Blogs from Coromandel Peninsula, North Island, New Zealand, Oceania - page 7

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En arrivant à Auckland, je n'ai aucune idée de ce que je vais faire durant un mois en NZ. Deux jours plus tard je suis renseignée et décide de profiter de l'île du Nord. La NZ est à peu près aussi grande que la Grande Bretagne, et je n'avais pas envie de commencer à courir de ville en ville pour avoir le temps d'aller sur les deux îles, en sachant que j'ai envie de profiter de la nature. Je pars donc pour la péninsule de Coromandel où je rencontre Greg, qui tient une auberge. Je pars en rando dans la vallée de Kauaeranga, pour 2 jours dans ces forêts où abondait autrefois les "kauris", ces arbres atteignant des dimensions gigantesques. Malheureusement l'exploitation forestière n'en a pas laissé beaucoup pour le plaisir des yeux... Le premier soir, ... read more
Thames
En route pour les pinacles
Un kauri couche sur le sol

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula February 18th 2011

My new housemates proved to be an Asian couple, very surprised, just as I had been, to be sharing a whole apartment rather than just having a room. They were polite and quiet (despite their being up well past midnight), but we didn't develop the rapport I'd felt with the Canadians. I made the same deal with them I had with the Canadians, asking them to shut the door when they went to bed; in fact, they shut it well before then. I had to check out at ten, and my bus didn't go till noon, so I hung around the computer lounge for two hours. It was comfortable enough except when some idiot started smoking just outside. At 11 I went up and fixed a quick lunch (oatmeal), just in case there was no ... read more

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula February 13th 2011

I spent a difficult night, eventually dumping my laundry onto the bed and sleeping on it in an attempt to gain the softness I needed to get to sleep. That worked until 3:30 a.m. or so, when I woke up, cold because I was also sleeping on my blankets, and put on my robe. The robe apparently substituted for the thickness of one of the blankets, so that I was able to get back to sleep about 4:30 a.m.. They charge a day rate here, too; $5.00 if you use any of their facilities past 10 a.m. checkout time. That's nearly unheard of on the hostel circuit; most places are happy to let you stay in their lounge and use the common areas as long as you've surrendered the key to your room. But then, ... read more
St. James'
Downtown Thames
Cars on the siding

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula February 12th 2011

Even exhausted as I was, I found it difficult to sleep on the rock-hard bed. I finally used my extra blanket as a mattress pad, and got to sleep that way. It was nice and quiet, though, especially for a Friday night. Following the owner's recommendation, I walked over to the main street of town in the morning. Thames has a regular street market on Saturdays. It was an odd mixture of a community yard sale and a festival. Local stores put out sidewalk displays. Charitable and volunteer groups held bake sales. Local craftsmen and farmers displayed their wares. I bought two bottles of locally grown organic apple juice, and two wooden souvenirs. One was sensible: a kauri-wood outline map of New Zealand with all the little bays hand-carved. One, bought from the same craftsman, ... read more
Mangrove Swamp
Sunset over the Pacific
The Market

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula February 11th 2011

I woke just before 5:30, and scrambled to catch the 7:30 bus to Thames. Even though I had kept almost everything packed, I was moving slowly and I only just made it through the door at 7:15, the time Intercity required me to be at the station. Of course the bus didn't leave till after 7:30. I travelled past a traffic jam (in the opposite direction, as it was early morning and I was leaving Auckland) and on into largely flat pastureland, mainly for cattle. At the Thames bus station, I waited 45 minutes for what they said would be another bus that would take me to Sunkist Backpackers. It turned out that, although it was an Intercity vehicle, it was not a bus but a van. It is the usual vehicle for travel within the ... read more

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula February 6th 2011

Blog Entry 3: Its 2:30pm on Sunday, Feb 6 in Wellington, watching the Leafs play the Sabres (Now 4-0 Buffalo) taking a day of detox after the Rubgy 7's this past weekend, i'll try and sum-up the past week or so. Loving life out here at the moment! Jan 26th - Went back to Auckland for one night after Paihia before jumping on board a new Kiwi Bus in the morning. Stayed at "Base Backpackers Hostel" in downtown Auckland, nice hostel but not very busy on a Wednesday evening, some real skeet organized a pool tournament worth a $100 bar tab (needless to say I went out in the first round as I need to brush up on my pool skills) still managed to get a free beer out of it though. On route to Mercury ... read more

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula January 28th 2011

Lorsqu’on regarde attentivement une carte pour choisir sa prochaine destination, il y a parfois des endroits qui nous inspirent ! Cela peut être par l’aspect géographique, les descriptions s’y référant ou simplement les noms. Et bien, la péninsule de Coromandel nous a inspiré pour toutes ces raisons : l’extrémité EST du golfe d’Hauraki qui voit passer les plus belles frégates vers Auckland, une nature luxuriante recouvrant une chaîne de montagnes où de gros filons d’or ont été découverts, des plages parmi les plus belles de l’île nord et un nom, « Coromandel » qui sonne plutôt bien ! C’est en réalité le nom d’une frégate britannique qui, en 1820, y accosta pour une gigantissime coupe de bois, ressources stratégique pour l’époque. Avec toutes ces nouvelles réjouissantes, la barre était donc fixée assez haute. Malheureusement, Dame Nature, ... read more
Plage escarpée de la côte EST
Sunshine sur la côte OUEST !
Rue centrale de Thames

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula January 24th 2011

Coromandel -The First Ten Days A rocky stream burbles over rounded rocks and boulders as it rushes off steep forested mountains. Fluffy fair-weather clouds drift on a clear sky and the woodsy air is scented by many flowering trees. We are camped just above the stream bank in a tiny orchard clearing in the forest, a hundred meters down a mossy path and across the water on a foot bridge, from our friends, Rick and Dot’s cabin. There are about fifteen hand built homes hidden in the hollows and on the hillsides of the 735 acres Karuna Falls Co-op. Rick and two others bought the land 37 years ago (for a song) and founded a commune that has slowly grown. On a map, the Coromandel peninsular is the middle, north-pointing finger of land sticking out ... read more
Our outdoor kitchen
Comfy slleep cabin
maori home

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula January 18th 2011

Good morning all Suz and I returned last night from an amazing 2 day tour of the Coromandel Peninsula. Driving from here there was rolling hills and farmland and then we went up and up into the remains of a lot of volcanoes extinct many millions of years ago… so when the road signs said bends for 14km – it literally was bend after bend up and up and then down and down…then there would be another sign to say bends for 14km – and so it went . It was a very good road however and thought steep and winding there were barrier and good marking – not quite like nightmare drivingin South of France we have had. The views we had were so beautiful and every now and then we would come to a ... read more
Photo 3
Hahei
Photo 5

Oceania » New Zealand » North Island » Coromandel Peninsula January 12th 2011

English (Lisa) 10/1 The Day We Hit the Road Monday morning we were picked up by an Indian taxi driver to go to the “Escape Campervan” office in Auckland. After some formalities, we were assigned the van that we would be living in for the next 3 weeks. We were lucky, because there was just one manual left. It is called “McGregor Bird” and the graffiti art on it displays the New Zealand landscape with flowers, sea, sailing boats and a Maori man (all in bright colours). Anouschka drove the first part of the day. We first went to the supermarket to get an enormous pile of food and then we left Auckland via the Southern Motor Way. The landscapes we saw on the way were breathtakingly beautiful. It’s as if someone took all European landscapes, ... read more
First stop
Watermelon
Cooking in Campervan




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