Coffee Talk

April 16th, 2009

Colac Bay 04-06-2009 2-38-10 PM

Joanie here for my first blog attempt!  We’ve barely had time to write about what we’ve been up to, let alone New Zealand culture.  It may come as no surprises that New Zealand culture shares most things in common with that of the US.  One thing we have come to understand though is that Kiwi’s get their Vitamin D a bit differently- not from the sun, but from the coffee they consume.  Coffee- Vitamin D? Yup.  There seems to be a plethora of cafes (1/NZ resident I think) serving various types of milky, espresso coffees from flat whites and short blacks to lattes and mochas.  There is, however, no such thing as a regular cup of coffee which we have come to find out is referred to as filter coffee and seems to only be available for brewing at home.

While coffee beans are readily available at any New World, Pak’ N’ Save, or Countdown, they are nowhere to be seen in the multitude of cafes.  In fact, if you walk into a cafe and want a regular black coffee you may well get instant.  Yup- instant.  Seems there is no in between- no plain old filter coffee and no half and half either.  If you ask for half and half you will get a questioning stare.

Back to the grocery store- Kiwi’s have their fair share of caffeinated products to choose from, including coffee with milk in a squeeze tube- just add water, available in a canned variety as well.  Sorry to say we have not had the opportunity to test out this Nestle product yet.

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Speaking of dairy, what’s up with Kiwi ice cream?  So many cows and so little quality ice cream.  Yes, they’ve got Hokey Pokey and as a lover of honey I can appreciate the honeycomb chunks, but where is the ooey gooey chocolaty, caramel, nutty yumminess we find at the Granite State Candy shop in NH or the Dairy Bar in MI?  One thing is certain, we will miss the fancy coffees (which we indulged in daily during our stay at The Pailion), and we are craving a massive (Kiwi’s love that word) waffle cone served up New England style from Goldenrod.

Glenorchy 04-14-2009 4-46-51 PM

Colac Bay

April 16th, 2009

As we travel around the country, people often ask us if we miss being in the United States.  While I often have a hankering for some Arthur Bryant’s BBQ, All American burgers and fries, Goldenrod ice cream, Granite State chocolate, The Friendly Toast breakfast and anything that Mom cooks up, our response is that what we miss most are our family and friends.  Two weeks WWOOFing at The Pavilion restaurant in Colac Bay was just what we needed to feel that sense of being part of a community of friends again.  It was also the perfect place to go after backpacking for two weeks and in need of some good calorie rich food.

Trees, Colac Bay 04-11-2009 10-00-32 PM Moonrise, Colac Bay 04-10-2009 1-24-58 AM

Colac Bay is a beautiful gem of a place on the south end of the South Island.  The surfing is great, the moon rises over the ocean, and the locals are incredibly friendly.  Julie, the owner of the restaurant (an an incredibly generous hostess) had asked us to stay through the Easter holiday to help out when things got busy.  We didn;t know what we were in for.  Easter is a HUGE deal here.  The nearby town of Riverton hosts annual horse races over the Easter weekend and things get busy at the Pavilion.

Through our first week at the restaurant we worked on lots of odd jobs–gardening, scrubbing decks, refinishing chairs and tables, and doing lots and lots of dishes in the kitchen.  The big project, however, was the renovations to a small room off the side of the restaurant to transform an old storeroom into a new bar.  This project was the definition of a community effort.  We felt as though we met most of the town as we helped with the renovations and through the restaurant.  The restaurant staff was great, and we ate gourmet lunches and dinner every day.  A huge thanks to our two chefs Dan and Rina for all the good food.  We also owe a huge thanks to Mary, maker of incredible desserts among other things and the most perfect Pavlova in New Zealand.  We got to know Mary’s boys Ricky, Nigel, and Bevin as well through the bar project, and we enjoyed a rauckus evening hanging out with them, playing music, and laughing an awful lot.

Foreshore Bar, Colac Bay 04-12-2009 4-16-11 PM

It was a big push to get the new bar ready for Easter weekend, but everything fell into place and the Foreshore Bar was packed on the weekend (And check out the vintage surfboard hanging from the ceiling courtesy of Don!).  People know how to have a good time in Colac Bay.  One thing we loved about our nights hanging out with everyone is that there’s lots of singing and music and it doesn’t matter how talented or untalented you are–just sing!  Easter in Colac Bay is really a three or four day party and we just happened to be around for it.  Woohoo!  I spent a good portion of the weekend driving the restaurant “courtesy coach” back and forth to Riverton to bring people to the races, bring people to the bar, drive them home from the bar, etc., while Joanie took a few turns as bartender/waitress when things got really busy.  In all it was an awesome two weeks.  There’s so much more to tell, but we just don’t have the time.

We did get a chance to go to the Riverton Races on Eater Monday, and Julie generously gave us two “sponsor’s tickets” which meant we had free beer and food all day at the races.  We got off to a great start at the track, picking a $50.00 winner on our first bet (We need to thank our Irish friends JP and Sorcha who inspired us to pick Celtic Dreams in that race).  From there it was a mixed bag of winners and losers, but we left with more money in our pockets than we came with.  We’re ready for Belmont when we get to NY!

Riverton Races 04-12-2009 8-51-44

A Long Way From Home…

April 6th, 2009

Bluff, NZ 03-27-2009 10-23-33 PM

Fiordland

April 6th, 2009

Hey folks!  Sorry for the delay here, but we’ve been away from the world wide web for awhile.  After our adventure at Trotter’s Gorge we basically made an uneventful dash down the east coast.  The weather was cold and rainy, so we spent lots of time in the car playing games, reading, listening to the wind, etc.  By the time we got to Fiordland the weather was slowly getting better and the forecast was looking great for our two weeks of backpacking.  Fiordland is definitely one of those places that pictures cannot fully capture and my lame vocabulary can’t come close to describing.

Routeburn Track 03-19-2009 5-53-54 PM

In the two weeks we had set aside for Fiordland, we had sketched out a pretty busy schedule for ourselves.  First up–the Milford Track which has been called “the greatest walk in the world” by National Geographic.  We had a day or so to hang around Te Anau and camp on the edge of Lake Te Anau before we took the boat ride to the start of the track.  It was nice to have a some time to dry out our gear from the previous week of rain, relax on the lake shore, and soak up the sun. Fiordlands is not typically a place that people go to soak up the sun.  On average, they receive about 7 meters of rain per year.  If you do the conversion to our system of measurement, that equals a shit ton of rain.  By the time we got on the track, the sun was out and it pretty much stayed out for the next 12 days while we were backpacking.

Caples Track, McKellar Pass 03-22-2009 8-26-04 PM

We ended up doing the Milford, Routeburn, Greenstone and Caples tracks before heading to Colac Bay and our next WWOOFing stint at the Pavilion restaurant.  I’ve got to wrap things up quickly here as internet time is short, but check out the new pictures on Flickr–they tell a pretty good story.  And, if I told you everything here then we wouldn’t have any stories to tell when we get home.

Just remember to ask us about Warren, our Routeburn Track mix-up, and all the gourmet food at the Pavilion.

Greenstone Track 03-23-2009 10-57-10 PM

Question

April 6th, 2009

What is the best thing about backpacking in Fiordland?

A.  The incredible mountain scenery.

Gertrude's Saddle 03-21-2009 8-25-09 PM

B.  Waterfalls at every turn.

Milford Track 03-16-2009 6-13-00 PM

C.  Quiet nights camping under the brilliant southern skies.

Routeburn Track 03-18-2009 9-29-41 PM

D.  Eating massive chocolate bars.  (This one cost $2.00 US)

Milford Track 03-14-2009 9-26-14 PM Milford Track 03-14-2009 9-24-28 PM

Don’t Occupy Camp

March 11th, 2009

As we travel around New Zealand, we’ve been trying to stay at DOC campgrounds as often as possible.  The Department of Conservation campgrounds are usually $10/night or less and there are even quite a few free campgrounds around the country.  We’ve had some excellent campsites where you could cast a line from the tent into the surf, lay down on a cushy mat of grass (have I mentioned that New Zealand has to be the world’s greatest place to grow thick green grass?  Really.  It’s unbelievable how campgrounds that get an insane amount of use still have a nice mat of grass to camp on–no dirt patches around here!), or chill a Mike’s Ale in a cool mountain stream.  The past two days, however, have been a bit different and interesting to say the least.

Kaikoura Peninsula 03-06-2009 8-32-37 PM

Two nights ago after a day of exploring Kaikoura Peninsula, we headed to Gray River Forest Park to camp for the evening.  It looked like a nice spot, even though we would be 30 minutes from the ocean, and it would allow us to take a hike the next day up Mt. Grey.  As we drove to the campground, the road turned to gravel and we kept climbing and climbing and climbing up through pine forests.  The further we went, the more we kept joking about how we hoped there would be space for us at the campground.  When we finally arrived at the site, we were thoroughly surprised to see a full campground of about 20 people.  Since they were all sitting together, we figured it must be a big family or group of friends out for the weekend.  We parked AGY in the one small space where there was still room and took out our chairs and got ready to make dinner.

As we were getting our things together, one of the group’s members came over and started to talk to us about him and his friends who love nature and love to come out here and enjoy the “native bush” and how they also like to have raves in the woods (I must have missed the David Attenborough series on Nature Raves) and how the black birch trees have little hairs on them with droplets of “honey” on the ends, and a whole bunch of other jibberish that didn’t make much sense to me or Joanie.  At first I couldn’t pinpoint what was so strange about the way this guy was talking.  Afterwards, we realized that he was talking to us as if we did not speak English.

Now, we’ve definitely learned that we do not pronounce many words similarly.  Aluminum is a great example. But, it’s still the same language and it doesn’t take much to figure things out.  Anyway, this guy went back to his group, we made our dinner, and then another guy came over to see us. He apparently had some sense about him still and was able to more precisely explain what was about to happen.  He and his associates put raves on for other groups of people out in the woods.  Rather than find a nice piece of farmland where other people don’t try to go camping (which is virtually everywhere that is not a forest, park, or preserve), they chose the DOC campground for this evening’s party.  There was going to be music through a PA system, it was going to last until 2 or 3 in the morning, we were welcome to stay and hang out if we wanted, but this was our fair warning.  Fair enough, I guess.  He did a much better job of explaining why we would want to leave, and why that other character sounded like a complete nutjob.  So, after our dinner we left what we thought was going to be our peaceful mountain abode and made the late evening drive to another DOC site about 30 minutes further southwest.

We spent the next day driving and exploring a number of different places–Ashley Gorge, the towns of Ashburton and Geraldine and other small roadside stops.  Geraldine had to be the highlight.  We went there to see the World’s Largest Jersey (sweater) as verified by the Guinness Book of World Records.  Geraldine is a small town and it wasn’t hard to find the shop with the big sweater.  The sweater actually wasn’t that impressive, and certainly not as cool as the giant salmon that we had seen earlier in the day.

The Giant Salmon 03-07-2009 5-19-40 PM

However, in the back room of the wool shop with the sweater was something that neither of us expected and that the guidebooks really missed out on.  The sweater was nothing compared to what was back here–a mosaic replica of the Bayeux Tapestry made entirely out of tiny pieces of steel from some discarded sewing equipment.  Over 1.5 million of these little steel pieces were broken off, laid down, and painted with a single tiny paintbrush over the course of 25 years to complete the tapestry.  The tapestry, for those of you who don’t remember your 10th grade history (Mr. Cosentino would be so proud), depicts a historic event of 1066–the Battle of Hastings.  The real tapestry is missing the last quarter of the story, but Michael’s daughter designed the last several panels and, viola, the world’s only complete tapestry depicting the events of 1066.  Best of all, Michael was there to share all the details and history with us, and he is quite an interesting fellow.  He is quite a mathematician.  In his spare time, which he must have a lot of now that he’s done with the mosaic, he creates games and puzzles.  He spent about 45 minutes with us, teaching us how to use a binary calculator (this peg board enabled him to “crunch” a 150 digit number in minutes while it would have taken a computer days to even get close) and showing us a variety of puzzles and games all based on math.  It was incredibly fascinating, and I felt incredibly dumb as he quickly went through the explanations of each game.  We eventually had to pull ourselves away from both the games and our host who was obviously excited to have some visitors in his shop.  It was time to head south toward Trotters Gorge and another DOC campground.

We pulled into Trotters Gorge just a little while before sunset and quickly made dinner under an increasingly grey sky.  The short road into the campground crossed two small rivers, each crossing being a giant concrete ford that passed over the bed of the river.  After the rain started to fall, we even joked about getting stuck in the gorge, but just settled into our tent and got ready to fall asleep for the evening.  Then we saw a light shining through the tent and someone saying, “Hello?  Hello?  The river’s going to rise and I’ve got a paddock where you can park your car and you can stay the night at my place.  You won’t be able to drive out of here if the river rises.”  It’s always funny talking to someone through a tent when you can’t see a thing.  After a short minute of this blind conversation, we emerged from our tent thinking that we would pull the tent down quick, drive across the rivers and then set it up again on the other side.  However, our rescuer Steve who lived across the way generously insisted on putting us, and a few other campers, up in his house.

At this point the rain was really coming down and the prospect of crawling into a twice soaked tent didn’t sound good so we took up the offer.  It turns out that Steve had literally rescued about 10 other campers just weeks before who had been stuck in the campground for 3 days after a heavy rain.  Like our host earlier in the day, Steve seemed happy to have some company and some ears and he told us all about the incident just weeks ago.  He even made it onto the front page of the newspaper.  About 10 campers were in the gorge when some heavy rains soaked the area, caused the rivers to rapidly rise (about 1 foot/hour), and made the road impassable.  Even Steve lost his station wagon when he tried driving through one of the fords in order to get to his house.  After a couple of days of the river being so high, he decided to go have a look at the campground and found these frantic campers who were short on food, needed to get to an airport, etc.  He set up a highline and sent some food and water across the river to them, and eventually pulled them and their cars across the river.  After hearing the story and seeing the pictures we were mighty glad that he came to get all of us out of the campground.

So, we spent the rest of the night listening to his stories, his opinions of the DOC, looking at photos of cars that he has fixed up over the years, stained glass windows that he has made for churches, masonry repairs that he has made on cathedrals, etc.  His ability to take a car that had been seemingly demolished in a crash and repair to look like new again was pretty remarkable–and probably profitable.  By the time we made it to bed the rain had stopped and there wasn’t really any threat of flooding this time.  I don’t know if there’s a lesson in all of this, but tonight we’re at a Holiday Park (private campground) doing laundry, enjoying a hot shower, and writing this here blog entry.  I’m assuming we will actually sleep in the tent we have set up, but I suppose we’re ready for anything!

Penguin Crossing, Oamaru 03-07-2009 11-37-39 PM Moeraki Boulders 03-08-2009 3-16-16 PM

Check out all the new pics on Flickr–there’s a lot I haven’t written about here!

North Island Finale (for now)

March 11th, 2009

Back home, one of the tv shows that we got roped into is Lost.  For all of the ridiculous things that happen on that show–and there are many ranging from mysterious black smoke that drags people away, a tropical polar bear, and an island that has apparently moved–the most unusual thing may be the extreme amount of “neck sweat” that the characters constantly sport.  Yeah, I know it’s a tropical island, but it always seems a bit over the top.  And who really sweats from their neck so much?  We’ve never experienced that kind of sweating–until last night.

Yesterday was our last full day on the North Island for awhile, and we went out in style. We woke up at Battle Hill Regional Park and were given a treat of fresh eggs from the chickens on this working farm/forest park.  It was just the beginning of a day of indulgence.  After making the short drive into Wellington we made a quick trip to the library and then headed to the legendary Embassy Theater.  The Embassy is a beautiful old theater that played host to the Lord of the Rings movie premieres.  I have never seen a movie in a theater quite like this–and we just about had it all to ourselves for an 11:00 am showing of Slumdog Millionaire.  We had our pick of the big leather chairs and settled in with Coke and popcorn in hand.  We decided that we would splurge a bit, so we checked into the Bay Plaza Hotel overlooking Wellington’s beautiful bay.  We did have a great view of the bay right from our bed–an old photo of the bay in 1929 graced the wall of our room, otherwise all we could see was the hills and houses overlooking the bay.  Wrong side of the hotel I guess, but it suited our needs perfectly.  Shower, bed, refrigerator, and just a few minutes walk from The Front Room–a music venue where we would later see Old Crow Medicine Show in their first ever Wellington performance.  What a treat!

Embassy Theater, Wellington 03-04-2009 4-50-27 PM OCMS, Wellington!!! 03-04-2009 10-12-04 PM

Before the show we had an incredible dinner at Sweet Mother’s Kitchen, a creole style place also just a couple of blocks from the hotel.  We had been there the weekend before with the Triggs and Ursula, our favorite fellow WWOOFer.  Ursula had steered us there after the beer festival and picked a real winner.  Finally some spicy food!

By the time we walked over to the music venue there was already quite a line of folks waiting to get in.  The Front Room was the perfect venue to see Old Crow–one big room, a balcony and two bars.  No chairs, no tables, and a fired up Kiwi crowd.  And, there was also no ventilation whatsoever.  It didn’t take long into the opening act to realize that things were heating up.  After just a few songs, we couldn’t take the crush of people up front and made our way up to the balcony where things weren’t so crowded.  And that’s where the neck sweat really started.  It was so hot and humid that we, and everyone else, were drenched head to toe.  It was so bloody hot, as they say here, that the bass player spent most of the show shirtless.  We did our best to show everyone how things are done back home in the States and I think we nailed it.  It was really such a treat to get a little taste of home here in NZ.  It was a great way to close out our time on the North Island, and we can’t wait to stop by Sweet Mother’s for dessert on the way back north.  After eating three meals there we never had enough room, so it will just have to wait.

One thing we’re learning along that way is that we take free internet for granted back home.  Most libraries, cafes, etc. do not provide free internet access and it can actually be a bit pricy to hop online.  As we head south, it might be harder and harder to get online, so the posts may come a bit slower.  We’ll try to keep us as best we can!

Ferry to South Island 03-05-2009 10-29-26 PM

Cape Palliser

March 11th, 2009

Wellington Beer Festival 02-27-2009 5-26-35 PM Wellington Beer Festival 02-28-2009 1-03-22 AM

We’ve again got a lot of catching up to do and I even need to look through the photos to remind myself of what we’ve been up to.  Oh right, the Wellington Beer Festival.  The festival was, of course, a blast.  We think that we’ve really found our niche working at these events.  Despite some pretty heavy rain there was still a good crowd of Wellingtonians who turned out and seemed unfazed by the weather.  As I would expect, as the day went on and the beer flowed, people seemed to become less and less bothered by the rain.  A few folks even showed up in their wetsuits and made the most of the rain and the beer.  One of the best parts of working these beer festivals is being on the receiving end of a wide variety of ploys, tactics, winks, nods, and begging all in the name of free beer.  We served beer for eight hours.  Which means that people were drinking for eight solid hours.  Which means that we were once again treated to entertainment of the highest quality.  But, the best part of being in Wellington for the beer festival was getting to meet up with our good friends Ron and Jill Trigg, Ursula (WWOOFer extraordinaire from South Africa), and the brewery’s newest brewer Tom.  It was like meeting up with old friends, and we had a great night out on the town the day before the festival.  We had quite a bit to drink, which worked in favor of us not drinking up all the profits the next day (It’s very easy to drink and pour at the same time during these events).  We really enjoyed the company of our good friends here and we will certainly miss them for the next few months as we head to the South Island.  We don’t know what are plans will be when we head back north, but it will be tempting to pay another visit to “Taradise” and White Cliff Organic Brewery.

We spent one more day in Wellington at Te Papa–the national museum.  It’s a fairly new museum–only 8 or 9 years old I think, and it shows.  All of the exhibits are very up to date and modern looking.  None of that stale green colored background with white lettering in all of the wildlife taxonomy exhibits that are so universal.  It’s really a gem of a museum, and we wandered around until we both had a serious case of museum foot setting in.  We had pretty much been through the entire museum at that point, so it was a good time to head out of the city and get back to exploring the countryside.

For the next couple of days we drove around to the sparsely populated Cape Palliser coast.  Joanie flirted with fur seals, we checked out the lighthouse and its 250+ steps, and we paid a visit to the Putangurua Pinnacles.  The little fishing town of Ngawi was also a highlight with their collection of colorful bulldozers that are used to launch fishing boats right from the beach.  Check out all the new pictures on Flickr to see more of what we’ve been up to.  The days went by quickly and soon we were back on our way to Wellington for our North Island Tour Part 1 Grand Finale!

Ngawi Fishing Village 03-01-2009 9-05-17 PM Cape Palliser Lighthouse 03-01-2009 7-33-28 PM

Which Way to Mount Doom?

February 26th, 2009

Tongariro National Park 02-19-2009 1-26-34 AM

Following our stint at Waiinu we headed inland (this was very hard to do) to check out Tongariro National Park.  Tongariro was the first national park in New Zealand, boasts one of the best day hikes in the country, and is home to a number of active volcanoes, including Mount Doom!  Of course, it’s not called Mount Doom, but it’s the volcano that was used for Mount Doom in the Lord of the Rings movies.  At last, we would have a chance to climb the mountain and cast the ring into the fiery…what would a blog about New Zealand be without at least one reference to Lord Of The Rings?  Or sheep.  So, in honor of stereotypical New Zealand here’s a sheep.

Sheep 02-26-2009 1-42-19 PM

I’d love to include a picture of Mount Doom, but we never really saw it–we were foiled by a raging storm.  We got to Tongariro just in time to set up our newly acquired tarp (Ethan, you’ll be happy to know that we spent the two extra bucks to avoid the dreaded blue tarp).  We set up the tarp, pulled out the chairs, and pretty much sat there through the biggest storm of the summer.  We did manage to see a pretty neat waterfall, and watching the stream near our campsite turn into a raging river was cool too.  We spent a lot of time in the Visitor’s Center waiting out the weather which was not letting up at all.  We checked out the exhibits two or three times apiece.  We watched every minute of every video display inside that place.  If you ever want to know anything about the history of skiing in Tongariro just send us your questions.  Worried that we would soon become a part of the exhibit, we headed out into the rain and drove back to our refuge under the tarp.  The Tongariro Crossing hike would just have to wait until another time–the weather forecast wasn’t much better for the next few days.

We were in for a real treat though.  The drive from Tongariro towards Levin was full of landmarks including a giant carrot, a giant gum boot, and a memorial to a train wreck (normal size).  We spent a few days on the beaches near Levin and then headed to Celtic Organic Winery where we’ve been for the past 5 days.
Ohakune Carrot 02-20-2009 3-45-33 PM Giant Gum Boot 02-20-2009 4-36-10 PM

You might be saying to yourself, “Why do Tim and Joanie seem to only go to farms that produce alcoholic beverages?”  Well, I don’t know what to say except, why not?  Clearly the benefits are outstanding.  Celtic Organic Winery has been fantastic.  Malcolm makes some very tasty wines in the old Celtic tradition. They age outside through the seasons instead of in a cool cellar.  We’ve had some delicious plum port wine, plum wine, celtic mead, green ginger wine, green ginger sparkling wine, whiskey mac, and feijoa wine.  I better go make sure I got them all.  Our first day here we were able to put our labeling skills to use, but since then we been focusing our energies on some outside projects.  We helped build a fence, weed some gardens, and for the past two days we’ve been cleaning up the 10 pine trees that were just cut down.  There’s now a massive pile of limbs out in the field, and it’s a bummer that we won’t be around to see the fire when it’s burned.

One of the best things about being here are the shared dinners that we have with Malcolm and his wife Deb.  We just had an incredible meal thanks to Malcom’s trip out in his boat today–fresh snapper.  We, I should say I, enjoyed some mussels yesterday.  Joanie was brave enough to give them a try, but isn’t the biggest fan.  We had fresh fish the first night here as well, and several other delicious meals in between.  We’ve got a bit of work to do tomorrow morning, and then we head south to Wellington to meet up with Ron and Jill from White Cliff Organic Brewery to help out with the Wellington beer festival.

Waiinu

February 26th, 2009

Waiinu Beach 02-17-2009 3-28-03 PM Waverly Beach 02-16-2009 4-38-53 PM

When we bought our surfboard, we also picked up a great surf guide to New Zealand.  It’s got descriptions of surf beaches in all parts of the country, complete with info on the best tides to surf, ideal wind and swell direction, and, of course, the stoke factor meter.  We’ve been thumbing through the book looking for beaches that are good for beginners, don’t have rocks, or sharks, or waste pipes draining nearby.  When we got to Waiinu Beach we found it to be pretty ideal for us–the waves were perfect for beginners, the beach was beautiful, and there was a free campground right on the beach!  Well, not really free–there was a donation box to put in whatever you thought fair.

An older Kiwi that I was talking with one day in the campground asked me, “How much would it cost to camp in a place like this back home?”  I kind of laughed at first, because there isn’t really anything like this back home at all–at least not on the east coast.  And, there’s not a chance that it would be free.  Before coming here, folks told us that Kiwi’s are some of the friendliest folks you’ll meet.  We’ve found that to be true so far.  Everywhere that we camp we seem to meet incredibly friendly people who are willing to share their company, food, drinks, books, knowledge of the area, etc.

But, friendly people aren’t the only thing that we’ve come to appreciate about New Zealand.  There have been lots of little things that seem to make a lot of sense.  Like two buttons on toilets–one for a half flush and one for a full flush.  And hose fittings are really neat here too–so easy to swap in and out.  Buying, registering, and insuring a car was far easier for us to do here than it is back home.    Another thing here that we’ve really come to appreciate are the massive chocolate bars that can be had for just a buck or two.  And, it’s pretty sweet to open up a 2 liter bottle of beer for the evening.  We might as well add Beer Festivals to the list here too.  They seem to be a pretty regular occurrence and are loads of fun.  We’ll be helping out at another one in Wellington on the 28th–stay tuned for more on that!

Best of all, we’ve found that New Zealand has the greatest playgrounds.  It seems that playgrounds here are still built with fun in mind.  Playgrounds back home are getting worse and worse–all the risk (fun) has been removed from them.  So far, the town of Levin and their Adventure Park has been the best of the best.  We spent the better part of a morning swinging around on the playground while the local kids were in school.

Levin Adventure Park 02-22-2009 2-50-38 PM Levin Adventure Park 02-22-2009 2-55-33 PM