World Affairs Part VI

Until not too many years ago I was a “casual smoker”, and by casual I mean I would casually smoke my way through each day like a narrow gauge train in a North Yorkshire coal mine. Since giving up smoking, the main thing I have regained is my sense of smell. Which is rather peculiar; that by given something up I have gained something. Usually I relate giving something up to losing something. Like when I gave up caring about changing underpants one summer and I lost my girlfriend. Anyway, where was I? Was I about to launch into an evangelical rant about how evil smoking is? Nah, that doesn’t sound right. Oh yes, there it is a few sentences back, the frayed end of this yarn. I was talking about smell and how wonderful it is to be reunited with it after years of sticking incense sticks made of burnt dog hair up my nose.

seb kemp, world affairs part 6, new zealand, scotland, wales mountain biking, extreme, nsmb, jamaica, whistler bike park
  Kelly “McMansion” McGarry shows off the calling card that almost got posted through his van window when we lost a wheel on the long drive north.

Nowadays, whenever I land at an airport it is the smell that strikes me. As I exit from airport arrival terminals it is like having a nose bag of local odors strapped to my snorter. Each airport arrivals has its own smell. Jamaica smells like sweet smoked potpourri. Whilst landing at the great airplane pile up known as Heathrow the smell is like wet sports clothes that have been left in a kit bag in the garden for the weekend. Vancouver, depending on the season, either smells like you have thrust your head into the deep freezer at the grocery store or like you have pressed several Pine Fresh Glade Plug-Ins up your nose. Lisbon airport smells like cured ham that has been rolled in an ashtray. LAX smells like glittering promises that are choked by the reality of waking up each morning to find that in the great employment lottery you find yourself wiping up burrito vomit from plastic tables rather than snorting cocaine off the thighs of Hollywood’s latest starlet. You get the picture. Each place has a smell and even a faint whiff teleports you to that place.

When I landed in Auckland a few weeks ago, the smell I was greeted by made me feel like I had just dove from a mossy rock into a refreshing pool of water. Hair wet, cool shadows, warm rock. Shampoo advert kind of thing. There could be a beautiful girl draped across a rock with a flower in her ear. It was a beautiful feeling to bathe in that smell.

seb kemp, world affairs part 6, new zealand, scotland, wales mountain biking, extreme, nsmb, jamaica, whistler bike park
  Waiting for the Interislander ferry in Wellington as we head south.

Due to a day long lay over in Auckland before heading again to be in the Southern Alps I had to check into a motel. The only available motel near enough to be commutable for the dawn connection was in the middle of an industrial area. I had nearly 24 hours to kill in that place, and unwilling to take an elaborate choreography of taxis and buses to get into downtown I decided to just chill out in the motel and treat that day like a busman’s holiday in order to get over the long haul flight acid bath brain.

However, I don’t deal well with these kinds of holidays. I hate sitting around doing f-all and I get antsy just lounging. So after about 45 minutes I had expended all the entertainment available in this drab dirty motel. The pool was out of order (it looked like a hippopotamus had recently taken a bath in it) and I had only packed a hip flask of Appleton’s, which was gulped with relish in order to provide entertainment in my own intoxication when the motel’s amusement potential failed to hit even Shopping Channel levels of interest.

seb kemp, world affairs part 6, new zealand, scotland, wales mountain biking, extreme, nsmb, jamaica, whistler bike park
  When it rains it is best to stay inside before your sanity goes west.

All I was left with was to nose the bouquet that even industrial Auckland provided. You see, even the dirtiest, most down trodden, commercial district of Auckland smells better than the handbag of a pop songstress. It was a pleasure to be back in this incredible country and even though Auckland is regarded as the ash tray of the land of the Long White Cloud it is truly a lovely little city.

Over the next few instalments of World Affairs I will be gushing about Nu Zelund like a 50 year old divorcee who just had a two minute conversation with the check out girl at the grocery store, decides to learn what the Facebook is all about and buys the new Fall Out Boy album just to impress the check out girl. Weird eh? Trust me, if you don’t already love NZ then I think you will once I have fawned over it endlessly. That or you will get a restraining order.

Join me on a not so literal literary trail ride through the thyme fields of Alexandra which I hope will give you the courage to take a trip to the rugged open space of Central Otago to take a ride there yourself. Think about breathing in the humid tropical sweetness of the bush around the Marlborough Sounds. Consider sniffing up a line of Wellington inner city singletrack. Put a metaphorical peg on your honker for the quality riding around the stinking bog of Rotorua. Have a whiff of imaginary burning brake pads and splintering pine on the hills that loam over Queenstown. 

seb kemp, world affairs part 6, new zealand, scotland, wales mountain biking, extreme, nsmb, jamaica, whistler bike park
  I got blind drunk one night, but thankfully B-Rad made keeping drunk easy the next day. Beer has yeast in it, which rhymes with east, therefore keeping the cardinal points theme theme going.

New Zealand is full of an amazing variety of trails, all with their own distinct character and, often, bouquet. Thankfully a mountain bike emits no more smell than a faint waft of lubricant and it can transport its rider deep into places where natures fragrances bloom, meaning that we can savor the snout flavour of the outdoors and wash away the odour of pedestrian vices committed in a motel

But first, to move from this motel room, wash the stench of previous occupants from my nose, and follow the nose of my bike through the perfumed ribbons of singletrack of New Zealand. Until next time.


A note about Seb’s photographic travails: The brand new Canon G12 (or the high caliber hipster cannon, as I like to call it) got treated to a tumble in the jungle when only two weeks old. I have been without a camera so this week a selection of awful little I-Phone photos will have to do. I promise next time you will be treated to the usual obscure black and white rubbish that catches my eye.


How does this smell to you? Any airports whose perfumes you remember? Tell us a fragrant tale…

 

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