Fidele Soul Rides – South Island (New Zealand)

 

In this article

Cathy was born and raised in New Zealand but now resides in Sydney, Australia. She joined us on the inaugural New Zealand Maori tour in 2020, which gave her a chance to reacquaint herself with her homeland. It is from that tour that she has chosen her soul ride.

 

An aerial photo of a winding coastal road in New Zealand built into the side of steep hills beside the ocean.

 

In 2020, I was lucky enough to join the inaugural Ride and Seek Maori Epic, starting in Auckland and finishing in Queenstown, something like 20 riding days and 2000 km. Completed just prior to border closures and lockdowns.

For me, the whole journey was something of a Soul Ride, having grown up in New Zealand and having a good deal of familiarity with where we were going.

One day we rode past a friend’s house and they were able to tell us a bit about the local history, another day we stayed in a hotel that I am fairly sure we had stayed in on family holidays (which is going back a long time), and so it went on. I am sure everyone was a bit tired of hearing my nostalgic tales.

However, as my Soul Ride, I am selecting one day’s riding in particular, from Westport to Greymouth, on the South Island stage on the often-wild West Coast. The whole of that coast is very remote and is often subject to wild weather, which thankfully we mostly avoided. I say mostly because a few days later, we did get to experience some true West Coast rain at Haast (annual rainfall in Haast is 4300 mm or 169.3 inches). But for this ride, the Coast was at its sparkling best!

 

A cyclist rides along a road built along a rocky beach in New Zealand. The tall green hills come down to the edge of the road.

 

The ride was about 100k km, although we did an extra that day, taking it up to 123km and 1244m of elevation. (R&S Extra Loop - challenge accepted!)

 

A Stage 2 Mouri tour cycling route map.

 

To me, the essence of the West Coast is its remoteness and wild beauty. I have been there many times, hiking, travelling by car, and also once before on a bike (tandem) following a similar route, before returning for this much more extensive cycling adventure.

 

A single lane road runs along the beach in New Zealand, with tall green hills coming down to the road.

 

Today, the West Coast is much less populated than in its heyday, but this is set against its history of early Maori migration and also in European times of fur sealers, as well as mining for gold and coal. So on the ride, we had to use our imagination to picture these different aspects of its history.

There is a bit of information here and here.

The ride started out from our accommodation in Westport, crossing fairly open terrain, inland to start with, and then reached the coast at the tiny town of Charleston, in the 1870s and 1880s, a thriving gold-mining settlement.

Once on the coast, we were never far from the rugged rocky shoreline, climbing and descending with spectacular bushland on one side and crashing waves on the other.

 

A photo looking south along New Zealand's South Island coastline with Pancake Rocks in the foreground.

 

The most spectacular views were to be seen on the section where we stopped for lunch at Punakaiki, also known as Pancake Rocks for the magnificent layered rock formations, crashing waves forming blowholes of surf and spray.

From there, we continued on to Greymouth, taking in an extra loop to visit a disused mine, the site of the Brunner Mine disaster, one of the worst in New Zealand’s history.

 

An aerial photo of a New Zealand South Island coastal road. The road is built along a long stretch of beach.

 

From there, we retraced our path to take us on to Greymouth. First checking out the wild entrance to the port before heading to our accommodation and a fine meal at a local brewery.

 

Cathy is posing behind her black road bike with the Constitution Docks in the background.
Our author, Cathy, on the recent Strzelecki tour.

I’d do it all over again!

Cathy

 

Contact us if you would like more information about joining the Mouri Cycling Tour.

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