After a lazy day we decided that we needed to get out and about and make the most of our last full day in Raglan. But what should we do and where should we go to do it.
"How about a nice walk tomorrow ?"
"Sounds good."
"Cool, but where?"
Well there was Mount Karioi to climb and as it was our doorstep it'd be rude not too pay it a visit. All sorted then. Sandwiches were made, bags packed and the alarm was set.
With the temperatures threatening to hit 30 degees we got up at 6am and were in the car heading towards the trail head at 7am. Doesn't everyone get up early on holiday? Seemingly not - we arrived in the trail head car park to find surfer types asleep in their cars - I guess they wanted an early alarm call. Couldn't they have found somewhere more convenient to sleep? A car park 12km down a dirt track didn't seem like the obvious spot.
After changing our footwear and a quick glug of water we were off. It was only 4km to the top of the 759m hill so we were confident that we would knock it off in a couple of hours. Somewhere between Great Gable and Old Man of Coniston. Easy peasy. The climb out of the car park was uphill, but easy-going under foot and with the sun barely over the horizon it was relatively cool. It wouldn't last but at least we were getting some of the climb out of the way before it got too hot. And with spectacular views, like the one below, already starting to appear there was no rush.
But it wasn't to last.... Pretty soon we left the clearing and entered the bush. Thick, dense, bush. Our pace soon dropped as the path became more challenging. Thick roots, rocks, sudden drops and sharp rises slowed our progress to an almost crawl. Quite literally in some cases, as our arms became as useful as our legs. And all the while, at the back of our minds was the thought "We have to do this again on the way down".
The further we got up the slope, the more obscure the track became with the occasional orange triangle to mark the way. Still, at least we were making progress and being rewarded, when the bush suddenly cleared, with increasingly spectacular views.
Maybe this was going to be ok? Maybe the view at the top was going to be worth it. Maybe..... Ahhh no. As we turned a corner, well I say corner - it was more like scrambling over a rock and ducking under a tree branch - we were presented with a new challenge. One we had never come cross in years of hiking. Chains.
The route had become so vertiginous that chains had been installed to help walkers get up the slope. One of the things that I like about hiking is the fact that you use your legs, and occasionally your backside, to get up hills. Pulling yourself up chains in order to progress is not, at least in my book, hiking. Scrambling? Possibly. Climbing? Perhaps.
Still we had come this far so we pressed onwards. And upwards. There was no point in going back. Finally, after ninety minutes of slow progress we reached the first objective. Mount Karioi lookout. And what a lookout it was, as the Tasman Sea stretched out infront of us with the bush-clad hills all around. Somewhere in there was the path to the top.
As we sat and munched our sandwiches we contemplated what lay ahead. It was another hour to the summit. Another hour of battling with tree roots, rocks, and slippery slopes. Another hour up. Another hour back to where we were, maybe longer. Then another two hours back down to the car. It was going to be slow going. Very slow going. Ninety minutes so far and we'd covered a grand total of 3km. Another hour to cover just 1km to the top. You've got to be kidding.
After much debate and, it has to be said, soul searching we decided to make a tactful retreat in the full knowledge that, for the first time in our hiking history, we'd been beaten by a mountain. Sure we'd turned back on hikes before but that was only due to poor weather. We certainly didn't have that excuse today. Nope it was simply too much. Not in terms of fitness but the thought of slipping, tripping or snapping something breakable was too great. We turned around.
Pretty soon we were back at the chain section. Going down was even harder. If it looked bad on the way up, it looked worse from the top. It was a long way to fall. Slowly we slid down the rock face, clinging onto the chain for support and reassurance.
Thankfully it all went without any incidents. And was actually much easier than we thought it would be. Had we been too hasty in our retreat? Had the mental challenge overcome us? It was looking like it was a possibility. After another hour of clambering, and making good use of our bums, and with only the ladder sections in front of us we'd soon be on the home stretch. Why couldn't ladders be installed on the whole walk? Tsscchhh! Our confidence was back and we pressed on down the hill. "We'll soon be down at this rate", I said.
I didn't know just how accurate that statement was going to be. Just as the path started to level out, I lost my footing and fell head first off the narrow path down the ravine. Thankfully the dense bush was there to stop my fall otherwise it might well have been auf wiedersehen. Sarah had quite a sight when she rushed around the corner, her pace quickened by a sudden cry of "SSHHIIITTT". Sticking out of dense undergrowth were two familiar legs.
"I think I might be stuck!," a voice called from within the vegetation, "Oh, I'm slipping!" it added.
Luckily, with the aid of creeping vines, gravity and Sarah's outstretched hand, I managed to turn around, face up the slope and gingerly pull myself onto the path. "That wasn't funny" I needlessly stated adding, "I thought I was a gonner."
No serious damage done. Just a twisted knee and a dented ego. One was fixable. The other maybe not! We slowly made our way back down to the car, each step more careful than the previous, until we finally hit flatter ground. The valley floor. At last.
"Well that wasn't too bad!," I exclaimed.
The echo from the response is still, to this day, reverberating around the valley.