Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Hostels

I am currently poolside at a hostel in Darwin.  Usually I enjoy staying in hostels over hotels because they have a more sociable atmosphere, and they have all the amenities like laundry, internet, and information.  Although the crowd is generally younger than I am, all ages are welcome and you will find older folks there too.  I have stayed in many around the world and have generally found it a positive experience. I usually get my own room these days instead of staying in the dorm, so I can get some distance from revelers if need be.  I was one of those once.  Like when I was chased up the stairs by a large shoe-wielding woman in Italy after breaking the curfew (I escaped by hiding behind a door), or the time I was stranded on the street outside a hostel in downtown Galway in my underwear after going through a one-way locking door.  

Quality varies by location and circumstances.  Darwin seems to be more of a travelers hub than a destination in itself.  So there are a lot of people here that are on hold during their trip around Australia or to/from Indonesia or Thailand.  Generally these people hang around and work somewhere to save up enough money to get somewhere else.  This creates a situation of "long-termers".  They are people who stay at a hostel because it's a cheap place to live.  It really changes the character of a place because they all know each other and it's an us vs. them atmosphere.  Some of them aren't particularly motivated to do anything about their situation, so they sit around and grumble.  

A lizard is crawling on my shoe.  Hopefully it eats some mosquitoes.

So I guess I'm saying that the hostel situation in Darwin is poor.  When I arrived, I headed for a place recommended by Lonely Planet (forgetting the rule that the guidebook is not the end-all).  Reception was closed so I wandered about and asked some people smoking and drinking if they knew anyone who worked there.  It turns out that one of them was the receptionist, who was annoyed that I interrupted her, and said she'd be there when she was ready.  Shortly she came back to the office and quoted me the rate.  It was hot and I was tired and I paid for the room.  It had air-conditioning and that was enough.  As I sat down on the bed, the level of filth sunk in.  Years of ground-in dirt and the old and thin mattress matched the tired peeling paint of the cinderblock walls and moldy air-conditioner.  I walked downstairs into the common area and found a crowd of listless bodies surrounded by empty bottles and cans staring emptily into a television set tuned to an infomercial.  The common bathrooms were vile and homeless men were outside picking up cigarette butts to smoke.  All for $75/night.

After fuming about my poor decision, I walked down the road to find somewhere else to stay, hoping that I could get my money back from the first establishment.  I passed a place that seemed leafy and pleasant, and I figured I'd go in and have a look.  Anything was better than the other place.  The room seemed OK, so I returned to the first place, successfully got my money back after inventing a sob story, and left with my bag.  Walking across town to the other establishment, my feet began to bleed because the plastic thongs I bought chewed through the webbing of my toes.  I checked in, and sat down on the bed.  Relaxing, I decided to check out Tripadvisor out of curiousity to see if the second place had been reviewed.  

To my dismay, every review was about the serious bedbug problem at this place.  I immediately jumped off the bed and pulled my bag off the floor.  I managed to hang all my things off the curtain rods and stood there for a bit.  I was bitten by some bedbugs in Fiji and it is awful.  The burning itch is intolerable.  Then you have anxiety for a week whether they have traveled with you in your things and are infecting things wherever you go.  I walked back to the office and kindly asked the receptionist if she knew anything about this problem.  She assured me, "I can tell you that there have never been any bedbugs in your room."  I said that there was no way I could sleep with the thought of it, and that I had to leave.  She grudgingly gave my money back, and as I left with my bag, a shirtless man ran through the courtyard with one eye swollen shut, angrily screaming something.  It was a good time to go.

Skin and blood shedding from my feet, I made it to the third place, where I am currently staying.  It's actually well-run and clean, and I am relieved.  There are still some of the long-term folks but a smaller proportion.

Here is the current joint.
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Tomorrow I fly back to New Zealand, and my mom will arrive at the end of the week. We are going to see the sights and then fly back together to the USA.  I will be happy to see my cat.  I wanted to import him to New Zealand but they have a one-month quarantine for pets.  You can go visit one hour a week or something.  Maybe I could have smuggled a file to him in a can of tuna. 

Monday, October 3, 2011

Kakadu/Darwin

For my last couple of days with the camper, I cruised over to Kakadu National Park, which is a remote World Heritage Site famous for Aboriginal rock art and culture.  I stayed the night at a caravan park run by an annoyed-to-be-disturbed proprietor (Is it me?  What did I do?).

I booked a tour for the next day into Arnham Land, which is a pretty unexplored and unvisited part of Australia.  It's set aside for the Aboriginals to live how they want and not be disturbed.  You have to have a permit to go there, which was arranged by the tour company.  A group of eight of us went in a 4WD bus across the border.  We were told that we would meet some residents and have the opportunity to purchase some art.

I was expecting some Stone Age situation, but we arrived in a village that seemed about like any other dusty Outback town. It had a school and relatively modern buildings and a construction crew erecting some new structure.  Our permit was to visit the art gallery and we were sternly instructed that we could not go across the street or anywhere else.

I've been trying to figure out the Aboriginal situation since I've arrived here.  Australia is a wealthy and progressive country and yet is populated by a good number of these people who are not merely unsuccessful, but decimated.  I mean, they have it rough.  You see them around town and they sleep in the roadside hedges or in the parks.  When they're awake, usually in the evening, they are wandering around drunk and fighting or crying or staring into emptiness. It's not like some of them are shopkeepers or run a restaurant but some don't do as well.  None of them make it, as far as I can see.  Zero. 

Anyway, we went to the art gallery and there was some very nice art that people were making.  This huge chain-smoking man with some tumors on his face was painting a basket.  He was wearing a Lakers shirt and painting slowly and deliberately in between tugs off his smoke (cigs are $18 a pack here, I couldn't help but think).  Some people felt encouraged to ask questions and nodded smilingly and understandingly when they got an mumbled response in an arcane dialect of Yolngu.  There were some white people there organizing the place and working the cash register.  On the tour there was a girl from Boston who is traveling around Australia for five weeks.  She really wanted to buy a spear, but didn't know if she could make it through airport security.  Shipping it was far too expensive, I guess.  I was hoping she'd buy it so I could chuckle about her wandering through Australia for another month carrying a spear, but she didn't bite.

Our guide took us out to look at some rock art, which was interesting enough, although it was a little hard to tell whether it was stenciled yesterday or in 2000 BC.  The guide told some stories about creation myths and serpents and how this represented that.  I didn't get the feeling that he really knew, or if anybody really knew.  I suppose the artist knew.  Maybe he/she was just doodling.

We came home that evening and I went out to catch the sunset at a rock mentioned by the guide.  When I got there, I saw some interpretive signs saying how it was a very special place and was the dwelling of a god.  I waited around for the sunset while getting attacked by biting flies on every exposed inch.  Finally I gave up.  The god can have his rock, fine by me.





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Waiting at the border crossing for the tide to recede across the road:
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I could insert a photo here of the painting guy or the one-legged lady with cataracts sitting in garbage under a tree, but I didn't feel very heartened to take photos of them.




Sunset from Ubirr (the first night, not the biting fly night)
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On the way to Darwin the next day I pulled off the road at the Original Adelaide River Jumping Crocodile Cruise.  On this riverboat there was a guy who tied a pork chop to the end of a fishing line and hung it out for the crocs.  It didn't take long at all for some big crocs to swim over.  You definitely don't want to go swimming around here.


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In Darwin was a good military museum.  They had some gun emplacements and all sorts of period artifacts.  The city was bombed several times by the Japanese and many Allied ships were sunk, including this US Navy destroyer.
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It was hotter than blazes in Darwin, and the hostel proprietor dropped me off at the military museum which was several miles from downtown.  I walked all the way back in the midday heat and it was excruciating.  I was actually moaning and talking to myself, feeling cold chills from time to time.  A couple of times I found water fountains, which was good.

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and, finally, the best Coca-Cola of all time.
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Friday, September 30, 2011

Northern Territory


I am writing from underneath the watchful glare of the Holiday Inn receptionist, who knows that I am not staying here and am just using their internet.  At $10/hr, they could be a little nicer.  Yesterday I got thrown out of the town library in some little town back up the road.  "We don't offer internet to travelers."  "Ah," I said, looking at the empty bank of computers.  "You do seem very busy."  He didn't think that was funny.  Take heart, Aussies, I think he was English.

The trip underwent a change of pace back in Broome.  Upon picking up my 4WD rental camper, I had to sign several contracts.  The relocation contract basically said that the company would have my head if I took it on a 4WD trail and something happened to it.  I could have paid $3000 and had free reign.  But I paid $250 and was thus restricted.  The route I was planning was about 600 miles of Outback, which is a bit more than a casual drive.  As I looked around at others who had just finished it, their tricked-out machines covered in red dirt, I figured that it was probably prudent to just take the highway around.  I will admit, however, that I was intensely jealous when I talked with some young German guy in a super-equipped Land Rover (two spares, jerry cans, and a couple of babes in halter tops).  But campervans are the way to go here.  Everyone is cruising around in one, from cheap ones filled with backpackers to big plush ones.

I drove the highway from Broome to Katherine, which is a bit like driving I-80 across Wyoming, then turning around and driving I-80 across Wyoming again.  The scenery was an unending flat scrubby country with the odd termite mound or grass fire.  There were a couple of places to pull off, where I filled the vehicle from the jerry cans I was provided (really handy).  The flies assaulted my head before my foot even got out of the car onto the road, so I did the job as quickly as possible and jumped back in. I mashed the pedal to the floor and watched the fuel gauge go down.

Before I left, I got some music from a French guy at a backpackers in Broome.  He was the first random guy I walked up to with a laptop, and I asked him if he would copy some music onto an SD card.  He asked me if I liked techno.  I said sure, whatever you have.  So I got 8GB of awful French techno music for the trip.  He also included Queen's Greatest Hits.

I arrived in Katherine where there is a famous gorge.  You paddle around in a kayak with the vaguely uncomfortable feeling that there might be a crocodile.  The waters are allegedly surveyed to be crocodile-free, but I didn't take a dip.  The crocs are a big deal in the Northern Territory.  As I was driving away from the gorge, I heard on the radio that a policeman was killed by one the night before.  A drunk lady fell into the river and was hanging onto a log.  The policeman jumped in to save her.  A crocodile joined in on the fun and... it didn't end well.  

I drove north to Litchfield National Park where I parked my camper in a great campground next to a waterfall and swimming area.  It was really idyllic.  I went for a dip in the morning and the evening.  As you cruise around the park in the daytime, looking at the sights, you can pull off at these cool "rockholes" and jump in for a swim to beat the heat.  There are a lot of other families swimming there too so I figure the odds were OK as far as crocs or snakes. 

I retire to the camper and cook up some grub.  Everyone has a campervan around here and it's by far the most popular way to travel.  There are cheap ones rented by a group of backpackers, rugged offroad ones, and big plush ones.  The really great feature is the little fridge.  At night a wallaby came to inspect the campsite.  He was the size of a dog but had a head like a mouse and jumped instead of walking.  The next night the mom came instead.  She was smaller and as I looked closer, there was a little joey's head poking out of her pouch.

There is plentiful wildlife.  A lot of it is of the six-legged flying variety.  The flies bite vigorously, the mosquitoes suck your blood, palm-sized spiders spin webs across trails, and ants are absolutely everywhere.  Other denizens include the largest dragonfly I've ever seen and thumb-sized cicadas.  It's hard to concentrate while sitting on the pot and a bat-sized wasp is flying around with you.  Then you look up and there's a bat-sized bat.

Today I drove up to Kakadu National Park where there is a lot of Aboriginal heritage.  Tomorrow I am going to take a tour, camp another night, then head to Darwin where I return my vehicle.  There seem to be a number of things to do in Darwin but I'm playing it by ear.



The Katherine Gorge
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Croc trap in the gorge.  Hopefully it isn't full very often.
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Big nightlife in the campground
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Falls and swimming hole in the campground.  Notice the guy at the bottom left for scale.
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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Broome


Hello from Western Australia.  I arrived in Broome last night after a rather epic travel day across New Zealand, the Tasman Sea, a continent, and something like 27 time zones.  Australia is big.  Out the plane window there was miles and miles of flattish, red, bushy type country which looked hot.

After filling out the form at the Qantas counter at the airport for my lost bag, I walked down the street to my hostel, which is the cheapest place in town.  It's still not cheap.  There was some sort of techno dance party going on, which I wasn't overly excited about. It's full of young and old, although it seems to be dominated by young attractive tanned types with pedicures.  I think you probably have to have a pedicure if you're in Australia, since you wear sandals all the time.  

I walked into town to buy some sandals and some food.  It is pretty muggy but there is a breeze from the ocean so it's not too bad.  There were a few cafes where tourists sat outside and ate and drank.  There are also lots of Aborigines huddled together in alleys and behind buildings, drinking and/or sniffing gasoline and looking ruined.  It was really sad.  

Today I went on a daylong photography tour run by this English guy named Nigel.  He has a big burly truck and took us out to a few places around town.  There was much camera instruction, and I learned a few things about apertures and ISO and the like.  I was a little bored, though, as Nigel was really interested in things that I found uninteresting, like twigs and sand dunes and abstract bands of color.  I thnk I took away some tricks for the future, but it was a tedious day in the searing heat taking photos of sand patterns.

Nigel is also a real eco-warrior.  Apparently there is a gas company interested in building a drilling facility here and Nigel spent most of the day railing about the injustice of it.  He was full of nuggets of information about ecology which seemed rather dubious or obvious.  "See these vines?  Without these vines here, this sand would just blow away.  It would be gone.  GONE!"  Umm, no shit buddy.  But he was a nice guy and was genuinely interested in our success as photographers.

Tomorrow I pick up a 4WD camper and am going to drive it to Darwin across the wastes on the Gibb River Road.  It's a pretty sweet rig, a Toyota Hilux with a fridge and BBQ and pop-top.  I got a really good deal on the vehicle because it needs to be relocated from one place to another.  The fine print on the contract said that due to the cheap price, you aren't supposed to take it off the pavement.  I figure they have a car wash in Darwin and nobody will know the wiser.  In the morning I will stock up with a week's worth of food and water and also a map or something.  Maybe a pen and paper since my laptop computer keyboard stopped working and they don't have coin-operated computers with sticky keyboards like I'm using right now.

This is a camp of protesters out in the middle of nowhere.  It is hot and there are lots of flies.  Nigel knew them and raised his fist in solidarity.
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We spent a lot of the day in the burning sun taking pictures.
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In the evening we went to Cable Beach, near Broome.  It was a huge beach, with lots of cars on it, and the locals are out grilling and watching the sunset.  It's a really nice spot to hang out.
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Camel tours!  Cue the Lawrence of Arabia theme.
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My grocery store thongs still have the tape on them.
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I imagine I will have some stories after the next week.  There may or may not be some internet at a roadhouse out there, powered by a kangaroo on a treadmill and run through a satellite dish or something.  If there is, I'll send another update. 

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Thursday, August 25, 2011

ski stuff


Be forewarned, mostly this email is about skiing and working on the mountain. I wish I had more to offer, but that's pretty much all I do.  Mostly the working part. I hope it's not too boring, but I figured I haven't written in awhile and I owe an update. 

Last week started off with a wicked storm, our first in months.  This would ordinarily be pleasant news, but I knew that it was likely that I would be stuck on the mountain for the duration.  The road gets snowed in pretty quickly, and due to the gale winds and white-out, there's no travel to or from the mountain during such an event.  They need some groomers up there to keep the drifts in check and the trails passable, so we went up as the angry clouds were rolling in.  Four of us were up for almost four days.  There were also three ski patrollers, two caretakers, and the plow guy.  It's quite an experience, being so isolated in a tempest, but after awhile it gets old.  There's nowhere to sleep (I found a reasonably-clean couch) and you don't go outside.  I did go outside a couple of times (once to shoot off avalanche rockets with the patrollers, which was cool).  Even with my hood pulled so tight that there was just a slit, I still got sandblasted in the eyeballs with flying ice shrapnel.

I went for a run around the cafeteria in my work boots, and hung out reading or watching TV with the rest of the inmates.  I didn't watch that much TV because the slightly (more than slightly) deranged caretaker was always in there boiling a gruesome fish stew and watching dog racing.  I also talked shop with the patrollers over dinner.  They were talking about trying to go for some ski runs when the weather broke.  I said this was a fine idea and I'd be happy to shuttle them up in my 'cat, but I said I'd like to take some runs too.  They looked sidelong at each other and I got the idea that they were sure I'd slow them down.  Patrollers... always with a chip on their shoulder.  At home, we call them "alpine heroes".  I'm pretty certain that I would keep up with these guys OK.

Finally the storm broke and we could get out.  I went home and showered and slept like the dead.  I had the next few days off, and I was more than ready to get out of town.  A dispute with my boss about being paid during my incarceration didn't help my mood.  So I went up skiing at Temple Basin, a "club field" a couple hours' drive away.  

These "club fields" are a remarkable experience.  It is literally a club, with members doing the maintenance work in exchange for reduced rates on skiing and lodging.  Everything is so back-to-basics, it's unbelievable.  Even getting there is a challenge.  This particular field required an hour to hike up to the lodge. The trail was pretty steep and icy for awhile, and I thought it was a pretty good workout.  It got steeper and steeper and then just it went straight into a wall.  There was a rope dangling down.  A rope?  I stared uncomprehendingly.  It became apparent that this was indeed the right trail, and I proceeded to haul myself up pitch after pitch of ice and snow.  This is just to get to the lodge!  At Beaver Creek they have escalators and a lady handing out cookies.  Here, you could quite easily end up a broken heap just getting there.

When I finally arrived, I sat down on a bench where there were five or six other skiers shooting the breeze.  I introduced myself, and was immediately welcomed.  Nobody was in any hurry to do anything, everyone was just enjoying the view and the sunshine.  Eventually they invited me along with their group and we went exploring.  It was bliss.  Later we all went for a communal lunch, which was a big cauldron of ham and pea soup.  You could have seconds if there was enough, and everyone does their own dishes.  And the skiing was utterly phenomenal.  If you felt like it, you could hike to any of a vast selection of crazy pinnacles and ski the kind of stuff that you see in movies.  You could do whatever you want, and there's no hurry, because there were only about 40 people in the whole place and 20 of them are drinking beer on the deck and working on their tans.

Contrast this with Colorado, where there is often a lot more aggression and attitude.  There is a mountain in southern Colorado, Silverton Mountain, which is renowned for its comparably extreme terrain.  I've been there a few times and while it is indeed amazing, it's a totally different scene.  There, you show up, and immediately people look you up and down to see what kind of gear you have.  The staff starts yelling at you from the get-go, telling you that THIS IS SERIOUS and that you need to LISTEN UP! and IF YOU CAN'T KEEP UP, YOU'D BETTER NOT SLOW EVERYONE ELSE DOWN and DID YOU SIGN YOUR RELEASE FORM?  Not so at this little club field in miles-from-nowhere New Zealand.  Some old-timer in a 1970s one-piece ski suit might sit down and tell you a yarn about how things used to be when he was a wee lad, and you'll kick your heels up and listen because it's a nice day and a sublime setting and there's no hurry to do anything at all.                     

Anyway, thumbs up to that sort of thing.  




Often at Mt. Hutt we are "above the cloud", which is nice.  It's gray and dreary down on the plains, then you drive up and up and up the mountain road and suddenly emerge into clear blue skies.  It's always a bit of an emotional lift when that happens.
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One of my coworkers navigating his way up the mountain.  Hopefully this illustrates how dodgy it is around here.  When I arrived I was shocked and terrified for awhile, but you get used to it.
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Coaches from the Swedish and Canadian ski teams, trying out our homemade slope watering device.  This perforated pipe got attached to my blade, and a water hose is attached to one end of it.  The idea is to spray water onto the snow while I drive around, so the racers have a nice icy surface when it freezes.  The whole activity was an utter failure ("a shitshow", to quote the Canadian coach), with the pipe freezing solid and the water hose exploding all over the run.  Luckily I just sat in the warm machine while everyone else was miserable.
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After the big storm.  This isn't fluffy snow, it's packed wind slab.  Every shovelful weighs about 20 pounds, and since they built the lifts with absolutely zero clearance for a snowcat, it all must be dug by hand.  The fish-soup caretaker really enjoys shoveling and attacks it with maniacal enthusiasm.  I think it quiets the demons in his head.
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Temple Basin ski area.  It's all yours for the taking.
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Found a mirror in the unlikeliest of spots up there.
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Friday, August 5, 2011

no winter yet


It's been a tough ski season here at Mt. Hutt.  We've just had no snow.  Hopefully it comes eventually.  I've been through a couple of seasons at Vail where it was bad for awhile but eventually it came.  Everyone has their fingers crossed.  Businesses in town are losing money, and so is the mountain.  I think I'll even miss my chance to watch (ogle) Julia Mancuso, the tiara-wearing US Ski Team downhiller/lingerie model.  They train in New Zealand in the summer but I think they went down to Queenstown where the snow is better.  

We could almost keep the mountain in pretty good shape if it wasn't for the wind.  With the ferocious wind and freeze/thaw cycle, the mountain is in a constant state of disintegration.  Rocks are showered onto the ski runs all the time, and as we groom the slopes we churn it into a slurry of snow and gravel.  A lot of skis are being destroyed.  There have been a lot of jokes made about getting loads of white spray paint to make the place more presentable.  The management (I'm not kidding about this) have already had a company-wide exercise where everyone walks down the hill and picks up rocks and puts them in bags.  They're planning to do it again soon.  Luckily, I am excluded since I work at night.

The snowmaking crew has been working nonstop to try to help conditions.  However, the product is pretty terrible.  The temperatures are not very cold, so the snow guns usually blow a sort of snot/water mixture.  The wind (and their questionable skills) means that they always blow the snow in the wrong spot (i.e. on the chairlift, on the side of a building, or onto their own equipment).  

Work in these conditions is mostly drudgery, since you can't be very proud of your product.  Lately the best entertainment has come from someone who has managed to get on the mountain radio frequency and interrupts radio conversations with... sheep noises.  It's been going on for weeks now. 

"15-8 Lifts, got a copy?"
"BAAAAAAAAA!"
"10-9, could you repeat?"
"I asked if you had the keys to the blue van."
"Oh, right.  I think Ross has them."
"10-4. Ross, you got a copy?"
"BAAAAAAAAA!"  "BAAAAAAAAaaaAAA!"
".....blue van?"
"10-9 bro?  I thought I heard a sheep."




Congrats to Luke and Monica for their new son.  And Patrick and Veronika for their new daughter!





People still manage to fly off the road even when it's completely dry.
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Ben the under-employed avalanche dog
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The view of the mountain from Methven
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My cover-up-the-rocks machine
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Sunday, July 10, 2011

Breezy night at Mt Hutt

First nor'wester of the season at Mt Hutt.




Wednesday, June 29, 2011

fjordland

Once again, nothing too crazy in this email.  Just some ridiculous scenery.  That's the thing about New Zealand.  Once you think you've seen the most mind-boggling lanscape in the world, then around the corner there's something that resets the bar.  I had to really pick and choose from my 75 photos per day.

I've been staying in backpacker hostels, which is totally the way to go.  I avoid staying in the dorms, but there are usually private rooms available so you can still hang out in the common areas but not have to deal with snorers and door-slammers.  Being a solo traveler, it's absolutely impossible not to meet people unless you lock yourself in a room.  So, I've hung out with the following people:

A Quebecoise girl whom I met on the trail (about Montreal, university studies, and career paths)
A Malaysian Chinese girl (about Malaysian and Singapore politics)
A French guy (about skiing, and also Lance Armstrong!)
A Dutch guy (about American gun laws)
An Irish guy (about the color of one's stool after drinking Guinness for several days)
...among others

I received word that I need to return to work in a couple of days, so I'll be making my way back north tomorrow.






Arriving in Te Anau. The next day I hiked up the mountain off my right hand.  It took about eight hours.  I left before daybreak and returned at dusk.  It was absolutely amazing but howling winds and rain meant that I couldn't take many pictures.
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Top of the hike.  I was wet and cold.  That's a fjord behind me but the sun is so low and the land is so steep that everything is always in shadow.
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The lakefront in the town of Te Anau.  It's a nice little town.  A few T-shirt shops, a big statue of a bird, and lots of wilderness next door.
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On the road to Milford Sound
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Riddle me this:
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You've heard the saying "the photos don't do it justice".  Well, this time it's true.
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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Kea


Kea (kee-yuh) are mountain parrots, the unruly teenagers of the bird world.  They are mischievous and curious.  They really like to chew on things, especially shiny things attached to cars.  I watched this one methodically destroy this guy's windshield wipers.

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When he was done, he (she?) trotted over to my car to see what he could mess with.  I actually had to remove my wiper blades while I went for a walk.  
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one more... the oft-photographed Mitre Peak in Milford Sound.
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Saturday, June 25, 2011

break from the heat


Hello fellow skiers and ski-ettes.

My friend Ben and I went to Craigieburn today, it was a blast.  These club ski fields are something else.  The terrain is as ridiculous as you want it to be, the rope tows are a challenge in themselves, and the mountains are spectacular.  In interviews, Aaron Brill, the founder of Silverton, says he got the idea for that mountain after a trip to Craigieburn.  


This nutcracker tow is famous even in NZ because it goes around a corner.  That's my hand at the bottom.  Remember, this thing is hauling ass.  Get it wrong and you have your knuckles flattened.  Taking the photo was a pretty respectable feat.
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That's an old Ford tractor in there powering the apparatus.
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The goods:
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Friday, June 17, 2011

touring Canterbury


Hopefully the number of pictures in this email doesn't blow up your computer.

My father and I have been kicking around Canterbury for the last week, seeing the sights in this part of New Zealand.  The weather has been really nice, which has been great for touring but bad for the ski area.  Winter has apparently been delayed so far, which means the ski area can't open yet.  Which means that I don't have any work yet.  There have been frosty temperatures overnight which has allowed some artificial snowmaking to take place, but that only covers a very small percentage of the ski area and isn't enough to keep the whole crew busy.  Hopefully Mother nature kicks it into gear soon and gives us some snow.

We had some people take us up in gliders, which was really neat.  A little wind-up rubber band plane tows the glider up to about 4000 feet, then detaches you.  It was a calm day, so it took maybe half an hour per flight.  On a windy day there isn't a limit on how long one can stay up.  I had a great view of the ski mountain and the surrounding hills and also the ocean.  My pilot did some stalls and loops, which was exciting but made me slightly queasy.  Great fun and nice people, though.  


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We also did some mountain biking around a lake up in the hills.  It was really pretty, but everything was brown because it is wintertime here.  This was where they filmed some of the Lord of the Rings scenes.  There weren't any power lines or people or anything at all, really.  Just a huge mountain range in the distance and the wind.  One thing that's cool about New Zealand is that there are never any airplanes or contrails overhead.  I guess it's just not on the way to anywhere.  In the US the skies are always full.  


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I fell into a patch of thorns.  I've still got some in my hands and I don't know how I'll get them out of my clothes.


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We also visited a lake up the way, Lake Coleridge.  There was nobody here.  There was a cold, stiff wind.  I guess in the summer people might fish or windsurf up here, but it was pretty menacing that day.  The water in the lakes and rivers are all a turquoise blue.  It's because of eroded glacial "rock flour" in the water that reflects blue.  I looked that up.

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My little town of Methven has about 1000 residents on a crowded day, and for shopping I drive about half and hour to the town of Ashburton, population 15,000 or so.  My dad and I went down so I could get my cell phone set up and we could rent some DVDs and such.  No on-line streaming of media here since internet is outrageously expensive.  While we were there, we experienced a fairly strong earthquake.  I was in the phone shop and the floor and walls started shaking.  I was standing there slack-jawed when a lady grabbed my arm and pulled me out of the building.  Outside everyone was on the street dialing on their cell phones.  The pavement was still roiling for a length of time after.  Feels like you are sickly drunk and woozy, since everything is moving around imperceptibly.   It turns out that the epicenter of the quake was in Christchurch.  This didn't help matters there at all, as I will describe later.  It was Steve's first earthquake.  We also experienced another in Christchurch a few days later.

Something that I think my dad was impressed with is the state of chilliness everywhere, most of all in my little house.  It's a really quaint little cottage near the center of town, and it is one of the older houses on the street.  It doesn't have any insulation or central heating.  It had a fireplace but the chimney fell down in the September earthquake (onto my car), so the fireplace is out of commission.  Now to keep warm, one operates a combination of portable propane and electric heaters.  If you're going to be in a room for awhile, you turn the heater on there.  Then you turn it off when you leave to save electricity.  You can be as warm as you like, but you have to be willing to pay the electric bill.  At night you have to wear a hat to bed or your ears and nose will get frozen.  You also need to remember to pee before going to bed.  It saves a lot of heartache later when you have to get up in the middle of the night and go to the icy toilet.  Don't get me wrong, I love the place, it's got character.


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The neighbors have some cats that are outside all the time and often hang out on the fence.  Everyone who walks by stops to pet them.  I guess it will suffice until I can be reunited with mine, who is on vacation at my parents' house for the summer.


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I just now left Steve at an airport hotel.  An ash cloud from a Chilean volcano has been circumnavigating the southern hemisphere and disrupting NZ air travel.  Allegedly it has drifted offshore for a couple of days, so hopefully he gets out tomorrow.  

Much love,
Ray

Christchurch

We went to Christchurch today.  We had planned to go to a museum or two, but most of the things to see are downtown.  We decided to go down there to check it out.  I hadn't been there, and I had heard that some of the city center was closed off.  I figured there would still be shops and people outside the cordon, and that we could browse around a bit.  I had seen some chimneys down in the area around my town, and there is a church down the road that lost its steeple.  But that was really all I had seen of the damage and it didn't register that things were much worse.

I was really unprepared for the state of things in the city.  It seems like the earthquake went off directly underneath downtown.  The entire city center was closed off, empty, and eerie.  It was like the beating heart of the city had been surgically removed.

We parked on a side street near a fence that closed off a bridge over the river.  We walked around looking for the parking meter machine.  As we were about to put coins in, a lone lady from across the street yelled "don't bother, they haven't checked the meter since February."  

I figured there would be a place to get a coffee, but there wasn't anything open at all.  It seemed like every building had a red tag on it that meant that it was condemned.  I peeked in the window of a coffee shop and there were cups and plates on the tables, and a dusty newspaper dated Feb. 22, 2011 (the quake happened on Feb. 23).  It was like Pompeii.

We walked around the cordon, satisfying our morbid curiosity.  There is a big casino on the edge of the city center and it was open.  It was a bit of a shock to see some people milling about.  We asked if there was coffee inside, and indeed there was.  We went upstairs to the bar and ordered.  While standing there waiting for our order, there was a rumble and the ceiling shook.  Everyone looked up and halfheartedly moved toward the door.  Later I looked at the http://www.geonet.org.nz/ site (chock full of interesting geological info) which said that it was a 4.4 quake, 6km deep, and 10km from Christchurch.  That's really shallow, and really close.

I think we flatlanders have the impression that an earthquake is an isolated event.  But it's really a long process.  There's the initial shock, then as the force transmits down that fault and on to other faults, there are continuous aftershocks.  They decrease in intensity and frequency over time, but they've been going on nonstop in Christchurch since the February quake there (and since September along the fault in Darfield 30 miles away, which had the 7.2 quake last year).  There have been many thousands of aftershocks since those quakes.  

The twin shocks we felt in Ashburton were 5.5 and 6.2 magnitude.  The February quake was a 6.3.  What's troubling now is that the clock is reset for the aftershocks.  They will now decrease over time, but buildings that might have been saved before Monday are now beyond repair, and there's really no timeline on when the quakes will quit.  We saw some scaffolding that was mangled from falling walls.  It looked like crews had been trying to stabilize the structures when the big shock hit on Monday and stamped out any hope.

We walked the rest of the way around the city and I snapped some photos.  One striking sight was the Catholic church, which looks like it is barely standing.  Out in the large courtyard in front of the church, workers had carefully tagged and stacked stones that were recovered from the church.  I guess the intent was to restore the building and put the stones back into place. But looking at it, it seemed obvious to us that there was no hope at all.  Huge cracks ran up the facade, and the massive structure looked like it could come apart at any minute.  I imagine the Monday aftershock broke a lot of hearts.

Well, here are some grim pictures.


planet of the apes
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The famous cathedral in the background.  Some of you have been there.
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church organ
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toilet and bathtub exposed to the street
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the Catholic church
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