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| Kauri in the Trounson Kauri Forest. |
Auckland will get there one day and one-star apartment buildings and 80s bulldozers put to the side, this city's CBD has arguably never been better with the redevelopment of places like Wynyard Quarter, Elliot and Fort Streets and against the odds, Britomart (as well as decent skyscrapers like Metropolis and the Vero and ANZ towers). As for jungle, the most alike New Zealand gets to our equatorial cousins is considerably closer than our skylines. I went in search of the most "jungly" part of the country and came away far more impressed than I ever imagined.
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| Tane Mahuta. |
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| Waipoua Lodge's living room. |
Armed with anecdotes and recommendations from Ian and Fran about what best to do in the area, I explored the underrated Trounson Kauri Park on my own and the better-known Waipoua Forest with the help of conservationist Steve King and tour-guides Shane and Matthew from the company Footprints. Footprints operates out of the Copthorne resort on the edge of Hokianga Harbour - a spot reminiscent of Norfolk Island vegetation-wise, coupled with Fraser Island-like sand-dunes. Most New Zealanders don't even know this place exists.
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| Te Matua Ngahere. |
Estimated at 3000 years old, Te Matua Ngahere is the world's second largest kauri, but is substantially girthier than Tane Mahuta and most crucially, about a thousand years older. In the middle of such dense, wild bush, sitting at the foot of a tree so otherworldly massive and so uniquely straight up is an almost spiritual experience.
For Maori, it is a fully spiritual experience and with a mixture of mythology, prayer, song, humour and history, Footprints provide a soundtrack so much more than just looking at a couple of big trees.
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| Hokianga Harbour. |
Thankfully an outright ban on kauri felling has been in place for some decades and the rewards of careful replanting schemes are slowly being seen. But what really makes it all hit home is looking at a spindly kauri that turns out be 60 years old. Easily chopped down, if you leave them long enough they become so wide as to look the stuff of fairytale. All of this is explained in careful detail at Matakohe's Kauri Museum - approximately half-way between Auckland and the Waipoua Forest.
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| One of the Waipoua Lodge suites. |
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| Holly eating a kiwi-fruit. |
But that said, most people want to know about Ian and Fran's pigs at the lodge! All I can say is Holly and Bessie are a great couple of gals and I apologise for being so lame at hand-feeding them. A city-boy who loves jungle, but still a city-boy.
Click here to link through to the Waipoua Lodge's website.







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