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Sunday, 6 July 2008
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I've been meaning to clean my bike for weeks now. In fact it hasn't been properly cleaned since I got back from my East Cape trip. A clean bike is a healthy bike. There just hasn't been any fine days on the weekends for a while, and it's not nice cleaning it when its already cold and wet outside. Anyway... yesterday I got around to it, and as usual I took some photos of my steed. 

1:29:14 PM
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Thursday, 19 June 2008
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6:48:05 PM
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Tuesday, 17 June 2008
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7:03:57 PM
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Wednesday, 28 May 2008
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2 thirds of Nelson's Xtracycle population out for a cruise on Sunday afternoon.
This cute little building is the latest addition to the Founder's Park historic railway here in Nelson. The track only runs a kilometer or two around the park and has three little historic stations installed now. The train does joy rides each weekend. Tui Station is at the Northern end of the park next to Miyazu Gardens and is quite photogenic. Would be a nice location for some people shots.
7:45:42 PM
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Tuesday, 27 May 2008
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 A white-faced Heron reflected in the surface of Nelson Haven.
 Nelson Central Post Office in the last of the evening sun.
7:58:50 PM
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Monday, 14 April 2008
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 The sunrise as I biked through Hira this morning.
9:15:40 PM
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Saturday, 12 April 2008
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The East Cape camp ground consists of a large mowed paddock with a dodgy looking long-drop in one corner, and a single freshwater tap in the middle. The sparse facilities didn't bother me, in fact, I kind of liked it. The beach, the swimming hole, and the expansive views made my stay here the best 'day-off' of my trip. I spent a day just walking and riding the beach, visiting the lighthouse, and swimming in the un-naturally warm swimming hole at the small river mouth (visable in this shot). I did my laundry under the tap, and dried it hanging on bits of driftwood poked into the sandy ground. Because the water was delivered via a long black hose that snaked several hundred meters across the paddock, and it was in full sun all day, each time I used the tap I got a couple of minutes worth of hot water. I was the only one tenting there that day so the hot water was all mine... so was the beach. I wished I had a kite with me, but I did have my camera... 




11:17:49 AM
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Saturday, 5 April 2008
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Just north of Napier is little lake Tutira. It was a great find during my cycle-tour. There is free camping on its shores. Being on a bike I got the best spot in the place. A grassy little bluff under huge oak tree that the buses and camper vans couldn't drive to. I rode my bike up there through the trees, and pitched my tent so I got this exact view from my tent door. 
The lake was bursting with bird-life including more black swans than I could count. 
I had an early start the next morning and when I was packing up the lake was covered in a thick mist. The mist began to break up and lift, and the sun leaked through as I rode around the western shoreline to continue my journey north (into some of the meanest hills I encountered the whole 3 weeks on the road.)
10:42:23 AM
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Friday, 4 April 2008
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The Rimutaka Rail Trail was one of the highlights of my bike tour up north. It came as a welcome break from state highway 2. The trail is only 18km but the points of interest along the way, like bridges, tunnels, old station platforms, and good signage, made it seem longer.  The Xtracycle after riding though the Summit Tunnel built around 1877. It is 576m long and kind of scary to ride through.
The way up, from the South was a gentle, sometimes winding, incline typical of most railway routes. The descent of the northern side was something else entirely. A white knuckle ride all the way to the platform at Cross Creek. I took a moment at the bottom to check the xtracycle over. All loaded up on a fast rocky descent like that must be near the limits of what the bike and free radical can handle. I half expected to find some sort of damage, but the rig handled it fine. The final leg was a 20 min technical little single-line walking track through manuka forest.With all the weight loaded low, keeping my center of gravity well below my knees somewhere, the xtracycle not only handled this track fully loaded, it excelled, even one the slow tricky bits. 
 Pakuratahi Bridge - 1876; 28m long, this is a "Howe"
truss bridge. It is the oldest truss bridge in New Zealand, and was
rebuilt in 1910 after a fire.
 Pakuratahi Tunnel - built in 1876 and 73m long, this was the first concrete block structure in New Zealand. It was curved so you couldn't see the other end when you entered.... creepy.
 A welcome sight.
7:48:46 PM
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Wednesday, 2 April 2008
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I'm home, safe & sound... and I've been to the most easterly lighthouse in the world on my bike. 1974 kilometers there and back. It is good to be home.
10:34:23 PM
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© Copyright
2008
Murray Neill
. Last update:
6/07/2008; 1:30:00 p.m.
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