For some years we have been promising ourselves a trip to
New Zealand and now the time was right!
Having decided to go as far as New Zealand we felt we had to have a
taste of OZ as well, so . . .
This update is an attempt at a brief resume of what we did this
winter, but even so it is quite long!
For those of you who have the time, we’ve picked some nice pics out of
the millions we took!
We arrived in Auckland 26 hours after leaving Birmingham,
having travelled on three planes and having had almost no sleep, but managed to
cook supper in our hotel room and stay up till 8pm. We got up at 9 am the next day feeling fine, despite dire
warnings of jet lag and picked up our hire car.
We spent a couple of nights with friends Pierre and Anna in
Auckland who had been Alex’s tenants in Harrogate. We’d all become very friendly and we’d met Anna’s parents Ric and
Jenni, in the UK too. Pierre and Anna
showed us around the city and took us for an amazing Asian-style barbi at a
friend’s house. They also booked us a trip up the Sky Tower where we had lunch
and watched people throwing themselves off the top! Yes, really – a 300feet vertical free-fall which people pay
hundreds of dollars to do! Then we
spent a night with Ric and Jenni who treated us to a lovely evening meal at the
local fishing port, and lunch the next day (so kind). Then we travelled on to
the Bay of Islands where our good friends Ken and Rhonda ex-owners of the barge
SOMEWHERE now live, to spend a few days with them.
While we were there we drove to the very northern-most tip
of the North Island – Cape Reigna – and to Russell and Keri Keri. It was great to see K and R again, catch up
with their new landlubbing life, and bring them up to date with the French
canals. But ‘rain god’ Alex was weaving his usual spell and rain and showers
were the order of the days.
Then Rhonda kindly helped us plan our trip down to
Wellington at the southern end of the North Island. We stayed a night at Rotorua in a motel with a hot sulphur pool
where Alex languished for half an hour or so, relishing the 42C heat and the
smell of sulphur! The following morning
we saw the hot springs, boiling mud and water geyser. And sun!
We spent a night at Napier which is a town built during the
art nouveau period, where there happened to be a historic car weekend just
coming to a close, which was great.
Everybody was dressed in 1920s clothes and that, together with the old
cars, was quite a sight.
At Wellington, in the short time available, we took the
cable car up the hill for a great view of the town, and drove round the
harbours.
Early the next day, we dropped the hire car at the ferry
terminal and caught the Inter-Islander ferry to Picton on the South
Island. Halfway there the ship was
joined by a school of dolphins much to everybody’s excitement. The weather though was not so good again
with a strong wind and the ever present threat of rain.
At Picton we caught the train for the 5-hour trip south to
Christchurch. For half of the journey
the line runs beside the Pacific coast, which provides some excellent scenic
views before it heads off inland crossing many wide dry ‘braided’ river beds on
its way to Christchurch.
At Christchurch, we were met by Alex’s cousin’s son Ghazi,
who gave us a bed for the night and whose wife Rebecca gave us a delicious
supper. The following day we borrowed
Rebecca’s car and drove to the campervan depot at about 10 am. They apologised and said we would have to
wait about an hour while our vehicle was prepared. At 3.00 pm!! we eventually drove out of the depot with not the
booked 4-berth van but a 6-berth (complaint letter is on its way) in convoy
with Rebecca’s car, to drop it off for her.
Having done so we returned to the depot forthwith, to point out that the
handbrake didn’t work even on level ground and the van pulled to the left. They agreed to sort the problems while we
waited – again! So finally, just after
4.00 pm we set off! Our destination for
the first night was to have been the town of Akaroa on Banks Peninsular, about
90 mins from the depot but in the event we didn’t go quite so far, and parked
up on the verge between the road and the beach at Wainui on the opposite side
of the bay to Akaroa. It was a lovely spot for our first night ever in a
campervan (and Louise’s favourite).
We made our way down the east coast visiting and or stopping
at towns of interest, such as Timaru, Dunedin and Invercargill. Throughout this though the weather wasn’t
brilliant with at least one night of torrential rain.
Having reached the southern-most tip of the South Island, we
turned north to Te Anau and pre-booked a boat trip on the fjord at Milford
Sound, then parked up overnight in the last permitted campsite on the way. (Camping is strictly controlled in this
highly guarded ecological area.) This
Department of Conservation site was beside a lake and fortunately we arrived
early so there were only a couple of other vehicles already there, and we were
able to park our huge van in a good spot.
By evening, the place was packed with cars and vans and more were coming
in to have a look, and driving off again disappointed to find no space at the
inn.
We were up very early in the morning for the spectacular
one-hour drive up to the tunnel and the pass through the mountain ridge, and
down the other side to the Milford Sound cruise quays. The only other thing at Milford Sound is a
hotel, staff quarters and a pay-to-stay private campsite which was fully booked
when we had asked.
The rain of the previous day had passed and we had a warm
and sunny cruise out to the fjord entrance which was great: we saw seals basking in the sun on the rocks
and were again joined by dolphins swimming beside the boat. We had also paid for a visit to the
underwater viewing pod, which was very interesting but just a little
disappointing, as we didn’t see any of the large fish, including sharks, which
are said to sometimes swim past.
We retraced our steps to Te Anau and thus to
Queenstown. When we arrived there, the
weather improved markedly, and we were able to have drinks outside at our
overnight stop at Wanaka with a magnificent view of the lake. We walked up close to Fox Glacier but
decided the cost of a guided tour on the ice itself was not good value for
money for us. But Alex had a plan!! And
the next morning we drove to a campsite north of the Franz Joseph glacier,
which was shared with a helicopter over-flight outfit. The 4-person helicopter was just taking off
on a trip as we arrived, but the ground staff said we could have an 18-minute
trip when it got back. But as it
happened, another couple arrived just after us and also wanted a trip. We left them to discuss. Shortly after that, Alex got into
conversation with the organiser who said the second couple wanted a longer trip
than us, and could we come to an arrangement?
So we ended up with a half hour trip with the other couple for a lot
less than they were paying! And it was
worth it too. Quite spectacular and
arguably the most impressive bit of the whole holiday.
Our next night was spent in another Department of
Conservation campsite which was, for Alex, quite the best we had stayed in so
far. It was about 3kms off the main
road down a dirt track with the parking places spread out between bushes and
trees. And, best of all, a lovely
stream running beside the site with
permission to pan for gold in it if you wanted (provided you didn’t use
any mechanical devices). There was a
father with his 10 year old son already trying when we arrived so Alex asked
him how you actually did it. The father
told Alex that his son was terribly excited as they had already recovered 3
slivers of gold. (Not enough to buy a
cup of coffee, the father assured us, but something, none the less.) Alex was stripping down to his shorts and grabbing
the frying pan and a bucket before you could blink!
However, what he failed to do was to cover himself in
anti-sand-fly spray. Within minutes of trying to pan, his legs were covered in
sand flies, then in blood from all the punctures left by the little
devils. He suffered on for a bit, but
had to give up in the end and felt it was too much to spray up and try again:
but for all that, it was a good laugh, in lovely weather.
Next day we dropped the van off at the depot and made our
way back to Ghazi and Rebecca’s house for the next couple of nights. But between those nights we had booked the
Trans Alpine train from Christchurch to Greymouth and back over Arthur’s
Pass. When we got on the train we were
a bit disappointed to learn that the tunnel at Arthur’s Pass was no longer
allowing passengers to be taken through (something to do with health and safety
– pah!). Instead we would all have to
disembark and travel the 15kms by bus.
But in practice this was a very good thing, because instead of 10 minutes
in a tunnel in the dark on the train, we got a 20-minute ride over the top,
with a running commentary from the driver, complete with the usual feeble
jokes, but amid glorious scenery.
Despite the fact that the journey both ways took the whole day, we
weren’t bored at all. The track itself
and the scenery were just so amazing.
During the day before our flight to Sydney we managed a
couple of hours in Christchurch city centre.
This was a very sad experience, because what looked literally like a bombsite
had been in fact the epicentre of the 2011 earthquake. The city was in ruins: most damaged
buildings had been torn down already, leaving huge gaps in the cityscape, but
the cathedral, subject of great discussion as to whether to demolish or repair,
was still standing, propped up with huge girders: a sorry sight indeed.
We arrived in Sydney for our 4 night stay and look around,
taking in a ferry trip to Manley, the usual open top bus tour around the city
and out to Bondi beach, and another ferry trip to Cockatoo Island, which has
been many things in its existence, including a prison, a girls’ school, a naval
dockyard and now is an open museum and organised camping and glamping ground.
Then on to Melbourne by air, where, after a night’s stay, we
picked up our hire car to drive the Great Ocean Road to Adelaide. Of course, we happened to be in Melbourne on
the weekend of the Grand Prix so the place was packed, but we managed to avoid
the worst of the crowds and traffic and the F1 cars, and made our way to the
outskirts and the road to Apollo Bay, our first stop. But as usual we took the ‘long’ way to get there by driving to
the opposite side of the huge sea lake where Melbourne is situated. Apollo Bay itself and the surrounding area
has lots to see including the lighthouse at Cape Otway and The Twelve Apostles
or is only Eleven now? and ‘London Bridge’ (half of which has fallen down) –
all rather spectacular sea stacks. So
we arrived in Portland a bit later than we had intended and after an abortive
search for somewhere to eat, we bought a cheap microwave meal, and regretted
it!!
But actually in the sunny light of the next morning, we
discovered that Portland was a lovely place and there were places to
eat, though much further away than we had walked the night before. It had a great harbour, vibrant commercial
shipping docks, an old tram and several other noteworthy objects of
interest. We discovered at the Tourist
Information Office that we were about to cross from Victoria into South
Australia and that we would not be allowed to carry certain foodstuffs across
the ‘border’. Fines are heavy and the
rules strictly enforced. We reviewed
our stocks – tomatoes, asparagus, mushrooms, plus butter and garlic. Well, we couldn’t throw all that away could
we? And the Tourist Information Office had pointed out the free-to-use electric
barbecues in the park. So we turned one
on and barbied the whole lot on skewers and very good it was too, if a bit
eccentric. (Louise was a bit sceptical
at first, but Alex persisted that it would be great – and it was!)
We left Portland and dipped off the road to see a ‘petrified
forest’ and yet another spectacular viewpoint but wanted to arrive early at our
next overnight stop, because after booking in haste we had noticed that some of
the reviews were terrible: “lakeside location spectacular, shame about the
room” etc. They were right but we
decided to make the best of it and stay anyway. We did a drive round the lake, crossed by the free ferry where we
had an interesting chat with the ferryman and took pictures of pelicans on
posts. Then back to the motel where we watched the sun set over the lake
through our window, and ate in the town hotel. In the morning we were greeted
by several pelicans swimming not 10 feet away past our window. So it was a
great setting – the best in fact of any of the motels we stayed in, but the
room itself, and particularly the bed, was a disgrace. (Warning to self –
always read the reviews carefully before booking!!)
We diverted from the direct main road to Adelaide to go
south to the ferry terminal for Kangaroo Island. The landscape was interesting and involved another free ferry
crossing over the Murray river, but the township at the terminal was forgettable
so we hightailed it to Adelaide where we were staying at the Oaks Plaza Pier
hotel at Glenelg – very smart – and for some reason they upgraded us to a suite
with balcony.
Next morning, with a crack of dawn start we drove to the
airport, dropped the car off and caught the 6.30am flight to Perth. Three and a half hours later we landed at
local time 7.30 am in a thunderstorm (rain god Alex again) and Alex’s daughter
Alice was waiting to pick us up.
We had a lovely three days with Alice, Mark and Bea in
Perth, trying not to do too much as by this time we had reached the stage of
longing to get home, but had the horror of the 26 hours of flights and airports
ahead of us.
So we visited the harbour, the old town of Fremantle, the
wildlife park, had a really good sushi lunch courtesy of Alice (thanks Alice
for proving that sushi can be delicious) and took a quick train trip into Perth
town centre plus an obligatory ferry ride over to the north side.
Finally we caught the flight back to Adelaide, spent the
night once again in the Oaks Plaza hotel, spent the following day looking
around Adelaide and then started the dreaded return flights in the late
evening.
We both picked up colds on the aeroplane and arrived back in
the UK, at Birmingham airport, pretty knackered. Alex’s son Will was there to
take us back to his and Laura’s house for lunch and later supper, but again we
managed to avoid too much jet lag by waiting till around 9.00pm before
collapsing into bed.
It has been a fascinating and memorable trip but we both
agree, if there is to be a next time, it will have to be by boat!!! (Not Riccall!!!)
1 comment:
I was wondering what you'd been getting up to! How excellent...not sure I can think of a better way to spend a few weeks than to tootle round NZ & Oz in a camper. Well done, you lucky so-and-so's!
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