Posts

Showing posts from 2016

Wellington on a good day, Red Rocks walkway

Image
It was a perfect spring like day today so we headed out on the Red Rocks walkway from Owhiro Bay carpark to the seal colony past Red Rocks.  Lovely coastal walk with stunning views of the snow capped South Island mountains. We walked 5km, sat and ate an apple looking at the view then returned.  There were tonnes of seals today basking in the sunshine. Man they stink en masse like this. Hard to get a good photo but the one above gives you an idea - yes the lumps that look like seals are seals.  As it is a stunning Wellington day there were also hundreds of people, tens of cyclists, a handful of trail bikes and we thinks we gave way to over 200+ 4wd vehicles.  My tiny rant is what a load of dickheads. This path is multi user yet the 4wd's sped, forced bikes and walkers to scramble up and down banks by not just slowing down and giving us room. Honestly of the 200+ only 7 vehicles did the kiwi index finger raise thank you gesture when we got out of their way. The

Spectacular Waiohine Gorge, yucky weather

Image
Foolishly believing the Metservice forecast we set off for a hike on Saturday. The weather in Wellington was pretty terrible and while the whole country was facing record winds on Sunday the forecast for the Wairarapa was mild Saturday in comparison.  We chose Waiohine Gorge as the swing bridge looks spectacular- and it is! As is the gorge it crosses. A 120m suspension bridge, 40m above the river apparently, it's one person wide with a loading of 7 people. This is somewhere I wish I had brought Don and Imogen when they were young - very wow. There was a family down below us as we crossed. In the selfie pic you can see the bridge above.  Back to our hike. We drove over the hill planning to hike and stay the night in Martinborough - the latter part we did.  As we left the sealed road and hit gravel, realising we had no cell coverage on either phone it also dawned on us we didn't tell anyone else where we had gone.  The rain was pretty bad and was sticking to the Tararua ranges, i

London Day 14 - time to go home

Image
This two weeks has flown by yet we are happy to have seen so many people and Steve enjoyed a great first visit to my former home town.  Our last morning was pissing down. We packed, chatted with Paul who kindly worked from home so we could spend some time with him and headed into town to meet Karen for lunch  Our last selfie at stop P Isle of Dogs and one last photo at Canary Wharf DLR station.  Our big plan for the last day was going up the Walkie-Talkie building to the SkyGarden. As you can see from this before and after pic series when we headed to our long awaited booking time we couldn't even see the building for the cloud.  So sadly we cancelled our booking. Impossible to get another the same day that has gone into the list for next time.  Another of the things on the list was lunch at Caravan which we did achieve. Great coffee as promised Sophie.  We escorted Karen back to work so we could delay the goodbye. So last photo on the tube.  She works in such a fantastic part of L

York - final day with Don in the UK

Image
After our shorter than ideal sleep we headed off to York, a short train ride from Leeds.  York is a walled town with Roman ruins, a cathedral and a castle too. We had yummy breakfast and set off on the wall walk, it's about 3km but we stepped off and on walking 13km in our short day there.  We found the walk lovely but curious watching normal life go on in homes alongside it. Here are a few pics that sum York up really.  Part of the walk had no wall section as it had formerly been a lake and moat section of the castle protection. Now it's a megacentre and housing. We saw baby geese and swans though.  Around midday we spotted a gorgeous pub so just had to stop and sit in their courtyard. Lovely day for it.  That's the wall behind Steve.  The cathedral is massive and ornate. Great windows and gargoyle display.  Hard to photograph up close so these don't do it justice.  The castle cost £5 EACH! To walk up but oh what a view.  The pedestrian streets are full of standard hig