Herbertville and Cape Turnagain
At the end of the Covid-19 lockdown, we escaped our home for a long weekend at Herbertville and Cape Turnagain. The weather forecast wasn’t looking great, but we were keen to leave the 7-week solitude at home.
Herbertville is a small beach-side settlement on the side of the meandering Wainui River that flows to the sea just east of the town. It’s about a 60 minutes’ drive from Dannevirke or Waipukurau and is located in the Tararua district of the Manawatu region, but many locals have a closer relationship with the Hawke’s Bay or the Wairarapa regions.
If you travel via Pōrangahau, Hawke’s Bay, you will pass a place with one of the longest names in the world, which is Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu.
At the turn of the century Herbertville was a thriving community. It had a large hotel and several shops, a police station and a blacksmith and its shallow sandy beach acted as a landing spot for vessels to drop off passengers and cargos to make their way inland on horse drawn coaches. Nowadays, Herbertville has a small number of seaside baches, a golf course grazed by sheep, traditional country pubs and a campground.
The coast has miles of sandy beaches north and south, offering excellent walking opportunities. It also hosts a seal colony at Cape Turnagain, about a 45-minute walk north from the town.
The brown-coloured beach has wide sand flats with a gentle wave movement on the low-gradient slopes. The large shallow seawater areas it thus creates, reflect the clouds above which provides for fascinating photographs.
Cape Turnagain is a high prominent headland near Herbertville. Cape Turnagain was named by Captain Cook who used the location as a well-remembered point where he turned his ship and retraced his steps. Perhaps he should have called it Cape Turnaround?
As you get nearer to the seal colony walking north, you’ll come across more and more sedimentary rocks that stick out of the sand and provide an interesting subject to offset the vast sand flats.
Apparently, the seal colony is a winter haul out, so the number of Fur seals increase during the winter months. However, when we were there at Queens Birthday Weekend in 2020, we didn’t see that many. That may have had something to do with the weather, because as soon as we got to the rocks where they hang out, dark clouds began to roll in and we decided to turn back to avoid getting wet.
We made it back to our bach just before it started to rain non-stop, and the remainder of our trip we spent inside with the heater on, entertaining ourselves, and watching the sheep graze on the local golf course. However, I went out one more time to capture a dramatic-looking Cape Turnagain.
All in all, it was a very relaxing time and we’re looking forward to visiting Herbertville again in the future as it is a beautiful and peaceful place with many photo opportunities.
A visual story about a group of recurring trees in the rural fields of Hawke’s Bay that are a recurring photography subject for Jos Buurmans. View his images and learn why revisiting the same location could help your photography.