I went with the raggle taggle gypsies oh.
And went and went. In fact, the past month has been very influenced by the Gyspy Fair. I did end up catching a ride with Karlos along the windy road from Napier to Gisborne, through sun and sleet and hail (I thought I was missing out on winter!), stopping along the way to collect pine cones for woodstove fuel and camping up overnight on a little beach islet, jamming late into the night and being rocked to sleep on the couch shelf by the wind broadsiding the caravan. We met back up with the rest of the fair folk the next day in Gisborne, and after walking around on my own for the afternoon, helped my new friends set up their booths (it all felt very familiar and comfortable from my years of growing up around the craft fair circuit) and spent the evening huddling in various people's housetrucks, hiding from the bitter wind before heading off to bed down in the vardo stage (closed up for the night for me to sleep in... don't worry, I wasn't sleeping out in the open on the stage) because apparently if I stayed in Karlos' caravan around the other fair folk, "people would talk." I guess there are upsides and downsides to living in such a small nomadic community.
In the morning I caught a ride from the fair grounds to the bus station with a matronly Maori woman who told me atleast five times that she'd just had to pull over because she saw me walking and kept thinking, 'she's gonna fall over with all that luggage,' then caught the bus to Hamilton. On the way I texted Woody to wish him Happy Halloween and to find out where his travels had brought him, and when he replied that he was hitching to Hamilton--what were the odds?!--we decided to meet up. He met me at the bus station, walked to the backpackers to drop luggage, went out in search of a cup of coffee to catch up over, stopped by the bus station to see when the local bus went out to Waikato University where I was to meet folks from Wai-Taiko to get a ride to the taiko show outside of town, found the last bus that would get me there in time was leaving in one minute, so both jumped on it. We had a beautiful evening with Wai-Taiko, filled with drumming, a GIANT bonfire, some cool poi and staff spinning and a mass release of paper lanterns floating up to the sky, little specks of glowing orange amidst the country-bright stars and nearly full moon. It was incredibly beautiful, and I promise to post pictures. The next two days we played back through The Foureigners repertoire, did some busking (made enough for one coffee!) and recorded a video of 'The Rock Song' for our youtube channel on the statue of Riff Raff (the writer of Rocky Horror apparently worked at a barbershop in an old cinema in Hamilton that showed a lot of B grade scifi flicks to which he credits a lot of his inspiration; they've erected the statue on the site where the cinema used to stand). You can check out the song here:
Another important event that shaped the last month was that for the first time I can remember, I remembered Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit. For those of you not familiar, this is a tradition wherein on the first of each month, if the first thing out of your mouth is the phrase "rabbit rabbit rabbit" you are supposed to have good luck for the rest of the month. There are various other rules that people subscribe to (have to have gone to bed before midnight, have to have it be the first thing you think, have to do a summersault to the end of your bed before saying it, etc., etc.--you can read about some of them in One Page Production's book, 'Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit'), and although I made the mistake of saying Rabbits instead of Rabbit, I have had an incredibly wonderful month, and I thank my good fortune at least in part to my first successful Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit.
From Hamilton, I travelled down the west coast of the North Island with a CSer named Reade and his station wagon Hobbes. He'd posted to the Ride Share NZ group about going to Northland the week I went back to Napier, and although I couldn't do that journey, after looking at his profile and discovering that he too was travelling with a mandolin and poi, we decided we should go on an adventure together after he got back and I was closer to him. We had a lovely week camping at sites from his 'NZ Frenzy' book for cool places on the North Island off the beaten tourist track and some along it, such as the hot water beach at Kawhia (at low tide you can dig yourself a pit in a particular part of the beach and soak in the sulphorous hot water that bubbles up), The Three Sisters and all the cool caves at Tongaporutu (met a man who lived in one of the caves while on whitebaiting on holiday, waded through a river up to our armpits holding cameras and beers above our heads up towards the rainbow that arched above us, and after dark watched the fireworks the locals set off for Guy Fawkes Day), hiked up Taranaki around North Egmont as far as we could go before the snow cap required proper gear (and camping in the carpark woke up in time to watch the fierce stars fade as the sunrise turned the snow pink) and around East Egmont down into the Enchanted Forest (I have never seen trees where 'festooned' was the only proper adjective to describe their mossiness), and lazed around Waverley Beach, watching the ocean crash against the natural arch. We had great conversations at night, listened to great and electic music as we drove, worked up a small mandolin repertoire, worked on poi moves (our last night he got to spin fire for the first time), and had an easy companionship that provided a lot of support while not feeling stifling. A good time to cultivate an appreciation for time on my own while still having fun travelling with someone and spending a fair amount of time together...and I got to see all these beautiful places I never would have reached if I were just travelling from town to town by bus! Yay for CS group "Travel Companions For Exploring New Zealand!"
To be continued...
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Saturday, December 5, 2009
updated map
I updated the WHERE I'VE BEEN SO FAR map... check it out to the right!
Post from all November coming soon!
Post from all November coming soon!
Monday, November 16, 2009
New map
Hey guys,
Sorry I've been so silent the past couple of weeks... I promise several updates soon!
But for the moment I just wanted to draw your attention to the new gadget on the sidebar. It's a map I'm updating of all the places I've been, so you can get a visual. Enjoy!
Sorry I've been so silent the past couple of weeks... I promise several updates soon!
But for the moment I just wanted to draw your attention to the new gadget on the sidebar. It's a map I'm updating of all the places I've been, so you can get a visual. Enjoy!
Monday, October 26, 2009
To go or not to go with the raggle taggle gypsies oh?
So, my plans have taken some shape!
Soon after my last post, I emailed Larry Gordon, director of Northern Harmony, the choir I toured Europe with in 2005. At the end of my internship in summer 2008 with Village Harmony (the sister organization that does singing camps) I was invited to be on this spring's Northern Harmony tour, but since I planned to finish up at Wesleyan in December, I wasn't sure what my plans would be, if I'd have a place I was renting, a job, etc. When I went back and squatted at Wesleyan for that spring, I decided that I actually wanted to travel instead of join the Real World, and decided in March to come to NZ with Woody some time after graduation. I emailed Larry back to say that I would in fact be able to go on tour, but I had taken too long--they'd filled all the spots! He told me they would keep me as an alternate, but that's not something you can plan on, so Woody and I decided to come to NZ for seven months. But now, with that plan discarded, I figured I might as well send an email to say, "Keep me in mind. I'd still love to go on tour if someone cancels last minute." I woke in the morning to a reply saying, effectively, "Perfect timing. We just had someone cancel. Here's the itinerary. I'll book your flight." So overnight I've gone from being very lost and not knowing how long I'd stay in New Zealand, where else I would go, for how long, what I was doing in life at all (other than the idea to visit all the taiko groups here), to knowing I need to be in Vermont by January 19th for rehearsals and that I will then be doing a tour of the East Coast U.S. and U.K., France, Switzerland and Germany until April 28th!
So that's exciting news #1.
Exciting news #2 is that things have so far gone along swimmingly and presented me with lots of great opportunities. After going into Dannevirke in the morning with Sue to peruse the market day deals, get a tour of the city in her Z3, and see an old car shop like the one in Masterton, I left the Azalea farm on Friday and took the NakedBus (I'm not sure why it's called this... maybe because it's just the basics and thus cheaper? $11 instead of the $30 InterCity bus) back to Napier. I'd seen on TV that Rhythms of Ireland, a Riverdance-type troupe from Dublin, was playing in Napier, so I wanted to be here by Friday night for that (unfortunately it was a bit too cheesy for my tastes as a show, not worth the high ticket price, but still some good dancing). I'd hoped to stay at Stables Lodge (where we'd stayed before and made some friends), but because it's Labour Weekend here, they were full, so I got a bed at the Criterion Backpackers Inn, this big hostel that's all done out in typical Napier Art Deco fashion.
In 1931, Napier was destroyed by burst gas lines from an earthquake and they rebuilt most of the city in the architecture of the time--Art Deco. It's subtler than I'd expected, not in your face, but if you look around for it, it's readily apparent. The Criterion is one of the few exceptions, Art Deco in a touristy way. And it very big, but (or perhaps consequently) people don't hang out and meet each other. So I slept there--not very well I might add, since the first night four girls from the dorm got drunk and kept coming in an turning on the lights all night, and the second night someone snored loudly--but hung out at Stables with my German friends.
Sunday I, along with about half the hostel, joined the Pania Plodders, the local Hash House Harriers group (google it!), though all but Tim, David and Dennis decided to leave before we really got going. They laid a false 15 minute trail in the city, then bussed us out to the country and the real run was out among the grapevines in the hills and down by a river--great scenery for a beautiful day! I stayed that night with two of the hashers and had a very silly night with them and some of the others, drinking and dancing to 70s tunes.
And the past two nights I've gotten a bed at Stables, while I wait for a phone call from Karlos, the gypsy musician. The other cool thing that was going on this whole long weekend was the Gypsy Fair. A group of modern-day gypsies travels around both islands for 9 months of the year, then takes the winter off. They sell wares they've made or imported, sell cotton candy and coffee, do tattoos and piercings off a bus, read palms, do portraits, paint faces, play music. The fair is made up of all of the their booths which hang off the side of their house-trucks. Some of the houses have more traditional curved tops like you would picture a covered wagon caravan, and some of them have quirky-angled house-like structures, but all sit on wheels. They're converted from trucks, buses, library vehicles... you name it. But all are painted in colorful hues. They are wonderful.
Since I'm now in the mentality of travelling alone, I'm making more of an effort to talk to everyone I meet, so I talked to the people at one of the stands, and after a bit was invited inside for a cup of tea. Ian's house is of the quirky variety, but very cozy inside and with ingenious locks on cabinets, fridge, doors, etc. to keep things from popping open in transport. I told him I'd been studying music and he said I should go play with the two resident musicians, Karlos and Frank, who play all day and have a set of congas set up for anyone who wants to play. I went and sat in the sun and listened for a while, singing along to myself, and Karlos noticed I knew all the words and kept motioning for me to come up. Thinking of my tattoo, I realized I had to get up and play. So I played congas for a while, and sang backup harmonies and soon they gave me a mic. They said it was nice to have an extra person up, changed up the monotony. When the fair was over for the day, Ian introduced me to them properly, I went and had a beer with them in Karlos' caravan. When I said I had no plans of what I was doing next, they invited me to come along with them to Gisborne up the coast.
And so the question, whether or not to go with the raggle taggle gypsies oh? It sounds like such a cool story, but I wonder what it would be like in reality. I've done a number of things just for the story, for the bragging rights, but it often doesn't turn out to be worth it. And my time is feeling short. I would enjoy singing and playing with them, and they even offered to let me do my own set, but it would mean giving up on my plan of going to a taiko and fire dance show in Hamilton this Saturday. Perhaps I'll go to Hamilton and then try to hook back up with the fair later? Karlos went to visit family in the area for a couple of days, but should be calling tomorrow or Thursday and I'll have to decide by then. I know from the outside it may seem like an obvious choice, but I'm still not sure. I'll let you know what I decide!
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Fear-chasing flowers: Athalbrae Farm, Norsewood, NZ
Despite several washings with soap and scalding water, my hands still smell of dirt.
This past Tuesday, Woody and I took the bus from Hastings to Norsewood. I'm pretty sure it was the reverse passage of the one we took from Palmerston North to Napier, and even had the same bus driver. I wonder if he recognized the two Americans carrying small instrument cases.
Norsewood is a stop on the route, but only that. In the seemingly middle of nowhere, the bus pulled over to the side of the road and the driver announced in his bored nasal tone that we were in Norsewood. Woody and I jumped up (the only two to disembark here), and scrambled off the bus, where we were immediately met with hugs by Sue, our WWOOF host. We grabbed our bags, crossed the motorway (which is really just a two-lane road, don't let the term fool you) and piled our packs into the back of her car. We drove through the heart of Norsewood (I think it had a few shops? Very small, one-horse type town that I haven't been back through since) and in a few more minutes turned up the drive to Athalbrae Farm.
Athalbrae is what they call a Lifestyle Block. We were told by Andrew at Highden Manor that these are land portionings of varying sizes (early on they were 40 acres, but when that proved to be too much for people, they brought them down to 10 and then 5 acres) where city people can pretend to be farmers. Sue and Jim are not city people. They used to help with Jim's family's farm which ran over 1200 sheep, but since Jim wants to grow organic and his 85-year-old still-farming dad only uses traditional pesticide methods, they decided to lease their part of that farm back to the family and move out here to this 50 acre plot to live as organically and sustainably as possible. They grow their own meat from 10 sheep with 10 really cute little lambs (who are right now in the hopping/frolicking stage and super cute!) and a 5 week old calf named Thibeau (Jim wanted to name him T-Bone, but Sue wouldn't let him, so they both settled for the suggestion by a French WWOOFer they had at the time), milk and butter from his mother KC the cow, eggs from the dozen chickens, have veggie and berry gardens, and over 600 rhododendrons and 400 azaleas all currently in bloom, planted by previous owners.
This is where the dirt comes in. The main task Jim has had for this week has been digging out a big hole for a pool they're installing, and then digging a long drainage ditch and laying pipe because of ground water/a spring he hit at the bottom, and because such physically strenuous work would probably not be good for my back, Woody has been helping him. Instead, I have been weeding a big bed of red azaleas that has been in neglect for the past four years. And the best way to get at the sneaky underground roots of one particular type of grass is to hook in tooth and claw. Ok, maybe only claw.
And for the past 5 days now, I've been at it. Our work schedule reminds me of hobbits: work 9-10:30, half hour break for tea and cookies, work 11-12, hour break for lunch, work 1-2:30, half hour break for tea and cookies again, work 3-4:30, take a break til 6:30, then eat dinner, followed shortly by dessert of fruit (or sticky pudding) and ice cream... constant breaks for food and so many sweets! But even so this means I have my fingers crammed up to the elbows in dirt for 5-6 hours a day! And because I'm sitting in it and flinging it everywhere as I flick it off root clumps, by the end of the day I'm covered. And the scent persists.
On a totally different note (though perhaps I turn my nose up at this too?), Woody and I have decided to part ways. I won't go into details (don't worry, it's all pretty amicable), but the short version from my side is that I am very much a social creature and Woody likes a lot of alone time, and the two don't mix very well when you're just two people travelling together. Also, since I realized NZ was a bit of a random choice (I think I was excited by the idea of travelling with Woody and didn't care much where we went) and since I now find I don't have any affinity for/vibes with/whatever-you-want-to-call-it about NZ, I think I will probably only stay here a few months instead of the original seven. So we're on very different travel schedules.
Where does this leave me? I spent the next morning thinking about it as I weeded. Since last time I chose a WHO but did not assert a WHERE or WHAT, this time I'll try something else. While I'm here, I have a few WHEREs I want to hit, but not a lot of them. So I'm focusing the rest of my NZ time on the WHAT. I've decided to do a taiko (Japanese drumming) tour of NZ.
Over the summer, I found one taiko group in Hamilton that was having a workshop Nov. 12th. I had signed up on the website, but hadn't received confirmation, so yesterday I emailed to make sure I was signed up before arranging my plans around being there. I post scripted, "should I bring my own bachi?", hoping it might work as a sort of 'open sesame.' It worked. She wrote back asking about my background and after hearing I'd taken taiko at Wesleyan for two years, invited me to come to their classes on Monday and Wednesday if I'm still around, and also told me about 6 other taiko groups in NZ who I could also try emailing. Taiko is something that has really struck a chord in me and drawn me in over the past two years (finding out I could continue to attend the taiko class was really one of the main reasons I hung out at Wesleyan this past spring!), so hopefully visits to these other groups will fall into place and give some meaning to my time here.
And I won't lie; I am a bit overwhelmed with the sudden changes in plan. But according to (not necessarily a reliable source, but appropriate):
"How the color red affects us mentally and physically
* Increases enthusiasm
* Stimulates energy
* Encourages action and confidence
* A sense of protection from fears and anxiety"
Thank goodness for the red azaleas.
This past Tuesday, Woody and I took the bus from Hastings to Norsewood. I'm pretty sure it was the reverse passage of the one we took from Palmerston North to Napier, and even had the same bus driver. I wonder if he recognized the two Americans carrying small instrument cases.
Norsewood is a stop on the route, but only that. In the seemingly middle of nowhere, the bus pulled over to the side of the road and the driver announced in his bored nasal tone that we were in Norsewood. Woody and I jumped up (the only two to disembark here), and scrambled off the bus, where we were immediately met with hugs by Sue, our WWOOF host. We grabbed our bags, crossed the motorway (which is really just a two-lane road, don't let the term fool you) and piled our packs into the back of her car. We drove through the heart of Norsewood (I think it had a few shops? Very small, one-horse type town that I haven't been back through since) and in a few more minutes turned up the drive to Athalbrae Farm.
Athalbrae is what they call a Lifestyle Block. We were told by Andrew at Highden Manor that these are land portionings of varying sizes (early on they were 40 acres, but when that proved to be too much for people, they brought them down to 10 and then 5 acres) where city people can pretend to be farmers. Sue and Jim are not city people. They used to help with Jim's family's farm which ran over 1200 sheep, but since Jim wants to grow organic and his 85-year-old still-farming dad only uses traditional pesticide methods, they decided to lease their part of that farm back to the family and move out here to this 50 acre plot to live as organically and sustainably as possible. They grow their own meat from 10 sheep with 10 really cute little lambs (who are right now in the hopping/frolicking stage and super cute!) and a 5 week old calf named Thibeau (Jim wanted to name him T-Bone, but Sue wouldn't let him, so they both settled for the suggestion by a French WWOOFer they had at the time), milk and butter from his mother KC the cow, eggs from the dozen chickens, have veggie and berry gardens, and over 600 rhododendrons and 400 azaleas all currently in bloom, planted by previous owners.
This is where the dirt comes in. The main task Jim has had for this week has been digging out a big hole for a pool they're installing, and then digging a long drainage ditch and laying pipe because of ground water/a spring he hit at the bottom, and because such physically strenuous work would probably not be good for my back, Woody has been helping him. Instead, I have been weeding a big bed of red azaleas that has been in neglect for the past four years. And the best way to get at the sneaky underground roots of one particular type of grass is to hook in tooth and claw. Ok, maybe only claw.
And for the past 5 days now, I've been at it. Our work schedule reminds me of hobbits: work 9-10:30, half hour break for tea and cookies, work 11-12, hour break for lunch, work 1-2:30, half hour break for tea and cookies again, work 3-4:30, take a break til 6:30, then eat dinner, followed shortly by dessert of fruit (or sticky pudding) and ice cream... constant breaks for food and so many sweets! But even so this means I have my fingers crammed up to the elbows in dirt for 5-6 hours a day! And because I'm sitting in it and flinging it everywhere as I flick it off root clumps, by the end of the day I'm covered. And the scent persists.
On a totally different note (though perhaps I turn my nose up at this too?), Woody and I have decided to part ways. I won't go into details (don't worry, it's all pretty amicable), but the short version from my side is that I am very much a social creature and Woody likes a lot of alone time, and the two don't mix very well when you're just two people travelling together. Also, since I realized NZ was a bit of a random choice (I think I was excited by the idea of travelling with Woody and didn't care much where we went) and since I now find I don't have any affinity for/vibes with/whatever-you-want-to-call-it about NZ, I think I will probably only stay here a few months instead of the original seven. So we're on very different travel schedules.
Where does this leave me? I spent the next morning thinking about it as I weeded. Since last time I chose a WHO but did not assert a WHERE or WHAT, this time I'll try something else. While I'm here, I have a few WHEREs I want to hit, but not a lot of them. So I'm focusing the rest of my NZ time on the WHAT. I've decided to do a taiko (Japanese drumming) tour of NZ.
Over the summer, I found one taiko group in Hamilton that was having a workshop Nov. 12th. I had signed up on the website, but hadn't received confirmation, so yesterday I emailed to make sure I was signed up before arranging my plans around being there. I post scripted, "should I bring my own bachi?", hoping it might work as a sort of 'open sesame.' It worked. She wrote back asking about my background and after hearing I'd taken taiko at Wesleyan for two years, invited me to come to their classes on Monday and Wednesday if I'm still around, and also told me about 6 other taiko groups in NZ who I could also try emailing. Taiko is something that has really struck a chord in me and drawn me in over the past two years (finding out I could continue to attend the taiko class was really one of the main reasons I hung out at Wesleyan this past spring!), so hopefully visits to these other groups will fall into place and give some meaning to my time here.
And I won't lie; I am a bit overwhelmed with the sudden changes in plan. But according to
"How the color red affects us mentally and physically
* Increases enthusiasm
* Stimulates energy
* Encourages action and confidence
* A sense of protection from fears and anxiety"
Thank goodness for the red azaleas.
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Spring Equinox at South Karori Hippie Commune
Well, I think the best course of action since so much has happened since I last posted is to make separate posts for the different parts of our adventures. Therefore, this entry will only be for the weekend we spend in Karori, the suburb of Wellington, purportedly the biggest suburb in the world (I have my doubts, as does Deeps, the Indian American CSer we stayed with at Niv's... apparently NZ claims a lot of doubtful superlatives).
Friday night we were picked up at Niv's by Robbie, Emma's 'partner' (this seems to be a term that everyone uses... not sure if it has any sort of connotations). We first went to his friend's engagement party (she is lesbian... I think there is no distinction here [yay!] but I don't know how recent this is at all), where we talked to an interesting girl from Christchurch who offered us a place to stay once we get down there, or discounts on sporting goods and apparell at the shop she's working at in Wellington. We then went with Robbie to South Karori to a hippie commune, where we met Emma (the girl we'd been communicating with via CouchSurfing.org), but were quickly offered communal food (after a hand-held ohm and thanks-giving song). We then sat around for a while until I was introduced to the other mandolin player, Dune Kitten (I swear this was here name! Or atleast how people refered to her). As luck would have it, she only knew melodies and I only knew chords, but since I spent 8 years doing Irish dance, and more than that around Irish musicians, I knew a lot of the tunes she knew and could, for most of them, pretty quickly pick out which chords would work well. For so long I have wanted to be able to play at an Irish jam and now for the first time, in NZ of all places, I have been able to competently play! We stayed up until 3 in the morning playing tunes, when most everyone else had gone to bed, then Woody and I set our sleeping bags up on the floor underneath the table, one of the only floor spots left.
In the morning we were awakened at 7 or 8 am by kids running around (everyone else seemed able to sleep through it, but we got up), and after getting dressed, headed outside to the fire pit. We were offered beers and swigs of champagne (the earliest I've ever started drinking!), then after listening to two guys poke fun at each other for a while, I started jamming on jembe with a guy who was playing blues guitar... one of the more interesting jam sounds I've experienced! But he seemed pleased.
During the day there wasn't much to do. People kept making calls for food to be made, cleaning to be done, etc., but no one really seemed to pay any mind, so when we did a few dishes or cut up cucumbers, we were lauded for our help. There was also a call to make a giant dreamcatcher out of flax (a native weed), and Woody and I, along with the other American traveller, Laura, volunteered and then surprised them all by actually following through and making a big 3 foot diameter dreamcatcher with a lashed bambooo base and rope made out of tied split flax. It was actually very relaxing to sit out in the partial sun for a few hours (I was the one who actually wove the dreamcatcher once they'd helped me split the flax) weaving with no one around and no stress, surrounded by towering beautiful mountains with blooming yellow gorse, and yet also sort of relaxing to have this task to do instead of just sitting around.
That night there was a big party/festival for the Spring Equinox (yes, it's Spring here!). During the day they'd made a 'hangi', a big earth-covered long-cooking fire pit, with veggies all dumpster dived from the town (almost all the food we all ate that weekend was dumpster dived... it's horrific how much good food is thrown away!), but they got impatient and dug it up before it was ready. There were also two lambs that had been slow roasted in a makeshift smoke house made of aluminum siding and a turning cog aparatus that kept them moving for the hours before the hangi was dug up. Having been vegetarian for the past 6 or so years (except when abroad), it was a bit odd to eat meat, but I figured I ought to try the lamb, there being more sheep than people in NZ. However, because I'm not used to eating meat, I think I got a particularly fatty bit and it was really rather gross.
After the food was served, the fire spinners of the group (who I got to count myself among!) were enlisted to light their fire toys from the food fire to spin in the drive way and then light the giant bonfire made up specially for the Spring Equinox celebration. How cool! I actually was holding back at first with Dune Kitten, worried about too many people spinning in too small a space, so I didn't get to light the bonfire, but I did light off of the bonfire to go spin with a few of the stragglers with the little bit of kerosene that was left. How cool to be a part of it!
Unfortunately, since we'd stayed up late the night before, and gotten awakened so early, Woody and I were both pretty tired (and quite a bit more sober than most of the people there), so we opted to claim the couches early and call it a night. I hope we didn't offend our hosts!
The next day we hung out in the morning, but since we had a 2 o'clock bus to catch from Wellington to Palmerston North (for our first WWOOFing adventure), and after a small misunderstanding with our CS hosts being too out of it in a fire tub to drive, we caught a ride with someone else, along with one other person who ended up being the housemate of the girl whose engagement party we'd been to--small world! Apparently Wellington is often like that.
So that was our hippie Spring Equinox in South Karori... relaxing, funny, awkward, exciting, possibly a good time, but definitely a good story! Stay tuned for the next adventure: WWOOFing at Highden Manor, the Fawlty Towers of the Manawatu!
Friday night we were picked up at Niv's by Robbie, Emma's 'partner' (this seems to be a term that everyone uses... not sure if it has any sort of connotations). We first went to his friend's engagement party (she is lesbian... I think there is no distinction here [yay!] but I don't know how recent this is at all), where we talked to an interesting girl from Christchurch who offered us a place to stay once we get down there, or discounts on sporting goods and apparell at the shop she's working at in Wellington. We then went with Robbie to South Karori to a hippie commune, where we met Emma (the girl we'd been communicating with via CouchSurfing.org), but were quickly offered communal food (after a hand-held ohm and thanks-giving song). We then sat around for a while until I was introduced to the other mandolin player, Dune Kitten (I swear this was here name! Or atleast how people refered to her). As luck would have it, she only knew melodies and I only knew chords, but since I spent 8 years doing Irish dance, and more than that around Irish musicians, I knew a lot of the tunes she knew and could, for most of them, pretty quickly pick out which chords would work well. For so long I have wanted to be able to play at an Irish jam and now for the first time, in NZ of all places, I have been able to competently play! We stayed up until 3 in the morning playing tunes, when most everyone else had gone to bed, then Woody and I set our sleeping bags up on the floor underneath the table, one of the only floor spots left.
In the morning we were awakened at 7 or 8 am by kids running around (everyone else seemed able to sleep through it, but we got up), and after getting dressed, headed outside to the fire pit. We were offered beers and swigs of champagne (the earliest I've ever started drinking!), then after listening to two guys poke fun at each other for a while, I started jamming on jembe with a guy who was playing blues guitar... one of the more interesting jam sounds I've experienced! But he seemed pleased.
During the day there wasn't much to do. People kept making calls for food to be made, cleaning to be done, etc., but no one really seemed to pay any mind, so when we did a few dishes or cut up cucumbers, we were lauded for our help. There was also a call to make a giant dreamcatcher out of flax (a native weed), and Woody and I, along with the other American traveller, Laura, volunteered and then surprised them all by actually following through and making a big 3 foot diameter dreamcatcher with a lashed bambooo base and rope made out of tied split flax. It was actually very relaxing to sit out in the partial sun for a few hours (I was the one who actually wove the dreamcatcher once they'd helped me split the flax) weaving with no one around and no stress, surrounded by towering beautiful mountains with blooming yellow gorse, and yet also sort of relaxing to have this task to do instead of just sitting around.
That night there was a big party/festival for the Spring Equinox (yes, it's Spring here!). During the day they'd made a 'hangi', a big earth-covered long-cooking fire pit, with veggies all dumpster dived from the town (almost all the food we all ate that weekend was dumpster dived... it's horrific how much good food is thrown away!), but they got impatient and dug it up before it was ready. There were also two lambs that had been slow roasted in a makeshift smoke house made of aluminum siding and a turning cog aparatus that kept them moving for the hours before the hangi was dug up. Having been vegetarian for the past 6 or so years (except when abroad), it was a bit odd to eat meat, but I figured I ought to try the lamb, there being more sheep than people in NZ. However, because I'm not used to eating meat, I think I got a particularly fatty bit and it was really rather gross.
After the food was served, the fire spinners of the group (who I got to count myself among!) were enlisted to light their fire toys from the food fire to spin in the drive way and then light the giant bonfire made up specially for the Spring Equinox celebration. How cool! I actually was holding back at first with Dune Kitten, worried about too many people spinning in too small a space, so I didn't get to light the bonfire, but I did light off of the bonfire to go spin with a few of the stragglers with the little bit of kerosene that was left. How cool to be a part of it!
Unfortunately, since we'd stayed up late the night before, and gotten awakened so early, Woody and I were both pretty tired (and quite a bit more sober than most of the people there), so we opted to claim the couches early and call it a night. I hope we didn't offend our hosts!
The next day we hung out in the morning, but since we had a 2 o'clock bus to catch from Wellington to Palmerston North (for our first WWOOFing adventure), and after a small misunderstanding with our CS hosts being too out of it in a fire tub to drive, we caught a ride with someone else, along with one other person who ended up being the housemate of the girl whose engagement party we'd been to--small world! Apparently Wellington is often like that.
So that was our hippie Spring Equinox in South Karori... relaxing, funny, awkward, exciting, possibly a good time, but definitely a good story! Stay tuned for the next adventure: WWOOFing at Highden Manor, the Fawlty Towers of the Manawatu!
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Happy Spring from Wellington!
So it may have just started Fall there, but that means it's newly Spring here!
We have safely arrived in EnZed! Our cross-country as well as our cross-Pacific flight got in early, but since we still had connecting flights it didn't elate us as much as it could have. But we sat in the SFO airport, got out our instruments and did some jamming at an empty gate, which was fun, and on both flights we slept through most of them. I'd been dreading the prospect of a 13 hour flight, but with two movies and a lot of sleep it was really a good deal! I haven't even felt the effect of jet lag!
When we got into Auckland we had to collect our bags and pass through customs. As fortune would have it, our checked backpacks came around the carousel just as we walked up. Someone standing nearby remarked what good luck we had and asked if it was a mandolin in the case I'd walked up with. Apparently her son plays mandolin. When I said that it was, and that I'd just started playing it, she invited us up to her place in Whangarei (pronouced Fahngahday) in Northland... I'd heard of people getting invited to the houses of people they'd met on the plane, but to be invited by a random stranger at the baggage claim? This bodes well. I also liked that after inviting us and giving us her address and number she remarked, "Well, I'll see you soon... oh right, what are your names?"
We then took a little plane (though not as small as I'd imagined... I've taken smaller out of Charlottesville) to Wellington. I'd hoped we would get to see all of the North Island as we flew over but it was a cloudy day so I went back to sleep. When we got in, we must have had good luck because it was a very easy touch down (I'd been warned it could be terrible!) and the sun started to come out. We caught the bus to downtown ($8 NZD with included wifi on the bus--crazy!) and walked around Cuba Street for a few hours.
Cuba Street is a pedestrian mall that has similarities to Burlington's Church Street Mall or Charlottesville's Downtown Mall, but with a NZ flavor. There are a lot of coffee shops, restaurants, bars, clothing shops, etc., and there are cross streets every block or so. The green 'walk' man has a funny buzzer sound that still gets me, three days later. I'll try to record it and post it along with the other videos I've been taking. We walked down to the harbor and sat and learned a few songs together--trying to work up our repertoire!
We then took the bus up to the Botanical Gardens and found Garden Rd. where our couchsurfing host lives. Niv is originally from Milan but is doing his PhD here. His flatmates are Deeps, an Indian American from NY, and Ursula, Carrizo and their 6-yr-old son Sebastian, from Chile. They are all wonderfully friendly, welcoming, fun and musical, and we're staying with them our whole short first Wellington visit! We have very much lucked out!
We spent Tuesday afternoon walking all around the vast Botanical Garden across the street, then went with Niv, Deeps and their friend Fido to Cuba Street so we could get some dinner. Per my friend Brianna's recommendation, we chose Cuba Kebab and had a filling cheap dinner. We then went back to The Big Kumara to meet back up with the guys, who were in the midst of a poker tournament. After trying to figure out the rules of Rugby watching the TV over a beer, our fatigue finally started to set in, so we headed back to the house.
Houses in Wellington generally have no heat, and although theirs usually does, it was broken, so Niv had warned us it might be chilly. Indeed, in the morning when we woke up we could see our breath--but I was warm in my sleeping bag all night! For the record, LaFuma sleeping bags are really cheap and effective! We had breakfast of eggs, toast, tomato (and bacon for the meat eaters) with Niv, then walked downtown. It was a beautiful day so we walked the length of the harbor before heading to HigherTaste, a veggie Indian restaurant where there is a weekly luncheon meeting of the Wellington Couchsurfers every Wednesday. We talked with a bunch of CSers and met Fiona, the woman with whom we'd been supposed to stay before miscommunication upset our plans. She said she would be going to Red Rocks (where there are a lot of seals) the next day if the weather was good and invited us along.
After lunch we went to Te Papa, the national museum. It is huge!! We spent three hours wandering around just the first floor, seeing cool exhibits on the flora and fauna of NZ, earthquakes and other natural disasters in the region, an interactive floor map of NZ, and many others... and that was just one of 6 floors! We went back this afternoon to see the rest of it, and in three hours we were able to at least briefly peruse everything, but not with as much detail as before. But Te Papa definitely gets an A+!
This morning it was raining when we woke up, and although it was only slightly spitting by the time we called Fiona, we decided it might not be the best day for Red Rocks, so we headed to Mt. Victoria right in Wellington instead. We had a nice hike up through the tree cover (where, apparently, many of the woods scenes of Lord of the Rings were filmed), and at the top could see all the way around the city--beautiful! I took a 360 video I'll post later. Fiona pointed out where in the city the two fault lines run. There are apparently a lot of earthquakes every year because New Zealand is split between three tectonic plates. Don't worry, they don't expect another big earthquake for a few hundred years.
I think that's all I'll post for now. Tomorrow night we go to Karori with another CS girl, then on Sunday head to Palmerston North for our first WWOOFing assignment at a newly renovated manor they're trying to get ready over the next two weeks--looks beautiful and it will be nice to have some structure. Hope you're all doing wonderfully and enjoying the Fall!
We have safely arrived in EnZed! Our cross-country as well as our cross-Pacific flight got in early, but since we still had connecting flights it didn't elate us as much as it could have. But we sat in the SFO airport, got out our instruments and did some jamming at an empty gate, which was fun, and on both flights we slept through most of them. I'd been dreading the prospect of a 13 hour flight, but with two movies and a lot of sleep it was really a good deal! I haven't even felt the effect of jet lag!
When we got into Auckland we had to collect our bags and pass through customs. As fortune would have it, our checked backpacks came around the carousel just as we walked up. Someone standing nearby remarked what good luck we had and asked if it was a mandolin in the case I'd walked up with. Apparently her son plays mandolin. When I said that it was, and that I'd just started playing it, she invited us up to her place in Whangarei (pronouced Fahngahday) in Northland... I'd heard of people getting invited to the houses of people they'd met on the plane, but to be invited by a random stranger at the baggage claim? This bodes well. I also liked that after inviting us and giving us her address and number she remarked, "Well, I'll see you soon... oh right, what are your names?"
We then took a little plane (though not as small as I'd imagined... I've taken smaller out of Charlottesville) to Wellington. I'd hoped we would get to see all of the North Island as we flew over but it was a cloudy day so I went back to sleep. When we got in, we must have had good luck because it was a very easy touch down (I'd been warned it could be terrible!) and the sun started to come out. We caught the bus to downtown ($8 NZD with included wifi on the bus--crazy!) and walked around Cuba Street for a few hours.
Cuba Street is a pedestrian mall that has similarities to Burlington's Church Street Mall or Charlottesville's Downtown Mall, but with a NZ flavor. There are a lot of coffee shops, restaurants, bars, clothing shops, etc., and there are cross streets every block or so. The green 'walk' man has a funny buzzer sound that still gets me, three days later. I'll try to record it and post it along with the other videos I've been taking. We walked down to the harbor and sat and learned a few songs together--trying to work up our repertoire!
We then took the bus up to the Botanical Gardens and found Garden Rd. where our couchsurfing host lives. Niv is originally from Milan but is doing his PhD here. His flatmates are Deeps, an Indian American from NY, and Ursula, Carrizo and their 6-yr-old son Sebastian, from Chile. They are all wonderfully friendly, welcoming, fun and musical, and we're staying with them our whole short first Wellington visit! We have very much lucked out!
We spent Tuesday afternoon walking all around the vast Botanical Garden across the street, then went with Niv, Deeps and their friend Fido to Cuba Street so we could get some dinner. Per my friend Brianna's recommendation, we chose Cuba Kebab and had a filling cheap dinner. We then went back to The Big Kumara to meet back up with the guys, who were in the midst of a poker tournament. After trying to figure out the rules of Rugby watching the TV over a beer, our fatigue finally started to set in, so we headed back to the house.
Houses in Wellington generally have no heat, and although theirs usually does, it was broken, so Niv had warned us it might be chilly. Indeed, in the morning when we woke up we could see our breath--but I was warm in my sleeping bag all night! For the record, LaFuma sleeping bags are really cheap and effective! We had breakfast of eggs, toast, tomato (and bacon for the meat eaters) with Niv, then walked downtown. It was a beautiful day so we walked the length of the harbor before heading to HigherTaste, a veggie Indian restaurant where there is a weekly luncheon meeting of the Wellington Couchsurfers every Wednesday. We talked with a bunch of CSers and met Fiona, the woman with whom we'd been supposed to stay before miscommunication upset our plans. She said she would be going to Red Rocks (where there are a lot of seals) the next day if the weather was good and invited us along.
After lunch we went to Te Papa, the national museum. It is huge!! We spent three hours wandering around just the first floor, seeing cool exhibits on the flora and fauna of NZ, earthquakes and other natural disasters in the region, an interactive floor map of NZ, and many others... and that was just one of 6 floors! We went back this afternoon to see the rest of it, and in three hours we were able to at least briefly peruse everything, but not with as much detail as before. But Te Papa definitely gets an A+!
This morning it was raining when we woke up, and although it was only slightly spitting by the time we called Fiona, we decided it might not be the best day for Red Rocks, so we headed to Mt. Victoria right in Wellington instead. We had a nice hike up through the tree cover (where, apparently, many of the woods scenes of Lord of the Rings were filmed), and at the top could see all the way around the city--beautiful! I took a 360 video I'll post later. Fiona pointed out where in the city the two fault lines run. There are apparently a lot of earthquakes every year because New Zealand is split between three tectonic plates. Don't worry, they don't expect another big earthquake for a few hundred years.
I think that's all I'll post for now. Tomorrow night we go to Karori with another CS girl, then on Sunday head to Palmerston North for our first WWOOFing assignment at a newly renovated manor they're trying to get ready over the next two weeks--looks beautiful and it will be nice to have some structure. Hope you're all doing wonderfully and enjoying the Fall!
Sunday, September 20, 2009
OFF TO KIWILAND!
Alright, this is it, folks! I've had a wonderful stay in NY and now Woody and I take the subway to JFK, go through security, and as of 2:35 PM, we will have commenced our first flight. 6 hours to San Francisco + 3 hour layover + 13 hours to Auckland + hour layover + 1.5 hours to Wellington= a long day of travel that, because of passing over the date line, means we never get to be a part of Monday the 21st. Celebrate the Autumnal Equinox for me!
Our first couchsurfing host fell through because of my poor keeping-in-contact skills, but I think we've lined up another last minute. If that too falls through, we're probably headed to Nomad's backpacker (hostel) on Cuba Street (thanks Bonna, for the suggestion!). I still can't really believe we're going so far away for so long so soon, but apparently we are--hopefully a day of travel will help me realize it's a reality!
I'll let you know more once we're on the other side of the world!
Our first couchsurfing host fell through because of my poor keeping-in-contact skills, but I think we've lined up another last minute. If that too falls through, we're probably headed to Nomad's backpacker (hostel) on Cuba Street (thanks Bonna, for the suggestion!). I still can't really believe we're going so far away for so long so soon, but apparently we are--hopefully a day of travel will help me realize it's a reality!
I'll let you know more once we're on the other side of the world!
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
And so it begins...
"All my bags are packed, I'm ready to go..."
Ok, so maybe not quite, but that's tomorrow's job. I'm counting Thursday morning as the official start marker of the trip, when I leave my red ladybug Tercel in Hardwick, VT and start travelling by other means, adventuring with Woody, and living out of a big backpack, a messenger bag and a mandolin case. Adventures shall ensure.
Ok, so maybe not quite, but that's tomorrow's job. I'm counting Thursday morning as the official start marker of the trip, when I leave my red ladybug Tercel in Hardwick, VT and start travelling by other means, adventuring with Woody, and living out of a big backpack, a messenger bag and a mandolin case. Adventures shall ensure.
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