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Friday, 8 October 2010

Adelaide

Hello,

I have decided to stop apologising for not blogging because it's just getting boring. I have been in Australia since 21st September. For the past week I have been in Adelaide. It was AWESOME. This was mainly because I was staying with family friends and Arthur, who is my age, took me everywhere with him and so I met all his friends and had a social life. Adelaide also has lots of wine and beaches and beautiful architecture - photos to follow.

My highlights for my time in Adelaide include 3 main events:

- A wine tour organised by one of Arthur's friends for her birhtday with 34 people. This was to an area known as the Barossa. We visited 3 vinyards and it is safe to say that due to a champagne breakfast to begin with I was feeling tipsy after vinyard number 1. I know this because I tried to take an 'artful' photograph of a wine glass and it was wonky. Not a good sign. The birthday girl herself is fabulous (we have arranged to go to Ascot together next year when she's in the UK). The afternoon finished with a huge lunch of gourment Pizzas and chacuterie at the final vinyard and a little nap for me.

- Parklife - huge music festival, sunshine. Danced my heart out.

- Koalas - more later no credit

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

Wednesday Glacier to Wanaka



On Wednesday morning we left Franz Josef in (frustratingly) brilliant sunshine. However the trip to Wanaka, via Lake Matheson with incredible views of the Fox Glacier, almost made up for yesterday's bad weather. Actually I didn't make the bus because I thought pick up was at 8.15 and I was staying at a different hostel from everyone else so had to get a taxi to meet the bus at Lake Matheson. Ouch.

We ended the day at Wanaka which is the smaller sister ski station town of Queenstown (where I am now). The reason I'm wearing shorts in the photo (it was freezing) was that our driver (Bods) told me you can feed dolphins in the lake (!) but that you have to wade in to feed them. And I believed him until I walked out of the door and realised I had been well and truly had. In justification I thought (and semi still think) it is not a land locked lake.

Monday, 13 September 2010

Franz Josef Glacier



Franz Josef Glacier - Winter wonderland (in torrential rain). Still breathtaking.

Sunday, 12 September 2010

Abel Tasman National Park, Nelson, South Island


Saturday 11th September - Abel Tasman National Park

On Saturday a few of us stayed behind in Nelson to walk in the national park. This is one of the most famous places to walk in New Zealand. The water is crystal clear and bright turquoise. When there is sunshine and blue sky it is phenominal - but of course there wasn't blue sky for us. Still gorgeous. We walked for about 4 hours through dense forest with lots of ferns. The forest is so green it feels as though it is literally bursting with life.

We had to get up early in the morning (pick up 6.55 am - ouch)and drive to the national park. We were taken by speed boat to one of the beaches up the coast so that we could walk back along the coastal path. En route we stopped at Tonga island (not the same weather as real Tonga) where the seals like to chill out. At the moment the babies are finding their flippers and apparently the mums are already preggers again so keep trying to move them along.

The walk was fantastic - fab views, waterfalls etc. The scenery is what makes NZ and it felt so good to be off the bus and having a look around.

45 minutes before the boat was supposed to pick us up it started to rain torrentially and was still at it when the boat collected us. It was low tide by then and the boat couldn't come into the beach, we had to wade out in the sea. In jeans. And converse trainers. Thigh deep. The final picture is how wet I was when I got back to the bus. I couldn't have been wetter if I'd gone for a swim fully dressed.

Centre of New Zealand, Nelson, South Island



Later on Friday 10th... in Nelson

The ferry from the North to South Island arrives in Picton and we then drove across to Nelson which is on the coast in the north west of the South Island near the Abel Tasman National Park (of which more later). In the afternoon because there was blue sky (finally) the whole bus walked up to the "Centre of New Zealand" which is basically a hill supposedly where you would put a pin if you spun New Zealand around. Awesome afternoon.

There are a lot of Magnolia's flowering here at the moment. I love Magnolia flowers.

I discovered at some point on this afternoon that I'd left my hiking boots, which I'd brought pretty much only for this one week, in the hostel in Wellington. It was dark when I left and I didn't see them. Bummer.

Crossing North - South Island. .... Sound



Friday 10th September - Wellington (North Island) to Nelson (South Island) across Cook Straight and Marlborough Sound.

Leaving Wellington the weather was overcast but it cleared up by the time we entered the Sound. The photos cannot do justice to how beautiful it is to have all of this around you. The water is SO turquoise blue. Marlborough SSound also means Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc country :-)






Tuesday 7th September - River Valley to Wellington

On the way down from River Valley to Wellington we stopped at a lovely town called Bulls. The people of Bulls love the name of their town. See pictures.
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River Valley Lodge - Monday 6th September

On Monday last week we stayed at this lodge in the middle of no where. Usually this is THE place to white water raft in New Zealand however at the time the river was running too high. So it was pretty good that we'd already rafted in Rotarua. This night was actually one of my favourite so far in New Zealand. The 'home baking' was amazing (it's consistently good here). The central part of the lodge is like a ski chalet with a double height ceiling, roaring wood burning fire and lots of sofas around it. Pretty much everyone on the coach played in a giant poker tournament.
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Hello!

Apologies for the delay in blogging. Just been really busy and had limited internet access. The past week has been one of the BEST of my life. It rains almost all the time because it is winter here at the moment but the Kiwi Experience has taken me to some really awesome places.

The link above I hope will show photographs of the Waitomo caves. Waitomo is actually famous for its glow worm caves and black water rafting but I'm afraid I woosed out because I didn't want to get cold and wet again after rafting in Rotorua and I wanted to see the Stalactites and Stalacmites instead.

We stayed in a hostel on a farm. The scenery was breathtaking and in the morning Charlotte got to bottle feed a lamb.
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Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Auckland, Rotarua, Cathedral Cove



We are in Rainy Rotarua.

I was really looking forward to leaving Auckland and venturing out into the New Zealand countryside and it hasn't disappointed. The landscape is breathtaking. We're travelling with the Kiwi Experience because we got a great deal for both islands. The Kiwi Experience has a notorious reputation as a drinking, club 18-30 on wheels but this is mainly during the NZ summer. Our bus was half empty (two seats each) but a great way to meet people.

On our first day out of Auckland we stopped for a walk (lots of walks on the Kiwi Experience - very bracing) at Cathedral Cove. Having been hauled over by New Zealand bio security twice at Auckland airport (and threatened with a fine and life imprisonment) I was ecstatic to finally be wearing them. I'm not going to describe the scenery, see photos, because words can't but I love this country.

That evening our bus stopped at Mercury Bay. This is a summer resort on the coast for Aucklanders and I fully intended to go for a walking along the beach but as night fell our hostel hosts produced a massive vat of spaghetti bollognaise and the female bus contingent took over the TV with A Knight's Tale.

The following morning we set off for Rotarua via Matamata aka 'Hobbiton' where part of Lord of the Rings was shot.

Rotarua is a town beside a lake formed by a volcano crater and pockets of geothermal activity surround it. Sulphuric steam rises from the ground in people's back gardens and when we were in the supermarket I was almost overcome by the smell of rotten eggs, from the ground not the produce.

Yesterday we went white water rafting over a 7 metre waterfall on the Kaituna River. Charlotte had been looking forward to it for months after seeing the rafting on television. All strapped up in a slightly soggy wetsuit, helmet and buoyancy aid I must admit I was a little apprehensive but it turned out to be really fun, less scary than it sounds but above all a chance to see some amazing scenery that you certainly can't see from the road. The river is boarded by high rock faces with the emblematic silver fern growing from the cracks. The strangest contrast in New Zealand scenery is that between the tamed farmland and the wild, rugged indigenous forest.

As you might expect in a country of farmers the meat here is incredible. Last night we each ate 3 steaks each! SO good. The perfect end to a Kiwi adventure day.

Stay tuned for Waitomo glow worm caves...

Saturday, 28 August 2010

San Francisco



I've been trying to put photos on the blog for a while and right now this seems the easiest way. If you click on the first picture (China Town Gate) a new window might open, hopefully, with an album of all the San Francisco pictures.

We are in Auckland again at the moment and today we're going to Rangitoto to climb a volcano, even though the skies look as though they are about to open. It's difficult to get the lie of the land here without going somewhere high.

Last night we had dinner at the Skytower which is apparently the tallest building in the southern hemisphere. We ate at the Observatory which is the buffet restaurant. The food was not so good but the view was spectacular. If you're planning a visit I'd try the revolving a la carte restaurant, Orbit, upstairs.

Tomorrow we set off down the North Island.

Sunday, 22 August 2010

Auckland for a day and Fiji

On Friday morning we found ourselves on a bus, it was cold and drizzling, the bus drove on the left hand side of the road and we passed fish and chip shops - no we weren't back in the UK, we were in Auckland, but it sure felt like home.

We only stopped over in Auckland for an afternoon and a night (it had to be less than 24 hours for a round-the-world ticket) but from what I saw of it I really like it. Some sort-of relatives took us to a lovely restaurant for dinner. When you're travelling it makes a huge difference if you have someone who knows the place to show you around and above all the best eateries.

We are now in Fiji, on the main island, in a really cheap but good 'flashpacker' resort. We're definitely getting into the backpacker spirit in our dorm room - no more hotels for us). I'm scuba diving this week and C is surfing.

From the little of Fiji that we saw on the drive to the resort it appears very different from Tonga culturally. The 'Indian' presence is very obvious in the form of both Mosques and Hindu temples. Fiji is ethnically 50% Indian as a result of the endentured Indian labourers who were brought here about 100 years ago ... probably by the British. This has been the subject of major political upheaval for at least the last 30 years but I'm not going to write about that because I don't know enough about it. Suffice to say that we have seen no evidence of it (and there is an ethnically Indian chef in the kitchen)and all the staff have been very friendly.

I have to go and beef up on my diving theory. The next post will probably be from Auckland.

http://picasaweb.google.com/111926669880466215152/Fiji?authkey=Gv1sRgCP_w1MLaqr_FtQE#

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Tonga

Good Morning!

Today we are going into the capital Nuku Alofa... because they have good banana cake! This is where the King's palace is (the only wooden royal palace in the world).

The buses here are awesome. Barely road worthy and yet fitted with a thumping bass system. People are very friendly and always offer their seats. The maximum road speed in Tonga is 40 km/hr. Nothing is rushed.

Yesterday we cycled for an hour and a half at mid day to the 'Blow Holes'. We had to go at that time to coincide with high tide when they are the most spectacular. Whilst these sound whale related they are actually natural holes in cliffs that run for at least 2 kms where the tide crashes against the waves and the water initially sprays up through the holes until it bursts over the cliffs. We took some spectacular pictures which I'll put up when I have a faster internet connection.

On Sunday our hosts Sven and Carolina held an Omu. This is when food is cooked in the ground on hot stones which are covered with palm leaves and left for about 4 hours. A similar method of cooking is used for special occasions, traditionally in Tonga on Sundays, throughout the Pacific, including by Maori's in New Zealand. We had chicken and snapper which was delicious. Afterwards Carolina's nieces came to perform traditiinal Pacific dances, including from Tahiti. I think I might have written previously that we had seen similar dances at another resort further along the beach. The evening at our own resort was special because it was more informal, with our hostess's own family

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Whale

August is peak calving season for Hump Back Wales off Tonga and about an hour ago we saw a Hump Back and her calf swim passed our beach, just beyond the reef. They were both waving their flippers/fins. Made my day!

Friday, 13 August 2010

Tonga

Hello

I'm a bit behind with posts at the moment and have decided to jump to where we are now and go backwards.

We're currently on the friendly island of Tonga, so called apparently by Captain James Cooke. The Kingdom of Tonga, and it really is a semi-feudal kingdom, is actually comprised of over a hundred islands but we are only staying on the mainland because we have found a fabulous place to stay (see pictures) and because it costs so much to go to other islands and we are having a budget week after the USA.

Our 'resort', Hai'lala Holiday Resort, is run by Sven who is German but has lived in Tonga since he was 14 years old, and his Tongan wife Carolina or Caroline. They have recently moved their resort (including all the plants) from a different area and there are tons of builders, electricians and members of Carolina's extensive family industriously putting in finishing touches. Sven and Carolina are incredibly, genuinely welcoming which is very refreshing after the 'have a nice day but give me a tip' culture in the US.

This week will be quite uninteresting blog wise because we are just snorkelling, reading and generally chilling out. Hopefully you will be able to see photos of where we are though.

It's winter at the moment here and the water temperature is only (!) 24 degrees C. Think pretty cool bath water. I think normal UK cold water is 20 degrees. I have ventured for one snorkel and it was fine once you were in. The New Zealanders here think the water is pretty warm but then they are coming from deepest winter and keep telling us of all the merino thermal vests we will need to get when we arrive in Auckland.

Yesterday evening we went to the next resort along the beach which was hosting a buffet of traditional food and dancing. The dancing was awesome. The boys seem to have the more interesting parts, including the Tongan version of the Hukka (the Sipi Tau I think) as well as performing the Mauri Hukka. One of the girls who worked in that resort performed fire Poi with balls of fire at either end of two pieces of string that she whirled around her and a ten year old boy performed with a baton on fire at either end (I could barely watch).

One dance required audience participation and Charlotte (with camera) made herself very scarce whilst the Tongan dancers made us go up on stage. I'll get her back.

Saturday, 7 August 2010

Las Vegas and San Francisco

We have finally set off and if the last 4 days (it seems so much longer) are anything to go by we are in for an amazing trip. Already I've been surprised by how much I liked Las Vegas and the slight disappointment I feel towards San Francisco. But I''ll start at the beginning.

At one point as the aeroplane flew from London to Las Vegas I lifted my blind to see white blobs surrounded by blue. Often when you are so high up it is difficult to distinguish what you are seeing below you, especially if there is no form of human settlement to act as a scale. In this case the appearance of a coastline confirmed our first suspicions. These were iceburgs. I asked the flight attendant about this at the end of the flight and he told me that we flew over the magnetic north pole (but didn't explain why we had taken this route).

As you approach Las Vegas the pilot tells you that the plane is starting its descent yet all you can see below is barren desert. The earth looks like a brown piece of paper that has been balled up and then flattened out again. There are the outlines of long dried up river beds. It seems impossible that any settlement could exist in such an inhospitable place. Then suddenly, very, very shortly before landing there appears the perfect grid of roads and houses that I now recognise as a US city. There are roads that traverse Las Vegas in a straight line and then continue, still in a straight line out into the desert as far as the eye can see. C told me on the plane that there are roads that go straight across the USA and that every so often they have a slight kink to take in the curvature of the Earth. As a European coming to the States you realise that the age of civilisation that you take for granted, especially for example in London or Paris, actually doesn't exist in many parts of the world. Everything looks uniform because it was built at roughly the same time and has never been bombed or had the chance to fall down.

When you step out of the plane in Las Vegas you are instantly aware that you're in the desert. The heat is intense and it's very dry.

We were staying at the MGM Grand and when we checked in I asked for a high floor so we were given the 27th with a spectacular view over... Hooters! If you've never heard of it the name kind of gives away the main theme of this hotel-casino. Unfortunately timing and the formidable freeway between the two hotels prevented us from visiting and getting a T-shirt for C.

Las Vegas Casinos are very strange. Obviously there is the large casino floor, shops, restaurants (including Starbucks and McD's as well as considerably more upmarket eateries) and all with absolutely no natural light. There is nothing whatsoever to indicate the time of day or night.

So why did we like Las Vegas so much? On Wednesday morning we woke up at 6am (jetlag) and were by the pool at 8am. For two daylight starved london students who have been tied to a desk for the past 9 months lying by the pool in Las Vegas, surrounded by palm trees, is, for a day or two at least, pure bliss. A stay in LV is a guarantee of pure sunshine and warmth.

Las Vegas has a monorail that goes between the main hotels, and also internaly linked bridges so that you never have to go down to the main road (the strip). We took the monorail to Bally's which is the nearest stop to the Bellagio where the modern Oceans Eleven was shot. Bally's is itself a casino. There are Casinos in Las Vegas for all pockets ranging from the Bellagio which has Chanel and Prada boutiques within it to "Bill's Steak House and Casino". Actually I didn't go into Bill's so can't judge. The Bellagio has the most incredible Baccarat glass flower roof in it's lobby and a display made of fresh flowers in the shapes of frogs, ladybirds and butterflies. The weirdest casino we decided was Paris. This casino famously has a giant faux Eiffel Tour actually built through it, so that when you go inside you see the tower's feet coming down from the ceiling, and a faux Arc de Triomphe in the parking circle. When you go inside the ceiling of the casino floor is painted with blue sky and clouds and around the edge are little shops like the winding roads of the 6th Arondisement.

After a mere 24hours we had to catch the plane to San Franciso. A lot of the time August in San Francisco feels like living in a cloud. However, at the moment the sun is shining so I'm going for a walk.

Sunday, 25 July 2010

Welcome to our blog!

In the next 6 months we will be travelling around the world to USA, Tonga, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia and Hong Kong. This blog is intended to enable our family and friends to follow our adventures and we also hope it will be useful to anyone planning a similar trip.

Special Interests: Learning to surf, visiting some of the best dive sites in the world, getting a tan!

P.S. Everything is copyrighted :-)