Sunday, June 8, 2008

East Coast of the North Island


























1. Mount Maunganui
2. me at the top - looking over the pacific I think
3. another view from the top.. an amazing beach
4. ahhh another thermal pool. This will be missed.
5. Craig O'Brien and Chris Hanna - my Gisborne hosts
6. Shaun, Malcolm, me, Steve, Wendy and Margaret
7. a $2500 brass fire hat.. thank god those are out of service. heavy!
8. the Whakatane training balcony
9. the AIX massage bed - imagine water shooting out of the shower heads!!
10. a wine tasting trick for clarity.
11. Chris's big pig! 250 kilos or something..
12. me on the farm, watching the eye/heading dogs work is truly amazing!
13. Gisborne's NX$1.3 million new toy
14. the Gisborne Cosmopolitan Club - New Zealand's version of the Fort Smith Legion
15. Art Deco- building art work
16. Art Deco- man hole covers
17. Art Deco- the town paper
18. Art Deco- another style
19. Art Deco- the old fire hall
20. back yard at the Napier jail - people would scale up the side wall and go out for the evening for a meal, movie, a drink or a "special meeting"
21. the hanging yard - now used for laundry, but for people back in the day
22. brick designed by a prisoner
23. brick designed by a prisoner
24. the quarry where the rocks were got to build the walls. The water fall is fake, man made


So on June 1st I flew to Napier and was transported to another time and place. Napier was rocked by an earthquake in 1931 measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale, knocking over buildings and causing the gas lines in the pharmacies to spark and eventually burn down much of the down town core. The earthquake actually raised the land 3 meters or so and created more land for Napier to expand. When they looked at rebuilding they looked at what was modern for that time and Art Deco was strong, so that is how they rebuilt much of their buildings, though there were still some other types as well. The Art deco took into account the discovery of King Tutankhamen's tomb, the Mayan world and included their styles in the art work and also included lots of styles defining speed, women in power, new beginnings and the Maori style. It was very cool there and going on a tour was a good way to get the inside scoop! They have a HUGE weekend where everyone dresses up and drives 1930-1940s styles of clothing and cars. I guess it is a huge event, so big, they will have one in the off season as well! The Hawke's Bay Museum had a decent display about the earthquake and its effect on the town and the people. NZ still experiences earth quakes everyday, just not to that scale lately.. the last big one was in the late 90's I think..

I toured the Napier Prison that was used until the late 1990's, though looks like it should have been closed down much sooner. It is a backpackers place now and the owner gives the tours, telling all the haunting stories and such on the way around. It was a decent size, but in looking at it, I am not sure how it hosted the number of people he said did time there. People we actually hung in the back court yard and they sold seats for people to watch.. reality is always better than the movies, isn't it?? As well when the prison was being built the prisoners were marched to the quarry and created the stone blocks that built the walls. Some prisoners made fancy designs on the blocks, most did not.I am currently on a hunt for a book one of the prisoners wrote with all the inside stories!

I went on a great wine tour to 4 different wineries and think I actually learned something! By the last winery I could actually taste the pepper in the red wine, though the sweet whites are still my favorite. Our guide was a great host and at one place we had an amazing feed with calamari, smoked venison and beef, fennel (tastes like black licorice), cheese and crackers and roasted garlic!! yummy!

My next journey brought me North along the coast to Gisborne and to another of Julie's brother's (and his girlfriend's) homes. The weather wasn't grand, but I did make it out to wander down to the museum and around town, to the fire hall (AMAZING) and out to the Cosmopolitan Club (much like the Legion at home with the same kind of regulars for their club nights on Tuesdays and Fridays!) The weather cleared on my last day and Craig tried his hardest to convert me to a farmer, by taking me out and having me ride along while he and the dogs did some cattle shifting. Pretty neat to see the dogs at work! On the way back to town we stopped at the longest pier in the Southern Hemisphere - 660 meters, but it is not used now and has been basically falling apart since it was built in the early 1900's! He also took me to the Maere (?sp) where they filmed Whale Rider.. so now I have to watch that!

I spent a relaxing couple of days in Whakatane, with friend's of Julie's (the Rawsons) and we had a lovely supper with Julie's daughter Shaun and other family friends, the Wilsons. I tried to get a tour to White Island a semi-active volcano, but the weather didn't cooperate. Another thing to put on the list for when I return. Malcolm is the deputy chief of the department here, so he took me for a tour of the hall.. they have a great upper training room and secured a beautiful deck by getting funding for an upper ladder rescue training situations..

I spent a night in Rotorua just to try out the AIX massage at the QEII spa (the one Dixie and had the mud baths at a month or so ago). What an experience.. a full body massage while jets of thermal water were pulsing down on me.. truly relaxing! well worth the trip.

I've made it to Tauranga for one last stay with Julie's friend Eunice and her son Lance. The weather finally cleared up and I climbed a mountain.. well what they call Mount Maunganui.. but it is only 827 feet or so high.. It was still a good walk. And after a relax in the thermal hot springs at the base was a beautiful way to finish and treat my achy knees.!!

I have three more sleep in the Land of the Long White Cloud (so called for the cloud always present above the Southern Alps), and don't know how the Internet will work (or cost) in the Islands, but I will continue to give updates as best I can, but assume there will be some sun and some sand and likely some sun burn and I also assume a few drinks.. though I need to save enough money to eat.. I will need three jobs to pay for these last two months of this journey!!

2 comments:

Beverly said...

Can you bring one of those massage tables home with you?
The scenery is absolutely beautiful! Thank you for sharing some of it with all of us!

Dix said...

Shari....I miss the thermal waters, regret not spending every spare minute in the stuff. So jealous of the AIX massage. Hmmm. Did you see Nesh again? Hope Fiji is as lovely as the cooks were. Miss ya.