Katy's Travel Log

Katy traveled around the world for 16 months. Just makes you sick, doesn't it?

New Zealand

Hi! I am finally closing the New Zealand chapter of my trip. It's been a truly lovely 2 1/2 months here and New Zealand has lived up to every expectation created by movies and travelers' tall tales.


I'm on my way to the airport in a few hours to fly to Thailand and there's a lot of ground to cover, so I'm just going to get the highlights out and then maybe make something coherent out of it...later.

HIGHLIGHTS

Biking! I spent a good bit of time on my bike (about half of which with a biking partner! Angi from UK) and covered just over 1,000 kilometers. Yes, there are a loit of hills in New Zealand, but either you prepare for them and get used to them, or you just skip the really big ones! The cars and trucks and campervans weren't so very bad, but they weren't great either (it seems like there's just not enough general education about what courtesy to a cyclist means) -- only had one minor altercation with a car and that was enough for me!

Rain! Rain! Rain! Hundred-year floods on the North Island (just after we left); early evacuation from Abel Tasman kayaking trip because of HUGE swells in sea; a few rain delays from biking -- just an excuse to laze around really.

Ice climbing on the Franz Josef glacier! Really just rock climbing with different tools and very cold hands, but in a surreal ice environment, very cool!

Christchurch! I only spent half of a day there, but I fell in love instantly. never have I ever felt such a strong urge to live in a particular place -- absolutely gorgeous with lots of people out running and biking and wonderful parks and lots of life going on -- maybe someday...

The East Cape! Our first biking adventure, just getting up the learning crve of what's what on the bike, but while riding along pristine coastline with huge, old trees eveyrhwere you look and the blkuest of blue water.

DOC huts! On all their paths in the National Parks, the New Zealand Department of Conservation has built huts for hikers to stay at, for a fee. This means you don't have to bring a tent, a stove, water or a sleeping mat (if you don't want to) and it's a nice warm place to end the day. It also keeps our impact on the tracks as low as possible by keeping us all in one place. On the busier paths (like Milford and Routeburn), it also allows them to limit the amount of traffic on the track by requiring hut reservtaions.

The Heaphy track! In the Kongariro National park at the north end of the South Island, the walk took 4 days and ecah day was perfectly beautiful. I walked it heading west which meant starting inland and ending up on the west coast, and by the end of day 2 you could see the sea and the mouth of the river where the end of day 3 was, breathtaking really; then of course the end of day 3 is awesome, right on the beach where the sea and the river meet. there were lots of great people on the track, and they were mainly New Zealanders - yeah! Plus, I had perfect, perfect weather the whole time, which was very unexpected.

The Routeburn track! My second backpacking trip on my own, considerably more difficult than the Heaphy track, but the weather wasn't cooperating and the spectacular views of day 2 (when you spend the day climbing up steep grades and then climbing back down the other side) were all clouded in. But, still a good trip (with a cool couple from Montana)!

Queen Charlotte Sound! This was a bit of a haphazard effort. Angi and I were meant to bike most of the track (in Marlborough Sounds), but on a whim decided to walk the first part of the track (which we couldn't bike on anyway) and got more than we bargained for; it turned into a 7-hour walk for which we were not really prepared and it was really muddy. Because of the mud, biking was out for day 2 so Angi caught the boat to the next stop, but for some reason I thought walking the next section sounded like a good idea, despite the threatening weather conditions. I ended up walking for 6 hours in torrential rains with gale-force winds and near-freezing temperatures (this was the same storm that brought hundred-year floods to the North island) and all this in my jeans and without enough clothes on, but it was a challenge I proved worthy of and I made it in one piece, aminly by not stopping and running when I felt like I was getting too cold. Then we did bike the last section which was my first taste of off-road biking (with a crappy rental bike with bald tires), and only had one mishap of Angi slipping in the mud off the path (and landing with her bike on top of her, no injuries though), and all in all I thought it was great fun, although I can imagine how better tires would have made a big difference!

Smurf houses! Another highlight from Queen Charlotte track (and one of the main reasons my spirits stayed so high in all that rain) was that there were Smurf house mushrooms all along the way!! You know, the white stems with the big red caps and white dots -- they made all the difference between laughing at the ludicrousnesss of my situation and just getting pissed about it!

Mt. Cook! My time in Mt. Cook was very rewarding. Mt. Cook itself is the highest mountain in New Zealand and climbing it is a serious mountainering effort (Sir Edmund Hilary climbed in prep for Everest), so I just did a coupleof the dya hikes in that range of mountains. But the one up to Mueller hut was a definite thrill -- for the most part you just climb straight up for a few hours, at first on a normal path, then on stone steps and then the path just keeps diminishing form there until you're walking straight up on the slide of loose rocks and boulders (which actually wasn't quite as bad as it looked like it was going to be). BUT, you are well rewarded once you get to the top and look across the valley to the other mountains and there's a glacier right in front of you and you can hear it shifting and creaking, and big, booming avalanches echo through the valley -- truly thrilling!

MISSES

Tongariro National Park

Biking to Lake Tekapo and up to Mt. Cook (was absolutely gorgeous and peaceful and would have been a breathtaking ride; the winds would have been awful, but tolerable if I hadn't already been battling strong winds for 3 days)

Whale watching in Kaikoura (thought it would've been too commercial for my taste, but word on the street is that it's really worthwhile)

Spending more time in Christchurch

The way South of the South Island (incl. Hump Ridge and Stewart Island)

NEXT STOP: Thailand!!

March 26, 2004 in New Zealand/Australia | Permalink | Comments (1)

New Zealand: Week 1

Well, I'm in New Zealand now (phew! finally caught up with my logs!) and I'm probably not going to get another update in until I'm done, which might be another 8 weeks, so I'll get a little heads-up in here ahead of time!

I've spent the last week in Auckland, imposing on my very generous hosts (thanks Jennifer!), and getting my act together for the rest of my stay here. Here's what I'm thinking: I want to do a bike trip, but I haven't done ANY biking lately, certainly not enough to qualify as training for a trip like I'm thinking about, SO the plan is to get my bike (probably rent becasue I found a good deal) and spend 4 weeks on the North island traveling around by bus/train with my bike, but use those 4 weeks to get on the bike wherever I am get some training in, and then take another 4 weeks on the South Island (which I hear is safer for bikers anyway) to do an official biking trip and actually use my bike as my main transport. SO I've got my first 4 weeks on the North Island planned out and my first week or so on the South Island and after that I'll decide how strong I feel, blah, blah, blah and go from there.

In the meantime I have to get this bike and all my gear ($$$ oy!) and on Friday (hopefully) I'll be going to Big Day Out -- a big day of concerts which they have in Auckland and a number of cities in Australia (I say hopefully because I don't have a ticket yet, and it's tomorrow) -- what am I going to see? The Flaming Lips (sorry Justin)! Then I'm off!

That's all for now!

January 20, 2004 in New Zealand/Australia | Permalink | Comments (2)

Fiji

For the New Year I met my brother, Tim, in Fiji! (I'm thinking that since I was in Fiji for this New Year's, I should go to Hawaii for next New Year's and have the longest year in the world!!)

We had about 11 days there and had a lovely, relaxing beach vacation -- it may seem wierd, but after Ecuador, I did feel like I needed a little vacation! Getting there from Ecuador seemed a little convoluted at first (spent one night in LA and then one night in Auckland), but it actually made the long trip very manageable (although if I hadn't had people to stay with in both places, maybe it wouldn't have been quite so easy -- Thanks Grandma, Grandpa and Dad! Thanks Jennifer!).

The second I got to the hotel in Nadi (Tim was already there), I find out that Tim has horribly sunburned himself just waiting around for me that day! So, we spent the first few days just lounging around in the shade doing a lot of reading and playing cards and eating ice cream, which was fine by me and seemed very appropriate for a Fiji vacation. But then he was on the mend, more or less, so we took a little trip and spent one night on one of the smaller islands (Mana). I went fishing that night with "Moses" a HILARIOUS big Fijian guy and a huge afro and the funniest laugh I've ever heard. He pointed out the island where they made "Castaway" and then told us all about how Tom Hanks stayed on Mana and where he stayed and how much he loved Fiji water -- ol' Moses obviously still got a pretty big kick out of the whole thing! And, i caught a little blue-fin Trevelly and then I caught a BIG blue-fin Trevelly -- which they cooked up for me for lunch the next day (although this annoying irish guy who I was just being polite too ate almost half of it!!). The next morning Tim and I did a little snorkelling, which was lovely, and then we headed back to our home base. One more day of swimming and reading and playing in nadi and then it was off to Suva, the capital city. There we stayed at a hostal that was near the rainforest outside of the town. It was a lovely setting (although the food wasn't the greatest or the cheapest). With our full day we went into the rainforest and went to the pools that are there. The first pools we went to were furthe rinto the forest and there was whole chain of them -- the main one was pretty crowded and full of other people doing their thing, but we looked aorund and found another, more secluded (quiet) one to spend a few hours and that was great time. It was gorgeous with all the rainforest trees and birds and whatnot hanging over the water and all these little waterfalls connecting the pools, just lovely. (At some point I will be able to connect my photos to this site...I know, I know, I've been saying coming soon for a while, but it's true!)

The next day we just tottled around the city for a little while, which was bustling like you wouldn't believe! And, then we took the bus back to home base and it was time for Tim to go the next day (and me the next)! The hostal Tim found in Nadi was great (Aquarius) -- very clean, cheap (enough) food, right on the beach, some really friendly people, some really quirky people, a good home base! So, that was Fiji, a short-and-sweet trip!

NEXT STOP: New Zealand

January 19, 2004 in New Zealand/Australia | Permalink | Comments (1)

My Photo

Photo Albums

  • View over Banos
    01. Ecuador
  • Making our way back down
    01a. Ecuador: Cotacachi
  • Clear, cool streams
    01b. Ecuador: Jungle
  • Katys_pictures_109
    01c. Ecuador: Pinan Lakes
  • Cusco_parade
    02. Peru
  • Yep, we're both dorks
    03. Fiji
  • Marlborough Sounds (S.I.)
    04a. New Zealand: North Island
  • Hokitika_10
    04b. New Zealand: South Island
  • Bangkok_grand_palace19 [JBarnes]
    05. Thailand
  • Vendor in McLeod Ganj 2 [JBarnes]
    06a. India, the Northern bits
  • Center of my gorgeous tabletop [JBarnes]
    06b. India, the (more) Southern bits
  • Guangzhou water life 3
    07. China
  • Hong_kong_19
    08. Hong Kong
  • Oslo_09
    09. Norway
  • 2063272_948dac00ef_s
    10. France
  • 2063203_6567db1c52_s
    10a. Markets and food
  • 2063541_fe497147b3_s
    10b. Disneyland Paris
  • 2054772_fdfdf4eb44_s
    10c. Thanksgiving
  • Geneva_19
    11. Geneva
  • Dsc01185
    12. England
  • 2063375_ce993957e0_s
    My favorites!
  • Park-hopping in Geneva
    My homage to narcissism

Recent Posts

  • Well, that's it!
  • Drawing to a close
  • France
  • Norway
  • Hong Kong
  • China
  • India
  • Thailand
  • New Zealand
  • New Zealand: Week 1
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