Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Sweet As!

Transport for the next month
Bay of Islands:
We arrived into Auckland in the pouring rain (not impressed) and headed for dinner at a italian restaurant that had free wifi- we did not realise this would be the only free wifi we would get! New Zealand is not like Asia they are all about making money. We started our kiwi experience adventure the next day and headed north to Bay of Islands. Close to the northern tip of New Zealand it took us a few hours to reach Paihia, where we booked into our first dorm of many. We chilled out on a beach before a BBQ for dinner where we were able to properly meet the other people on our bus. That night we took part in the bar quiz with 2 Norwegians and a Finnish girl. Unfortunately we suck at quizzes and so didn't even hand in our half empty answer sheet.
Just driving along the beach...in a coach!
Collecting hidden shellfish
The next day was New Zealand's national day, Waitangi Day celebrating a treaty signed by both the Maori and the Europeans. There were lots of celebrations in Paihia but we spent the day visiting Cape Reinga, the northernmost tip of New Zealand where the Tasman sea and the Pacific Ocean meet. On route we spent a wee while wandering around a kauri forest. These trees are the second largest in the world after the Californian redwoods, and we even saw a staircase carved into one in a furniture showroom. Next we arrived at 90 mile beach (which is actually only 60 miles..) and came across a road speed sign just as we reached the sand. There is a 100 mile an hour limit on the beach! It was a very strange experience, hurtling along the beach in a coach for an hour without slowing down to avoid getting stuck. We hopped out at one point to enjoy the views and dig our feet into the sand to find shellfish. Then we headed along a river bed to a huge sand dune for an extreme sport....well it was extreme enough for us! Throwing yourself down a very steep sand dune on a boogie board is slightly terrifying but amazing fun. The most amusing part was watching others wipe out at the bottom of the slope.


Long way up
Managed to stay dry
After all this excitement we headed to Cape Reinga, where we stood by a lighthouse and watched 2 oceans met. The scenery around the area is truly stunning.
Cape Reinga Lighthouse
Meeting of the Tasman Sea and the Pacific Ocean
Huge Kaori tree
Staircase carved out the inside of the tree
The next day we had an early start so that we could go searching for dolphins. We jumped on a boat and drove around for over an hour before we spotted our first bottlenose dolphin. They came right up to the boat and soaked us while we were trying to take photos. Then we were given a quick safety briefing before the majority of people on the boat launched themselves into the very deep water for a chance to swim with these beautiful animals. Katie stayed on the boat so that she could laugh at Sarah trying to chase the dolphoins. Apparently we only swam with 2 but it seemed like a whole pod, because they are so fast and seem to appear out of nowhere. Without warning we were suddenly within touching distance of completely wild dolphins, which was just totally awesome.



Sarah swimming around
Hot Water Beach:

After returning to Auckland for a night (and $5 pizza, oooh yeah), we hopped onto our second kiwi experience bus and made some new friends. We are getting pretty good at the whole friend-making business, although it is sad when we have to leave them. Heading south we travelled to the Coromandel peninsula, where we hopped out and wandered along the coast to a beautiful cove called Cathedral Cove. There was white sand and crystal clear water with a fantastic archway that high tide would close off. We swam and sunbathed before starting the trek back.

When we arrived at our nights accommodation in Hot Water Beach we were pleasantly surprised. The dorm rooms were really nice, friends of ours even had a wee cabin/shed to themselves. There was a sheltered outside living area with comfy sofas where we spent a couple of hours relaxing. For dinner we made an effort to be healthy (not easily done when travelling)and bought a yummy looking salad. Unfortunately there are a lot of people out to make money in NZ and we refused to buy a $2 plastic fork....so the salad eating was restricted to what we could manage with our fingers.
Cathedral Cove
After our little food mishap it was time for the main event, the whole reason to visit Hot Water Beach...digging holes in the sand at low tide. Earlier in the day we had managed to nab a couple of shovels for our group to use and only when we went to pick them up did we spot a certain Canadian with them-from that day on she was known to us as the Spade Thief! On this particular day  low tide was at midnight and so after grabbing a head torch (not many people thought of this and had to wander in the dark) we headed past some glow worms to the beach. It was a surreal experience on the beach because there was quite a lot of people milling around, and only when you take a closer look do you notice that lots of them are digging away or relaxing in a pool of water. Once a hole has been dug it fills with geo-thermically heated water and so you ultimately sit in a spa pool of your own creation. There is some skill involved because you can't dig too close to the seawater's edge or cold saltwater will flood your pool, but you also can't dig in certain places on the beach or risk scalding your bum. Once the digging was complete we had a great time relaxing in our hot pool. 
Digging away
The water was so hot we couldn't properly sit in it!

Saturday, 2 February 2013

2 of the best days so far!!

Australia day is very well celebrated over here...so we spent it in style at the Bondi Thong Challenge! Basically we tried to break a world record- to see how many people they can get floating on giant inflatable flip-flops joined together out at sea. We didn't break the world record but we did beat the Bondi record with 2070 people :D (just 23 people under the world record grrr!)




Katie's deflated before we even hit the water!
They make very comfortable sun beds...unfortunately we got quite burnt
Raring to go (with Katie's school friend Fiona, and her friend Naomi)
Poor guy! We laughed a lot as he floated past...
 Sarah mid wipe-out (too much slippery sun cream)

So for the people reading this that have never heard of the Australian soap Home and Away you should probably stop here. We visited Palm Beach where it's filmed and being the huge fans that we are proceeded to watch the filming (and stalk the actors!). We managed to slightly embarrass ourselves by getting over excited at buildings and pushing into crowds to get pictures with our favourite actor. 

The Diner
Lighthouse you can see in the ariel view of the bay
The Pier
Having lunch at the Surf Club
The Braxtons surf here! 

Alf's Bait Shop 
Recognise the corner?
Think who else has sat here! 
Indi and Sasha filming
Ahhh we're on a film set

Look how close we are!
mmmm...
We love Bianca 
We were lucky enough to see our favourite couple filming 
Yes...we are standing next to Heath Braxton (Dan Ewing is such a lovely guy)
Sasha with 2 new characters- watch this space

Sydney times

With over a month in Sydney we've got lots of photos!
Bondi Beach on Hogmanay...reading the Watsonian!
One for the family album :)
Waiting for the midnight fireworks
Fireworks off the bridge  
Couldn't be a Loudon New Year without some jager 
Bombs away!
New Year's Day
No matter the weather, Mum and Dad's last day had to be spent on Bondi
Check out the waves
Copying a photo from years ago, we're at a revolving restaurant
Curl Curl beach with old family friends
Christmas and surf wear...bit of an oxymoron
Beautiful city

Went for a walk around Macquarie Park and we saw...The Wiggles!
Spent a weekend with the Porteous family (Dad's been friends with Billy since uni). We suffered through Sydney's hottest day on this weekend- almost 46 degrees C.
We joined them to watch Nippers (surf life saving training for kids- way cooler than Brownies!)
Ciara was a natural
After Mum, Dad and David left we headed down to the south coast for a week on the beach. Despite the worry about bush fires we didn't need to use our evacuation plan.
Edie showing off at Lilli Pilli beach house
Playing in the surf
Sarah boogie boarding
 Day at the Zoo!!
"Please don't call me a koala bear, cos I'm not a bear at all"
The next Steve Irwin
HUGE komodo dragon
Taronga has an awesome dinosaur exhibit 
We watched the gorillas being fed 
Amazing view
The original Nigel (gave Katie the fright of her life haha)
Riding in the cable car

Sarah's friend Julia sent us some wish paper, so we gave it a try. You write your wish on a piece of paper, set it on fire and watch it fly away.


It was going so well, and then Katie let go and it fell over..
...and didn't fly away!