Monday, December 10, 2012
Monday, July 2, 2012
July 3- Auckland
George here- It's 1:30 in the afternoon, and we should be out and about on our last full day of our New Zealand adventure, but it's pouring down rain in Auckland at the moment and about 50 degrees and windy. We've already been to the aquarium this morning and will likely watch a movie in an hour, so a little down time in the hotel is just fine at the moment.
I feel a little guilty being in such a cooler climate with the whole East Coast baking and much of it without power, but we'll be home to face it soon enough.
Not much to report on since Sunday, but we greatly enjoyed our villa at Hot Water Beach and Burke and I even woke up early Monday to watch Spain beat Italy in the Euro Cup soccer final. We left there around 10 and got into the heart of Auckland around 12:30. We settled into our hotel here which is probably our biggest yet with 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, a living room and a small kitchen. After a quick bite for lunch, we walked down to the wharf area and did some last minute souvenir shopping.
With steady rain this morning, we thought the aquarium would be a could idea, but so did many others, including the Australian National Boys Choir, so while seeing penguins, sting rays and sharks was cool, the crowds made it difficult to get around.
So while we will likely wrap things up later on, this will likely be it for me. We leave Auckland at 9:30 tomorrow night and then depart from L.A. an hour later on July 4. (after 12 hours of flying and 8 hours of waiting) It's been a blast, but we're all ready to be home again.
I feel a little guilty being in such a cooler climate with the whole East Coast baking and much of it without power, but we'll be home to face it soon enough.
Not much to report on since Sunday, but we greatly enjoyed our villa at Hot Water Beach and Burke and I even woke up early Monday to watch Spain beat Italy in the Euro Cup soccer final. We left there around 10 and got into the heart of Auckland around 12:30. We settled into our hotel here which is probably our biggest yet with 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, a living room and a small kitchen. After a quick bite for lunch, we walked down to the wharf area and did some last minute souvenir shopping.
With steady rain this morning, we thought the aquarium would be a could idea, but so did many others, including the Australian National Boys Choir, so while seeing penguins, sting rays and sharks was cool, the crowds made it difficult to get around.
So while we will likely wrap things up later on, this will likely be it for me. We leave Auckland at 9:30 tomorrow night and then depart from L.A. an hour later on July 4. (after 12 hours of flying and 8 hours of waiting) It's been a blast, but we're all ready to be home again.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
June 29-July 1
George here (and Josh too).
We left Waitomo around 10:00—we are not moving at a rapid speed in the
mornings at this point-- and headed towards the Alexander Farm (also known as
Hobbiton) used in the 3 Lord of the Rings and 2 Hobbit films.
But in one of the brochures I was reading, I saw that there
was a tribute to Tim and Neil Finn [two of my favorite musicians] in their
hometown of Te Awamutu. So we found the
museum there and spent about 30 minutes reading news clips, listening to music
on albums (I think Josh was pretty amazed music could be made that way), and
watching old family videos of the Finn Family.
Once I had my fix, we headed to Hobbiton. We got there in time for a 12:20 tour and
loaded the bus with 25 or 30 other tourists.
(from Josh)- We started off seeing some small Hobbit holes,
then on our way up to Bag End (Biblo’s house), we saw the Party Tree where
Bilbo had his 111th birthday, and across a small lake, we saw The
Green Dragon Tavern (soon to be a working pub). Then we went to Bag End and Sam
Gangee’s house. We were supposed to stay
with our guide, but one little Russian boy kept wandering off and slipped into
a pond.
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| Josh in one of the Hobbit holes at Hobbiton |
From there, we drove to Hamilton, the 4th biggest
city in New Zealand. We got a room with
a Queen, a double, and a single bed and had a yummy buffet dinner. Josh even
had an ornate pineapple-lemonade drink.
![]() |
| Josh's drink at Valentine's |
We got up Saturday before we left Hamilton, we went to the
museum there. Josh says “it was
cool.” It had animatronics and gave Josh
some ideas what he wants to do with engineering when he grows up.
![]() |
| Laura and Burke have a "real life" Mario Cart race |
After a Subway lunch (our 4th or 5th
this trip), we headed east to Hot Water Beach, where Laura and the boys had
been on the second day of their trip. We
got their at high tide, so we spent most of the night cooking dinner and
watching TV (George-rugby and Laura and the boys Spiderman 3)
Sunday morning, we got up a little earlier and headed to the
beach at low tide around 9:00 armed with shovels to build holes in the sand and
to create our on family hot pool. Two
hours later, we were a little sandy, but warmer than the 45 degree and drizzly
outside temperatures.
We had a small cabin with no amenities last night, but
upgraded to the family villa where we’re now relaxing, watching TV and chilling
after a nice warm shower.
We’ll do a little more adventuring around the Coramandel
Peninsula this afternoon and then head back to Auckland tomorrow
afternoon. One more update from there in
a day or two.
Friday, June 29, 2012
June 26-28
Burke: June 26th & 27th
I think that I’m developing memory lapses, because I had to ask what we did 6 hrs. ago, or the sheer awesomeness has temporarily given me amnesia. Ok, it’s all good now. So yesterday, we woke up and had a little jaunt through Windy Welly (Wellington.) It really proved its name the night before when it was gusting on our 25th hotel floor at 4:00 in the morning. We then saw the national museum of New Zealand, Te Papa. It had lots of interesting exhibits about New Zealand’s wildlife, history, and their native people, The Maori. After Te Papa, we drove to Whanganui. We climbed a 176-step tower and saw a lovely view at the top. The side effects of going back down were jello-legs. We spent the night in Whanganui and had tacos for dinner.
The
next day we woke up and drove toward Waitomo. The drive had great scenery until
it started snowing, I couldn’t see anything after that. Well, not until we got
to The Grand Chateau, a giant mansion that was a ski resort. We were able to go
outside and have a (snow) ball. I made Fort Burke and Josh and Dad made a
snowman. We then finished driving to Waitomo and ate a lasagna made by Mom.
Laura: As I may have mentioned- the boys are a little short on words. The time in Wellington wasn’t too remarkable outside the Lord of the Rings tour. It is a lovely town that is very reminiscent of San Francisco, right down to the active earthquake zone. At one point the shore line for the harbor was about 500 feet above where it is now- an earthquake in the late 1800’s lifted up the entire harbor and gave the town a lot more real estate to build on. It is the capital of New Zealand, which is now embroiled in their own high profile murder trial (think OJ Simpson without the celebrity). The drive from Wellington to Whanganui was one of our easier drives- minus the 5-7 miles that went right along the crashing waves of the shore. Whanganui was a stopping point for us, not much to see there, but it did give us a good shelter for some rain and wind coming through the region. The next day we hoped to see the highest point on the North Island and the active volcanoes used as the Mt. Doom for the Lord of the Rings- Mt. Tongariro and Ruaphepu.
We stayed 2 nights at Waitomo, best known for its extensive
network of glow worm caves. On Thursday,
we took a short hike up to the Waitomo lookout, and saw a country very much
like I picture Ireland- and found a flock of turkeys to visit in the process.
In the afternoon, we had booked an adventure tour, and we were not
disappointed. We went with Kiwi Raft Adventures and started by putting on
wetsuits and harnesses and getting a short course in abseiling (what I call
rappelling). We then abseiled into a 90 foot cavern, with a stream running at
the bottom. This was followed by a walk upstream to a few caving spots where we
tried our hands at squeezing through small spots and pulling ourselves out of
holes and caving spots.
I think that I’m developing memory lapses, because I had to ask what we did 6 hrs. ago, or the sheer awesomeness has temporarily given me amnesia. Ok, it’s all good now. So yesterday, we woke up and had a little jaunt through Windy Welly (Wellington.) It really proved its name the night before when it was gusting on our 25th hotel floor at 4:00 in the morning. We then saw the national museum of New Zealand, Te Papa. It had lots of interesting exhibits about New Zealand’s wildlife, history, and their native people, The Maori. After Te Papa, we drove to Whanganui. We climbed a 176-step tower and saw a lovely view at the top. The side effects of going back down were jello-legs. We spent the night in Whanganui and had tacos for dinner.
Laura: As I may have mentioned- the boys are a little short on words. The time in Wellington wasn’t too remarkable outside the Lord of the Rings tour. It is a lovely town that is very reminiscent of San Francisco, right down to the active earthquake zone. At one point the shore line for the harbor was about 500 feet above where it is now- an earthquake in the late 1800’s lifted up the entire harbor and gave the town a lot more real estate to build on. It is the capital of New Zealand, which is now embroiled in their own high profile murder trial (think OJ Simpson without the celebrity). The drive from Wellington to Whanganui was one of our easier drives- minus the 5-7 miles that went right along the crashing waves of the shore. Whanganui was a stopping point for us, not much to see there, but it did give us a good shelter for some rain and wind coming through the region. The next day we hoped to see the highest point on the North Island and the active volcanoes used as the Mt. Doom for the Lord of the Rings- Mt. Tongariro and Ruaphepu.
We couldn’t see them due to the 6+ inches of snow and the
low clouds that accompanied them. We did stop at the Grand Chateau Tongariro
and had a fun snow play day. Only 20 minutes away it was green, sunny with
rainbows and no trace of snow. We headed to Waitomo.
We then got a lesson on glowworms, turned out our headlamps
and saw a constellation of glowing worm butts. They produce the phosphorescence
to burn off their waste, as they have no other way to get rid of it. We then
jumped into our innertubes and proceeded to coast down the stream, passing our
entry point and continuing on in complete darkness at times. After a nice long
float, we dismounted and did a little more caving. Our guide, Simon, was
encouraging, even if his language wasn’t always family friendly!
After a nice warm drink and some chocolate, we then walked
against the current back up to our entry point. This was the hardest part of
the trip as we had gotten plenty wet and tired, and it was sometimes hard work
slogging back upstream, but we all made it.
Our final part of the adventure was to climb out of the cave
we were in. Simon practically walked up to the belay point, and then Burke was
the first up, followed by Josh, then George and I brought up the rear. By the
time I went, it was almost completely dark, so I didn’t have much help in
seeing where I was going- There were plenty of hand and footholds, and the
slope wasn’t too severe, so despite some jelly legs and wetsuits holding us
back, we all made it up and back to our waiting van. It was a true adventure
and amazing time for all.
George won the award
for caving, or the ‘superman’ award, Burke had the award for humor and ‘aiding
and abetting’ award, Josh got the perseverance award as well as ‘I am ready!’
award, and Laura got the ‘that’s why we wear a helmet award’ or maybe the ‘I
just want to take a swim’ award. The
next day we headed to Hamilton, but not before stopping for a Finn Brothers
museum exhibit in their hometown of Te Awamuta and a full tour of the Hobbiton
set near Matamata- but I’ll let someone else talk about those.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
June 24-25
| Take the LEFT side! |
On Sunday, we got up early, and thanks to some good mountain
driving on Laura’s part, we made it to Picton just in time to turn in our
rental car and catch the Interislander Ferry to Wellington.
| Frodo senses Nazgul while hobbits hunt mushrooms |
Josh here- today I’d say was the best day of the trip. We
went on a Lord of the Rings tour around Wellington- viewing places where they
shot the movie. We went with a guy named Todd who was an important extra in the
Lord of the Rings. First we went to Mount Victoria where they shot s couple of
scenes in big pine trees.
Then we went to the river where another scene was filmed,
and there Todd had some replica props that we could use- hobbit/elf ears, and a
real sword like Frodo’s and he also had Legolas’ bow. Then we went to Harcourt
park where they filmed the scene of Isengard with Gandalf. I also sat, stood
and crouched where Sir Peter Jackson, Ian McKlellan, Elijah Wood and the other
hobbits had been. Then we went to the Weta Cave.
Weta is a special effects company that makes props, makeup,
CGI effects and all the non-acting movie magic. We saw a life-sized model of
Smeagol (Gollum). It was so cool to see
actual props and miniatures from the movies. It also had maps and things
describing Middle Earth and pendants and Jewelry for sale (the ring of course).
| Todd as Oliphant driver |
Todd told me that one guy bought a $5000 ring that matched
the one in the movie, then hired a helicopter and dropped it into a volcano,
just like in the movie! Todd was an Oliphant driver in the battle for Minas Tirith
scene where Legolas takes down his Oliphant, and he was a courier for Denethar-
the steward of Gondor, and was in the scene where Denethar lights himself on
fire. At the end of the tour we came back to our hotel and got an autograph
from Todd in our new LOTR Location guidebook as well as a shot of him dressed
as an Oliphant driver. Having just seen the movies before we left the States,
this was a great way to make them a little more real.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
June 23
George here--It was another
day of unexpected adventures (although we really don’t have any decent pictures
today to show for it). We had a leisurely morning in Akaroa and ended up
leaving there around 10. We stopped
again in Christchurch to switch rental cars (a Toyota Corolla for a Mitsubishi
Triton/ pick up truck) and headed north.
Laura got to drive with severe wind gusts (40-50 mph) and a few
drizzles, and made it to Hanmer Springs a little before 3. It is a cute resort town best known for it
hot spring and Thermal Spa. The only
problem was that once we arrived, there was no power in the entire town,
including the Spa or the Holiday Park where we were staying.
Since we have a decent drive
ahead of us tomorrow, we debated driving ahead, but we decided to stick it out
and are ecstatic that we did. The boys
jumped on a trampoline in the rain and we were hanging on in the room until
4:30 when the power came back on.
After doing a quick happy
dance, we got our swim stuff together and headed to the spa. Despite 50 degree
temperatures, stiff winds and a steady rain, we spent two hours in and out of
100 degree pools, sulfur baths, and several water slides. We had a great time and finished in time to
watch most of the All Blacks vs. Ireland rugby match (at this point, a 36-0 All
Blacks lead)
Off to Wellington tomorrow
with a 3 hour drive and a 3 hour ferry trip, so lots of excitement to come!
Friday, June 22, 2012
June 21-22
June 21-Burke
When we arrived at the ski area, we purchased our passes and had
some lunch. The cool thing about the passes is that you don’t have to pull them
out every time; they had scanners that could read it through your clothing. We
then were given rentals and we hit the slopes. Josh and I didn’t have much of a difficult
time starting on the kiddie hill. After several runs through it we thought we
were ready for the beginner’s hill. Nope. After several crashes and half an hour of
speed then crash and speed then crash, we actually got done and went inside for
some drinks. With 45min. left, Josh and I went on the kids slope again and Mom
took one run down a real course. I would have liked to do better, but I haven’t
skied since I was 10, and that was my first time so I was beginning then. I
improved, but still have a ways to go. We had a fun time and another
semi-adventure going back down. The day was a very beautiful and enjoyable
experience.
Hey its Josh here, today we went on a small 2 hour cruise
said to see about 2-4 Hector’s dolphin which is the smallest and rarest dolphin
in the word and a couple of little blue Adelie penguins which are the smallest
penguins in the world but we actually saw about 3 dozen dolphins about 3
penguins and 2 humpback whales which have only been seen in winter (we are in
winter) rarely! It was really cool and I got to drive the boat for a while too!
I loved it and the company loved Moms pictures so much they kept a lot of good
shots. I had a very fun time! See you (theoretically).

From Laura: Wow. What a couple of days. The skiing was
beautiful. We had some great weather- the road to Mt Hutt was an alpine course
all unpaved and the further up you got the more it was surrounded by banks of
snow and the steeper it got. We had to stop 2/3 up and get chains put on for
the last bit by a full team of mud covered women mechanics. What a job. The
resort was great- nestled up in the top of the alps. Lots of snow and not a lot
of people. There were Keas- large green alpine parrots, wild, in the parking
lot. They are often found up in the Southern Alps and there are lots of signs
to keep people from feeding them. We got set up with the skis and had some
lunch then hit the kiddie hill.
It had a cool lift called the magic carpet that
was just a large enclosed conveyor belt that took you to the top. Easy enough
if you can stand up straight on skis. Josh only had a problem once. Both boys
showed me they could do turns and then I challenged them on the ‘easy’ slope- a
long S turn slope. I think they would have done better had the slope not had a
steep drop off one side that felt like imminent doom to them- it kept them from
doing big wide turns. That led to a lot of speed and mostly calculated falls,
but a few spectacular ones that earned their badges for skiing. It was a tiring
but beautiful day. My one trip to the mountain top was a beautiful view of snow
capped mountains on one side and the Canterbury plains on the other.

We went on a nature cruise that
usually promises a few dolphins, a few seals and penguins, and some local
history. We had just started our tour when the captain got news from another of
their boats and put on the speed, because they had spotted three whales
breaching and playing in the ocean outside the harbor entrance. This was really
unusual- they were humpbacks migrating from Antarctica up towards the
Equatorial waters for mating.
I’m not quite sure that I can full
capture the actually coolness of skiing on Mt. Hutt, but I’ll do my best. The
day began with a joyful hour and a half trip to the ski area on Mt. Hutt with
the last half an hour of the drive up the mountain and some of the drive on
snow chains.
June 22
We checked out of our Christchurch lodging on Friday
morning, and headed out to Akaroa- a beautiful French village in an ancient
volcanic crater that is now a sheltered harbor.
We caught one surfacing and heading north and
followed it for a while. We then went to check in on some others and were able
to catch them breaching- we spent probably an hour following them and clicking
away at the pictures.
Meanwhile, there were dozens of Hector’s dolphins, where
the cruises usually see one or two on a winter cruise- they were all playing
around the boat and very interested in the whales as well. The captain kept
saying they never saw whales like that and he was ‘gobsmacked’ and he even pulled
out his camera.
| Zoom this one for great detail! |
We finally started back to do the rest of our cruise in short
order, as we were already 10 minutes overdue. We did catch a royal albatross
(the largest ones) and a few blue penguins as well. On the way back, the
captain let Josh drive the boat for awhile and spoke of how amazed he was. He said
he hadn’t gotten a great picture of the whale breach, so I offered to let him
copy mine. They copied all 100 pictures we took- they can sort out the good
ones from the bad! It was really special and I understand the meaning of
gobsmacked fully now! Looks like we’ll pay for it all with some bad weather on
our way north to (hopefully) Hanmer Springs and Picton. Fingers crossed for good
weather for our ferry trip on Sunday.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
George at Work
George here again.
Sorry for that brief interruption, but I was in a workshop learning
about some interesting iPad Apps for Education and was just trying out some
things. While much of this trip has been
family vacation, it has been more of a “work-cation” for me and I thought I’d
spend a little time talking about what I’ve been doing.
When I visited New Zealand two years ago to visit schools,
our trip was sponsored by a New Zealand education organization called CORE,
based here in Christchurch. I hoped the
trip would spur on some ideas for a sabbatical project, and it eventually did
after of the Feb. 2011 earthquake. What
I’m looking at is the use of technology by schools in the aftermath of
disasters (specifically earthquakes here)
When I get back to the US, I hope to talk with other schools who have
dealt with similar situations (tornado, hurricane, etc.)
When the earthquake hit in Feb. 2011, the building housing
CORE’s headquarters was badly damaged and has since been torn down, so they’ve
been operating out of a house well out of town.
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| The CORE offices in the June 6 snow |
Much of my time here has been spent at this house talking to folks,
making phone contacts, and staying connected to the Internet. Members of the research team at CORE wrote a
report for the Ministry of Education on “Co-Located” schools, those who were
forced to share building space in the aftermath of the February 2011
Earthquake. This report helped me figure
out what happened during the 2011 school year (Feb.-December) and gave me some
ideas for people to contact.
So from June 6- June 8 and June 19-today, I’ve been
interviewing principals and other leaders from a variety of schools across
Christchurch to see how technology has helped them through this difficult
time. (10 interviews total) I got a
little sidetracked with snow two weeks ago, but I’m still happy with the work
I’ve done. I’ve got lots of analyzing to do, but hopefully I’ll be able to
share some ideas through articles, conference presentations, etc. Today, I went
to the South Learning Centre where many teachers came to get up to speed with
technology in the weeks after the quake, especially those in schools where
students didn’t arrive until 1:00 in the afternoon (high schools) I talked to
the eLearning director there and got a professional development session in at
the same time. I missed skiing with
Laura and the boys, but I negotiated the Christchurch bus routes, and made it
back to the hotel fine.
But tomorrow will be my last “work” day and I’m excited
about spending more time exploring the country.
More to come!
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Josh liked how small
they were- Burke’s favorite part was our ride on the Hogglund- a snowcat/ all
terrain vehicle that went on a track outside over large hills and even into a
deep pond. We rode around by the US Antarctic prep area where everyone heading
to the stations comes for their prep, their clothing and equipment and then
head off on giant aircraft to the Antarctic.
| "The brave. The Intrepid. The conqueror...Burke Lipscomb!" |
We also experienced an antarctice storm in the snow room- they can’t
really simulate the conditions of course, but it did get dark, windy and pretty
cold! There were lots of cool rocks, animal exhibits and a very fun interactive
4-D film about Antarctic tourism.
We had lunch in the café, and then rather
than hanging out another hour waiting for George, we hoofed it over to the
airport and took a cab back. One of our more expensive trips, but on a cold
frosty day better than walking 3 miles. All in all a good day, and lots of
thoughts of Uncle Bill, who would have taken off from the same spot on his trip
to Antarctica a few years ago!
Monday, June 18, 2012
June 19
| Breakkie at the Earwakers |
(6/19/12)Burke: So
today I was told to blog about food, I don’t know if I should be offended or
proud. What I can say thought is that NZ has some of the same foods, but a lot
of different ones too. They have Mickey D’s and BK, but most of the cafes serve
things like mince pies or sausage rolls. The mince pie is like sausage and gravy
inside with a pastry outside. The sausage rolls are pretty self-explanatory,
they have sausage and other things like cheese and onion rolled into one
delicious food. One meal that’s a twist on words is a NZ Hot Dog with Chips. I
know what you think, bun, hot dog, and potato chips, nope. It’s a Corn Dog with
French Fries.
Hey this is Josh here. There is a thing I want to tell you about on
the beach at Blenheim. As the others walked along the beach, Dad and I drove
the campervan to the playground next to the fire station as we were told where
we thought we’d meet up with everyone. It was a cool playground that we played
on waiting for the others to catch up. But it turns out that we were at the
wrong playground! There was a playground made out of driftwood logs on the
beach with lots of swings and climbing structures and stuff like that. People
had just gathered the driftwood logs and made a big playground out of it. I
especially liked that I found the ‘trampoline’ which was a really bouncy piece
of driftwood.
Before that we had seen a sea cave that had been eroded into the
rocks by the waves. There was one really big wave that came onto the little
beach. I was the only one standing on the big rock in the middle of the beach
and the huge wave came and everyone else had to run while I sat and laughed.
Burke got wet up to his knees! I found my new favorite food that I had never
tried and never knew in the US… English muffins!
So after we left Blenheim to
go to Christchurch, we stopped at a seal colony, one out of 3 in the area. We
hiked about 5 minutes to come to a pool fed by a waterfall. There was about 3
dozen baby seals playing in the water- there were many that came up to you and
sniff you but you weren’t allowed to touch them L.
I was afraid when one was close and I looked at mom and she took a picture that
the seal would bite me, but he didn't. In Kaikoura, we found a funny t-shirt
that I will show you a picture of. I also saw tshirts with a lego kiwi and a
sheep driving a tractor. Back in Christchurch we dropped off the RV, got a
rental car, drove back to our hotel Chardonnay Motor Lodge. I hope we go to the caddyshack a suped-up indoor
mini golf and also go skiing.
June 18
| It must have space if Burke needs a stool! |
Well. We survived the RV trip around the South Island with
grand style! Our ‘luxury’ RV was a fine home for 8 days, but I think we’re all
happy to be in one place for a few days. George is back at work in Christchurch
and we are camped out in a lovely hotel with ample room.
| The Natural Playground at Blenheim |
After we left Blenheim and the gorgeous Malborough sounds
and wine country, we headed south along the coast to the Kaikoura peninsula.
This area is mostly known for its whale watching tours as there is a pod of
sperm whales who live off the coast. Evidentially as we were enjoying atypical
sunny weather on the west coast, they had a good amount rough weather on the
east coast and the seas had been too rough to have any whale tours go out (all
a’chunder as they might say here).
| The churning water in the pool is from baby seals swimming Below |
On our way to Kaikoura, we stopped along the way at a baby seal colony. Basically, there is a seal colony on the coast, and the seal pups go up a short rocky stream to a large pool that is at the base of a beautiful waterfall. We followed a path alongside the stream to the waterfall. There in the pool were dozens of baby seals frolicking and swimming about. On the rocks next to the path we were on several had crawled up and were checking us out as well as letting us check them out. We could of touched them if we wanted, but they asked that you not and there is the possibility of one giving you a nip, which could be pretty severe. It was definitely a highlight for Laura- everyone enjoyed it.
| Posing for the public |
We took a tramp (hike) up to the top of the plateau and over a cow pasture (against the boys protests) to look out across Whale Watcher Bay and another seal colony. We came back into town and all found a few souvenirs. We headed on down to Christchurch, turned in our RV, rented another car and then to the supermarket and back to our hotel.
A few things that are of interest: Because of the internet
and world wide shrinkage, (it’s a small world after all) there is very little
that is truly unique or different in a lot of the culture. Most of the things I
have seen that aren’t American resound more of English culture than anything
uniquely Kiwi. There are still lots of
funny words and phrases though and those have been fun to pick up on. The Kiwis
have very high electric bills, as electricity is very expensive. Lack of national
reserves of fossil fuels and unwillingness to dam up too many streams accounts
for this. As a result, no one has central heat, despite the climate. They have
a lot of portable heaters, electric blankets, hot water bottles and woolens to stay warm. Every outlet has a
switch on it, and you should turn it off when you aren’t using it. The electric
budgeting also means our costs for lodging are usually per person rather than
per space. A double room has different rates depending how many people are
staying there (presumably because more people use more resources). Also, every
bathroom has a window and it is supposed to stay open. A smelly loo is worse
than a chilly bum! Most houses and hotels we’ve seen have been very compact, no
sprawling McMansions like you see in the states. Despite the weather, you see a
good number of men in shorts year round, and most people don’t seem to use
heavy coats or lots of outerwear. These are some hearty folk! There is very
little cable TV, but what there is has been heavily influenced by American
sitcoms- Big Bang Theory and How I Met your Mother are both really big. The
main cable franchise, Sky TV is owned by Fox’s Rupert Murdoch. The people here
know much more about the States and our political leaders than we know about
Kiwi affairs. Quick, who is the New Zealand Prime Minister? See?
I hope the boys will find some time between games to write
some entries- especially about our foods and the things they find different.
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