On the way home from Milford Sound, we stopped to look at a waterfall. In the parking lot there were four keas, which are cheeky, smart, and friendly birds. They are the only alpine parrots in the world. When they fly, you can see the underside of their wings, which are red. We kept trying to get a photo of a kea in flight, but couldn't do it.
Dave had read that you want to keep them away from your car, because they will destroy the plastic around the rear view mirrors and windows. In the first photo below, you can see one of them picking at the plastic on top of a piece of metal on the pickup truck.
Monday, December 29, 2008
a day trip to Milford Sound
On Boxing Day we drove to Milford Sound from Te Anau where we were staying. It's a two hour drive, and in the first hour, the road runs in the Eglington River valley. We were only a little way out of Te Anau when we got a hint of what would be a huge pleasure of the day. In the first photo you can see some purple in the middle of the field. That's a patch of lupin flowers growing alongside the river.
All along the Eglington River there were swaths of lupins. We kept stopping to take photos because each place seemed prettier than the last. Here are some of the views we saw.
All along the Eglington River there were swaths of lupins. We kept stopping to take photos because each place seemed prettier than the last. Here are some of the views we saw.
Somewhere near the end of the Eglington River valley, we came across the sign in the next photo. In case you're wondering, some of the places in the Northern Hemisphere at 45 degrees north are Portland, Oregon; Minneapolis; Montreal; Bordeaux, France; Torino, Italy; the Crimea in the Ukraine; and the northern tip of Japan. In the Southen Hemisphere, the only other place where there's land at 45 degrees south besides New Zealand is South America. 45 degrees south in Argentina would be in the middle of Patagonia. Since Dunedin is close to 45 degrees south, these facts have great interest to us.
After we left the Eglington valley, we climbed over several ridges into other river systems. Below is another river.
As we passed the halfway mark to Milford Sound, it started to rain. This was actually a blessing because it activated so many waterfalls. As I've written in earlier posts, the mountains are so young and have so little soil, having been scraped clean in the ice age, vegetation grows on them very lightly. When it rains, there is almost nothing to absorb the water, so it cascades down the rocky hillsides. In the first photo, you can see the entrance to a tunnel on the road, which gives a sense of the scale of the hills.
more on Christmas in the summer
A couple people have asked me what it's like to have Christmas in the summer. One notable difference is the food -- strawberries, watermelon, nice red and green peppers and lettuce and tomato salads highlighting the Christmas colors. It's hard to want to eat anything heavy because the weather is warm and the fresh fruit and vegetables are so lovely.
Apart from the food, the biggest difference is that Christmas begins the vacation season and ends the school year.
December for kiwis with kids is frantic. Not only do they need to buy Christmas presents and attend their office Christmas party, the kids' schools have their end of year awards assemblies, plays, and so forth. Universities and high schools have graduation and graduation parties. Most kiwis take a month off beginning either at Christmas or around New Years, so all those vacation preparations are happening as well. Lots of kiwis have said to me that they think Christmas would be so much more peaceful in the Northern Hemisphere, when there wouldn't be all those end-of-school-year events. Little do they know that we have done a great job creating miserably busy Decembers.
Dunedin is so quiet in early January. No meetings of any clubs or organizations, very small church attendance, no organized activities of any kind. Last year I loved it because I got so much writing done. Dave found it boring. It's somewhat like Europe where everyone takes vacation in July or August. Here the most popular vacation time is late December and the first three weeks of January. So it's true that Christmas is eclipsed to some extent by the rush to have a vacation and get prepared for it.
Apart from the food, the biggest difference is that Christmas begins the vacation season and ends the school year.
December for kiwis with kids is frantic. Not only do they need to buy Christmas presents and attend their office Christmas party, the kids' schools have their end of year awards assemblies, plays, and so forth. Universities and high schools have graduation and graduation parties. Most kiwis take a month off beginning either at Christmas or around New Years, so all those vacation preparations are happening as well. Lots of kiwis have said to me that they think Christmas would be so much more peaceful in the Northern Hemisphere, when there wouldn't be all those end-of-school-year events. Little do they know that we have done a great job creating miserably busy Decembers.
Dunedin is so quiet in early January. No meetings of any clubs or organizations, very small church attendance, no organized activities of any kind. Last year I loved it because I got so much writing done. Dave found it boring. It's somewhat like Europe where everyone takes vacation in July or August. Here the most popular vacation time is late December and the first three weeks of January. So it's true that Christmas is eclipsed to some extent by the rush to have a vacation and get prepared for it.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
fishing and biking around Te Anau
roadside humor
The main north-south highway in New Zealand is highway 1, which goes right through Dunedin (and which I ride my bike on to get to the university). If you go south from Dunedin on highway 1 for an hour and a half, you'll come to the town of Clinton. A half hour further is the town of Gore. Sometime in the 1990s, that stretch of highway got christened the "Presidential Highway," complete with signs at both Clinton and Gore announcing the name.
tussock
In New Zealand you hear a lot about tussock, the native grasses that covered much of the eastern half of the South Island when Europeans arrived. On our way to and from Te Anau, we went through a red tussock conservation area. In the first photo, you can see some clumps of tussock in the foreground. The wind was blowing strongly, so the tussock is being blown to the right. The blades of grass are about 18 inches long and tussock always grows in clumps. In the background, the hillside has a lot of tussock growing on it.
In the next photo, that hillside in the upper left side of the photo is covered with tussock and you can see it in the right middle part of the photo also.
In the next photo, that hillside in the upper left side of the photo is covered with tussock and you can see it in the right middle part of the photo also.
A summer Christmas Day
What do New Zealanders do at Christmas in the summer time? We've been here 18 months, but we didn't experience a normal NZ Christmas last year. Last Christmas our son, Mike, was here visiting, and we went to Queenstown, a glitzy tourist town, for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and Boxing Day. We stayed in an inner city motel, and spent Christmas day driving up Lake Wakatipu. It's a beautiful memory, but not a typical kiwi Christmas.
This year we rented a house for a week in Te Anau, a town four hours west and a little south of Dunedin. Te Anau is also a tourist town, the town closest to Milford Sound, but our house was in an ordinary quiet neighborhood. You can see just how ordinary the house is. The best part was the upstairs room, the living room, which had a deck with a view. Te Anau is a much more beautiful town than the house would indicate, and I'll do another blog post soon showing some views around town and from Dave's fishing spots.
The photo above was taken on Christmas Day, the only gray day we were there. The photo below was taken another day from the deck, and I've posted it just to give you an idea of the view from that upstairs living room. The tree in the foreground is a cabbage tree, a native New Zealand tree, which was blooming when we were there.
This year we rented a house for a week in Te Anau, a town four hours west and a little south of Dunedin. Te Anau is also a tourist town, the town closest to Milford Sound, but our house was in an ordinary quiet neighborhood. You can see just how ordinary the house is. The best part was the upstairs room, the living room, which had a deck with a view. Te Anau is a much more beautiful town than the house would indicate, and I'll do another blog post soon showing some views around town and from Dave's fishing spots.
The photo above was taken on Christmas Day, the only gray day we were there. The photo below was taken another day from the deck, and I've posted it just to give you an idea of the view from that upstairs living room. The tree in the foreground is a cabbage tree, a native New Zealand tree, which was blooming when we were there.
The upstairs living room had an electric heater and a small closed stove with a basket of coal beside it. By the outside door was a bin of coal (with Dave's fishing boots beside it). I read recently that more people in Europe and the US are heating their houses with coal. Lots of people in NZ and in our Dunedin neighborhood do it, and it makes for an odd smell outdoors in the winter. Dave grew up with a coal stove, so it reminds him of childhood. It's a smell I've never experienced before.
One of the funny things about our stay in Te Anau and our experience of Christmas is that our house was SO quiet six of the seven days we were there, but on Christmas Day someone close by played rock music with a very loud bass beat all day long. We could feel the throb of the bass throughout our house
Now, on to the question of what people in New Zealand do on Christmas Day (besides play rock music really loud). Barbecues are the tradition. On Christmas Day I walked over to the park right by our rented house and took pictures. The first picture shows a nearby house with a bunch of people barbecuing. Then the next five photos show people in the park. There was a group playing informal cricket, some people walking a dog, a father and his kids in a go cart, and another small family flying a kite.
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