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Kia Ora Sept Issue

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AIR NEW ZEALAND INFLIGHT MAGAZINE<br />

SEPTEMBER 2017<br />

Game On<br />

The sporting<br />

guide to Boston<br />

Good for<br />

business<br />

The green<br />

building boom<br />

Auckland<br />

lights up<br />

Exploring the<br />

night markets<br />

Chef ’s<br />

table<br />

Josh Emmet’s food<br />

tour of Penang


Hot<br />

Cirque Du Soleil rolls<br />

out its new extravaganza<br />

this month. Toruk – The<br />

First Flight is inspired by<br />

James Cameron’s film<br />

Avatar. It’s on in<br />

Christchurch <strong>Sept</strong>ember<br />

1-10 and in Auckland<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 15-24.<br />

cirquedusoleil.com/toruk<br />

<br />

20<br />

SHOPPING<br />

Inspiration for your<br />

home, wardrobe and<br />

weekend leisure time.<br />

26<br />

SHORTLISTED<br />

World of WearableArt,<br />

Midnight Oil, comedy and<br />

Māori Language Week.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 19


Hot Shopping<br />

HOME & HEARTH<br />

Fun finds and practical pieces to make your home a haven.<br />

COMPILED BY JACQUI LOATES-HAVER<br />

<br />

Le Creuset Fleur 28cm<br />

signature shallow casserole<br />

dish, $690. 0800 526 974<br />

for stockists.<br />

<br />

Moooi Perch Light<br />

Branch, $7715. ecc.co.nz<br />

<br />

Redondo firewood<br />

holder, $590.<br />

thecleverdesignstore.com<br />

<br />

DESENT ILENT DERVE<br />

Dehicius daes igm ut exeriosse<br />

<br />

il erereped quo occullendio que<br />

Piha Lounger, $429. natqui veriam et ut aliquaectur<br />

icotraders.co.nz as<br />

qnatqui veriam<br />

<br />

Armidale table lamp<br />

in mahogany, $179.<br />

freedomfurniture.co.nz<br />

<br />

Kitten tea towel, $11.<br />

smithandcaugheys.co.nz<br />

<br />

Jan Constantine Fiesta<br />

Cactus cushion, $166.<br />

nz.amara.com<br />

<br />

Muskhane France<br />

felt bear rug, $339.<br />

teapea.co.nz<br />

20 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Hot Shopping<br />

BRIGHT IDEAS<br />

Add a pop of colour with bold shades for walls, floors and wardrobes.<br />

<br />

Tui clock by Reuben<br />

Price, $98.90.<br />

texanartschools.co.nz<br />

<br />

10.17 carat blue zircon and<br />

diamond ring, $23,500.<br />

partridgejewellers.com<br />

<br />

World Man Leopard<br />

polo shirt, $299.<br />

worldbrand.co.nz<br />

<br />

Smeg retro coffee<br />

machine, $649.<br />

kitchenthings.co.nz<br />

<br />

Deadly Ponies Boxette Rainbow<br />

bag, $510. deadlyponies.com<br />

<br />

Kate Sylvester Marisol<br />

Escobar pump, $499.<br />

katesylvester.com<br />

<br />

Richard Killeen moth rug,<br />

$4100. goodform.co.nz<br />

<br />

Kartell velvet Largo sofa,<br />

POA. kartell.co.nz<br />

22 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Hot Shopping<br />

SATURDAY NIGHT, SUNDAY MORNING<br />

The weekend’s all yours – enjoy it with new toys, tech and accessories.<br />

<br />

Audi A6 sedan, from<br />

$99,990. audi.co.nz<br />

<br />

Takayama DT2 silver<br />

surfboard, $1755.<br />

nzboardstore.co.nz<br />

<br />

Herschel Albert cap, 75.<br />

airpointsstore.co.nz<br />

<br />

R.M. Williams Classic<br />

Cleanskin Rider jacket<br />

in bone, $319.<br />

rmwilliams.com<br />

<br />

Thorens TD309<br />

suspended turntable,<br />

$2999. thehifistore.co.nz<br />

<br />

Leica TL2 camera, from<br />

$2999. photowarehouse.co.nz<br />

<br />

Karen Walker Mini<br />

Bonnie bag in rouge,<br />

$390. karenwalker.com<br />

<br />

Miss Wilson Katherine trainer,<br />

$279. kathrynwilson.com<br />

24 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Hot Events<br />

SHORTLISTED<br />

Our pick of the hottest events for the next six weeks.<br />

World of WearableArt<br />

Awards Show<br />

Why just create art when you can<br />

wear it too? The World of<br />

WearableArt Awards Show reveals<br />

the extraordinary wearable artworks<br />

created by designers from all<br />

backgrounds, and from across the<br />

globe for the internationally<br />

recognised competition. The show<br />

is a remarkable, multi-sensory<br />

theatrical event that combines<br />

theatre, art and fashion – with<br />

spectacular results.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 21 to October 8, TSB Bank<br />

Arena, Wellington. worldofwearableart.com<br />

Midnight Oil:<br />

The Great<br />

Circle Tour<br />

Sydney’s Midnight Oil,<br />

famed for one of the<br />

catchiest, best known,<br />

Australian political<br />

songs of all time, “Beds<br />

are Burning”, perform<br />

in Auckland and<br />

Christchurch as part of<br />

their global The Great<br />

Circle Tour. It’s the first<br />

time they have headlined<br />

shows in New Zealand<br />

since 1990.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 9, Spark Arena,<br />

Auckland and <strong>Sept</strong>ember<br />

11, Horncastle Arena,<br />

Christchurch.<br />

ticketmaster.co.nz and<br />

ticketek.co.nz<br />

Māori Language Week<br />

The theme for this year’s<br />

campaign is “<strong>Kia</strong> ora te reo<br />

Māori’, which celebrates our<br />

indigenous greeting. Since<br />

1975, the Māori Language<br />

Commission has been<br />

promoting the language, raising<br />

awareness and encouraging its<br />

everyday use through simple<br />

phrases every day, week and<br />

month of the year.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 11-17, tetaurawhiri.govt.nz<br />

Best Comedy Show on Earth<br />

Didn’t manage to get to the New Zealand Comedy Festival this<br />

year? Not to worry – a giggle of comedians from the festival<br />

is touring the country. Travelling to 13 cities, the Best Comedy<br />

Show on Earth promises lots of jokes and “delicious comedy<br />

flavours to suit everyone”. The line-up includes Brendhan<br />

Lovegrove, Melanie Bracewell and Dusty Rich (pictured).<br />

August 30 to <strong>Sept</strong>ember 24, nationwide. comedyfestival.co.nz<br />

FOR MORE<br />

EVENTS GO TO<br />

PAGE 135<br />

26 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

30<br />

A NIGHT OF IT<br />

We visit Auckland’s bright,<br />

buzzing evening markets.<br />

38<br />

GAME ON<br />

Have a ball in Boston,<br />

where sport is the winner.<br />

46<br />

DAY IN THE LIFE<br />

Air New Zealand’s Londonbased<br />

general manager<br />

reveals her favourite spots.<br />

Chiang Mai lantern<br />

festival is just one of many<br />

events lighting up nights<br />

throughout Thailand<br />

in early November.<br />

tourismthailand.org<br />

MORE TO EXPLORE<br />

48 Paradise in the pines<br />

Heavenly Pacific hideaway.<br />

56 Riding the rails<br />

Darwin to Adelaide.<br />

64 A taste of Penang<br />

With Josh Emett’s Woo crew.<br />

72 My place: Christchurch<br />

Sophie Pascoe’s city.<br />

78 Pamper places<br />

Fiji, the Philippines and<br />

Auckland’s East Day Spa.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 29


Travel Auckland<br />

offers so much more than a variety of<br />

sizzling hot skewers of meat.<br />

Aucklanders are notorious for sticking<br />

to their own little “villages”, or gravitating<br />

towards established eating zones, never<br />

finding out how the other half eats.<br />

But the city’s population is growing and<br />

changing, fast. Why not get out there and<br />

explore it? Some markets are alcohol-free<br />

and all are family friendly: there’s no better<br />

place for travellers and locals to embrace<br />

the true cultural and ethnic diversity of<br />

21st-century Auckland.<br />

A night of it<br />

Spring is the perfect time to explore the incredible range of Auckland’s evening markets.<br />

EXPLORING THE NIGHT markets of<br />

Auckland quickly reveals two opposing<br />

street-food tribes. On one side are food<br />

trucks, those mobile gourmet kitchens that<br />

started popping up around the city at special<br />

events and music festivals about five years<br />

ago. Food truck customers don’t mind<br />

paying a little extra for their tacos or gong<br />

bao, so long as the chicken is free-range<br />

and the salad greens didn’t travel far.<br />

STORY BIANCA ZANDER PHOTOGRAPHS ADRIAN MALLOCH<br />

When these vehicles gather en masse<br />

you have a food truck stop, aka one of the<br />

inner-city night markets found at La Cigale<br />

in Parnell, Silo Park in the city (silopark.<br />

co.nz) or Mount Albert.<br />

On the other end of the spectrum are the<br />

official Auckland Night Markets<br />

(aucklandnightmarkets.co.nz), the popular<br />

street-food jamborees that take place in<br />

empty carparks every night of the week in<br />

suburbs such as Papatoetoe, Glenfield,<br />

Pakuranga and Henderson. Cheap, cheerful<br />

and a magnet for gaudy trinkets, these<br />

arguably offer a more authentic street food<br />

experience, but you’ll have to leave your<br />

farm-to-fork principles at home.<br />

The only free-range meat you’ll potentially<br />

find at these markets is curried goat. Be<br />

brave. Go vegetarian if you must.<br />

A visit to the Auckland night markets<br />

Mount Albert Market:<br />

Streetfood Station<br />

Organic wines and craft beers are served<br />

at the Mount Albert night market, which<br />

makes for a convivial atmosphere under<br />

fairy lights in what was once a petrol station<br />

forecourt.<br />

Trestle tables seat local families, travellers<br />

and yuppies on dates. Under almost every<br />

table, a cavoodle or dachshund, but what<br />

hound wouldn’t be hoping for a morsel of<br />

juicy Angus cheeseburger from the Little<br />

Yellow Food Truck, one of about six parked<br />

up for the night?<br />

The amusing thing about food trucks is<br />

they often serve just one or two basic menu<br />

items, such as hand-cut fries, and you might<br />

need to go to another truck for, say,<br />

burgers. This can make for a spendy night<br />

– especially if you’ve got kids. We grazed on<br />

a few beers, a couple of cheeseburgers with<br />

fries, a wood-fired margherita pizza from<br />

Napoli Central Pizza (which has a<br />

permanent wood-fired oven on-site) and a<br />

serving of beef-strip nachos from Taco Loco,<br />

This page and opposite:<br />

The Friday night market<br />

under fairy lights at<br />

Mount Albert.<br />

30 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 31


Travel Auckland<br />

This page: Families,<br />

couples and groups<br />

of friends sample the<br />

wares at Mount Albert.<br />

and then we succumbed to dessert from the<br />

Little French Pastry stall.<br />

Each week there is a different dessert<br />

cart, along with a rotating series of food<br />

trucks that includes Judge Bao, Akemi’s<br />

Gyoza dumplings and Coreano (an intriguing<br />

fusion of Korean and Mexican). Everything is<br />

fresh, free-range and delicious.<br />

FRIDAYS, 5PM TO 9PM, SPROUT CAFE CARPARK,<br />

847 NEW NORTH ROAD, MOUNT ALBERT. FARMERS’<br />

MARKET, SATURDAYS, 9AM TO 1PM.<br />

Glenfield Night Market<br />

Glenfield Mall dominates the suburban<br />

North Shore landscape like a cruise liner and<br />

the night market underneath it – once you<br />

find it – is epic.<br />

With more than 50 food stalls, my advice is<br />

to join a queue and eat what’s popular<br />

before it sells out.<br />

The market is noisy and teeming with<br />

locals, and by 8pm they’ve cleaned out some<br />

delicacies. What are they scoffing? Skewered<br />

squid tentacles, three for $5, fresh off the<br />

teppanyaki grill at Taste of Japan. Pipinghot,<br />

peppery soup with hand-pulled noodles<br />

from Sichuan. Made-to-order okonomiyaki<br />

(Japanese pancakes) and baby castella,<br />

delightful egg-shaped cakes cooked in<br />

an intricate copper contraption. Roasted<br />

chestnuts, Hungarian fried bread, pork belly<br />

This page: The heaving<br />

Glenfield market where<br />

you have to be quick<br />

to snap up the most<br />

popular fare.<br />

32 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 33


Travel Night Markets<br />

gua bao, Dutch waffles, wiener sausages,<br />

Spanish churros, bubble tea.<br />

Thai, Indian, Middle Eastern, French...<br />

The biggest dilemma is the overwhelming<br />

selection. But it’s all so cheap you can afford<br />

to make mistakes, while the kids stuff their<br />

faces with dumplings. Was there ever a more<br />

perfect toddler food? Here they are five<br />

bucks for a dozen.<br />

Aside from street food, Glenfield market<br />

has an array of stalls selling everything from<br />

eco wraps and dream catchers to fresh kale,<br />

disposable clothing and ovine placenta eye<br />

cream. But there’s one stall worth making a<br />

special trip for. Tuli Pasifiks is a husbandand-wife<br />

team who sell a beautiful selection<br />

of South Island pounamu (greenstone) and<br />

whale bone pendants made by a master<br />

carver in Hokitika.<br />

SUNDAYS, 5.30PM TO 11PM, UNDER COUNTDOWN,<br />

GLENFIELD MALL.<br />

This page and<br />

opposite: The Botany<br />

Night market offers<br />

a variety of food<br />

experiences from<br />

around the world.<br />

Botany Night Market<br />

If you haven’t been to any of the official<br />

Auckland night markets, Botany is a great<br />

place to start. Small and contained, with a<br />

low-key vibe and live rock bands, it’s home<br />

to some of the best street food we sampled.<br />

The garlic, mayo, cheese karaage chicken –<br />

exactly what it says on the label – from<br />

Karappa Japanese Fried Chicken, is worth<br />

driving halfway across Auckland for.<br />

Next door, the mother and daughter team at<br />

Daddy’s Soul Fried BBQ tell me the sweet story<br />

of how their incredible tangy BBQ sauce is a<br />

loving tribute to the cooking of their Samoan<br />

and Californian parents and grandparents.<br />

At other night markets, the stallholders<br />

are too busy to chat, but the more relaxed<br />

pace of Botany leads to some interesting<br />

and educating conversations.<br />

At the Klasiq Sizzle South African food<br />

truck the Durban-Indian chef patiently<br />

demonstrates how to make “bunny chow”<br />

by cutting a loaf of crusty white bread into<br />

three equal cubes, which are then hollowed<br />

out and filled with curry.<br />

Another must-try, for the spectacle<br />

alone, is “DG knife-shaved noodles”.<br />

Watch as a robot, which some wag has<br />

provided with an Ironman helmet, slices<br />

noodle strings from a fresh dough block into<br />

a cauldron of steaming, fragrant and<br />

savoury soup.<br />

The usual array of toys and trinkets is<br />

on sale at other stalls, as well as services<br />

such as speedy manicures.<br />

WEDNESDAYS, 5PM TO 11PM, UNDER HOYTS,<br />

BOTANY TOWN CENTRE,<br />

34 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 35


Travel Auckland<br />

This page: Fried<br />

chicken and fruit<br />

at the Papatoetoe<br />

market; under the light<br />

illumination at Silo<br />

Park market.<br />

Papatoetoe Night Market<br />

An episode of the television show Sidewalk<br />

Karaoke was being filmed at the market the<br />

night we went, and the excitement of the<br />

contest had us grinning like loons – alongside<br />

hundreds of other families and locals of all<br />

generations. Fun, inclusive and buzzing,<br />

Papatoetoe Night Market has an atmosphere<br />

all its own, and it’s a terrific place for travellers<br />

to sample Māori and Pasifika cuisine,<br />

alongside Kiwiana and Asian favourites.<br />

There’s a stall that sells hāngi – steaming<br />

piles of chicken, lamb, pork, kumara, potato,<br />

pumpkin, cabbage and stuffing, slow-cooked<br />

the traditional Māori way.<br />

Another offers rewena bread and a boil-up<br />

of pork bone, puha (a leafy green) and potato<br />

dough balls. There’s even a spot selling the<br />

humble bacon and egg roll.<br />

Kai moana (seafood) is well represented,<br />

with plenty of stalls offering Samoan-style<br />

raw fish salad alongside mussel, paua and<br />

whitebait fritters. Barbecued meat is cheap<br />

and plentiful at stalls with such charming<br />

names as “Hungry Islanders”.<br />

Many locals head straight for the Pasifika<br />

food stalls for a comforting taste of home<br />

– chop suey, pink potato salad, steak and<br />

mushroom sauce, hot doughnuts – while<br />

others run a mile, saying they can eat<br />

Island-style “any night of the week”.<br />

For an Asian spice kick I recommend the<br />

pork belly, pickled veges and crushed<br />

peanut bao from BAO.<br />

One bonus of the Papatoetoe market is a<br />

large range of stalls selling everything from<br />

socks, perfume and manicures, to fruit and<br />

veges, second-hand clothing and T-shirts<br />

emblazoned with Southside slogans.<br />

FRIDAYS, 5.30PM TO 12AM, UNDER KMART<br />

(HUNTERS PLAZA), GREAT SOUTH ROAD.<br />

Seasonal and occasional<br />

night markets<br />

Over the summer months, night markets and<br />

food truck stops pop up in almost every<br />

suburb of Auckland, from Green Bay to<br />

Te Atatu to Point Chevalier.<br />

Close to the central city, Parnell’s La Cigale<br />

French market runs an occasional food truck<br />

stop with offerings such as Judge Bao, The<br />

Rolling Pin (dumplings) and Guerrilla Grill.<br />

The Silo Markets run markets throughout<br />

the summer at the city’s Silo Park.<br />

There is a rotating roster of food trucks,<br />

plus stalls offering everything from secondhand<br />

books and records, to vintage and<br />

designer clothing – which is all too easy to<br />

buy after you’ve stopped by the all-important<br />

craft beer stall.<br />

36 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Boston<br />

GIt is home to America’s oldest<br />

baseball park, the Celtics<br />

basketball team and one of the<br />

world’s most celebrated<br />

marathons. Boston is a city where<br />

AME<br />

New England – and the world –<br />

comes to play.<br />

STORY CAMERON OFFICER<br />

O N<br />

38 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 39


Travel Boston<br />

BOSTONIANS ANNOUNCE THEIR love of<br />

sport long before you’ve even touched down<br />

on the Eastern Seaboard. When I boarded<br />

my flight from San Francisco, I was greeted<br />

by a sea of Red Sox baseball caps, Harvard<br />

Rowing sweatshirts and Celtics basketball<br />

singlets (it was summer after all).<br />

This town lives for sport, fielding national<br />

champions and internationally recognised<br />

franchises in a number of American codes.<br />

As much as the city is the focal point of<br />

American independence, Boston’s sports<br />

history – and its citizens’ undying love of<br />

contemporary battle on the court or field<br />

– is very much a part of its beating heart.<br />

Fenway Park (boston.redsox.mlb.com) is<br />

where these two sides of Boston collide.<br />

America’s oldest baseball ground, Fenway, is<br />

a museum; it’s just one that happens to<br />

resonate with the sound of feverish crowds<br />

several nights a week when Boston’s beloved<br />

Red Sox are playing at home. Oldest? It<br />

pre-dates Chicago’s Wrigley Field by two<br />

seasons. To give some context, the first<br />

game ever played there was on April 9, 1912.<br />

That’s five days before the Titanic hit an<br />

iceberg in the North Atlantic Ocean.<br />

Witnessing a home game against a worthy<br />

adversary here is unlike any other sporting<br />

occasion you’re likely to experience. Unless<br />

you’re a New York Yankees fan, of course.<br />

After defeating the Chicago Cubs in the<br />

1918 World Series, the Boston Red Sox were<br />

at the top of the heap, thanks to their<br />

legendary slugger, Babe Ruth.<br />

But in 1919 the Red Sox sold “the Bambino”<br />

to the New York Yankees and so began<br />

Boston’s fierce rivalry with their southern<br />

neighbours, and the so-called “Curse of the<br />

Bambino” – a superstition that evolved<br />

through the decades from the moment<br />

Ruth left Fenway Park until 2004, when<br />

the Red Sox finally broke an 86-year losing<br />

streak and won the World Series.<br />

I found out all this and much more on<br />

a walking tour of Fenway Park.<br />

While these hour-long visits don’t take you<br />

out onto the diamond itself, visitors are<br />

escorted almost everywhere else, from the<br />

best seats in the house (above the “Green<br />

Monster”, the 11.33m left-field wall that still<br />

houses the ballpark’s 1934-era scoreboard), to<br />

the media room high above the diamond, to<br />

the visiting teams’ changing room – a former<br />

supply cupboard where out-of-town<br />

opponents trip over each other in purposely<br />

designed compact solitude. Well, team sports<br />

are 90 percent psychology, right?<br />

Speaking of psychology, I’m not a runner.<br />

Various purchases of expensive “this time,<br />

——<br />

As much as Boston is a<br />

focal point of American<br />

independence, its sports<br />

history – and its citizens’<br />

undying love of battle on the<br />

court or field – is very much<br />

part of its beating heart.<br />

——<br />

Clockwise from top: Fenway Park, home of the<br />

Boston Red Sox; the Red Sox in action; the start<br />

of the Boston Marathon in Hopkinton; Baseball<br />

caps for sale in Quincy Market; and the Boston<br />

Sports Museum.<br />

40 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 41


Travel Boston<br />

——<br />

Want to see Larry Bird’s<br />

number 33 Celtics vest,<br />

vintage posters from the<br />

New England Patriots’<br />

storied past or learn about<br />

the goal that won the Stanley<br />

Cup in 1970? It’s all here.<br />

——<br />

for sure” running shoes and roadside weeping<br />

sessions proved to me I just don’t have the<br />

mental fortitude for it.<br />

So, while I’m almost envious of the<br />

thousands who flock to Boston on the third<br />

Monday in April to take part in one of<br />

endurance running’s premier events – the<br />

Boston Marathon (baa.org)– I was<br />

perfectly content to trace the inner-city<br />

portion of the route at walking pace.<br />

The Boston Marathon begins in the rural<br />

New England town of Hopkinton.<br />

Runners traverse leafy Massachusetts<br />

settlements all the way into metropolitan<br />

Boston, before turning into Boylston Street<br />

and crossing the finishing line near the<br />

John Hancock Tower in Copley Square.<br />

In any other week of the year Boylston<br />

Street is a busy thoroughfare notable for<br />

the mammoth Boston Public Library and<br />

Trinity Church.<br />

In the third week of April, however, this<br />

stretch of urban tarmac is the scene of<br />

triumph and exhaustion. But mainly triumph.<br />

Triumph is writ large in the Boston Sports<br />

Museum (sportsmuseum.org)too. It is housed<br />

within the colossal TD Garden entertainment<br />

venue and showcases memorabilia from all<br />

the big local codes.<br />

Want to see Larry Bird’s number 33<br />

Celtics vest, vintage posters from the New<br />

England Patriots’ storied past or learn<br />

about Bobby Orr and the famous goal that<br />

won the Boston Bruins ice hockey team<br />

the Stanley Cup in 1970? It’s all here.<br />

This New England city isn’t just about<br />

organised spectator sports, though.<br />

Boston’s many parks, pedestrian paths<br />

and green spaces offer a variety of<br />

environments for a run, walk or bike ride.<br />

In fact, combine The Esplanade, which<br />

stretches from Beacon Hill down to Back<br />

Clockwise from top: Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial<br />

Bridge (Zakim Bridge) over the Charles River;<br />

Harvard University campus; Acorn Street, in the<br />

fancy neighbourhood of Beacon Hill; The Boston<br />

Public Library McKim building; charming Newbury<br />

Street is a dining and shopping hub.<br />

42 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 43


Travel Boston<br />

Bay alongside the Charles River, with the<br />

Dr Paul Dudley White Bike Path (named after<br />

a Harvard-educated pioneer cardiologist),<br />

and you have several kilometres of riverside<br />

riding and walking space.<br />

Here there are views aplenty of<br />

watercraft plying the river, although I was<br />

more fascinated by the red-brick mansions<br />

of Back Bay along Beacon Street, on the<br />

other side of the pathway.<br />

These historic homes chart the rise of<br />

Boston’s commercial aristocracy, although<br />

they were all built facing the street, rather<br />

than the river itself, providing strolling<br />

voyeurs like me with a great view of Back<br />

Bay’s backyards.<br />

With Boston’s heady mix of American<br />

social history and all that baseball and<br />

football action, you’d be forgiven for<br />

forgetting this is a harbour town. But<br />

boating is big in Boston, and I’m not just<br />

talking about the Tea Party ships<br />

(although you can get a feel for these at<br />

the interactive Boston Tea Party Museum<br />

bostonteapartyship.com).<br />

At the northern end of The Esplanade,<br />

past the instantly recognisable open-air<br />

dome of the Hatch Memorial Shell, little<br />

pink triangles start coming into view out<br />

on the river – sailboats from Community<br />

Boating Inc (community-boating.org), which<br />

is the United States’ oldest community<br />

sailing club.<br />

If you’re keen to get out on the river,<br />

Community Boating offers four- and fiveperson<br />

sailboats for hire, as well as kayaks,<br />

windsurfers and stand up paddleboards,<br />

although landlubbers need to prove prior<br />

experience to cast off in the yachts.<br />

All this activity... Forgive me, but I think<br />

I’ll head back to Fenway Park. The Red Sox<br />

are in town and there’s a beer and burger<br />

combo with my name on it.<br />

boston.gov<br />

Above: Yachting<br />

with Community<br />

Boating Inc.<br />

Eat<br />

REGINA PIZZERIA<br />

World famous in Boston, Regina<br />

Pizzeria, which has been serving<br />

slices since 1926. The family-owned<br />

restaurants with their brick ovens<br />

elevate pizzas above mere fast food.<br />

There’s a perfectly positioned Regina<br />

Pizzeria across from Fenway Park. So<br />

before encountering all the snack<br />

vendors on Yawkey Way outside the<br />

stadium, duck in for a slice of<br />

pomodoro formaggio or St Anthony<br />

sausage pizza and a cherry cola.<br />

reginapizzeria.com<br />

UNION OYSTER HOUSE<br />

As with any claim to being “first”,<br />

there are plenty of others who might<br />

issue a challenge. But Boston’s Union<br />

Oyster House certainly looks to be<br />

the real deal – the nation’s very first<br />

restaurant. Founded in 1826, this<br />

specialty seafood emporium is on the<br />

Freedom Trail right in the heart of the<br />

city. unionoysterhouse.com<br />

Sleep<br />

XV BEACON<br />

In the heart of historic Beacon Hill is<br />

the luxurious XV Beacon, a boutique<br />

establishment that has been the<br />

recipient of awards from a variety of<br />

travel publications. This inner-city<br />

hotel mixes olde-worlde pageantry<br />

with modernist interior design and the<br />

name of the XV’s restaurant – Mooo...<br />

– tells you exactly what sort of<br />

premium fare you can expect.<br />

xvbeacon.com<br />

THE VERB HOTEL<br />

If you want to soak up that Red Sox<br />

atmosphere, The Verb Hotel offers<br />

something completely different within<br />

sight of the light towers of Fenway<br />

Park. This low-lying modernist hotel<br />

Getting there<br />

Air New Zealand operates<br />

non-stop flights from Auckland<br />

to Los Angeles, San Francisco,<br />

and Houston, with ongoing<br />

connections to Boston.<br />

Holiday Packages <br />

0800 747 222<br />

Holidays Travel Brokers <br />

0800 737 767<br />

airnewzealand.co.nz<br />

was originally opened in 1959 (as the<br />

Fenway Motor Hotel) and in recent<br />

years has been painstakingly<br />

restored to its original design and<br />

given a suitably retro rock ‘n’ roll<br />

makeover, with a bit of an indie edge.<br />

It’s like a little slice of Route 66<br />

Americana smack-bang in the middle<br />

of Boston’s baseball boulevard.<br />

theverbhotel.com<br />

Play<br />

NEWBURY STREET<br />

Fancy a break from stadium seats<br />

and hot dogs? Head straight to<br />

Newbury Street in Back Bay, a<br />

well-heeled shopping street that’s<br />

home to all manner of coffee houses,<br />

independent retail gems and high-end<br />

chain stores. About the only thing you<br />

won’t find in abundance is sports<br />

paraphernalia. But believe me, there<br />

are plenty of other places in Boston<br />

for that.<br />

HARVARD UNIVERSITY<br />

From downtown, take the Metro red<br />

line across the river to Cambridge. It<br />

takes five short stops to arrive at that<br />

hallowed seat of Ivy League education,<br />

Harvard University. Alumni include<br />

Barack Obama, Mark Zuckerberg, Bill<br />

Gates, Kareena Kapoor, Rashida<br />

Jones and Matt Damon – and in terms<br />

of numbers, tourists seem to rival<br />

students. History seeps from the<br />

bricks and, if you fancy some<br />

education of your own, the Harvard<br />

Museum of Natural History is a<br />

must-see. hmnh.harvard.edu<br />

TRIDENT BOOKSELLERS<br />

AND CAFE<br />

Trident Booksellers and Cafe. is a<br />

haven for bookworms, and the cafe is<br />

such a popular breakfast stop.<br />

tridentbookscafe.com<br />

BOSTON<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY ALAMY, GETTY<br />

44 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Isle of Pines<br />

Paradise<br />

in the Pines<br />

This page: The Le Méridien<br />

Isle of Pines at Oro Bay.<br />

Opposite: The lagoon<br />

known as the Piscine<br />

Naturelle (Natural Pool).<br />

If visitors to the Isle of Pines ever tire of gazing romantically into each other’s eyes,<br />

there are always the almost impossibly beautiful beaches and lagoons.<br />

STORY SHARON STEPHENSON<br />

48 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 49


Travel Isle of Pines<br />

THERE ISN’T MUCH to the Isle of Pines,<br />

a tiny speck on a part of the map without<br />

many specks. You can drive around the<br />

narrow, winding roads in 40 minutes,<br />

speed bumps included. There’s a bank, post<br />

office, pharmacy and an enormous 18thcentury<br />

church. But that’s kind of the point.<br />

This French overseas territory, a<br />

25-minute flight from the New Caledonia<br />

capital of Noumea, is where you come to<br />

wiggle your toes in icing-sugar sand and<br />

to get familiar with sun-protection factor<br />

30, a book and the insides of your eyelids.<br />

And, judging by the guests at the island’s<br />

largest hotel, Le Méridien, to breathe life<br />

into an existing relationship or celebrate a<br />

new one (beware the glint of those shiny<br />

new wedding bands).<br />

Sadly, my plus-one is back in Wellington,<br />

so I’m something of an oddity at the breakfast<br />

buffet – a woman with only her phone and<br />

a large stack of pancakes for company.<br />

“We wondered if you’d been stood up at<br />

the altar and decided to come on your<br />

honeymoon alone,” says Sara, not unkindly,<br />

after inviting me to join her and her<br />

husband one morning.<br />

The German couple has crossed nine<br />

time zones to spend a week in this slither<br />

of paradise. “That’s the secret to a happy<br />

marriage,” says Sara. “Find the most<br />

romantic destinations in the world and<br />

visit them often.”<br />

I can see why they picked the Isle of<br />

Pines. It might be just three hours from<br />

New Zealand, but this South Pacific idyll is<br />

so far removed from the tourist superhighway,<br />

you’re able to live out your<br />

loved-up Robinson Crusoe fantasies on<br />

deserted beaches.<br />

Plus, thanks to the French who showed<br />

up in the 1800s, you get to say bonjour (a lot)<br />

while scoffing fat, flaky croissants and<br />

deliciously gooey cheese.<br />

It’s as if a chunk of France broke off and got<br />

stuck half-way between Australia and Fiji.<br />

The indigenous people, the Kanaks,<br />

originally called their island Kunie. But<br />

Captain Cook, passing by in 1774 en route<br />

to New Zealand, spotted the araucaria pines<br />

which perforate the hillsides like a row of<br />

jagged teeth and, somewhat unimaginatively,<br />

christened it the Isle of Pines.<br />

Almost two centuries later, Japanese<br />

novelist Katsura Morimura wrote about<br />

“the island closest to paradise” and the<br />

phrase stuck, mainly because it’s true.<br />

Even the United Nations considers this<br />

island so special, it’s granted part of it<br />

UNESCO world heritage status.<br />

You have to wind your calendar back<br />

several decades when you arrive in the<br />

tiny settlement, population 2500.<br />

Ignore the four-wheel drives and the odd<br />

cellphone tower and it could be 1980. Or<br />

even 1950. Things don’t change much here.<br />

But that’s part of the attraction for my<br />

fellow guests, who alternate between<br />

staring at the gob-smacking views and<br />

into each other’s eyes.<br />

My guide, the smiling Zerena, tells me<br />

Le Méridien was built 20 years ago for the<br />

Japanese honeymoon market.<br />

The 48-room hotel, built on a century-old<br />

coconut grove in a bend of Oro Bay, has<br />

since flung open its doors to all-comers,<br />

including families, the retired and those<br />

well-heeled enough to be thinking about it.<br />

No matter who you are, this is pretty<br />

much how your days will go: wake up to the<br />

sound of lorikeets and kingfishers, eat the<br />

tastiest baguettes this side of Notre Dame,<br />

move from the sun-lounger to the pool,<br />

snorkel/swim/kayak, eat your bodyweight<br />

in the world’s sweetest mangoes, repeat.<br />

A 10-minute walk from the hotel is La<br />

Piscine Naturelle (the Natural Pool), a shallow<br />

enclosed lagoon boarded by limestone rocks<br />

and connected to the Pacific via a series of<br />

narrow caves. I run out of adjectives trying<br />

to describe the particular blue of the water<br />

as I wade among schools of tiny reef fish<br />

that brush against my feet, thinking I might<br />

be worth a nibble.<br />

The coral-filled natural pool, about 100m<br />

wide and separated from the reef by a<br />

sandbar, provides safe snorkelling, even<br />

for beginners, who are rewarded with the<br />

brilliantly hued marine life. It’s easy to<br />

spend the whole day here and if you ask<br />

nicely, the hotel will provide a picnic<br />

lunch, usually something involving a<br />

lobster plucked not too far from where<br />

you’re eating it.<br />

Brush Island, a short boat-ride away, looks<br />

like the backdrop to a Bounty Bar advert.<br />

There’s no one but us and a young<br />

Japanese couple who got married in Noumea<br />

three days ago. They’ve spent the morning<br />

snorkelling around this uninhabited island<br />

and are awaiting delivery of a picnic lunch.<br />

“A friend honeymooned on the island and<br />

Left: Kayaks on<br />

Kanumera Beach.<br />

Clockwise from top:<br />

A pine-lined inlet;<br />

Zerena’s cousin<br />

Daniel and his<br />

pirogue; escargot..<br />

——<br />

‘I run out of adjectives trying<br />

to describe the particular blue<br />

of the water as I wade among<br />

tiny reef fish that brush<br />

against my feet, thinking<br />

I might be worth a nibble.’<br />

——<br />

after seeing her photos, we knew nowhere<br />

else would do for our honeymoon,” they say.<br />

We leave them to it, strolling along the<br />

beach, while Zerena tells me what drew<br />

her back to the Isle of Pines after 10 years<br />

in London.<br />

“This island is like a magnet,” she says<br />

of her birthplace, which is 95 percent<br />

Kanak, with most of the remainder<br />

transplants from France. “So many of our<br />

young people go to Noumea or overseas,<br />

but they always come back.”<br />

Hilary Roots understands why. Nicknamed<br />

Cleo by the locals, who find her name<br />

hard to pronounce, the expat Kiwi came to<br />

the island for a five-day holiday in 1975.<br />

She’d been working as a political journalist<br />

50 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 51


Travel Isle of Pines<br />

in Sydney and was looking for a quieter pace.<br />

“On the first day Albert, a Swiss-German<br />

designer, who’d been running a dive business<br />

on the island, chatted me up,” she says.<br />

“My five days turned into 10 and I’ve<br />

pretty much lived here ever since. But look<br />

how beautiful it is,” she says, gesturing to<br />

the lush Kuto Bay property where she and<br />

Albert, who’s called Chichu (Jesus) by the<br />

locals because of his long hair, have carved<br />

out a low-key existence.<br />

Along with writing books about the island<br />

and welcoming cruise passengers, Roots<br />

screen prints T-shirts and sarongs she<br />

sells from a small shop at the front of the<br />

property. It all seems so romantic, I’m<br />

tempted to ask if she wants to swap lives.<br />

We drive around the island, stopping<br />

every few minutes for Zerena to yell a<br />

cheery bonjour to passersby.<br />

“That’s my brother/cousin/uncle,” is a<br />

refrain I hear numerous times during my<br />

two days here. “I’m pretty much related to<br />

everyone here,” she laughs.<br />

It’s hard to believe but not everyone was<br />

so enamoured with this sub-tropical slice<br />

of serenity.<br />

Inspired by the British models of<br />

deportation to Australia, in the 1800s<br />

French authorities decided prisoners could<br />

be reformed through work in the colonies.<br />

More than 3000 prisoners were plucked<br />

from the streets of Paris and exiled to a<br />

brick prison not far from the main port,<br />

Kuto Bay.<br />

We wander through the former settlement,<br />

where tangled vines sprout from crumbling<br />

walls and papaya trees grow where the roof<br />

once was. Zerena tells me the near constant<br />

sunshine was of little comfort to the prisoners:<br />

“Most of those who survived couldn’t wait to<br />

leave, fleeing mainly to Australia.”<br />

——<br />

‘On the first day Albert<br />

chatted me up... My five<br />

days turned into 10 and I’ve<br />

pretty much lived here ever<br />

since. But look how<br />

beautiful it is.’<br />

——<br />

Clockwise from top<br />

left: Queen Hortense’s<br />

Grotto; a local<br />

performer; a profusion<br />

of flowers, including<br />

bougainvillea.<br />

Opposite: The lush<br />

Le Méridien gardens.<br />

Prisoners weren’t the only things the<br />

French brought with them. They also<br />

converted the locals to Catholicism.<br />

The whitewashed church at Vao aside,<br />

the most obvious example of this is the<br />

silvery statue of Saint Maurice which marks<br />

the spot where the island’s first Catholic<br />

service was held.<br />

Here, traditional religion and local<br />

Melanesian culture collide – the statue is<br />

surrounded by carved poles, gifts from the<br />

island’s eight different tribes.<br />

A full stomach is never a reason to forgo<br />

a meal here, so we head to Relais de<br />

Kuberka, a family-run gite which combines<br />

hut-style accommodation with a restaurant.<br />

Not being of the meat-eating persuasion,<br />

I say non to the local specialty, escargot<br />

(snails), opting instead for a hunk of fresh<br />

mullet with a side of ubiquitous roasted<br />

yam. Much larger than our kumara, these<br />

carb-heavy vegetables with bark-like skin<br />

are such a feature of island life, there’s an<br />

annual festival dedicated to them.<br />

52 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 53


Travel Isle of Pines<br />

Eat<br />

KUNIE KAA<br />

Bulimes, or escargots de l’le des<br />

Pins, are endemic to the island and<br />

are beloved by the locals. At Gite<br />

Nataiwatch’s Kunie Kaa restaurant, a<br />

plate of the lightly seasoned<br />

gastropods will set you back around<br />

$40. The restaurant is open for<br />

breakfast, lunch and dinner.<br />

nataiwatch.com<br />

KOU-BUGNY<br />

Try the local blue shrimp at Kuto<br />

Bay’s restaurant Kou-Bugny.<br />

They come crumbed and lightly<br />

pan-fried. This local specialty isn’t<br />

cheap but is worth every cent.<br />

kou-bugny.com<br />

Sleep<br />

LE MÉRIDIEN ILE DES PINES<br />

is the island’s only five-star resort.<br />

Situated on a natural lagoon, it<br />

features a range of rooms, suites<br />

and bungalows, including some<br />

overlooking the beach and lush<br />

coconut grove. There’s an infinity<br />

pool, gym, spa, restaurant, small gift<br />

shop and complimentary use of gear<br />

for snorkelling. Breakfast is included,<br />

while lunch and dinner feature a<br />

delicious mash-up of French and<br />

Kanak cuisine.<br />

lemeridieniledespins.com<br />

Play<br />

VANILLA PLANTATION<br />

Visit the vanilla field near Gadji for a<br />

fascinating look at how this expensive<br />

spice is grown. Tiphaine, a recent<br />

arrival from France, will give you a<br />

tour of the property and show you<br />

how she grows, dries and exports<br />

the fragrant vanilla pods.<br />

QUEEN HORTENSE’S GROTTO<br />

Check out Queen Hortense’s Grotto,<br />

an impressive cave hidden in the<br />

belly of limestone cliffs. The popular<br />

attraction gets its name from the<br />

island’s former queen who was forced<br />

to hide there for almost a year<br />

in1855, thanks to an uncle who<br />

objected to her ascending the throne.<br />

I’m awake the next morning before the<br />

mosquitoes to visit Pic Nga, a 45-minute<br />

thigh-curdling hike 262m to the island’s<br />

highest point. It’s worth it, though, for the<br />

views across the island, from Kuto Bay,<br />

where the cruise ships dock, to the rocky<br />

outcrop of Kanumera, which the locals<br />

consider sacred.<br />

In between are bright slashes of pink,<br />

spilled by the island’s many bougainvilleas.<br />

Zerena tells me I can’t leave the island<br />

without experiencing a pirogue, a<br />

traditional outrigger canoe with a single<br />

triangular sail.<br />

It just so happens that her shy,<br />

dreadlocked cousin Daniel owns one, so at<br />

the picturesque Baie de St Joseph we<br />

clamber aboard the vintage vessel.<br />

Gliding elegantly across the waters with<br />

no one else in sight, the only sound the salt<br />

water gently hitting the outrigger, we spot<br />

stingrays and green turtles, which play<br />

around the boat, diving like synchronised<br />

swimmers in search of food.<br />

The 90 minutes I spend on the pirogue<br />

does more for my stress levels than a week<br />

of downward dogs ever could.<br />

I run into my German breakfast<br />

companions several times during my stay<br />

(it’s a small island), and each time they look<br />

more blissfully in love.<br />

I tell them I’ll be back to the Isle of Pines,<br />

but next time with my husband in tow.<br />

newcaledonia.travel/nz<br />

Above: Carved poles<br />

at Saint Maurice Bay.<br />

Right: The church at<br />

Vao.Clo<br />

Getting there<br />

Holiday Packages <br />

0800 747 222<br />

Holidays Travel Brokers <br />

0800 737 767<br />

airnewzealand.co.nz<br />

ISLE OF PINES<br />

Air New Zealand offers<br />

non-stop flights to<br />

Noumea from Auckland<br />

with connections from<br />

across the domestic<br />

network.<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY ALAMY, GETTY, SHARON STEPHENSON<br />

54 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Australia<br />

RIDING<br />

THE<br />

The Ghan rumbles through the immense, parched Australian<br />

interior between Darwin and Adelaide, following in the tracks<br />

of pioneer railway builders and cameleers.<br />

STORY JENNY FARRELL<br />

RAILS<br />

56 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 57


Travel Australia<br />

unforgettable four-day, three-night journey<br />

from Darwin to Adelaide through Australia’s<br />

storied Red Centre, with stops for excursions<br />

(including the Uluru flight) to cater for the<br />

increasing numbers of travellers lining up to<br />

travel in the time-honoured fashion of last<br />

century, but with modern benefits.<br />

Our contingent of nearly 300 passengers<br />

assembled at Darwin railway station on the<br />

morning of departure. It was our first<br />

glimpse of the legendary train, which<br />

stretched far beyond the platform, its<br />

monogrammed carriages gleaming in the<br />

sun. The reaction of an Aussie bloke standing<br />

next to me summed it up: “Streuth, it’s<br />

bloody long!” Yep, 904m to be exact, from<br />

the last car to the two red locomotives up<br />

front, which, let me tell you, is quite a walk<br />

in the heat of the desert sun.<br />

WE’D BEEN FLYING south-west of Alice<br />

Springs over the vast red desert for nearly<br />

an hour before our destination hove into<br />

view: majestic, mysterious Uluru, its<br />

characteristic shape even from a distance<br />

quite unmistakable. From my seat in the<br />

tiny Cessna I watched, spellbound, as we<br />

approached until we were flying just 1500ft<br />

above it, the ridges and markings on its<br />

broad surface standing out like scars on<br />

the back of a giant prehistoric beast.<br />

We stared down in awed silence, amazed<br />

by the intensity of its colour, and at just how<br />

huge it is. At 348m above the ground, with<br />

another 2.5km below the desert surface,<br />

Uluru is the largest monolith in the world.<br />

Formed millions of years ago when much<br />

of the region was under water, Uluru has<br />

been a sacred site for Aboriginal tribes for<br />

more than 10,000 years. The rock art<br />

discovered there is testament to its cultural<br />

significance long before it was given its<br />

European name, Ayers Rock, in 1873.<br />

In the early days of tourism, little heed<br />

was paid to Uluru’s importance to the<br />

traditional land owners. Today, however, it<br />

is part of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park,<br />

jointly administered by the Anangu tribe<br />

and Parks Australia. Some particularly<br />

significant areas are off limits to tourists,<br />

Pilot Jim Wallace, an affable Kiwi with a<br />

dry sense of humour, has taken thousands of<br />

tourists out to “the Rock” in the five years<br />

he’s been flying with Northern Territory Air<br />

Services (ntas.com.au), and says it’s a sight<br />

he never tires of. “Depending on the light<br />

conditions, the cloud cover and the season,<br />

the rock always looks different,” he said. “To<br />

see it with waterfalls is pretty special.” One<br />

year, he told me, the locals reckoned it had<br />

snowed (“it was actually just sleet”) but it<br />

“was all painted white. The tourists loved it.”<br />

GREAT SOUTHERN JOURNEY<br />

The 724km trip from Alice Springs to Uluru<br />

was just one of the highlights of an epic<br />

journey from the top to the bottom of Australia.<br />

We were on the Ghan (greatsouthernrail.<br />

com.au), the 21st-century version of<br />

Australia’s historic passenger train named<br />

for the cameleers, erroneously believed to<br />

have come from Afghanistan, who laboured<br />

in the outback to build the first railway from<br />

Alice Springs to Adelaide.<br />

Great Southern Rail’s Ghan Expedition<br />

traces part of that original route on an<br />

Opposite, clockwise<br />

from top left: Views<br />

of Uluru; a cave in the<br />

giant red monolith;<br />

a crocodile in the<br />

Adelaide River, Darwin.<br />

This page, clockwise<br />

from top: The Katherine<br />

Gorge; rock art; and an<br />

Uluru story-teller.<br />

MAKING TRACKS<br />

The outskirts of Darwin fell away quickly,<br />

and we were soon heading towards Katherine,<br />

the train thundering across the miles of<br />

empty Northern Territory desert. It’s big<br />

country up there, flat and featureless, but<br />

strangely mesmerising.<br />

As I gazed out from our Gold Class cabin I<br />

counted a dozen different desert grasses and<br />

trees, and amused myself by thinking of names<br />

to describe their colours – chestnut, bark,<br />

wheat, caramel, flax – before the gentle<br />

swaying of the train sent me to sleep.<br />

Over lunch of buffalo curry washed down<br />

with Adelaide wine, served in the Queen<br />

Adelaide Restaurant, we met the first of<br />

our fellow travellers. Bob recalled a very<br />

different journey on the Ghan in the early<br />

1950s: “There weren’t any luxuries then,” he<br />

said, “and the trip took forever. The tracks<br />

used to warp in the heat and the progress<br />

was so slow, on some parts we’d get out to<br />

stretch our legs – you could walk faster.”<br />

——<br />

During the dry season the<br />

river is regularly cleared<br />

of crocodiles – the giant<br />

saltwater crocs swim up<br />

during the wet season – to<br />

allow water sports...<br />

——<br />

KATHERINE<br />

By mid-afternoon we were at Katherine, a<br />

small town on the Katherine River whose<br />

claim to fame is the beauty of the Nitmiluk<br />

National Park. We joined local guide Jason<br />

Gray for a sightseeing cruise.<br />

He told us about the rock formations in<br />

the deep gorges carved out by the river, and<br />

the history of the Jawoyn people, who are<br />

the traditional landowners.<br />

During the dry season, he told us, the<br />

river is regularly cleared of crocodiles – the<br />

giant saltwater crocs swim up during the<br />

wet season – to allow water sports such as<br />

swimming and kayaking.<br />

After hearing Jason’s jokes (“How do you<br />

tell if the croc coming towards you is a ‘salty’<br />

or a ‘freshie’ if you fall in? If it’s a freshie it’ll<br />

swim away, but if it’s a salty, you’re done<br />

for”), we’ll pass on that, thanks.<br />

Jason manoeuvred his boat up the first<br />

gorge, pointing out the harmless freshwater<br />

crocodiles on the banks, and we craned our<br />

necks to see the walls towering high above.<br />

At the end of the first gorge, we got out<br />

and followed a boardwalk up to the second,<br />

a tranquil and utterly beautiful place filled<br />

with birdlife. It seemed completely at odds<br />

with its remote outback location.<br />

ALICE SPRINGS<br />

We were under way again by 6pm – next<br />

stop Alice Springs. In the Outback Explorer<br />

Lounge, over a beer before dinner, we met<br />

Canadian Maggie Mazankowski, the charming<br />

host of our section of the train. It didn’t take<br />

long to discover she’s a millennial version of<br />

a train spotter – she did a four-year stint on<br />

Canada’s Rocky Mountaineer train and since<br />

58 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 59


Travel Australia<br />

arriving in Australia has worked on both the<br />

Indian Pacific and the Ghan.<br />

Working on luxury trains and “seeing<br />

every country in the world before I’m 30”,<br />

she said, is her ultimate goal. “There’s<br />

something so romantic about train travel.<br />

I love the history behind rail, how it<br />

developed so many little communities.<br />

There are so many towns that wouldn’t be<br />

here today if it wasn’t for the trains.”<br />

Mazankowski’s enthusiasm for train travel<br />

was echoed by Great Southern Rail senior<br />

chef Joseph Cobiac, who cooks on board and<br />

devises the menus for the Ghan Expeditions.<br />

His innovative menus (think camel tagine,<br />

crocodile sausages, buffalo curry) meant<br />

mealtimes were a highlight.<br />

“The food is all regional, of the place and<br />

where we are,” he said. “The menu changes<br />

every day and it’s different for every train,<br />

which is really unique. I’m really proud to<br />

have the opportunity to be able to do that.”<br />

Day two dawned, and from my bunk I<br />

watched the early-morning sun warm the<br />

desert with a gorgeous display of colour as<br />

it climbed into the sky.<br />

Though the daytime temperatures in the<br />

desert can reach the 40s, they drop to single<br />

figures at night, so when we disembarked at<br />

Alice Springs, we were glad of the jackets we’d<br />

been advised to bring. The temperature was<br />

in the mid-30s when we arrived at Uluru, but<br />

by the time we were back for an outback<br />

dinner under the stars at historic Telegraph<br />

Hill in Alice Springs, the temperature had<br />

plummeted 25 degrees. Never mind. The<br />

winning combination of live music, great food<br />

and wine, convivial company, plus an excellent<br />

astronomy lesson, more than compensated<br />

for the chill. It was a memorable night.<br />

COOBER PEDY<br />

Our final day of sightseeing, at Coober Pedy,<br />

proved a stark contrast to the natural wonders<br />

of Katherine and Uluru. The opal mining<br />

capital of the world, Coober Pedy has a<br />

population of about 3000 souls, who hail from<br />

all over the globe and speak 45 languages.<br />

Some are transients trying their luck, others<br />

such as retired miner George, who we met at<br />

——<br />

This page: An ANZAC<br />

tribute camel train near<br />

Alice Springs; aboard<br />

the Ghan. Opposite<br />

page, clockwise from<br />

top: Katherine Gorge;<br />

Alice Springs; the<br />

Ghan; an historic station<br />

in Alice Springs; an<br />

outback sunrise.<br />

‘There’s something so<br />

romantic about train travel.<br />

I love the history behind rail...<br />

There are so many towns<br />

that wouldn’t be here today<br />

if it wasn’t for the trains.’<br />

——<br />

60 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 61


Travel Australia<br />

the Umoona Opal Mine, are “lifers”. George<br />

followed his brother out from Greece to work<br />

in the mines when he was just a lad, “and<br />

somehow I just never left”, he said.<br />

Above ground, the dusty town looks forlorn,<br />

run down, but it’s another story underground,<br />

where the majority of the population live in<br />

subterranean homes hewn from the bedrock<br />

of an ancient sea.<br />

Enterprising ventilation systems ensure<br />

they’re cool, dry and free from the dust and the<br />

flies. There are churches, museums, shops, even<br />

a hotel, as well as tourist attractions such as<br />

Umoona Opal Mine and Museum<br />

(umoonaopalmine.com.au), which has guided<br />

tours, an underground lunch for the Ghan<br />

passengers and, of course, sells opals.<br />

Head chef Joe’s excellent catering skills<br />

were showcased again that evening at a<br />

farewell cocktail party in the desert at<br />

Manguri Siding, 42km from Coober Pedy.<br />

The final leg into Adelaide the next<br />

morning would complete this 2979km<br />

journey, but even though the air was rapidly<br />

cooling, we were in no hurry to leave the<br />

party. We stood, drinks in hand, swapping<br />

stories with newfound friends and watched<br />

as the sun disappeared behind the Ghan,<br />

the bright flames of the bonfire adding to<br />

the savage beauty of the outback setting.<br />

australia.com<br />

This page: Inside<br />

the mine tunnel at<br />

Coober Pedy.<br />

Eat<br />

SYDNEY<br />

Longrain’s menu is inspired by the<br />

communal eating philosophy of<br />

south-east Asia, and it’s spectacular.<br />

Whatever you order don’t miss the egg<br />

net, a fabulous concoction of bean<br />

sprouts, pork mince, peanuts and<br />

prawns, with a zingy dressing and<br />

cucumber relish. longrain.com<br />

Ester’s menu is a modern Australian<br />

take on much-loved classics including<br />

oysters, scallops, prawns, fish and<br />

steak. We ordered roasted oysters<br />

and raw kingfish with nori for starters,<br />

followed by steak tartare and Shark<br />

Bay snapper fillet cooked in a clay<br />

pot. Oh, and the “burnt pav”. It was all<br />

divine. Sigh. ester-restaurant.com.au<br />

ADELAIDE<br />

Chef Jock Zonfrillo showcases locally<br />

sourced native and wild ingredients<br />

on a menu that’s as innovative as it<br />

is interesting. At Restaurant<br />

Blackwood we ordered fire-pit<br />

yellow-fin tuna with couscous, karkalla<br />

and lilly pilly, because we liked the<br />

sound of the ingredients. We were<br />

wowed by the game pie, and a<br />

mushroom, goat’s curd and chestnut<br />

pasta. restaurantblackwood.com<br />

South Australian produce including<br />

veges and herbs from the nearby<br />

botanic gardens kitchen garden are<br />

on the menu at the award-winning<br />

Botanic Gardens Restaurant.<br />

botanicgardensrestaurant.com.au<br />

Sleep<br />

SYDNEY<br />

The Tank Stream hotel is within walking<br />

distance of the Opera House, the Royal<br />

Botanic Garden and the Rocks. Named<br />

after the Tank Stream, Sydney’s main<br />

water source in its early days of<br />

Getting there<br />

DARWIN<br />

Holiday Packages<br />

0800 747 222<br />

Holidays Travel Brokers<br />

0800 737 767<br />

airnewzealand.co.nz<br />

settlement as a penal colony, the hotel<br />

is a cleverly reimagined 60s office<br />

block in the heart of the city. stgiles.<br />

com<br />

DARWIN<br />

The Darwin Hilton has recently had a<br />

$10million refurbishment, with<br />

stunning results. The rooms are large,<br />

comfortable and stylishly contemporary.<br />

There’s a rooftop pool and fitness<br />

centre and the lobby bar and Mitchell’s<br />

Grill mean you don’t have to go out<br />

into the heat to dine. hilton.com<br />

ADELAIDE<br />

The Adelaide Hilton’s large,<br />

comfortable rooms and well-stocked<br />

bathrooms were a delight after three<br />

days in a confined space on the<br />

Ghan. The sunken bar proved a great<br />

place to catch up with new friends<br />

from the train. hilton.com<br />

Play<br />

SYDNEY<br />

John Pastor’s Tank Stream Tour of<br />

the historic CBD provides insightful<br />

commentary on the Tank Stream, the<br />

water source for the indigenous<br />

Gadigal tribe for aeons, and for the<br />

new penal settlement of Sydney. The<br />

tour follows the route of the stream<br />

now buried beneath the pavement.<br />

golocaltours.com<br />

DARWIN<br />

The Defence of Darwin Experience<br />

provides an interactive, multimedia<br />

experience of the World War II<br />

Japanese bombing of the<br />

Northern Territory capital.<br />

defenceofdarwin.nt.gov.au<br />

ADELAIDE<br />

If you have even half a day to spare,<br />

do a Barossa Valley wine tour. Book<br />

through your hotel.<br />

Air New Zealand operates<br />

four weekly non-stop<br />

flights from Auckland to<br />

Adelaide. Travel to New<br />

Zealand from Darwin<br />

via Sydney with alliance<br />

partner Virgin Australia.<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY ALAMY, GETTY<br />

62 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Penang<br />

A<br />

TASTE<br />

OF<br />

PENANG<br />

There is a wealth of culinary tradition to be explored in Penang. So when the people<br />

behind the Madam Woo and Rata restaurants, Josh Emett and Fleur Caulton, took<br />

some of their staff on a research trip to the Malaysian island, we tagged along.<br />

STORY ANNA KING SHAHAB<br />

64 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 65


Travel Penang<br />

WHEN YOU GO on tour with a group of<br />

hospitality professionals, it follows that<br />

your grazing prowess will be put to the test.<br />

In Penang, however, the constant eating<br />

doesn’t feel out of the ordinary – everywhere<br />

you go, people are enjoying food.<br />

They’re slurping bowls of steaming<br />

noodle soup, mopping up curry with puffy<br />

roti and digging into bowls of brightly<br />

coloured shaved ice. They’re usually dining<br />

with a friend or two, or in a big family group,<br />

so the perception of Penangites is that<br />

they’re always eating, chatting and<br />

generally having a great old time.<br />

Fleur Caulton and Josh Emett, the<br />

founders of the Mayfare Group that owns<br />

Rata and five Madam Woo restaurants,<br />

regularly travel to Malaysia and take some<br />

of their staff with them.<br />

Every trip is different because each part of<br />

Malaysia has its own culinary traditions, but<br />

Penang is special. It is considered by many<br />

to be one of the most exciting food<br />

destinations in the world. It also boasts a<br />

UNESCO World Heritage Site – George<br />

Town, which is awash with grand old British<br />

and Chinese-influenced architecture and a<br />

striking street-art precinct.<br />

In George Town, you could be sitting in a<br />

traditional kopitiam (coffee shop) breakfasting<br />

on kaya (coconut jam) toast, noodle soup<br />

and thick, sweet coffee while nearby, a<br />

blacksmith will be forging anchors in his<br />

foundry in 35-degree heat, a bicycle repair<br />

shop will be going about its business and<br />

an elderly woman will be weaving baskets.<br />

In Penang there’s not so much a sense<br />

of time standing still, but of tradition<br />

carrying on; of people working hard to keep<br />

family businesses going and in doing so,<br />

perfecting their craft.<br />

The Woo crew was here to learn about the<br />

——<br />

There’s not so much a sense<br />

of time standing still, but of<br />

tradition carrying on; of<br />

people working to keep<br />

family businesses going and,<br />

in doing so, perfecting<br />

their craft.<br />

——<br />

This page, from above: Fleur Caulton and Josh<br />

Emett at Ikan Bakar Din Malay fish restaurant;<br />

Opposite: A satay stall at the night markets.<br />

66 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 67


Travel Penang<br />

——<br />

Nyonya cuisine isn’t merely<br />

a meeting of Chinese and<br />

Malay traditions, but a<br />

more nuanced hybrid. Every<br />

Nyonya household puts its<br />

own stamp on its food.<br />

——<br />

This page, from top: A street stall in George<br />

Town’s Love Lane; Kek Lok Si Temple.<br />

Opposite page: a char kway teow street stall.<br />

best examples of classic dishes. We tasted<br />

them all over town – and across the bridge on<br />

the mainland. We tasted versions made in<br />

street carts, at night markets, in coffee shops,<br />

in restaurants and in homes.<br />

Penang’s cultural makeup is composed of<br />

a majority Chinese population, followed by<br />

Malay and Indian, as well as a significant<br />

Nyonya presence. Nyonya (also referred to as<br />

Peranakan) refers to the offspring of Malay<br />

and Chinese settlers and the culture dates<br />

back centuries. There’s also the influence<br />

of Portuguese, Dutch and British traders<br />

and colonists.<br />

The food scene in Penang follows suit.<br />

There’s a prevalence of Chinese culinary<br />

traditions from settlers’ home regions.<br />

You’ll see it in dishes such as Hainanese<br />

chicken rice, Teochew ais kaching, Hokkien<br />

noodles or Cantonese roast pork.<br />

Most of the Indian population traces its<br />

roots to the south, so there is roti and<br />

chapati, spicy curries and ghee-rich sweets.<br />

Indigenous Malay cooking features<br />

spice-laden pastes and sambals, belacan<br />

(fermented shrimp paste), local seafood<br />

(fresh and bountiful on this island) and rice.<br />

And Nyonya cuisine isn’t merely a meeting<br />

of Chinese and Malay traditions, but more<br />

a nuanced hybrid. Every Nyonya household<br />

puts its own stamp on its food.<br />

It’s hard to get a handle on Malaysian<br />

cuisine until you’ve visited the country. But<br />

four days of exploring Penang with the<br />

group – and their seemingly bottomless<br />

hunger for novel and defining experiences<br />

– had me feeling I’d gained a decent<br />

knowledge of the island’s food offerings.<br />

I’d also developed a strong desire to<br />

return for a second helping.<br />

68 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 69


Travel Penang<br />

Eat<br />

CHAR KUEY TEOW<br />

A good char kuey teow bears the telltale<br />

wok hei (breath of the wok), the<br />

aroma and taste of the flames having<br />

danced inside the wok. You won’t walk<br />

more than a few minutes in George<br />

Town without coming across a hawker<br />

selling char kuey teow, or head to Cecil<br />

Street Market or Gurney Drive Night<br />

Market to sample a few versions.<br />

PENANG LAKSA<br />

Challenge your taste buds with Penang<br />

laksa. Also known as asam laksa<br />

(asam is tamarind), this soup is made<br />

both thick and pungent with flaked<br />

mackerel, chilli and a good dose of nice,<br />

sour tamarind – hence the name. Our<br />

group was divided on this dish. One<br />

member had an endless craving for it,<br />

I was a willing convert and Emett and<br />

Caulton weren’t so enamoured.<br />

NYONYA CUISINE<br />

Eat in a Nyonya home. At Little<br />

Kitchen@Nyonya, we dined in the<br />

main living area of the proprietors’<br />

home. Beneath us was a well-worn<br />

Dutch-tiled floor and around us were<br />

family photos; an elaborate carved<br />

wood and marble opium bed; jars<br />

housing fighting fish, with large<br />

leaves placed in between to quell<br />

tempers; herbs, spices and bird-nest<br />

delicacies and colourful plaster<br />

relief work depicting Chinese belief<br />

systems (bats, for instance, which<br />

represent prosperity and longevity).<br />

Our host Baba Ji told us the story of<br />

his Nyonya heritage, the family home<br />

and how it became renowned for fine<br />

food (it was his grandfather’s third wife<br />

who made the kitchen here famous).<br />

He served us a succession of dishes,<br />

but the highlight was the wonderfully<br />

fragrant and textural nasi ulam (herbed<br />

rice salad) he made at the table,<br />

slicing the large wad of fresh herbs 60<br />

times as tradition dictates.<br />

ROTI TISSUE<br />

At Kayu Nasi Kandar the roti dough<br />

is stretched out incredibly thin and<br />

cooked through on the hot plate<br />

before being doused with sweetened<br />

condensed milk, ghee and honey. It’s<br />

rolled into a cone more than a metre<br />

tall and presented to the table, then<br />

everyone digs in with their hands.<br />

Absolutely delicious.<br />

MALAY CUISINE<br />

Feast Malay-style. We drove over<br />

the bridge to Butterworth to eat at<br />

Ikan Bakar Din, a popular open-air<br />

restaurant full of feasting families.<br />

Cooking revolves round the charcoal<br />

grill and whole fish, huge prawns,<br />

lamb and chicken come off the grill<br />

smoky and succulent with flavours<br />

from complex spice paste marinades.<br />

Salads, rice and shellfish round out<br />

the menu and you order with your<br />

eyes (which are of course bigger than<br />

your stomach). You pay for what you<br />

take. It was utterly delicious; we ate<br />

like kings for around $10 per person.<br />

It was a halal eatery, so rather than<br />

wash it all this down with beer we<br />

sipped on wonderfully refreshing lime<br />

juice spiked with salted prunes.<br />

Getting there<br />

Air New Zealand offers non-stop<br />

flights from Auckland to Singapore,<br />

with ongoing connections to<br />

Penang.<br />

Holiday Packages <br />

0800 747 222<br />

Holidays Travel Brokers <br />

0800 737 767<br />

airnewzealand.co.nz<br />

Sleep<br />

EASTERN & ORIENTAL HOTEL<br />

Arriving at the grand entrance of the<br />

Eastern & Oriental Hotel (eohotels.<br />

com) at the end of a hard day’s eating<br />

is a treat. Inside the Victory Annexe,<br />

built in 2013, the suites are luxuriously<br />

appointed yet reasonably priced, with<br />

calming views of the Straits, especially<br />

from the deck swimming pool. During<br />

cocktail and nibbles hour in Planters<br />

Lounge, you’ll find the most delicious<br />

peanuts. visitpenang.gov.my<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY DAZ CAULTON, GETTY<br />

70 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Christchurch<br />

The George hotel. We’ve had a couple of<br />

celebrations there. And, of course, I love a<br />

good roast lamb with my family around.<br />

There’s nothing better than everyone<br />

pitching in and making a meal together.<br />

My place<br />

Multiple gold medal-winning para-swimmer<br />

Sophie Pascoe explains why Christchurch remains<br />

the city she wants to live and train in.<br />

My favourite shops in Christchurch are<br />

home decor places. I feel very grown up<br />

now that I’ve bought a home, I’m buying<br />

things like new tables instead of clothes.<br />

I’m a big advocate of Ballantynes<br />

[department store]. I love the fact that it’s<br />

Christchurch-owned, and they’ve kept it<br />

modern and up to date, but they cater for<br />

the older generation too.<br />

I really like the shops around Merivale<br />

and Victoria Street. They’ve made them<br />

very trendy. And the Woolston shops. The<br />

Tannery has some funky shops too.<br />

I GREW UP HERE on a lifestyle block in<br />

Halswell. But really, I had two homes – I<br />

lived at my parents’ house and at QEII<br />

[Recreation and Sport Centre in North<br />

New Brighton].<br />

I spent four hours a day training there,<br />

sometimes more, so people got to know me<br />

pretty well. I’ve always had the support of<br />

the community behind me.<br />

After the 2011 earthquake QEII was so<br />

damaged it had to be demolished. It was<br />

tough. I had made it my home, and then all<br />

of a sudden, my world was flipped upside<br />

down. Now I’m training at Jellie Park. It does<br />

the job, but it has been a lot of sacrifice.<br />

The earthquakes showed me how our<br />

community reacts when a disaster strikes,<br />

how close we really are and how we support<br />

one another. Christchurch is a really<br />

powerful place with strong people. When<br />

I say I’m a proud Cantabrian, there’s a lot<br />

more behind that than just the words.<br />

Before the earthquakes, I took Christchurch<br />

for granted and enjoyed spending time<br />

away, but nowadays it’s nice to be home.<br />

I appreciate it a lot more.<br />

When I’m away from Christchurch I miss<br />

doing things around my house – landscaping,<br />

picking out decor and making it my dream<br />

home. Last year, I spent eight months<br />

travelling, living out of a suitcase. I missed<br />

being able to walk around and interact<br />

with people I know. And I missed the<br />

luxury of having a good coffee in New<br />

Zealand. You can’t beat our baristas.<br />

I’ve got a real love for food and I’m<br />

constantly hungry because of training!<br />

My partner Tom and I go to Dux Dine on<br />

Riccarton Road for breakfast as our Sunday<br />

ritual. Mexicano’s is always enjoyable. It’s<br />

not your traditional Mexican – it has a<br />

twist. For fine dining, I enjoy Pescatore at<br />

When I get the weekend off Tom and I go<br />

to the Saturday markets in Riccarton. It’s<br />

always nice to get our fresh fruit and veges<br />

from there. We walk around the Botanic<br />

Gardens in Hagley Park at least once a<br />

month. And I had a great day recently at<br />

the Lyttelton Farmers Market.<br />

That’s what I like about Christchurch<br />

– there are so many different spots. We<br />

may not have the big towering<br />

skyscrapers, but we have a city and<br />

beautiful hills, beaches and countryside.<br />

You don’t have to spend a lot of money to<br />

enjoy yourself.<br />

For a romantic time we’ll plan a weekend<br />

break, because it’s hard to spend quality<br />

time together here in Christchurch – we<br />

get too distracted by friends and family.<br />

Opposite: Sophie<br />

Pascoe takes a<br />

break from training.<br />

Clockwise from top left:<br />

The Tannery shopping<br />

and restaurant complex;<br />

the George hotel;<br />

Riccarton House<br />

market; Akaroa Harbour.<br />

72 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 73


Travel Christchurch<br />

——<br />

‘Before the earthquakes,<br />

I took Christchurch for<br />

granted and enjoyed<br />

spending time away, but<br />

nowadays it’s nice to be<br />

home. I appreciate<br />

it a lot more.’<br />

——<br />

We recently had a great day trip to Akaroa<br />

and the French market. It’s only an hour<br />

away from Christchurch. You’ve got the sea<br />

right there, and you can sit outside in the<br />

breeze and enjoy each other’s company.<br />

Hanmer Springs, which is about an<br />

hour and a half away, is a little more<br />

adventurous. You can have a relax in the<br />

hot pools and hang around the bach or do<br />

some four-wheel driving, jet-boating or<br />

bungy jumping.<br />

When I’m stressed out I go to the cinema<br />

in Sumner or the one in The Colombo<br />

mall. When I’m in a movie, my cellphone<br />

is turned off and I can get completely<br />

engrossed in a new world. It’s my way<br />

of relaxing.<br />

When it comes to my swimming career<br />

I don’t need to move anywhere else. I can’t<br />

fault what we have down here. The highperformance<br />

centres up in Auckland have a<br />

lot more people to cater for, and you tend<br />

to get a little lost.<br />

Here, we don’t have as many highperformance<br />

athletes. But don’t get me<br />

wrong – the sporting scene in Christchurch<br />

is definitely growing, because people are<br />

realising they can settle here and still<br />

be a world champion.<br />

Clockwise from left:<br />

poolside at Jellie Park;<br />

The Christchurch<br />

Botanic Gardens<br />

Visitor Centre; Hanmer<br />

Springs; Ballantynes<br />

department store.<br />

STORY INDIA LOPEZ PHOTOGRAPHY PETRA MINGNEAU, ALAMY, GETTY, ONESHOT<br />

74 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Stay<br />

Fiji<br />

Vomo Island Resort<br />

BY JACQUI LOATES-HAVER<br />

VOMO ISLAND RESORT is a private<br />

paradise 15 minutes by helicopter or<br />

seaplane from Nadi airport, or 75 minutes<br />

by boat from Denarau marina. Vomo is a<br />

91ha dot in Fiji’s Mamanuca Island group,<br />

but what an island it is. On arrival you’re<br />

greeted with smiles, fresh apple juice and<br />

a rendition of Bula Maleya, the island’s<br />

cheerful welcome song.<br />

The resort has 28 villas, all impressive.<br />

Some line the beachfront, seven are<br />

nestled into the hillside of Mt Vomo and<br />

afford additional privacy and spectacular<br />

views. There are beachfront retreats, which<br />

house larger groups, and four residences<br />

which come with a concierge butler service.<br />

Happily, the layout of the island has been so<br />

thoughtfully designed that sightings of other<br />

guests are relatively few and far between.<br />

Besides swimming, scuba diving and<br />

snorkelling safaris, you can play the nine-hole<br />

golf course or tennis, relax at the divine Kui<br />

Spa, work out at the gym or partake of a picnic<br />

on nearby Vomo Lailai (Little Vomo Island).<br />

Chef Nic Samaras serves a wonderful<br />

produce-driven menu at the resort’s two<br />

restaurants and before dinner it’s worth<br />

visiting the Rocks Bar for an evening<br />

cocktail to enjoy what is arguably the best<br />

sunset view anywhere.<br />

Vomo is the last word in luxury and,<br />

surprisingly, it’s also family friendly, with<br />

a kids’ village complete with attentive staff,<br />

a dedicated chef, baby butlers and a treasure<br />

trove of toys, games and dress-up costumes.<br />

vomofiji.com<br />

Clockwise from top:<br />

The Palms pool; a beach<br />

villa; and the main pool<br />

and pool-side bar.<br />

78 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Stay<br />

Philippines<br />

Amorita Resort<br />

BY SHARON STEPHENSON<br />

A RESORT WITH a name that means “little<br />

darling” was never going to be ordinary, and<br />

this hidden retreat on lush Panglao Island can<br />

definitely be filed under “special”.<br />

There are 96 suites, across four room types,<br />

including swanky villas with their own plunge<br />

pools. All look like the kind of minimalist<br />

industrial apartment your bachelor friend<br />

with good taste might own.<br />

They have concrete floors, mid-century<br />

modern furniture, muted colours and natural<br />

wood. It’s gorgeous, but not intimidating.<br />

I stayed in the Junior Suite, which is<br />

basically one large room, but the clever layout<br />

makes it feel like a well-sectioned unit. A plus:<br />

everything in the mini-bar is complimentary<br />

(other hotels, take note) and replenished<br />

twice daily, along with baked treats such<br />

as macaroons and brownies.<br />

There are two infinity pools, both with<br />

magnificent views over the nearby milky<br />

white Alona Beach, as well as Sea Tree Spa,<br />

which offers traditional massage therapies<br />

and treatments using home-grown essential<br />

oils. The two restaurants – the poolside<br />

Saffron, which serves a mixture of Filipino and<br />

international food, and the Tomar, a dinneronly<br />

restaurant specialising in tapas – mean<br />

you don’t have to go far to fill your belly. If<br />

you must leave the property, mountain bikes,<br />

kayaks and paddle boards can be rented.<br />

There are more restaurants and bars further<br />

down the beach, but development has been<br />

strictly controlled, so mercifully there are few<br />

tourists to ruin the view.<br />

amoritaresort.com<br />

Clockwise from<br />

top: The Amorita<br />

Resort pool; Saffron<br />

restaurant; and<br />

an ocean villa.<br />

80 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Travel Spa<br />

Auckland<br />

East Day Spa<br />

BY JACQUI LOATES-HAVER<br />

EAST DAY SPA is a Balinese-inspired<br />

haven in the middle of Auckland’s CBD.<br />

The rooms are low-lit and pleasantly<br />

scented, the staff attentive and serene.<br />

There is music to soothe and, on arrival,<br />

fruit tea to refresh. It’s easy to see why East<br />

Day Spa won awards in the last two World<br />

Spa Awards (it has also been nominated<br />

in two categories for this year’s awards).<br />

The treatment menu offers many<br />

restorative ways to slough away the<br />

remnants of winter, including the<br />

signature Codage Paris Body Scrub, which<br />

is available with anti-ageing or intense<br />

hydration formulations.<br />

It is 45 minutes your body will thank you<br />

for – enjoy a full rub-down using a finely<br />

milled scrub of oils, sugar and rice particles<br />

to buff, boost and refine skin texture.<br />

After a warm shower, moisturiser is<br />

slathered on and massaged into the skin,<br />

and it leaves you feeling rather fantastic.<br />

It’s worth booking in for a Prêt-à-Porter<br />

facial, also using Codage products which<br />

the therapist will tailor to your skin type<br />

and needs. It’s 30 minutes which will<br />

restore your skin to its hydrated best.<br />

eastdayspa.com<br />

Clockwise from top left: The soothing environment<br />

at East Day Spa; a relaxing massage; the rooms are<br />

low-lit and pleasantly scented.<br />

82 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Business<br />

Green buildings are<br />

the way of the future<br />

for residents, business<br />

tenants and landlords<br />

alike (see page 100).<br />

<br />

84<br />

CULINARY HEIGHTS<br />

The whirlwind life of Kiwi<br />

fusion cuisine pioneer,<br />

Peter Gordon.<br />

90<br />

DESIGN CENTRAL<br />

Ed Cruikshank’s furniture<br />

and the Otago factor.<br />

<br />

96<br />

BUSINESS BRIEFS<br />

News in a nutshell.<br />

100<br />

HOME TRUTHS<br />

Our green building boom<br />

and why it matters.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 85


Business Enterprise<br />

Culinary<br />

heights<br />

Peter Gordon is hailed as a fusion<br />

cuisine hero, but he refuses to rest<br />

on his laurels. He works hard to<br />

maintain his edge – and eateries<br />

on opposite sides of the globe.<br />

STORY SHELLEY HOWELLS<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY JOSH GRIGGS<br />

WE’RE ON TOP of the world, aka Peter<br />

Gordon’s Sugar Club restaurant up at the<br />

pointy end of Auckland’s SkyTower. A<br />

terrible place for an interview. The<br />

unrivalled eagle’s-eye view of the city and<br />

its twinkling, island-strewn Hauraki Gulf<br />

on a bright winter day is very distracting,<br />

especially when people in high-vis overalls<br />

start tottering past – outside – along the<br />

tower’s 1.2m-wide SkyWalk, a vertiginous<br />

192m above the ground.<br />

Gordon’s own balancing act is every bit as<br />

dizzying. The celebrated Whanganui-born,<br />

London-based chef pioneered and refined<br />

fusion, by cleverly combining ingredients<br />

from different cuisines. At the time – the<br />

late 80s and early 90s in the original Sugar<br />

Club restaurants in Wellington and London –<br />

Peter Gordon<br />

continues to ride high<br />

– and his Brompton<br />

folding bike.<br />

86 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 87


Business Enterprise<br />

it was shocking, revolutionary; today<br />

we all put miso in our kumara mash.<br />

He has spent most of his working life<br />

juggling several projects, at least a couple<br />

of restaurants and various international<br />

time-zones. He runs top restaurants (The<br />

Providores and Tapa Room in London, and<br />

Auckland’s Bellota and The Sugar Club), is an<br />

Air New Zealand consultant chef, co-founder<br />

of London’s Crosstown Doughnuts, cookbook<br />

author, restaurant consultant, newspaper<br />

columnist, telly personality, in-demand chef,<br />

member of the UK’s Sustainable Restaurant<br />

Association, superior charity fundraiser and,<br />

by all accounts, top bloke.<br />

It’s a seven-day-a-week gig which might<br />

understandably leave many 50-somethings<br />

in shreds. But here he is, fresh as a daisy,<br />

and happy to take time out to have a chat,<br />

cheerfully endure a photo shoot and put<br />

up with us nosing around his kitchen.<br />

After more than three decades he is still<br />

at the top of his game. But it’s a punishing<br />

schedule, “a seven-day working week,” he<br />

says. “There’s a lot of time spent catching up<br />

on emails. At least a couple of hours every<br />

day on the computer on non-work days.<br />

“When I’m in New Zealand I’ll get up in<br />

the morning and check emails from London,<br />

then I’ll do Sugar Club stuff and then some<br />

Bellota work. Then there will be a meeting,<br />

a school visit or something. I might be in<br />

the kitchen, or out in the restaurant in the<br />

evening. When I get back to my room<br />

tonight, about 11pm, I’ll check emails from<br />

London. It’s constant.”<br />

How does he do it? “I have no idea,” he<br />

says, laughing. “I think I’m just used to it.<br />

I’ve been coming to New Zealand five or six<br />

times a year for the last 13 years. I have a lot<br />

of staff who don’t know what I’m like without<br />

jet lag. I’m often a bit dopey and I sort of<br />

flake out about 7pm for the first few days.”<br />

Maintaining success, he says, requires<br />

flexibility. “You always need to be willing<br />

to adapt and change – that’s key.”<br />

He cites the example of Auckland<br />

fine-dining restaurant, Dine by Peter<br />

Gordon, which made a big splash, back in<br />

the day. But as the Federal Street dining<br />

scene grew – ably shepherded by Gordon,<br />

who suggested adding Al Brown (Depot<br />

Eatery, Federal Delicatessen) and Nic Watt<br />

(Masu) to the scene – he noticed numbers<br />

at Dine thinning a bit.<br />

“That more formal style of dining was<br />

becoming less popular too. Dine’s heyday<br />

had gone, and I recognised that and moved<br />

on.” Besides, he’d always had his eye on a<br />

spot at the top of that tower…<br />

This page and<br />

opposite: Gordon<br />

working with<br />

colleagues at The<br />

Sugar Club restaurant,<br />

high up in Auckland’s<br />

SkyTower.<br />

“But mainly, it’s all about staffing and<br />

collaboration. You might have the big idea,<br />

but if you don’t have a great manager and<br />

a great head chef then you’re in trouble.<br />

“The way I’ve always run the kitchens is<br />

collaborative. ‘Peter Gordon’ is the name<br />

on the door, but there will be dishes that<br />

I’ve had 100 percent to do with, some I’ve<br />

collaborated on with the chefs and dishes<br />

that I’ve had nothing to do with.<br />

“In London it’s the same. We might give<br />

staff challenges like, ‘Let’s put on a clam dish<br />

– you’ve got a week to come up with some<br />

ideas’. I like that. There’s no way I could<br />

come up with every single dish on every<br />

menu with everything I’m involved in.<br />

“And likewise, in order to keep staff,<br />

from the cheffing point of view they want<br />

ownership of dishes as well. People are<br />

really proud to present their dishes.”<br />

He’s proactive too. Years ago, when asked<br />

to write his first cookbook, he figured he<br />

could use some practice so wrote to “all the<br />

magazines in New Zealand” to ask if he<br />

could write for them. NZ House & Garden<br />

took him on. “That became a 14-year<br />

relationship. Suddenly, I found myself<br />

writing for a magazine. Then I did some<br />

more books, a newspaper column. It was<br />

an organic thing, like most of my career.”<br />

That said, some things were clearly meant<br />

to be. Gordon’s 20-plus-year relationship<br />

with Air New Zealand goes back to his<br />

beginning – his birth – when he was named<br />

after his uncle Peter, who worked for the<br />

company. When he was 15 he applied for<br />

an apprenticeship with the airline.<br />

“I was flown from Whanganui to<br />

Wellington three times, for three different<br />

interviews,” he says, “but I didn’t get that<br />

apprenticeship.” Thank goodness. That<br />

disappointment eventually lead him to a<br />

job in a restaurant kitchen, and the rest is<br />

fusion cuisine history.<br />

Fast-forward to the mid-90s and Gordon,<br />

head chef at London’s legendary Sugar Club<br />

restaurant, is flying economy on Air New<br />

Zealand from Auckland to London, thinking,<br />

——<br />

Gordon’s relationship with<br />

Air New Zealand goes back<br />

to his beginning – his birth<br />

– when he was named after<br />

his uncle Peter, who worked<br />

for the company.<br />

——<br />

“the food’s not very nice”.<br />

Ever the self-starter, he wrote to the<br />

airline offering his services. By extraordinary<br />

coincidence, Air New Zealand had just<br />

written to him to suggest working on a<br />

project together – the letter arrived in the<br />

post that afternoon. “Spooky.”<br />

As an Air New Zealand consultant chef,<br />

Gordon helps create the dishes served in<br />

Premium Economy and Business. These days<br />

he shares the gig with renowned Auckland<br />

chef Michael Meredith. “We’ll be given a<br />

brief like, ‘We need a duck dish, Europeanstyle,<br />

for Beijing.’ Or, ‘We need a lamb dish,<br />

no polenta, from LA.’ It’s very specific.<br />

“We have a big meeting in Auckland two<br />

or three times a year, where we strategise,<br />

discuss any new routes, what’s working and<br />

what’s not. And then in London we have<br />

regular menu presentations at Heathrow.<br />

“We aim to provide food that’s really<br />

tasty, full of punchy flavour and texture.<br />

Moisture in the food is really good, because<br />

on a plane you might feel dehydrated. We<br />

try to be seasonal as well.”<br />

He agrees some airline food can have a bit<br />

of a bad reputation, but says it doesn’t have<br />

to be that way. “I fly all different airlines<br />

because I need to know what our competitors<br />

are up to and, yes, some of it is pretty bad.<br />

But I don’t think it needs to be. You can have<br />

restaurant quality food in the air. It’s all<br />

about how much the airline prioritises it.<br />

“Air New Zealand’s food and beverage<br />

offering is really important to them; it’s key.<br />

They invest a lot of time and resources in to it<br />

and we do really well. Considering the size of<br />

the airline, compared with some enormous<br />

ones, the number of food and beverage<br />

awards we’ve won over the years is huge.”<br />

For all his success, Gordon wasn’t able to<br />

dodge “a bit of a mid-life crisis” last year.<br />

88 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 89


Business Enterprise<br />

Clockwise from left:<br />

Gordon has a laugh<br />

with the team; the jawdropping<br />

view from the<br />

restaurant; and Gordon<br />

on his Brompton bike.<br />

Looking back, he puts it down to exhaustion,<br />

after having fewer than four months to<br />

complete his book, Savour: Salads for all<br />

Seasons, during which he had two full-on<br />

working trips back to New Zealand.<br />

“It was the most stressful time. Chaos.<br />

Almost unbelievable.<br />

“As we shot the book’s last photo I was<br />

vomiting in the bathroom upstairs.”<br />

Then came the doubts. “A big mid-life<br />

crisis; a period where I thought, ‘Is Peter<br />

Gordon relevant on the food scene any<br />

more? Is my food really boring?’ In the old<br />

Sugar Club days I knew I was relevant. In the<br />

Dine days I knew I was relevant. But then I<br />

had a moment when I thought, ‘What is the<br />

point of me these days?’ It was quite healthy,<br />

but it was unexpected.”<br />

The cure, as is so often the case in life,<br />

was a great meal with old friends. To<br />

celebrate the 15th anniversary of The<br />

Providores and Tapa Room there was a<br />

get-together of some of the restaurants’<br />

“alumni”, including impressive talent such<br />

as Brad Farmerie, the Michelin-starred<br />

executive chef of PUBLIC restaurant in<br />

New York; Kiwi Miles Kirby co-founder of<br />

London’s popular, award-winning<br />

restaurant group Caravan; Selin <strong>Kia</strong>zim,<br />

restaurateur, cookbook author and Great<br />

British Menu 2017 contestant; and Kiwi<br />

Anna Hansen, chef and owner of The<br />

Modern Pantry.<br />

“It turned out to be a big love-fest,” says<br />

Gordon. “We all cooked, and people talked<br />

about their time at The Providores, what it<br />

meant to them and how it helped them on<br />

their way. It was like a marker of many<br />

people’s careers.”<br />

——<br />

‘In the old Sugar Club days<br />

I knew I was relevant. In the<br />

Dine days I knew I was<br />

relevant. But then I had a<br />

moment when I thought,<br />

“What is the point of me<br />

these days?” ’<br />

——<br />

And his new book was a triumph. “I’m really<br />

proud of the book. But I can’t believe I did it.<br />

The book, the alumni dinner, it was all lovely<br />

and it all suddenly seemed quite relevant.”<br />

As if to emphasise the point, recently<br />

Matt Tebbutt, the host of UK cooking show<br />

Saturday Kitchen had to publicly apologise<br />

for admiring Gordon. Newspapers reported<br />

that the show’s guest chef, Anna Hansen,<br />

declared Gordon the “godfather of fusion”.<br />

Tebbutt agreed, a bit too strongly for live<br />

television: “I think he’s a genius. I think<br />

he’s (expletive) brilliant.”<br />

Gordon grins when I mention the story.<br />

“That was quite good wasn’t it,” he says,<br />

with a wicked laugh.<br />

A couple of days later, during our photo<br />

shoot, the revered chef is acting the goat.<br />

He’s taken his cherished Brompton folding<br />

bicycle to the Sugar Club kitchen to show it<br />

to staff before opening. But that’s not quite<br />

enough. He climbs on and suddenly he’s<br />

whizzing through the upmarket restaurant,<br />

really rather close to impeccably dressed<br />

tables and fragile, expensive-looking objets<br />

d’art. Everyone’s falling about laughing and,<br />

of course, everyone has to have a go too.<br />

Fifteen minutes later, they’re all back in<br />

the kitchen, hard at work.<br />

It’s classic Peter Gordon fusion, be it in the<br />

kitchen, boardroom or on a bike: take a cool<br />

idea, put it in a new and unexpected context<br />

and get everybody on board for the ride.<br />

90 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Business Briefs<br />

Q&A<br />

Debbie<br />

Humphrey<br />

FOUNDER OF SPRING<br />

The award-winning entrepreneur<br />

has been designing growth<br />

strategies for corporations and<br />

businesses for 16 years.<br />

KIWI ENTERPRISE<br />

News from the country’s shakers, movers and innovators.<br />

BY MATT PHILP<br />

What has experience taught you?<br />

Progress is 10 times slower than you’d<br />

like. There’s no such thing as an overnight<br />

success and no such thing as loss or<br />

failure – just a lesson.<br />

What makes New Zealand entrepreneurs<br />

stand out on the world stage?<br />

The consistent theme of 2010 research<br />

I was involved in is that New Zealand has<br />

striking levels of innovation that we<br />

don’t often appreciate. But where we are<br />

outstanding at innovation, we are weak<br />

in commercialisation.<br />

What’s the next big thing?<br />

Everything digital. There will be drastic<br />

changes in the application of technology<br />

to everyday lives and businesses.<br />

What stops people succeeding?<br />

Focus. There are often opportunities on<br />

the journey. The trick is to identify the<br />

ones that are aligned to success and the<br />

ones that are distractions. The biggest<br />

challenge is to say no.<br />

Who is your mentor?<br />

My husband. Mentor, cheerleader,<br />

counsel, friend and everything else<br />

required to support me in my passion.<br />

How do you achieve work-life balance?<br />

No business owner with passion to grow<br />

has “work-life balance”. We don’t see our<br />

business as work but as our passion, so<br />

there isn’t work, just life. Entrepreneurs<br />

shouldn’t apologise for having a mission.<br />

It’s what makes them who they are.<br />

spring.co.nz<br />

Pitch perfect<br />

They call it glamping, and for those who like their outdoor adventures less basic, it leaves<br />

camping for dust. Canopy Camping was set up in 2012 by Wellington friends Liz Henderson<br />

and Sonia Minnaar to connect holidaymakers with hand-picked, quirky-but-comfy hideaways<br />

around the country. “You feel immersed in nature and connected to the outdoors, but at<br />

the same time it’s easy and comfortable – and a little bit luxurious,” says Henderson.<br />

canopycamping.co.nz<br />

IN THE GAME<br />

If you think the days of board games are over, you<br />

haven’t heard Shem Phillips’ story. The Kapiti Coastbased<br />

designer behind Garphill Games has launched<br />

a string of popular titles into the international board<br />

game market since 2007. They include the muchlauded<br />

Viking-themed Raiders of the North Sea.<br />

Raiders was nominated for the prestigious Spiel des<br />

Jahres awards, the Oscars of board games.<br />

garphill.com<br />

Suits you Barkers has released a limited-edition business travel suit,<br />

which is made from a 70 percent woollen-blend fabric that’s water,<br />

stain and wrinkle resistant. The suit, which is slim-fit and currently<br />

only available in navy, features 10 internal “organisational” pockets,<br />

including a hidden mobile phone pocket with a headphone jack<br />

keyhole. Jacket, $499.99; trousers, $199.99.<br />

barkersonline.co.nz<br />

98 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Business Briefs<br />

WASTE NOT<br />

A Lake Wakatipu development will be New<br />

Zealand’s first zero-net-energy campground.<br />

Camp Glenorchy, due to be completed this year,<br />

will have optimally insulated cabins, low-energy<br />

lighting, rainwater and grey-water collection,<br />

and composting toilets. The vision of<br />

philanthropists Debbi and Paul Brainerd, the<br />

camp will also be educational. Using in-room<br />

control panels, guests can track their heating<br />

and water use. theheadwaters.co.nz<br />

In the bag What parent doesn’t want a hand? Enter My Baby<br />

Bag, a new website-based service from baby supplies delivery<br />

firm The Baby Bag. Place your order just once for the nappies,<br />

food and other bits and pieces you need for baby, and the<br />

service then adapts subsequent deliveries according to<br />

baby’s age and stage. Founder Jessie Jarvie (above, centre) says<br />

the response has been overwhelming. “We’re so chuffed to be<br />

making a difference to the lives of busy parents.” thebabybag.co.nz<br />

FESTIVAL ON DEMAND<br />

A selection of local movies shown at the New<br />

Zealand International Film Festival (NZIFF)<br />

can now be rented through a NZIFF video-ondemand<br />

platform. The service, in partnership<br />

with video technology outfit SHIFT72, already<br />

has films from Florian Habicht, Summer<br />

Agnew and Adam Luxton, Jeremy Dumble,<br />

Simon Ogston and Rebecca Tansley. There are<br />

also plans to release more titles, as well as<br />

screen NZIFF premieres simultaneously online<br />

and on screen. nziff.co.nz<br />

Taste of success<br />

No robots. That’s one of the secrets<br />

behind Pure Delish, says Karen Staples,<br />

founder of the gourmet cereal and<br />

baked-goods company that turns 20 this<br />

year: “We truly believe our products are<br />

better because they’re made by people,<br />

not machines.”<br />

It has been a topsy-turvy ride for<br />

Pure Delish, which has grown from a<br />

small Christmas-cake venture into a<br />

multi-million-dollar brand, pioneering<br />

the local premium breakfast cereal<br />

market. There have been plenty of<br />

challenges, not least convincing<br />

supermarkets that shoppers would pay<br />

extra for handmade cereals, snack bars,<br />

slabs and cookies. The advent of gourmet<br />

retailers such as Farro Fresh has helped.<br />

How does she feel about the 20-year<br />

milestone? “Incredibly gratified. To see<br />

something grow from the seed of an idea<br />

into a recognised brand is nothing short<br />

of amazing.” puredelish.co.nz<br />

New Zealand film On an Unknown Beach<br />

by Adam Luxton and Summer Agnew.<br />

100 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture<br />

Wellington’s Nobel Rot<br />

Wine Bar has more<br />

than 400 wines on offer,<br />

more than 40 of which<br />

you can buy by the<br />

glass (see page 114).<br />

<br />

110<br />

THE GARDEN PATH<br />

Tamsin Wilson’s business<br />

growing edible flowers<br />

and herbs is flourishing.<br />

114<br />

CITY ON A PLATE<br />

Wellington serves up a<br />

top selection of eateries,<br />

bars and sweet treats.<br />

118<br />

NEW AND INTERESTING<br />

118 Food, wine and beer<br />

Fresh from producers.<br />

124 Toys and motoring<br />

Tech triumphs and an SUV.<br />

126 Wear it, do it<br />

Fashion, beauty, wellness.<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 111


Culture Food<br />

The Garden Path<br />

It has taken a few years and some tough on-the-job learning, but Tamsin Wilson’s rural<br />

Auckland business growing edible blooms, garnish leaves and herbs is flourishing.<br />

STORY SHELLEY HOWELLS PHOTOGRAPHY TODD EYRE<br />

This page: Tamsin Wilson<br />

in her Secret Garden.<br />

Opposite: The property in<br />

Auckland’s south is also<br />

home to ducks; Wilson<br />

helps with the picking.<br />

GROWING EDIBLE FLOWERS looks and<br />

sounds like a charming, idyllic kind of job.<br />

A lifestyle of bright, dew-dappled mornings<br />

filled with armfuls of fragrant blooms,<br />

perhaps occasionally plucking at an errant<br />

weed or two…<br />

The reality, of course, is a bit different.<br />

More dirt-under-the fingernails, slugsquashing<br />

hard graft than days spent<br />

frolicking in meadows.<br />

But Tamsin Wilson of The Secret Garden<br />

wouldn’t have it any other way. A keen<br />

gardener since she was a child in England,<br />

Wilson studied agriculture at university and<br />

went on to a career working for NGOs and<br />

charities around south-east Asia, and<br />

consulting in the UK.<br />

Then she and her Kiwi husband Pete, a<br />

forester, had their first baby and decided to<br />

move to New Zealand. They settled on a nice<br />

bit of land with a “freezing, draughty old<br />

cottage” in Patumahoe, a rural community<br />

in southern Auckland.<br />

The Secret Garden specialises in growing<br />

edible blooms, garnish leaves and unusual<br />

produce, largely for the high-end restaurant<br />

market. It also offers greens – think<br />

dandelion leaves, wood sorrel, swine cress<br />

and yarrow – foraged from around the<br />

neighbourhood. Talk about on trend.<br />

“It was a friend who had the idea to grow<br />

edible flowers,” says Wilson, from the<br />

comfort of the now renovated cottage on<br />

the lifestyle block that’s home to her<br />

business, dairy goats, ducks, chickens, sheep<br />

and children, Lena, 12, and Callum, 10.<br />

“I thought it was a crazy idea. And then<br />

I just came around to it over time.”<br />

That was five years ago. The first year she<br />

grew only edible flowers and baby radishes.<br />

There was no money in it, but Wilson saw<br />

the potential, despite the challenges.<br />

The aim to be as sustainable as possible<br />

by using no artificial fertilisers and<br />

pesticides made growing on a commercial<br />

scale more difficult.<br />

The vagaries of the Kiwi climate, choosing<br />

the right plants to grow in a fickle market<br />

and not really knowing a lot about making it<br />

all work were also challenges. Suffice to say<br />

there was a lot of on-the-job learning.<br />

112 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 113


Culture Food<br />

Clockwise from top left: Wilson with some of her<br />

colourful harvest and “the secret ladies”, who check<br />

every leaf and petal for imperfections and bugs.<br />

——<br />

It’s labour-intensive work.<br />

Everything is hand-sown,<br />

hand-picked and sorted<br />

by a crack team of local<br />

employees known as<br />

the ‘secret ladies’.<br />

——<br />

“At the beginning I was doing huge<br />

hours and definitely not getting enough<br />

sleep. I realised that I had to get to a scale<br />

where it would be worth the time I had<br />

put into it,” she says.<br />

But the time was right and early on<br />

leading chefs such as Ben Bayly (The Grove,<br />

Baduzzi, television’s My Kitchen Rules) and<br />

Nic Watt (Masu) were, and still are, keen<br />

customers.<br />

Each year the garden beds and poly tunnels<br />

increased in size – “pretty much doubled<br />

year-on-year” – and the range increased.<br />

“Two years ago I decided to have a go at<br />

growing mixed boxes of garnish leaves and<br />

the business really took off from there.”<br />

The leaves get them through winter, when<br />

flowers are not so abundant. “As a business<br />

that has saved us. If we didn’t have them it<br />

would have been a really tough winter.”<br />

It’s labour-intensive work. Everything is<br />

hand-sown, hand-picked and sorted by a<br />

crack team of local employees, known as the<br />

“secret ladies”, who check each leaf and petal<br />

to ensure perfection (and no rogue bugs).<br />

It’s amazing what you can eat. Begonias,<br />

for example. They taste tart and the young<br />

leaves have a pleasing crunch. Pine needles<br />

are foraged for infusions and some chefs<br />

love lichen. Trend alert – succulents are so<br />

hot right now, on your plate as well as on<br />

your windowsill. (Health and safety check:<br />

obviously you need to know what you are<br />

doing. You can’t just run around munching<br />

on random bits of greenery without risk of<br />

poisoning yourself.)<br />

Other edibles the Secret Garden grows<br />

include myoga ginger (the flower buds are<br />

edible and are often pickled) and horseradish<br />

(adds delicious heat when grated on a steak.<br />

It grows like a weed but its tap root is<br />

fiendishly reluctant to release its grip).<br />

Also, Chinese artichokes, root vegetables<br />

that look pleasingly like a row of little white<br />

beads (but only after the secret ladies have<br />

completed the unbelievably laborious job of<br />

cleaning them). These were seen on plates at<br />

Peter Gordon’s The Sugar Club in Auckland<br />

this year. Other leading customers include<br />

Seafarers Members Club, Hilton, Clooney,<br />

Soul, Huka Lodge and, as of last year,<br />

high-end restaurants in Hong Kong.<br />

But these are not just for fancy<br />

restaurants. Home cooks can get their<br />

hands on punnets of The Secret Garden’s<br />

edible flowers – polyanthus, pansies, violas,<br />

dianthus, rosemary, chrysanthemums,<br />

cornflowers and more – at Moore Wilson’s<br />

in Wellington and Auckland’s Farro Fresh.<br />

Wilson’s favourite way to use them is to<br />

mix them through cream cheese or butter:<br />

“Do a garlicky butter with some lemon zest<br />

and salt and pepper, chop up some flowers<br />

and mix them in. It looks really pretty.”<br />

Happily, now the worst of the growing<br />

pains of the young business are over, Wilson<br />

has more time to stop and smell the roses –<br />

and perhaps toss a few into a salad.<br />

secretgarden.co.nz<br />

114 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Food and Drink<br />

CITY ON A PLATE<br />

Wellington<br />

New Zealand’s capital is a<br />

culinary mecca – a land of great<br />

coffee, world-beating craft<br />

brews and an ever-changing<br />

array of eateries and bars.<br />

Here are some favourites.<br />

STORY SHARON STEPHENSON<br />

Eat<br />

THE BOTANIST<br />

219 Onepu Rd. Open seven days 9am-10pm<br />

If you enjoy plant-based kai, try this seaside<br />

vegetarian/vegan cafe. The vege fry-up<br />

features the surprisingly tasty “facon” (fake<br />

bacon) while the sake and miso aubergine<br />

with pan-fried satay bok choy is like a kiss<br />

from an angel. thebotanistlyallbay.co.nz<br />

SWEET BAKERY & CAKERY,<br />

CUBA STREET<br />

268 Cuba St. Open Tue-Sat 10am-6pm (8pm<br />

Fri), Sun 10am-6pm<br />

The younger sister of the Karori store<br />

opened last October and has quickly proved<br />

to be a hit. Owner Grace Kreft, who left a<br />

career in law to follow her sweet tooth, has<br />

dreamed up new delights, including salted<br />

caramel popcorn cupcakes. For something<br />

truly decadent, try an Oreo hot chocolate.<br />

sweetbakery.co.nz<br />

MR GO’S<br />

59 Taranaki St. Mon-Sat 11.30am-late<br />

This Kiwi take on an Asian hawker market<br />

has everything from classic duck pancakes<br />

to Taiwanese popcorn chicken. mrgos.co.nz<br />

Clockwise from top<br />

left: Shepherd; Mr<br />

Go’s; the team behind<br />

Rita (Matt Hawkes,<br />

Kelda Hains and<br />

Paul Schrader); The<br />

Botanist; Botanist coowners,<br />

sisters Lydia<br />

Suggate and Maria<br />

Boyle; and Grace Kreft<br />

at Sweet Bakery<br />

& Cakery, Cuba Street.<br />

R ITA<br />

89 Aro St, Open Tue-Sat from 5.30pm<br />

The team behind Nikau Café has opened an<br />

intimate new eating house on Aro St. Rita<br />

offers a three-course set dinner menu of<br />

simple, seasonal favourites from Tuesday<br />

to Saturday. rita.co.nz<br />

SHEPHERD RESTAURANT<br />

1/5 Eva St. Open Wed-Sun 5.30pm-late<br />

A restaurant opened by two of Wellington’s<br />

hospo stalwarts should be good, right? And<br />

it is. This collaboration between Shepherd<br />

Elliott and Sean Golding offers modern-day<br />

Kiwi cuisine. shepherdrestaurant.co.nz<br />

116 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember 2017 117


Culture Food and Drink<br />

Drink<br />

HUGO’S WHISKY LOUNGE<br />

14 Courtenay Pl. Open Tue-Thu 5pm-2am,<br />

Fri 3pm-3am, Sat 5pm-3am<br />

Wellington’s only dedicated whisky and<br />

cigar bar opened in February and provides<br />

a welcome escape from the noise of the<br />

capital’s party strip. With 150 whiskies<br />

on offer, you’ll never get bored.<br />

TOKEYO IZAKAYA DEN<br />

19 Edward St. Open Tue-Sat 5pm-late People<br />

of a certain age will remember this spot<br />

as the legendary Mexican Cantina. Now<br />

it’s a slither of Japan dropped into the hip<br />

backstreets of Wellington. Tokeyo, inspired<br />

by Japan’s underground izakaya bars, has<br />

a varied drinks list, including six different<br />

sakes. whg.co.nz/tokeyo<br />

NOBLE ROT WINE BAR<br />

6 Swan Ln. Open seven days 4pm-late<br />

With more than 400 wines, including 40-<br />

plus offerings by the glass, this is a welcome<br />

addition in a city that has long hogged the<br />

headlines for craft beer. noblerot.co.nz<br />

Shop<br />

V1 VEGAN STORE<br />

207 Cuba St. Open Tue-Sun 10am-6pm<br />

This cruelty-free store is chocka with<br />

tasty food, ingredients and treats including<br />

locally baked cupcakes and “chicken” and<br />

mushroom pies. There are even vegan pickand-mix<br />

lollies. v1vegan.com<br />

From top: Noble Rot; Hugo’s Whisky Bar;<br />

V1 Vegan Store owners Manda Grubner and<br />

Russell Holder; and Tokeyo Izakaya Den.<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY JEFF MCEWEN, JAMES GRIFFIN, JAMES PHILLIPS<br />

118 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Food News<br />

EAT, DRINK, COOK<br />

Fresh news from the New Zealand cuisine scene.<br />

COMPILED BY SHELLEY HOWELLS<br />

Dining Out<br />

DOWN YONDER<br />

Yonder is a new Queenstown<br />

cafe, bar and restaurant, in<br />

historic McNeill’s Cottage.<br />

Created by the team behind<br />

World Bar (next door), Yonder<br />

is open from breakfast time to<br />

party time. yonderqt.co.nz<br />

Game changer Gathered Game makes premium,<br />

naturally cured wild venison salami and deer<br />

sticks. Priced from $9.95, these are made by<br />

family artisans using natural ingredients,<br />

starting with wild organic red deer from licensed,<br />

sustainable sources. gatheredgame.co.nz<br />

Crunch time<br />

From the I Love Pies<br />

team comes I Love<br />

Baking cookies, $5.<br />

Ingredients include<br />

butter, unrefined<br />

sugar, date puree (to<br />

reduce the amount<br />

of sugar used)<br />

and wholegrain oats. ilovebaking.co.nz<br />

DRINKING CHOCOLATE<br />

There’s dark beer with chocolate aromas,<br />

such as Boundary Road Brewery’s Chocolate<br />

Moose, $5.99 for 500ml, which has been<br />

re-released. And there’s<br />

dark beer made with real<br />

chocolate, such as Mac’s<br />

limited-edition Sweet<br />

Disposition Chocolate<br />

Stout ($14.99 per four<br />

pack), created in<br />

collaboration with<br />

Wellington Chocolate<br />

Factory. We vote try both.<br />

brb.co.nz and macs.co.nz<br />

HEAR ME RAW<br />

Lively Desserts, by<br />

raw food chef Lauren<br />

Glucina, are creamily<br />

indulgent treats<br />

made with organic,<br />

ingredients. The<br />

desserts, $17.99, are<br />

also vegan and made<br />

without common<br />

allergens.<br />

ascensionkitchen.com<br />

Stellar start to the day<br />

Baby oats, a little organic coconut<br />

sugar, Heilala vanilla, organic chia<br />

seeds and a probiotic add up to<br />

a fast, delicious way to start to<br />

the day. Blue Frog Probiotic<br />

Porridge comes in individual<br />

serving sachets ($12.99 for a<br />

box of eight 40g pockets).<br />

bluefrogbreakfast.co.nz<br />

FERIZA’S KITCHEN<br />

Wynyard Quarter in Auckland is<br />

home to Feriza’s Kitchen, offering<br />

traditional and contemporary<br />

takes on shared mezze dishes<br />

inspired by the cuisines of<br />

Turkey, Greece and across the<br />

Ottoman Empire. ferizas.co.nz<br />

THE GEORGE HOTEL<br />

Chef Ryan Henley has returned<br />

to Christchurch’s The George<br />

Hotel as chef de cuisine for<br />

Pescatore restaurant, where he’s<br />

introduced a new seasonal<br />

menu. “We are committed to<br />

using the best, freshest<br />

ingredients on our doorstep.”<br />

thegeorge.com/pescatore<br />

120 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Wine<br />

1——<br />

VILLA MARIA<br />

2010 Reserve Library<br />

Release Cabernet<br />

Sauvignon, Hawkes<br />

Bay, $69.99<br />

This seven-year-old<br />

cabernet sauvignon has<br />

been carefully cellared at<br />

Villa Maria and released<br />

after the tannins have begun<br />

to mellow and savoury<br />

bottle-age characters have<br />

emerged. It’s a special<br />

occasion wine that certainly<br />

justifies its premium price.<br />

Try it with lamb shanks.<br />

BOB CAMPBELL<br />

Mr Big<br />

Lovingly age your cabernet<br />

sauvignon, but if you can’t<br />

wait, whip off the screw cap<br />

straight away and enjoy it<br />

with roast lamb.<br />

CABERNET SAUVIGNON CAN make you<br />

seem like a viticulture expert. The grapevine<br />

has distinctive leaves that overlap<br />

themselves giving the appearance of holes.<br />

So, if you are being escorted through a<br />

vineyard and spot these leaves, casually<br />

remark, “I see those are cabernet sauvignon<br />

vines” and impress your guide.<br />

Cabernet sauvignon is the “Mr Big” of the<br />

wine world. It is a grape with thick skin that<br />

stores colour, flavour and tannins. The wine<br />

typically has a deep colour, plenty of flavour<br />

and is quite “grippy” or astringent.<br />

Tannins (which give the wine grip) are<br />

nature’s preservative. Red wines with more<br />

tannin, such as cabernet sauvignon, can<br />

be aged for longer than softer, lowertannin<br />

reds such as pinot noir. If, for<br />

example, you want to buy a wine for<br />

a newborn and would like it to be<br />

delicious for their 21st birthday, cabernet<br />

sauvignon is a good choice. I’d choose one<br />

with a screw cap. In my experience these<br />

can more than double the life of a wine and<br />

cope with imperfect storage conditions<br />

better than corks.<br />

Cabernet sauvignon is believed to have<br />

originated in Bordeaux, the region many<br />

(including me) believe produces the<br />

world’s best examples, although these are<br />

almost always blended with the other red<br />

grape varieties – merlot, cabernet franc,<br />

malbec and petit verdot.<br />

In New Zealand, cabernet sauvignon<br />

is often the last red harvested. It’s also a<br />

survivor, thanks to that thick skin which<br />

helps it resist disease.<br />

Records show the variety was<br />

established in New Zealand in 1903, but<br />

it was almost certainly here before then.<br />

Winemaking pioneer Tom McDonald put<br />

the variety on the map with his stylish<br />

Hawke’s Bay-grown wines in the 60s and<br />

70s. Today cabernet sauvignon rarely flies<br />

solo and is often partnered with merlot<br />

and other Bordeaux varieties to help tame<br />

its sometimes exuberant astringency.<br />

Hawke’s Bay and Waiheke Island are our<br />

“sweet spots”. It’s no coincidence that their<br />

climates are similar to that of Bordeaux.<br />

To get the best out of cabernet<br />

sauvignon (or cabernet sauvignon/merlot<br />

blends) I recommend you either age<br />

them in a cool, dark spot for a decade<br />

or more, or enjoy them with their<br />

soulmate, roast lamb.<br />

3——<br />

MILLS REEF<br />

2015 Elspeth Cabernet<br />

Sauvignon, Hawkes<br />

Bay, $49.95<br />

Find a cool, dark spot<br />

for this supremely<br />

elegant red and it<br />

should still be deliciously<br />

drinkable in a couple of<br />

decades. Fine-boned<br />

cabernet sauvignon with<br />

blackberry/cassis, cigar<br />

box and very subtle fresh<br />

herb flavours.<br />

2——<br />

STONECROFT<br />

2015 Gimblett Gravels<br />

Cabernet Sauvignon,<br />

Hawke’s Bay, $47<br />

A youthful cabernet<br />

sauvignon that’s begging<br />

to be lovingly aged for<br />

at least five years.<br />

Alternatively, you<br />

can fire up the barbecue<br />

and cook a butterflied<br />

leg of lamb, my favourite<br />

match for young<br />

cabernet sauvignon.<br />

122 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Beer<br />

1<br />

——<br />

ALICE GALLETLY<br />

Kingsland, we<br />

have lift-off<br />

Out with the elf ears and in with<br />

the craft beers… Auckland’s hip<br />

new brewery Urbanaut has<br />

landed in a space once occupied<br />

by a costume-hire business.<br />

WHEN I FIRST moved to Auckland, in 2010,<br />

I flatted in the inner-city suburb of Kingsland.<br />

Conveniently, since my friends were going<br />

through a dress-up party phase at the time,<br />

the flat was just around the corner from<br />

New Zealand’s biggest prop and costume<br />

hire shop, First Scene. Every other weekend,<br />

my flatmates and I would be in there, trying<br />

on wigs and elf ears and debating things like<br />

whether it was possible to score in a medieval<br />

jester costume (it wasn’t).<br />

Seven years later, First Scene has moved<br />

to a larger space in Avondale and a new<br />

brewery has taken over the premises. In the<br />

warehouse once piled high with polystyrene<br />

gravestones and Egyptian mummies, steel<br />

fermenter tanks hold gallons of fresh pilsner<br />

and pale ale.<br />

Like most breweries, it would be an<br />

unexciting place to visit, except that this<br />

one has an off-licence. You can taste the<br />

beers, chat with the team and then walk<br />

away with a fresh rigger or cans.<br />

Urbanaut Brewing Co, launched in May,<br />

is the shared dream of three friends from<br />

Rangitikei College: Bruce Turner, Thomas<br />

Rowe and Simon Watson. Unlike many new<br />

brewers who make the leap from home set-ups<br />

to commercial beer with zero formal<br />

training, head brewer Turner has been<br />

working towards this for a decade.<br />

The trained engineer and avid snowboarder<br />

spent 14 years living in the UK, 10 working<br />

in packaging and production roles at<br />

heavyweight London breweries Fuller’s and<br />

Meantime. He also has two formal brewing<br />

qualifications from the Institute of Brewing<br />

and Distilling under his belt, and has been<br />

working with Tuatara here. In other words,<br />

the man knows what he’s doing.<br />

“We haven’t come into this game lightly,<br />

by chance or to just have a crack at making<br />

beer,” he says. “I only wanted to start Urbanaut<br />

after honing my skills and knowledge, which<br />

is why it has been 10 years in the planning.”<br />

His patience has paid off. I tried the full<br />

range of beers, each of which is named after<br />

a hip urban suburb from around the globe.<br />

There’s Williamsburg IPA, Brixton Pale<br />

Ale, Gastown Red IPA and Shimokita Lager,<br />

as well as the flagship beer, Kingsland<br />

Pilsner. The pilsner and the pale ale were my<br />

favourites, but without exception the beers<br />

were clean, well-balanced and flavourful.<br />

So, while I’ll miss having a place nearby<br />

where I can pick up a skeleton at short<br />

notice, Urbanaut is undoubtedly a brilliant<br />

addition to Auckland’s beer scene. If this is<br />

how the beers taste at lift-off, I’m excited<br />

about what happens once they reach orbit.<br />

urbanautbrewing.co.nz<br />

UBERNAUT<br />

Gastown Red IPA<br />

A brilliant<br />

ruby-coloured<br />

IPA, Gastown<br />

combines<br />

the citrus,<br />

grapefruit<br />

and lychee<br />

notes of an<br />

American IPA<br />

with a rich, malty backbone of toffee,<br />

caramel and roast.<br />

2<br />

——<br />

UBERNAUT<br />

Brixton Pale Ale<br />

A wellbalanced,<br />

full-bodied<br />

pale ale<br />

brewed with<br />

a mix of Kiwi<br />

and American hops. Expect fresh<br />

tropical fruits on the nose, fruity and<br />

spicy notes on the palate and a<br />

subtle bitterness.<br />

3<br />

——<br />

UBERNAUT<br />

Kingsland<br />

Pilsner<br />

Highly<br />

effervescent<br />

with a firm<br />

head, tight<br />

bubbles and a<br />

brilliant pale-golden glow, this is<br />

a clean pilsner brewed with both<br />

local and German hops.<br />

124 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Toys & Motoring<br />

TOP GEAR<br />

Cool tech, things for pets and this month’s hottest wheels.<br />

TOYS JENNY FARRELL MOTORING CAMERON OFFICER<br />

PET SMART<br />

Keep tabs on pets while you’re<br />

away from home with an appcontrolled<br />

flap. The Microchip<br />

Pet Door Connect, designed for<br />

cats and small dogs, uses an app<br />

and the SureFlap Hub to monitor<br />

and control your pet’s movements<br />

in and out of the house. It also<br />

keeps out intruder animals –<br />

the flap only unlocks when it<br />

recognises your pet’s microchip.<br />

The door and hub together<br />

cost $360, and the app is free.<br />

sureflap.com/connect<br />

A mover and a shaker<br />

This handsome cocktail tote from New<br />

York-based W&P Design is the perfect<br />

gift for the person who has everything.<br />

The hand-crafted canvas and leather<br />

carry bag includes all the essentials<br />

for making cocktails on the<br />

go, including a shaker,<br />

muddler and jigger.<br />

Sewn-in sleeves keep<br />

bottles and shaker<br />

upright and secure<br />

while you’re on<br />

the move.<br />

wandpdesign.com<br />

LIKE A SHOT<br />

Sony has come out with its most<br />

technologically advanced and<br />

innovative digital camera, the new a9,<br />

$4499. It’s an impressive piece of kit<br />

– the full-frame mirrorless a9<br />

combines speed and versatility<br />

with ease of use. sony.com<br />

Subaru XV 2.0i<br />

In a crowded market, this<br />

Subaru SUV stands out for<br />

all the right reasons.<br />

If compact crossover SUVs are where the Kiwi<br />

market is at, then Subaru must be confident in<br />

having a sure thing. The new Subaru XV had<br />

me with its “symmetrical all-wheel drive”<br />

(an increasing rarity in a market dominated<br />

by 2WD sales), but there are plenty more<br />

chocolates in this particular box.<br />

Subaru New Zealand has come out<br />

swinging in a competitive market – $39,990<br />

for the 2.0i Premium ($34,990 for the 2.0i<br />

Sport). For the amount of standard kit these<br />

cars arrive with, those are very good<br />

window stickers.<br />

The Premium XV comes with 18-inch alloy<br />

wheels, chrome accents, silver roof rails, a<br />

sunroof, TomTom satellite navigation (over<br />

and above standard Apple CarPlay and<br />

Android Auto phone mirroring systems<br />

already in the car) and leather-accented seats.<br />

There’s also a Vision Assist package with<br />

equipment such as blind-spot monitoring,<br />

high beam assist, rear cross-traffic alert and<br />

a new addition – reverse automatic braking,<br />

to stop you hitting that low wall as you back up.<br />

The symmetrical all-wheel drive puts this<br />

car into a different bracket from its more<br />

urban-style competitors – that of a driver’s<br />

car, regardless of the surface under the tyres.<br />

Take cover<br />

The Velosock Indoor Bike Cover, $74, is the<br />

solution for those who need to store bikes<br />

inside or cart them around<br />

in the car. Made of stretchy<br />

polyester and spandex, the<br />

Velosock protects your<br />

floors, car and most<br />

importantly, your bike.<br />

There are 17 cover<br />

designs on offer and<br />

even a sock for kids’ bikes.<br />

velosock.com<br />

ENGINE: 2.0-litre four-cylinder Boxer<br />

TRANSMISSION: Seven-stage Lineartronic automatic<br />

POWER: 115kW<br />

TORQUE: 196Nm<br />

FUEL ECONOMY: 7.0L/100km<br />

EMISSIONS: 159g/km<br />

PRICE: $39,990<br />

126 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Style<br />

PRETTY IN PASTEL<br />

Pastels are versatile enough to wear on their own or layered with other shades<br />

and textures. For an evening look wear a floral print and a detailed heel.<br />

BY LOUISE HILSZ<br />

The light fantastic<br />

Accessorise neutral<br />

outfits with pastels to<br />

add a blush of colour.<br />

1 3<br />

Prada Etiquette bag, $3350.<br />

prada.com<br />

2<br />

Kathryn Wilson Challis heel,<br />

$349. kathrynwilson.com<br />

5<br />

Deadly Ponies Poucher,<br />

$119. deadlyponies.com<br />

4<br />

6<br />

1. Lonely Folded top, $225. lonelylabel.com 2. Trelise Cooper Waltz On The Weekend dress,<br />

$899. trelisecooperonline.com 3. Self Portrait 3D floral mini dress, $695. museboutique.co.nz<br />

4. World Jeremiah jean, $379. worldbrand.co.nz 5. Twenty-seven Names Waterfall top, $330.<br />

twentysevennames.co.nz 6. Isaac + Lulu Tiffany dress, $389. sills-and-co.com<br />

Le Specs Enchantress<br />

sunglasses, $99.95. lespecs.com<br />

128 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Style<br />

BOYS IN BLUE<br />

Classic denim never goes out of style. Accent it with white and brown to keep your look<br />

light and fresh and don’t be afraid to mix different shades of the fabric in the same outfit.<br />

Cool accent<br />

When plain denim is<br />

the key component of<br />

an outift, accessories are<br />

key to lifting the look.<br />

2 3<br />

Dior Homme navy blue<br />

grained calfskin briefcase,<br />

$5100. dior.com<br />

1<br />

4<br />

Armani Jeans Squares belt,<br />

$199. smithandcaugheys.co.nz<br />

6<br />

Merchant1948 Georges boot,<br />

$259.90. merchant1948.co.nz<br />

5<br />

7<br />

1. Working Style dark denim tapered jean, $249. workingstyle.co.nz 2. I Love Ugly tapered denim aged<br />

jean, $219. iloveugly.co.nz 3. Stolen Girlfriends Club Smith jean, $239. stolengirlfriendsclub.com<br />

4. Superette Denim Pocket shirt, $199. superette.co.nz 5. Topman washed denim jacket, $95. topman.<br />

com 6. Huffer Stello jean, $159.90 huffer.co.nz 7. Neuw Rebel skinny jean, $ 189.99. neuwdenim.com<br />

Calvin Klein City<br />

watch, $665.<br />

calvinkleininc.com<br />

130 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>


Culture Wellness<br />

WELL & GOOD<br />

Hot tips, heavenly scents and sun-smart advice for the new season.<br />

BY BRONTE CHAPERON<br />

HEAVEN SCENT<br />

Relax and unwind with a warm bath and soy<br />

candle from Ecoya’s new range: Cedarwood<br />

& Leather, invigorating Spiced Ginger &<br />

Musk and refreshing Blue Cypress & Amber.<br />

$52.95 each. ecoya.com.<br />

IN SEASON<br />

Kiwifruit are now plentiful, so make the<br />

most of the juicy, fuzzy-skinned fruit<br />

that is rich in vitamin C and has good<br />

levels of fibre and vitamin E, an<br />

antioxidant. Kiwifruit also contain<br />

potassium, which can help maintain<br />

healthy blood pressure; and vitamin A,<br />

which is important for maintaining<br />

vision and boosting immunity.<br />

TRAVEL RIGHT<br />

Have an important<br />

meeting after your<br />

flight and need to<br />

stay fresh? Aerospace<br />

Medical Association<br />

recommends drinking<br />

about 250ml of water for<br />

each hour of your flight.<br />

Hot stuff<br />

If it still feels a bit chilly for<br />

outside exercise, try hot<br />

yoga. Rise Hot Yoga and<br />

Pilates studio in Auckland<br />

(risestudio.co.nz) offers<br />

classes in comfortable 27- to<br />

30-degree rooms. Founder<br />

Alexandra Stafford, says<br />

by using infrared heat, the<br />

body’s muscles are able to<br />

relax into postures. “Pairing<br />

heat with movement<br />

stimulates blood flow,<br />

decreases inflammation<br />

and encourages cellular<br />

detoxification,” she says.<br />

SMART SUN MOVES<br />

New Zealand has the highest rate of<br />

melanoma in the world, so make time this<br />

month to review your skin health. Stock up<br />

on sunblock and book in for an annual skin<br />

check-up. Dr Maria DS Reeves, founder of<br />

skin cancer clinic Claris Group (claris.co.nz)<br />

advises wearing sunblock year round, having<br />

regular professional check ups, as well as selfchecking<br />

your skin each month. “Remember,<br />

you are the owner of your skin, so look after<br />

it. We do a lot to moisturise and beautify our<br />

skin, so make regular checks part of your<br />

skincare routine.”<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY GETTY, ONESHOT<br />

134 <strong>Kia</strong> <strong>Ora</strong>

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