Around the World

Cambodia’s Angkor Wat

Share Button

Angkor Wat: “Erected by some ancient Michelangelo”

On our first full day in Cambodia, we purchased 3-day passes for $67 for Angkor Wat, a place so revered by Cambodians that it is on their flag. It is the largest religious monument in the world—covering almost 500 acres.

Built in the 1100s AD as a Hindu temple and a capital city for King Suryavarman II’s Khmer Empire, it was converted to a Buddhist temple later that century. Later, it would nearly be abandoned. In the mid-1800s, a French explorer named Henri Mouhot wrote about Angkor Wat, and reestablished interest in the complex:

“One of these temples—a rival to that of Solomon, and erected by some ancient Michelangelo—might take an honorable place beside our most beautiful buildings. It is grander than anything left to us by Greece or Rome…”

A moat had stopped the jungle from overtaking the temple, but the complex needed much help to clear vegetation and restore some buildings. Today Angkor Wat, with its surrounding temples, is a UNESCO world heritage site.

We took a remork (Cambodian tuk tuk) to the temple, enjoying the cool morning air breezing on us in the carriage. Through the residential side streets, and main road motorbike chaos, into the red dirt land of Cambodia on the road to Angkor Wat, those rides were a favorite part of our day—talking to Sothea (the driver), and seeing life along the streets of Siem Reap.

Just outside the main entrance to Angkor Wat, we decided last minute to hire a guide to walk with us through the complex. Our expectation was that he’d take us to the most meaningful spots (he did), allow me time to photograph (he did not), and tell us about the complex with both facts and local stories. We got the facts—spewed at us without context or passion as we ran to keep up with him. Any questions set him to rewind-repeat-data mode. One hour of this fast-moving, fact frenzy for $15. Whew. I was glad to hear him say, “Time is up. You want ‘nother hour?” “No sir, thank you.” And that was the first and last day we used a guide. From then on, we decided to wander, see what we saw, and look it up in our book—a pace better suited to us.

Donation box at a temple at Angkor Wat
Donation box at a temple at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
Lady with blue umbrella Walking around the almost 500 acre temple complex at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
Walking around the almost 500-acre temple complex at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
Cool, dark tunnels in the Angkor Wat temples, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Cool, dark tunnels in the Angkor Wat temples, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
A building from 1100 AD at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
A building from 1100 AD at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
Bas relief of two women at Angkor Wat temple complex, Cambodia
Bas relief of two women at Angkor Wat temple complex, Cambodia.

 

Red Yarn Blessings

It was after our guide left us that we heard a soft young voice chanting, and saw the teenage boy making the song. He was a monk. Shaved head, wrapped in an orange robe, seated in front of a woman and her young daughter. We watched and waited, and when they stepped down, we stepped up. He indicated our shoes. We took them off. He pointed to our places to sit. We sat, Bryan to my right. And then he began chanting while looking down at his accoutrements and monk tools. Next, a raised a scooper out of a bucket of water and shook it in our direction. I covered my camera in my lap and welcomed the cool drops of water in this 90+ degree humid day. He looked at me and indicated my left wrist. I offered my arm and he began tying a red-braided piece of wool yarn around my wrist while chanting—knotting it once, twice, how many times? He then took scissors and carefully cut off the excess. Then he did the same to Bryan’s right wrist. Bryan put money in the young monk’s basket, and we reached to get our shoes. I turned back to the young monk and asked him, “How old are you?” He hesitated for so long that I thought he did not understand my language, and / or was not going to answer. But as I picked up my shoes, he ever-so-quietly said, “Fifteen,” waited a heartbeat or two, and then smiled at me. My heart melted a little as I smiled back and said my best “saum arkoun nay” (Thank you in Khmer…I hope) and I stood to go.

The red string is to remind the wearer to be compassionate, to mind the tongue so as not to harm with words, and to be fearless, courageous, and brave. Some say it protects too—absorbing negative energy until it can hold no more, and falls off. As I write this, it is nearly seven months later, and the red yarn blessing is still secure on my wrist, and the young monk’s shy smile is tucked tight in my memories. I like this red yarn and its reminders.

A young monk bestows blessings at Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
A young monk trims a red yarn blessing after bestowing it in Angkor Wat, Cambodia.

 

Spirit Houses

As we walked around Siem Reap, we noticed colorful little houses on pedestals, often placed near door ways. The birdhouse-sized structures sometimes had offerings on their little patios—burning incense, a little bowl of rice, fruit slices, a piece of bread or cake, a cup of coffee, a shot glass of liquor or soft drink. These are spirit houses. Some are ornate, some simple and plain, and each one intriguing. I learned that they are common in Southeast Asia, and are considered a place to shelter and appease restless spirits, and to invite the good spirits of those recently departed. Friendly spirits are said to congregate in the spirit houses to enjoy food and drink, and it is their presence that keeps bad spirits away.

A small spirit house, beside an ancient tree. Siem Reap, Cambodia.
A small spirit house, beside an ancient tree. Siem Reap, Cambodia.
A simple spirit house, Cambodia.
A simple spirit house, Cambodia.
Ornate spirit house with coffee offering. Cambodia.
Ornate spirit house with coffee offering. Cambodia.
Lots of incense and drinks at this spirit house, Cambodia.
Incense and drinks at this spirit house, Cambodia.

 

The Night Market

After a daytime of touring, we’d return to the hotel for a little rest and to clean up. At sundown, we walked into the old town for dinner. In the cool of the evening, more people were out, laughing and talking, eating and visiting. We went to the touristy Pub Street to find meals, and ventured into the circus of the Night Market.

The Night Markets were always interesting. There were narrow lanes containing hundreds of small stalls selling brand-name knock-off clothing and accessories. One could also find souvenirs and t-shirt vendors, dimly-lit and calm massage shops–where several tourists always sat in recliners getting foot massages, and bright carnival-like stalls where tourists climbed up to sit and dangle their feet in a fish tank—the fish eating dead skin from their feet. In the streets, amputees begged with a poetic cadence, and the music of bands of land mine victims drifted into the night like smoke. Little girls demonstrated high spinning toys and glow necklaces, and served as translator when tourists bought the novelties from their nearby mom. Women sold fried tarantulas, scorpions, and snakes for snacks from large display tables hanging from their necks. There was so much going on there–and always the smells of moped exhaust, woodsmoke, and lemongrass.

Such strange and different things to see, but also so many things the same as home. And the hoards of tourists—all together, in places where we can buy bottled water, eat from a menu printed in English, find a cheap, fake version of an expensive brand, and be all together to marvel and be shocked by seeing fried scorpions served on a stick.This was everything I’ve come to love–and hate–about travel. As fascinating as it was, I longed to be away from this—away from the mobs of other tourists and the universal salad of globalization. Of course, being here in Cambodia makes me part of the problem.

I’m curious how other people feel about the increase in tourism and what it does to the places we all go. There are the crowds, the traffic, the overbooked hotels. And on the other hand, there’s an economic bump to the area. But who gets the bulk of the profits? My guess is the international company coming in, not the people who live there (who may only earn a small wage working for the tourism industry). Does anyone else worry about this, and plan trips differently as a result?

Along the street near the Night Market, Siem Reap, Cambodia
Along the street near the Night Market, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Near Pub Street, Siem Reap twilight, Cambodia.
Near Pub Street, Siem Reap twilight, Cambodia.
The Night Market, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
The Night Market, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
At night, the smiling faces inside the shop of the Geological Institute in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
At night, the smiling faces inside the shop of the Geological Institute in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

 
Cambodia prints available on Etsy.

More about our time in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

First Impressions of Cambodia

Share Button

We chose Cambodia because of a Steve McCurry photo-—you know the photo…those trees hugging and prying into stone temples, and a doorway with monks in saffron robes peering out. This was the third stop on our around-the-world trip, and we were anxious to spend more time in Asia. And we found so much more than those jungle trees in beautiful Cambodia.

A kid smiles at me from the back of a motorbike in Siem Reap, Cambodia
A kid smiles at me from the back of a motorbike in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

 

To Cambodia via Hong Kong

We flew from Brisbane Australia overnight, connecting in Hong Kong. There’s something about a night flight, and a flight to HONG KONG–a place name we’ve heard all our lives and now it was printed on our boarding passes! It was 4,300 miles and 8+ hours to Hong Kong, passing over places like Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, the Philippines, and the South China Sea. I slept little, instead eyeing the flight map, trying to see the land below, and reading.

In Hong Kong, we had 70 whole minutes to change terminals and planes. We bought water, got some Hong Kong coins back in change, and I stood staring at a display of books… it took a minute in my groggy state to realize that these were for readers of right-to-left text—and were not stacked on the table backwards afterall.

Arrival in Siem Reap

We arrived in Siem Reap, Cambodia about three hours later, and exited the airport into a hot, hazy land, full of buzzing mopeds and smiling people. There was a closeness in the air, maybe the enveloping humidity and the smoke of wood fires, or maybe the dreaminess from our lack of sleep.

Traffic at dusk Motorcycles, mopeds, and remorks (tuktuks) rule the streets of Siem Reap, Cambodia
Traffic at dusk–Motorcycles, mopeds, and remorks (tuktuks) rule the streets of Siem Reap, Cambodia.

 

Mr. TinTin, a driver from the hotel, met us with a sign, escorted us to a waiting old Mercedes, and politely chattered in English with the full-blown AC on as he drove us to the hotel. We tumbled back out into the heat and smoke and sounds of buzzing motorbikes at the Privilege Boutique Hotel, and were greeted with sunny, smiling people offering cold white lemongrass-scented washcloths, and a dainty glass of an orange tasty juice I couldn’t identify. Nothing has ever felt more refreshing.

It was still morning and our room was not yet ready. So we sat and talked to our friendly hosts:  Jasmine, Phally and Ken. I felt so welcomed here, it was as if we were long-lost family. They gave us advice on seeing Angkor Wat, filled us in on their elected monarch, and taught us a few important words and phrases in Khmer like Chul Mouy (which means cheers and to my ears sounded like “chew muy”). According to Jasmine, “You say this so the ears can enjoy it too”.

Lotus blooms floating in a vase in Siem Reap, Cambodia
Lotus blooms floating in a vase in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Lotus pads floating in a hotel vase, Siem Reap, Cambodia
Lotus pads floating in a hotel vase, Siem Reap, Cambodia.

 

These friendly Cambodians have a history that is equally grand and empirical, elegant and exotic, and cruel and haunting. There is Angkor Wat, a vast religious monument that is evidence of a time when Cambodia was the center of an empire. There are also the sophisticated architecture and cuisine leave-behinds from the Indochina era when Cambodia was under French protection as a buffer between Siam and a French Vietnam. And there are the lingering effects of Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge regime when 25% of the Cambodian population was tortured and murdered between 1975-1979.

Cambodia’s Recent History

There was a civil war in Cambodia in the early 70s. After, Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge regime arrested and eventually executed almost everyone suspected of connections with the former government or with foreign governments, as well as professionals and intellectuals. This state-sponsored genocide killed more than two million Cambodian people—men, women, and children. There are at least 20,000 mass grave sites in this small country (a country about the size of the state of Oregon). Today, bones have been gathered and are placed in “Killing Field” stupas around the country. Sometimes, bones or teeth are unearthed in monsoon rains, or when farmers are tilling fields and are brought to local stupas or monasteries out of respect. While the bones remain unidentified, they are cared for, remembered, and give the world a place to contemplate the horrors of genocide. Please, if you haven’t yet, read “First They Killed My Father” by Loung Ung and see the movie, “The Killing Fields”. As painful as these may be, it is important to remember these atrocities and the events that led to them. It is astounding what unbelievable horrors and cruelty people can inflict on other living beings. 

Skulls in a Killing Fields stupa in Siem Reap Cambodia
Unidentified bones from mass graves are brought to stupas out of respect for the dead. In the 1970s, Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge regime tortured and killed 25% of Cambodia’s population in a state-sponsored genocide.

 

Lingering Impressions of Cambodia

I don’t want to end this post on this note. Cambodia is so much more than the haunted history of Pol Pot, mass graves, and land mines. I will remember it for being a land of French touches like baguettes and coffee, of beautiful green rice fields and white-water salt flats, of red dust and of dragonflies, of smells of night jasmine, lemongrass, and peppercorn; of humidity and a glorious diffused light from the woodsmoke and motorcycle haze, and being home to some of the friendliest people in the world. Remarkable. Cambodia reaffirmed how kind people can be. 

Four Cambodians on a motorcycle smiling and waving
Cambodians have ready smiles, waving from their motorcycle.
A dog sleeps in the red dirt of Siem Reap, Cambodia
A dog sleeps in the red dirt of Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Exotic yellow and green fruit stacked up. Siem Reap, Cambodia
Name that fruit. Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Penny Lane yellow, Siem Reap, Cambodia
Penny Lane yellow, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Shutters on the French-influenced La Malraux restaurant in an alley of Siem Reap's Old Market, Cambodia.
Shutters on the French-influenced La Malraux restaurant in an alley of Siem Reap’s Old Market, Cambodia.

The Turtles of Lady Elliot Island – Great Barrier Reef

Share Button

The Turtles of Lady Elliot Island 

Located at the southern tip of the Great Barrier Reef, Lady Elliot Island is remote—50 miles from the Australian coast. There is limited air access, and no ferries or boats come in. Evenings on Lady Elliot Island are dark and quiet but for the sounds of the wind, the waves, the birds, and sometimes the sounds of sand being scooped and pushed as Green and Loggerhead turtles come ashore to dig holes and lay eggs. 

The Green and Loggerhead turtles that call this island home are the size of end tables–three to four feet in length and about 500 pounds or more. They can live to be 50-80 years old, and will often travel as far as Africa in their lifetime. At night, they lumber up on the same beaches where they were born, to find a place above the high tide line to lay their eggs. About 8-12 weeks later, hatchlings dig their way out of the nest and run for the sea—usually on a cool, dark night. It is said that the baby turtles know their way to the water by looking for the lightest part of the sky—the horizon. Any other lights may disorient and confuse the turtles. So during our stay on Lady Elliot Island, we were urged to keep room lights off at night, and when lights were on—to close the thick curtains tight. 

“She must have forgotten the time”

Every morning, we saw at least one turtle making her way down to the water after sunrise. Sometimes we saw turtles sitting at the lip of the surf–exhausted from their night’s labor–waiting for the tide to ease them over stones and back out to sea. 

A turtle has an audience as she goes back to sea on Lady Elliot Island.
A turtle has an audience as she slips back into the sea on Lady Elliot Island.
A turtle waiting for the tide to help her out to sea one morning on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A turtle waiting for the tide to help her over the rocks and back out to sea one morning on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A turtle and her tracks, waiting for the tide to help her out to sea one morning on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A turtle and her tracks, waiting for the tide to help her out to sea one morning on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Watching the Turtles

On land, turtles seem prehistoric, lumbering, slow, and so intentional. In the water, they float, glide, dive, and seem so carefree. On a glass-bottom boat tour, we saw a teenage turtle resting in a bed of sea plants on the ocean floor, while another large turtle cruised past the boat’s sea window looking in at us. A Hawksbill turtle—which is endangered and rare to see around Lady Elliot—swam by the boat. On our final morning, Bryan saw a single half-dollar-sized hatchling race to the sea.

Another day, I sat on the beach, soaking in the sun and staring out at the turquoise blue of the reef. Bryan was snorkeling—or as he said, putting his face into an aquarium of colorful, Finding Nemo fish. I tried to write in my journal, and should have been applying sunscreen to my shins. Instead, I couldn’t take my eyes off the glinting water. And like a vision, I saw a giant turtle raise her head and look at me from the reef right in the very spot where my eyes were focused. I saw her feet treading water as she bobbed in the shiny waves, looking straight up the beach at me. She stayed there for a few minutes before turning and diving down. Maybe she was looking for her nest, or being kind to this non-swimmer with a little viewing. I’ll remember that turtle for a long time, gracefully bobbing in the sparkling blue water. 

Turtle tracks and a turtle on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Nest types can be identified by the tracks. This Green Turtle waits for the tide on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Dual turtle tracks to the water. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Dual Green Turtle tracks to the water. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Seen from a glass-bottom boat, a teenage turtle rests. Lady Elliot Island, Australia
Seen from a glass-bottom boat, a teenage turtle rests in a reef cubby. Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
An endangered Hawksbill turtle, rarely seen in Lady Elliot Island, surveys the people in the glass-bottom boat
An endangered Hawksbill turtle, rarely seen in Lady Elliot Island, surveys us in the glass-bottom boat.
Possible turtle nests are marked on Lady Elliot Island.
Possible turtle nests are marked on Lady Elliot Island.
Hatchling the size of a half-dollar runs for the ocean one morning on Lady Elliot Island.
A turtle hatchling–only the size of a half-dollar–runs for the ocean one morning on Lady Elliot Island.

 

Saying Goodbye to Lady Elliot Island

Turtles are solitary and mysterious creatures. They navigate long distances, and yet regularly find their way back across the vast ocean to the same tiny bit of beach where they were born.

As we lifted off the runway, and circled around to see the island from the air one last time, I hoped that I–like a turtle–could find my way back to the peaceful beaches of Lady Elliot Island and the Great Barrier Reef.

Plane landing on Lady Elliot Island, photo taken from a plane
Photo taken from a plane just leaving Lady Elliot Island and circling around for a last look. Note the plane landing from the right (on the tip of his nose 🙂
Tiny little Lady Elliot Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Tiny little Lady Elliot Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

“And the turtles, of course…all the turtles are free, as turtles and, maybe, all creatures should be.” Dr. Seuss

Lady Elliot Island’s Coral – The Great Barrier Reef

Share Button

The Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef is the largest living structure on earth. At 1,400 miles long, it occupies less than 0.1% of the ocean surface, yet 25% of all marine species can be found in the reef. Lady Elliot Island’s reading room exhibits explain that the reef is made up of corals—which are tiny marine animals that grow in colonies. The colony excretes a hard carbonate skeleton, and over many generations coral reefs are formed from the buildup.

Lady Elliot Island’s Coral

The beaches on Lady Elliot Island are filled with bits of coral washed ashore, making beach walking a slow workout, especially when you stop every three feet to photograph a piece of strawberry red, asparagus green, or carrot orange coral. The coral bits sometimes have shapes like hearts, sponges, tubes, or plant-like stalks. They sound hollow, feel hard and a little chalky, and clink and crunch like bone china beneath your shoes.

A coral beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Coral beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Walking Around the Island

Every morning on Lady Elliot Island, we circumnavigated the island. It takes about 45 minutes to walk all the way around including a few minutes to stop and examine a piece of coral, or to stare out to sea. We did the walk at least twice a day.

A coral branch, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
A coral branch, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A coral sponge with stars, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
A coral sponge with stars, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Strawberry-sized coral pieces, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Strawberry-sized coral pieces, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Orange coral stalk, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Orange coral stalk, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Red coral and a cone shell, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Red coral and a cone shell, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Bright red coral among milky white corals, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Bright red coral among milky white corals, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Reef Walking

A favorite thing to do was reef walking. Wading up to my knees with a walking stick in one hand, camera in the other, I walked in the paths between the corals. How peaceful out there. No one else around, just the sounds of the waves and the birds, and feeling oh-so-small in the big blue sea. One day, I caught a glimpse of something cobalt blue underwater. I made my way over in the maze of coral to find a blue starfish below the waves stretching its arms and hugging the coral, as it made its way across the reef.

Reef walking, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Reef walking, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Reef walking, just me and the sea and clouds, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Reef walking, just me and the sea and clouds, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Blue Starfish in the coral reef off of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Blue Starfish in the coral reef off of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Blue Starfish crawling over the coral, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Blue Starfish crawling over the coral, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Peaceful Days

Lady Elliot Island was a series of glorious days of sun, of passing clouds, and of peace. One day was a repeating cycle of a misty rain for 2-3 minutes, then the bright warm sun for 5-10 minutes before the mist returned. This cycle repeated again and again that day. I felt like a vegetable in the grocery, waiting for the mist machine to cycle on. Another day was really windy—which they say is a forbearer of cyclone season, but since the wind came from the east, there was no reason to worry. We watched the birds float on the wind, just over the water.

A crab coming out of his shell, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
A crab coming out of his shell, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, AustraliaA crab coming out of his shell, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Striped coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Striped coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Shells sheltering on a stone, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Shells sheltering on a stone, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
In a stone bowl, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
In a coral bowl, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Various sizes and shapes of coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Various sizes and shapes of coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Corals, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Corals, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Sponge coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Sponge coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Neutral shades of coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Neutral shades of coral, photographed on the the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

We spent sunsets at the Lighthouse, with champagne and beer. Sitting in plastic chairs photographing the colors and the clouds. One evening, there was a double rainbow behind us as the sun went down. Such extraordinary beauty. Afterwards, walking back across that little island in the dusk and dark, across the deserted runway, feeling the wind and the mist, hearing the birds and the ocean waves surrounding us—and beneath all those stars—THAT was magic. That feeling of isolation, of distance, of solitude, of the immenseness of the world. It puts things in perspective. 

Lighthouse and rainbows at sunset, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Lighthouse and rainbows at sunset, Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Heart-shaped coral found, arranged, and photographed on the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Heart-shaped coral found, arranged, and photographed on the beach of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

To read more about Lady Elliot Island, please see this post.

To read more about climate change impact on coral reefs worldwide, please see THIS ARTICLE.

Lady Elliot Island – Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Share Button

Finding a place to stay in the Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef was at the top of our list of what to see in Australia, and thankfully we found this tiny island. Lady Elliot Island is a coral cay located at the southern tip of the World Heritage Great Barrier Reef. The 111-acre island is a a highly protected sanctuary for over 1,200 species of marine life and is known for its abundance of manta rays, turtles, birds, and unspoiled coral reef. All of that sounds great…but the thing that hooked me was the photo. When I searched for places to stay near the Great Barrier Reef, I came across an image of a green and white dot, circled by a turquoise tutu with white fringe sitting alone in the middle of miles and miles of midnight blue water. Here. That’s where we’d go. I reserved our room within the hour of seeing the photo. Booking at Lady Elliot Island includes their air travel to/from the island, a basic room, and buffet breakfasts and dinners.

Lady Elliot Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. A 111-acre eco resort 50 miles from the Australian coast.Lady Elliot Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Lady Elliot Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. A 111-acre eco resort 50 miles from the Australian coast.

 

Getting to Lady Elliot Island:

We left Hervey Bay in the rain, on a 20-seater plane with two propellers and two pilots. After only about 30 minutes flying in the thin layer beneath the rain clouds and not far above the water, we saw the tiny island ahead. In five more minutes we flew in over the reef, the beach, touched land, and bounced down a grass airstrip.

Looking North at Lady Elliot Island's runway. Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Looking North at Lady Elliot Island’s runway. Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Looking South on Lady Elliot Island's runway. Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Looking South on Lady Elliot Island’s runway, near the solar panels. Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Lady Elliot Island is an “Eco Resort” which means they generate their own power with solar panels, desalinate seawater for drinking, maintain a waste water treatment plant, and recycle the majority of the island’s trash. Their goal is to have minimal impact on this fragile ecosystem and be 100% sustainable by 2020. They also minimize the use of disposable items:  they were the first island in the Great Barrier Reef to eliminate selling bottled water in 2012.

We checked in to our reef room, with a sliding glass door view to the water (which was just 24 steps from the porch). We did the first of many walks all the way around the island. You can go all the way around in about 45 minutes and that includes stopping for photos and looking at turtle tracks and pretty corals washed ashore.

The beach just outside our room on Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
The beach just outside our room on Lady Elliot Island. On the day we arrived, it was breezy and threatening rain.
Bryan walking around Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Morning walk around Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Our seats on the beach at Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Seats on the beach at Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

 

Coming back from dinner that first night, with our phones acting as flashlights on the dark trails, we saw many birds sitting on the pathways. One was sitting on the steps to our unit, and Bryan nearly stepped on her. She made a whining sound as she jumped out of the way. We’d meet her again in the morning…and each and every time we came in or went out. We named her Gracie.

Gracie, our pathway's Bridled "dog" Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Gracie, our pathway’s Bridled “dog” Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.

 

Gracie, the Dog Tern

February is bird season here. Lady Elliot Island has the highest seabird diversity of any island in the Great Barrier Reef:  94 species have been recorded. It is an important nesting site, and over 100,000 birds come to Lady Elliot Island during summer breeding season. The island isn’t that big, so the nests are everywhere, and sometimes very close together. Between the territorial spats and the babies begging for breakfast from mama birds, there was a continuous racket of bird cries…cackling, whistling, calling, whining, barking.

The White-Capped Noddy nests in the trees of Lady Elliot Island, despite having webbed feet. Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Despite having webbed feet, the White-Capped Noddy Tern nests in the trees of Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

Our reef unit bird, Gracie, was a whiner and a barker. She made little woof-woof sounds, which explains this bird’s nickname: Dog Tern. The official name is Bridled Tern and they are most often seen nesting on pathways. It seemed all the units had a resident dog tern. These birds sat on paths everywhere on the island, waiting for moms to come feed them, and hunkering down when guests walked by.

And Gracie was always there at Reef Unit #1, on the steps, the porch, the sand path. We walked carefully around her during the day and prayed we didn’t step on her in the dark nights. Her similar-sized mom brought Gracie snacks often. One day, we heard a lot of whining and barking outside. Looking out, we saw mama bird hopping around with food in her mouth. No Gracie. Mama bird flittered around the path and the porch, frantically looking—the food still in her mouth as she whined, called, and cried. She got too close to neighboring White-Capped Noddy nests which caused even more commotion. We stood inside, watching this mother’s heartbreak. Did Gracie unexpectedly leave the nest? Did something happen to her? After a long while of this, Mama bird flew away. As we stood there wondering if another bird had gotten her, Gracie came side-stepping up the lane back to her usual spot. All smiles now, we told her that her mom had been looking for her.

Gracie portrait, Dog Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Gracie portrait, Dog Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Path to the beach/shadow: Gracie, our pathway's Bridled "dog" Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Path to the beach: Gracie and mama bird’s shadow, our pathway’s Bridled “dog” Terns, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Sun and Shade: Gracie, our pathway's Bridled "dog" Tern, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Sun and Shade: Gracie, our pathway’s Bridled “dog” Tern cooling her tail feathers, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Gracie on the bricks, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Gracie on the bricks, Lady Elliot Island, Australia.
Flock of birds on the beach. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Flock of Noddy Terns on the beach. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A bird at sunrise. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
A bird at sunrise. Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia.

Prints available on Etsy.

Australia! Brisbane to Hervey Bay

Share Button

Australia!

The second stop on our around-the-world trip was Australia, which checked off our final continent. Australia is a very big country—about the same size as the continental USA, and getting around it can be expensive and time consuming. So, we made a decision to stick to one area and see it well.

We were on a One World Alliance round-the-world trip ticket going west, and from Auckland we had good arrival city options. The Great Barrier Reef topped our wish list of things to see in Australia, so we chose Brisbane and the area known as the Sunshine Coast in Queensland as our anchor. And we splurged on a booking at Lady Elliot Island in the Great Barrier Reef.

Auckland to Brisbane is a four-hour flight over the Tasman Sea. It was a brilliant afternoon–blue skies outside and a sunny mood inside on our Qantas flight. They served cheesy pasta and a crisp Australian white wine for me, and beef and rice curry with a Tasmanian beer for Bryan. And then, ice cream! Woo!

The shadow of our Qantas flight descending into Brisbane Australia
The shadow of our Qantas flight descending into Brisbane Australia.

 

We needed ETAs (Electronic Travel Authority) visas to enter Australia and we’d purchased them online for $20 AUD ($16 USD) before leaving home. Once again, no one stamped our passports. This is probably the single most disappointing thing about modern travel for me. I miss border crossings with the strange anxiety when an immigration officer holds your passport up to scrutinize your tired travel face versus the worst photo you’ve ever made in your life, and then with a sigh or a grunt, punches the stamper down about 10 times in 5 seconds in the secret confines of his desk, and hands your passport back with a flat, “Welcome. Next.” Would you believe we asked four of their TSA folks if we could somewhere get a stamp in our passports? Maybe? Please? No, nay, nada, nope. Boo. I was distracted from the missing passport stamp when we got on the “Travelator”…a moving walkway. What a great name!

Brisbane

We’d booked AirTrain transfers into the city and caught the train into the city during the evening commute. Hotel Jen is super conveniently located–next door to the busy Roma Street station, and is surprisingly quiet. It’s a modern, comfortable hotel, with a kicking buffet breakfast featuring fresh honeycombs pulled from the honeybee boxes out back. My favorite thing there was the juice machine—a large compactor contraption that took in a wide assortment of already peeled veggies and fruits and loudly smashed and squished them into your own special juice concoction. Carrot and beets and oranges. Looked like a pretty tie-dye in a glass. Yum with the eggs, beans with tomatoes, and coffee. We were still trying to figure out the differences between a flat white (basically an espresso with foaming milk) and a long black (espresso over hot water) coffee, so drank both. More often than not, hotels offered Nescafe ”sachets” in Australia.

After checking-in, we went over the Brisbane River on the Kurilpa Walking Bridge on our first evening walk in Australia. As we loitered back, watching the moon rise an hour before sunset, we tried to sort out the time difference vs New Zealand and vs Chicago.  4 a.m. Brisbane is 7 a.m. Auckland and noon yesterday in Chicago. Dialing our moms was tricky business.

We went over the Brisbane River on the Kurilpa Walking Bridge on our first evening walk in Australia.
We went over the Brisbane River on the Kurilpa Walking Bridge on our first evening walk in Australia.

 

February is in the heat of summer. Our first morning, it was already 74 degrees Fahrenheit at 8 a.m., on it’s way up to hot and humid. After a street cafe breakfast, we walked over the Victoria bridge to see the Wheel of Brisbane. We were sitting in the shade to cool off, when I heard creeping. I turned to see a large white bird with a long black beak and a black head tip-toeing behind me. This was our first Australian Ibis sighting (they are also known as “bin chickens”).

On the Victoria bridge, looking over the Brisbane River the Ferris wheel.
On the Victoria bridge, looking over the Brisbane River the Ferris wheel.
Australian Ibis, aka the "Bin Chicken"
Australian Ibis, aka the “Bin Chicken”.

 

The day got steamy, and we walked until we were sticky and exhausted. We were sampling our way through an outdoor market—strategically staying under the stand umbrellas—when Bryan came up with a genius idea for a luxurious and cheap dinner. He bought a large piece of just-smoked salmon, a heaping tray of “vege” paella made to order, and a quart of assorted fresh fruit for a picnic in our room. For about $40 AUD plus a bottle of wine, we had a feast that would have cost us at least twice that in a restaurant. As the storm clouds rolled in and the rain poured down over Brisbane, we showered in our cool room, and spread our indoor picnic. Delicious!

North to Hervey Bay (pronounced HARVEY Bay) 

A couple of days later, we took a 6-hour Greyhound bus north to Hervey Bay, a coastal town that would bookend our days on Lady Elliot Island. Greyhounds are not the tour-guide buses of New Zealand, but they are a clean, cheap, and practical way to get where you’re going and see a little landscape along the way. 

Along the drive, we saw an Australia that is not so different than the USA with the many places to shop:  K-Mart, IGA, KFC, 7-Eleven, ALDI, and of course, McDonald’s (or “Mackers” as they say in Australian). It falls a little short of my expectations to see too many similarities to home in a place so far away. I like foreign to be foreign, not a cookie-cutter replica of Anyplace, USA. Sure, it’s reassuring to know that you can walk into a bit of the USA all over the world and order the same Mickey D’s french fries, but I also like the little surprises–like walking into a store named Woolworths to find out it’s a supermarket here. And I got a cheap thrill out of sitting in the front row–on what would be the passenger side back home–and guessing which lane we’d turn into.

One thing that is different in Australia is the curious town names, with places like Nambour, Kybong and Gymbie. In Kybong at the traveler’s area where we stopped for lunch, there is a giant, old, metal kangaroo called Matilda. I thought I was losing my mind when I noticed Matilda was looking in a different direction. But then, she winked…with a sound like a creaking, banging garage door in motion.

Matilda, looking right, at Kybong, Australia.
Matilda, looking right, at Kybong, Australia.
Matilda, looking left, at Kybong, Australia.
Matilda, looking left, at Kybong, Australia.

 

Back in the bus, I started to notice the unique Australian Federation-style homes with roof-on-roof verandas, porticoed porches, Victorian gables and finials, and RV garages. I scanned the immense land, the gardens, the roads, looking for a real kangaroo. Nothing.

We found this faux kangaroo on a street bench in Brisbane.
We found this faux kangaroo on a street bench in Brisbane, Australia.
Bryan finds the infamous Vegemite in a Woolworths Supermarket. Austraila.
Bryan finds the infamous Vegemite in a Woolworths Supermarket, Austraila.

Lake Tekapo and Pounamu

Share Button

Lake Tekapo

On our final days in New Zealand, we made our way back up the South Island via Tekapo. This little place is about halfway between Queenstown and Christchurch and is known for being an area of low light pollution. If you’ve ever seen the photos of a night full of stars and an old church in the foreground, this is probably the place. 

Coming out of Queenstown, George the bus driver had the greatest sayings. I spent much of the four-hour ride to Tekapo writing down as many of his sayings as possible. I also heard him pronounce Tekapo the way I should have been saying it all along, ”tee-cuh-poo”…flashes of a teeny gray poodle in a pink bone-china teacup cross my mind just about every time I say it.

Regarding the vineyards all around the South Island, George told us about a winery that needed harvesters, so the owner offered a bottle of wine for anyone who came to help harvest, “Just one bottle mind you. And blow me down. He got 90 helpers!” Pinot Noir is found in Central Otago, and Sauvignon Blanc in the Marlborough Region…two favorites. Next time, we’ll do a vineyard tour, maybe help in the harvesting.

Rows of grapevines in a Vineyard in Central Otago, New Zealand
Rows of grapevines in a Central Otago vineyard, New Zealand.

We passed the first bungee jump location near Queenstown, “where you can stretch yer bones,” George said. And nearby, you can pan for gold…another next time!

Our bus broke down on the way to Tekapo. George called for help and we waited. Each bus that passed stopped to see if they could help. One bus took some passengers with a flight to catch in Christchurch. The rest of us sat on the roadside, with our luggage, watching the clouds pass over the beautiful New Zealand land. Our replacement bus came within an hour to drive us into Tekapo.

We checked in to a dated hotel, and made our way over the bridge to see The Church of the Good Shepherd on Lake Tekapo. This 1935 stone church is often photographed with starlight behind. Close by is a monument to the hard-working dogs “without the help of which the grazing of this mountain country would be impossible”. I was surprised to see a Gaelic phrase on the inscription:  Beannachdan Air Na Cu Caorach…Blessings on the sheepdogs.  

The stone Church of the Good Shepherd on the banks of Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
The stone Church of the Good Shepherd on the banks of Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
Monument to the working dogs of the Mackenzie Basin, Tekapo, New Zealand
Monument to the working dogs of the Mackenzie Basin, Tekapo, New Zealand.

We ate a hearty dinner, watched the sunset, and walked awhile before bed. I got up several times in the night to go out and gaze at the stars in a mostly cloudy sky. I had seen photos of the Aurora Australis, the Southern Lights, here…and oh how tight my fingers were crossed every time I stepped out the door that night. But once again, the Polar Lights eluded me. In the hours before dawn, I walked to the Church to see the sunrise. I sat on a boulder and watched the ripples in the water reflecting the pink and orange sky. Such pink, and peace.

A bridge at dawn in Tekapo, New Zealand
The footbridge over Scott Pond at dawn in Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
The Church of the Good Shepherd at Lake Tekapo New Zealand, selected for its clear atmosphere, large number of clear sky nights, and relative freedom from light pollution, Mount John University Observatory is located on a small hill to the north. This area has been declared a Dark-Sky Reserve, one of only four in the world.
The Church of the Good Shepherd at Lake Tekapo New Zealand. Mount John University Observatory is located on a small hill to the north. Selected for its clear atmosphere, high number of clear sky nights, and freedom from light pollution, this area has been declared a Dark-Sky Reserve, one of only four in the world. 

 

 

Pink sunrise on Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
Pink sunrise on Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.

Pounamu

Before leaving Queenstown, I made a touristy purchase at Global Culture—three small plain pieces of New Zealand jade on a leather cord. Jade is called pounamu, or greenstone, in New Zealand. It originates in the rivers of an area in the southwest known as Te Wahipounamu, Māori for “the place of greenstone”. This special area contains four national parks (Aoraki/Mt. Cook, Mt. Aspiring, Fiordland, and Westland) and owns superlatives like: 

  • the largest and least modified area of New Zealand’s natural ecosystem with diverse vegetation that is essentially in pristine condition
  • having the largest and most significant population of forest birds in the country and home to many indigenous animals
  • the area least populated with humans
  • one of the most seismically active regions in the world.

A piece of pounamu binds one to this place.

It is said that greenstone is not found, but reveals itself. That’s a good thing, since greenstone is within nondescript boulders and rocks that are difficult to identify as pounamu without cutting open the host stone. In the river, the stone is always moving. It, like a fish—or us—is on a journey. 

I sat there on a boulder that morning in Tekapo, feeling the greenstones around my neck, smooth and comforting. A few days later, I held my greenstones as the airplane wheels left the ground of New Zealand. Will they miss it here? Will they bring me strength, peace as I roll along? Will they bring me back? I hope so. 

Calm Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
Calm Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.

 

 

In 1935, the builders of the Church were instructed that the site was to be left undisturbed and that even the matagouri bushes surrounding the building were to remain.
In 1935, the builders of the Church were instructed that the site was to be left undisturbed and that even the matagouri bushes surrounding the building were to remain.
Peaceful morning on the shores of Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
Peaceful morning on the shores of Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
Dawn at the Church of the Good Shepherd, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.Dawn at the Church of the Good Shepherd, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
Dawn at the Church of the Good Shepherd, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
From the Scott Pond bridge, overlooking the Church of the Good Shepherd and Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
From the Scott Pond bridge, overlooking the Church of the Good Shepherd and Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.

 

Click for more about Queenstown, Christchurch, and other parts of New Zealand. Select photos are for sale on Etsy. 
If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for sale. Please message me.

Next stop…Australia!

Mt. Cook, Lindis Pass, and Next Time

Share Button

Another day, another drive!

This time, we were on our way to see Aoraki / Mt. Cook, the highest mountain in New Zealand at more than 12,200 feet. Today’s driver guide, Stuart, had a teacher’s way with his old-timer’s knowledge of the land, its nature, and the country ways. We spent 7 hours on the bus to and from Mt. Cook village (160 miles each way). It was not nearly enough time to explore the area. Once again, we had to reassure ourselves with “Next time.”

Lake Pukaki

Stuart knew a lot about geology. He told us that New Zealand was the only above-water land on the 8th continent, Zealandia. He explained the moraines that formed the valley and the glacial flour that made Lake Pukaki so unbelievably blue. There were sky blue dollops, within turquoise blue pools and aquamarine patches in Lake Pukaki. I’ve never seen water that blue in all my life. It would have been grand to spend a whole week on those shores, watching the lake change shades of blue in the light, and trying to think of all the words in the world for this Lake Pukaki blue. Next time.

Driver/Guide Stuart takes photos for passengers on the banks of baby blue Lake Pukaki, New Zealand
Driver/Guide Stuart takes photos for passengers on the banks of baby blue Lake Pukaki, New Zealand.

Animals of (and not of) New Zealand

Stuart knew a lot about sheep farming. He told us about Shrek the Sheep who avoided shearing for 6 years by hiding out in the mountains. Poor old Shrek was so matted and “wool blind” by the time they got him that he had to be carried down the mountain. When he was at long last shorn, his wool made enough yarn for 20 large men’s suits.

Stuart knew a lot about herding dogs. He explained the difference between “heading dogs—silent, obsessive, steely-gazed herders” and “huntalongs who walk with the farmer–speaking as often as necessary.” Stuart told us about the Country Calendar TV show that documents rural life in New Zealand. I watched a few episodes in New Zealand, and…next time, I’d love to spend some time with the sheep, the headings, and the huntalongs. The Country Calendar program is not fully available outside New Zealand, but I found an episode featuring the group Retired Working Dog Adoption NZ.

Stuart knew a lot about non-endemic plants and animals:  like the pine trees we saw cut and stacked as wind row fences, and like the rabbits and deer we saw in the fields. Rabbits were first introduced to New Zealand in the 1830s. With few natural enemies, the rabbits over-populated and are periodically culled. New Zealand also has deer over-population, said to have started when deer were gifted to the country for hunting stock. The rabbits and deer compete with the sheep for grass, and in the winter of 1890, it came to a critical head. There was not enough fodder for the sheep, who were left on the fields. When the snow accumulated that year, in one of the harshest winters ever recorded, there was not enough labor to dig the sheep out of the snow in the fields. It’s estimated that 45,000 sheep died. Horrible. But It doesn’t seem fair that rabbits and deer take all the blame. They are not responsible for sheltering sheep, or for not hiring enough people to bring them in. And hey, sheep are not native to New Zealand either.

Kiwis are endemic. And they are endangered because of loss of habitat and non-native predators. In a cruel design twist for a bird, they cannot fly. They lay eggs that are very large in comparison to their chicken-like body size. They have hair-like feathers, and an unusually good sense of smell for a bird (presumably to make up for being nearly blind). These flightless quirky birds can live to be 60-years old. Many live in captivity–to save them, and/or to make a few bucks showing them off to tourists. There is one group called Kiwis for Kiwi that helps birds safely hatch and make it to adulthood before releasing them into nature with their project Operation Nest Egg.  

Cromwell and the Golden Kiwi

We passed Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell twice that day, stopping both times for fresh fruit and sampling. Did you know there is a golden kiwi? We sampled the green and golden kiwis side-by-side at Jones. The golds look almost the same from the outside, maybe a little less hairy. On the inside, golden kiwis look less seedy than the traditional green variety, and I found them to be a bit sweeter. 

Colorful baskets of fruit, fresh from the farm at Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell, New Zealand.
Colorful baskets of fruit, fresh from the farm at Jones Family Fruit Stall in Cromwell, New Zealand. Funny how pine cones sort of resemble pineapples…

Mt. Cook and Sir Edmund Hillary

And as we got closer to Aoraki / Mount Cook, Stuart turned our attention to Sir Edmund Hillary and mountain climbing. Mt. Cook is considered an assessment and practice mountain for those wanting to climb Everest. According to New Zealand’s tourism site, “Mt Cook is a technically challenging mountain. Its level of difficulty is often underestimated. The climb crosses large crevasses, and involves risks of ice and rock falls, avalanches, and rapidly changing weather conditions.” The mountain lost nearly 100 feet in height in 1991 because of a large rock fall that reshaped the summit.

Sir Edmund Hillary—or “Hilly” as they call him here–was born in Auckland. In college, he joined the Tramping Club and studied math. But he dropped-out to keep bees with his family in summers and hone his climbing skills in winters. Hilly made his first ascent of Mt Cook in January 1948, and a month later was the first to top the South Ridge (now known as Hillary Ridge). Of course, in 1953, Hilly was the first to summit Mt. Everest with Tenzing Norgay. New Zealand is quite proud of their native son and he occupies their colorful five-dollar note, sharing it with images of Mt.Cook and the endangered Hoiho penguin.

We spent only a few hours in Mt. Cook Village. A month would not have been enough time. Next time. But my, what a fine, fresh smell. What is it about mountains? Is it the juniper, the grasses on the surrounding slopes? Or is it just the smell of altitude. I stared and stared at those mountains, trying to see the knife-edge ridge of Mt. Cook’s summit through the thick cloud cover. Sometimes, I was allowed a one-second glimpse of snow-capped mountain tops. Was that Mt. Cook? 

A path to the trail to Aoraki / Mt. Cook, Southern Alps, New Zealand
A path to the trails to Aoraki / Mt. Cook, Southern Alps, New Zealand.
Rooftops of cabins with Aoraki / Mt. Cook mountain behind clouds, New Zealand
Cabin rooftops at Aoraki / Mt. Cook Village, New Zealand.
Aoraki / Mt Cook Village, with a view to a campervan on a valley road, New Zealand
Aoraki / Mt Cook Village, with a view to a campervan miniaturized on a valley road, New Zealand.

Lindis Pass

Of all the places we saw this day, I’d most like to spend more time around Lindis Pass. As we drove into this quiet, treeless landscape, Stuart pointed out that early settlers had burned large swaths of tussock around the Pass, destroying the underlying ecosystem. Today, there are miles and miles of rolling green land, rolling and rolling and rolling….like a worn-thin green velvet blanket draped over jade stones, in places rubbed smooth from a worrying thumb.  There was something so peaceful and empty and raw about that landscape. A draw-in-your-breath kind of beauty. Respect. Silence. 

Next time.

The landscape at Lindis Pass, New Zealand
The landscape at Lindis Pass, New Zealand. A selection of my New Zealand prints can be purchased on Etsy.
Lindis Pass tussock on the South Island of New Zealand
Lindis Pass tussock on the South Island of New Zealand.
The road through Lindis Pass, New Zealand
The road through Lindis Pass, New Zealand.
Lovely Lindis Pass, New Zealand
Ridges in a valley in lovely Lindis Pass, New Zealand.

If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for these GreatSights bus or Interislander ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019 or I’d be keeping this for our next trip! Comment or message me if you’re interested! 

The Divide and Milford Sound, New Zealand

Share Button

Queenstown to Milford Sound

To get from Queenstown to Milford Sound is not as easy as it might look on a bird’s map. The two towns are only about 40 miles apart, but it’s 40 miles over the the Southern Alps’ Main Divide. For those of us without wings, our road is 180 miles and a ~4 hour trip each way. On our day trip to Milford Sound, we were lucky to have Greg as our GreatSights bus driver / tour guide. When Greg saw my camera (or maybe it was Bryan’s beer t-shirt?), he invited us to sit in the front row so that I could more easily move into the front door’s jump seat for good photos at key viewing points. 

Reflection in Mirror Lakes, in Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand
Reflection in Mirror Lakes, Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand.
Sky and Mountains reflecting in Mirror Lakes, in Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand
Sky and Mountains reflecting in Mirror Lakes, Fiordland National Park, South Island, New Zealand.

Like all of the bus drivers, Greg knew his New Zealand. He told us so many things about his country…I couldn’t write fast enough to get them all down and ended up with fragments like “can’t chop fallen trees”. We stopped several times that day for sights, and for bathroom breaks, or as Greg said in his sparkling wit, “to spend a penny”. Roadside sights included Mirror Lakes, a river near Livingstone which Greg assured us was 100% pure to drink from “just like the ads said”, and the Chasm. The Chasm is a dramatic and deep gap where the water of the Cleddau River falls, swirls and bubbles down among the sculpted rocks and caverns beneath two viewing bridges.

100% Pure New Zealand, Fiordland National Park
A 100% pure New Zealand river, in Fiordland National Park. 

We passed a marker indicating we were at 45 degrees South, the halfway-point between the Equator and the South Pole. How lucky and strange if felt to see that, remembering that I’d been at 45 degrees North in November with my mother somewhere in Oregon! What a big wide world.

The Divide

We were on our way to Milford Sound. A place that has been called the 8th wonder of the world. Equally impressive and awesome was The Divide, and the Homer Tunnel that goes through to Milford Sound. We were passing through the Fiordland National Park, the land becoming rocky, dramatic, treeless, and dwarfing our bus. Greg explained that the Divide runs from Greymouth to Invercargill and that the area around Fiordlands has more earthquakes than anywhere else in New Zealand because it sits on three fault lines. He reassured us that *only* 2,000 quakes were actually felt in 2016, the rest were imperceptible. The bus was all whispers and shutters snapping as we made our way into the valley between the rock mountains. The tops of those mountains were only visible if you stretched your head to your knees to look up out your window, or if you looked straight up, out the thoughtfully-planned glass roof of the GreatSights bus. We slowed to get in the queue for the Homer Tunnel.

South Island roads are different. Allow more time. The Divide, South Island, New Zealand.
“South Island roads are different. Allow more time.” Yes, indeed! The Divide, South Island, New Zealand.
Queuing for the Homer Tunnel, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Queuing for the Homer Tunnel, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand

Greg told us the story of the tunnel as we waited to go into the tiny entryway. The Homer Tunnel is a 0.75 mile-long tunnel through solid rock. Construction began in 1935 with a team of just 5 men with pickaxes. Other men joined them, and working in tough conditions, they managed to break through to the other side in only 5 years. However, it took much longer to widen and complete the tunnel because of World War II, and an avalanche in 1945. The tunnel finally opened in 1954 after 19 years of construction. It is wide enough for a bus and a car to pass each other, but lights regulate a one-way flow of traffic.

We entered the mouse hole and felt the road begin its steep decline, the wet tunnel walls so very close to the bus windows. Greg told us that this area receives an astounding 39+ feet of rain every year. As we exited the tunnel and saw the breathtaking steep road winding down into the Cleddau Valley, Greg’s voice quaked in pride, “It makes me the luckiest man in the world to have this as my workplace…imagine this on a rainy day when the sun breaks through, water pouring off these mountain walls like a champagne waterfall. It’s the most beautiful thing I’ll ever see.”

"Imagine this a champagne waterfall on a rainy day!" Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
“Imagine this on a rainy day, when the sun breaks through, water pouring off these mountain walls like a champagne waterfall!” Looking back up at the tunnel’s exit awning. Fiordland National Park, New Zealand.
The Chasm and tiny people looking in. New Zealand.
The Chasm with people on a footbridge looking in. New Zealand.

Milford Sound

Milford Sound, or the sing-song Piopiotahi in Maori, is grand, is moody, and is all the things you’ve ever heard describing it. Our 2+ hour lunch cruise took us out past forested fiord mountains, low-flying clouds, deep blue-gray water, and a hard-misting rain. Everything seemed black and white, unnaturally quiet, and Jurassic. We were nothing there on that water, just dots on a dot, on a trickle of water running between those ancient mountains. We passed through the bad weather into the blue skies of the Tasman Sea at the end of fiord. The boat came back into a completely different weather system, sunny and lighthearted now instead of the moody Milford we’d felt on the way out. Dolphins passed our boat from behind, criss-crossing in front like it was a race. Young male seals watched us as we watched them. The cruise captain stuck the nose of the boat under a waterfall, rainbows shooting out in the water droplets blowing back over the boat. Small prop planes took off over us giving bird’s-eye view tours.

My favorite part of this day will always be the image of a champagne waterfall in the Divide, and the shaky voice of a proud Kiwi describing the incredible view he is lucky to see every day.

Moody Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Moody Milford Sound, New Zealand.
The Tasman Sea at the end of Milford Sound, New Zealand
The Tasman Sea at the end of Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Waterfalls and clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Waterfalls and clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Clouds in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Clouds beginning to lift out of Milford Sound, New Zealand.
Planes going out in Milford Sound, New Zealand
Plane going out in Milford Sound, New Zealand.
The green and grey waterfall drama of The Divide, South Island New Zealand
The green and grey waterfall drama of The Divide, South Island New Zealand.
The Divide, South Island New Zealand
The Divide, South Island New Zealand.

 

If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for these GreatSights bus or Interislander ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019. Comment or message me if you’re interested!

To read more about New Zealand’s bus tours and ferry rides, please see these posts:
Bus to Queenstown
Ferry to the South Island

On the Road to Queenstown

Share Button

On the Road to Queenstown

After a few days in Franz Josef, we boarded a bus for an all-day ride to Queenstown. Lucky us, we had Pete the driver for the first leg of the trip, and Lewis for the last leg. Both of these drivers had the storytelling gene and were steeped in pride and knowledge about the South Island of New Zealand.

Pete pulled off on a side road not too long after we started out from Franz Josef. On this fine, clear morning, he wanted to show us what he called the “trifecta view” …and the crazy white bull. We piled out of the bus on an empty country road and there across a sweet-smelling field, glowing in the morning sun, sat three New Zealand treasures: the Fox Glacier, Mt. Cook, and Mt. Tasman. We stayed there for a bit, taking photos and big gulps of fresh New Zealand mountain air. Back onboard, Pete then told us about the old white bull. This bull, either bored or crazy, is known for chasing cars like a dog—running alongside the road, inside his fence, snorting and carrying on. This morning however, the old bull was sleeping in the back corner of his pen. Alone with the view and the lonely road.

New Zealand's Fox Glacier, Mt. Cook, and Mt. Tasman
New Zealand’s Fox Glacier, Mt. Cook, and Mt. Tasman.
Looking for dolphins in Bruce Bay, New Zealand
Looking for dolphins in Bruce Bay, New Zealand.
Pleasant Flat, South Island New Zealand
Pleasant Flat, South Island New Zealand.

 

We made more stops that day: at Bruce Bay to look for dolphins, and at Pleasant Flat just to gaze at the fields and mountains. Pete also told us the story of Knight, the opportunistic dog who went back-and-forth between two construction crews to get double the food and love during the west coast road-building of the 1950-60s. The story goes something like this:

Two road construction teams began from opposite ends, intent on meeting in the middle. After some years of construction, the two teams met north of Haast at a picturesque place on the coast. Officials journeyed to the meeting point to make arrangements for a commemorative monument by the roadside. In the course of conversation with the construction crew about naming the location, the crew informed the delegation from Wellington that the area had already been named Knight’s Point. The officials inquired who “Knight” was and were informed that he was the surveyor’s dog. Turns out the dog would stay with one crew part of the day, eat dinner with them, and then sometime in the evening, hike over to the other crew. They would feed him breakfast before he headed back to the first crew later in the day. Neither crew knew until they came together and both mentioned that the dog belonged with their crew. The official opening was on 6 November 1965, and is known as Knight’s Point for the dog.

We changed drivers at Thunder Creek, saying good-bye to Pete and hello to Lewis. We had some time to wander off the road down to the waterfall at Thunder Creek. Just a normal stop on the typical road in South Island, New Zealand…and there’s a waterfall. As I got back on the bus and studied the map, I smiled at the name of the area…Mt. Aspiring National Park. New Zealand is endearing in so many ways.

The waterfall at Thunder Creek, New Zealand
The waterfall at Thunder Creek, New Zealand.
Our bus at Thunder Creek, New Zealand
Our bus at Thunder Creek, New Zealand.
Lake Hawea, South Island New Zealand
Lake Hawea, South Island New Zealand.
The beaches of Lake Hawea, South Island New Zealand
The beaches of Lake Hawea, South Island New Zealand.

 

Queenstown 

Lewis, the bus driver, dropped us near our hotel. The Queenstown Motel Apartments are a family run place where the rooms have balconies, spotless kitchenettes, and the breezes from the brilliant blue Lake Wakatipu.

We spent many happy days there in Queenstown, our base from which to explore the Milford Sound and Mt. Cook areas. It was a short but steep walk up and down to the town center, past three 100+ year old sequoias. Some favorite memories center around food and the beach/pier area:

Joe’s Garage. They put a little twist on the typical NZ breakfast offering with the Gorgeous George.

Taco Medic. Picnic tables in a little alley where I filled up on The Producer tacos:  a most tasty combination of black beans with thyme and garlic, sweet pumpkin, cole slaw with pickled red onion, cilantro, coriander and feta cheese…yum.

The rock beach at Lake Wakatipu, near the pier, the street performers, and the ice cream shop. One day a couple dressed in wedding attire showed up on the beach with a photographer and a loaf of bread. How entertaining it was to watch this “trash the dress” or “good luck” session on the beach for the next hour. The couple invited the birds to crowd around their feet with bits of bread, and then ran through the flock for photos. Again, and again, and again.

 

Another day, we sat watching the mama seagulls come and go, bringing back morsels to feed their hungry teenagers. While the nearly full-sized teenagers waited for mom, they’d stand in the surf, staring into the sky and crying out. Some mean little kid came along and threw stones at one of the young birds we were watching. Thankfully, he missed. And I yelled “HEY! NO! Stop it!” as the kid raised his hand for another try. For a split second I thought the kid was going to throw his rocks at me instead. I was ready to jump up and chase the little turkey down the beach. But he thought better of it, dropped his rocks and ran off, I suppose to tell his mum that someone had yelled at him. His mom didn’t come to bless me out, the kiddo didn’t come back to bother the birds, the teenage birds’ moms did come back to feed their rattled babes, and thus, a happy ending.

Queenstown's rocky beach at Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand
Queenstown’s rocky beach at Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand.
Locks on the Queenstown pier / Lake Wakatipu
Locks on the Queenstown pier / Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand. Print available on Etsy.
Ice cream near the pier in Queenstown
Ice cream shop near the pier in Queenstown, New Zealand.

 

If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for bus or ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019. Comment or message me if you’re interested!

The Franz Josef Glacier

Share Button

“South Island roads are different. Allow more time.”

We exited the splendid TranzAlpine train from Christchurch at Greymouth and now boarded an InterCity bus to see the Franz Josef Glacier. We chose to leave the driving to someone else and purchased InterCity bus passes online. Bus passes are sold by hour packages, for example a 15-hour pass could take you on a 7 hour trip, the 7 hour return, and give you an hour left over. With a simple bus pass code, we scheduled our travel online. Easy, peasy. Together, InterCity, GreatSights and Gray Line connect locals and travelers all over New Zealand, with special coach buses to and from key scenic destinations. The bus drivers are country-proud Kiwis, serving as tour guides in addition to driver, conductor, and baggage handler. There are bathrooms and free WiFi on board, and you can’t beat the view—especially when you don’t have to concentrate on those crazy South Island roads.

Please note:  If you are going to New Zealand, we have unused bus pass hours for two people for sale at a discount. We have 17 hours each for 2 people which is a $175 USD ($260 NZD) total value. We’re selling the hours for $150 USD total. Payment can be made via Paypal, and with a quick name transfer at InterCity.co.nz, the passes will be yours. The pass hours are good for bus or ferry services. Travel has to be completed by January 5, 2019. Comment or message me if you’re interested!

It is a 3.5 hours bus ride from Greymouth to Franz Josef. We arrived on time, and were dropped at our Franz Josef YHA hostel.

Detail of a New Zealand fern in the rainforest of Westland Tai Poutini National Park
Detail of a New Zealand fern in the rainforest of Westland Tai Poutini National Park

 

Hostels…at our age?!

Well, yes! New Zealand’s YHA hostel system is a great idea for those of us who want centrally-located, clean accommodations without the fussy price. In Franz Josef, and in Wellington, we chose the YHA Hostel and got a double-bed room with a private bath. We did our laundry there, alongside some twenty-something backpackers, and hit the streets for a walkabout before dinner. We landed at an outside table at Alice May’s, with a view of all the surrounding mountains. The next morning, we awoke to the singing of unknown birds, and helicopters going up to the glacier.

Bryan crossing the Waiho River on the Bailey Bridge in Franz Josef, New Zealand
Bryan crossing the Waiho River on the Bailey Bridge in Franz Josef, New Zealand

 

So, who is Franz Josef?

The glacier was named after Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria by a German explorer, Julius von Haast in 1865. The Māori name for the glacier is Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere (which translates to “The tears of Hine Hukatere”). The legend says that Hine Hukatere loved climbing in the mountains and persuaded her lover, Wawe, to climb with her. Wawe was a less experienced climber than Hine Hukatere but loved to accompany her. One day, an avalanche swept Wawe to his death. Hine Hukatere was broken-hearted and her many, many tears flowed down the mountain and froze to form the glacier. In 1998, the name of the glacier was officially changed to Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere.

From the Southern Alps, the Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimtata ō Hine Hukatere steeply descends into the rainforest of Westland Tai Poutini National Park, making it more accessible for most people. In addition to being one of the steepest glaciers in the world, it also moves faster than average glaciers at over 19 inches per day (and 13 feet per day has been recorded in some sections).

Unlike others, this glacier has a more cyclic nature..receding and returning periodically. A 1946 postage stamp depicts the view of the glacier from St James Anglican Church. The church was built in 1931 with a panoramic altar window looking out to the glacier. By 1954, the glacier had disappeared from the church window’s view, but it reappeared in 1997. The glacier was still advancing until 2008, when it entered a very rapid phase of retreat. As of 2018 it is said to be rapidly advancing again.

Bryan and New Zealand waterfalls in the Westland Tai Poutini National Park near Franz Josef
Bryan is dwarfed by New Zealand waterfalls in the Westland Tai Poutini National Park near Franz Josef
The winding Waiho River in the Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere valley runs beside the trail to the viewing point
The winding Waiho River (in the Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere valley) runs beside the trail to the viewing point

 

Hiking to the Glacier

After a hearty breakfast of poached eggs on potato cakes and a few cups of stout coffee at Full of Beans, we headed out for a hike to meet Franz Josef, as New Zealanders so poetically say, “the glay-see-air”. Past the town, over the Waiho (said “Y-Ho”), and down the path through the rainforest we went. We encountered a variety of ferns, more new bird songs, smoke on the water, and warning signs to stay on the path to avoid dangers of quickly changing conditions in the glacial valley. One sign warned of falling ice “as big as a campervan”, another sign showed 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. comparison photos of the same spot in the riverbed, on a day when the river had surged, flooding the valley. !!! We kept to the path, past waterfalls, rich copper and mustard-colored lichen-covered boulders, stones with evidence of glacial striations…on and on we hiked, the sound of gravel under our feet. The sky grew darker, the temperature got cooler, and the green landscape gave way to gray. Poles, presumably for marking the trail in high snow or raging floods, were marked “no stopping” as we neared the viewing point.

In the final mile of the hike to the viewing point, Franz Josef Glacier.
In the final mile of the hike to the viewing point, Franz Josef Glacier.
Sculpted mountain sides, showing where the Franz Josef Glacier once reached. Now this is the path to the viewing point.
Sculpted mountain sides, showing where the Franz Josef Glacier once reached. Now this is the path to the viewing point.

 

And there it was. Franz Josef Glacier. At the end of the path, and across an expanse of dark gray rocks was a giant tongue of blue ice in the valley between the the mountains. The scale was shocking.

The blue tip of the Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere, New Zealand's South Island
The blue tip of the Franz Josef Glacier / Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere, New Zealand’s South Island

 

A cool clamminess settled in as we stood there admiring the glacier. It has receded in recent years, and the empty gray riverbed in front of us ghost shadowed where it’d been and where it may again be one day. Rain came. A steady, solid rain. We put our jackets on over our packs and turned to see the long path ahead of us. It was peaceful, walking alone in that moody landscape. The rain stopped about an hour later, and we were almost dry before reaching the hostel.

The long walk back to Franz Josef from the glacier viewing point, New Zealand
The long walk back to Franz Josef from the glacier viewing point, New Zealand
Rich colors of lichen covers the river banks alongside the Waiho glacial valley river in Franz Josef.
Rich colors of lichen covers the river banks alongside the Waiho glacial valley river in Franz Josef.

 

That night we rewarded ourselves with a big delicious meal at the Landing, underneath an awning in another rain shower. As we sat there admiring the mountains at the end of the road, and recapping our day, the waitress told us that the town had been advised 4 months ago to move…to pick up the entire town and relocate. Why? Because this sweet little town of Franz Josef sits squarely on top of the volatile Alpine Fault line *and* mostly below river level. Meaning that any earthquake “event” would likely crack the town in half and the Waiho would flood what was left behind. Good luck Franz Josef.

The TranzAlpine over (and under) the Southern Alps

Share Button

Any morning is a good morning for a train ride

We were the first to arrive for the TranzAlpine train to Greymouth. So early in fact, that the Christchurch railway staff kindly offered to share their office coffee as no cafes were open nearby. It was going to be a five-hour trip up and over the spine of New Zealand’s South Island. I sat in the lobby that morning, watching the shade and the sun jockey for position on the platform, and picking at the side of my coffee cup—anxious to move. This is the land of the Southern Alps and blue-gray “braided” rivers, and the scenic train was expected to be full.

Glimpses between noggins on the TranzAlpine train in New Zealand's Southern Alps
Glimpses between other tourists’ noggins, while on the TranzAlpine train in New Zealand’s Southern Alps  🙂

 

And full it was. Everybody was in the viewing car when the train passed into a landscape of dramatic green gorges, with the turquoise Waimakariri River pouring along at the bottom. I’d been standing on the “wrong” side of the viewing car, daydreaming and sniffing at the wind like a dog when I heard the exclamations and gasps. People stood 4 deep on the other side of the open-air viewing car. No one was going to cede a railing spot with that view. I held my camera high over their heads and snapped a few photos—not one lucky. A cloud soon vignetted the view and a soft, sweet rain sparkled down in the full-on sun, over a jade-green gorge and the sky-blue water. I moved away from the crowd, and stepped out into the “between”. There, between the cars, was an open railing, the green gorge, the blue water, and those magical raindrops twinkling down. Thank you gods of New Zealand!

The braided turquoise Waimakariri River, from the TranzAlpine, South Island, New Zealand
The braided turquoise Waimakariri River, from the TranzAlpine, South Island, New Zealand
The turquoise rivers of South Island, New Zealand as seen from the TranzAlpine train
South Island, New Zealand as seen from the TranzAlpine train
Sheep run up a green hill from the sound of the TranzAlpine Train, New Zealand
Sheep run from the sound of the TranzAlpine Train, New Zealand
Lone house near the TranzAlpine tracks in New Zealand
Lone house near the TranzAlpine tracks in New Zealand
From the viewing car on the TranzAlpine Train in New Zealand
From the viewing car on the TranzAlpine Train in New Zealand

 

Going through the Otira Tunnel

After a while, the train stopped at Arthur’s Pass National Park and almost everyone exited. The train was quiet, the viewing car now empty except for the lucky few of us going on to Greymouth. We were about to enter the Otira Tunnel, a 100-year old, long (5.25 miles) tunnel that takes the train down 820 feet, under the Southern Alps from Arthur’s Pass to Otira. Because of exhaust fumes in the tunnel, the viewing car is closed, the cafe car is closed, and riders are asked to stay seated. We entered the darkness. The mountain walls on either side were very, very close. The train was going slow. Sometimes so slow that it felt as if we had stopped moving, betrayed only by a few bumps, the occasional sounds of metal groaning and screeching, and a sound like a squeegee on a wet windshield. This went on, and on, and on. Having just left Christchurch, thoughts of earthquakes, land shifting up 6 feet, and rockslides began to nibble on the edges of my consciousness.

When we passed out of the tunnel into brightness–an eternity (or 20 minutes) later, it’s as if life came back into the train. Smiles, laughter, we breathed again. I suddenly wanted a glass of wine, and maybe ice cream. I was not the only one. The cafe car had brisk business just after the tunnel.

New Zealand’s West Coast

We were on the West Coast of New Zealand now. The tunnel had taken us to another realm. I sat with my Sauvignon Blanc, and listened to the GPS-triggered history recordings onboard, making notes in my journal. This lush “sub-tropical valley” was “too wet for sheep”, so it was now used for “dairying”. Some seeds were blown here from Australia. And I got chill-bumps when they told the story of the white heron, whose flight one is lucky to see once in a lifetime, or in death (as in, “He flies with the white heron now.”)

Cows watch as the TranzAlpine train passes, South Island New Zealand
Cows watch as the TranzAlpine train passes, South Island New Zealand

How lucky I felt that day, on the TranzAlpine train, in beautiful New Zealand. To read more about taking the train in New Zealand, please see this post.

Carol & Bryan boarding the TranzAlpine in Christchurch
Carol & Bryan boarding the TranzAlpine in Christchurch
New Zealand's rugged landscape as seen from the TranzAlpine train
New Zealand’s rugged landscape as seen from the TranzAlpine train

You can find my photos for sale here. Thanks for reading!