At 81 years of age, Derek Andrews has climbed Taranaki Maunga 870 times.
He’s collected 8077 pieces of glass during his summits and 30kg of rubbish off the mountain this year alone.
It’s what makes him one of many stalwarts, a loyal, reliable and hard-working supporter of the maunga doing his bit to protect it.
But when asked what it is that draws him to Taranaki Maunga in particular, Andrews says it’s a matter of convenience.
“I can drive there in half an hour,” he says.
Perhaps if he’d lived in Hamilton, his life would have been very different.
He did his first summit on February 25, 1956, and joined the New Plymouth Tramping Club in 1976.
Andrews writes down every interaction he has with the mountain – the date, the time he did it and what he collected along the way. Any rubbish is weighed when he gets home.
“It’s just amazing how much would still be on the mountain if I hadn’t collected it.”
It’s not just rubbish and glass Andrews collects. During his years he’s found the crampon of a climber who died on the mountain, a New Zealand flag, an Australian flag, a Canadian flag, an American coin suspected to be from World War II times, and a 1940s penny.
