Skip to main content

Best Husband in the World

My day started out with a surprise.  As Shawn was walking around Matamata this morning in search of coffee (either a long black or a flat white), he found a patchwork shop.  The owner was very friendly and showed me her selection of New Zealand designed fabrics (of which a few are coming home with me).  She said quilting is popular in New Zealand and there are many guilds, but many shops are closing because it is cheaper to buy fabric on the Internet.


We drove to Rotorua to see the thermal geysers at Te Puia.  Lots of bubbling mud, steam, and the occasional spouting geyser.  I've noticed the parks in New Zealand are very well maintained with paved walkways and informative signage.  Its probably obvious, but I must mention it was hot, humid and smelled of sulfur.









They have carving and weaving schools to teach the younger generations the age old art.  The designs are very intricate.









We stopped in town at the iSite for directions to the Redwood Forest and picked up a bite to eat.  Zippy Central, this funky little backpacker cafe had a great lunch.  Lamb rump on a Greek salad for me and a lamb pita and strawberry smoothie for Shawn.




Ten minutes from the sweltering geysers there is a beautiful redwood forest.  We walked along a well groomed path among the redwoods and ferns.  We saw a few joggers on the trail.  I would  take up running if I had such a beautiful shady trail to run on (really, I would).



Even the bathrooms were cool

Then it was back in the car for an hour drive to Lake Taupo, our destination for the next two days.  The Suisse Chalet is a townhouse accommodation across the street from the lake.  It is a little less desirable than portrayed on the Internet, but the proprietors are super friendly and helpful.



We walked down the street to The Lake House for dinner.  We shared on outdoor table with two young women from England.  They had some fun stories about their adventures in New Zealand.  They are traveling on a hop-on hop-off bus.  They determine how long they stay in each town before catching the next bus.  One was taking a career break and traveling for 6 months before deciding what she want to do next, and the other was celebrating finishing her PhD in skin cancer (so I found it odd that she had a peeling nose and sunburned chest).  PhD had just climbed the volcano Mount Doom and said it was awful, and New Career went skydiving and told us how frightened she was the whole time while trying to smile for the video.  I will live vicariously through their adventures and stay on the ground.

New Zealand beef burger with blue cheese, carmelized onions and fried egg and plum cider


Daily ratings:
Zippy Central - 4 Kiwis
The Lake House - 4 Kiwis
Te Puia - 3 Kiwis
The Redwoods - 4.5 Kiwis
The Suisse Chalet - 3.5 Kiwis

Steps taken: 12,553
Gelato - severly lacking in availability

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Be Our Guest

We spent the majority of our day working on the guest room flooring.  An early morning trip into Coeur d’Alene (CDA from now on because it’s easier to type) for more flooring and assorted supplies at Home Depot.  You can’t go into town without a trip to Home Depot to buy and/or return stuff. Yesterday we pulled up all the carpet, pad and tack strip and filled the holes in the floor of the guest room.  This morning we rolled out contact adhesive around the perimeter of the room and closet.  Then we just started slapping down the vinyl planks.  The center of the room was done in no time, but cutting the planks for the ends, edges and doorways took a few hours.  It looks much better than the original gray indoor/outdoor that was there originally.  We will paint and install new base boards when we return in March. Empty with indoor/outdoor carpet Contact adhesive applied New flooring Today I noticed that I would walk from room to room ...

A Risotto Kind of Day

Shawn went scuba diving today, so I'll leave the fish tales to him.  I walked about town and enjoyed a leisurely lunch on the wharf at 36 degrees. (I'm guessing that's our latitude.  If I remember my 6th grade teacher correctly, longitude is the long vertical lines on the globe and latitude is the circles.  Feel free to correct me.) Pumpkin Risotto with Cashews and Fried Kale Maori long boats getting ready for the Treaty Day celebration In the afternoon we headed further north to Doubtful Bay.  We have a cute little apartment right on the beach.  The big, beautiful house next door is the owner's.  He pulled a Tom Sawyer on Shawn and had him help reel in the fishing line. The owner's lovely house on the left Shawn reeling in the fishing line New Zealanders are always ready to help you to your next destination I swear I'm not making this up, but we had dinner at the Waterfront Cafe.  I get it, New Zealand is an isla...

No One Died in Auckland Today...

For a moment, we were wondering if we were going to make it out of LAX.  We asked for directions and ended up outside the terminal and on a a shuttle bus to the international terminal.  I'm not sure if we could have gotten there without going outside, but it was a long way between terminals and ate into our 2.5 hour layover pretty quickly. The Air New Zealand plane was a 777 and we had upgraded our seats to a "sky couch".  That didn't work out as hoped, but it gave us all 3 seats in the row so that was good.  The conceptual drawing showed the footrest flipping out into a bed that two can sleep on.  So picture the width of a normal 3-seat airplane aisle.  Now picture Shawn and me lounging in that space...yeah, that didn't happen.  But, all in all, for a 12-hour flight it wasn't terrible. Air New Zealand in Auckland First view of New Zealand Shawn bravely tackled driving on the left side of the road.  It was even more of an adventu...