Plan B    (June
22- Aug 30’16)
Following our sudden change of plans from sailing across The
Pacific (the boat was sold in Tahiti ), we
opted to continue on to Austral-Asia and go land-yachting. In short, we
traveled from Tahiti to New Zealand ,
Tasmania  and ending the trip in Australia   
All told we drove 15,000 kilometres in three “cramper” vans
over a period of three months and absolutely loved it. This is despite the fact
we were travelling in their winter period, when the sun didn’t rise until
“eightish” and set by five at the latest, was very chilly (especially in New
Zealand), and mostly had beaches and camp sites to ourselves.
| far too many beaches like this | 
South Island: From
the Auckland 
We covered the southern island in a clockwise direction and
every turn in the road seemed to produce a “wow”! But apart from the heavy
morning frost (which didn’t dissipate until noon where there was tree canopy,
the lack of any straight road was the only misgiving (that and it was all left
hand oriented) and dictated constant vigilance of the white line.
Everywhere, the landscape proved fascinating, but it was the
Fox and Joseph Franz glaciers that topped our list. To be able to walk on the
glacier beds, which only 30 years ago, were ice encased, was spectacular. Our
guess is that the glacier retreat will be complete in 10 years time.
| Fox Glacier | 
| Franz Joseph Glacier | 
| Fox Glacier bed | 
| Maeraki Beach meter sized marbles | 
| Milford Sound | 
| enroute to Milford Sound | 
| Milford Sound | 
| Geothermal Valley | 
| Maori Village | 
| Maori Village | 
The landscape is a gorgeous blend of mountains and pasture land and while still very appealing, our vote went to the southern island as having the most eye candy.
The Kiwis have definitely made travelling around their
country easy with abundant tourist information, rest stops, excellent signage and
a welcoming attitude. The four weeks and 5,500 kilometres flew by effortlessly.
We’d love the chance to revisit and walk some of the many alpine tracks which
weren’t open to us at this time of year.
Being smaller in size, we opted to stay only one week and
weather conditions being what they were, this was simply a touring holiday.
Heavy rains closed many roads, which was taken as a common occurrence by the
locals. Such wash out areas are all marked by a permanent depth indicator, so
you can determine if you your vehicle can make the crossing. But generally the
roads are good and distances between points short.
Over 21% of Tassies’s land is dedicated to National park and
much only accessible by foot or four wheel drive. Although Tasmania 
is part of Australia , it is
like Australia 
| A good day to be ON a land-yacht | 
| pastoral Tass - hops and grapes | 
| Hobart | 
| Hobart | 
Like Canada ,
Australia Melbourne , Victoria ,
followed the coast NW up to Adelaide ,
 South Australia Brisbane ,
 New South Wales Canberra  and finally to Sydney Australia 
When we crossed the interior from Adelaide 
to Brisbane 
| typical Outback with a little Mad Max | 
| typical outback gear with reinforced roo bumper | 
| go anywhere outback camper | 
Just west of Canberra , in the
Blue Mountains, we visited the Jenolian 
Caves , of which there are many such
sites around Australia 
We could babble on for pages about the sites in the SW
corner and have definitely put a return visit back onto the bucket list. Only the
next visit will be to see the WNW coastline.
Home:
We are now back home in Canada 
Before we think any more about that, we need to rescue Two
Moons from the dusty boat yard in Spain 
and prepare her for a return trip to the west side of the Atlantic 
in 2018.
Best wishes to all…..G’day……….Mike and Grace  (mobile 226-600-5051)
 
| cockatoos - make crows sound like song birds | 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment