has very nicely and impressively put together a whole set of 1:50,000 TOPOs (the ones freely available from the LINZ website) complete with the Te Araroa trail overlayed with handy notes to boot, and all in an easy to handle and print A4 size .gif files.

    There are 103 maps altogether, so you can print off all of them on 52 sheets of A4 paper. We'll be doing this and binding them to make a small book. As we finish one to move to the next map, just rip it off and use it to light some fires :) For some sections that we feel we need actual maps, we'll probably be buying some TOPOs from time to time.

    With this we'll also be taking a Garmin eTrex H GPS and some compasses.

    There is one hump, in so far as, these maps dont have grid references. If we're carrying a GPS that gives us grid references, it may not be much use. We haven't quite figured how to remedy this bit yet, save cross checking Google Earth or LINZ'z maps with the trail maps and noting down grid refs on the map for the whole trail (which is too mammoth a task i feel). Still, we'll be taking the little GPS with us for better or worse.

    Additionally, I read in a message that with these little Garmin eTrex H's, they dont natively support new New Zealand's Transverse Mercator map grid that’s been officially in use for a year now.  But with entering some custom parameters available from the LINZ website it should all work fine.

    Track Information
    In addition to having all the maps printed off and bound, we thought it would also be quite useful to have all of the track information available to us as well. With all the track information that is available on the Te Araroa website, we will also be printing off a little book of track info. As we're taking a little netbook with us, we have put together an ordered collection of trail information, so that we may be able to view them off-line when on the trail. This will be put up available to everyone that wants it, as a file on our website soon.

    Thursday, 14 October 2010

    People Like Us

    There are other people out there doing cool stuff. I've been trying to keep tabs on a couple of the more interesting websites and blogs whilst teaching myself as to what to expect with long distance, long term walking. I thought I would write a quick post so that you guys can see what I'm thinking about.


    Boston to Austin 2000 mile run
    These guys are trying to break a record for the most consecutive marathons run as the run from Boston to, well, Austin. Why anyone would run as fast as they could to get to Texas is beyond me though... just kidding, never been to Austin so not gunna judge.
    Not really anything to do with walking but pretty awesome and they've raised tonnes of money for charity so good on them.


    The Big Walk
    Jamie Fitzgerald walked the Te Araroa trail finishing in February 2010. I've been trying to read through his blog posts along the way to get an idea of what NZ is like in the summer time (i've only been in the winter and it was wet and cold) but I suppose if you prepare for the worst then it'll be awesome the whole way.


    Te Araroa - On Veg
    I've already talked about Paul but he's still updating his blog daily and doing lots of hiking in preparation so there's always interesting stuff to read on his page.


    Steve Cleverdon
    Steve is attempting to walk the length of New Zealand faster than anyone before. He wants to walk the trek in 100 days which works out at 18 miles a day provided he doesn't stop for a rest! Unfortunately he's leaving before us so I doubt we'll catch him up but good luck to him all the same.


    Shalane Hopkins and Alex Ward
    Taking off the Te Araroa trail today. Wishing them the best of luck. A month and a half headstart on us so again probably wont run into them but hope they reach their fundraising goals and have a blast doing it.


    The Odyssey Expedition
    This is an amazing journey by Graham Hughes who is trying to visit every country in the world. And on top of that he's doing it without flying. He's nearly there as well - 6% left to do!




    So there you have it. Some of the other people doing cool stuff that i've been reading about and following.


    -Landey



    Monday, 11 October 2010

    Endorsement ideas!

    Hey all!
    We've got some big plans in terms of endorsements that we are trying to secure.
    I'm in the process of making a montage for 'Flight of the Conchords' from Dubai with love!
    This is a plan to try and get the student end of the market to donate to WaterAid and Solar Light for Africa through our website, when we start our TastyTrek across New Zealand on the Te Araroa Trail.

    Be sure to keep checking back onto the website to see the montage soon!

    Take care and have a nice day!

    DM

    Sunday, 10 October 2010

    Massive Update

    Hello all,
    Sorry for the long time of silence. Lots of things have been happening and we've all been very busy...so busy that we should have been filling you all in with what we have been doing. Here it goes:
    • Anders flew over to Dubai 2 weeks ago to visit his family and generally just chill out in the baking sun. He met up with Damien (who if you haven't figured it out yet, is his little brother). We took some trips to the Mussandam and to the desert and wadis where we tried out equipment and did some light hiking and general exploring.
    • We have made some changes to the website and more videos will be on their way soon, as will our own tv channel. But you'll hear more of that soon.
    • We have been given tons more sponsorship! A big thank you to all our sponsors so far and our most recent sponsors: Fozzils, Lightloads, Eagle Creek, LuxuryLite and more to be announced soon. Please check out the sponsors page for more information about each of them.
    • The Solar Light Caps have arrived, we will be reviewing them shortley with a video that will be put up on the sponsors page.
    • Finally we've got some big plans in terms of endorsements that we are trying to secure so keep your ears to the ground. 
    Speak soon
    -Anders

        Wednesday, 1 September 2010

        Latest Sponsorship!

        Our latest sponsor to join TastyTrek has quite an ingenious invention!


        At first it may look just like a regular cap. Wrong! By day, it protects us from the sun and recharges its lightweight, long life NiMH batteries. By night, it's a headlight, providing us with ultra bright LED light from it's environmentally friendly solar powered light!

        Simon Dyer, CEO of 2C and inventor of the Solar Light Cap has agreed to sponsor TastyTrek with three solar light caps, one for each of us. We think they are brilliant because they combine 3 items into one: Hat, light and batteries. This means a saving on weight and space and a saving on money, as we wont need to keep buying batteries.

        As I said, we think they are seriously cool and are very chuffed that 2C have come on board.
        Anyway, don't let me ramble on about how cool these caps are. Check out the Solar Light Cap website for yourself.

        - Anders

        Thursday, 26 August 2010

        The Kirkland Brothers

        I recently had two long lost friends from my sailing days drop by London on their way back to Bermuda. Jesse and Zander Kirkland are starting out on a campaign to sail in the 2012 Olympics in London sailing in the 49er class. From what I understand from them, 49ers are similar to Australian 18-footers but smaller and lighter and understandably fewer crew members, 2 to be specific. Like the 18-footers they also go incredibly fast and are very hard to manage, apparently they can get up to 25knots (~28mph) or something.

        So basically at the moment its just Jesse and Zander against the boat rather than against the rest of the fleet but they're learning fast and are optimistic about their chances. They've just finished a tour of Europe sailing in regattas in Poland, Germany and, for the last two weeks, in Weymouth. Now they are flying back just in time to get hit by Hurricane Danielle before they head out to Cali to do some more training.


        So just wanted to wish them luck in all the hard work they have left to do over the next two years up to qualifying in June, 2012. If people are interested they have a blog up: BER 49er Olympic Campaign.

        - Landey

        I believe

        We need sometimes to escape into open solitudes, 
        into aimlessness, into the moral holiday of running
        some pure hazard, in order to sharpen the edge of 
        life, to taste hardship, and to be compelled to work 
        desperately for a moment no matter what.
        - George Santayana, "The Philosophy of Travel"

        I particularly like this quote and i feel it is very fitting for what we are about to attempt. I have no doubt that we will definitely taste some hardship along Te Araroa. I believe that we will run into hazards; some probably accidental  or unavoidable and some possibly through bad judgement. But I also believe in myself, Landey and Damienmarc. I believe that we all have that spark that makes you push on through whatever poor situation we may possibly be in.

        Neither of us have ever attempted anything quite like the Te Araroa trail, but what we lack in experience I think we make up for in common sense, determination and the ability to take any bad situation in a positive light, in order to sharpen the edges of our lives.

        - Anders

        Wednesday, 25 August 2010

        Guerilla promo in Oz

        A good friend of ours, Patrick Burr, is in Sydney right now staying in some backpacker hostels. Very kindly he has offered to print off and handout/hang up some flyers promoting TastyTrek and the Te Araroa trail.


        Anyway, thanks a lot Patrick. Beers are on us next time we see you.
        -Anders

        If YOU would like to promote TastyTrek and our causes please don't hesitate to contact us at TastyTrekNZ10@gmail.com

        Tuesday, 24 August 2010

        Where we all are.

        I just realised that many people will not know where in the world each of us curently are, or what we are doing with all our time when not updating the website or writing around to potential sponsors and magazines. Well let me enligten you.
        • I (Anders) am in London and will be starting a new job with a removals group, hopefully tomorrow. I also hope that this job will make me enough money to do Te Araroa without having to constantly worry about budgetting for everything...because that would be a pain in the ass and not much fun. I have done some rough calculations and i should be fine.
        • Landey is also in London and works on the 24th floor of the Canary Wharf building, where he sits all day long typing information off utility bills into a database. He says that it's riveting and he's having the time of his life. Note the sarcasm. No, it's a soul destroying job. But he will persevere. They pay him quite well and this will ensure he has enough funds to do the trek.
        • Damienmarc is currently in Sri Lanka with some firends but will be back home in Dubai in the next few days, where he will continue to work somewhere, doing something until he comes to London at some point. Very vague i know. Thats just the way he rolls i guess.
        So we are all roughly in the same boat at the moment, just working to raise some capital and continuing to spread the word of TastyTrek.

        - Anders

        Friday, 20 August 2010

        WaterAid in Pakistan

        It has been hard to miss the news reports of the devastating floods that have ravaged Pakistan in the last few weeks. United Nations are declaring it the worst humanitarian crisis in recent history with more people being affected than in the Indian Ocean tsunami and recent Kashmir and Haiti earthquakes combined!


        The first wave of deaths resulting from the floods themselves stands at 1,384. However, Pakistan's problem are set to get worse as now 3.5 - 6 million people do not have access to clean water and/or are at risk of contracting deadly water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea and cholera.


        WaterAid is helping. WaterAid have already released funds that will primarily provide relief focusing on drinking water, sanitation and hygiene services; and secondarily will continue efforts towards rehabilitation of drinking water sources, hygiene and sanitation facilities. WaterAid are currently supporting local partners in the following activities:
        # Hygiene kits
        # Dissemination of Information, Education and Communication (IEC) material
        # Drinking water tankering
        # Drinking water quality testing
        # Emergency water purification and hydration
        # Assesment and rehabilitation of dinking water supply schemes

        For more information, please see what Wateraid is doing for Pakistan.

        There is really no better time than NOW to support WaterAid.

        Help WaterAid help Pakistan.
        Thank you

        - Anders and TastyTrek

        References:
        Pakistan Floods Facts and Figures

        Monday, 16 August 2010

        You've got mail

        WaterAid fundrasing packs have arrived! Albeit very squashed and mangled after being folded and jammed through my letter box. Anyway, there's tons of literature and information here and a personal message -

        "Dear TastyTrek, wish you all the very best. We hope you enjoy your walk and are successful in rasing awareness for WaterAid!"

        Thanks WaterAid.

        Sunday, 15 August 2010

        Donations

        We have now raised over £113 or $176...
        Just want to say thank you to everyone who has donated so far.
        There are alot of changes coming to the site very soon (hopefully). 
        Have a look at the Charities Page to read up on Solar Light for Africa and WaterAid (to be added soon)


        and please make a small donation if you can:
        Solar Light for Africa
        WaterAid

        Monday, 9 August 2010

        Te Araroa - On Veg

        I just want to say a quick thank you to Paul Goodsell. Paul is also walking the Te Araroa trail although he is starting a couple weeks before our planned departure date. He has selflessly taken some time to write us an in-depth email with his thoughts on our equipment list. Anyway I have added his page to our Supporters as a thank you for his help.

        Paul updates his Blog (Te Araroa - On Veg) daily and has alot of information on vegan trekking. So if your planning on doing any long distance walking on a vegan diet then take a look!

        - Landey

        Update by Anders

        Another day gone... It's suprising really how much of a day can be used up whilst just sitting on your bed, drinking tea and playing with the website; ironing out all the little mistakes, trying to make it look nice. There's plenty to still do to it, but slowly slowly it's coming along.

        Daily the website is being edited by Landey and myself, having stuff added to it (some stuff you haven't even seen yet!). However i'm beginning to feel that im using the 'editing the website' card more and more often as an excuse to not seriously start looking for a job. I hate job searching.

          The ball starts to roll...

          Today is a great day! Imperial College's student newspaper 'Felix' are our newest sponsors. Felix have asked to interview us about TastyTrek and our intentions of walking Te Araroa; and to publish an article in the September additions of Felix when the university reopens.

          Hopefully this will spread the word of TastyTrek and bring in more donations for Solar Light For Africa and WaterAid. 

          We also hope that this will inspire others from Imperial College to get out and explore the world. There is more to life than working hard.

          Thank you to Felix the cat and Kadhim Shubber (Felix Editor).

          Sunday, 8 August 2010

          TastyTrek Blog

          I have, finally, got around to setting up the Planning Blog (well thats what I'm calling it for now). Updates will be still be posted via the Map/Blog page however we will only start updating it once we start walking since it was designed to allow people to follow our progress (and right now we are miles away from New Zealand and the Te Araroa Trek!). So for right now we will write about the ongoing planning of the trip. 


          This Blog also has the advantage that users can comment on posts so that we can receive your much appreciated feedback, and you can subscribe to TastyTrek allowing you to follow us easily using the format you want.