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Home / The Country

Te Araroa trail: How these two travel the world from their own home

Laurel Stowell
By Laurel Stowell
Reporter·Whanganui Chronicle·
11 Nov, 2019 04:00 PM5 mins to read

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George Mills and Rob Firmin have made a hut for Te Araroa trail walkers in their backyard. Photo / Laurel Stowell

George Mills and Rob Firmin have made a hut for Te Araroa trail walkers in their backyard. Photo / Laurel Stowell

George Mills and Rob Firmin "voyage around the world" from the comfort of their own home by hosting people who are walking the Te Araroa trail.

"We get far more out of it than we give," Mills said.

Last summer 28 of the 1100 people who walked the trail from Cape Reinga to Bluff spent a night or two at their Whanganui house.

The season officially starts on October 1, but some people start early and they've hosted seven walkers so far.

The pair started taking in walkers by chance, after they encountered a woman with an enormous backpack walking the Whanganui River Rd.

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Now they have a hut on their Whanganui property for walkers.

It was two days before Christmas six years ago, and she refused a ride or a drink and explained the trail to them.

She did agree to spend Christmas at their place, and has kept in touch ever since.

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The two men have learned a fair bit of trail jargon. TA is for Te Araroa, and a flexitarian is a trail vegetarian who eats meat when staying in a town.

Through walkers do the whole thing in one go. SOBO stands for south-bound - about 90 per cent do start in the north. NOBO means north-bound.

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Those people start at Bluff and walk north, arriving in Whanganui in March, April and May. They were a surprise to Firmin and Mills last season, arriving after the SOBO walkers had dried up in January.

NOBO walkers can't canoe up the Whanganui River. They walk the River Rd, get a jetboat from Pipiriki to the Mangapurua Landing, then continue on foot to Whakahoro and National Park.

Whanganui is nearly half way along the 3000km Te Araroa trail. Photo / Laurel Stowell
Whanganui is nearly half way along the 3000km Te Araroa trail. Photo / Laurel Stowell

Most trail walkers are young and from overseas, and some walk for a cause.

Mills and Firmin's first guest, WeeBee, had been an Alaskan park ranger and is one of those people who spend their lives doing long walks. Since doing the TA she has walked several other trails, sending them homemade postcards from all over the world.

A 19-year-old German girl took her time to finish the trail, went home and found returning to normal life difficult.

"She knows she's not the same as she was."

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One very organised young man started the trail the moment he finished school.

Mills and Firmin don't worry about theft as they open their super-organised home and garden to strangers. Firmin said people who set out to walk 3000km carrying a heavy pack tend to be honest.

Whanganui comes at the end of a strenuous week for SOBO walkers. Most have paddled down the Whanganui River from Taumarunui and been without internet access.

In Whanganui they want to rest, resupply, repair equipment and communicate online. Sometimes they stay two nights, and have a rest day. Often they spend $150 to $250 during their time in town.

Firmin and Mills are the only TA hosts here, and they would like Whanganui to be more welcoming. Anyone who wants to be a host can contact them through Facebook, to talk about it.

"It's quite disappointing that our community isn't as aware as it could be," Firmin said.

Trail walkers "hit the wall" at times, and a simple offer of a glass of water or a place to pitch a tent can make their day.

People register online to host the walkers and some hosts ask for a koha. Shops, cafes and approaches to town could put up welcome signs, and shops could offer discounts.

Te Araroa walkers at Arthur's Pass. Photo / supplied
Te Araroa walkers at Arthur's Pass. Photo / supplied

In Northland and Otago people put out boxes of fruit for walkers. In northern Spain, where thousands of pilgrims walk the Camino de Santiago every year, an industry has grown up to supply them.

The route south from Whanganui used to be a black spot on Te Araroa. Last year it was a 28km slog on SH3 and Turakina Beach Rd. It was long, open and dangerous.

Now it leaves Whanganui on Portal St, heads toward Fordell on No 2 Line, veers right down Warrengate Rd, uses 3km of SH3 to cross the Whangaehu River then turns right again, down Whangaehu Beach Rd.

At the beach it heads south down the coast, crossing the Turakina River 500m from the beach at low tide. Markers have just been installed on either side.

Many walkers spend a night at Koitiata's campground, before continuing south along the sand for16km and turning inland toward Bulls.

The 60km from Whanganui to Bulls usually take walkers two days.

Whanganui has a regional Te Araroa Trust with four members: Maureen Bamber, Dave Scoullar, Brian Doughty and Ridgway Lythgoe. The original plan for the route south was to walk the coast from South Beach, with a bridge over the Whangaehu River, and only turn inland near Bulls.

But landowners were unwilling to let walkers cross their land, and the new route is the second fall-back option the trust has tried. It is still hoping for a better long-term solution - perhaps involving that bridge over the Whangaehu River.

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