Monday, 21 December 2009

WANDERING WEST SOUTH WEST, WITH WET, WILD, WOOLY WEATHER.

Well it's good news, the technical department in Canada have managed to find a way to get the photos back in the text, so please enjoy the blog back in its original format.

Well we leave a windy Wellington on a sunny Wednesday morning ready for our smooth crossing to the South Island, Jan was pleased! The last hour of the three hour crossing is spent sailing down the Queen Charlotte Sound to Picton, very scenic and after leaving the windy Cook Strait, very warm.

Although we are now on the south island we are in actual fact no further south than what we were in Wellington, the top of the south island sits west of the north and it is much warmer much to our surprise, and hopefully long may it continue! We head off to Elaine Bay on the north coast where after an initial fine evening the winds return with vengeance, we were going to fish off the jetty the next day, but with the wind being so strong it was difficult to stand on it let alone fish off it.


By the evening the wind subsides and I try my luck, catching a couple of little yellow eyed mullet, which was more than the two other guys on the jetty were catching, oh & Jan hooked the bottom! From here we are off to the top of the south Island a place called Farewell Spit.

This spit is the longest sand spit in NZ some 35km’s long across the top of Golden Bay and yes when we arrive it’s blowing a hooley yet again. As there are no roads going around the northwest corner, we cut back inland and downwards towards the west coast, camping overnight at Lake Rotoroa. Here is our first introduction to sand flies, the booklet telling you about the campsites tells you to “take repellent for ferocious sand flies” and as soon as we stop the van they descend on to its outer sides like bees round a honey pot. Whilst walking around the Lake their not to bad but as soon as you stop, well it’s open season and any exposed skin is a target, needless to say after our walk we don’t venture out of the van, but spend our time watching others draw up opening their doors and getting eaten alive! One young couple even running around in circles while cooking trying to evade the little ----------!!!! We hopefully leave the sand flies behind and travel down the Buller Gorge, walking across the longest swing bridge in NZ during the process. For our return journey we take the tandem flying fox, which due to Jan’s extra weight (I’m wafer thin don’t forget) helps us go even faster.


We spend the night at Jack’s Gasthof, a bar and pizzeria that also does overnight camp sites for the princely sum of $10 about £4.40. The local brew was excellent the first decent dark ale I’ve tasted since leaving England, and although the pizzas were his specialty I’ve been at least two weeks without a steak, so there was no contest. The next day we are off to do the west coast road, which according to the Lonely Planet and I quote “SH6 along the surf pounded coastline proffers fine Tasman Sea views; so fine that Lonely Planet’s Blue List dubbed the west coast highway one of the planets 10 best road trips.” So yes we were looking forward to this drive, the only problem being that the weather has again closed in, in actual fact not only was it raining (pouring) but the cloud cover had dropped down to road level, making the fine Tasman Sea views just a little difficult to appreciate!!!

Anyway you win some you lose some we can’t expect two years of travel not to have it’s hiccups, even if they all seem to be happening in New Zealand, at least Greymouth certainly lived up to it’s name as we passed through it on our way down the coast.

This coast road ends at Tai Poutini National Park, famous for its two biggest highlights the Franz Josef & Fox Glaciers. We walked on Bhaltar glacier when we were in Pakistan but only at the terminal end of it, this time I was hoping to take a helicopter ride to get further up a glacier so that we could get to see the blue ice near the top. I say I because Jan as you well know is not the best flier, and so although she wanted to see the glacier was far more hesitant! Both glaciers move at approximately 10 times the speed of any other valley glaciers around the world about one metre a day. The reason for this is due to the funnel like shape of the glacial valley and the huge neve, the snow accumulation area, at the top of the glacier, which due to the endless rain that falls on the west coast (don’t we just know it!) makes for perfect conditions, so much so, that both glaciers have been advancing for the past 25 years. We arrive in the rain at Franz Josef and walk to the terminal end, this is supposed to be the more superior ice experience, but with the bad weather and higher than average camp fees, we drive on to the Fox Glacier and spend the next 30 hours waiting for the weather to improve so that we can fly up onto the glacier. We past some of the time by walking to the terminal end of the Fox glacier in the rain, Ralph this isn’t one of your wheelbarrows is it!

The afternoon is spent walking around Lake Matheson, the most photographed lake in NZ trying to capture Mount Cooks reflection in the lake along with the cloud!!!

So here we are, finally a morning where you wake up and can see the sun and clear blue sky it looks like the wait was well worth it! Until one of the helicopters develops a fault after power up and has to be shut down and checked out, this all in front of a very nervous Jan.

So it’s at about this stage that my wife is leaving and walking back to the town to wait for me there, but after some more reassuring that the pilot has no intention of getting himself killed along with the rest of us, she allows herself to be shoe horned onto our awaiting death trap (according to Jan). It turns out that it was only a defective radio (so they say) and we are on our way in no time at all. It’s the first time I have flown in a helicopter this small, and what a pleasant surprise, it is a bit like sitting in an armchair and being smoothly whizzed around the skies, even Jan opened her eyes on the return journey and actually smiled (never been known to happen in flight before!).

We land about halfway up the glacier and spend two and a half hours walkabout on the glacier seeing some wonderful caves, waterfalls and blue ice, another experience that will stay with us forever.


After such a good morning we head south through some stunning scenery (fellow overlanders will know what I mean!)


finding a camp spot at the viewing point overlooking Queenstown and the lake. Our first free camp since arriving in NZ, which is quite disappointing really, as we were led to believe that freedom camping is a big thing in NZ, but after seeing all the “NO CAMPING” signs we have realised that the Kiwi’s are even worse than Western Australians for their use of these signs. But never mind, this view point didn’t have any “NO CAMPING” signs and so we stop the night at Crown Range Pass, 1076 metres high, right next to the highest bit of sealed tarmac in NZ, this pass was first used by sheep herders in the late 1800’s, then by gold seekers, now by the Jell’s finding their first free camp in NZ.

Queenstown is where our daughter Charlotte spent several months living and working a couple of years ago, and we were interested to see some of the places that she has spoken about. There were no signs up saying “JELL’S NOT WELCOME” so they seem to have recovered from her visit!! This is our second day of good weather on the trot, my we are lucky, the difference a bit of blue sky makes, just like being back in England. After spending the day exploring and shopping (Xmas cards it has to be done wherever you are in the world), we head off to Milford sound where we have a late deal overnight cruise booked for the next night, there is only the one road to Milford Sound which we plan to drive nice and slowly because they say it has the sort of scenery that makes drivers swerve wildly off the road for, as they reach for their cameras! We are not disappointed with repeated stops for photo shots of waterfalls and snow capped mountains that in places reach right down to the roadside.


As we found out that night on the cruise this road is the most dangerous road for avalanches in the world and it is regularly closed during the winter & spring months, especially up by the Homer tunnel where you wait 15 minutes for the traffic lights to change, last year they had to set an avalanche off because of the build up of snow above the tunnel, it took two days for the diggers to clear the tunnel entrance not much chance of seeing the green light if you get caught in that then!

Milford Sound itself is out of this world, towering cloud covered sides covered in waterfalls, which considering they get in excess of six metres of rain a year here, is hardly surprising.



Our boat the Milford Mariner is very luxurious, probably the best cruise we’ve done so far, with it only being two thirds full we enjoy the extra space and the all you can it dinner buffet and breakfast, the only consistent thing with all our cruises is the bar bill at the end! The evenings in NZ are much like in the UK and it stays light until about ten o’clock at night in the summer, so we take advantage of being zipped around the sound in a fast launch to spot dolphins, seals and penguins, and it didn’t even rain once on us, our luck is hopefully changing.

Fully recharged and relaxed after our overnight cruise it’s back to the camper and the long road to Invercargill famous for Burt Munro and his motorbike the fastest Indian, made into a film in 2005. Too far for us to rush it in a day, so we stop at a Department of Conservation campsite next to Lake Monowai, late that afternoon. Settling down for the night a rustling sound can be heard from the front of the vehicle, our rubbish bag seems to be alive, yes I think we have a visitor (or at least Jan did I was soundly asleep). Well picture the scene, it’s one o’clock in the morning, it’s now raining hard and my wife is not happy, which in turn ensures that I am both awake and not happy either! We opt for the easy option throwing out the bag of rubbish, which we will sort out in the morning once all the other animals have dragged it around the campsite! So this should be it then, peace and quiet, not quite, it appears the mouse did not leave with the rubbish but is now on a tour of our vehicle running over my arm as I lay in bed in the process. The next hour is spent trying to track our little friend down which in a long wheelbase transit camper is not an easy thing to do to many holes to hide in. We eventually restrict his movements to the rear of the vehicle and then put our dastardly plan of a bit of cheese in a cardboard box to trap him into operation. Sure enough after about ten minutes he goes for the bait and we have him, Jan threw the box out so hard I thought it was going to into orbit, make sure he doesn’t come back I heard her muttering. So it’s now two o’clock in the morning & we both finally settle down to sleep, well almost. I glance down and there he is popping his little head up inside the back doors, not only does this transit let dust passed the seals, it also lets mice pass as well!! So after managing to quickly open the rear doors forcing him out, we opt to drive further down to the boat launching ramp, and park in the middle of a large puddle (the rain is good for something) hoping that this little mouse hasn’t got a boat in which he can sail across to us in!!! Our last week is spent cruising around the coastal roads taking in the sights of the Catlins. The beaches and rocky outcrops on this part of the coast have numerous colonies of Fur Seals and Sea Lions, which we enjoy being able to watch and get up close to,

in their own environment, as well as visiting the most southerly point of the South Island.

Dunedin with it’s steepest street in the world with a gradient of 1: 2.86, which just to check our

hearts are still functioning correctly we manage to walk to the top of without the aid of a oxygen mask!!

From Dunedin we drive to Christchurch our final stop before flying out of NZ, we again experience all the elements in one day from a perfect sunny morning with lovely views across Lake Tekapo towards Mount Cook to an hour later driving through a hail storm with all the fields covered in hailstones, and all this on my birthday perhaps next year the weather will be better, back in England!!!

Christchurch and the comfort of a hotel room for our last two nights in NZ, here we spend a day on the Tranzalpine railway, crossing from coast to coast through the Southern Alps to Greymouth, at least the weather was much nicer than the last time we passed through. Unfortunately a lot of the snow had melted up at Arthur’s Pass and so we didn’t get to see it in all it’s glory but I’m sure the Canadian Rockies will more than make up for this later on. New Zealand has been our most disappointing country so far, it’s not the country itself but a combination of factors that together have made our experience less enjoyable than anticipated, firstly my parents were meant to be joining us for the tour but due to my father’s motorcycle accident were unable to make it, but good news he is now making a very good recovery and will probably be back on his other bike before we return next year. What with the defective camper that we first had and the fight to get some joy out of the company, coupled with the relentless bad weather and the not very friendly local councils with their “no camping signs”,

has made what could have been very enjoyable, into very difficult at times. So we leave the southern hemisphere supposedly in its summer, but after the size of the hail stones yesterday and the very chilly overnight temperatures we have to wonder! Heading off to Vancouver for a taste of real winter chilly temperatures, let’s hope our winter clothes have arrived ahead of us, because my shorts have certainly struggled in New Zealand. We wish all our readers a very merry Xmas and a happy new year wherever you may be on this planet, and to both new friends and old we look forward to meeting up again at some point in the future.


Monday, 23 November 2009

NEWS FROM NORTH NEW ZEALAND


HOPE YOUR GETTING USED TO THE PICTURES FIRST AS WE CANNOT DO NOTHING ELSE ,SORRY!!!

US LADY KNOX GEYSER

FIJI'S DEPARTURE TERMINAL

OUR SMALL PLANE

AUCKLAND FROM THE SKYTOWER

ONE WAY TICKET!!!!!

MEETING UP WITH AMY & RICH

SHEEP GET EVERYWHERE IN NZ

A ROOM WITH A VIEW

YES YOU  HAVE A PROBLEM

THE COOK FINALLY GETS BACK IN THE KITCHEN

FISHING AT SPIRIT BAY

DOLPHINS BY THE SHORE

A WINDSWEPT 90 MILE BEACH

SHAYNE & SHARONS FARM

THE TALLEST KAURI TREE

A TWITCHER IN NZ

WHAT A LIFE

"VINCE" THE ROOSTER

NEW CHUMS BEACH SUPPOSEDLY ONE OF THE TOP TWENTY IN THE WORLD

SPOT THE THERMAL POOLS ON THE BEACH!!!!!

THE MODERN CARAVAN "STILL IN USE TODAY"

I NEED A NEW WOOLY JUMPER

JAN ZORBING

I THINK MY HEAD MUST HAVE SHRUNK AFTER THAT LAST FAST RUN

LAKE TAUPO

WELL THE BLACK SKY MAKES A GREAT BACKGROUND FOR THE GEYSER

CHAMPANGE POOL

LOOKING OUT TO THE BAY OF ISLANDS

ANOTHER WINDY DAY ON THE BEACH

NOW THATS WHAT YOU CALL A WATERFALL

Well we leave Fiji the same way as we started delayed! After turning up at the small airport ready for our two o’clock flight we discover that it is delayed, by at least two hours and as it turns out three and a half hours due to all their planes being grounded for mechanical reasons very reassuring! We at least get a free lunch back down in town by the marina, courtesy of the airline, and board our even smaller plane an eight seater run by Pacific Island air, piloted by a very laid back Fijian in a very bright yellow south pacific flowered shirt. Jan adapts well though, after having to shoe horn her on to the aircraft with cries of I’m not getting on that as she first sees it, she soon settles in and enjoys the last bit of the flight between the mountains of Vitu Livi, something about being so close to the ground it wouldn’t hurt so much if we crashed! Oh yea! Back to our hotel to recover our stored bag, we were only allowed 15 kilos on the internal flight and so had to leave about seven kilos at the hotel. After recovering our bag I had a very long discussion about the payment of our first nights stay which they didn’t think we had paid for, but after a short while on the internet I could prove we had paid, Fijian bureaucracy don’t you just love it. The next morning we fly out bound for New Zealand and with only a 20 minute delay, not at all bad for Fijian time. It’s a bright but cooler Auckland that greets us some three hours later, in no time at all we have our campervan and are out on the open road heading for the north shore of the windy city to spend our first few nights in New Zealand. We spend Sunday in Auckland doing the Sky Tower, getting a feel for the city which is well strung out rambling over several miles, the link bus service is the ideal transport to get you around the whole city. That combined with our ferry ride across the water from the north shore at Devonport makes for an enjoyable day, especially as we manage to get a good deal with a new mobile phone provider, we await to see just how good the coverage is though as we ready to move north up the island! An hour up the road is Warkworth, our first stop off point to meet up with Amy & Rich who left England four months ago in their travels around the world. Amy is our niece and arrived in NZ only a few days before us, after spending the last four months in south east Asia. They are now staying with Chris & Conny on a sort of chicken farm, earning their keep by keeping the place clean & tidy, which is a full time job with 250 chickens roaming around some even in doors, always watch where you sit or you could sit on anything. Chris & Conny invite us back for dinner, several bottles of wine later, and it’s one o’clock in the morning, we’ve caught up on all the news and through some lateral thinking, Amy has even named one of the roosters, Vince, my claim to fame having travelled halfway around the world, there’s a rooster in New Zealand named after me! We have a few problems with the camper namely the fridge is not working properly, but Apollo campers are not getting back to us after leaving three messages with their service centre because all there operators are always busy! As it turns out when I finally do manage to speak to someone after ringing there airport pick up line, the only line that a person actually answers instead of a machine, and almost losing it on the phone about the lack of service from their service centre (I haven’t been stressed like this since the photos wouldn’t go right on the blog, oh the traumas of travelling) we finally get joy and a few days rental refunded in compensation. I soon realise after talking to Daniel in the service centre on several occasions over the next week that it is only Daniel in the Apollo service centre, which is for all of Australia as well as NZ so no wonder he’s so busy, I think he’s the only operator in the southern hemisphere. Finally after one new auxiliary battery we can now keep our fresh produce from thawing out overnight, this never happened in our trusty Hilux in Oz. We wind our way slowly north, the roads in NZ are especially windy & the tyre and brake outlets here must do a roaring trade, Roger & Karen you must have had a great time here on the bike. Stopping off at Whangaruru North Head Scenic Reserve, we park with views overlooking the beach and Whangaruru Harbour. It’s during the evening that we are treated to the sight of three Orca’s hunting down and killing a large Ray in the bay about 200 metres off shore, this is just one of nature’s natural wonders that we are so lucky to see. We arrive at the top of NZ, camping at Spirits Bay, even trying a little fishing off the beach, without any luck though, but we are treated to the sight of six dolphins swimming through the surf along the beach right in front of us another amazing sight. Returning back down towards Auckland we visit 90 mile beach (it’s actually only 52 miles long), and is used as a highway for local Maoris’ and tour buses going up to Cape Reinga, the day we visit it resembles being on Felixstowe sea front in January while someone is operating a sand blasting machine in your direction, needless to say it was one of our quickest beach visits ever! We head back inland to come down through the large Kauri forest on the west coast, these trees are a magnificent sight with huge trunks up to 5 metres in diameter, and 60 metres tall, they are now protected and cannot be felled, but the loggers still harvest Kauri’s by digging them up from the peat swamplands where they have been perfectly persevered. In these swamplands there are three layers of Kauri trees dating from a few thousand years old to some 40,000 years old. We stopped overnight at a small hobby farm run by Shanye and Sharon, with just a few animals on 100 acres of paddocks & bushland, with great views from the top of the ridge. They have just put this property on the market complete with large house plus planning approval for two others for $675,000 NZ, now this even at today’s poor exchange rate equates to less money than we sold our bungalow in Felixstowe for which sits on less than a quarter of an acre, yet more food for thought? Calling back in to see Amy we spend the evening in the hot tub which has just been installed by Chris, sipping yet more bottles of wine under the stars, but it’s an early start, as our fridge is now running constantly and freezing all inside so Apollo’s Auckland depot is our next stop. Anyone coming to New Zealand who is thinking of hiring a campervan DON’T GO TO APOLLO which also trades as Cheapa Campers the customer service is lousy. We arrive to a shop full of newly arrived customers that didn’t take to kindly to me going to the front and asking to speak to a manager, and of course with this sort of bad service no manager was to be had anywhere, but after telling them the van would be parked across their gates until my problem was sorted we finally got their attention. So one hour and one new van later we are back on the road with a nice quiet working fridge plus a cabin heater which now works as well and supposedly a few more days credit on our hire, but I’ll wait and check my bank account first to see if that actually happens! We spend the evening catching up with Ethel & Roy my father’s cousins who came out here in the sixties with their campervan by ship. They broke their journey by getting off the ship after passing through the Suez Canal and driving through Africa in their Commer campervan which was specially built (campervans weren’t big in those days), and this was when Zimbabwe was still called Rhodesia so hats off to you guys for your pioneering trek, that makes our travels look quite tame by your standards. Anyway getting back to today, New Zealand with it’s 4.1 million residents in some ways seems to be stuck in some time warp some twenty years behind the UK, sixties and seventies style caravans seem to be everywhere and still in use! Pin numbers on bank cards are only just starting to get used (the times I’ve signed after using Jan’s bank card and not been picked up on it, it must be the way I’m wearing my dresses nowdays). And it was only a couple of weeks ago that it became illegal to use a mobile whilst driving. We travel down through the Coromandel peninsular enjoying the coastline on the way, Hot water beach was going to be a highlight, where you dig a hole on the beach, and then sit in hot water as it percolates up from below but one look at the crowds crammed into the small area where this actually happens means we opt for a couple of photos and then move on, too much like Brighton beach on a summers day. Rotorua is the big tourist attraction in the middle of the north Island with lots of thermal activity from where the Indian/Australia plate and Pacific plate buckle under each other below the surface, Geysers, mud holes & thermal pools you could spend a fortune here, three days is enough for us, with the highlights being for us the Zorb which Jan threw herself right into and the luge for me, these things go a lot quicker than I ever thought possible. Oh yes we enjoyed the Maori cultural evening as well but I think the kids in us managed to escape at Rotorua. The smell of rotten eggs(sulphur) follows us as we travel down to Lake Taupo, which is the flooded cone of an old volcano, stopping off at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland for us the best value of all the thermal attractions. Several different thermal features are packed into a small area, such as the Lady Knox Geyser which erupts at 1015 am everyday (with a little prompting from some organic soap), the Champagne Pool which boils with tiny bubbles of carbon dioxide with a surface temperature of 74 degrees, several boiling mud pools and mineral terraces round off our two hour visit. We spend the next week winding our way down the east coast hoping to get a spot of fishing in at some point but the weather is against us and the rod and line stay inside the van. New Zealand’s Maori name is “Aotearoa” which means, land of the long white cloud, it certainly hasn’t changed over the years & we spend most of our time on the North Island under this very cloud, at times even a huge black cloud, like at Rotorua where the heavens opened, or at Napier where temperatures were nudging 29 degrees under the broken white cloud. It reminds us very much of the uncertainty of the English weather and with the chilly evenings here, it’s a gentle nudge of the things to come when we get back home. The North island for us has been far more scenic than we expected and once your away from the cities nice and quiet, if only the campervan and the weather had been a bit kinder to us it would have been a great experience, but now we move on to the South Island and hopefully the jewel in the crown so fingers crossed the weather improves just a little, while we spend our last few weeks in the southern hemisphere.