Sunday, October 10, 2010

KIA ORA (Welcome to New Zealand): Auckland October 7-10, 2010


Downtown Auckland
AUCKLAND

At the same time Pacific and cosmopolitan in flavor, with a sparkling though wind-blown harbor, scenic hillsides, wineries, boutiques, cafes, and art galleries, AUCKLAND was the perfect synthesis for the last leg of our trip.

It had been a wild ride all along, so we thought, why not cap the experience with an indulgent passion?  Thus, in the Fish Market, past thru the courtyard, and into the new exciting Auckland attraction called Big Picture Wine, we participated in an interactive wine adventure that began in the Aroma Room, enabling us to appreciate the language of wine.  Then, we viewed the 30-minute film that flew us over Auckland’s spectacular landscape and on to six - yes, six! - wineries within the region.  It was a creatively unique way of having the winemakers onscreen to join us for a personalized tasting of their wine.  As the euphoria of enjoying the rich, fruity aromas of the six featured red wines had set in, the rest of this paragraph would be unfinished...

Our final days were spent soberly browsing New Zealand’s collection displays at the AUCKLAND ART GALLERY and viewing rare Maori taonga (treasures) at the AUCKLAND MUSEUM.  We gazed at intricately-carved wood tikis and colorful weaving that covered a hotunui (Maori ancestral house) inside and out.  We ogled at tall pou whakarae (carved stockade posts) that featured the characteristic warrior-stance of glaring eyes and a stuck-out tongue.

Inside Maori ancestral house
Maori warriors intimidating enemy
 We learned a few things from this trip, among other things - that discarded things are thrown in the rubbish (garbage), milk is either full or slim, food ordered out is take-away, one punts in gondola boats and rides the lift (elevator), tap water is potable, Aussies and Kiwis are very friendly people, and that the best souvenirs of a trip are its memories (and maybe a carved shell heitiki pendant).

But as with everything else, all things must come to an end.  Besides, as Erma Bombeck says, it is time to go home once you start looking like your passport picture - so for now we say, KA KITE (goodbye in Maori)!
Wanna rumble?


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Thursday, October 7, 2010

KIA ORA (Welcome to New Zealand): Christchurch October 3-7, 2010

The Garden City of CHRISTCHURCH

It took a while to get to CHRISTCHURCH, but the spectacular views on the way were a bountiful consolation.

A three-hour ferry ride on the waters of Cook Strait brought us from Wellington to Picton.  Out of Picton, we continued on with a five-hour transcoastal train ride traversing what was called the “real New Zealand.”  We were treated to picturesque sights crossing the Wairau Plains, over a pass to the coast of the Pacific Ocean that was lapping the rocky shores on one side of the train, past snow-capped mountains on the other side, went under 21 tunnels and crossed 175 bridges, then onto the lush farmland of Canterbury, and across the braided river of Waimakariri.  Finally, gliding past well-manicured suburban gardens, we knew that we had arrived.

First stop was the CATHEDRAL SQUARE - a hub of hawkers, bagpipe players, a jazz singer, a mini-bungee-trampoline attraction, chess enthusiasts strategizing their moves using life-size chess figures, and food stalls.  Radiating from the square were spokes of streets that were lined with shops, bars, restaurants, and sundry business buildings.

Giant chess match at Cathedral Square


Lording over it all at the center of the square was the CATHEDRAL, a stunning gothic edifice built in 1881.  Two large crosses that had slid down the wall of a back room and a scaffolding at the altar area were the only visible signs of damage from a recent earthquake.


All within walking distance were various sites of note.  At the CANTERBURY MUSEUM, we viewed intricate wooden carvings, tools, and weapons of the Aotearoa Maori settlers; and saw skeletal remains of the now extinct giant flightless moa bird, dioramas of rare and extinct native birds, marine reptiles, and fossils.

At the ARTS CENTRE, we negotiated interior passageways toward various artist studios where high-quality and equally high-priced New Zealand-made pottery, weavings, carvings, sculpture, and stitched fabric were on display.

A few buildings down was the ART GALLERY, a quasi-Louvre/Crystal Cathedral glass building that was impressively light and spacious, housing traditional as well as quirky-funky/, my-child-could-have-drawn-that kind of art.

To us, the city’s striking features were its expansive stretches of flora and greenery along sidewalks, on house fronts, and eminently at the 500-acre HAGLEY PARK and the BOTANIC GARDENS - the latter brilliantly colored by heathers, daffodils, primula, giant azaleas, magnolias, cherry blossom trees in full bloom, and a host of others.  The garden was a crazy patchwork of fountains, several duck ponds, nooks, meandering pathways that had seemed to go nowhere but ended in “secret” gardens, a hidden bower of a giant tree inside of which children hid and swung from smaller branches, and many more areas that we did not explore. 



















In retrospect, we thought that after braving the prospect of what could happen while staying on the site of a caldera, hearing stories about volcanic eruptions that had formed the areas that we visited, experiencing earthquakes (even if simulated), and valiantly facing some days of blustery weather, do we dare try our luck with an Arctic adventure?  Christchurch, after all, was known as the gateway to Antarctica.

As the Penguin Bus dropped us off the ANTARCTIC CENTRE, we knew that there was no going back.  How was it?  It was a most enticing, exciting, and “ex-chill-arating” experience - seeing 26 Little Blue penguins, known as the world’s smallest penguin.  There was just something magical about them - stretching tiny wings in a yawn, wobbling knock-kneed, carrying on with their swimming antics, or taking time out to be hand-fed like babies.


There was the magnificent audiovisual of a seasonal arc from sunrise to sunset, interwoven with stunning shots from a camera mounted on the underside of a helicopter. 


The most thrilling of all? -  entering an ice crystal cave, being blasted by an antarctic blizzard, riding the steps of an ice shelf, and being blown away by 24 mph winds and frozen to the fingertips by -18 degree Centigrade temperature (do the math on that in Fahrenheit).



But we Zonies survived, rewarding ourselves afterward with the culinary delight of 2.2 lbs. of mussels steamed in white wine, celery, leek, and thyme at the 1920’s styled Belgian CafĂ©.  With a side of crispy fries served with mayonnaise and a glass of Hoegaarden beer, lunch by the window with a view of the Avon river made for a perfect afternoon.

Tomorrow, on the final leg of our vacation, we’ll be going round circle - back to AUCKLAND to savor its sparkling harbor and off-shore islands, beaches, and wineries!  Did we say… wineries??!!  Ah, yes.  Wine, glorious wine!  

Saturday, October 2, 2010

KIA ORA (Welcome to New Zealand): Wellington October 1-3, 2010





About the only similarity Wellington has to Hongkong is its curved harbor surrounded  by hillsides dotted with houses and elegant high-rises. 

As we made the trek toward the BOTANIC GARDEN, surveying the scenery around, we noted that Wellington was actually very picturesquely verdant, broken up by multi-level areas occupied by a variety of buildings and offices. Negotiating a winding road bedecked on either side with historic tombstones, we soon came upon  the leafy enclaves of the garden.  Although the roses corralled in 106 formal beds were not in bloom yet, the riot of colors from tulips and flowering trees everywhere was dazzling.
Flower people still around?
The PARLIAMENT building, just a few blocks from our suite, was a curiosity.  Shaped like a beehive with a puny flag atop, it looked like a bonnet that Olive Oyl would have sported.  Indoors, very impressive was the Maori Affairs Committee Room which was ornately decorated with wooden carvings and native weavings.  However, down in its basement was a most interesting sight - the building foundation that sat on rubber bearings.  Using the noted base isolation technique, the building will actually be able to move up to 12 inches sideways, thus reducing the impact of an earthquake.

At the Parliament building
Wellington’s cultural jewel, in our mind, was the TE PAPA TONGAREWA museum.  Reputedly one of the largest national museums in the world, it did not fail to impress with the variety of inter-active and audio-visual media in which artifacts and migrant stories of the New Zealand peoples were presented.  We felt the tremor of an earthquake, walked barefoot on the floor of a wharenui (house structure), saw the carcass of a colossal squid specimen, and experienced a walk-on satellite map of New Zealand that triggered images.

Maori carving at museum

To CHRISTCHURCH it will be tomorrow!