INDEPENDENT NEWS

Young walkers on track for Te Araroa record

Published: Wed 19 Dec 2018 11:44 AM
Two Dunedin children who are nearing the halfway point of New Zealand’s national Te Araroa Trail are on track to become the youngest ever to walk the length of the country.
Jonathan, 6, and Elizabeth, 9, set out from Cape Reinga with their parents Chris and Jorinde Rapsey in October, and expect to complete the epic 3,000km walking journey down to Bluff in March. The family will arrive at the Wellington end of the trail today to enjoy a couple of rest days before their ferry to the South Island on Friday (21 December).
“At the start the children were tired and found some parts hard but now they are loving it,” Mrs Rapsey said. “It amazes me that at the end of a long day Jonathan still jumps around full of energy.”
The family was averaging around 20 km a day and had even clocked up more than 30 km on a few occasions, she said. Both children began the journey without a pack, but by the time they reached Auckland Elizabeth was adamant she should have one, so they purchased a pack for her and she has carried it ever since.
At one point, in Northland, the family accepted a short ride along a road section from Puhoi to Wenderholm after a local stopped to pick them up. However, the children complained afterwards that the drive would mean they hadn’t walked the whole trail once they got to the end, so the family retraced their steps and did the kilometre again on foot.
Mrs Rapsey said the trip had gone smoothly and joked that deciding which flavour of muesli bar to eat each day had proven to be the only contentious issue. “There have been some arguments over which flavour of muesli bar they are having but overall they have just been really happy.”
She said Chris and her were inspired to walk the trail after venturing into Fiordland with the children twice in the first half of the year and being amazed at how well they did on the Hollyford Pyke Loop and a five-day return tramp to Monowai Hut. The family are renting out their house to help fund the trip, and the children have been able to keep up their home schooling while on the trail.
“We’ve been doing a lot of maths problems for fun to work out how much of the track is left, how far we’ve come, and how much further we’ve got to go each day. It’s amazing the questions we get,” Mrs Rapsey said.
She was confident they would complete the trail and was looking forward to spending Christmas Day on the Queen Charlotte Track, “with some extra yummy food”.
Te Araroa Trust chief executive Mark Weatherall said the youngest person he knew of to have completed a single island previously was 11-year-old Cedric Wittwer, from Auckland. He was “thrilled” to hear of the Rapsey family’s journey and commended them for showing other people what was possible.
“If these guys can do it then so many other Kiwis can do it too. Whether it’s just walking a section of the trail on the weekend or walking the length of the country in one go, age is no barrier.”
Mr Weatherall said the number of people expected to walk the full length of the trail this summer was likely to exceed 1,000 for the first time, with hundreds of thousands more walking individual sections in their weekends, after work, or during their holiday break.
The number of Kiwis walking the trail was on the rise, with around a third of all through-walkers coming from New Zealand, compared to around one in five in 2016/2017.
Some of the most popular sections this summer would be the Tongariro Crossing in the central North Island, the Paekakariki Escarpment Loop on the Kāpiti Coast, the Queen Charlotte Track in the Marlborough Sounds and the Motatapu Alpine Track near Wanaka.
Mr Weatherall’s advice to anybody walking the trail this year was to enjoy it, wear high visibility vests when walking on road sections, and to be respectful of others by taking home rubbish and camping in permitted areas. He urged all walkers to take a hard-copy paper map with them, rather than relying solely on their phones or an app, and to be prepared for changing weather conditions.
“Te Araroa is our national trail and it’s there for all New Zealanders. It’s a great way of connecting with our country, seeing the landscape, and reflecting on the outdoor culture and lifestyle we are so lucky to enjoy as Kiwis.”

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