Monday, March 14, 2011

Coromandel to Queenstown by Carol

Queenstown Lake

Serpentine Hills, location of "Plains of Rohan" filming
New Chums Beach, Coromandel
View of Tairua estuary, from cottage on Mt. Paku

Just days after arriving in NZ, Megan, Kris & I drove up to the Coromandal Peninsula east of Aukland to see his brother Andy whose wife had just given birth to their 3rd boy. How great for me to get to meet them and see Kris with his brother, plus now I know who they are when Megan talks about them. Our lodging there was a little apartment high on a hill with a view of the beach & high hills dense with bush at Tairua -- a place I could only dream of being before this! We had one good day of weather here that gave us a chance to explore beautiful New Chums Beach. A bit isolated, we had a trek to get to it & were the only ones there until we left. Between Wellington & Tairua we passed by the NZ ironman marathoners at Taupo and waded in hot thermal waters by Huku Falls on the Waikato River. Driving affords the opportunity to really see the land even if it means feeling carsick from the narrow, winding roads of the north island!

Then an unexpected opportunity came for Megan & I to spend a week on the southern end of the south island with jenny from her church. Two days travel each way from Wellington means lots of new scenery! Our road trip began with a 3 hour ferry ride through Cook Strait separating the north island from the south. The bush (dense foliage) covered the steep hills right down to the water and dolphins swam near Pictin (northern tip of southern island). The more south we drive the straighter the roads became (compared to the winding of the northern island). So much new scenery for the senses to absorb! Two opportunities with our host:

Jenny's husband, Simon, is a geologist here in Alexandra for gold mining and took us along to inspect a site at 3,000 feet in the Serpentine area of Central Otago. The fascinating rock formations there were the site of filming the Plains of Rohan in Lord of the Rings "Two Towers" where the people are running toward Helms Deep. The landscape is treeless and dry, and the one lane, deeply rutted and very bumpy road is only navigable by 4 wheel drive. And it was in that setting that we stopped for our "tailgate" tea time from the back of his pickup truck! What a wonderful adventure! The next day Jenny & Simon drove us to Queenstown one and a half hours from Alexandra. Queenstown is a ritzy ski resort on a beautiful lake surrounded by steep, treeless mountains, and is a tourist mecca for the whole country. A college town feel with people enjoying the sunshine in the outdoor seating of the many cafes, an artist outside painting and musicians hoping you'll drop some coins in their instrument case. On the outskirts of the town we stopped at the 1880's bridge that was the birthplace of bungy jumping and watched several brave souls plunge head first toward the aqua water of the gorge. We are so grateful for Jenny & Simon hosting and chauffeuring us!

Carol's Impressions written by Carol

Tea time on the road (by the waterfall above, on the tailgate below)


Everyone hangs their clothes out to dry

Weet-bix, the favorite Kiwi cereal


NZ consists of 2 large islands & I have been from the NE end of the northern island to the south central end of the southern island -- from the Coromandel Peninsula to the town of Queenstown. Here are my impressions from my travels: Fascinating & unique topographical features crowd this small nation -- dense foliage over steep hillsides to steep grassy knolls; mountains bare of trees to aqua rivers. I have heard the mechanical sounding Tui bird & learned that possum fur makes beautiful yarn. I will not complain about the price of gas in MT because it is about $6 a gallon here! I have picked kiwi fruit and learned new names for common vegies. I do not like the Marmite spread (80% yeast) or WeetBix cereal that most Kiwi's love, but I do love their little meat pies sold everywhere and tea time with biscuits (cookies). Sheep outnumber people 7 to 1 and I love the fluffy Marino sheep of the south island. I have become quite used to the driving on the other side of the road as long as we are going straight, but right hand turns and the roundabouts that are everywhere still throw me! Megan wants me to try driving before I leave! When I get in the front seat on the left side I still expect there to be a steering wheel there! I love that I have 5 weeks here because besides seeing a lot, I have lots of time to just shadow Megan's kiwi life. Because of that I feel like I live here! I have gone to the grocery store and the play group where she assists, a Bible study with a few friends and watched her coach a volleyball team of 14 year old girls in a private school. Her life as it happens is my life as it happens. And the bonus is lots of time to watch her married life which I had seen so little of with her either in Arizona or New Zealand.