Last Sunday I photographed at the annual Baring Head bouldering competition, on the south-eastern tip of Wellington harbour. I climbed, too — nothing spectacular, but I loved the feel of moving on real rock again.Here, Bob Keegan tops out on Jaded (graded V5: that's incomprehensibly hard if you've never climbed seriously; a warm-up climb for the elite). Dave Kopp watches in the lower left of the photo, after spotting Bob through the crux of the boulder problem ("spotting" means being ready to guide the climber's body, particularly the head and neck area, away from dangerous landing spots like rocks in the event of a fall).
All content © 2009 Pete McGregor





Mr N.K. Sharma founded Jaisalmer's 


Out here the night has no street lights; at 2 a.m. one sees only moonlight through curtains, dark shapes, the idea of things. The night releases what one seldom sees in daylight.
These loading yards are further up the valley from my place, on the opposite (western) side of the river. That's the southern Ruahine Range mostly hidden by cloud in the background. I photographed this between showers of rain on a miserable day in Spring last year (2008).

Knights Track starts at about this point in Makiekie Stream (a.k.a. Coal Creek) and climbs steeply to the summit of the Ngamoko Range. From there, one can traverse the range or drop — again, steeply — to the Pohangina River almost directly opposite Leon Kinvig hut. In the right kind of weather it's a lovely journey the whole way.
In a comment on the 




