When I got home from Wanganui yesterday, this was the sight that
greeted me, Mt Taranaki with fresh dusting of snow.


Wanganui Opening.
Here I am talking to Emma Camden and Miro (named after the painter not the tree).

Don’t recognise who this group is on the left, apart from seeing the corner of my head.
The trio on the the right are however, Paula Frost, Jan Bieringa and Peter Simpson.

Wanganui exhibition.

I returned Sunday afternoon from an exhibition at the McNamara Gallery in Wanganui. Here are three snaps taken by Luit Bieringa, who very kindly sent them on to me last night. Personally I felt that it was the crispest exhibition that I’ve ever had.

There was a lovely group of people there, thirty at the most, but several drove the two hours from New Plymouth, one flew from Auckland, and others came by car from Wellington.

Outcrops
I have mentioned below, in Templates, how there are certain shapes that I return to on quite a regular basis. Here are a couple of examples, the top photo being of the St Pauls rock at Whangaroa, and the lower, one of a cluster here at New Plymouth. Both are the cores of volcanoes, approx 6 million years old.


Marlborough Daisy

This is growing in a street planting near me. Last year I took this photo, but wasn’t entirely happy with it. Right now, though the plants are reaching the same stage again so I will go down the road and have another attempt.

In 1985 I did the lower version, which I did like. The original is not quite as dark and contrasty as this. It was taken in Otari Gardens, a native plant reserve in Wellington.

Taheke River.
This river bank and the river itself, was a playground for many of us. The Taheke Hotel was built on higher ground, up to the right of this photo. In pre-European times this had been an important highway, because this was as far as travellers could go before reaching a waterfall, which is what the name Taheke refers to. This was a desirable disembarkation point however, because from this point it was a relatively easy traverse right across to Kerikeri on the eastern coast, the most direct route from the Hokianga to the Bay of Islands.

Before roads this became a small town, built as a staging post by Europeans, where travellers could change from boat to horse, carriage, or perhaps just foot, & vice versa. There was, apart from the hotel, shops and a school. William Satchel, author of The Greenstone Door, had a shop here. Once roads came through however, river traffic ceased to be so important and the town went into a population decline. Now there are no shops at all, and the school has, in more recent years, closed down. It was where I began my formal schooling.

In the late 40’s when this photo was taken, there were still Maori communities who lived in very inaccessible areas. These people relied on the horse and the river for getting around. In this case these 4 men have come to the hotel by waka, and are going home with a keg of beer.

The river was always a place of great power and mystery for me. The clear water, with fresh water mussels burrowed into the shingle, the silvery blunt-nosed mullet, the waitbait, the weeping willows trailing in beautiful parallel lines, the Maori wading along the banks groping for eels and throwing them up on the bank. There was a sense of history there. It is part of me.

Tree roots are a topic that I often photograph. they seem to hold something for me. Here are a couple from the last two or three years. On Sunday I tried to make a photograph of some but it didn’t work out. No doubt I will try again.

Taheke- late 40’s.
In the sidebar to your right you will see a small photo of a hotel where I lived as a child. This is the view looking the other way, from an upstairs window. No tarseal, herds of cattle being driven to the works by drovers with stockwhips and dogs guiding them along. They were probably headed for Moerewa Freezing Works. Now defunct.

On the right is an old hall where my father ran a boxing gym, and locals, mostly Maori, used to come some evenings to train and enjoy themselves. There were punchbags of various description, fast skipping, sparring too. Boxing at that stage was still in some Secondary Schools but rapidly ending. Tournaments seemed common and my father, as a younger man had been a keen participant.

The hall is no longer there which is a pity. The area was depopulated after this time by the migration of Maori to other centres because of the opportunity for paid employment. Many from this area went, I think to work in the new paper mill in Tokoroa, or was it Kawerau.

This open space was often the arena for fist fights. Fisticuffs & hotels went hand-in-hand then, it was exactly like the Westerns that were such a staple of our movie diet. As a little boy I admired the cowboy’s code and this sort of event seemed quite normal. What I saw in movies looked very familiar.

This road in now tarsealed, going through and leading to settlements with names such as Kawakawa, Moerewa, Kaikohe, Opononi and Rawene and others of course, but who I hope I haven’t offended by leaving them out
! All right then. Mitimiti, Kohukohu, Waima, Waimate, Horeke, Pakaraka, Paihia, Kerikeri. In the Hokianga there don’t seem to be many towns with non-Maori names.


Kereru
This native pigeon is sitting on the powerlines outside my studio, on a perch that is directly above my neighbours guava tree. The tree is, during the fruiting time, a daily feeding station for two or three kereru. The only down side is the concern at how far and wide they are spreading the seeds of this rather invasive tree.

Poppies
Much of my life I have been interested in plants, and this interest is often reflected in my photography. These are the buds of Iceland Poppies, an out of fashion flower, which my parents used to grow for the house. This year I decided that I would try to grow some for myself. I bought about 40 plants and put them into the magnificent Taranaki soil that I have a small patch of. They did not simply grow, they erupted and for four months I was able to pick a bunch most days. Only in the last week have they come to an end so now I have to wait for the autumn before I can repeat the experience. One of the greatest joys of having such an abundance of blooms was being able to give them to neighbours and friends.

Bulls
I came across a friend’s collection of these tiny plastic bulls. They used to be on a string around the neck of bottles of Spanish wine, perhaps they still are. I arranged them on a Formica table and made this tiny little photo.