Saturday, May 28, 2011

shenan-agains

Man!  Has it been a long time since I last posted, or what?  First off it took me forever to get my Semester break trip written up, then its been a long time since then that I've posted.  Those of you who share my mother's level of interest in my blog (love you Mom) must be wondering if I'm losing enthusiasm for writing.  My answer to you is thus: HAVE NO FEAR!  My lack of writing is due much more to the absence of happenings/shindigs/shenanigans/hootenannies/events/adventures and much less to my not wanting to write.  So now that I am finally writing again, I'll get around to telling a couple short stories...

Dunedin is getting cold.  I know this may be a shock to several of you, and in a recent conversation with Affable Dave who is back States working at camp who outright refuses to believe it, but yes, it does in fact get quite cold down here in the Southern Hemisphere.  Dunedin, because of some crazy geographical and atmospherical rubbish suffers from what is generally accepted as the worst weather in New Zealand.  Because of its proximity to the coast, Dunedin gets zero snow, but because it is quite hilly and mountainous, the clouds get caught up and dump a lot of their wetstuff on us.  The combination makes for a very wet and crappy winter with perfect conditions for the production of copious amounts of ice.

To intensify the unfortunate affects of the weather, it seems as though New Zealand builders are not familiar with the term "insulation."  Its not like they know what it is and call it something else, like calling the kitchen counter the "bench" (which is just plain malarkey, one sits on benches), they are completely ignorant of the benefits and virtues of putting stuff between the outside of the house and the drywall on the inside.  To say that our flat is a sieve for heat supposes that there is any heat on the inside to begin with, which is plainly not the case.

In an attempt to escape our chilly city, a crew of 14 of us decided to venture off to Queenstown for a weekend of adrenaline-fueled excitement.  The crew, which included Kiwi Justin, All American Jacob, Scruffy Ethan, Ginger Justin (our Canadian friend who is our token ginger - a word which we pronounce as though it rhymes with ringer), Mellow Andrew, Goofy Andrew, Eager Rachel, CK Jay and me, arrived in Queenstown on Friday night and moved in to the cushy pad that some organizationally-minded person had rented for us.  With the requisite Queenstown-visit Ferg Burger in our bellies, we made for the grocery store to pick up those foods and drinks necessary for the weekend.  Some people had elected to go bungy jumping  early Saturday morning, but that did nothing to prohibit the rest of us from having a raucous time until we felt so bad for those trying to sleep that some people took the party out to the town, others of us (like myself) decided that finding a slice of floor or couch and remaining inside was the better course of action.  After a typically slow start, Scruffy E and Ginger Justin and I decided to go check out the (regionally) infamous Queenstown disc-golf course.  Kiwi Justin and All American took Baby Bey to the airport to pick up Justin's friend who had just finished a semester with the Eco-Quest program on the North Island.  While the course itself was quite nice and definitely one of the most unique courses I have ever played, what with some of the Tees requiring a climb onto a large boulder and the holes which demanded that players pass between trees, I didn't play very well with the crappy disc I had found in Queenstown and was rather flustered.  My frisbee-throwing experience was saved by the discovery of a skateboard-park located next to the 18th hole.  After we finished (in my case 12 over par), we decided to check out the "bowl" at the park.  For those not familiar with the skateboarding craze of the last 20 years and the concrete-manufactured terrain, a bowl is just about what it sounds.  Its is a submerged half-dome which meets the ground at a right angle and curves out... kinda like a round swimming pool without the water.  This bowl happened to be amoeba-shaped with a smaller bowl stuck onto the side of a much deeper and larger one.  It did not take us long after our arrival at the bowl to determine that even sans skateboard, a bowl was a lot of fun to play around in.  Our first discovery was made when I (in my disgust and frustration with my frisbee) threw it against the side of the bowl.  Rather than bouncing off to the ground, the disc took a route around the side of the bowl and flew out the other side.  EUREKA!  A sport was born.  By throwing frisbees in different directions, we could get them to travel the circumference of the bowl and almost come back to the thrower inside the bowl.  Another game was found when one stands on one side of the lip of the bowl and throws a frisbee straight down.  The disc rolls down, then across, and then straight up the other side.  Game three involved running as fast as one could, which generated enough outward inertia that one could run up the side of the bowl and feel like they're horizontal to the game.  All in all we spent well over two hours revisiting our youth in the bowl.  Finally we were driven out by some kids who wanted to mess around with their bmx bikes and scooters.  After returning to our swanky bed-place, we took a complete change of activity, popped in a movie, and promptly passed out.  Another evening of food, drink, and fun came and went more or less uneventfully.  Kiwi Justin's friend Eli had shown up and we hung out with him, and the night was filled with fun, but little excitement.

Kiwi Justin and Scruffy Ethan chillin too hard.

the "bros"
the top floor (of the 3) of Condo de Lux

Partay time







So after two nights of staying up late and getting up early (this means before noonish), none of the crew riding in the Gus Bus was all too enthused about packing up and having to drive home, but what had to be done was done and we finally got all our belongings (minus a shirt that Kiwi J has been unable to find since this weekend) and ourselves loaded into the Baby and started the drive home.  I elected to capitalize on my short-lived awake-ness and drive the first leg.  Eventually we got home...

And thats the end of the story.  No big climax to that one.

One last picture taken as we drove out of the city:




Stay tuned for more short stories.

Also, it was recently brought my attention that I don't have a blog-name for myself, so those of you who bother to read, if you find yourself inspired, please comment below and hit me with a suggestion or two.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

three dudes, one van (or) the new-age travelers (or) "kiwis," "penguins," and seals

Well, this one, I promise you, is gonna be a long one.  So, if you plan to read it all in one sitting, I'd get up now, work out any kinks in your backside, maybe prepare your next meal and bring it to the computer, and definitely get ready settle in for a while... Aside maybe from O-Week and the Arcadia Program's independent orientation, the days described in this post - the week of my semester break - comprises the most active and eventful week of my time in New Zealand.

For several weeks Scruffy E. and I had been repeatedly saying, "hey, we should really sit down sometime and figure out what we're gonna do on our semester break adventure."  Which invariably caused the other to say, "ohhh, yea bro, we gotta do that soon."  Well, no-so-surprisingly, it got to be Wednesday night before break and we had yet to even open a book, pull up a website, or even seriously consider what things we could legitimately fit into a week+ of traveling around the South Island.  We had decided several weeks previous that while Kiwi Justin was off in Sydney getting his tan on and cruisin' around the big city, Ethan and I would take a little tour of the more distant parts of the South Island.  Partially out of a hope that the incorporation of Football Jacob would mean that he would use his get-up-and-go enthusiasm to help up get off the ground with planning, but mostly because we wanted someone else to split gas money with, and not at all because he's a good friend of ours, Scruffy E. and I added Jacob to the crew which made a dynamic crew for our upcoming adventure of epic awesomeness... now to actually plan what to do...

[I have never done this before, but after careful consideration over the course of the trip -  knowing that I would end up blogging about everything - I have decided to rename one of my characters.  Football Jacob will henceforth be known as All-American Jacob.  He's probably the most stereotypical, just "All American" kind of guy I have ever met, and that will help you, as the reader, get a better insight into his personality that his previous name, which I have already forgotten.  I apologize in advance for any confusion this might cause.]

So, it got to be Wednesday night before break's beginning on Friday and Ethan and I finally got our acts together and sat down to plan some things out.  We had a general idea of what we wanted to do, and we knew that we had 8 days to make it all happen.  While break actually began Thursday night (no classes Friday due to it being Good Friday), we would not be leaving until Sunday morning.  All-American Jacob's brother and sister had come to visit and wouldn't be leaving until Sunday morning, so we had to push back our departure until he no longer had that obligation on his back.  So anyways, Ethan were sharing a couch, him with his computer, I with a tour book, and we started planning stuff out.  We knew that we wanted to see the glaciers, kayak the Abel Tasman, and see Queenstown's lesser-known twin, Wanaka.  There were other things on the list, but since we didn't end up doing them, I'm not gonna mention them.  We figured it made the most sense to head West first, pass through Wanaka, hit up the Glaciers on our way North, spend a couple days kayaking, and then book it all the way back down South.  While I make this decision process sound easy, it was the product of several hours spent "planning."  The fact that we actually ended up doing just about everything else on the internet BUT plan probably had something to do with our productivity... or lack thereof.  The pinnacle of the trip, a three day kayaking tour through the Abel Tasman National Park, proved to take a little more planning than just us making the decision to go.  With the recent surge in tourism in NZed, the DOC (Department of Conservation) has chosen to regulate the number of people camping in different places around New Zealand.  Several hikes are now designated as "Great Walks," which means that one has to book and pay for campsites along these trails (which are not necessarily "walks") in advance.  During peak season one would probably have to schedule well in advance, but since it is now almost Winter in New Zealand and well out of tourist season, we were able to get a couple spots at sites with only a week notice.

At this point, I think it would probably be helpful to include a map of New Zealand which the reader can refer back to as I talk about our adventures.  So here it is:

The red line marks our route, with dots where we spent a night or more.
SUNDAY:
Saturday night before the trip began, Scruffy E. and I attended Ethan's kiwihost Toni's birthday party.  While turning 21 in New Zealand does not carry with it the legal-privileges it does in the states, people still go pretty crazy for their 21st.  For her event, Toni's friends had planned a surprise party and her parents had rented out one of the bars in town.  While all in attendance had a grand time, partying the night before made our departure in the morning somewhat delayed.  When we finally did get on the road around 11:00 AM, a couple hours after we had hoped to leave Dunedin, Ethan and I elected to take first shifts of not-driving.

one of the many river crossings on the road to Wanaka

Our first stop was Wanaka.  Around 75 kilometers Northwest of Queenstown, Wanaka sits at the Southern end of beautiful Lake Wanaka.  We arrived in Wanaka at 3:00 PM.  All American Jacob, who had just been to Wanaka with his family a couple days previous elected to fish while sending Scruffy E. and I on a "little hike," up Roy's Peak track.  This wee little jaunt up a mountainside was a rather ambitious undertaking considering the late hour (it gets dark around 5:30 or 6:00 by this time of year), and the fact that we had been in a car all day and our legs were rather used to being sedentary.  Nevertheless, with water and cameras in our daypacks, Ethan and I took off up the 4km track which switched back and forth through acres and acres of sheep and cow territory.  Immediately as we left the parking lot, the track took a sharp upward slope.  (Upon return several hours later, we took a look at the map and learned that over the 4km trek up, the trail gains over 1200 meters, so, for those not-so-mathematically-inclined, thats over a meter of rise over every four meters of run.  Which in American units equates to...VERY STEEP.  After a grueling three hour trek up to the summit of Roys Peak, it was getting very close to dark and Scruffy E and I, both from fear of hiking in the dark, and hunger, remained on the gusty top for only long enough to snap a few photos and share a Crunchie (honey comb covered in chocolate) before we turned around and made the knee-pounding walk back down, through overabundance of evidence of sheep and cow activity.  Within only a few minutes of leaving the top it was completely dark and we were glad we had brought our flashlights with us.  While walking by headlamp did make the going much slower, I'm not sure my knees could have taken it any faster.

Roy's Peak from the base
view over Wanaka

























a little ridge near the top (Scruffy E in the distance)
the long-sought Peak


























Upon returning to the parking lot at the head of the trail, we met back up with Jacob who drove us all into Wanaka where we (thankfully) located a hearty meal rather easily at a Kabob place.  It might have been one of the best things I've ever tasted.  We found the backpackers that All American J had stayed at with his family.  While I was completely ready to crawl into bed with my book, Ethan and Jacob convinced me to play some gin rummy with them in the common room/kitchen of the backpackers.  It was all well and good (getting out of bed and not falling asleep before 8pm was probably a good idea) right up until a particularly chatty fellow from Ireland happened into the common room.  While we didn't keep close track, we're pretty sure he didn't stop talking for about three hours.  Although we tried to tune him out as much as we could, we did get part of a story about him rock climbing somewhere with a group of "new-age travelers," who "kept perfect rhythm on the bongos all night long," which created "an epic scene with lights, and climbing, and bongos, and a fire."  These were phrases which we quoted endlessly, particularly the new-age travelers part.  And the bongos part.  At last, we were driven out of the common room and into our beds.

MONDAY:
Up early-ish we packed up our things and headed out of the backpackers.  I took a turn at driving and immediately made the American-in-a-British-colony mistake of driving on the wrong side of the road.  Luckily it was early and we were in a residential street, so Jacob, riding shotgun pointed out my error before we ran headfirst into oncoming traffic.  We got back on the 6 (there are only a handful of "highways" in New Zealand, so the single-digit ones are referred to as The __.  These "highways" however would be a stretch of the US's definition of State Route) and headed for the West Coast.  Crossing the Southern Alps proved a rather difficult task for our beloved Baby Bey.  While I had subconsciously realized this in the past, only during this particular driving session did I realize that she only has three engine notes: grumble, rumble, and roar.  Roar, being the gear most-frequented while climbing the roads of up to 11% grade, is a volume which pierces right through the headphones I was wearing in order to provide myself with some distraction while driving.  Another shortfall of Bey is her lack of stereo system.

The Southern Alps cut by one of the many rivers we crossed

Once on the West Coast and in view of the Tasman Sea which separates Australia from NZed, our route took a turn North towards the Fox and Franz Joseph glaciers.  Making frequent stops along the road North slowed our progress, but the views of the coast and the Tasman Sea were so marvelous we couldn't help but pull over every half hour or so.  Additionally, being from Dunedin, we hadn't seen the sun in a couple weeks, so that also required appreciation.

We arrived at the Fox Glacier, got out, took a little walk which we assumed would take us to look at the glacier, but in fact took us to see some "historic bridge."  The historical significance was not explained, but it was clearly very old and therefore must have something in its past that makes it historical... I guess.  Upon returning to the car we determined that the road that designated "Fox Glacier" was not actually the one we wanted to take, so we drove the couple kilometers back to the highway, and took our next right which lead us up the other side of the river we had just driven by.  This road did take us to the correct place and we were able to do a quick little hike to the glacier.  We we're actually able to get to the glacier though, the trail stops a couple hundred meters short of it.  There were a number of strange signs posted along the 15 minute hike to the glacier including this one, which we can only interpret as, "don't fall in the water or a big wave will come and crush you."  Its a dangerous looking brook, er, river.

big waves in this stream
the rocks must fall out of the air, the path gets nowhere
close to any cliffs



























Back on the road we headed North to the Franz Joseph glacier.  Reportedly "better" than the Fox, we had decided earlier that we wanted to do a somewhat longer trek around the Franz Joseph; a more significant hike than the 15 minute one we did at the Fox.  The glaciers are only a couple kilometers apart and we were soon pulling into a road that would lead us to the parking lot and trail heads.  Almost immediately off the highway we stopped to pick up a hitchhiker.  Kristina, the Taiwanese hitchhiker would prove to be one of the oddest people we encountered during our trip.  After asking us if we had been to Queenstown or Wanaka, she reported that a town that we couldn't make out through her accent was "way better."  She also inquired if we were going heli-hiking, a several thousand dollar adventure that college students probably have absolutely no business doing.  I'm not sure she understood that we don't have money trees in America.  When we arrived at the parking lot we all got out of the van, and while All American Jacob and Scruffy Ethan and I were putting cameras and water bottles in our backpacks, Kristina was getting out her hazmat mask.  We advised her that she prroobbably didn't need that here.  She looked skeptical, but we didn't see her wearing it after that.

Surprisingly, or maybe not-so, the Franz Joseph was very similar to the Fox.  I guess big chunks of ice flowing slowly out of the mountains all look more or less the same: cold, whitish-grayish-blue, and have a river coming out of their base.  Still a beautiful sight though, and one I had definitely never seen before in person.


We found a backpackers that advertised a "free spa," so naturally we felt compelled to spend our night in the town of Franz Joseph appreciating the warm bubbly water.  We pulled into the Rainforest Backpackers, and after some difficulty finding the main office, we booked ourselves a tent site.  The kindly woman who checked us in advised us to go scope out the spa soon because there were some foxy ladies there, but we found it more necessary to eat first.  We set up our tent in the designated area, which happened to be in rather close proximity to the kid's playground equipment.  We didn't really notice it then, but when Ethan and Jacob were awakened bright and early the next morning by children not-so-quietly at play, we figured that was probably a bad place to set up.  After dinner we decided to check out "spa," which turned out to be nothing more than a massive hot tub, but still very nice on the ol' bones.  After a good soak I chose to sleep in the van, opting to not cram all three of us into the tent unnecessarily...p articularly when there is a tempur-pedic bed in the van.

TUESDAY:
We drove farther North, up the coast, before cutting inland.  On our way North we stopped in a small old mining town called Ross which claims to have the largest gold nugget ever discovered in New Zealand.  Well, it doesn't in fact actually have the nugget, it has a replica... so that was a let down.  But the town provided a good break to get out and stretch our legs.  Our next stop was Greymouth where we attempted to find some lunch.  I wandered over to a chinese takeaway place for fish, chips, and a curry rice roll.  Scruffy and All American chose to play it a little safer with some good old KFC (called K-Fry by Kiwis).  This plan, however, completely backfired.  They split the "Dinner for Two" which included chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, cole slaw, and a drink.  The only edible part turned out to be the drink.  I can't explain it, because I didn't eat it, but Jacob and Ethan have sworn they will never eat NZed K-Fry ever again.

We headed back up the coast and stopped at a place called Pancake Rocks.  A very touristy spot, the only "hike" was a paved walk over and through the rocks.  Overcrowded, but pretty cool to see.  Our progress North was slow due to our inability to drive for more than 30 minutes without finding a reason to pull over and admire the sights.

Mountains barely visible in the distance on the horizon
a beach where we stopped for a little beach baseball.
(Notice Jacob and Ethan's matching shirts, how cute)


Pancake rocks... obviously named.
We stopped for the night in Motueka.  We had been trying to get there all day in order to be in the right town when we had to wake up early to go and collect our kayaks for our adventure.  After a food shop we dumped all the contents of our bags onto the bed and floor of a rather small room in a backpackers in order to sort out what we would be needing the following three days.  Since I had gotten the comfy bed in the van the night before, Scruffy E and Jacob (still looking like twins) shared the king size bed which was crammed into our small room.

WEDNESDAY:
We awoke to rain...not a good sign for those people trying to hire kayaks for three days.  Nonetheless, we packed all our gear (its incredible how one can be 90% ready to do something in 10 minutes, and then the remaining 10% takes 30 minutes) into Baby Bey and drove down to the kayak rental place.  When we arrived we were greeted with some not-so-good news: all trips had been canceled for the day due to four meter swells along the coast.  The guy behind the desk told us that the weather was supposed to improve by Thursday and that we could leave then on our adventure if we so desired.  We stayed committed to a three-day paddle, but said we would be back tomorrow to try again with a final answer.

Not to be controlled by something as trivial as weather, the three new-age travelers decided that we would do a hike in the Abel Tasman National Park to get an idea of what we wouldn't be doing for the next three days.  We found a good walk leading up into the hills of the park overlooking the coast which then circled back and followed the coast back to the trail head.  We drove to the parking lot and unloaded all our carefully packed food and clothing only to fill our bags with rain gear, water, and lunch items.  We took off on the trail which begins as a raised path through a swampy area and almost immediately ran into one of Chillin' Matt's flatmates, Levi.  Levi explained that he and Matt had just happened upon the parking lot the night before, had spent the night in their hired van, and in the morning Levi had decided to get out and see where they were.  The absurdity and goofiness of this series of events was not at all surprising to those of us who know Matt.  It is totally reasonable that he would find his way to the parking lot of the Abel Tasman National Park (a good 45 minutes from the nearest town/highway) in the middle of the night, decide to sleep there, and then not have gotten out of his van to figure out where he was by 10:00 AM.

After a gradual start, the "Inland Track" took a turn directly UP.  Unlike the Mount Roy track, this trail had no switchbacks, it was just straight up, and very tiring.  Repeated stops to "enjoy the view," were taken and made the hiking more doable.  We finally reached a clearing we had been told about where there was a hut with two beds and a picnic table.  We took a long lunch before heading down.  Once again, my knees were killing me by the time we reached the flat of the "Coastal Track" for a surprisingly long 12 km walk back to the van.

lunch spot... gray skies much?

the coast the we would be paddling the next couple days.
When we returned to the van we found a note on the windshield.  After initially thinking that we had gotten a ticket for some reason, we found to our relief that Chillin' Matt had left us a note, "Wassup doodes... Heard you saw Levi mad fun we goin for lil hike then headin to westport hit me up if you around keep it E Z" (This is exactly how the note was written, sans punctuation from the get-go).  We chose to stay at a different backpackers that night, wooed by the prospect of another "spa."  We made another grocery stop to replenish our supplies from what we had eaten for lunch and to pick up some dinner makings.  After a fairly delicious feast of chicken, pineapple, red pepper and onion stir-fry over rice the night before, we decided to go a slightly easier route of mac-n-cheese with chopped hot dog.  A full kg of macaroni, another full kg of cheese, and a half kg of hot dog made for quite a feast.  Unable to come anywhere close to finishing five pounds of food, we packaged it up so that we could bring it with us on our paddle adventure.  We never got around to checking out the "spa," which was even less of a spa than at the Rainforest, but we did sleep very well that night.

THURSDAY:
SUN!  We woke up, and once again packed our supplies for the paddle trip into our bags and headed for the rental place.  Unlike the day before, the sun shone brilliantly and we were very optimistic that we would be allowed to start our adventure.  When we arrived at the rental place we were directed to take our van around back to start unloading our gear into our kayaks.  We were given two kayaks, a double and a single.  Scruffy E., being the most experienced of the three of us elected to take the single for the first day.  Kayaks were loaded with gear, and then loaded onto a trailer, and we headed off to the put-in spot near where we had started our day hike the day before.  We would be putting-in with a guide named Sally and two Belgian dudes who she was escorting during their two-day paddle.  Once the kayaks were in the water we were soon on our way.  We had been given a bunch of gear by the kayak company, including waterproof jackets, skirts, booties, bags, and a couple dry bags.  Its remarkable how friendly people are here, all that gear came to us at no extra cost, which stands in stark contrast to the US where one would DEFINITELY be charged for all the little things like that, none of which we needed, but all of which were much appreciated.

We had been kayaking for less than an hour when Sally directed us to beach on a little strip of sand where she would give us a "safety briefing," along with some delicious cake.  The "safety briefing' was given in typical Kiwi style, "so, uhm, yeah couple rules.  Number one, don't be dumb.  Number two, use your flare in emergencies.  Number three, the answer to all problems can be found by adhering to one and two."  While that isn't exactly what Sallygirl told us, thats all we were able to pick out.  We were having serious problems paying attention due to the stunning views that lay before us (no, I'm not talking about Sally, though she was pretty cute).  The sky was startlingly blue.  While we had had fantastic weather for the entire trip, the weather today was like nothing we had seen since our arrival in NZed.

postcard perfect, eh?
After our cake and briefing we paddled across to the island in the picture above to have our lunch and what would become our standard post-lunch beach nap.  With our tarp spread out and the food unpacked, we began to munch away.  We had the entire beach to ourselves for a good while until a couple of intrusive Germans beached their kayak right next to ours and set up their own little picnic well within earshot.  After our nap, feeling about as carefree as one can, we lazily packed our kayaks back up and departed our little beach on Adele Island to begin the process of finding our campsite that we had booked.  we were in no particular haste, so we spent much time exploring the coves and inlets all along the coast until we finally reached our campsite for the night.  Situated in a sizable cove very well protected from the larger waves, our campsite was clearly a popular spot that night.  There were five or six other tents set up along the hundred yard stretch of campground set back from the beach a little ways.

We unpacked our kayaks, setup the tent, and began to do what boys do best - explore their surroundings.  With some quality rock scrambling under our belts, we returned to the campsite to begin cooking dinner.  Dinner, which consisted of spaghetti, sauce and sausage was coming along quite well.  Scruffman Ethan and I were enjoying some quality conversation about previous camp-cooking fiascoes when disaster struck.  Midway through a conversation about mishaps regarding the draining of pasta without the benefit of a strainer... well, I think you can imagine what happened.  We tried to salvage as much as we could, but between the ground seasoning and the not-heated pasta sauce, we were all rather unsatisfied by dinner.  We took a look at the supplies we had brought and decided that we had far more than we were going to need for dinner the next night, so we cooked up some noodles and through in some soup flavoring and more sausage for a hearty stew-ish thing.  It was well after dark by the time we finished cooking dinner round two, and we decided to pack it in after a short lay on the beach staring up at the stars.


FRIDAY:
Paddling, dia numero dos.  We were up early, not quite early enough to see the sunrise, but pretty dang early if I do say so myself.  I made the mistake of commenting to Ethan and Jacob that I was, "feeling a bit slow," that morning.  As I had already developed a little bit of a reputation for not being a morning person, I had a hard time living that comment down.  We breakfasted on fruit and nut bars and had the kayaks loaded fairly quickly.

Once again, we had an entire day of cloudless blue skies.  We paddled up to our next campsite and were there before noon.  Although our campsite was called Mosquito Bay, we determined this to be a complete and utter misnomer.  We set up our tent and staked a claim on a patch of ground next to a picnic table and returned to our boats.  We paddled to the northern most end of the Abel Tasman National Park for our lunch at a place called Tonga Quarry.  While we initially had the beach to ourselves, we were soon intruded on by the infernal noisy Germans from the day before.  We concluded they had bee stalking us, waiting for us to let our guard down before stealing our gummy bears.  But we put our stalkers our of mind and had a great, warm, sunny nap before heading back to the kayaks and paddling back to our campsite.  I had elected to take the single kayak which didn't handle large waves quite as well as the tandem.  When All American Jacob and Scruffy Ethan elected to take the long way 'round a little island where there were supposed to be seals I took the faster inside track back to the Mosquito Bay.  When we had setup camp earlier we assumed that we were the only tent there because of the hour at which we made camp, but in fact, we were going to have the entire lagoon to ourselves that night.  Jacob and Ethan beached a while after I did and we pulled our kayaks far up the beach to avoid them getting swept away when the tide came in that night.  Rather than try to explain the change in water level, I will provide a couple pictures instead...


Scruffy at our private campsite.
Our lagoon at low tide.

Our lagoon getting near high tide as the sun began to set.
Dinner that night was held around a small, yet still very prohibited, fire next to the log in the picture above.  We decided that being the only people camping at this campsite had its privaleges and that the frigid nighttime temperatures necessitated some pre-sleep warm-up.  Reading by headlights and watching the fire grow and die kept us occupied late into the night... or actually until about 9:00 PM.  Not having indoor lights really limits how long one wants to stay awake once the sun has completely set.

SATURDAY:
After our initial apprehension that we would have a really long day of paddling ahead of us on day three since we had been paddling farther North the two previous days, we did some calculating and determined that it should take us all of about 5 hours to paddle back to where we put in from the campsite we where we slept.  Speaking of sleeping, while I was warm and cozy in the tent, Scruffy E. and All American J. chose to sleep outside beside the fire.  They woke up very wet and quite cold and were ready to go waay before I even managed to crawl out of the tent.  I had determined that day before that the inflatable air pad that I was using, which had been thrown in to the Gus Bus deal, had a hole somewhere and was therefore unable to provide much in the way of comfort.  The hole must have been fairly small because a fair level of air could be maintained if one was rather diligent at inflating it.

At All American Jacob's urging, we began our day early, without even the courtesy of breakfast, not that I usually eat breakfast, I just take full advantage of the time that I therefore gain while E and J are eating.  As I learned later, we were moving fast so that we could explore the lagoons before the tide went out and made the lagoons inaccessible.  Ever since the word lagoon was first mentioned, I repeatedly inquired if we were going to explore Blue Lagoon, a pretty terrible Brooke Shields cult classic that frequently plays on bad movie channels between the hours of 3 and 6 AM in the US.  I think my compadres got kinda tired of that question, but I got rather weary of them calling every bird we saw either a penguin or a kiwi.  A penguin was any bird seen on or near the water, a kiwi was any other bird.  As far as my limited knowledge of our aviary friends goes, during the entirety of our trip we saw neither kiwi nor penguin... or Brooke Shields for that matter.




Having satisfied our need to explore a couple lagoons, we beached up and got around to having a late breakfast.  Driven off quickly by sand flies, we paddled on South and arrived at Adele Island (our day one lunch stop) around 1:00 PM.  We decided to end the trip as it began with lunch and a nap on the beach at Adele.  After lunch and a nap we made for the bay in which we had initially put in and tried to figure out what we were supposed to have heard Sallygirl say during our briefing about getting picked up.  Luckily, we spotted her and the tractor and trailer she had driven out on a sand bar and made a B-line for her.  We unpacked out kayaks and loaded them on the trailer.

Once back at the rental place, we loaded the stuff back into Baby Bey and got back on the road.  We figured that we needed to cover well over 700 kms over a day plus in order to get back to Dunedin by Sunday afternoon.  We made some significant progress, but by the time we got to Blenheim we decided that it was time to stop for the night.  We pulled over in a gas station and evaluated the backpacker options in Blenheim (pronounced Blen-um).  As our guide book explained, "Blenheim is a flat, dead, old farming town."  We found this a very accurate description... except for the flat part, there were more speed bumps in Blenheim than we had encountered in the rest of New Zealand combined.

We selected a backpackers on principle of its offer of a Playstation 2.  After locating the Arrow Backpackers, which turned out to be in a very sketchy area of town we pulled in to the parking lot, and surprise-surprise, we were the only car in the lot.  Just as we were making the decision to find somewhere else to stay that night a hospitable looking Asian gentleman stepped out onto the porch.  Ethan made eye contact, and at that point it became too late to leave.  The gentleman who barely spoke understandable English, but who's name we determined was Bruce, ushered us inside and INSISTED that we all sit on a rather small love seat.  (Three dudes, one van just became three dudes on a love seat)  Bruce requested ID so he could take down some information, so we all handed over our 18+ cards (standard NZed ID for people without NZed driver's licences).  He looked at these in the same way I imagine Socrates would look at an iPhone, rolling them around in his hand and staring blankly at them.  When he asked if we had any other forms of identification, Jacob and Ethan produced their US state drivers licenses and I gave Bruce my student ID.  He seemed less happy with these, but reluctantly took them and started copying down numbers left and right.  We concluded he had no idea what he was doing because the numbers he took down we the inconsequential ones that only someone with a deep understanding of the DMV would have any reason to understand.  Bruce required that we pay in cash, which none of us had, so we got back in the Gus Bus and headed back into town.  Immediately when we entered the van we all started talking at once about how we should probably stay somewhere else for fear of getting ax-murdered.  We had contracted a case of the giggles and that coupled with our actual slight fear of the place made for a very interesting trip to the ATM.  Cash in hand we returned to Bruce an paid him.  He insisted on giving us a very thorough tour of the complex (including the rooms that were empty).  Its very difficult to convey the entirety of the creepiness of the place through words.  (If you are really interested in hearing a very animated story, ask me in person sometime)  It became clear how little English Bruce and his wife understood when we started reading the signs posted around the backpackers.  Next to the love seat we had been forced onto there was a sign that read "NO VISITORS."  On the refrigerator in the kitchen there was a sign which read, "Please note that SOMOE FOOD STUFFS have been stolen by someone like shop lifter.  This kind of action is a STEALAGE definitely and destroyed an atmosphere in BACKPACKERS life."  There was another sign that read, "EVERYONE DO NOT WANTED TO GET DIRTY IN THE KITCHEN."  We were so on edge that we actually traveled around the backpackers in a group, never allowing one person to be separated from the others.  It was a crazy night, punctuated by someone getting up at 4:30AM and watching Asian language TV very loudly in the lounge across the hall from our room.

SUNDAY:
(I'm getting REALLY tired of writing and there isn't much to write about for this day, so...)  We woke up early, with no complaints from me for once, and headed for home.  Three hours of driving by each of us later and we were pulling into my driveway at 669/3 Castle St.  It was good to be home.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

rave in the cave and some mid-way ruminations

So you know how the subtitle of this blog is "rants, raves, and ruminations on antipodean adventures?"  Yeah, well until this point there has been much raving, the occasional ranting, but very little ruminating on my experiences. This post, being submitted on the first day of the second half of my time in NZ, will have but one story, and then some actual ruminating.  We'll see how it goes.

The Story:


Not long after landing in New Zealand, I began to hear tales of a party which was thrown in a cave not far from Dunedin.  One of the advisers from Arcadia (the program through which I came to NZed), a woman named Chandra who graduated from Denison randomly enough in '06 and who had spent her semester abroad in Dunedin told me of this uniquely-located party.  It took me two months and many "next weekend guys, rave in the cave is happening," before I actually got my so-called ducks in a line and it actually was the next weekend.  Planning for a party in a remote location like a cave -- which also happened to be on the beach, as if it weren't awesome enough already -- is a rather tedious experience.  Before starting to arrange for the hire (what they call rental here in NZed) I began to make a list of the items I thought I would need in order to ensure a raucous and joyful time was had by all attending.  Among this list were things as easy to come by as trash bags and matches for the starting of a cave-mouth fire, as well as items as difficult to find as speakers and a generator for the powering of said speakers and some lights.  Considering the success of the fete hung contingently upon the locating of the latter two items, I decided to make sure I could in fact hire them before announcing the event to my oh-so-(not)-extensive number of friends I have in Dunedin... oh, hold-up, I didn't wait, I announced the party before securing a single item or determining prices... in retrospect, kinda foolish, but it all worked out, so no worries.  Justin and I had checked out the cave, so thats some preparation at least.  The party was scheduled for Thursday night in order to avoid a block party being held a street over from my residence on Saturday, and my friends were informed.  I hoped that I had left enough time for word of the party to disseminate to a large number of people.

A generator proved easy enough to find.  Every time the Gus Bus made the trip to the beach, we passed a store called HireQuip which always had scissor-lifts, large generators, and other construction equipment for hire.  After a phone call to "Craig" (or maybe it was Greg, I couldn't tell through the accent) at HireQuip, I determined that was just about the only place in Dunedin to hire a small generator.  Speakers were not quite as easy.  I had been to a party a couple weeks past where a guy had a massive pair of speakers.  Luckily, Mellow Andrew plays soccer with the host of the party and was able to figure out where he rented his equipment.  We were pointed in the direction of a place called Strawberry Sound downtown.  On the Tuesday before the party Kiwi Justin and I headed in town in the Gus Bus to locate this Strawberry Sound place and figure out how much this was going to cost.  With Kiwi J holding down Baby Bey in a non-parking spot outside, I found my way to the office in the back of a large storage building.  Guy number one was on the phone engaged in a very strange yet humorous conversation, so I was directed to talk to guy number two who looked to be significantly more crotchety than guy number one.  This impression was confirmed.  I explained that I needed to "hire" speakers for a party, to which guy number two asked how big they needed to be, to which I responded (in error) something about they needed to be big enough to fill a large cave with music.  At this point the guy made it plain that he wanted nothing to do with renting speakers to a party with sand involved.


Lesson learned, we very luckily stumbled upon another speaker-hire place.  Long story short, I negotiated the hire of two 15" speakers with stands (to keep them out of the sand), two strobe lights, a music-reactive laser light, and a 4-color flashing light for the rather low price.  On Wednesday I headed out to the Home Depot-owned Mitre 10 MEGA to pick up a power strip and extension cord to stretch from the generator to the music station.


Thursday, day of, was a rather stressful day.  I roped Kiwi J into chauffeur me around while we picked up the speakers, lights, generator, and gas, all of which needed to be done before 4 PM, when I had to be back on campus for a test in my political science class.  With the test behind me (and feeling like I had done a pretty solid job), we collected those friends of mine unfortunate enough to be close enough friends that they were asked to help me set up and drove out to the cave.  When we arrived it was already dark.  Even the drive in had been pretty precarious due to a cloud that had settled heavily on the Otago peninsula.  We parked as close as we could to the path marked "Beach Access," unloaded Baby Bey (who had barely been able to power the five of us and all the equipment over the steep hills) and started the rather long trek towards the cave.  The speakers themselves were definitely not light, weighing around 40 lbs each, but the generator was a whole different matter.  Big Tim and Football Jacob, being the two strongest and biggest members of the set-up team had been volunteered to carry the generator.  Like champs they carted the well over 100 pound behemoth all the way into the cave where Scruffy E, Kiwi J and I had begun to lay out the lights and ironing board which would serve as an impromptu DJ table.  Once all was set up and wood had been collected for a fire all there was left to do was wait.  By 10 or so around 50 people had shown up, far more than I was actually expecting.  No official headcount was ever taken, but I asked people for small donations in order to help me recoup some of the expense and I ended up making a $10 profit, so there were a fair number there for sure.

Kiwi Justin getting his dance maybe a little too early... typical.

some fun with long-exposure in the lasers
 
getting my dance on at the appropriate time, naturally


























rave-ing in a cave.  the light on the left is not the fire, just the awesome four-color lights...

Big Tim, DJ Jono the Kid, and Scruffy Ethan a.k.a. DJ Skeeter
For those who chose to stick around, the night was spent sleeping on the sand floor of the cave, which, surprisingly, is not as comfortable as one might think.  While the sleeping situation was merely uncomfortable, the cleanup in the morning was straight-up painful.  The speakers and generator had both gained a significant amount of weight and we had all lost speed.  The set-up crew minus Big Tim, plus Goofy Andrew hauled themselves and equipment back into Baby Bey and headed for home.  Equipment was returned to its rightful place, and I took up my rightful place in my bed for the rest of my night's sleep, but not until after Goofy Andrew Skaggs and I made a large mess of omelets and hash browns.

The Ruminations:

Rave in the cave was one of my favorite experiences in New Zealand; one of many that I have had with my best bro's - Ethan and Justin.  Before coming to New Zealand I had the same trepidations that a couple good friends from Denison had as they began their semesters abroad, that the friends we made would not be as good as the friends we had at home.  I was not concerned that I would make friends, I knew I would.  Being an easygoing, jovial, somewhat charismatic guy, I like people and make friends with relative ease, but I had worried that when I got to New Zealand the friends I would make would be friends of convenience and not true friends.  When one finds oneself in a long-term situation where one meets many people and has time to get to know them, one makes good friends by choosing among those who they interact with.  When in a situation like traveling abroad, there aren't as many people to draw one's friends from.  I am lucky that I found two great dudes who I thoroughly enjoy spending time with. 


It seems to me as though those people who choose to study abroad in New Zealand share some commonality that I cannot exactly identify within my own mind, let alone articulate clearly to someone else.  Most, but not all, of the internationals I have met here in Dunedin, and during my overlap with the kids I have met who chose Auckland are highly independent, adventurous -- not necessarily in an outdoorsy way though -- and fun people.


Some more about this place, Dunedin, in which I live.  Dunedin was founded by Scottish settlers in the late 18th century.  Its name comes from the Gaelic for Edinburgh and the main party of the city is actually planned according to the layout of its Scottish counterpart.  While the city is still clearly influenced by its Scottish heritage (there was a bagpipes competition held in the center of the city, a place called the Octagon, the first weekend I was in Dunedin) it is even more heavily influenced by the college-age population of the city.  According to the last census, and many Kiwis I talk to, one in four Dunedin residents is a college student.  That number skyrockets to at least three of four in the section immediately surrounding the University.  The Uni Flats area of Dunedin, is quite large, extending over a mile or so and about four blocks wide.  It is definitely a fun place to live for a semester, what with the occasional couch burning, the constant sound of music coming from no fewer than two houses within earshot at all times, and the outpouring of students on party nights, but it is definitely not a place I would want to live for all four of my college years, too chaotic.


Coming to New Zealand I had the expectation of meeting a lot of Kiwis and getting to be friends with a number of antipodean residents, but herein lies the biggest change from my expectation.  The Kiwis I have met, both Kiwihost and just regular student alike have been very nice,  very congenial, very welcoming.  I have become good friends with Kiwi J's host CrayCray Sasha and my host, Industrious Josh.  But as for the rest of the Kiwi community, I could not number any more of them among my good friends.  I do not criticize them for this, and it is not for lack of trying on the standpoint of international students, but when I reflect on the culture surrounding those students who come to Denison to study for a semester, there is no great effort to become great friends with them, because at the end of the semester, they leave.  At a college where international students are so common (there are about 400 of us in my Maori Society class), it is totally reasonable that Kiwis wouldn't spend their time befriending someone they view as a passer-through.

As a whole, Kiwis are an outrageous group.  The students are among the most boisterous, insane people I have ever met.  But individually, they are just like people I know back in the States, only they have really funny accents.  They also have what I would call very "hipster" clothing.  Girls wear, almost exclusively, skirts with black leggings, a loose-fitting top, and a jacket.  Guys wear either stubbies (short shorts) or dark jeans with flat-bottomed shoes and a t-shirt.  Colors do not seem to be a thing that Kiwis appreciate as far as clothing goes.  Needless to say, international students stick out just because of our fashion like a sore thumb. 

I will leave you with a few of the amusing/hilarious phrases and words that I have grown accustom to during my time here:

entree - appetizer
main - entree
coffee - I don't know what this liquid is, but it isn't coffee
pash - to make out with someone
coma - to fall into a heavy sleep due to anything, exhaustion, drinking, etc.
pin your ears back - RUN FAST!
the lounge - the living room
flat - apartment
_____ as - a good-for-anything compliment (sweet as, yum as, windy as, etc.)  the word after the "as" is implied
scull - chug quickly
stubbies - shorts
jandals - flip-flops/sandals
togs - swimsuit
Zed - Z
sneans - sneakers and jeans, a trademark of international (read: American) students
[more additions to this list coming...]

Sunday, April 10, 2011

visitors and the great migration

It feels like a long time since I was last here attempting to express the intricacies of Kiwi life in words, probably because it has been a long time, and for that, I apologize.

Since my last post there has been a fundamental change in my life here in New Zealand, but more on that later, don't want to get ahead of myself...

Life with Baby Bey continued much as life without the her, except now traveling farther than the Octagon (the center of Dunedin, so named for the octagonal park in the center which is surrounded by a "roundabout," which obviously is a misnomer since its an "octagonabout") is done by motorized transport rather than foot.  This simplifies life a lot.  Going to the beach, going for a large grocery buy, hauling surf boards, etc. is all much easier when one actually has a vehicle and does not have to depend on others' generosity or public transpo.

The day after we picked up our beloved Baby Bey, my good friends from the North Island graced Dunedin with their presence.  The compass-point girls and Sunny Sarah arrived in Dunedin on Thursday evening and after getting settled into their backpackers (what Kiwis call a hostel) at the North end of town they joined Scruffy E and me at Kiwi Justin's flat for some shenanigans and revelry.  Thursday night is a big party night in Dunedin and so we did it up right, which produced a late wake-up Friday.  I called up Northern Leah and I figured out where to meet the girls - they had eaten brunch at a place in town.  Considering how beautiful the weather that day was, we made a B-line for the beach.  We piled into the Gus Bus with all kinds of beach toys and rolled the couple miles to our favorite part of St. Clair Beach.  After several versions of soccer and other balls sports had been exhausted we decided to explore the end of the beach we had not yet seen.  We headed down towards a bluff which Ethan, Justin and I had been told was a spot frequented by suicidal New Zealanders until the government closed the road which ran to the end of the cliff, now its just a beautiful park.  The bluff was a lot farther than it seemed when we began our walk, but eventually the whole crew, Northern Leah, Southern Browning, Chillin Matt, Kiwi Justin, Scruffy Ethan, and I (minus Sunny Sarah who had passed out on the beach during our soccer game so we decided not to disturb her peaceful slumber) made it to a rocky outcropping right next to the cliff.  We found a cave in the bluff and quickly developed a game involving the water droplets dripping off the roof of the cave.  Similar to Neo dodging the Agents' bullets (reference to the movie The Matrix, for all those over the age of 30), one looked straight up and watched the drops fall in slow motion towards them and tried to avoid getting hit by them.  It was an (almost) endlessly entertaining game, but neck pain and hunger soon drove us back to Baby Bey and then on to the grocery to buy supplies for dinner. 


Scruffy E. lookin' fresh with the bluff in question in the background on the right.
E, J and I cooked up a delicious mess of sloppy joes and salad which were thoroughly enjoyed by all the Americans at Justin's flat, but were utterly scorned by his Kiwihost, Craycray Sasha (short for Crazycrazy Sasha, so named because nothing else really seems to fit, she's just wild) and her Kiwi friends.  Equally mocked by the natives was our ingestion of potato chips with our sloppy joe's.  [Author's note, if one ever needs to have their ego tempered, I suggest spending a little time around Craycray.  She will make fun of just about every "strange" American habit/word/activity/fashion etc., but all in a funny way.  We let her know how weird her Kiwi-isms are too.]

Saturday I again met the girls in town and we walked around for a bit before deciding that the best way to spend the day was in the Botanical gardens checking out the last of the Summer flowers and wondering at the massive collection of flora that Dunedin has collected in its pristine Gardens.  Trees of all varieties, flowering bushes and other flowering plants abound, but the flowers themselves are now far more scarce than when we first arrived in February.

pristine is the word that comes to mind
the Mediterranean Garden


























Saturday night we headed into town to find a club where we could get our dance on.  Since Scruffy Ethan, Kiwi Justin, and I had spent much of the previous two nights discussing the awesomeness/absurdity of a frequent first-stop of ours called Monkey Bar, so we decided to start there.  An old church converted into a bar and dance club, Monkey Bar is frequented by the "freshers" of Otago University, a clientele which definitely contributes to the absurdity of the establishment.  Dancing is encouraged everywhere at Monkey Bar, on the dance floor, on the tables, on the windowsills, in what used to be the choir loft, in the basement, and (for those girls attractive enough) on the bar.  It is definitely a novelty place, falling into the "you should go once, and just once," category.  After a short time I managed to lose every single person I came to Monkey with and, since my phone died, was unable to find anyone I knew for quite a while.  Searching through a sea of dancers is pretty difficult, for those of who were wondering.  The girls left at the outrageously early time of 5:30 AM on Sunday.  I didn't bother getting out of bed for a long time after that...



Remember at the beginning of this post when I hinted at a big story?  Well, here it is:

A diligent reader of my blog will probably have noticed that I talk very little about my flatmates.  This is not an oversight on my part, it is a function of there being nothing good to say.  In my rather short life I have met many people, some with BIG personalities, some with little personalities, I had never met someone withOUT a personality, let alone, three of them who all lived together.  As any reader of this blog knows, I thoroughly enjoy the simple things in life like discussion, conversation, good food, and pleasant human interaction.  These may be very tall orders, maybe my expectations are unreasonable, but I doubt it.  My experience at 4/167 Dundas Street had not been terrible, but it was definitely not one that would ever merit the use of the word "enjoyable" in its description.  This is not to say that Quirky Betina (my Kiwihost), Drinking Suz (if tea-drinking were a sport, she would be a formidable foe), and Bustling Tom aren't wonderful people, I'm sure their mothers' love them very much.  We just shared ABSOLUTELY nothing.  I had been petitioning the woman in charge of Uni(versity) Flats since the day of the Christchurch Earthquake to find me a new spot to live which would augment my Kiwi experience.  As some of you may not know, many students who had been attending the Univerisity of Canterbury (the school in Christchurch) transferred down to Otago after the Earthquake.  Due to this significant influx of students and a crazed scramble to find housing for them, my petty request to switch flats was put on the back burner.  Despite the assurances of the woman at Uni Flats, I recognized that my desire came second to the needs of the Christchurch kids.  Finally, on Friday, March 25 I got the call I had been waiting for.  I was to have a meeting on Monday morning with the Uni Flats lady to discuss a possible transfer.  I eagerly awaited my 11 AM meeting all weekend.  Just before 11, as I was walking to the woman's office, I got a call from the woman herself saying that things weren't yet finalized and that I didn't need to come in.  I said that was fine and asked her to inform me when she was ready to meet with me, but as the day progressed I grew more and more frustrated with this game she had been playing with me and decided that action needed to be taken.  I walked myself over to her office and requested an explanation of what was going down.  This seemed to make a difference, so much so that she actually called the Kiwi host at the flat she was considering moving me into and asked him to stop by.  She introduced me to Josh and asked if he would walk me by the flat for me to check it out.  Within minutes of leaving the office, I knew that this new flat would be far more up my alley than the previous one.  Industrious Josh (not the most fluid name, but he is the most industrious person I have ever met.  He's always doing something.  Cooking, studying, working, etc.) introduced me to Goofy Andrew Skaggs (he's just a goofball.  that is all), Mellow Andrew Lund (yes, I live with two Andrews, and he's just very relaxed and hard to excite.  Even when he is excited, he's excited in a mellow way), and explained that there were also two girls who lived in the flat Emmy and Terri.  I explained that I thought I knew Emmy, and after some of the "is she this height, this color hair, kinda like this..." discussion, we determined that yes, I did in fact know her.  A close friend of Affable Dave's cousin Spunky Casey, Boisterous Emmy (big personality in a little girl) and I had met weeks earlier.

My exodus out of my old flat was the epitome of stealth.  I managed to pack all of my belongings including a fair amount of groceries (which I had to keep in my room because there was no space in the kitchen due to all of the stupid tea cups) into bags and load these bags into the Gus Bus (driven by Kiwi J).  I think the easiest way to describe the awesomeness of my new flat is to draw a list of contrasts:
Number of flatmates that partied at old flat: 0 (not including me, which would raise the number to 1)
Number of flatmates that party at the new flat: 6 (not including the 5 or so people who hang out here constantly)
Number of times I enjoyed family dinner at the old flat: 0
Number of times I enjoy family dinner at the new flat: every night.
Number of times the old flat threw me a welcome party: 0
Number of times the new flat threw me a welcome party: 1 (per night for the first three nights, starting Wednesday)
Number of engaging conversations at the old flat: 0 (come to think of it, there weren't any conversations period)
Number of engaging conversations at the new flat: too many to count
Number of times I went on a spontaneous trip with old flatmates: 0
Number of times I went on a spontaneous trip with new flatmates... there's a story here...

So one Sunday night sitting around the new flat playing rummy with the Andrews, Boisterous Emmy, and Eager Rachel (friend of the flat), I said that I wanted to go to a place not far from Dunedin called Moeraki Boulders (see pictures below).  After a significant amount of agreement that Moeraki was a cool place and definitely one that needed to be explored, someone suggested that we leave immediately and go camp out and wake up for the sunrise.  This was a brilliant idea.  The fact that it was already after midnight and that Moeraki is about an hour's drive away was entirely inconsequential to five enthused 20-somethings.  Once we had verified that we were in fact going and this wasn't another case of, "Yeah, thats a great idea. Lets do that!" only to be followed by inactivity, we all packed a couple necessities and piled into two cars and took off.  With only a rough idea of where we were going, what could possibly go wrong?  An hour north of Dunedin, we arrived at the Boulders' site quite easily.  Once my compadres had found an agreeable spot to camp on a bluff (I was sleepin in the Gus Bus) and had set up their tents, we found our way down to the beach and began exploring.  With the sky deeply overcast, there was very minimal light, only barely illuminating the almost perfectly round boulders rising out of the sand.  It was very eerie.  After getting our initial fix, we headed back to our beds and arranged to wake up around 6:30 in the morning to be sure we would catch the morning's first light.  I awoke around 6:00 to the sound of rain coming down fairly hard on the roof of Baby Bey.  This was not promising.  I fell back asleep hoping that in half an hour's time, the rain would have dissipated... which it did.  I got out of the Bus, dressed, and made my way back down to the beach.  Light was only just beginning to touch the horizon.  A picture is worth a thousand words, no?  Well in the interest of not trying to write another couple thousand words, here are some pictures: