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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Home is where I am


"Home for you is wherever you hang your hat." Fern Keller (my mother), 1957.

Kia Ora!

We leave Invercargill tomorrow morning April 17, a bittersweet departure. While this has been a rewarding experience, we are anxious to get and give besos y brasos to our kids (that's Texas talk for hugs and kisses). Waiting for us will be 4 of our 5 kids and 3 grandchildren. Who wouldn't want to come home to that?

First we fly through Christchurch to Auckland. We are staying there one night so The Kiwi Consort can interview for yet another temporary position in palliative care for next year. I guess he likes it! Friday afternoon we fly out of Auckland to LA. Then on to Austin via Denver, arriving around midnight.

We will be in Texas for about a month and then drive to Minnesota where this writer will spend the North American summer months. That of course is an adventure in itself, but not one that falls into the vegemite tales category. (Although I brought some vegemite back with me. That stuff is addicting!)

I have more tales about living and traveling in New Zealand (we have lived in Greymouth as well as Invercargill), Antarctica, and the sub-Antarctic islands that I haven't been able to finish and post. And at some time in the future, I will post on this site, all the adventures that I have been sending the select few on e-mail. So here's the deal. I will get them finished as I can and post them on the blog. Essentially, until we return to KiwiLand, this becomes a memoir, albeit one of relatively recent adventures. If you aren't already, I invite you to become a Follower. If it works as it should, the site will just notify you by email when a new posting is up. Then you can read it on the blog and post comments also.

This is the address to bookmark: http://vegemite-tales.blogspot.com/

Thank you for reading my musings. I have so enjoyed the responses I received from you. Until we next meet ...

Cheers and Aroha*!

The Kiwi Traveler

*Maori. Translates akin to Aloha from Hawaii.

Monday, April 13, 2009

AAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...........

Keep your eye on the red shirt.....................







I don't think I can do this!
















Whoa! Back flip out?













YIKES!









WHOOPEE!!!!

































Big Bounce

















Just swingin'












Coming
back
up













I DID IT!!!!!










Note: Before the jump, I signed a legal waiver which I didn't read, of course. Later, I noted AJ Hackett Bungy would not be responsible for "... emotional trauma to friends and relatives ...". I would have just blown that off except The Partner was so relieved that I survived that he cried. Gotta' love that man!

Cheers!
Kiwi Traveler

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Living the high life in Qtown

4 April 2009

Kia
Ora!

Queenstown is the queen of New Zealand's tourist industry. We have been here before but ignored the usual tourist attractions in favor of a wine tour and visit to a historical Chinese village limited restoration in Arrowtown, returning by way of the market orchards around Cromwell. You will find that story on a previous post. Now I want to be a tourist in Queenstown, so this is the weekend to indulge me, if not us.

We are booked at the Novotel, teeming with busloads of tourists from America, Japan, Holland, Germany and who knows where else. I got in on an Internet special and then, bonus!, we are upgraded to a garden room. The Novotel is on Marine Parade, a boulevard right at the water front, and we can walk to The Mall, restaurants, and more. We choose highly reviewed restaurants for our meals (The Bunker, Pier 19, and Wai, which is Oh-My-Gawd! good). The Skyline Restaurant at the top of the peak overlooking Queenstown is closed Saturday, so that is saved until Sunday. For a buffet, it is surprisingly good also.

So other than food, the big Saturday event is a trip across Lake Wakatipu in a vintage steamship, TSS Earnslaw. There is talk of closing this attraction because of the pollution from the coal-fired engine. I don't know; what do you think? We watched the coal being loaded into the hold and then viewed the engine room and the crew hand shoveling it into the engines. Some people wondered who was the Captain of this ship anyway!

The ship is quite elegant and features a piano player and sing-a-long on the return trip. Alas, only the piano player seems to be singing.
Some passengers debarked across the lake at Walter Peak Station to tour the compound of a former sheep station and watch demonstrations of dogs herding sheep and sheep shearing. Having just had an up-close-and-personal-tour of the McIntosh sheep farm, we passed on that option.

Back at the quay, we shop an artist's flea market and wander out on a jetty. Here is the winning New Zealand ship from America's Cup, of which the Kiwis are justifiably proud. Tourists can get in on the thrill for a price and book a sail on the vessel.

We wander on up to Shotover Street. I spy the AJHackett Bungy storefront. Hackett is the owner of several bungy jumps around Qtown. Are there jumps with a harness instead of ankle wraps, is my query. Then, eyeing my wrinkles and gray hair, he says: Good on you! You can make that jump. Yeah, right!

Then we drive out to Glenorchy, a tiny hamlet at the other end of the lake. It is halfway to the trailhead of the Greenstone Track, the 4-day backpacking adventure we took on a long-ago trip to NZ. In the village, we share Devonshire tea and pleasant memories of a time when we could still do a mountain tramp.

Saturday is the tame day. Just wait until I tell you about Sunday!

Cheers,
Kiwi Traveler

Fw: A visit to the farm

29 March 2009

Kia Ora!

We are invited to the McIntosh farm. Yes, that McIntosh; Jamie's parents Kate and Alistair. Alistair, also called "Tosh", raises sheep and also has about 19 cattle. The trip to the farm takes about an hour from Invercargill. We traverse backcountry roads and through the foothills close to the Catlin Mtns. The comfortable 5-bedroom farmhouse, up a hill and accessed via a narrow tree and shrub lined lane, is tucked into a shady glen.
Though the day is chilly and gray, we warm ourselves by a warm fire in a sunken parlour. Dinner includes delicious lamb chops (What else?!), served two steps up in the dining area.

I ask Alistair if this is a sheep station. He laughs. "No, a station is at least 10,000 acres. We only have about 700 acres." Just a teeny place, you see! Alistair and Kate run about 7,000 sheep. After dinner, Alistair takes us on a tour of the farm. Anticipating this tour, I am prepared with my rubber calf-high Wellingtons (aka gumboots). We travel through multiple paddocks to the top of the farm and inspect just a small representation of that 7,000.

In the sheep shed, Alistair shows us bales of wool from shearing that happened early this morning. Too bad the shearers were on their own schedule; I would have loved watching the process. Alistair demonstrates how the sheep are sheared and shows us the electronic technology by which each sheep is weighed as they pass through a shoot. Then they are divided into different pens based on weight. Some are off to market while others need to grow more.

Back by the welcome warmth of the fire, we have tea and meet Pocket, the cat. Kate tells us the amazing story of Penny and Pocket, and Alistair gives us a children's book by artist and author, Gwenda Turner, written about this pair of remarkable animals. Briefly, the story is this:

McIntosh daughter, Bianca, has an empathic fondness for animals. (She is now a veterinarian.) One evening on her way to a party, the 18-year old Bianca spied a piece of gray fluff at the road side. She stopped and picked up a tiny kitten with its eyes still mostly closed. She tucked the kitten into the breast pocket of her shirt (hence the cat's name), and Pocket was off to his first party. Arriving back at home, Penny, the family Jack Russell terrier, became very energized on seeing the kitten. She picked Pocket up and carried him back to her basket. Kate thought nature was about to take care of the kitten. But she hadn't anticipated what Penny was going to do. Penny adopted the kitten, allowing it to nurse. After a couple days, Penny, who had had a couple of litters, began producing milk. Even though Pocket's nourishment needed to be supplemented, Penny continued to nurse and mother the kitten, and Pocket thrived. Of course the novelty of a dog nursing a kitten made the newspapers and that is how the book titled Penny and Pocket came to be written.

Cheers,
Kiwi Traveler

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Lift a glass to Central Otago

Kia Ora!

We knew we were going to the Queenstown area but couldn't agree on what to do there. I wanted to do the tourist sites like ride the old-timey steam ship, take the gondola to the top of the mountain above Queenstown, and maybe, if I dare, do a bungy jump. Bungy jumping originated in the South Sea Islands where indigenous young males tied jungle vines around their ankles and leaped head first off a platform in the trees. Some survived; some didn't. Commercial bungy jumping started in New Zealand in 1988 near Queenstown, when an enterprising A. J. Hackett created a bungy jump from a bridge over the Kawarau River. I am put off by hanging from my ankles, which can't take any more abuse than they already have.

Main Street Arrowtown
France? No, Chard in NZ
On the other hand, The Kiwi Consort wanted nothing to do with the tourist mecca of Queenstown. He wanted to visit the quaint town of Arrowtown. In the end, I couldn't get two nights lodging in Queenstown, so after one night at a pricey place on the edge of Q-town, we went to Arrowtown. We booked a wine tour of Central Otago vineyards. This area can grow both whites and reds well because of the dry climate and variations in altitude from sea level to high in the foothills. We visited four, mostly outstanding, vineyards and ate lunch at Carrick winery. A favorite was Peregrine Vineyard where the architecture was designed to resemble the wing of the bird, which by the way is an American bird. There are native falcons but no Peregrine falcons in NZ. Chard Winery looked for all the world like it should be set in the French countryside. As the tour leader headed back, she stopped at the bungy jump. We all watched as a young woman, teetered at the edge of the bridge, waiting...waiting...waiting... Then she backed out and didn't jump. I was not tempted to hang by my ankles over the river.

Arrowtown, where we found a lovely little motel, is as quaint as its reputation. Dating from the era of gold mining, we walked through the portion of the town settled by the Chinese miners seeking their fortunes. Nearly all were men who were in the area for one thing only, and that was gold. When European miners left as the alluvial gold appeared to be gone, the Chinese managed to glean more from the rivers and sent their profits home to China, where most returned when the gold was depleted. We walked through the remnants of the Chinese village tucked in the shadow of the mountain. Each stone and tin hut had a fireplace for heating.

Remains of Chinese Village

The Long Drop
In front of the Chinese general store was the doorless "long drop". I wonder if the entire village used just the one?


Cheers,

Kiwi Traveler