Saturday, February 24, 2007
Hanging out with a new mob...
This was one of the small emus. I knew it would be friendly, but approached with caution anyway!
And here is Huge, arms full of koala. They smell just like cough drops and they're so soft! What a day!
Such lovely manners!
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Making ourselves at home...
Doesn't he look calm and peaceful? The guitar is good medicine for him! The hat is a nice Aussie touch, I think. It's really a part of surviving the forty degree summer here.
We're just finishing our third week at school and we're both a wee bit tired. Huge is loving his school...he has koalas right outside his classroom window sometimes. He's started lawn bowls on Thursday nights. He says it's just like curling except warmer....and no sweeping! Photos to come...
Besides the koalas, we've seen one gigantic spider(harmless we're told) and about a million ants. Tiny ones that crawl all over the kitchen in an enormous ant frenzy!!!!! Taking a page from My Big Fat Greek Wedding, I've taken to spraying them with Windex! It's enormously satisfying to see them stop in their tracks...and everything is so clean and shiny!
So far, this is the only thing close to a kangaroo that we've spotted besides steaks at the market!
Thursday, February 8, 2007
Exploring Christchurch
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
Our final stop? Christchurch, New Zealand...
Saturday, February 3, 2007
Bushwalking in Abel Tasman...
Paradise? We thought so! After an entertaining water taxi tour, we were dropped off onshore to begin a trek. The trail was well-worn and lush.
We'd like to come back to try it in other season.
The trek was beautiful. One minute, we were in the deepest, thickest forest, and then the trail would open up and we'd see the expanse of the ocean.
Breathtaking, really.
Friday, February 2, 2007
The fifth oldest wooden sailing ship in the world...
In Picton, tourists can visit the Edwin Fox Museum. According to our guide book, tourists can view the artifacts, video texts and other text materials collected in the museum part and then actually walk right onto what's left of the ship. Of course we had to go! Huge, the sailor at heart, was rapt!
Edwin Fox was built is 1853, and started life as a fully-rigged ship in India. She was built of teak, to protect her from woodworm and a covering of copper-sheeting was applied to further strengthen her hull. Her maiden voyage was from Calcutta to London, carrying a cargo of tea.
She changed hands often. Soon after her voyage from India, she was sold to the British Government, as a transport ship for the Crimean War. She carried troops during the mid 1850s. Later, the ship served as a convict ship bound for Fremantle, Western Australia. She has quite a sad history after that... stripped of some of her rigging, drunken crews running her into rocks, lawsuits, conversion into a refrigeration ship transporting meat...
Anyway, what remains of the ship is now preserved in drydock in Picton. These photos are from down in the hold. Huge says we were standing right on the keel. Amazingly well preserved for its age.
I couldn't resist this shot... the ship's cat?
About Us
- Huge and me
- Adelaide, South Australia, Australia