Archive for October 2007


Gluttony

October 27th, 2007 — 8:48am

Amongst all the Otago bird-watching, we also ate titanic quantities of very good food.

On the way home, we stopped in Moeraki and enjoyed a lunch at Fleur’s, which would be that little building by the pier on the right side of the harbor in the previous post. Their claim to fame is proximity to all those fishing boats. Yep, fresh fish.

Anna opted for the fish of the day, prepared nicely with, ya know, capers and that sort of frou-frou junk.

I, on the other hand, opted for the cold platter.

Woah. From the foreground, clockwise: ceviche (in the abalone shell), steamed mussels and clams, blue cod waldorf, one whole smoked leatherjacket, smoked mussels, smoked eel, smoked ling, smoked salmon, gravalox (mostly hidden), one whole elephant fish head (smoked), and blue cod “wings,” which is a whole tail section the size of my hand, smoked. Oh, and two lemons wedges and some garnish. What, no chips?

Rest assured, with persistence and a couple of handles of beer, we made it through.

For my money, the perfect meal would be that smoked leather jacket, some fine crackers and a bit of mustard or horseradish. Tasty!

[one of these days I'll wise up and post my follow-up post first so it appears below the main post, which is below...]

Comments Off | New Zealand

Southward bound

October 27th, 2007 — 8:38am

Another weekend, another roadtrip. I have to say, the Southern hemisphere has been good for getting us off our collective butts. I feel quilty about that trip to Yosemite we never took.

Monday was Labo(u)r Day. As we heard from our Kiwi friends, Labour Day is well loved because it breaks the long winter drought of no public holidays from Queen’s Birthday waaay back in June. It’s also the first three-day weekend of spring.

We had made grand plans to do some bike touring, but weather and lack of preparation nipped those ambitions. Instead, destination: Otago!

Otago is the large-size region (political unit? state?) south of Canterbury, and covers basically the lower third of the east coast. Whereas Canterbury is flat and plain-y, Otago is rolling and hill-y.




(as always, er, mostly, click a pic to get a larger version)

Besides eating excessively and sightseeing, the primary purpose of our trip was to observe us some endangered animals. Aaron’s sub-goal was to demonstrate the need for an exorbitant telephoto lens for the digital camera. Both goals were achieved marvelously.



We kicked off our trip in Oamaru. We both rather enjoyed Oamaru, a small-ish town slowly becoming a tourist destination. It plays host to colonies of both blue and yellow-eyed penguins. The former, though more common, have been, ahem, commodified out of the reach of your average punter. The latter, we’ll get back to that.

Instead of natural splendor, we took a walk around Oamaru’s old downtown, now just becoming a bit of an arts-business district, featuring great quantities of the local limestone. We toured a cheese factory, and waited for the local whiskey distillery to open. The distillery never opened, so we bought cheese instead. Tasty!

Heading south we pulled off in the village/tourist trap of Moeraki. Moeraki the village is an out-of-the-way fishing harbor.



Moeraki the tourist trap consists of these spherical boulders which have come to rest in the surf:






(yes, yes, I know. exposure madness)

At first the whole thing seems overwhelmingly mundane, but after a bit of time in the sun, with the waves crashing around the boulders it’s easy to imagine them as some sort of immense horseshoe crab or alien spawn, crawling from a watery birth.

The site lacked any scientific explanation, but we gleaned that the boulders are the result of some far away geological event (duh), and they’re embedded in the relatively soft embankment above the beach. As the ocean wears at the cliffs, the boulders emerge




and carried into the surf by rather ugly dwarves.

Sometimes the rocks crack open, exposing their creamy nougat-y centers.




Crazy dwarves. Always loafing on the job.

From Moeraki, our next stop was Dunedin. Founded in 1848 by the Lay Church of Scotland, Dunedin is NZed’s “Scottish” town, it’s also South Island’s second largest city at around 115,000 noses [ed: News flash -- South Island population hits one million!], and site of Otago University, the third major University in the South (the others being Lincoln and Canterbury, both in/around Christchurch).




Like Oamaru, we also got a favorable impression of Dunedin. Whereas Christchurch is oppressively flat, Dunedin sprawls across the hills ringing its harbor (it also hosts the world’s steepest street, Baldwin Street). It has a tidy dowtown and a solid college-town feel — most of the housing stock in the city center looks, ahem, well used. As do most of the cars. But there is a plentiful supply of cafes, bars, restaurants and shops.

Dunedin is also the gateway to the Otago peninsula, a short 20-km spit which shelters the Dunedin harbor. The Otago peninsula plays hosts to another colony of yellow-eyed penguins, as well as a nesting colony of royal albatross. Like the blue penguins, the albatross have been screened from the unwashed public by barbed wire and a conservation society which will gladly give you a peep for for a quarter. Unlike the penguins, the albatross can fly anywhere the please, including over the car park to the albatross attraction.




Best guess is those are non-breeding birds, maybe juveniles, with a mere 2- to 2.5-meter wingspan.

For your eye-straining pleasure, here’s the first, but not last, fuzzy blow-up. Gosh, Anna, think how much easier this would be with a telephoto lens.



To my eye, (royal albratross) is to (gull) as (marathon runner) is to (me), with a kindof normal (though large) gull-like body, but that immense, high aspect ratio wing. Given their epic flightpatterns, that comparison might be pretty close to the truth.

A bit later we took a tootle around the Dunedin botanic garden and came across a fine example of NZ Pigeon.






It’s a beautiful bird, at least 50% larger than the common pigeon. And a horrible flier. It’s not uncommon to locate them in the woods by listening for the crashing noises.

We returned to the Otago peninsula to (finally!) stalk the yellow-eyed penguin. At this rather idyllic beach




the Department of Conservation has set up a hunter’s blind for those on the yellow-eyed penguin stakeout. Besides being quite rare, the yellow-eyed nest well-inshore among the shrubs and foliage, often up to a kilometer from the ocean. They feed during the day and return to their nests in the mid-afternoon. So, if you’re lucky enough to be in the blind at about three in the afternoon, you can hang out for a couple of hours and watch penguins commute home.

Unfortunately, the beach was guarded by quite a few fur seals




which were, er, rather huge. And sort of ill-tempered. And between us and the penguins. Sigh. We did actually see a penguin crossing the beach, about a kilometer away.

So we salved our wounds with a fine snack, and watched three more penguins appear on the beach directly in front of us. While the camera sat in the backpack elsewhere on the beach. Sigh.

Before we left Otago, we also caught this elusive creature on film. Not quite as rare as the others, of course (but quite tasty when medium-rare).




On the way back, we stopped at Oamaru again to take another chance at the yellow-eyed. Much like at Otago, DoC provides a blind overlooking the beach. So we waited.




And our patience was rewarded. What? No, really. There’s a penguin in the picture above.



We saw several penguins



Even saw a group go back out for a little playtime.



After a while we noticed a a few penguins well up on the cliff, apparently waiting for their mates to return.




What’s amazing is that this penguins (who we figure is guarding the nest while their mate feeds) is an easy hundred feet above the beach, up the brushy hillside you see in the picture. It would be a long waddle. I speculated that they could just fly up the hill, but didn’t get many takers for that hypothesis.




Awesome.




(full gallery here)

Comments Off | NZ places, New Zealand

A fair time was had by all

October 14th, 2007 — 9:02pm

After a week of passing some sort of antipodal uber-cold back-and-forth between us, the sun finally came out (figuratively and literally), and we got to play this weekend. On Saturday, we tripped lightly down to the beautiful burg of Leeston for the Ellesmere A & P Association Show. “A & P” would be “Agricultural and Pastoral.” The county fair, to those in the autumnal north.

First, to dispense with the obvious…

Yes, there were sheep.

(click on any of the pictures for a bigger version)





All kinds of sheep



and sheep accessories





and sheep being judged. I now know that you don’t put a nice leash on a sheep and lead it around a ring with pink ribbons in its fleece. Nor do you ride it around jumping over fences.




There was lots of judging going on. Wine, cooking, handicrafts, highland dancing



[I'm glad I got a picture of the 16-year-old piper, way over to the right. Imagine what he's thinking. "I do this for the groupies" or "I should have asked for an electric guitar for christmas" or ...]




Sheep shearing was judged of course. Singles, pairs, mixed doubles. I was most impressed with the color commentor on the left, who really put me in the middle of the action.

And of course the vege was judged:




And what’s it all for? The money? The power?




The silverware. Of course.

Well, and the losers of the vege competition get put out here




We also managed to catch this candid shot of two hobbits getting ready for a riding competition




(just kidding, those are kids showing Shetlands)

Oh! And this is possibly the least illustrative photo possible, but there was bobbing for eels! Er, eel petting!




Eels were once numerous in nearby Te Waihora (Lake Ellesmere) and a major Maori food source, and have since become the ugly poster children for lake conservation.

Side observation: We saw many sheep, many cows, quite a few chicken, ducks, geese, llamas, and alpacas. The petting zoo even had a dog, which seemed a little redundant. No domestic rabbits (rabbits are pests here), and exactly eight pigs: one sow and seven piglets. Given the kiwi pre-occupation with sausage, I would have thought pigs would big deal. [Then again I also would have thought they could make bacon that was worth a darned.]

The A&P show was co-incident with an old tractor family reunion




They had a playpen for the baby tractors




Even big uncle Eddie was there




and that crazy dog he keeps chained up in the front yard.




And, to top it all off: log sports, brought to you by the Ellesmere A&P Axemen.




To you it’s just fun and games with an axe, but for them, it’s training for their upcoming grudge match against the Aussies. I’ve been told the man in the middle is 78 years old. The average age of the squad hovers around 65.



A good time in the sun had by all. We even had hot dogs!



Comments Off | New Zealand

October 10th, 2007 — 2:07pm

Here’s a warm Marburg shout-out to Angus Hay Edelman.



What a bruiser!

1 comment » | New Zealand

What’s in a Name?

October 9th, 2007 — 8:49pm


Image from TeAra.govt.nz – “The Encyclopedia of New Zealand”

I’ve commented before on the imaginative poverty of the early colonists. I can understand the yearning for the familiar by strangers in a strange place, but only the British could look at a bird with plumage this striking and a call this haunting, and decide that the most appropriate name is “blue-wattled crow”



Image from the awesome nzbirds.com

The Maori name, Kokako, is a much better match for the birds’ loveliness. Fortunately, that seems to be the most widely used name these days. Unfortunately, the kokako is now so rare that the only Pakeha with cause to use either name are tree-hugging pinkos who make special trips to the handful of “mainland islands” and actual islands where they’re still holding on.

Like me.

Back at the beginning of September I got to tag along on a field trip to two areas with remnant populations. It took a special trip at dawn to a spot where the local conservation officer knew there was resident male, but we heard one on the last morning of the trip. I’m still waiting to catch a glimpse of one, but just to have heard that call waft through the bush on a frosty morning as the rising sun glided the rimu crowns was an experience to treasure.

Comments Off | New Zealand

Back to top