Showing posts with label ocean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ocean. Show all posts

Sunday, December 30, 2018

Birds and Beaches in Newcastle, Australia


I recently traveled to Newcastle, Australia (about a two-hour train ride north of Sydney) with a friend for the last academic conference I would attend as a student. It was a bit humid and hot (in the 80s F / high 20s C) but great to be so near the ocean and able to enjoy the nice birdsong and frequent sightings of the cockatoos and kookaburras. The conference was invigorating – lots of new ideas and books to check out and new friendships made. On the days off, we did some Christmas shopping at a big mall and walked down to the beach to do some swimming with the fish. That was a fun experience and reminded me how calming an effect being in nature can have on us humans. I always plan to get out in it more, but maybe I will actually make an effort to do it in the new year. Every time I’m in Australia, I enjoy it and want to come back. We did a quick harbor tour in Sydney while waiting for our flight. It started thundering and raining while we were out, so that was a bit of a bummer, but at least I got to view the magnificent Opera House and Harbor Bridge again.


First time I saw this phrase used to describe a loading zone!









At the Harris Farm Markets store (fancier version of Trader Joe's)

cool public art fixture that lit up at night

the conference was in a new building at the university

where we went swimming with the fish

cockatoos were everywhere, noisily announcing their presence

found this cute kitty on one of our walks around the neighborhood

more cockatoos

kookaburra - heard their laughing call every morning

kookaburra on the nature walk

this kookaburra let me get so close to it!

harbor tour in Sydney with thunderstorm approaching

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Getaway to Hokitika

After a long summer spent working hard on my thesis and other things, I was in much need of a break. I had been itching to go on a road trip for a long while, and the long Queen's Birthday weekend (June 4th was a holiday in NZ) was a good opportunity to get away. We decided to go to the little tourist town of Hokitika on the West Coast of the South Island, since it is only a 3-ish-hour drive from Christchurch and I hadn't been there before. Did the car overheat on the drive over, forcing us to limp back to town (and blast the heater on so it could make it) and switch it out for a rental car? Yes. But that did not prevent us from having a good weekend away!

It turned out to be a really nice time. The sunsets were pretty, the mountains were gorgeous all covered in snow, and the weather was amazingly clear and sunny the whole time! (The West Coast is known for always being rainy.) We could hear the ocean from the hostel room, and it was a soothing sound.

They're big into the driftwood art here and have an annual competition for it, which is kinda cool.



There is a glowworm cove accessible right from the main highway, so we went there at night and got to see hundreds of glowworms in the trees. The next day we drove the 33km out to the Hokitika Gorge with its pretty glacial blue water. There were a ton of fantail birds flitting around all of the tourists. There must be a lot of bugs around. After one brushed me, I realized there were indeed sandflies buzzing around and that was it. Thankfully I avoided getting bitten so no itchy bumps that last for weeks when you get home!





The scenery was nice: lots of farmland surrounded by mountains, and then the rocks on the oceanfront and an old washed-up ship. We splurged on one nice meal which was well worth it. The scalloped potatoes were delicious -- I haven't had them in many many years.




We also drove up to the Pancake Rocks, which are a unique geological feature and they're not quite sure about how they formed. The tide was low so we didn't get to see the full blowhole effect, but it was still beautiful and we could still hear and see smaller splashes and the thundering when water gets stuck in an underwater cave and howls.



We still had time to see the Brunner Mine, which actually had some good historic plaques and lots of abandoned machinery and bits. There was a collapse back in the day which killed a bunch of people. The ponies knew something was up and refused to go in, but they forced them to. :( You gotta listen to the animals -- they have different (often better) senses than we do.



On the drive back, we stopped briefly to walk around the Londonderry Rock. It was one of those rocks that doesn't get ground up by a moving glacier and rides the top of it, so it never has a chance to break down. The miners tried to break it up but it was too big, so they just worked around it. The thing is massive. I wouldn't want to be anywhere near it for an earthquake.


We also stopped at Arthur's Pass on the way back and saw four kea in the parking lot. They are such intelligent parrots. Some of the other tourists were feeding them (which is a big no-no) and photographing them. They get so much attention. Unfortunately they are more endangered than the kiwis, with only a few thousand left after they were hunted by farmers back in the day because they would attack their flocks.


Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Sydney Itinerary: Whale Watching

We really lucked out on the day we chose to go whale-watching in Sydney. The captain found a pair of humpback whales that were doing a phenomenal amount of splashing, tail- and fin-slapping, and breaching. He said it was the most activity he'd seen in almost ten years of doing the job. We followed them for over an hour, and they kept it up the whole time. They also started attracting other whales to the area. It was rocky out there, and even I started getting seasick by the end of the three-hour cruise, but I think it was worth it. And I managed to get some nice pictures of their activity!








Then we walked through the Botanic Gardens and got dinner in Darling Harbor in the evening. This is what a day outdoors in Sydney can be like...