KIWI RIDER JANUARY 2018 VOL.1 | Page 36

including one spectacular cartwheel caused by overgrown grass covering some deep ruts. We rode through pine forest trails, with amazing light, that were so unused and overgrown that the tracks needed bush bashing most of the way. Then it was back through one of the mountainous farms we’d come through the day before, but this time it was dryer, faster, and more fun. Not so dry was the big river that Jonny, our lead rider, lost his bike in... so the first round was on him that night. Then it was on to Mount Hikurangi where we had been given permission to ride up to a sacred Maori site. There was a very mystical and slightly foreboding air with giant totem- like Maori carvings sat shrouded in mist. By this time I’d got the hang of the ground and my 36 KIWI RIDER bike, so the descent from the summit was fast and fun. This was finished off by a mad dash through downhill mogul-filled pasture, the bikes were springing up and down like prancing deer. Our final destination that night was Tokomaru Bay at the sea’s edge. It’s amazing to think that on NZ’s most easterly point the next stop is South America. On our fourth and final day on the East Cape adventure I had finally got the hang of the bike and the terrain bouncing around over rough ground in a mini ‘dance’ with ruts, rocks, trees, and every other type of flora and fauna NZ could throw at us, including Kiwi enduro riders. As a result I wasn’t always at the back of the pack and I started getting a few comments from the others, like “ya riding pretty quick, aye, Ant” and “Ya not as slow-a,s aye!”