She hooked up with her pal in Thames and off they went. Five hours of quality loafing lay ahead. I wanted to make the least of it: do nothing, eat, rest, put my face to the sun. It was bliss. It was happiness. It was an essence of summer in New Zealand – a small town, no one in any hurry to get anywhere, heat, shadow, bright light.
I'd arranged to meet the legendary Shade Smith, a great songwriter from the 1970s, in a pub. We sat down with a couple of drinks and a guy with a red face walked in and said gidday. "Oh hi, Boggsy," I said. It was my boss, the CEO of the company. He had bare feet.
Thames has a remarkable feature: very deep gutters. One end of town is dominated by a magnificent war memorial on a hill, and the other end stretches towards the river. The sky has that quality of light on all coasts: a thinness, a haziness. Dense and very tall mangroves cool their feet at the water's edge.
Lunch was beer, dinner was ordered at quite possibly the finest fish and chip shop in the North Island: Thames Wholesale Fisheries, a hut on the old Shortland Wharf. Families were scoffing their seafood suppers on outside tables. Two guys were fishing off the wharf. A boat started its engine, and cruised past; I gave the skipper a crisp salute and he returned it. A sign on the wharf warned, 5 KNOTS OR $200. The sky was busy with terns, shags, black-backed seagulls, godwits.
A guy was scraping the hull of his boat in the nearby boatyards. I said, "You're putting in the work." He said, "That I am." A walking track led past a row of mangroves keeping the river intact and came out at a park. I lay down with my delicious meal. A guy walked by and sat a few metres away on the grass bank. We got to talking; he said he worked on a mussel barge and divulged that there was very good fishing to be had on the mussel farms. "The snapper get fat on mussels," he said.
The sun was low and shadows were lengthening. Fat on beer and fish, I waddled towards the bus stop. The main street was empty. Everyone was home or gone swimming. What a beautiful town, shining like a jewel in the hard sunlight of a New Zealand summer.