And this part of a tree trunk
Another fossil, oh no, that’s me
Lots of this green moss (?) here
And seagulls
And more petrified trees like this long trunk
I love how the waves keep smashing on the rocks
And taking photos
Poor birds, one with only 1 leg, another one with no legs
Just north of Curio Bay there’s something relatively new: the ‘Living Forest walkway’, the Kiwis want to make it clear to visitors that unlike the petrified forest on the beach, this walk is through a bit of forest that is actually living. I’m so glad they mention it’s a living forest because otherwise I would never have realised this!
Kiwis are notoriously terrible when it comes to signs. Take this one. When you arrive at the start of the Living Forest walkway, you are not greeted by a sign that tells you something meaningful like how long said walkway is, noooo, it tells you how long you have just walked from eg the Visitor Centre, as if that information is of any use!
Anyway, this is part of the walkway, the whole thing takes about half an hour and is as interesting as walking in any other forest, provided it’s a living forest, not a dead one!
We decide to actually camp here at the Curio Bay campsite, it costs a bit but does come with an awesome view
We deicde to walk around some more around the bay
The weather is great and so are the views
Lots of seaweed
Good amenities here
The weather is no nice that we decide to go for a swim, the water is cold though so I just quickly dived in and got out again, Rachel is just getting out of the water in the distance
Of course the moment we really want sunshine to dry off after our dive in the water clouds drift in and the sun is gone
And it doesn’t stop there, the weather seems to take a turn for the worse now
The point they were wanting to make with the living forest, is that the trees are the descendants of the ones that are petrified. Poor signage though.