Sunday, July 25, 2010

Hanmer Springs

Hanmer Geothermal Pools

This past Friday, Christian, Christine, Max, Ryan, and I took a day trip to Hanmer Springs.  We took the Hanmer Connection bus and enjoyed our two hour ride down there.  It was a beautiful day and when we arrived we went straight to the geothermal pools.  It was still cold but the pools felt so amazing.  Afterward, I felt so relaxed and light!!  After some pizza and milkshakes we took an hour hike up conical hill.  The views of the town and snow capped mountains were incredible.
Hanmer Geothermal Pools

Top of Conical Hill

Hanmer Springs
On Sunday, Christian and I took a bus to the Riccarton Rotary farmers market.  I love this market!  It is huge and has everything from food to clothes to kitchenware etc.  It was really fun wandering around and sampling different things.  I got some fresh bread and fruit and we got some lunch from a food stand.  Then we got these amazing fresh donuts!

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Sumner and New Brighton

Sumner Beach
This past Friday, Christian, Tom, and I hoped on a bus to Sumner.  We spent a while relaxing in a cute cafe where I got delicious pumpkin potato soup and a chai latte.  I love the designs they put on the coffees!  After, we walked along the beach and climbed on and under a rocky cave.  This beach is awesome and beautiful.  Its always cool going to a beach in the winter.  I then had hokey pokey ice cream for the first time ever!  It is the greatest ice cream in the world!!!  It has bits of the inside of my favorite chocolate bar, Crunchie!  Little honeycomb bits.  Mmmmm. We sat and enjoyed our ice cream as we watched the waves roll in.

Coffee at Sumner
Saturday morning a group of us walked to the Riccarton Bush farmers market.  I love farmers markets!! This was a small one that sold only food.  Delicious food.  I got some honey and flaxseed bread, vegetables, and white chocolate and rhubarb porridge.  Everyone there was extremely friendly.

New Brighton Beach
Sunday Cathy, Ryan, and I went to play some Gridiron (American Football) at Ilam Fields.  Cathy and I were the first girls ever to join the club!  It was really fun and really muddy.  I was great at defense but need to work on my catching skills.  The guys are awesome and we all had a lot of fun.  After we cleaned up, us three ventured to New Brighton beach.  We walked out to the pier as it was getting dark.  The lights on the pier changed colours.  It was extremely cold and windy though.  We talked to some fishermen at the end of the pier and then walked through town.  I got hokey pokey ice cream again and then we went back and hung out at the apartments.

Monday, July 12, 2010

IES Abroad Orientation Week

July 5:  I can't believe we finally made it to Christchurch!! After all these months of planning and waiting my study abroad semester at the University of Canterbury has begun! The first thing we did was check in at Ilam Apartments where I got the keys to my new home.  It is also my first apartment ever!!  I love it!  I live with four other freshmen Kiwi girls who are all super nice.  We each have our own big rooms and we have two bathrooms, a cute kitchen, and common t.v. area.  After unpacking and stocking up the fridge and cabinets with food, I met with Eunice and the thirteen other IES Abroad students from America.  Eunice is our amazing program director - she is like a mother to us.  The first thing we did was split into groups and venture on a scavenger hunt around the university campus.  The campus is really nice.  It kind of reminds me of Ithaca with the buildings and trees, except it's very flat and a bit bigger.  Afterwards we went out to dinner in town at Riverview Buffet Restaurant where we ate and got to know each other.  Excellent first day!

July 6:  The next day we all ventured into the city.  After a nice lunch at the Botanic Gardens Cafe, we ran around Christchurch on an even bigger scavenger hunt.  This was awesome because I was able to navigate my way around and find a lot of cool places like Cathedral Square, Arts Center, the Holy Grail Sports Bar (where they play all the rugby matches), the bus exchange, nice shops, and a ton more. 

July 7:  Today I attended the International students' orientation.  They introduced us with a traditional Maori welcoming.  They spoke in Maori and also sang for us!  It was awesome.  I love the Maori language.  Fun Fact - The Na'vi language in the movie Avatar is based on the Maori language.  The director had visited New Zealand and loved its flow and melody.

Castle Hill
July 8:  Today I enrolled in my classes!  I am taking 'Science, Maori, and Indigenous Knowledge,' 'Kapa Haka Maori Performing Arts,' 'God, Mind, and Freedom,' and 'Sport Nutrition.'

July 9:  Today the whole IES group left for our overnight trip in Springfield!  We stayed at a youth hostile called Smylies.  The drive was incredibly scenic and we ended up at Castle Hill.  We hiked up the hills and there were so many crazy cool limestone boulders and amazing views.  This place is  near where the battle scene in the Chronicles of Narina: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was filmed.  After an amazing dinner at Smylies, we went out to a small pub and hung out with the locals.

Castle Hill
July 10:  After a delicious breakfast at Smylies we visited a cute little farm.  We learned all about the sheep, sheep dogs, and alpacas.  Alpacas looks like llamas and have incredibly soft wool.  I loved watching the sheepdogs chase the sheep, I'm pretty sure I want a sheepdog as a pet.  They are so smart!!  We also got to try sheering the sheep.  The best part of this day was jetboating!  It wasn't as epic as the Queenstown Shotover Jet but it was still fun!

Sheep sheering
Antarctic storm room!
July 11:  Today, Sunday, was our day off from IES activities so I hung out with my family.  It has been really nice having them here to help me get settled.  We went to the Antarctic Center located at the Christchurch International Airpirt.  This is where many Antarctic missions are organized.  We explored the gallery area which had many displays about modern day Antarctica, including the Antarctic Treaty partners, the human impact on the continent, the wildlife and plant systems, and Antarctica’s effect on the globe.  We watched a sound and light show called "Beyond the Frozen Sunset" which showed absolutely stunning footage of the continent.  Then we got to experience a simulation of an Antarctic storm.  We threw on heavy jackets and shoe covers and went inside a room with an igloo and snow.  The lights dimmed and the wind picked up as people started talking over the intercom of a storm headed our way.  The sound effects were awesome.  But it was so windy and freezing that Lindsey and I wondered why we were doing this to ourselves after about three minutes.  We ran out when they opened the doors and were very thankful we were not actually stuck in an Antarctic storm!  After that we got to see Little Blue Penguins!  The most exciting part of our Antarctic experience was the Hagglund ATV ride.  The Hagglund we rode had actually been in Antarctica!  We rode up and town rough terrain, hills, and pools of water.

July 12:  Classes begin!!!

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Dunedin

Happy 4th of July!!!  After me and Lindsey belted the American national anthem in the campervan to show our national pride, we started out spending some time in Dunedin.  We went to the Otago Settlers museum where we learned a little of the city's history.
Otago Settlers Museum

Otago Peninsula
We then drove out to the Otago Peninsula.  The views here are spectacular!! We saw cool birds and seals and visited the Royal Albatross Center.  This peninsula is the only mainland breeding colony for any albatross species found in the southern hemisphere.  Afterwards we headed toward Christchurch.  Along the way we stopped at beaches, including the Moerkai boulders.  These are unusually large and spherical boulders lying along a stretch of Koekohe Beach.  They are shaped like this due to erosion.  Maori legend tells that the boulders are remains of calabashes, kumaras and eel baskets that washed ashore after the legendary canoe, the Araiteuru was wrecked at nearby Shag Point (Matakaea).  As we walked along another beach, we found a seal and walked right up to it!
Moerkai Boulders


Seal on beach

Finally we reached Christchurch and I spent my last night in the campervan as I prepared for Orientation the next day!


Saturday, July 3, 2010

Invercargill

Our wake up call was 2 am this morning!  We ran to the lounge, got the key the owner had slipped under the mat for u, and switched on the television to watch the Netherlands play Brazil in the world cup.  The Netherlands won 2-1 WOOO!  That was exciting!!  After a few more hours of sleep we drove to Invercargill and had coffee in the world's southern most Starbucks.  We also went to E. Hayes and Sons hardware store where we saw the "World's Fastest Indian" motorcycle on display.  At 68 years old in 1967, Burt Monro set the world record for the fastest Indian motorcycle.  It went 305.89 km/h (190.07 mph).  I still need to watch the movie about it!
World's Fastest Indian

Baldwin Street
After our stop in Invercargill, we drove along a scenic route to Dunedin, the second largest city on the South Island, and home to to New Zealand's first University, the University of Otago.  The name comes from Dùn Èideann, the Scottish Gealic name for Edinburgh, Scotland, and it was made to emulate Edinburgh.  Here we walked around, saw the Robert Burns statue, and a piper!  We went to the famous old Dunedin Railway Station and the world's steepest residential street (Baldwin Street).  It was sooooo steep that the sidewalk turned into stairs and I was out of breath by the time we reached the top.  We didn't dare to drive our campervan up it!  We had a great view from the top and it was fun running down it.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Milford Sound

Milford Sound
Our mission today was to travel through Fiordland National Park to get to Milford Sound.  This is the world's top travel destination and is considered the 8th world wonder.  I can tell you this place is beyond beautiful.  Even the one road to Milford Sound is considered one of the finest drives in the world.  When we arrived, we hiked around some trails and then took a small cruise around the Sound.  We were surrounded by sheer rock faces covered in rainforest and waterfalls.  One of the tallest mountains in the world, Mitre Peak, rose 1,692m above us, plus the 1,517m Elephant Mountain, resembling an elephant's head, and the 1,302m Lion Mountain, in the shape of a crouching lion.  One of my favorite parts was when a dolphin came right up to the boat and swam beside us.  Our ship captain said the dolphins like to ride alongside the boat because it propels them forward so they can move without effort!  I also loved the waterfalls and rainbows they created.  We got to put on rain jackets and go right under some of them.  We ended up sailing right out to the Tasman Sea and back, and got to see a lot of seals.  I wish everyone in the world could see this place.  Well done, Earth, I am beyond amazed.

Mirror Lakes
On the way back along the same road through Fiordland, we stopped at the Mirror Lakes.  These are formed by glaciation and are so incredibly still and reflect Mount Cook and Mount Tasman.  It was a brilliant site.  Afterward we drove to Invercargill where we got fish n' chips and went to sleep.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Queenstown


We woke up in Queenstown and headed to the Skyline Gondola.  On the ride we had a spectacular view of the city, mountains, and Lake Wakatipu.  At the top we took in the beauty and went on a fun scenic luge ride.

Afterward, we went for a ride on the Shotover Jet - the world's most famous jet boat operation!  It was SO exciting!!!  Not to mention incredibly beautiful.  At breathtaking speeds, we twisted and turned through narrow canyons, did 360 turns, and sped across the winding river.  We got so close to the sharp rocks and my adrenaline was definitely pumping!
After we calmed down from the jet boat excitement, we went to a remote beach in Bob's Cove.  Here the water rises and falls 15 cm every five mins.
Bob's Cove