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CoffeeWaffle
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Friday, 30 April 2004
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I just found out that kite buggying might not be as new as I thought it was. I thought the kite buggy was a recent invention, but in 1826 an English school teacher, George Pocock, patented the char-volant.
Basically a lightweight carriage, the invention could carry four or five passengers at speeds up to 20mph, and it was powered by, wait for it.... a stack of two arch top kites. The kites were controlled by four lines and the vehicle could travel down-wind and across the wind, by steering the kites to the left or right of the winds course.
Sounds suspiciously like a kite buggy to me.
I managed to find a picture of one.... 
11:55:17 PM
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Tuesday, 27 April 2004
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Friday of my holiday was the day to fly kites and buggy. The wind Gods co-operated and brought me a nice smooth north-easter. On Friday morning I began exploring the Christchurch coast at Sumner Beach. Although it was small, it looked promising and I made a mental note to return there next time, at dead low tide. By early afternoon the tide was low and I had made my way to New Brighton, a coastal suburb of Christchurch with a wonderful long, wide sand beach. Right in the middle of this beach is a huge pier which looked almost big enough to buggy under, kite and all. I didn't try it, even though a local assured me it had been done before (but he couldn't tell me what length of kite line it was done with!) I kite buggyied with my 6.3m c-quad for most of the afternoon up and down the 8km of beach south of the pier. It was much like Rabbit Island Beach here in Nelson, except for the big piles of kelp seaweed that wash up there. They just made the buggying all the more interesting as I had to work to avoid the great blobs of seaweed at 50kph!
 The New Brighton Pier splits the beach in two with several kilometers of kite buggy hevan on either side. In the photo below you can just see the pier in the background.
 A couple of local kite surfers were also enjoying the breeze that afternoon. New Brighton Beach really made my holiday. I'm sure I'll return here next summer for another buggy blast.
After I packed up at New Brighton I headed back up the coast to Kekerengu. I spent another night in the housebus with Mark and Pamela before completing the journey home on Saturday, tired but happy.
8:15:00 PM
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Sunday, 25 April 2004
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I spent Wednesday night of my east coast trip at a little place called Kekerengu. Its one of the first places to stop after the road South joins the coastline and right at the start of the Kaikoura District (famous for its whale watching and abundant seafood). Theres only a cafe and a parking area there and along the strip of land between the railway tracks and the sea I found friends Mark and Pamela, on holiday in there house bus. "Ample Karma" is a 1948 Mack bus which has been kitted out for permanant living. Apart from the occasional freight train the only noise around here was the relentless pounding off the ocean waves on the steep rocky beaches. The only neighbours were the occasional fur seal. The beach was no good for kite buggying but Mark and I took the oportunity on Thursday morning to fly some kites before I hit the road again, heading south.
 Sunrise on an overcast Thursday morning at Kekerengu beach.
 "Ample Karma" gets its name from an anogram of the owners names, Mark and Pamela.
Above Left: Mark setting up his excalibur on the beach. Top right: Kaycee made a new friend amongst the locals. Bottom right: Another one of the locals.
Tommorrow... the East Coast Adventure continues.
2:47:52 PM
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Sunday, 18 April 2004
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An early morning high tide was the perfect oportunity for me to go for a kayak around Pepin Island this morning...

Another group of kayakers were already on the water, as seen from the road to Cable Bay (above). Delaware Bay can be seen in the background beyond the esturay. Half an hour later as we (Devon and I) were paddling across the same area all that cloud had disappeared into the morning sun. The top of Pepin Island was still covered in cloud as we set of across the esturay. I had a close encounter with what was probably a large Eagle Ray soon after leaving. About 1 meter across, It cruised right under my kayak in only two or three feet of water, then cirled both of us before darting away with an impressive burst of speed. The water he was swimming in was so shallow that you could clearly see his wake on the surface as he sped away, inches off the bottom.
He was to be the only fish-like creature I saw today. I was hoping to catch some fish for dinner tonight but although I towed a lure all the way around the island, I came home empty handed. Never mind.
6:32:47 PM
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Monday, 12 April 2004
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My neighbours across the road live up on a hill at the end of a long steep driveway. Recently they had this driveway sealed. Since then an idea had been jiggling around in the back of my mind... today I acted on that idea. Video 10.5mb
7:35:34 PM
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Sunday, 11 April 2004
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"May your walls know joy; May every room hold laughter and every window open to great possibility." Maryanne Radmacher-Hershey
Photo: The view through Kaycee's window as we zoom past Waihopai Valley vineyards on the way home from this afternoons kayaking trip.
9:42:36 PM
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Friday, 9 April 2004
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A paddle around Pepin Island was the way I spent my Good Friday afternoon. I'll let the pictures tell the story...
 Click to enlarge Devon coming in to land on one of Pepin Islands many little beaches.
 A big swell today meant there were quite a few blowholes like this one. All belching out spray and weird hissing and groaning noises.
 A choppy sea and a gloomy sky...


 I even managed to catch a nice pan-sized Kawhai for dinner. I towed that lure three quaters of the way around the island before I got a strike. Persistance paid off!
Paddling in that choppy sea has really taken it out of me. I can tell I will sleep soundly tonight, and probably wake up feeling sore all over tommorrow...
7:33:54 PM
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Thursday, 8 April 2004
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I am now offically on holiday. I have the next two weeks off work, to do with as I please. I have no solid plans, just possibilities at this stage. Just two goals:
- finish the house painting. Just the window and door frames to go now.....
- kite buggy on at least one beach I've never buggyed on before (Pohara Beach in Takaka, Woodend Beach near Christchurch, and Carters Beach in Westport spring to mind. )
Hopefully I'll achieve more than just those two things but alot will depend on the weather, which right now is raining 'cats & dogs'. I was thinking of returning to the Waihopai River tomorrow (Good Friday) but with all this rain there might be too much water!
I was hoping the rain would ease this afternoon, but leave the north-east wind that had carried it. It would have made for perfect conditions to head to Rabbit Island beach after work for a kite buggy. Instead, because it was still pouring down, I came home, turned on the heater, stereo, and laptop, and learnt how to fake a lightning strike in photoshop ;D thanks to this tutorial.
Have a good Easter!
9:50:11 PM
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Sunday, 4 April 2004
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went for a little paddle around the esturay at Delaware Bay this morning. Tried fishing in the harbour mouth at high tide. No fish but it didn't matter...
3:58:39 PM
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Saturday, 3 April 2004
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Mark and Pamela are here for the weekend. This morning we all went and checked out the ever popular Nelson Markets. Every Saturday morning one of the largest carparks in Nelson city is transformed into a marketplace with trailer-sized stalls selling almost anything. Woodturning, pottery, jewellery, exotic foods, fruit and veg, furniture, cutom made knives, candles, ...anything!
After lunch at Sub-way, Mark and I spent a few hours this afternoon on the Wakapuaka Sanflats with all the kites we could fit in the car. Mark has an excalibur like mine, so he's no stranger to flying a two line kite... but he had never buggyied before. First we tried the Super-10 which was very fast in todays big SW wind. He got the hang of buggying in no time, and after only two or three kite crashes he was making runs at 30kph+! Not bad at all for a first timer! Then came the fun when he made his first "power-turn". That is he turned downwind with a little too much wind in his sails, and lost traction with the back wheels of the buggy. In a split second the buggy spun around, and he found himself facing the wrong way trying to steer the kite, with the lines crossed, while traveling backwards. All part of the learning curve :)

6:26:55 PM
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© Copyright
2006
Murray Neill
. Last update:
13/11/2006; 8:03:38 p.m.
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