Sunday, August 31, 2008

"winter"

I'd hoped to find kite surfing here, after seeing some at the Oregon coast. As it happens, it didn't take long. Even in winter, about 6 blocks from home:



I've also been told about a local place that rents gear and gives lessons, which brings me to another item. Kiwis are absurdly friendly. It's fantastic. My running tally so far: days in NZ = 19, unfriendly kiwis = 0.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Shaxspere

The previously mentioned visit to "Shakespear Park" piqued my curiosity about the missing "e". A bit of research/googling seems to indicate that not only was lack of spelling standardization a bit of an issue at the time, but that many of the alternate spellings propagated outside of London. See this for the surprisingly long list of alternatives.

Of course, considering I've used the word "googling" and the googol/google story, a bit of spelling variation really shouldn't be surprising.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Shakespear Park

As the day for returning our hire car was rapidly approaching, on Sunday we decided to drive out of Auckland a little bit. We found ourselves at Shakespear Park, at the end of the Whangaparoa penisula.



It's unclear if the Kiwis just can't spell, or whether they are referring to someone other than the great bard. Either way, the park was just the place for a quiet stroll on a Sunday afternoon. It had something of an English feel about it - gentle rolling hills, and of course, as we knew had to happen sooner or later, sheep:


What was less expected was the appearance of some incredibly tame peacocks, including this one, who decided he was most definitely going to `shake his tailfeathers' at us.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Extreme edge

Faced with a rainy and wintry Saturday afternoon, we decided to try out Extreme Edge - which claims to be the largest climbing gym in Australasia. And it is indeed large, with a wide selection of difficulties of routes to try (very handily colour coded) and large sections of overhangs specifically for lead climbing, which would be quite impressive to watch. They have an extremely foolproof belay system, which is nice for beginners, allowing almost no possible way for you to drop your friends off the wall. The grading system of difficulty of climbs here is different from the US, which was my first excuse for giving up halfway up the wall on several occasions, but in the end it just turns out that after two months of doing nothing, my arms just can't take it anymore.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Two days, two volcanoes

Hello and welcome to our blog. We're hoping to use this to write about all our adventures in New Zealand - hiking, biking, skiing and the like. Hopefully this will keep some of you back home up to date on what we've been up to and may also be useful for those of you who come to visit!

As yet, our main adventure has been house-hunting, but we've had time to do a little walking. Auckland is built on more than 50 volcanoes, and in the past two days we've been up two of them.

This is the view from the top of Mount Victoria in Devonport across to Rangitoto - Auckland's newest volcano. The strange mushroom things we believe to be airvents from underneath... for something...



And this is the view from the top of Mount Eden, across the town where you can see several more volcanoes sticking up above the houses.


Let's just hope none of them suddenly decide to become active again...