23 June 2010
surf competition in taranaki
Back in April, from 10-16, there was a women's surf competition. Josh and Dan got to go see part of it up in New Plymouth (I was working, sad). But Josh got some cool photos, as his camera has a better zoom than mine!
There was a local gal that was in the competition, and she did well. But the winner was a Hawaiian young 'un Carissa Moore--she won the inaugural TSB Women's Surf Festival!
21 June 2010
stinky like sulfur!
So we drove back to Rotorua and first had to stop at the Warehouse (after reminding everyone to bring suits, what do I forget? Yes, my suit...and where do you find togs in the middle of winter?? You don't. But I did find some bottoms for $2, and paired it with a tank top...nice!)
Then we went to the Wai-O-Tapu (sacred waters) geothermal wonderland! Oh, yeah. Someone (IAN!!) gave Moni too much caffeine and she went crazy. But first she wanted to be like Josh.
Hi cuties! Don't step into that crazy hot water!
These are the Alum cliffs. Pretty.
Mmmmm....Smell that sulfur!
Here's the world famous champagne pool. So steamy!
The colors of the champagne pool were awesome...
And another crazy colored pool, which I think was called Devil's Cave. The devil had lots of things named after him in the park, like the devil's ink pots, devil's home, etc.
OH! The mud! I LOVE THE BOILING MUD POOL! I don't know why i love it so much. It's like waves and fire, I just can't get enough.
More 'shrooms!
Stopped for a beer at a surf-y themed restaurant. I want a surfboard table.
Ahh, the fun you can have in a grocery cart. One minute 'Are you ready to go off the ledge?' the next second KERPLUNK! Jarring, really. Or so Josh says.
The next day we drove to look at Huka Falls and Lake Taupo. Josh went to an outdoors store. He's addicted.
Look at this car! I want one!!
Rum cake as a snack in the middle of Taupo.
A misty Lake Taupo.
And then we had to drive home, and Ian and Moni drove to Auckland to fly home the next day. We loved having you!!!
16 June 2010
rugby and rainbows
Oh, the lovely rain! It makes even lovelier rainbows! This weekend we were sad that Ellen had to leave, and excited for rugby and for Monica and Ian!
Josh and I stayed in New Plymouth on Friday night and went to the Puke Ariki museum in the morning. NZ has a lot of cool museums. We were looking mainly at the new exhibit, Don't Mention the War, which was all about the Taranaki land wars in the mid 1800s.
And the wind wand again. I think it's cool.
So after our venture around New Plymouth that morning (and a really great breakfast at a fun colored cafe kitty corner to the museum) we headed north where we were going to meet Moni and Ian. Here's our gorgeous view from our crazy little room/house at Seaview Holiday Park just outside of Mokau....this is my favorite beach. Yum. It might be Josh's favorite beach too.
Who are these cute kids? Nice van!
We headed out to Three Sisters, which is three rock formations in the water...used to be four till erosion took that one, and one of the three is going to be gone soon as well!
Here's something someone carved--looks like Yoda.
So you can see the two big guys, right? The other one is that tiny little rock on the right. Poor forgotten third sister. You can only get to this during low tide, unless you want to go swimming. We were there directly at low tide and I still took off my shoes and socks and had to walk in the water. And then it started raining on us a lot...we all got soaked.
And on the way out of the parking lot I saw these calla lilies growing on the side of the road (they are all over the place right now!).
Then we had to leave Moni and Ian and go to the All Blacks vs Ireland rugby game! It's not often that they play in New Plymouth, actually, it's not that often that they play in NZ, really, so it was a really cool experience. Here's Josh with Ann and Jim, Ann is one of the nurses at the clinic, and Jim is her hubby. Aren't they cute? Ann and Jim have their caravan at Belt Road Holiday park, and have an AMAZING view of the water.
At the game! These things were putting out some heat!
I was super excited cause the All Blacks were practicing on the side of the field that would have them performing the haka towards us, but then they got the other side in the toss. Sad.
Josh's camera has a better zoom than mine.
We're so cool!
Here's a scrum. I don't know how there aren't more neck injuries in this game.
Action shot!
And the score board at full time. The poor Irish had a guy who got red carded and was off the field in like the first 10 minutes, so they had to play the whole game one man down.
We got back to the holiday park by about midnight, and went right to sleep. The next day we had planned on doing part of the White Cliffs hike, but turns out that it rained. A bunch.
So instead we went a bit more north to the Kiwi house in Otorohanga and saw the great spotted kiwi, and ate at the yummy Thirsty Weta again. Then we went to the caves to see glow worms! Or maggots, as they are otherwise known.
More rainbows on the way. We saw like 5 of them that day.
Cool carving at the new Waitomo cave site--the shiny bits that look like rain are actually representing the sticky threads that the worms send down that catch their food. Yum!
ooh, look at the sky at my favorite beach in all of New Zealand!
Hello cute people on the beach!
Then we went home to Hawera. Good times had by all.
15 June 2010
i heart books.
I've gotten to read lots of fun books, especially since the library is across the street from our apartment. All of the library info is on line, so I can browse and reserve all kinds of books. It also keeps track of the books I've read, which is 79 at the moment. I've been on the waiting list for the last book in Stieg Larsson's millennium trilogy for the last few months, and I may not get it before I leave...now I can put it on the Kindle! And it's only $11 (books here are crazy expensive, por ejemple, that book would be $40). And Dan said that anything written before 1923 (before copyright laws) is free! I am very excited about this.
Anyone have any fun books you've been reading lately? Since I'll probably forget what I've read, here is a partial list of some of my library books:
March by Geraldine Brooks--very good read, as was her People of the Book
Outliers : the story of success by Malcolm Gladwell
several by Joanne Harris (author of Chocolat)--Blackberry Wine, Five Quarters of the Orange, Coastliners, Gentlemen and Players
Charlotte Gray by Sebastian Faulks
The Memory of Running by Ron McLarty--Boone said this was getting made into a movie. Fabulous book.
Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger, strange and good
The Help by Katheryn Stockett
Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk
Not becoming my mother: and other things she taught me along the way by Ruth Reichl
Committed: a skeptic make peace with Marriage by Elizabeth Gilbert
The story of a New Zealand river by Jane Mander
The hitch-hiker's guide to the galaxy by Douglas Adams
Vintage Alice by Jessica Adams
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman (gotta love reading children's books...)
and the silly vampire series by Charlaine Harris, pure candy for the brain, but fun. It's what True Blood on HBO (or wherever it is) is based on.
And then there were lots of chick lit books that I try not to admit I read...but I can't help it.
09 June 2010
ellen fun-ness!
Anyhoo, the plan was to explore Northland. And keep Ellen up at least till about 7pm (thereby making her total time awake something like 38 hours). We started driving north and to the west coast, but first we had to have breakfast.
Oh, and we saw this guy, whose leather jacket reads: 'Jesus is Lord' across the top, and 'The Redeemed' on the bottom. I think my mom should join that gang. Is it a gang, then? A gang for the Lord? That sounds bad. :)
Continuing on, we stopped in a tiny town called Matakohe and saw the kauri museum, because I love the big trees. It had lots of other random bits in it, including a room full of horse racing trophies, tea cups (including one for mustaches), and these weird little guys that look like bobbleheads, but are actually pitchers. Like, for pouring.
Is that an airplane in your lap or are you just happy to see us?
Mighty fine missile. Hee hee.
And the whole downstairs is dedicated to kauri gum, which is like amber--it is the resin of the tree, and people used to dig for it and then use it for all sorts of things, including carvings, varnish, and linoleum.
Here's a dude who was going up the tree to harvest gum directly from the tree, called bleeding. It was discontinued in State forests when the Department realized that it was injurious to the trees.
And then there's a lady's bottle collection. A seriously huge amount of bottles that one woman collected and stored in her home...don't know where they all fit.
Josh and Ellen sittin' in a tree...
Drove north a bit and went to Bayly's Beach, just outside Dargaville. One of my books tells me it's the longest beach in NZ, at 100km. AND it turns out that it's a public highway. Seriously.
Cool cliffs with lava looking sand.
There were some great waves to watch, and pretty rocks to look at...
And cute old man with super short shorts. I don't know if I've mentioned it before, but the shorts are called stubbies, and are actually a macho thing to wear.
Yes! I have a partner in crime when I make Josh stop the car so I can take pictures!
Funny! These are not in very many places...we've only seen three kiwi crossing signs now.
And then we got to the Waipoua Forest Park, which has NZ's only primary kauri forest. The fact that it's in the middle of nowhere and hard to get to prevent it from getting logged when everything else was, and has been a sanctuary since 1952. We got to see really big trees. I love them a lot. I really want to see the redwoods, too...speaking of trees...
These are the Four Sisters, a group of (you guessed it) four inseparable (roots and branches all intertwined) kauris.
Josh and Ellen are in front of the 'Father of the Forest,' which is the world's second largest living kauri--a mere 1500- 2000 years old! It looks small in the picture, but it really is HUGE. But they need to protect the root systems so we're standing a good 20 feet away. It has a girth of 16 meters. We also got to see the 'Lord of the Forest' which is the oldest at 2000 years old, 52 meters high and 14 meters wide.
Rooster! (Always makes me think of Carol Burnett in Annie).
Great view as we came to the harbor towns of Omapere and Opononi. Across the harbor you can see big ole sand dunes....you can surf down them into the water. We didn't get to do that.
We headed across (east) to get to Paihia in the Bay of Islands, which is where we were staying for the night. Our motel had an awesome hot tub outside. Yum.
Woke up in the morning to some gray, stormy weather...unfortunately didn't get to see much of the Bay of Islands 'cause of the clouds.
So we went to the Haruru falls...
KeriKeri, where we went to the farmer's market (LOVE those things), and saw this cool sculpture.
Heading out of KeriKeri we stopped at Makana Confections...yay for chocolate!
There are 21 wineries in the area as well, and since the weather wasn't cooperating, we went wine tasting! First to the Fat Pig.
There were very few leaves left on the vines...
And then stopped at Ake Ake vineyard for lunch (super tasty) and more wine tasting.
Then we started driving south on the east coast, stopping in Kawakawa to see the toilets. Yeah, for real. The attraction is actually the toilets. First off, they really do have a great system here--almost every town has a public toilet. The small town of Kawakawa went all out for their toilets, though. So these were designed by Kawakawa's 'adopted son' Friedrich Hundertwasser, the 'internationally regarded architect and ecologist,' who was born in Austria in 1928, came to live in NZ in the early 1970s, and lived a reclusive lifestyle on a farm with outdoor plumbing. The toilet block has ceramic columns, garden roof, and used local talent and resources.
The windows are made of old bottles from the district.
The garden roof and columns.
Then we drove back down through Auckland, and over to the east coast of the Coromandel peninsula, and stayed the night in Hahei. The next morning we headed to Cathedral Cove, a beautiful beach with pretty rocks and stone archway...
Here's Ellen and Josh at the start of our fun walk--the weather was misty and a bit rainy...
but it cleared up beautifully for pictures!
Half the sky was blue and the other half was crazy gray and stormy looking.
And here's the stone archway that we were not actually supposed to go through. We pretended not to see the sign.
Then we drove over to the Hot Water Beach, which was beautiful but at higher tide, so no hot water. Sad. It's basically a free spa, when nature cooperates, anyway!
And the waves here were fantastic--Josh was salivating. Too bad he didn't have his board.
Then we drove around the Coromandel, including going on the 309 road where we talked to this cute hobbit man (he had hobbit toes, even) whose pets include like 57 little piggies, who were all quite tame. He doesn't eat them, but apparently sometimes other people buy them to eat.
The colors in the sun are so vibrant!
Looking over Coromandel Harbor.
More pretty Coromandel pictures.
So we drove down the gorgeous west coast of the Coromandel, stopping in Thames to pick up our dinner from the grocery store, and then headed to Coromandel Forest Park, to the Kauaeranga Visitors Centre to pick our hut tickets. The plan was to do the walk up to the Pinnacles Hut, which is a mansion of a hut, with 80 bunks. 80!! AND a barbeque, solar lights, and showers. Crazy. In Josh's walks book, they had it marked as an easy walk, meaning not much of a grade, well formed trail, etc. Turns out it's a million stairs. A MILLION. Poor Ellen. We wanted to share the fun outdoorsy stuff of NZ, and figured a nice easy 3 hour hike and fun hut would be awesome, but we didn't realize it would be such a crazy hike. She's such a good sport. We didn't get started till almost 4pm, though...
Here's Ellen coming over her first swingbridge of the trail!
And one of the few areas it was actually flat...
One of the lots of great little waterfalls.
And then it got dark! We had our headlamps on and had a good 1-1.5 hours of a night hike. It was very cool--the stars were out and brillant (especially since there are very few lights out there), and you could still see all the dark shapes of the mountains all around us. We got there just in time--it started POURING rain 5 minutes after we got in.
Here's Josh in the mansion of a hut. This is the dining room--there are separate bunk rooms, bathrooms and showers.
We slept well and headed back down late in the morning. It got a little rainy, but then it stopped.
A look down the Kauaeranga Valley.
Stream crossings!
More pretty mountains.
Josh needed some decorations on his backpack.
More stairs on our 'easy' walk. These are actually part of the old railway that used to go from the top of the valley to the bottom, as a means to log the forests.
Another swingbridge! This one was a bit longer, and a lot more bouncy. Good thing Ellen REALLY loves bridges. (By the way, that's a lie.)
Here's some details on the track (Ellen, show Sean so he can read all about your crazy hike)--
Pinnacles Track follows the old pack horse trails from the car-park, over the river and up the valley to the Pinnacles hut. The track was used in the good old days to bring supplies up to the millers and tree fellers, who cleared out hundreds of acres of kauri trees in the valleys. In the late 1990’s, the track (which had become a bit scungy) was upgraded, and rebuilt. The result is about a thousand stone steps, wide enough for packhorses, dominate most of the track, crossing the river three times as it rises steeply to logging/power camp at the ‘near’ top.
The logging camp was also used as a base for the power company to helicopter huge power lines in that feed from Thames to Tairua etc. It’s a good place to stop and rest, have some food and appreciate how high up you’ve come.
From the logging camp, it’s an undulating walk of between 30 min to an hour to the Pinnacles hut.
On the way back we took the Billy Goat trail--Billy Goat Trail starts at the logging camp where you take MORE stairs. This trail undulates again as it winds around the sides of the hills and there are some steep climbs but eventually it peaks and you can stop by an almost hidden information post and have a breather and admire the view. The Billy Goat Trail used to have an old wooden bridged railway running from the top of the valley to the bottom. The trail becomes a gentle walk around the side of some more valleys (with remnants of train tracks and piles sitting about)…then the last bit will test the calf muscles…a step descent down to the valley floor.
So we finally made it back to Hawera by about 11:30 on Tuesday night. It was a nice long 5 hour drive back. Wednesday I went off to work (sad) and Josh and Ellen wandered down by Whanganui, and then we had super yummy Indian takeout. I could eat naan every day. For real. Ellen had to head home on Thursday, so she and Josh headed up to New Plymouth...but not before stopping at Anderson's Pie Shop!