Saturday, March 29, 2008
Update from The Capital
Walk the Walk is currently chilling in Wellington, enjoying the hospitality of the community centre at 128 Abel Smith St. We arrived on Thursday evening and had a delicious dinner prepared for us there and a meeting with Happy Valley supporters in Welly. We had a discussion about the best areas to put efforts into at this stage of the campaign and for our part, encouraged people to try to get to Westport when we arrive in late April, as we will need as much support as we can muster there. So please tell anybody you know who might be able to get there, that the last week of April is an excellent time to visit the West Coast and Happy Valley!
Yesterday (Friday) we arrived at Parliament at 12pm with a small group of supporters (quality, not quantity!) and presented our "Dear Helen Clark" book to a representative from Trevor Mallard's office to pass on to the woman her self, along with our banner signed by Massey Uni students from Palmy and our letter to Trevor Mallard, signed by people in Petone when we visited his office on Wednesday. We spoke to whomever was listening about our journey and our campaign, stressing the hypocrisy of the government, talking about carbon neutrality while destroying pristine native habitat for coal to export over seas. Our climate camp was not received well by Parliament security, who were on top of us before we even managed to get one tent erected. There is apparently a rule to say no "structures" shall be erected on the grounds. We argued that we were staging a legitimate, peaceful protest and were simply doing what we have done in every town we have visited along our 8 1/2 week journey, but they called in the police, who trespassed one of our supporters from parliament grounds for two years. He left the grounds peacefully to avoid arrest and we set up our camp just outside the gates on council property beside two giant Pou Whenua, or Maori tribal boundary marking posts.
We remained at the camp until 12pm this afternoon when we packed up to go and sort out some issues with our passage across cook strait and have a bit of chill time for ourselves, busking time and such things.
Unfortunately the skipper of the sailing ship which we were to travel across cook st. on has had work commitments come up at the last minute and has had to cancel. He could not manage to do the passage for another two weeks. As we have certain time constraints and it seems Solid Energy has began making movements and marking out areas in the valley for work to begin in preparation for the mine, we have decided to catch the ferry across with the chip wagon tomorrow. The walk must go on! The skipper Jimmy clearly felt terrible to have to cancel at the last minute but it was out of his hands, and he very kindly donated us enough money for the two of us who would have been sailing to cross on the ferry. Thanks Jimmy! We may be able to organise to sail back with him on the return journey, Micky and I are both really keen to experience the sounds in a yacht.
Jimmy also dropped us off the "climate relay" baton to bring over Cook St with us. We are really happy to be a part of this climate journey too, and will drop it off in Picton for the next person to bring it to the next town using a mode of transport as carbon friendly as possible. It is a shame we couldn't sail it over using the power of the wind, but public transport is the next best thing.
For more information about the climate relay, check out http://www.climaterelay.co.nz/
Keep sending those messages of support,
Catch you all in the South Island leg!
Peace out,
--
Heather Simpson
Walk the Walk Organiser
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Rimutaka Valley Road
--
Heather Simpson
Walk the Walk Organiser
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
The Life of a Walker
Then there are the street hoons in their souped up boy racer cars, doing burnouts and yahooing at all ours of the night, sometimes driving up into the park we are in and doing wheelspins and doughnuts around the trees.
When we cross bridges we sometimes just wait until we can hear nothing coming for miles before we make a mad dash for safety, and in some cases have been known to scoot down the bank and cross the river or stream instead. A great many variables come into account when deciding the best way to negotiate tricky roads, including space, terrain, vegetation, steepness, traffic speed and size, visibility, road conditions and weather.
Heather Simpson
Walk the Walk Organiser
Monday, March 17, 2008
Manawatu Standard: Nothing will Stop them Now!
"It was literally a drive-by. I'm not sure whether it was our cause, or whether it's just because I'm a hippy chick with natty dreadlocks."
Ms Simpson has dealt with blisters, hypothermia, emotional and physical exhaustion during the past seven weeks - but this was the first threat of a gunshot wound.
Check out the full article online!
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Walk-the-Walk in Pahiatua - Heather Gets Shot at.
Dear Friends,
Walk the Walk is currently in Pahiatua. We have had a mad few days in this part of the world! We have had another walker join us, by the name of Dan, who is right behind the cause and loves walking too, so it seemed like just his cup of tea. So now we are four. On Friday we visited Massey University in Palmerston North to expose government greenwash and stir up some action among the student population, who we have heard haven't been up to much activism lately.
I let rip for about an hour on the megaphone about the hypocracy of our government regarding Climate Change and our environment, and persuaded students to take off their shoes, dip their feet in green paint and put a footprint on a banner saying "Stop Greenwash, No Coal, Massey University Students, Palmerston North". Each footprint is signed, and we will be bringing this to Parliament when we hit Wellington on the 27th-30th March.
We also had the chip wagon parked nearby pumping some chilled out, revolutionary music with it's eco-friendly chip powered spare battery.
That night there were some hostilities, and although I'm not sure they were directed at our cause, they were definitely directed at me. I was busking across the road from where we had been camping in the square, playing Bob Marley's Redemption Song, when a black car drove past containing 4 young men with shaved heads, dressed in camouflage. I saw one of them lean out the rear passenger side window and point a gun at me, while looking me straight in the eye. I didn't know if he was just trying to freak me out but when he pulled the trigger I moved my head to the side and a slug gun pellet brushed past my ear and made a dent in the wall behind me. So, it wasn't a real gun but it could have done some real damage where he was aiming it, at my eyes! Lucky I dodged it because he was a crack shot. I must remember that not everybody loves peaceful hippy chicks with natty dreadlocks.
The following night, we made it about 12 k out of Palmy to a beautiful lookout point atop a hill beset with a forest of wind turbines. From our camp we could see both Mt Ruapehu and Mt Taranaki, and Palmerston North spread out in front of us looked like a fairy city by night.
Apart from the idyllic location however, all was not peachy. We saw a white ute drive into the turn around we were camping near about three times in the evening, checking us out, but not stopping to talk. They were young guys, looking drunk as skunks. It wasn't until 5am when we were all in bed that they had the guts to approach, and when they did it was to sneakily steal our "climate camp, Haere Mai" banner and hoon off cackling like hyena's when Mick heard a disturbance and leapt up, telling them "You leave that there!"
So if anybody sees this banner being hung up anywhere, please return it to us, care of state highway one. Or if you can help us with replacing it - we need a huge piece of fabric which we can't afford and some way to paint it again.
Catch up again soon,
Heather
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Palmerston North
Dear Friends,
"Walk-the-Walk" has hit Palmerston North! We are currently camped out in the Square here and all the local greenies and fighters for the cause seem to be coming out of the woodwork to give us a warm welcome. The camp has become a bit of a homeless shelter here, we put up four guys and a very young girl (too young to be sleeping outside) who were just planning on crashing under trees, in our spare tent and they were very friendly but snored like beasts! I let the 15 year old Julia who worked at McD's across the road sleep in my tent because she was too scared to sleep in a tent by herself and she didn't want to go home to her Mother...(I remember when I was 15, but we needn't go into that) so we kept her safe.
Always happy to accomodate people who want to join the camp for whatever reason so it was great to have some more friendly company.
Since I last spoke to you all from Taihape, we have passed through the small town of Mangaweka, on to Hunterville, where we camped up next to the town's icon, a statue of the Huntaway farm dog.
We met a French tourist called Christian who walked with me for one day from Mangaweka to Hunterville. We were really appreciative of him for taking a day out of his last two weeks in New Zealand to do something to protect our environment here.
Some friends who we met in Arapuni (one of our personal favorite towns) bumped into us again in Hunterville on their way home from Welly. They were amazed at how far we had come and happy to see our banners up in another town. Another lady there stayed with us for the night to avoid falling asleep at the wheel and after Mick left in the morning he went with Josh (our new walker from Taihape) to his parents' house and had a korero and a good feed before meeting little old me in Marton.
I was without a cellphone for about four days because I dropped it in our friend Malcolm's compost heap when he was enthusiastically showing us the ins and outs of his pride and joy. I had thought it was gone for good until he went to put another load of compost on and saw it sitting there on top! It was very lucky he found it when he did because I don't think the garden would have liked it very much.
When I got to Marton we set up in their little town square, but there was no flat space and we were camped on little curvy hills reminiscent of the Tellytubbies set, not a very comfortable night! We were approached by a surprisingly consistent stream of locals in full support of the cause.
The Police approached us in the morning with a completely made up story about a theft that was connected with our car, and used it as an excuse to ask all our details, while telling us we weren't allowed to camp there. (the first time this message has come from the Police) They went on to say this apparent theft happened in July last year when the car wasn't even going! So Mick told them straight up that we thought they were making it all up and they needn't because we were happy to talk to them and tell them all they needed to know.
They ended up being quite friendly and seemed rather amused by our way of going about things. Then it was on to Feilding where we had a pretty quiet response, but you get that on the big jobs.
So we will hit Massey University tomorrow with a hairbrained stunt to expose government greenwash and stir up those students into some environmental activism with our enthusiasm, creativity and shocking extremist behaviour. A bit of well chosen music won't go amiss either!
The next big destination will be Lower Hutt, which we plan to hit on the 25th or 26th and will be passing by the office of Trevor Mallard, where we plan to do a bit of vigorous stirring too. The next day of course will be Wellington and that's the big one folks!
Watch this space....
Love, Peace and Joy from Positive Palmy
H Diggity dawg (Heather)
J Jiggity Jawsh (Josh) and. . .
Mick the Chip Man, Gnatty Dread Brother (Mick)
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Message from Heather in Taihape
"I enjoy all of your company when I am walking physically alone, and I feel you all beside me every step of the way."
Dear Friends!
Since I last updated you, I have been walking the most dangerous road in New Zealand, THE DESERT ROAD! It is brutal, it is treacherous and it is deserted. Deserted like a desert. I guess that's why they call it that, because when we were there, it certainly wasn't dry!
The Rangipo desert is another of New Zealand's wild places. Just like Happy Valley, it is unfit for human habitation. That doesn't make it any less worth saving. Fortunately, it is a National Park. Happy Valley, unfortunately, is on a state coal reserve.
It took us three days to walk the desert and the first two days were fine and sunny, we went through a lot of drinking water and were getting a bit worried about our water supplies. Luckily (or unluckily, whichever way you look at things) on the last day it rained. It poured. The wind was behind us, which helped because we had another 30K to walk, one of our longest days yet, so I let the wind carry me. I found out my raincoat wasn't waterproof but that was okay, I had my thermals on and a fire in my belly so I just kept walking. I didn't stop until I reached the desert oasis of Waiouru, where I was too exhausted to pitch a tent and slept in the train station, which also was not very waterproof. You get that on the big jobs.
Since then we have pressed on to Taihape and met plenty of supportive and friendly locals here, I have had a gumboot throwing lesson and plan to come back for the contest on Gumboot day, watch out, I'm ready!
I must move on and continue my korero with my new friend Josh who is taking me to meet some local Muso's because I'm hankering for a jam, so I will speak to you all again from Palmy.
Thanks for your support, I enjoy all of your company when I am walking physically alone, and I feel you all beside me every step of the way.
Peace out,
Heather and the Walk the Walk crew From the Gumboot capital, Taihape, represent!
Heather Simpson
Walk the Walk Organiser