Can land hold you?
Can land hold you?
Do those clouds, full of light really soothe a mortal ache?
I wanted to dash into the sunset, fall wherever the light falls, crash like the waves, decay like the old wooden shop in Orepuki – my timbers going gray with rain. Crepuscular light seems most painterly – the land, already a canvas – the purples and pinks of azaelea leaves – impossible. The spun sun is a tangle of bracken grass growing on the fencetop and the stately stillness of evening in this vast house-turned-gallery on the edge of town with seats in formal gardens, left for contemplation. Yet I do not sit.
I’m a constant-motion machine, enlivening and tormenting the
world.
And yet, there was autonomy enough, almost, for me, in the
car, turning its nose on to the beach just past noon, the black-backed gulls
rising on the wind, miraculous as a plane taking off. The two rutted tracks
between beach grass leading to a choppy, muddy foreshore and a treacherous
ocean.
There are little ‘batches’ of every era and state of repair:
some eco-designed and open to the world, others small, stony, perched atop the
hill and enclosed; one with windows in all directions, like a fly with compound
eyes, as a concession to the coast location and the coast views.
The sweep of the road to the right as you go over the bridge
at Riverton, takes you up a winding way with the toi-toi lined, silvery stretch
of the Aparima, shallow at this tide, takes you into the aching distance.
Macrocarpa hedges frame settled land as the Easterly rushes in with icy effect.
The old skeleton of a tongue and groove kauri house fenced off to prevent
encampment and to contain the cattle, gave me hope that someone had plans for
its restoration. The front of the house had the river, the sides and back had a
sweeping valley right through to the other coastline. Right now the meditative
inhabitants chew their cud, eyeing me through the fence.
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