on magazine issue 11, autumn 2014
Transcription
on magazine issue 11, autumn 2014
free What’s On Wanaka & Beyond Issue 11, Autumn 2014 xxxsxxx y y VINTAGE WARBIRDS BOTTLE ROCKETS ODE TO ORANGE ROCK HOPPER PAR AVION contents Issue 11, Autumn 2014 THE WHITE HOUSE 4 concept 18 what’s on 32 opinion 6 aviation 23 directions 33 little ones Gig guide & events Ode to Orange Warbirds to Watch For Wanaka & Hawea map 8 par avion Wanaka band Rock Hopper 24 on the beat Paris, On T’aime 26 on the scene 10 on location Romance in Wanaka Fixed Wings - local business Twenty24 28 on track Unspoked - young riders 12 fashion 30 on foot Flight 443 17 on/off What’s cool, what’s not Coming Home Bottle Rockets 34 degustation Whare Kea Chefs 35 on the page Book review: The Mouseproof Kitchen 36 on screen Pisa Range Walk Music movies to mong out to Part 2 31 on the water 38 inspiration The Matukituki River Poetry by Ali Jacs The contents of On Magazine are copyright and may not be reproduced in any form without written permission. Printed on FSC paper by Craigs Ltd. To advertise with On Magazine contact us on: 022 0188 314 or (03) 443 4629, [email protected] www.onmag.co.nz. Follow us on Facebook & Twitter. COVER: Martin Cedes & Chevy Libaude @ Classic Flights, Wanaka. Image by Bridget Hall Wanaka’s Iconic Art Deco Café and Bar Mediterranean cuisine and a stunning Central Otago wine list Open: Tuesday to Sunday, 5.30pm til late 33 Dunmore St, Wanaka Ph: 443 9595 concept Orange is the colour of autumn. Right now every deciduous leaf in the region is moving through the orange spectrum, and watching the change is pretty uplifting. That’s because orange is a warm mellow glow that has its own specific wavelength. This means it produces the colour when light reflects a transparent surface. Orange is often interpreted as a colour of joy and enthusiasm. It’s also a spiritual colour. That’s why the Hare Krishnas wear saffron robes. Orange is the hue of happiness. It’s the colour of beginnings and endings: sunrises and sunsets. It’s the colour of tangy childhood tastebud teasers like Raro, Frujus and wedges of orange at half-time. The feelings that are experienced when the colour orange is observed are happiness, encouragement and freshness. Full of energy, this vibrant and friendly colour is said to increase the supply of oxygen to the brain, stimulating activity in it. So go cop a load of those fiery poplars by the lake. The view is bound to make you feel energised and inspired. That’s also the aim of our little zine. We hope you like this issue, in which we celebrate another year for Warbirds Over Wanaka and all the aircraft of Autumn. Welcome to Flight 443. Shanti, shanti, shanti. Peace. ANNABEL WILSON MAGAZINE Editor Annabel Wilson Deputy Editor Laura Williamson Design Bridget Hall Advertising Prairie Pritchett [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Contributing Writers Miek Deuninck Rebecca Williamson Ali Jacs Contributing Photographers Martin Cedes, Chris Riley Contributing Illustrator India Hughes Online On Magazine is supported by Micimage Design & Martin Cedes Photography 4 MAGAZINE. JOIN OUR ONLINE COMMUNITY... For latest Wanaka events, gig alerts, sport, people, places, arts & culture www.onmag.co.nz Twitter Facebook aviation GRUMMAN AVENGER TBM-3E WARBIRDS TO WATCH FOR LAURA WILLIAMSON singles out a few of the more badass aircraft coming our way for this year’s Warbirds Over Wanaka. CURTISS P-40 KITTYHAWK The RNZAF flew 297 of these beauties in the Pacific during WWII, and they were responsible for downing 99 enemy aircraft. Math isn’t my strong suit, but by my calculations that’s an epic kill rate. When the No 112 Squadron of the Royal Airforce used the P-40s in North Africa, they were the first allied unit to paint the “Shark Mouth” on the nose of their aircraft. It was really scary. YAKOVLEV YAK 3-M Apparently, when the Yak 3 was introduced in 1944, it shocked the pants off German fighter pilots, who had been used to dominating the badly-trained and poorlyequipped Russians. The new Yaks were one of WWII’s smallest and lightest fighters, and their manoeuvrability was unmatched—as many as 15 enemy planes were shot down for each Yak lost, earning the plane the nickname “Dogfighter Supreme.” This excellently-named bad boy first saw action at the Battle of Midway in the Pacific theatre in 1942. Torpedo bombers can attack their adversaries with both torpedos and bombs. Avengers were credited with 30 submarine kills in WWII, including the I-52 cargo ship, nicknamed Japan’s “Golden Submarine” because she was carrying a secret shipment of gold bound for Germany. Cool, huh? Pub trivia fact: Future American President George HW Bush was an Avenger pilot. GRUMMAN AVENGER TBM-3E IROQUOIS The Iroquois, also known as the Huey, has been flying since 1956 and the RNZAF still uses them. Over the years it’s become a downright iconic helicopter, and I get shivers every time I see one of these mofos fly. Remember the Ride of the Valkyries scene in Apocalypse Now? Those were Hueys. Awesome, obviously. YAKOVLEV YAK 3-M A nod to Ben Thompson of www.badassoftheweek. com who we’ve completely ripped off for this story. Do check out his stuff. It’s brilliant. 6 CURTISS P-40 KITTYHAWK MAGAZINE. IROQUOIS MAGAZINE. 7 par avion “If you escaped what I escaped, you’d be in Paris getting f***ed up too!” – Kanye West and Jay Z PARIS, ON T’AIME If you could fly away tomorrow, where would you go? It’s a bit of a cliché, but for me, the answer is always the same: Paris. It’s got everything a city should have, great food (oh God, the food), music, art, multiculturalism, girls in frocks on bikes, wine, literature, history, parks (big parks, with sculptures), gothic architecture, gypsies on the Metro, a bloody big river running right down the middle, and did I mention the food? In fact, it’s so excellent it can be a bit overwhelming. And expensive. Not to worry though, years of working in print media have not only taught us the difference between an apostrophe and a gerund, we’ve learned how to have fun on the cheap. Here’s a few ways to do it in Paris. RIDE A VELIB BIKE The Parisian bike share programme is the third-largest in the world, with about 14000 bicycles in circulation. It works like this: you saunter up to a Vélib station, pay less than two Euros and spend the rest of the day pedalling around Paris like Chris Froome doing Tour de France victory laps. The trick is to swap bikes every half hour - rides of less than 30 minutes don’t incur additional charges. The glitches (broken spokes, dodgy brakes and the fact that the residential neighbourhoods have an early morning exothermic relationship with Vélib bikes; they all disappear into the central city by 8am) make it all the more enjoyable. VISIT CIMETIERE PERE LACHAISE Worth a look for its creepy tombs and art deco monuments, this is where Jim Morrison is buried (expect to see at least one inebriated fan swaying next to the grave, pouring his last beer reverentially over the deceased), not to mention Edith Piaf, Oscar Wilde and the painter Modigliani, who’s partner is buried with him. She threw herself out of a five-story window not long after he died, which is really tragic, but just the sort of thing you go to a cemetery to think about. 8 MAGAZINE. loudspeakers is so high, you can hear most of it from the riverbank (though sometimes it’s in German). A stroll along the river’s thedral Left Bank takes you past the Eiffel Tower, Ca e am -D Napolean’s tomb at the Les Invalides, the on Notre A gargoyle Pont des Arts “Love Lock” bridge where you queues in the high season are very long, but can leave a padlock for your sweetie, used who cares, because you don’t need to go book stalls selling French vintage Asterix inside to see the coolest part: the gargoyles. comics, and the bohemian Latin Quarter, Gargoyles rule. once home to Voltaire, Ernest Hemingway, George Orwell and science hero Marie Curie. WALK ALONG THE LEFT BANK You can take a tour of the Seine by boat, but this costs a bit, and you can view the same sites on foot. Even better, the volume of the live commentary on the tour boat Vélib Bikes are so chic Love Lock bridge “A walk about Paris will provide lessons in history, beauty, and in the point of life” – Thomas Jefferson EAT SEE NOTRE-DAME CATHEDRAL A fine example of French Gothic architecture, Notre-Dame Cathedral is a masterpiece, magnificent in both its scale (the interior is 130 metres long and 35 metres high) and its detail. The architects purposely worked asymmetrical imperfections into the design, such as differently-shaped entrances. The Stroll the left bank pas t the Eiffel Tower Eating out in Paris is expensive, but no matter. This is France, where even the crappy food tastes ridiculously good. Load up on the filled baguettes at the neighbourhood patisseries—they’re huge and will last you two meals--and hit the supermarket. The first time I saw the cheese aisle at a Parisian Monoprix I cried, overwhelmed as I was by the bounty spread before me. Fromage. Paris. Ah oui. LAURA WILLIAMSON MAGAZINE. 9 on location FIXED WINGS LAURA WILLIAMSON talks sheet metal and slip rollers with Twenty24 Ltd. We love meeting locals who make a living following their passion. For Trish Wrigley and Callum Smith of Twenty24, this involves working on very old aeroplanes, not to mention owning a hangar! I had a word with Callum to find out more about what they do, and why they do it. Can you explain a bit about your work? I’m a licensed aircraft engineer and director of Twenty24. We repair, restore and maintain aircraft. We specialise in vintage and warbird restoration, but we have spread our wings as far as microlites, racecar parts and shop fittings; we have specialised tools to shape sheet metal the old school way and the result is quite beautiful and classic. Where does the name Twenty24 come from? 2024 is a grade of aircraft aluminium commonly used in aircraft construction. Did you come to Wanaka for the vintage aircraft? It’s one of the spots to be if you're into historic aircraft. We arrived nine years ago when I had an opportunity to move here and maintain a couple of P40 Kittyhawks and other warbirds. What's been you're favourite job so far? I worked for a company that restored several P-40 Kittyhawks, so I have a soft spot for Kittyhawks, but the Russian LA9 fighter was incredible, and finishing a 1936 Beech Staggerwing is right up there - it oozes class with its classic lines, leather interior and walnut trim. 10 Groovy! Do you get to fly in some pretty cool planes? A couple of weeks ago I flew in an RAF BE.2F (a WWI biplane) from Peter Jackson's collection. It was built 100 years ago, but has the original engine and lots of original parts. MAGAZINE. I can still taste the castor oil, which gets fired out of the engine all over the gunner. Will you have a role at Warbirds Over Wanaka? I’m on the airshow committee and I organise the aircraft on the flightline, making sure they have everything they need. Twenty24 also provide maintenance support to a large portion of the warbirds at the show. You have two young children, and we reckon an airplane hangar is a dream place to hang out if you're a little nipper. Do your kids come to your “office”? The kids are often at work and love messing around flying the odd wrecked plane we have in the hanger. What on earth are these: English wheel, wheeling jenny, slip rollers, planishing hammer? These are all sheet metal forming tools we use to make parts; most have been superseded by big computerised machines these days, but for one-off hand made parts there is still nothing better. fashion y y Martin wears: Huffer Spezial T, Wrangler Stomper moleskin, RM Williams boots, helmet & jacket from Classic Flights. 12 MAGAZINE. Martin wears: Rusty Camino shirt, Rusty Hooked Out beach pant, Modern Amusement T. Chev wears: Crayon T, Rusty Cadet short, Katherine Wilson Jimmy boot. Le Specs sunnies. Deerskin hat & driving gloves from Robert Wilson. MAGAZINE. 13 Chev wears: Federation Believe dress, Chaos & Harmony shoes. Martin wears: Bauhaus Camo jacket, Le Specs sunnies. MAGAZINE. 14 for your graphic design project call: 021 177 5922 email: [email protected] on/off ON OFF Flights Fights Man beards Mussel beards Gelato scoops Scoop neck tees Macrame Macaroni Early bird passes Passing out Kumara Couch potatoes Bags for life Plastic bags DROP IN FOR A SPEIGHT’S AT NEW ZEALAND’S MOST ICONIC HOTEL Photography: Bridget Hall Models: Chevy Libaude and Martin Cedes Make-up: Gena Bagley with M.A.C cosmetics Hair: Sarah Carlton Fashion: Base, Wanaka Location: Classic Flights, Wanaka 16 MAGAZINE. Crown Range Rd, Wanaka Ph: 03 443 8153 www.cardronahotel.co.nz what’s on For regular gig and event updates or to submit your event: check onmag.co.nz or follow us on Twitter (@onmagwanaka) • R&R Sport 49km Team Adventure Run, start at Fern Burn track • National Finals Rodeo (March 8-9), Albert Town Reserve • Craig Adams and the Rustlers live, Bullock Bar SUNDAY 9 MARCH • Jenn Shelton and No Reason live, Bullock Bar SATURDAY 15 MARCH • Yardmen live, Bullock Bar SUNDAY 16 MARCH • Tin Flowers live, The Luggate Hotel TUESDAY 18 MARCH • In Flagrante contemporary cabaret, Lake Wanaka Centre On Magazine parties - every issue MARCH SATURDAY 1 MARCH • On Magazine Jive ON Autumn release party, Barluga, Post Office Lane • Adam Page live, Masonic Lodge • Rock Hopper live, Bullock Bar SUNDAY 2 MARCH • Cardrona Village Market, every Sunday, Cardrona Valley • Wanaka Sunday Craft Market, every Sunday at Market Corner, Pembroke Park • Sunday Sessions in The Snug, every Sunday, Ruby’s Cinema Multi-instrumentalist Adam Page • Live music at The Creek from 7pm, every Friday • Motatapu R&R Sport Multisport, start Matukituki River • Craig Adams and the Rustlers live, Bullock Bar • Purple Cake Day! SATURDAY 8 MARCH • Motatapu Icebreaker Off-Road Marathon, Glendhu Bay • Motatapu Speight’s Summit 47km High Country Mountain Bike, Glendhu Bay • XTERRA Motatapu UDC Finance Triathlon, Glendhu Bay SATURDAY 22 MARCH • Northburn 100 ultra-marathon, Northburn Station, Cromwell • Buzzy Bees live, Bullock Bar MONDAY 24 MARCH • Otago Anniversary Day THURSDAY 27 MARCH • Sir Peter Blake Memorial Trophy - Round Ruby Island Race, Wanaka Yacht Club SATURDAY 29 MARCH • Mt Outdoor Southern Lakes Half Marathon and 10k, Pembroke Park • Hard Yards live, Bullock Bar TUESDAY 4 MARCH • Group mountain bike ride, 6pm every Tuesday, RSVP 443 7882, Racers Edge Bike THURSDAY 6 MARCH • Wanaka Farmers’ Market, every Thursday at Market Corner, Pembroke Park FRIDAY 7 MARCH • Upper Clutha A & P show, Wanaka Showgrounds (March 7-8) 18 MAGAZINE. Check out Craig Adams at the Bully Visit the Sunday Market at Cardrona Village Chris Riley, Eco Wanaka The Clutha River in Autumn APRIL Craig Adams TUESDAY 1 APRIL • Group mountain bike ride, 6pm every Tuesday, RSVP 443 7882, Racers Edge Bike THURSDAY 3 APRIL • Wanaka Farmers’ Market, every Thursday at Market Corner, Pembroke Park FRIDAY 4 APRIL • Live music at The Creek from 7pm, every Friday SUNDAY 6 APRIL • Cardrona Village Market, every Sunday, Cardrona Valley • Wanaka Sunday Craft Market, every Sunday at Market Corner, Pembroke Park Russian Yak 3 at Warbirds Over Wanaka • Sunday Sessions in The Snug, every Sunday, Ruby’s Cinema • Buzzy Bees live, Bullock Bar SATURDAY 12 APRIL • Yardmen live, Bullock Bar SUNDAY 13 APRIL • Giant 2W Gravity Enduro, Cardrona Valley FRIDAY 18 APRIL • Warbirds Over Wanaka International Airshow (April 18-20), Wanaka Airport • Wanaka Arts Society Easter Exhibition (April 18-21) SATURDAY 26 APRIL • Contact Epic, NZ’s Ultimate MTB Challenge, Lake Hawea • Hard Yards live, Bullock Bar MONDAY 28 APRIL • Wanaka Autumn Arts School (April 28-May 2), Mount Aspiring College MAY THURSDAY 1 MAY • Wanaka Farmers’ Market, every Thursday, Spencer House Mall FRIDAY 2 MAY • Live music at The Creek from 7pm, every Friday SATURDAY 3 MAY • Yardmen live, Bullock Bar SUNDAY 4 MAY • Billy Connolly High Horse Tour, Queenstown Events Centre • Sunday Sessions in The Snug, every Sunday, Ruby’s Cinema directions SUNDAY 1 JUNE • Sunday Sessions in The Snug, every Sunday, Ruby’s Cinema THURSDAY 5 JUNE • Wanaka Farmers’ Market, every Thursday, Spencer House Mall 12 Wharf FRIDAY 20 JUNE • Cardrona Alpine Resort opening day • American Express Queenstown Winter Festival (June 20-29), Queenstown 11 TO TREBLE CONE WEDNESDAY 25 JUNE • Rock Apocalypse, MAC school musical, Lake Wanaka Centre 5 1 THURSDAY 26 JUNE • Treble Cone opening day 9 7 2 SATURDAY 10 MAY • Buzzy Bees live, Bullock Bar 6 SATURDAY 17 MAY • Hard Yards live, Bullock Bar 3 Photo: Bridget Hall SATURDAY 24 MAY • Buzzy Bees live, Bullock Bar SATURDAY 31 MAY • Yardmen live, Bullock Bar 4 8 10 Treble Cone from Dublin Bay Come and try our Irresistible Flavours like you never tasted! Open lunch and dinner 11am~2:30pm 5:30pm~9pm 34 Ardmore St. Wanaka Ph (03) 443 1777 www.facebook.com/SHINABURO.wanaka 1 2 3 4 5 6 Amigos: Mexican Restaurant Barluga: Bar Cardrona Hotel: Bar/Restaurant/Accom Emma for Beauty: Beauty Therapy Relishes: Café/Restaurant Sasanoki: Japanese Cuisine 7 Shinaburo: Korean Restaurant 8 Skydive Wanaka: Wanaka Airport 9 The White House: Café & Bar 10 Warbirds Over Wanaka: Wanaka Airport 11 Wanaka Kayaks: Kayak & SUP Rental 12 Island View Place: Luxury Accommodation MAGAZINE. 23 on the beat the HOPPERS ROCKING with LAURA WILLIAMSON talks linguistics, Duran Duran and religion with Wanaka’s favourite live act. Their first gig was less than two years ago (“it was messy, very messy, but the band was tight, real tight”), yet Rock Hopper have alreay established themselves as a Wanaka classic, famous for their rowdy shows and eclectic repertoire of covers. Describing their sound as “bohemian mix of toothless stomp and redneck serenades”, they’re the sort of band that makes you want to drink Jim Beam, throw your bra onstage and get into girl fights, which are all very good things in a post-Bieber world. They say they love their live and local gigs at the Bullock Bar and the Hawea Hotel, but recent highlights have been doing big shows like Wanakafest 24 MAGAZINE. and New Year’s Eve at the lake. And hen parties. They really like hen parties. To find out what makes the band tick, we caught up with Hoppers Sam Orbell (guitar, bass, vocals, hen parties), Pete Stevenson (the fiddle), Jeff Sinnott (hits things) and Helen Carter (blows things) and hit them with a few questions. To keep it interesting, we thought we’d make them answer separately. Turns out they have a lot in common, though Jeff was the only one who got the Lemmy question right. What rhymes with Rock Hopper? SO: Knock Shopper. PS: Flock Cropper. JS: Cock Flopper, Knock Shopper, you know the drill. HC: Sorry, nothing I can say in polite company. Who is the most attractive member of your band? SO: Seriously, you have to see us!! ‘SaxyMiss-H’ all the way!! PS: Sam. JS: Sammy, sweet Sammy oh Sammy I want to have your children – oh hang on that’s bad isn’t it. HC: They are all pretty tasty, but Jeff’s the best cook! What’s your favourite song to play live? SO: Definitely originals!! PS: Our version of Planet Claire at Hen Parties! JS: Our originals. HC: Love playing our originals! We think Duran’s Duran’s version of ‘911 is a Joke’ by Public Enemy is the worst cover song of all time. What would be your choice for worst cover ever? SO: Every version of ‘Wagon Wheel’ ... including ours!! PS: If Susan Boyle sung ‘War Pigs’. JS: Our version of ‘The Final Countdown.’ It just sucks. HC: Us playing ‘Blurred Lines’ by Robin Thicke. In a hand-to-hand combat situation, who would win: Lemmy from Motorhead or God? SO: Buddha would kick his ass - Lemmy would be too busy vomiting over his bass amp! PS: Da G-man. JS: Lemmy IS God. HC: I would pick a Celtic goddess of war - a deity that could really kick some she-butt. Lemmy and his sleazy, man-whore muttonchops wouldn’t stand a chance! And for your at-home listening pleasure, On music columnist MAL has prepared a ‘Flying Mix’ to go with our autumn issue, featuring Hans Zimmer, Expendable Youth, Fat Freddy’s Drop, and field recordings of sparrows and a tui chasing a blackbird. It’ll make you soar. Go to www.onmag.co.nz to listen and download for free. MAGAZINE. 25 Romance i IN WANAKA Home is where the heart is – but Wanaka is the place that sends hearts aflutter. Touted as one of the top 10 romantic destinations in the world by American book ‘Dream Destinations: 100 of the World’s Best Vacations’, it’s the perfect spot for a little lovin’. But what to do on a first date or that milestone anniversary? We’ve got the low-down on the area’s lovey-dovey highlights. J’adore: No-one nails romance quite A wine winner: Avoid the awkwardness like the French. But if you can’t jet to Paris, of a first date with the help of a little booze swing by Bistro Gentil. Ask for an Enomatic and a common conversation topic by wine wine card and taste-test your way around tasting. Rippon is your go-to place. the dangerously delectable wines from the On track: Many a marriage proposal has dispensing machines, then cosy up for a taken place on top of Mounts Iron and Roy – magnifique meal. so slip on some walking shoes and get those Mile high: Get your hearts beating even pulses racing. faster by taking a scenic flight in a nostalgic Lakeside love: There’s nothing better biplane. Classic Flights can whisk you and than tucking into fish and chips or a gourmet your beloved to a secluded lakeside spot for picnic while taking in magic views. Keep a picnic lunch. Bliss! it simple and lull by the lake or chill by the Pitch a tent: If all you need is love, then Clutha River in Albert Town. you can’t go past back-to-basics camping. Hollywood romance: Kick back on Just pack a tent and sleeping bags to snuggle Cinema Paradiso’s comfy couches then split up in – idyllic DOC camping areas are at a just-baked cookie at intermission. Kidds Bush Reserve and Boundary Creek. REBECCA WILLIAMSON Classic Flights: Freedom of Romance package 26 MAGAZINE. Bistro Gentil: Poulet Torchon dish On top of Mt Iron on the scene g n i v o l d an l ca o l War Birds over Wanaka on track UNSPOKED how young wanaka rolls Riding off-road is just the kind of good muddy fun youngsters should get into as often as possible. Unspoked is making sure they do. Unspoked is the junior division of local mountain bike club Bike Wanaka. Focussing on cross-country and trail riding, the group aims to encourage and develop mountain bikers between the ages of 11 and 16. Unspoked got its start in October 2011 when ten local kids from Mount Aspiring College joined together to take on the Dean’s Bank 10-hour race. “They all had a real blast and were smiling from ear to ear, and I thought it would be great to get them out mountain biking together on a regular basis. I suggested this to them at the race and they were all very keen, so the following Thursday we started the weekly rides,” said Unspoked orgainser Oliver Young. 28 MAGAZINE. Sam Coupland Oliver was joined by Scott Wright, who had just relocated to Wanaka from the MTB Mecca of Rotorua. He put together rides and sorted out the groovy black and orange Unspoked bike shirts for the kids to wear, tops that are fast becoming legendary on the trails of Wanaka. The group runs regular fat tyre gettogethers for young people, usually every Thursday. Oliver said Sticky Forest was a Phoebe Young favourite with the Unspoked kids, with the biggest turnout to date being one ride when 38 young cyclists turned up. That’s a lot of pedal power. To get involved, youth from Year 7 through 13 need to first sign up to Bike Wanaka (www.lakewanakacycling.ning.com) as paid members - a junior costs $10. To find out where and when rides are happening, they can then join the Unspoked Facebook group and get in touch with Oliver to let him know they’re coming. All skill levels are welcome. As for young Wanaka riders to watch, Oliver said keep an eye out for Paul Wright. “He has great downhill skills, and is fit and strong on the uphills mixed with a self determination to give it his best. A 3rd place overall at the Big Easy this year showed his emerging talent to the fullest.” He added that Alex Young, Nick Toepfer, Luke Wright, Sam Coupland, Joseph Wilson, Harrison Brown and Phoebe Young (the only girl - Campbell Russell who’s going to join her?) have all been riding regularly and improving. “I look forward to see who can chase Paul down!,” Oliver said. Unspoked is always on the lookout for volunteers. Any adults keen on trying to keep up with a great bunch of kids on wheels can contact Oliver on [email protected]. on foot on the water TAKE ME TO THE RIVER ANNABEL WILSON dives into one of her favourite local stretches of water – the mighty Matukituki. Fancy a challenging day trip? Try this classic walk along the spine of the mighty Pisas. Photo: Laura Williamson You’ll need two vehicles for this one, lots of food, clothes for all weather (even in summer), a topo map and plenty to drink. It’s a one- to two-day mission, but well worth the effort. Leave one car at the Tuohys Gully carpark near the base of the Snow Farm road and head to the top of the Crown Range in the second one. Park at the carpark at the Crown Saddle—you’ll see a DOC sign marking the start of the track, which zig zags steeply upwards. Get used to it. There are a lot of ups and downs to come as the trail follows the ridgelines of the gorgeous Pisa Range. It’s about 1.5 hours to Rock Peak, where you could turn around and head back to your car, but why stop there? The views from the track are Central Pisa Range 30 MAGAZINE. Otago at its best: tussocks, hebes, schist, ghostly rock towers and Spaniards with their spectacularly tall flowerheads. You’ll look down on the Cromwell Basin on one side and the Crown Range on the other, and feel you can reach up and touch the Queenstown-bound Air NZ planes as they pass close overhead. Another five hours or so, and you get to Tuohys Saddle, where you have two choices. Turn right and drop down to spend the night in the rustic-butadorable Meg Hut (built for musterers in 1958) or turn left and head down the 4WD track through Tuohys Gully. You’ll be rewarded with a 600-metre descent through a fascinating microclimate, a boggy green oasis in the heart of the dry Cardrona, home to a robust population of cackling birdlife including some resident ducks. This is an exposed alpine route, and it can get nasty quickly in adverse conditions, so be prepared and tell someone where you’re going. For more info and advice, check in with the crew at the DOC office, Ardmore Street, Wanaka. Good news: Once you reach the Tuohys Gully car park, you’ll find yourself but a short drive from the Cardrona Hotel, the perfect place to reward yourself with a pint in the garden bar while you relive your epic walk. There’s a fair amount of magic to the onomatopoeic Matukituki. It’s said this is a misnomer, as when the Scots recorded the Maori placenames for the area, they heard Matakitaki as Matukituki. It was named after an early chief and also has the meaning ‘to gaze upon’. Indeed, to glimpse this river is to be drawn into its snowfed depths. After rain, the water becomes milky as silt gets stirred up, but on clear days you can make out the myriad stones strewn upon her belly. It’s worth getting cold feet to hunt out a watersmoothed rock for your palm. Look for that distinctive pink schist only found here, or an albescent piece of quartz. I’ve walked along her banks since I was a kid, exploring both the East and West branches. Lying in the long grass next to the river’s life-support willows somehow makes picnics taste better and talk turn philosophical. Look up and you’re surrounded by the glacier-shaped landscape carved out in the last Ice Age, with Tititea / Annabel Wilson explores the Matuk ituki Valley with her fam ily, Easter 1984 Mt Aspiring the ancient ancestor watching over us all. The mouth of the Matakitaki meets Lake Wanaka just past Glendhu Bay. Once the shores were a site for gathering pounamu, nephrite, birds’ eggs, eels and up until around five hundred years ago, snaring moa. These days, anglers tread the edges of the river in pursuit of introduced brown and rainbow trout, and hunters scramble along the tops of Mt Alta and Bent Burn for red deer, chamois and wild pigs. My attraction to this river however is not in one of fish and game. For me the appeal lies in the nuances of the seasons, and sometimes the changes that occur in a day. Winters, whether still or stormy, are always moody, haunting. In summer oaky native orchids and dandelions spring up along her sides. Spring brings the rumble of avalanches to the black peaks above. Autumn is a great time to ford the river and follow the torrent as you watch a storm roll in. MAGAZINE. 31 opinion little ones ROCKET SCIENCE I grew up in this area and I think it’s ruined me a little. Honestly, one of the best parts of going on holiday is coming home. This is not a phenomenon that begins when I get to the Southern Lakes area; it sometimes begins in Auckland even. I get progressively more excited the closer I get to home. I was enraptured by the low winter light in Ashburton this time round. I’d just spent two weeks in Hawai’i and I was fizzing on the view in Ashburton. Clearly this is serious. Whilst in Hawai’i I thought about New Zealand a lot: “If I was on a beach in New Zealand I’d have it all to myself right now” - granted I’d probably be in a 5 mm wetty or a down jacket once the sun went down - “If I was in New Zealand, this would be a beach break, and I wouldn’t be quaking in my reef booties about falling on the reef or Tiger Sharks eating me” – New Zealand’s Great Whites don’t like eating us, they just take an exploratory bite – “If I was in New Zealand I wouldn’t need a permit to go for a mountain walk” - “If I was in New Zealand this coffee would be a lot more likely to be awesome.” This “grass is greener in New Zealand” narrative was ever present during a recent European trip too. Well, almost – it stopped whilst I ate French pastry, and drank Belgian beer. There are definitely things I think other places do better. I like the European’s laissez faire approach to personal safety – they seem to assume people will think before acting. I was surprised to find that Americans appear to be more relaxed about safety too; they let people ride on the back of pick-ups, and they do not instantly recoil at the sight of a dog: it’s refreshing. The Aussies are - I’ve found – generally friendlier than us Kiwis, if you don’t 32 MAGAZINE. arrive on a boat that is. But when I want to indulge in a tasty New Zealand-made craft beer after a day of flatwhite-fuelled-riding amongst mind-blowing scenery – and when I want to do that in peace, without fear of being stung, bitten or mauled, or sharing the track with the sweaty masses – there’s no place like home. We have on our doorstep one of the most incredible places on earth. I suspect the only reason we still have it this good is because there’s only a few of us here, and the majority of that few live in Auckland. Our 17 people per square km compared to say, the UK’s 259, means that we get away with a lot of environmental mismanagement. And maybe - because we just need to look out our windows to get the impression that the wilderness is doing just fine - we’re a little prone to complacency. If we want Aotearoa to remain the best place in the world to come home to, complacency is not what we need right now. If this land resonates as deeply with you as it does with me, please do all you can to protect it; our mountains, bush, rivers, lakes, oceans and all that dwell therein are worth fighting for. MIEK DEUNINCK It’s completely excellent to be a kid for many reasons, one of which is that no one contacts the psychiatric authorities when you want to blow stuff up, and when it comes to controlled explosions, there may be no better method than this childhood classic: Mentos and Coke. In honour of our “flight” theme we thought good shake. we’d tell you how to make a Coke-and- • Throw the bottle really high above your Mentos-powered rocket. It’s a great party head and let it fall onto a hard surface. trick and makes a big sticky mess that is • Run away. Blast off! really annoying to adults. Why does it work? Apparently this is • Get yourself a 2L bottle of Coke, a pack of something scientists have argued a lot about. Mentos and some masking tape. (HINTS: Most them agree it has to do with nucleation, Diet Coke works best. And use the white where the carbon dioxide in the Coke is minty Mentos, not the coloured ones. They attracted to the thousands of little bumps suck for rocket fuel.) created by microscopic layers of liquid sugar • Cut off a 10cm strip of tape and stick two or on the surface of the Mentos. Lots of bubbles three Mentos to it, leaving the tape exposed form all over the mints as they sink to the at either end. Fold over and stick the ends of bottom, releasing extra gas that pushes the the tape together. liquid away, hard. But whatever. The main • Dangle the Mentos into the bottle. Leave the thing is that it’s really cool. PS - Be careful. end of the tape hanging over the rim of the Launch in an area with lots of space. And bottle neck. don’t throw the rocket at anyone. That would • Screw the lid on, not too tight. be silly. • Turn the bottle upside down and give it a LAURA WILLIAMSON Overlooking the lake and mountains Relishes Café is something of a Wanaka institution. Seasonal, local produce dominates a contemporary menu. Open from 7am, dinner from 5pm every day. 99 Ardmore Street, Wanaka | Ph 03 443 9018 degustation on the page WHARE KEA CHEFS AMONG AUSTRALASIA’S BEST Local chefs James Stapley and Sarah Wadsworth have been causing a stir. Chef James has been invited to be the sole New Zealand representative chef at the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival Masterclass weekend, and Sarah has won Mindfood/Silver Fern’s Best Homecook of the Year competition. Chef James will join superstar chefs from around the globe to create dishes for an exclusive Relais & Chateaux International Chef and Wine dinner in Melbourne on March 6. From 8 March, he will front the Langham Masterclass session that has a central theme of water. The session takes food and wine lovers on a journey to explore the concepts and craftsmanship behind working with the rich supply of produce created from the bodies of water that connect our planet. Sarah has been assisting Chef James in the kitchen with dinner service since November. She loves the creativity involved with coming up with a new menu every day based on seasonal availability, as well as guests' preferences and dietary requirements. Her winning recipe was her own Southwestern Lamb Chili, which she had to prepare in a one-hour cook off that saw her pitted against other national finalists. Sarah finished her recipe a bit early and admittedly got creative in the last few minutes by making some fresh corn tortilla chips using an opened can of tomatoes as a cut out. "I knew I wanted to serve the dish with tortillas and kept contemplating how to maximize the flavour of the chips, while also using a convenient shape to spoon the chili onto, so the diameter of the can was perfect." For those who wish to experience Sarah and James’ cuisine, guests of Whare Kea Lodge have a five-course degustation included in their stay, and those who stay for three nights or longer may enjoy a complimentary cooking class. To try Sarah’s recipes, head to seasonalalchemist.com and to peep into Whare Kea’s kitchen, hit up: wharekealodge.com/nz/from-the-kitchen/. Southwestern lamb chilli Sarah with Mindfood editors and judges 34 MAGAZINE. THE MOUSEPROOF KITCHEN BY SAIRA SHAH The Mouseproof Kitchen opens with a birth, with all the pain, hope and dread that can come with that moment, and the blurry minutes, then hours, that follow. In this case, the parents are told their daughter is severely disabled, and will probably never walk, talk, eat properly or engage with other people. An opening chapter like this leads you to days are as much dictated by a ongoing expect two things: one, a depressing read, battle with the leaky roof, an army of cunning and two, a tale of the triumph rats and French bureaucracy of the human spirit where the as with the needs of their parents overcome adversity, daughter. An eccentric cast learn lots of lessons and wheel of neighbours and hangersoff contently into the dusk on (undocumented hippies, knowing they are better people questionable “heroes” of the for it all. Resistance, a gay orphan There’s a little bit of both with some pretty big mother here, but mostly there isn’t. issues), as well as Anna’s own That’s what makes this book judgemental and slightly potty stand out. The parents, mother, provide a foil to the Anna and Tobias are, at gentle Freya who stays sweetly the beginning, selfish about in the background as if waiting what has happened to them, for her parents to come to Pick up your copy at discussing abandoning Freya, terms with her, and with each Paper Plus Wanaka, worrying that a lifetime of other. 23 Helwick Street caring for her will hijack their Shah herself is mother to future. They share a black a child with severe cerebral humour about their situation, palsy, and while she distances about their “baby with no herself and her family from brain”—this sounds horrible, but it’s the the fictional characters in the book, Freya’s exact opposite of the noble hand wringing condition mirrors that of her own child. you’d get from characters in a Hollywood The Mouseproof Kitchen offers a genuine movie. It feels real. More importantly, it glimpse into that experience. conveys the idea that, in a situation like this, Food bonus: The novel closes with a list of there is no proper reaction. There are only recipes from the Languedoc, including olive different ways of coping. Each individual tapenade, savoury olive and ham cake and needs to find his or her own. Jerusalem artichoke soup, a reminder that The London-based pair (he’s a composer, food, in the end, makes a lot of things a lot she’s a chef) move to a run-down farmhouse better. Yum. in the Languedoc region of France. Their LAURA WILLIAMSON MAGAZINE. 35 on screen ALMOST FAMOUS (2000) MUSIC SOOTHES EVEN THE SAVAGE BEAST PART TWO Endearing teen journalist Will goes on tour with up-and-coming band Stillwater for Rolling Stone magazine. Loses his virginity, falls in love and bears witness to beautiful madness along the way. Plus Kate Hudson and Billy Crudup are in it. Swoon! Best scene: When the band’s private plane flies through a thunderstorm. Home truths as the members confess what’s on their chests. Best mid-air scene ever. MORE MUSIC MOVIES AND ROCKUMENTARIES TO MONG OUT TO Last issue we published LAURA WILLIAMSON’s favourite music movies (she got a lot of flack for the Spice Girls, but that’s what you get for being avantgarde). ANNABEL WILSON has a few more suggestions to get you through autumn. Annabel’s top five music movies. DAZED & CONFUSED (1993)) CONTROL (2007) A gritty biopic designed for watching with the curtains shut when it’s dismal outside, Manchester-style. Shot in colour then printed to black and white, Control tracks the rise and demise of Joy Division’s post punk rock Adonis, Ian Curtis. A poignant reminder of how the most talented and tortured artists fly too close to the ether. Best scene: The part when Curtis has an epileptic fit on stage. Haunting. Daunting. Will probably leave you feeling a little like the audience did when they saw this live. MAGAZINE. 36 School’s out for summer! School’s out forever! Alice Cooper blazes over the opening sequence and introduces us to a motley crew of kids on their last day of high school, 1976. Richard Linklater’s comingof-age cult film takes its title from a Led Zep song of the same name. Watch hotties including Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck and Milla Jovovich get all wiggy at the drive in and in the woods. Best scene: Alright, alright, alright! When seniors Pink (Jason London) and Wooderson (McConaughey) escort ‘fresher’ Mitch into local hangout, The Emporium. Tight pants, tighter t-shirts and flowing tresses. The apex of London’s career, considering he went on to star in the saccharine series Party of Five and recently pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct after getting in a bar fight then soiling himself in the back of a cab. Melvins and Pearl Jam. Best scene: The rare video footage of Nirvana’s first performance of their breakthrough hit, Smells Like Teen Spirit. HIGH FIDELITY (2000) This is a film for the makers of mix tapes and lists. Nick Hornby’s London-based novel is transposed to Chicago where vinyl junkie Rob (John Cusack) composes a list of his Top Five break ups then contacts his exes to figure out what went wrong. Worth watching because the “musical morons” in this movie make lists for every conceivable occasion, just like us. Best scene: Bruce Springsteen’s cameo is pretty cool, but Jack Black singing ‘Let’s Get It On’ is next level! HYPE! (1996) Rockumentary tracking the basement inception of the Seattle sound to its commercialisation in the mid 90s. Includes interviews and performances from bands linked with the Sub Pop brand like Mudhoney, Nirvana, Soundgarden, The Fly by, dine in or takeaway with Sasanoki! SASANOKI OIK I SSAA SS AA NN OK SASANOKI 26 Ardmore St Lake Wanaka Tel: 03 443 6474 26 Ardmore St, Lake Wanaka. Tel: 03 443 6474 inspiration FLOSS Two brain surgeries and a life devoid of oral hygiene Storm says that teeth are overrated. Storm wanted to be a dancer, but these days she does her dancing upon rails of powdered steel and smoke filled streets cackling with the unadulterated joy, of somebody who has nothing left to lose. As she turns to leave, an afterthought, she offers sage advice on the alternative uses for dental floss. She says, to always apply cocaine to the wound before attempting DIY stitches, and never to use mint flavoured floss. ILLUSTRATION: INDIA HUGHES On the streets of the Mission, I gave a dusty fur coat to a haggard old hippie named Storm. ALI JACS www.alijacs.com Based in Wellington, Ali Jacs is a performance poet, storyteller and New Zealand’s 2012 National Poetry Slam Champion. Her work is equal parts hilarious, hard-hitting and thoughtprovoking, speaking to the madness, and the beauty, of our times. She blew us away at this year’s Outspoken Festival of Words & Storytelling, and she has shared this poem with us. later on 38 MAGAZINE. WANAKA the little magazine with a big heart WINTER ISSUE ON THE STREET JUNE 1, 2014 onmag.co.nz GET ON THE LAKE WITH US Lake Wanaka’s watersports rental and tour specialists. Kayak, Stand Up paddle Board & Catamaran Tours, instruction and rentals. We are your local Red Air Paddleboard stockists with a huge range to choose from. Come try a Demo board and see how you like it. Alternatively come join our ISA qualified instructors on a Paddleboard class to suit your level. For those after a bit more of a challenge join one of our SUP Fitness or SUP Yoga classes run twice weekly. Contact us for more information or visit our website for details. 0800 926 925 Open daily 9am to 6pm on the waterfront opposite ‘Dungarven Street’ and the ‘Waterbar’ Look for our Logo on the van! www.wanakakayaks.co.nz
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