The last week or so has offered a slight break from bush living and a reintroduction to the civilized world. We have been welcomed into the homes of friends, once again experienced the sensation of a hot shower (gasp!), and been immersed in the beautifully unique, modern, and artistic urban culture of Wellington. But, it is of course just a temporary break as we will be venturing into the truly wild and vast landscapes of the South Island in the coming days.
We said goodbye to our English friends Kit and Rich (and their van Frank) on one of our last days in Hawke's Bay. They were in a bit
of a rush to make it down to Wellington (the capital of New Zealand, located on the very southern tip of the North Island) for their scheduled ferry to the South Island. To be honest, I was anxious to get to Wellington as well. Other than Auckland, every city we've stopped in has ranged from small to very small and I was looking forward to change. However, we agreed to hold out a bit longer and make sure we took in the remaining sights before reaching what would be our final stop of the North Island.
One of these sights was Havlock North (oddly there is no Havlock South), arguably one of the top wine regions of New Zealand. A cheap bottle here
tastes like something twice it's price. And the expensive ones... well I wouldn't know with my backpacker budget, but I'd be willing to bet they're pretty good too. Wine is nice, but after 4 weeks of cold "showers", if they could even be called that, a real hot shower is even better. And, we got just that at Jess's house in Havlock North. Jess is a friend of Julia. They originally met in a hostel in Melbourne, Australia, and coincidentally, they ran into each other at a cafe while we were in Hawke's Bay. She showed us a night on the town of Havlock North, offered us hot showers, and let us do some laundry and cooking. Things that I had at one point thought of as a hassle, but now stick out as highlights of the week. The town of Havlock North is
also the wealthiest per capita of New Zealand. It was obvious by the bleached
blonde fifty something women sipping wine at small tables along the main strip. It was also apparent in the social atmosphere of the pubs. There was plenty of chat, but it remained in small tight cliques that nobody dared venture from besides the quick stuck-up jealous glances from one girl to another. Not a bad area, but you'll probably enjoy it more by driving along the rolling hills of the wine country and
spending the evening at Ocean Beach as we did the second night there.
Our last destination before going to Wellington was the Kapiti Coast. On the way there, I was in charge of navigating. While I managed well for the most part, the music and scenery proved too distracting and there was this one slight turn we missed. Luckily I caught the mistake... an hour later. (shhh... Susi and I never told Julia who was reading a book in the back at the time. She has a tendency to get upset easily so we figured it best she remained out of the loop on that one). Anyways, the mistake turned out to be quite nice as it forced us to cross through this very narrow one lane (you pull over for oncoming traffic) road through misty mountains covered in rainforest. These are the same misty green mountains shown briefly during the introduction to Lord of the Rings. Other than the constant fear that I was about to die the drive and views through the area were incredible. Mental Image - picture this: A VERY narrow one way road filled with blind, hairpin corners, wet roads from the recent rain, and your driver is a blonde german girl with a lead foot, 3 weeks of left hand driving experience, and 2 years lifetime driving experience, all the while carelessly bobbing her head back and forth to the blaring sounds of some overly energetic spanish music.
As you may have guessed, we did fortunately survive and arrived at our destination, the Kapiti Coast. This coastline is a long stretch of Tasman beach that looks out upon an island called -guess what-... Kapiti Island. The island itself looks about the size of Catalina Island, only its much closer to shore, just 15 minutes by boat. The island is a protected bird refuge. Birds that are rare or even extinct on the mainland of New Zealand flourish in the island sancturary, likely due in part to the daily limit of visitors, allowing only 50 people to step foot on the island per day. Because of this, the lonely planet guide reccommends reserving a trip to the island 1 month in advance for weekday trips and 2 months for weekends... of course we didn't read this until the day we arrived, it was a weekend as well. :( But, what's better than seeing rare birdlife upclose? Another hot shower! This time, it was at the beachfront house of Su and Troy, both artists in the film industry. Su creates sculptures for scenese in movies, movie priemeres, and all sorts of industry conventions and shows. Troy's work is similar, but he specializes in scenic sculptures and painting, basically enhancing scenes to look better than they would have looked naturally.
They've both worked in the industry for around 20 years and have had a hand in a number of big budget mainstream titles.
The first night we stayed at their house Troy showed us some video he recorded documenting his and Su's latest work together on a film by director Roland Emmerick, known for his movies of epic scale such as Independence Day. It was inspiring to see on video the place they called their 'office' for the 3 months of work they did for the film near Queenstown on the South Island. They woke up each day at 5:00am for the rugged cliff-hugging drive to these surreal mountain top views of the sun rising in a brilliant display of colors, cloud formations, and a layer of fog that sometimes looked like water turning the tips of mountains above into little islands. Every day was its own individual artistic display. Su and Troy were great hosts and made it clear that it was very important to them that we feel completely at home and welcome in their house. They made delicious meals of pasta with a spicy organic sauce made from scratch with a sweet and tangy side salad, pancakes bacon and grilled banana halves in the morning, and following a long leisurely day on the beach behind their house we had sauteed shrimp for an appetizer before feasting on lamb, veges, and sweet potato. All enjoyed from the second floor deck looking out to the beach and Kapiti Island. For a brief moment I was no longer a backpacker. I was royalty.
After the second night at their house, we all made a convoy to Wellington for the Waitangi Day celebrations. A little Waitangi Day history lesson: Waitangi Day is the day in which the Waitangi agreement between the Maori's and the European settlers was signed. As I've come to learn, the agreement has been and still is a source of controversy and tension in the country. One of the major reasons for the disagreement is that there were actually two versions of the treaty, one in English, and the other in Maori. The translation to Maori was less than perfect with some items being added and others ommitted, resulting in the two parties agreeing to slightly differing terms.
We celebrated by going to the massive Reggae flavored 'One Love' festival in the city. The music was great, featuring the top reggae influenced groups of New Zealand. The crowd was friendly, saying hello to strangers and picking up conversation with the people sitting next to you. They had had a cool hacky sack and poi section, and of course it wouldn't be a festival without beer and clouds of that thick pluming smoke floating through the crowd. We stayed as long as our bladders and freshly sun baked skin could
hold out before parting with Su and Troy, each on our way to get our own versions of munch... er... food; sushi for the film industry mogles and 2 minute noodles for the backpackers.
That was Tuesday, leaving us one week to explore the whole of Wellington before our scheduled ferry to the South Island on the following Tuesday. I'm writing this as of Friday night, about half way through my time here in Wellington and so far I love it. In all aspects of the city there is a richly modern and historic artistic influence, from the skyscraper and building architecture, to the open air cafes with walls of abstract paintings populated by people with diverse clothing styles and backgrounds, to the street side sculptures, pieces of art you can walk through, insane waterfront contraptions that spin, bend and spray water, and poems embossed on solid stone lying amogst a pile of rocks like they were always there.
I've spent a total of 8 hours over two days exploring the super modern, newly built Te Papa museum littered with high tech interactive displays and ground breaking designs and still have yet to see it all. I've walked along the waterfront and marveled at the huge skate and bmx scene that's developed around the skatepark. On the outside walls of the skatepark are these cool wall climbing zones with this interesting rubber ground that's easy to walk along, but once you put a lot of weight on it, it absorbs the impact like a trampoline. They have the same material beneath all the kids playgrounds, which by the way are way cooler than the skin scorching, steel slides I slid on as a kid. Instead they have a practice skateboard half-pipe on rails, and a pyramid net that climbs up through trees. The water in the city bay is incredibly clean like the rest of New Zealand, but I still find it hard to believe given the the size and relative business of the port. The water isn't just for looking either, all along the wharf are ladders to climb the 15 feet out of the water and oddly enough there more than often happens to be a big structure to jump off of nearby as well. I jumped off some wood planks jutting out from the side of the wharf yesterday and today saw a crowd of people looking on as a guy climbed 20 feet up a waterside building and jump off followed by another guy climbing a 35 foot crane next to the water and jumping. The nightlife is equally exciting with a load of live bands everywhere, cheap to free cover charges, and its legal to drink in the
streets so instead of shelling out $7 for a beer, you take a break from dancing and grab that $0.80 bottle you hid in the bush before you walked in. There's so much to see and admire, I actually had a lot of fun spending an afternoon walking around the city listening to the ipod and watching the people and places descreetly behind a pair of sunglasses. It seems that every piece of the city is worthy of a long hard look. It's obvious that a lot of passion and thought lies behind it all.
After my breakfast and morning swim tomorrow, I'll be packing a lunch and spending the day at the 'X-Air 2007' events. They're the New Zealand equivelent of the x-games and happen to be taking place in Wellington while we're in town. On Sunday, we'll catch the second part of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. The theatre here in Wellington was the site of the world priemere showing of the final Lord of the Rings and has sort of become a mecca for fans of the series. It's probably the most pristinely decorate
d and furnished theatres I've been to with intricate details all along the walls and light fixtures, marble floors, extremely high vaulted ceilings, and plush leather seats fitted with gold tags on the arm wrests, etched with the names of the friends and family of the Lord of the Ring producers. Recently, they began showing the trilogy sequentially, one part every Sunday. We caught the first installment last Sunday (we saw Troy's name in the credits).
Long post, but its been a pretty exciting week or so. The next post will be from the South Island, later!
............
(The sound of car tires screeching to a halt)
As usual, it took me a couple days to get everything above posted up on the site. Since then, through the below series of events and some long consideration, I've decided to part with Julia and Susi. They will be moving on with the van to the South Island and I will be staying to live and work in Wellington for the coming months.
I met a couple guys from Auckland, Ben and Anthony that were camping out in their car next to us in front of the beach. They came down here for the x-air show, Ben was actually competing in the motocross water jump where he attempted a double back flip but only made 1 1/2 rotations. After parking all day in a grocery store parking lot, they ended up getting their car towed. To make matters worse, they only came with money for food and gas and couldn't afford to bail
The whole situation was quite funny because it basically doesn't get worse than that. They had about $20 between the two of them, no place to sleep, and no food. That night, Ben and I, along with some Irish sisters we had met the night before, wandered the main party streets, checked out some live music, and walked along the beach. Ben, with no place to sleep for the night, was looking to crash at their hotel room with them. I knew that they were staying with their parents in a hotel room and that he had no chance but I didn't have the heart to break it to the guy. Inevitably, at the end of the night, the girls and us parted ways and it looked like he would be stuck sleeping on the beach in the freezing wind. But, we had a break.
At about 2am, as we were walking back to the van in bitter defeat, we saw a group of people swimming (we thought skinny dipping) at the beach. Ben had the idea of heading down and asking them if we could use their phone to send a text message. A brilliant plan, because it of course led into the unbelievable story about his current situation. So, we got to talking to the
It turns out Anthony had wandered back to the van and was sleeping there, between Susi and Julia. I'm assuming he was uninvited but they didn't want to talk about it. They were angry. And the anger was directed at me just as much as Anthony. They weren't fond of Anthony, and neither was I to be honest, but without saying so, it was clear they blamed me for him sleeping in the van.
I walked away and thought about the situation, trying to figure out what had led to the obvious factions that were forming. In the last week it seemed that arguments were creeping up too easily between us. Simple things, like questions of who was supposed to wash a pan or dish were becoming difficult. Conversation was often limited to one sentence questions and answers. It was clear we were all getting on each others nerves.
I've come to the conclusion that while we could easily be good friends, and even live together in a hostel room without a problem, there are very few people that you can live in a van with. We were together all day and all night. We shared a little space where a little mess could quickly turn into a catastrophe. Everything we did and everywhere we went had to be agreed upon between the three of us. This alone is difficult for an extended period of time. Now add in a language barrier and I'm impressed we did pull it off for a month!
So last night I informed them that I would be staying in Wellington as they moved on to the South Island this coming Saturday (we rescheduled the ferry). We were all sort of sad to see the end come, but I think we understand it was the best decision and nobody is angry about it. We'll be working out the money situation tonight, but it looks like I should just about break even
So I'm off now to continue the job hunt here in the city. I have one job lined up as a Kitchen Hand that I'll be starting tomorrow morning. I have a few other interviews lined up with various places (Internet Cafe, Night Club, Movie Theater, Game Retailer). Most likely I'll be working 2 or 3 part time jobs in an effort to save up as much cash as quickly as possible. I plan to live in a hostel or campground, if I can find one, for the first week or two then I'll hunt for a room for rent. I'm pretty excited about working and living with some kiwis. It's probably the best way for me to be involved in and experience the culture. Who knows, I might even pick up some of the accent!
Sorry if that made your eyes bleed. Thanks for reading, I'll update soon.



15 Comments:
Geeter? Leave messes? and girls have to pickup after him? they get mad? SHORE! notttt geeter. he clean person. he relaxeddddd, carefreeeeeeeee, in noooooooo hurryyyyyyy. ever. not piss girls off. screw you geeter! you made us sleep w/ some wierdo. HAHAHA LOL!! love the stories and the updates. so is ur visa gunna run out and ur not going to be able to get off the island and come back home one day? how does that work? hows the new job as the kitchen hand? are you cooking? guess what. i got a digital camera last night from erick for valentines day. my 1st ever in my whole life. i have a camera! i'll start taking pix and send to you so you dont forget what we all look like. ttyl. be careful. be safe. dont live in bushes and drink 80 cent booze anymore. LOVE & Miss you, Dinny.
fun ... fun .. fun!!! Im glad youre having a FAN TAB time. I think you made an excellent decision about staying there. Im really excited for you and well yeah we really miss you here. Maybe you can save up enough to come home and hang out for a lil with you fam and then go back. Just a thought. lol I'll email you about whats going on with me. Oh and oh course Cindy had to rub it in about her camera. She called me that night to tell me and I was like heyyy thanks for rubbing it in that mine was stolen. lol jk cindy. SO motocross guys huh. Let them know you have a sister that loves to ride too lol jk but not really. Miss you tons. Love the pics. Hope to see you soon!
PS: I hope you know its almost river time again. But hey if it makes you feel any better, I have no idea how I will be able to go to the river with everyone since I work like 10 gazillion hours a week and like 7 days a week too. Oh well. And yeah Im not even included on weekend trip emails anymore thanks to my job. Good lookin out fam... I def feel the love. F*ckers! jk
not that this needs to become a chat site between me & mel, but just to clarify, since it was noted, i did not rub anything into mel. i called cause i was excited that i got a camera. and she couldnt even be happy for me, she had to go on about how hers was stolen. so no, i wasnt rubbing in that hers was stolen. i had forgotten and i dont really even care, it wasnt the point of me sharing my happyness.
ok- so you dont read that last one and feel like WOAH. i'll write something nice & refreshing here too. Soooo.... how about a little sharing is caring... Tee din's bf is in gool, and getting all A's. Snuggs will be 4 in about a month. he'll have a kite bday party i think. he lovesss kites. bernen is getting soooo old. he has long hair, its super cute. snugs had hello kitty cards for valentines day and loves his barbi toothbrush. dont worry, he "LIKES GIRLSS!!". my friend Ronda from Abbott is getting married in march & heather & my bf & i are going. ryan & bernen have a boy scout camp out that weekend. we'll be drunk at 11am at the Chart house in Dana Point. It should be fun! You need to come Home this YEAR geeter!! no more being a homeless shaggy & scrappy & scoobie character living outta a van and showering in bushes. come home damnit. ok- i dont know what else is new to write about. same-o-same-o pretty much. oh u'd be proud of me, i deleted my myspace account a while back. i dont know what else. that's about it. ok. ttyl. w/b write back w/b w/b w/b. LOVE Dinny.
LOL, I love the hostility over what was likely a 2 minute phone conversation about a camera. IT IMPORTANT! SURRRRE it really makes him want to come back! Just kiddng though, I actually find the cat fights funny from a safe distance of several thousand miles.
Thanks for the updates on everyone, Cindy. I can't be stuffed (NZ phrase) to comment on it all, but it's fun to read what everyones up to.
Back to that camera topic, I need to work on getting a camera or becoming close friends with someone that owns one or my next posts are going to be straight text.
Type to you later (yea, I'm thinking of coining that phrase)
you should coin it... its good. and it would totally still work with the ttyl too... Honestly I was just messing around about the whole camera thing. JOKE... FUNNY FUNNY! HA HA lol
Well yeah since dinny talked about everyone besides me I'll just let you know that well I have been working and thats pretty much it. Ive had 1 day off in like 2 or 3 weeks. Work like 10-14 hours a day. I think I might have a day off next weekend. Not sure though. lol Its cool though because I LOVE IT!!! LOVE MY JOB and all the peeps I work with.
Miss you!
I'll be sure to rile her up again for another entertaining cat fight jk lol
COME HOME SOON!
geet!!!geeet!!!!!geet!you now that game thats sort of like a war that I played when I was3-5 then i stoped playing it. do you know were it is!!!!????? I need it!!!
Bernen
cuteeeeeeeee...Bernen cant stop asking about this game he's trying to identify. he called me yesterday and was asking me, and im like, thinking SHOULD i know this game...did i play it or something? NO, def not me. im like "bernen, did i play it? he's like NO. im like howchum u think i might know then, and he's like, mommy said to ask you." SHORE! heather not sick of him asking her. hehe. j/k. wups, parental supervision here--the kid can read--please preview posts before you let ur child on this website. -disclaimer- ok- so anywho, thats super funny, he's asking u on here. im like Bernen ask geet. he's like I DID, but it takes him boreber to reply :( haha LOL so GEETTTTTtttt did u get my email?? are have a durpriseeeee for louuuuuuu.... are you alive? whats new? where are you? arent u sidey for lur durprise?? :-) luv dinny
Was the war game on the computer? I think it was counter-strike. Daddy and I
used to play it a lot too. You only played it for a little bit because it
was too bloody and real. The only other game I remember you playing a lot
was spider-man for the computer, but you're probably thinking of
counter-strike.
it was counterstrike. he figured it out shortly after emailing u. good call tho, u were right! i like how u say he couldnt play it anymore cuz it was too bloody & real. too funny!! hey! he's 8 now, its ok now for eight year old. Shore! LOL ttyl. dinny
hey man, seems like your having a blast! Def wish i was in your shoes right now..
-Davis
SHORE!!!! we dont need an update. SHORE!
sharing is caring...
LOL :-)
i FINALLLLYYY can read your posts!! we got internet again!!! wooo i kinda skipped a couple paragraphs, i didnt really understand what you meant when you said "hope your eyes are bleeding" until i really thought that my eyes were gunna bleed if i read one more word hah but everything sounds like so much fun! hope your job is ok... heres a little sharing is care from me too... me and ryan (my bf) just moved to ocean beach in san diego still, to a 2bedroom house with a huge backyard and a laundry room! i love it i cant wait til everyone can come over and we can bbq and walk to the beach and stuff! and i got a little kitty (i think cindy email a pic of her and roxy to everyone) shes sleeping in my lap right now, oh and mel by the way its a girl haha ya not a boy sorry, we examined it and its definitely a girl haha so she needs a new name now cuz sebastian is just not going to work anymore haha anywayssssss thats pretty much it, come home! miss you and love you!
love lis
oh and ps my dig cam was stolen too haha
(in lebo voice) Scott not wear same brown shirt in every picture. Trust, he do laundry.
WTH are you talking about? I'm wearing a different shirt in like every picture. That's pretty impressive for living out of a backpack for the last 8 months. NOOOO, he dirty guy! lol
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