Bay of Plenty Times

Summer’s the season to try new pastimes

- Wynne Gray

Black Caps bowler Trent Boult had a go at beach cricket at Mount Maunganui. Sport is so much better when everyone joins in.

Most activities have restrictio­ns on player numbers, unless local rules and officials are in scarce supply.

Five players don’t fit into a doubles match at tennis, on the golf tee or a bowls match and six is one too many for a game of basketball.

Informal games are much more relaxed, especially over summer and the recent hot weather has encouraged a variety of beach contests between families, friends and new acquaintan­ces.

Kite flying, skimboardi­ng, cricket,

Sport is so much better when everyone joins in.

longboard surfing, touch, volleyball and boules create the involvemen­t long-lining can also generate from the beach.

At one stage it was called kontiki fishing — using the right wind conditions to take a line out to sea, wait a while and then wind the line back in with your catch.

There have been all sorts of fancy upgrades on that basic method, with torpedos the latest must-have.

That was out of our hosts’ realm but they have a great system when they put the longline out at Onetangi beach on Waiheke.

It’s an inclusive sport which becomes more intense when neighbours dust off their equipment and fill the conversati­on with tales of their methods and special spots.

This time they opted out of a duel. They’d been out a few nights before with limited success and implied that would be our lot as well.

We pooled our resources, baited the hooks, set the traces and sent our host on her 800m kayak journey before she jettisoned the weighted line at a special mark and headed back to shore.

After an hour, six of us got to work retrieving the line and winding it back on to the reel.

There were wavering ideas about our chances before the first few traces emerged into the shallows without any cargo.

Any anxiety disappeare­d as a catch flapped out of the surf, followed by others as the yahooing created a diversion for the beach walkers.

They saw a gurnard appear, then several snapper nudging 50cm as the bin filled with plenty of fish for dinner and bragging points for filleting conversati­ons with the neighbours.

The ocean-to-plate success took less than three hours and was the best sporting entertainm­ent any of us had this week.

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