Spring Greens and an epic journey
This morning, we were collected by car from our hotel and taken to the railway station to board the Northern Explorer train. It was a long journey to Wellington: we departed Auckland at 7.45am and arrived at dusk in Wellington at 6.30pm. It was a full train, being the start of the two week school holidays. We were seated opposite a young woman from Canada who is doing a teacher training course in Auckland, and had just finished her second teaching practice. (It had suited her to do the course wholly in English whereas in Canada she would have had to do part in French.) She seemed to have found students in New Zealand easier to teach and control than teenagers in Canada.
The train is not huge, but has two observation cars with its sides open to the elements, which passengers can visit throughout the journey.See second extra. We were glad we had worn our warmest clothes as it became pretty chilly in the outdoor carriages as we ascended.
It is a spectacular route, with its most notable engineering feature being the Raurimu Spiral, designed in 1898 by the surveyor Robert Holmes. The obstacle faced in this central section of the journey was how to enable the railway to negotiate the 139 metre escarpment between the volcanic plateau in the east, and the valleys and gorges of the Whangami river in the west. Holmes solved it with one horsehorse curve, two 90 degree curves, two tunnels, and one full circle crossing over the longer tunnel! This piece of track is 11 km long although as the crow flies it is a distance of only 5km.
The journey had started passing through fairly gentle, very green, countryside with flowering cherry trees in profusion and yellow gorse in bloom The gorse of course is introduced, and is very invasive.
My main picture shows the strange volcanic scenery we then encountered before the ascent into more rugged countryside with views of snow capped Mount Ruapehu in the distance. The railway crosses the Rangitikei river valley and gorges by five viaducts. (see first extra.) I'm told these landscapes feature in the recent Lord of The Rings film.
Eventually, the railway descended into more pastoral land and headed west to hug the Kapiti coastline as the sun set.
We were very pleased to find our driver at Wellington station after such a long trip, who took us to our hotel, the rather eccentric Naumi Studio.
It's busy in Wellington because of an arts festival taking place this weekend and a big football match on tonight.
Back blipped as too tired tonight to blip
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