JnR’s trip to New Zealand (week one)

11/29

We flew to New Zealand and made our way to Christchurch.  We walked around a bit before heading back to our room and getting some much-needed rest.

The following day we discovered meat pies at the Copenhagen bakery.  Over the next several days I tried to get pies at least twice a day.  After breakfast we visited the Antarctic Center.  They had blue fairy penguins in an enclosure and we watched them swim around for a while.  Then we rode in a Hagglund around a course they built to show off the tank’s capabilities.  After the Antarctic Center we walked around Christchurch some more taking in sights, such as the dandelion fountain by the river.

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The next day we took the TranzAlpine railroad across the continent to Greymouth where we rented a car.  This is when the real NZ adventure began.  I was pretty anxious about driving on the left side of the road, and over the course of our trip there was a time or two where I pulled into the wrong side of the road by habit.  Thankfully, there was VERY little traffic on the road and both times I made that error there was no one around to witness it.  Except Jenn, of course.  After we got the car, we drove to Punakaiki to see the pancake rocks, then on to Hokitika for sunset and our hostel.

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We did some shopping in Hokitika and bought some jade.  We had quite a time trying to buy a Styrofoam cooler to store our groceries in the car.  In Australia, the major cooler manufacturer was eskimo, and they called their coolers ‘eskies’.  On our tour of the red center we used them a lot so we picked up their terminology.  They did not call them eskies in NZ, and it took a while to explain just what it was we were looking for.  We asked at the grocery store, the gas station, even at a jewelry store.  Eventually the ladies at the jewelry shop told us we were trying to buy a ‘chilly-bin’ and sent us back to the grocery store to buy one.  As we were in line to check out, we asked for some ice.  They didn’t understand what we wanted.  Frozen water, I say.  ‘Ohhhhh, OICE!’ the checker says.  ‘Like Oice Oice baby!’, he says.  ‘Say Oice again!’ he requests.  It was pretty funny.  We got our groceries in our chilly bin with our oice and we were on our way.  From Hokitika, we went to Fox Glacier where we did the terminal face walk at the glacier.

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We signed up for the heli-hike atop Fox Glacier but it took a few days for the weather to clear so we kinda just hung out at Lake Matheson playing cards.  NZ had very interesting birds.  The black one is a Pukeko and the green one is an alpine parrot or Kea.  When we visited Gillespie beach we met our first of many sheep.

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The next day was clear enough for our helicopter to land on the glacier for our hike.  It was awesome!  Our guide was long-legged so Jenn had trouble trying to cross the chasms he could casually step across.  The air was crisp, the ice was blue, and they told us the dirt was from Australia- carried over by clouds.

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We loaded up the car and headed out for Wanaka.  Unfortunately, we discovered a little too late that NZ isn’t like the states in regard to gas stations.  They are few and far between and we ran out of gas near Haast and decided to try to sleep on the beach.  We stepped put of the car and were swarmed by mosquitoes.  We lept back in the car and killed the blood suckers for an hour.  It also turns out that the beach in Haast was crazy cold.  We put on ALL of our clothes and tried to sleep in the car.  It didn’t work out so well.  Morning arrived very slowly.  We got some gas and continued on to Wanaka.  After arriving at the Purple Cow, we slept a bit before getting sunburned on a jet boat and visiting puzzling world.

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Then we drove to Milford Sound.

JnR’s trip to Australia (week five)

11/19

Lady Elliot Island is a natural island formed by coral and bird droppings.  It really is.  The lodgings are glorified tents.  The reason you want to stay a week here is that the island is in the Great Barrier reef and you simply walk off the island into reef and amazing coral vistas.  We spent days snorkeling here.

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We only had a disposable underwater film camera so our pictures are not as good as we would have liked and we missed a lot of great shots.  We saw so many different kinds of seafaring creatures: sharks, turtles, anemone, cuttlefish, manta ray, and a huge maori wrasse (biggest damn fish I have ever seen).

While we were there, the Green sea turtles were nesting, so we could go out at night with the nature guide and watch the turtles dig a pit and lay eggs before heading back to sea.

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We left Lady Elliot and headed to Sydney to finish out the Australia leg of our trip.  Our second day in Sydney we went to the Opera house for Rachmaninoff after a visit to the botanic gardens.

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The following day we saw the aquarium and wildlife world.  We got a lot more pictures at the aquarium but it feels like cheating after seeing some of these animals in the wild.

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The Sydney Harbor bridge was very cool.  We climbed the pylon before taking the Parramatta ferry.  Of course, the most interesting pictures you can take from the bridge are the opera house.

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We took the train to Katoomba and the Blue Mountains.  There we saw echo point, three sisters and the leura cascades.

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The next day we flew to New Zealand.

JnR’s trip to Australia (week four)

11/13

We stayed in a rambunctious hostel (I think it was called Calypso) in Cairns but they had a travel guy there that would have made the place a bargain at twice the price.  He helped us book an overnight on the Great Barrier Reef (our travel agent in the states said there was no way we could afford to do that) and he even refunded our hostel for the days we would be on the overnight.  Anyway, kudos to Calypso, they were great.

Our first full day in Cairns we went to Tjapukai, an aboriginal cultural park.  We watched an aboriginal dance with music by didgeridoo.  We were also taught how to throw boomerangs and spears.  It was pretty awesome.

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We took the Skyrail to Kuranda.  The Skyrail cable car was outstanding and we were fortunate in that it had rained the day before so waterfalls were flowing and the greenery was beautiful.  In Kuranda, we went to the butterfly sanctuary.

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The next day we went out with Billy Tea Bush Safari.  We must have done their Daintree rain forest 1 day tour.  We went out in their truck through the rain forest to have a snack, then on to the boat trip down the river.  We saw crocodiles, snakes and mangrove trees from the boat.  At the animal preserve we fed kangaroos, and at Cape Tribulation we saw a box jellyfish.

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The travel guy at Calypso said we had to do Uncle Brian’s waterfall tour, so that’s what we did the day after Daintree.  The waterfall tour was incredible!  The sights were amazing and the natural water slides were great.  This tour was easily the most fun you can have on a bus.  We even saw two platypus! (yes, I had to look it up)

  1. Scientists generally use “platypuses” or simply “platypus“. Colloquially, the term “platypi” is also used for the plural, although this is technically incorrect and a form of pseudo-Latin; the correct Greek plural would be “platypodes”.
  2. Platypus – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platypus

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Then on to the Coral Sea Dreaming for our live-aboard for the next two days.  The live-aboard was less expensive than our hostel stay in Cairns.  Of course, we had to sleep on the dining room table but it was awesome.  Plus, we went to snorkel, not to sleep on tables!  We tried scuba here and it was ok.  Jenn didn’t care for it at all and used up most of her air in just a few minutes underwater.

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The day after we got back from the live-aboard we flew to Lady Elliot Island.

JnR’s trip to Australia (week three)

11/6

We took the ferry back to Adelaide and the next morning we boarded the short bus for our 6 day trip through the red center.  The tour hiked through Alligator gorge and we saw aboriginal cave paintings.  We ended the day at Pachilna where we ate kangaroo, emu and camel for dinner.

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Our tour went through another gorge where we saw yellow footed rock wallaby, emu and a shingleback lizard whom we affectionately refer to as a turd lizard.  Their tail resembles their head and as it was described to us, a predator might bite the shingleback’s ‘fake’ head and get a mouthful of something not delicious.  Later in the day when it was much warmer, we climbed Mt. Ohlssen-Bagge.

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The following day we drove to Lake Hart salt flats.  It was the first time I’d ever seen salt flats and it was pretty neat.  It was also very flat.  After that short stop we continued our trek to Coober Pedy where they mine opal.  They had these crazy vacuum vehicles made of old pickup trucks.  They use these vacuums to suck the dirt up from inside the mines.  It was very hot there, so hot that the houses are built underground.  We fossacked dirt piles for a while trying to find opal but gave up and bought one.  The breakaways are near here, and a lot of movies like Mad max and Pitch Black were filmed in this region for the desolate landscape.  That evening in the dining hall where we stayed, we saw a giant spider and learned that everything in Australia can kill you.  You should listen to the ‘Come to Australia‘ song.

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11/9

We made it to Uluru.  It was quite hot.  That night we camped under the stars.139 rc

The next day we had a chance to walk around Uluru (or climb it).  We read that it is disrespectful to the Aboriginal people to climb it, so we admired it from the ground.  After a few hours at Uluru, we hiked at Kata Tjuta.  We camped in cabins that night and saw more of Australia’s poisonous spiders.  I’m pretty sure that’s a redback.

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After packing up camp, we head to King’s Canyon where we hiked for a few hours.  It was very hot once again.

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Leaving King’s canyon we drove the rest of the way to Alice Springs.  In Alice Springs we bought a painting by an Aboriginal artist then took a flight to Cairns.

JnR’s trip to Australia (week two)

11/1

After visiting the tourism information center, I did their walking tour #5.  I also saw the Royal Exhibition Building and the Old Melbourne Gaol.

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The next day we flew to Adelaide.  After checking into the hostel and getting some groceries, we rode the tram awhile and saw the Chinese market.  Then we walked around the park and saw the river and sculptures there.

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The bus for our Kangaroo Island tour picked us up the following day.  Aboard the Sealink ferry, we crossed over to the island.

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The tour took us to a farm where we were able to pet koalas, feed kangaroos, and hold a joey.

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After the farm we went to a beach with sea lions before continuing on to watch a man feed pelicans.  Jenn loved it.  The pelicans were pretty ornery and threatened to eat a gull that sat atop the man’s head.  That evening, we walked along to beach to see penguins.

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The tour bus picked us up the next morning and took us to a eucalyptus distillery, remarkable rocks and a dairy farm where we enjoyed fresh sheep cheese.

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