The famous Hawke's Bay pastures—Hastings—Maori
farmers—Mountain torrents—A backwoods clearing—
Wasteful methods—The forest and hill country—Woodville—The famous Manawatu
gorge—A curious ferry— Palmerston.
We determined to
travel to Wellington by rail and coach, instead of doing
the usual sea passage, as by so doing we would see more of
the country, and get a better idea of the progress of
settlement in the interior.
As soon as one
gets beyond the deposits of shingle on which Napier is
built, the train enters magnificently grassed country.
Rich paddocks, neatly fenced, and stocked with fine flocks
and herds. There are no unsightly stumps such as
may be seen in most Australian pastures. No dead
timber; no brush fences ; no jungle of briar and thistle
and prickly pear. There are thickly scattered about,
however (as many as three or four in some paddocks),
substantial bulky hayricks. Bountiful provision for a year
of scarcity or a bleak winter. This is, alas ! a sight
that may not commonly be seen in Australian pastures. All
the paddocks are here laid down in English grasses,
and would, I should imagine, carry possibly six, if not
ten, sheep to the acre; and such sheep, big carcases,
healthy fleeces. They are mostly a Romney cross.
After fourteen
miles, during which we cross one or two sluggish rivers,
and pass the Tomoana Meat Preserving Works, which are well
worth inspection, we pull up at Hastings, which is to Napier
pretty much what Parramatta is to Sydney. It seems
a neatly kept, flourishing town. There is one fine old
church with twin turrets. A good racecourse with new race
stand. Hotels, which so far as outward appearances go, are
immeasurably superior to the usual grog-shops which in an
Australian, country town are dignified with the
misnomer, hotel. The streets are planted with shade trees
; and rows of poplars and willows, clumps of firs and
alders, and hedges of gorse and hawthorn, with the broad
fertile pastures of home grasses, give a wonderfully
English look to the place.
After Hastings, the train runs past miles of
bare brown hills, with a long winding valley at their feet, raupo growing on
its swampy bosom, and there is little of interest for the
tourist. The rich rolling
downs, the grasses and clover, the splendid condition of sheep, cattle, and
horses, the air of rural prosperity, would doubtless have charms for the
pastoralist; but to the searcher after the picturesque it is rather
monotonous. I indulge in speculations as to the future, when increasing
population will make the land more valuable; and then, doubtless, these
myriads of acres, now lying unproductive as raupo swamp, will be drained and
cultivated, and, who knows, may be planted with rice, maize, tobacco, poppy,
oil seeds, ginger, turmeric, safflower, indigo, and other subtropical
products, for behoof of the swarming villagers. I feel certain these would
grow well here.
At Poukawa, a
native village, with a big whare in the centre, the train
stops to shunt. Groups of native women lie lazily about,
very fat, very dowdy, and very dirty. A troop of school
children, about to proceed by rail, are amusing
themselves by a noisy game at marbles, and have to break
up their game to catch the train, a disruption which gives
rise to a very pretty quarrel.
The car
platforms are very dangerous for children, having no protecting rails
whatever, and the guard informs me that already several
deaths have occurred from the consequent accidents.
Still advancing
and ascending, the scantily clad hills begin to draw
nearer to the line. At the top of a long rise, whence
looking back we get a fine view of the raupo swamps and
grassy pastures we have left behind us, we emerge into a
lovely valley, with two perfect little gems of lakelets,
one on each side of the line, nestling still and beautiful
under the bright sunshine. Myriads of ducks scuttle across
the placid water as we pass, but a number of black swans
paddle serenely about, disdaining even to turn their
graceful necks to look at us as we whizz by.
Further on in a hollow to the right, shaded by- drooping
willows, is a college for natives. The buildings of red brick look warm and
comfortable.
Here now is a
noteworthy sight. One suggestive enough of the changes time is working.
What think you? A native village. No Europeans visible. And yet here
is a modern threshing machine of the most improved pattern, with
all the latest contrivances busily at work, under
native guidance exclusively.
Only twenty
years ago, these Maoris were quite in the mood to wage war
with the settlers on the slightest pretext. Now, the men,
in European costume, are busy threshing their grain, in
the most approved modern fashion, and the scene is one of
cheerful, peaceful rural industry.
What a water-favoured
land is this. There is a lakelet in every valley or hollow
we pass. At Kaikora, surrounded by grassy hills and rich
pastures, the school children get out. Evidence of
the popular tastes in amusements is here furnished by the sight of two
racecourses—an old and a new one. We get an insight into
the staple trade here too, as the down trains for the
coast are laden with sawn timber and enormous uncut logs, and also
grain. The timber is mostly white pine and rimu.
Is it not
short-sighted policy to have no regulations, making it compulsory on
timber-getters to replace by fresh plantings this constant
depletion? A wise policy would be to have tracts set apart
for new forests, and let fresh planting of suitable trees
proceed contemporaneously with the cutting down of
the original forests. Is this being sufficiently attended
to? I doubt it. I see no signs of it. A few sparse patches
of pine are being planted here and there, but nothing
systematic or on an adequate scale seems yet to be
attempted. But of this more anon.
The train now
crosses the Waipawa River, and at Waipukura just such
another river is crossed.
These are
typical New Zealand mountain streams. Here we have the
explanation of the enormous shingle drifts on the coast.
This is one of the gigantic operations of Nature, which
alters the face of the earth, fills bays, changes
coastlines, and puts at defiance the most skilful contrivances of the best
engineers.
At present the
rivers are mere shrunken threads winding through their
desolate valleys of shingle. But in rainy seasons, or at
the melting of the snow on yonder high serrated ridge of
mountains, the torrents come tearing down the gullies and
carry tons upon tons of silt and shingle and gravel
with them; and the roar of the stones and boulders as they
roll over each other and crash onwards in the bed of the
flooded stream is louder than the angry surges on the
tempestuous coast.
Still more trim
pastures. A constantly rising, rolling country. The very
perfection of land for pastures and stock-keeping. Wire
fences by the league. Turnip paddocks, hundred of acres in
extent. Great hayricks here and there, and an occasional
mansion peeping out from its plantations of fir and willow. Alas! for the
sparsity of humanity. Sheep and cattle cannot equal
men.
Now we leave the
undulating downs and grassy ridges and enter the bush
country. We pass sidings with great logs ready for the
trucks. Wooden tramways lead everywhere into the dense
forest. Here are magnificent wild wooded valleys
and forest-clad gorges ; the silence in their deep
recesses only broken by the ring of the timberman's axe.
Dashing ever
onward and upward, we whizz across a high spidery wooden
bridge on fragile looking trestles, spanning a deep
ravine, and now reach Ormondville.
Such a township;
with its acres of blackened prostrate logs, its giant
trunks and stumps, the clearing fires, the rough
backwoodsmen, the lumbering bullock teams, and the distant peep of the
wooded hills over the ever-widening circle of
seemingly impervious bush. It recalls the stories of
Fenimore Cooper; and we could almost fancy ourselves away
in the Indian wilds of Canada.
And so to
Danevirke, a neat Danish settlement. The same prospect
here. Man carving a home out of the heart of the primeval
bush, and everywhere the fire completing the work begun by the
axe. The sky is shrouded in gloom from the smoke.
We are told this is a good burning autumn. Last year was wet, but this
season fires have been blazing for weeks, and of the poor
forest, if it were sentient, one might say, "The smoke of
its torment goeth up for ever."
No use seemingly
made of the potash? No destructive distillation of wood?
No pyroligneous acids, or wood tars, or oils, made here?
Under more enlightened processes many most valuable
products might here be utilized and saved. The
whole thing—waste, waste! Want of capital, want of
knowledge, want of foresight, want of proper labour, and
facilities for marketing. Verily, "the greater haste which
in the end may prove the lesser speed."
Possibly I am
wrong. This process may really be the cheapest and the
best, and the game may be worth the candle in the long
run. And yet my soul revolts at this wholesale
destruction. It was not so the old planters worked, in my
old pioneering days, among the forests in India. Charcoal, tar, potash,
oil, resins, gums, battens, spars, planks, even lichens
and mosses, were all found marketable; and my forest
clearing was made to pay in products for the labour
expended. I think, too, of the elaborate care bestowed on
plantations in Scotland, in Germany, and elsewhere, and
sigh as I contrast the thrift there with the extravagance
here.
But of course
circumstances alter cases, and I am conscious that under
altered conditions such as we have here, I am but poorly
qualified to judge as to what is best. And yet such
wholesale waste and destruction does to me seem grievous.
At length we
reach Tahoraite, the present terminus, eighty-two miles from Napier. -The
air is keen and bracing. Around us we can see countless
leagues of forest country and wooded ranges
stretching to the far-off plains below, and climbing in rugged succession,
range on range, right up to the topmost peaks of the main
mountain chain above us.
The
fourteen-mile drive to Woodville is very beautiful. It is
through the New Zealand bush. Having said that, I have
said enough. At Woodville, the public school and various public buildings
were neat, but, evidently, inexpensive edifices of
wood—not the extravagant palaces which the cupidity of the
electors, the plasticity of Cabinets, and the log-rolling
of members have peppered down in every hamlet in New South
Wales, where the money might have been infinitely
better expended on reproductive works of public
utility. But there!! "Off the track again, you see!"
At Woodville you
have the choice of three routes. The one, to take coach to
Masterton, and thence by rail to Wellington; another to go
on through the famous Manawatu Gorge to Palmers
ton, thence by rail to Foxton on the coast, and
then either by coach along the beach, or by steamer to
Wellington; or, thirdly, from Palmers- ton by rail to
Wanganui, and then on to the capital by steamer.
We chose the
last mentioned, as we had business in Wanganui.
About two miles out from Woodville we begin the
never-to-be-forgotten passage of the Manawatu Gorge.
The first view
of the river is striking. The valley in which it flows is
narrow, and the steep hills on either side are thickly
clad with forest. The coach (Jones's) with its three
splendid grey horses, seems suspended right over the
stream, which rolls in brown, eddying volumes close under
the road. It has, in fact, hollowed out the cliff in which the
roadway is cut. Down below, crossing an elbow of
the stream, is a graceful suspension bridge. On the
further side steep pinnacles of rock tower high into the
sky, and the defiles look black with shade. A blue haze,
like that of the Blue Mountains, shrouds all the distance.
The trees are hoary with mosses, hidden and smothered with
creepers, and laden with tangled masses of parasitic
grass.
The road is
barely wide enough for the coach. There is not ten inches
to spare at many a jutting angle. Two vehicles could not
possibly pass. Even an equestrian must pull up to let the
coach pass at certain places, sidings in the rock wall
being cut for that purpose. The wall of rock on the
left rises sheer up from the road. Beneath, whirls and
foams the river in its rocky bed. Over the river we see
the blazed line along the face of the precipices which
marks the survey for the projected railway. Above, rise
terrace on terrace of fern trees. Here a bald jutting rock
some hundreds of feet high. Here a dell of glossy verdure.
Here a plashing cascade. Here a bare ugly gash in the
steep boskiness, caused by a landslip. Every winding turn
discloses some bank or crag, some dell or ravine more exquisitely lovely
than the one * just passed.
The clang of the
hoofs on the hard road, or the boom as we cross a culvert
or bridge, echoes from cliff to cliff, and the crack of
the driver's whip is multiplied, and reverberates amid the
gorges and precipices on both sides of the pass.
Giant totaras,
ragged with age, draped with moss and lichen, tower in
masses above the lower bush, which is thickly clung with
creepers innumerable. The wind howls up the pass, and lashes
the pools into temporary fury. The tints, the
heights and deeps, the tossing foliage, the swift stream,
the mists and shadows, the fringes of ferns over the
beetling cliffs, the craggy boundary before and behind,
seeming to enclose us in a rocky prison, all form a scene
of inexpressible beauty and indescribable grandeur.
Well may New
Zealand be named wonderland, and this most glorious gorge
is aptly designated one of its chiefest wonders. After
miles of this majesty and sublimity, the cliffs open out
like the rocky jaws of some Adamantine serpent, and the
released river rolls out smilingly and open-bosomed
into the undulating forest country outside the gorge.
We cross by a
curious ferry. The boat is propelled by the current of the stream itself. A
well- oiled traveller runs on a taut wire cable. The
current catches the boat at the angle made by the
running gear on the cable, and so the traveller runs freely along, and the
boat goes across like a craft under sail.
The forest
country here shows all the evidences of frequent settlement, in houses and
herds, fences and foreign grasses. There seems to be no
crop farming. Stock-raising taxes all the energies of
the settler. Even the gardens look neglected. The
familiar stumps and prostrate logs, and slovenly paddocks
of Australian scenery again meet the eye here.
Burning is going
on all around. The air is dense with smoke. Our clothes
get white with falling ashes, and our eyes smart with the
pungent reek.
Here we pass the
railway line again, and we are now in the straggling but
thriving town of Palmerston.
Palmerston
occupies the centre of a plain, which has been carved and
cleared out of the virgin forest. It is well laid out. A
big square occupies the centre of the town, and round the
square are shops, hotels, and buildings, such as are seen
in very few country towns of much greater age and
pretensions in the mother colony of Australia.
There are several handsome churches. A hall, a public
library, several sawmills and factories of various kinds;
and the place looks altogether lively and progressive. The
railway station alone looks ramshackle, and is more like a
piggery or a dog kennel than a station.
By the time the train
from Foxton comes up it is dark, and through the deepening gloom, broken
only at fitful intervals by the lurid glare of the forest fires, we are
whirled into Wanganui, and put up at the prince of hostelries, the
Rutland Hotel.
Shortly after our trip as above recorded,
this part of the island was visited with a series of
devastating forest fires, which did enormous damage, both
to life and property, and made many families
homeless. Referring to this, a correspondent in one of
the Sydney papers gives the following graphic account
of the dangers some of the mail- coach drivers have at
times to encounter in the execution of their duty:—
"It is interesting," says
the writer, "in connection with the peculiar weather we have lately had in
New Zealand, that the Maoris in one district are just now very busy
removing their dwellings to
higher ground in anticipation of a very heavy flood setting in shortly. The
Maoris of the North Island predicted an unusually dry summer, on account of
a peculiar appearance in connection with the flax flowers. It is certain
that their prophecy in that case has turned out correct, and it remains to
be seen whether this latter prediction of the natives will also come to
pass. But the terrible bush fires that have raged throughout the country
have been the worst feature of the season, destroying as they have so much
valuable property, and in many instances endangering life. On the day
previous to that on which I travelled by coach on the same route, and
passing through an almost similar experience which I shall never forget on
the Reefton road, the following incident occurred: The coach left Nelson at
the usual hour, but on reaching the Motupiko Valley it was found that an
extensive fire was raging to the right of the route. Mr. G. Newman (the
coachdriver), however, continued his course, thinking that he could keep
ahead of the flames. But in this he was mistaken; for after proceeding a few
miles, and reaching a portion of the road where it was next to impossible
to turn the coach, he found that the fire was of greater extent than he had
imagined, and began to realize the gravity of the danger which threatened
him.
"The
country behind him he knew to be all in flames, and therefore all hope of
retreat in that direction was cut off. His only hope then consisted in his
chance of heading the fire, and he accordingly put the horses to the utmost
speed, and then commenced a race for dear life. The smoke at this time was
such as to almost entirely shut out the leading horses from the driver's
view, and the heat growing more and more intense as the great column of fire
rolled down the hillside towards the road. The flames were now within a few
yards of the roadside, and the paint on the coach began to blister and give
out a strong odour, which caused Mr. Newman to think that the coach awning
was on fire. But being himself almost suffocated with the heat and smoke,
his only thought was of reaching a point ahead, where there was a break in
the country, and a small stream into which he might throw himself, for his
whiskers and hair had already been badly singed. The coach swept on at
a terrific pace
until reaching the point on the route already referred to, where, as
expected, the fire had taken another direction, and the danger was over.
"A glance at the coach and
foaming horses then revealed how terrible had been the
ordeal through which they had just passed for the last
mile. The horses were singed fearfully, the paint had
peeled off the coach, and the only wonder seemed to be
that the awning had not ignited. Mr. Newman will not
be likely to forget that journey in a hurry.
Probably few other men could have undergone such a trial
without losing their senses. Had a burning tree fallen
across the road, or had any accident happened to the coach
at the great speed at which it was going, there would have
been no possible escape from a terrible death for
them all. But this is only one instance out of many. One
man descended a well in order to escape a raging fire, and
had a most miraculous escape from a terrible death, when the woodwork on
the top of the well caught fire, and crashed down the
shaft, but was happily extinguished in the few feet of water remaining in
the well." |