At the end of my first post I mentioned that I was going with Stella to her parent's home where they run a sort of bed-and-breakfast place called Out In The Styx. It's a beautiful house/restaurant/hotel located in a small rural town that is called Pukeatua, two hours drive south of Auckland. Here I met Lance and Mary (Stella's parents), both of which are excellent cooks who spoiled me every few hours with a free meal. I also met her twin brothers, Adrian and Nolan, as well as their friends Bonnie, Anushka, and Ashlee. Because they weren't accommodating any large groups of visitors over the weekend, each of us got our own guestroom fitted with a queen-sized bed. We took advantage of the various amenities, an evening spa on the deck while enjoying one of NZ's local beers or wines is one that sticks out in my mind. On Saturday morning a few of us took a hike around the area and ended up going for a swim as well. The river that we swam in is used for bottled water in NZ and is the clearest water I've ever seen. We swam out to a little side pool, which was ridiculously blue to the point I swore there was food coloring in it. The water was a nippy 10 degrees Celsius too, I was told the temperature holds constant year-round.
The 21er party was a good time. It was out in another small town called Toruanga; we took Lance and Mary's camper-van so we wouldn't have to drive back that night. Not gonna lie … it's kinda nice being the foreigner with the intriguing accent at a party and having girls introduce themselves and say, “oh, so you're the American” … enough said ;).
We woke up the next morning and headed into town to pick up some powerade, Anushka and I were relegated to the rear of the camper and were eventually lulled back to sleep by the steady rhythm of the road. We were startled back to consciousness by the sudden halt of the camper and instead of arriving back at Out In The Styx, Ashlee and Adrian had made an executive decision and drove to Waihi beach just an hour or so in the opposite direction.
We stayed for the afternoon, played hopscotch on the beach (Ashlee won), then enjoyed breakfast (well, 1:00 PM but it was breakfast for us) at this Swiss cafe that was incredible. One thing to mention, I have been here 5 days and already had some of the best food I have ever tasted; credit mostly Lance and Mary's cooking. If anyone ever travels to New Zealand, they must stop in and stay a night or weekend at Out In The Styx.
The people, the food, the scenery are unbelievable … and it sits at the base of a protected nature reserve where NZ's national bird, the Kiwi, resides. Lance allowed me to join a Dutch group who had signed up for a guided night-walk through the reserve. We walked through complete darkness with our headlamps guiding us and were comforted by our guide's knowledge of the bush and his bits of information such as the fact that over 900,000 spiders were suspected to be within the fenced area, meaning you were never more than a couple inches from one at any instant … not normal spiders either, the giant Weta is bigger than my hand easily!
Anyway, it soon became Monday and I had plans to head to Te Kuiti to start work on a sheep farm. I had originally decided on taking a bus, but a few other of Adrian's friends came by for lunch and were on their way down to the capital, Wellington, along the way passed Te Kuiti. They volunteered to give me a lift and said that they were going to check out the Waitomo Caves on their trip down so I joined them … boat ride through the limestone caves through utter blackness except the thousands of green lights overhead given off by glowworms. The caves were cool but the whole thing was a little too commercialized for me. The best part was driving down with the group, there were a couple girls from South Africa, one Aussie, and one Kiwi … we joked how they had stopped in just to say hi to their friend, decided to stay for lunch, then ended up leaving with an American, it was a 'feel good' moment realizing everyone came from all different parts of the world but we're enjoying each others company as well as helping each other out. I made it to Te Kuiti and as I said previously, I'm a bit out of my element; herding cattle, sheep and deer. I asked Chris (aka Curly from “City Slickers”) what work needed to be done for the day and pretty much what it entailed was moving this herd of sheep from here to there, then move the cattle from there to there, so we could move the deer from there to here. It seems simple enough, but try 1800 sheep scattered across hundreds of acres and you've got yourself a full day's work!
Well, I'm tired. It's late. And this nearly wraps up my first week in New Zealand. I'll keep you posted, have a good one!