Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Tongariro Crossing

East coast of the North island. Tasman sea


 The following pictures were taken on the Tongariro crossing, one of New Zealands great walks, located south of Taupo. Many of the volcano's situated on this walk are still active, and evidence of this was visible to us throughout our hike. The smell of sulfur in the air, hot steam rising from the ground, boiling water and hardened lava flows made this a hike like no other we have undertaken while in NZ.



Emily and Steve (our wwoof host from Eltham)


Mt Ruapehu

About to start the Tongariro crossing. A 8-9hr hike that takes you through Volcano fields, alpine environments and grassy tussocks. One of New Zealands great walks.


View of Mt Ruapehu from the Tongariro crossing. (An active volcano that erupted a few years ago)

Beginning of the hike

Mt Ngauruhoe (A.K.A Mt Doom from the Lord of the Rings movies) Also an active volcano.


John blending into soda falls

5km of stairs await

The fog rolling in, the weather can change here without notice, as we found out.

If you look closely, you can see Mt Taranaki in the distance.

Warning of what to do in case of an eruption. Not very comforting.

Emily with the fog rolling in

On the central plateau about half way done the walk.

Steve and Emily stopping for some lunch.

The three hobbits

Volcanic ash of past eruptions

View from the trail

Final climb before the trail heads downhill

The Blue lake

The Emerald Lakes. Once explosive craters situated on Mt Tongariro.

The lakes behind us are not fit for swimming and the foul odor emitting from them reinforces this notion. 


Mt Ruapehu in the back ground, Mt Ngauruhoe in the middle and the red crater in the foreground

Lake Taupo in the distance. (NZ's largest lake)

At the end of the track, 7 and a half hours later

View from the end of the track

Friday, May 20, 2011

Blenheim, Hawkes Bay and Eltham

The following pictures are of our last days in Blenheim, and then follow our voyage from the South island to the North island and to Hawkes Bay, where we wwoofed/house sit for a Canadian. We are currently re-visiting with one of our wwoof host who we stayed with back in December, his name is Steve and he lives in Eltham, on the west coast of the North island near Mt Taranaki. 

Fall has arrived

Emily playing in the park

Why there was beaver statues I don't know but we thought it was blog worthy

Vineyard fields in Blenheim


Grape leaves changing colors


Emily and Zhee Chee (from Malaysia)

Chardonnay


Passing on a little Canadian spirit


Kenneth from the Aisle of Sky, Scotland

Downtown Blenheim

Emily at a Chinese pot luck, courtesy of her Muscle shucking mates

Emily preparing the Easter ham

Final product

The spread....... mmmmmmmm

We organized an Easter egg hunt. Emilys work mates had never experienced one before.

Enthusiastic photographer

The Asians enjoying the Easter feed

John teaching the girls a friendly game of horse

Farewell South Island

John and Jaus (Rosie and Guys son) in Wellington

Jaus, Emily and Sylvie in the back of the car

Tourere Station, where we stayed in Hawkes Bay

The house was situated on a 800 hectre property, with green as far as the eye could see

Endless fields where cows, sheep and deer graze

Taking a break on one of our walks around the station

Judgement day, these ewes were off to the paddock in the sky

Emily in Napier, the art deco capital of the world


Emily with the Maori mermaid protector

On the beach with the pacific behind us


Walk in the park

John posing with a black fern


Suzanne and Petes place in Waipukurau (where we house sitted)

Permaculture farming at its best


Emily and Patrick before bedtime, Suzanne and Petes son

John reading Patrick a story

Back in Eltham, where cheese is the name of the game

Zhee Chees first snow experience up Mt Taranaki

Native bush

John making his way across a swing bridge with a 100 ft drop below, hold on.....

Don't look down

Steve planking, the new craze in NZ

Mt Taranaki

Pig hides on the forgotten highway. Deliverance anyone?

Mt Damper falls

Our gang

Where the ferns grow. snapshot under the canopy of green

Bah Bah black sheep have you any wool?

Hope you enjoyed our photos. Emily and I have three weeks left here in NZ and are looking to cram in all sorts of activities, and we look forward to sharing them with you via the blog. Look forward to seeing you all soon, hope all is well.