Aranui Cave

Beez Neez now Chy Whella
Big Bear and Pepe Millard
Sat 5 Jul 2014 22:57
Aranui Cave
 
 
 
 
DSC_0339
 
We emerged from Waitomo Cave, parked our hard hats and bimbled over to a shelter where Norm made us a hot chocolate. We were thrilled to watch a local falcon playing with a crow. We then had a choice whether to walk a short distance or ride in the van to the next cave.
 
 
IMG_3207
 
We walked, stepping through the enormous number of sheep droppings. Bear stopped to take this picture of a limestone pile, common in these parts. Soon Norm had moved the van and we were at the entrance of the Aranui Cave.
 
 
 IMG_3208  DSC_0347
 
 The Aranui Cave is considered to be one of the prettiest caves in the country. Its namesake, Raruku Aranui, first discovered the cave back in 1910. This is the smallest of Waitomo’s three caves available to tour. Every cave we have ever visited always seems to have a ‘statue’ of the Virgin Mary, here was no different, this tiny stalagmite was interesting to compare our two cameras. Bear with torchlight and flash, mine with no light and kidding the camera it was daylight.
 
IMG_3216
 
We followed a path two hundred and fifty meters into the cave, part concrete, part pretend wood made from recycled plastic milk bottles, held in place with thousands of steel screws from China and laid by our very own Norn and three other chaps in a four month period.
 
 
IMG_3220
 
An interesting sight was where the walls looked stained brown. This happened when the caves flooded during a particularly wet season. The brown  came about because the flood water had so much mud content. The usual white deposits then built over, giving this unique effect.
 
 
IMG_3229
 
Along the way we stopped at the skeletal bones of a moa bird. The skull toward the left, the sacral bone easily recognisable along with the femur. In some parts of New Zealand they were the size of a fat turkey, in others, standing much higher than man, one such example is displayed in the Natural History Museum in London. Sadly, the Maori hunted these birds to extinction. The rest of our bimble was unexceptional but here are some pictures. After we were dropped off by Norm we headed toward New Plymouth and onward to Surf Highway. In the dark we took a road called Ahu Ahu and found a spot to park when the tarmac finished. A distance of one hundred and twenty miles. We slept to the sound of the sea and wondered what we would find on waking..........
 
DSC_0348  DSC_0372  DSC_0351 
 
DSC_0377
 
DSC_0364  DSC_0376  DSC_0382
 
IMG_3218  IMG_3209
 
  DSC_0362  DSC_0377
 
DSC_0370
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ALL IN ALL A GENTLE BIMBLE IN MUTED TONES
                     NOT THAT IMPRESSIVE BUT FOR THE BONES