Thursday, 12 January 2017

Indomitable Christchurch & Other Nice Things – Part II

It's the second part of my tale in New Zealand, and this yarn focuses on the fellowship's camping trip from Boxing Day to New Year's Eve. You could say it was the one journey to end them all...

---

You learn many uncomfortable truths when you go camping. Firstly, wet rooms are a test of acrobatic skill. It's hardly a way to conduct sleepy, morning bathroom routines. I already knew this from my experience of house-hunting in Singapore, but it never occurred to me that you mightn't be given a choice in the matter. After our first night camping, in Oamaru, about 80 miles north of Dunedin, I managed to get around this by hanging my clothes over the towel rail, pointing the shower at the toilet, jumping precariously around it, and at the end tiptoeing my way out of the room while clutching my belongings like Indiana Jones taking a leap of faith to nowhere. And I'm still here.

Oamaru is an unusual little town. It has grand avenues and whitewashed buildings reminiscent of Italian piazzas or the Indian Raj, but there's nobody there...which is something of a national theme in New Zealand. The wide roads almost seem wasted on a population of barely 14 thousand. I guess it doesn't take them very long to get around the place. That's just as well because they have to be quite timely to catch a glimpse of the penguins that turn up at exactly the same spot on the coast to nest every night (see pictures). Clever penguins, that lot. If you go at 9pm, they will be there, surfing USA on the incoming tide. I rather enjoyed that they were half-an-hour late when we went to watch them. Perhaps they are Singaporean penguins. Other main attractions in Oamaru are the Steampunk museum and the public gardens (see pictures).

We spent the second night in Dunedin, which means "Edinburgh" in Gaelic. South Island's second city was designed as a deliberate nod to Scotland's capital. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the city centre, dominated by a statue of a seated Robert Burns, who watches over the city's best-laid plans as far as the hills (see pictures). Today, the two cities are twinned. The old city certainly borrows from Edinburgh's recognisable Palladian architecture, and it evens sits atop a hill, but the new suburbs around it have deviated from this and developed their own style. There is a large population -- large by South Island standards as there is hardly anybody outside Christchurch -- in the south of South Island that has Scottish ancestry, and this is obvious from place names such as Glenorchy, Invercargill and Dunedin. Some Scot long ago must have thought, 'I'm sick of Scotland. I want to go somewhere else!' And then he went to live in a place that looks just like Scotland and built a city called Edinburgh. Dunedin overlooks the pristine waters of Otago Harbour, which makes for the kind of view that people use in memes ("Insert inspirational quote here"). The Maori name for Dunedin is Otipoti, which holds the distinction of the best Maori name I came across during my trip, because it sounds like Swedish Chef offering you a meat stew. I really liked the city, but unfortunately we didn't have long enough to see all the sights, as we had to move on to our base near Milford Sound in time for our tour of that picturesque bay on the west coast of South Island. The original Speight's brewery will have to wait for another day...

Christchurch (population 385 thousand) and Dunedin (118 thousand) are the only major cities I visited. You can tell they are small, even at their best. Singapore is small, but it doesn't feel small. It is a bustling and busy metropolis of over five million people, with skyscrapers that light up the night. In fact, I note that the population of Singapore is greater than that of the whole of New Zealand, and it's a running joke that there are more people living in Hampshire than on South Island. Make of that what you will! The New Zealand outside of the massively-overpopulated city of Auckland is largely devoid not only of skyscrapers but of any multi-storey buildings at all. Auckland is an interesting case. It's population as a proportion of New Zealand's population is equivalent to London having 21 million people, New York having 96 million or Shanghai having 416 million mouths to feed. The overpopulation crisis is now so bad that the local government is offering people money to leave the city and live elsewhere, and New Zealand's points-based immigration system awards points to newcomers who choose to settle in other cities. But in the rest of New Zealand, they have no need to build upwards, because at this rate, they will never run out of space. What's more, everything shuts down at 6pm. For many people, of course, that is among New Zealand's most attractive qualities.

On our way from Dunedin to the southwestern region of Fiordland, at the base of the Southern Alps and the setting for Sir Peter Jackson's Middle Earth in 'Lord of the Rings', we drove through Otago. I could best describe Otago as the miscellaneous box of New Zealand, a Bible-thumping region of old-fashioned farmers with curious radio habits, rickety barns and rolling hills that stands out from any other part of the country. In the distance but clearly visible are the Southern Alps, and every so often you come across a gravel road, but you can't tell where it goes. Dotted about the roads are tiny villages and hamlets, some of which seem to exist only because people stop off there for petrol and a coffee. That's how all the horror films start, too.

Well, the second home truth about camping is that no matter what you think, you are not born with toilet etiquette. It is a learned quality. What are you supposed to do in the queue for the portaloo? Do you speak with the other people? Is it considered impolite to stare silently into the mud? Should you attempt to huddle for warmth like penguins? Would your fellow campers like some soup...or a shave? Do they require help swatting sandflies? An instruction notice stuck to the side of the toilet would be very welcome. The only time I had to use one during the trip was the night before the Milford Sound cruise, when we were camping in near-freezing conditions near the west coast. In my case, I don't think I had to bother much with conversation, though, because I frightened the bleary-eyed competitors off with a torch. Even if you did speak, they’re bloody hard to understand. New Zealandish is not a phonetic language, and you should be particularly careful of vowels. Take the simple request that you might hear at a café: “Please can I have a regular cappuccino with a muffin?” Waiting for my transfer at Auckland airport, I heard this: “Please kin I hiv a rigular kipucchaino wuth a maffun?” It continued thus for 11 (“alivven”) days.

New Zealand is the only place in the world where you can go directly from Scotland to Wales with nothing in between. Milford Sound, named for Milford Haven, west Wales, is a pristine glacial fjord of crystal-clear water surrounded by ice-capped mountains on the west coast of South Island. Flowing into the Tasman Sea, it has been proclaimed as the world's top tourist destination and Rudyard Kipling once declared it the eighth Wonder of the World.

On the chilly morning after the chilly night in the mountains, we set out for our Milford Sound cruise at 08:55, and the sound is every bit of the wonder that Kipling proclaimed it to be (see pictures). As we pulled out of the harbour, bottlenose dolphins appeared from below and swam in the boat's slipstream all the way out towards the sea. On either side were some of the country's most famous mountains: the 5500-ft Mitre Peak (so named because it looks like the Pope's hat) watches over and prays while the 4300-ft Lion faces the 5000-ft Elephant ready for battle on the other side. In fact, Mitre Peak descends right down to the bottom of the fiord, another 1000 feet, making it one of the tallest mountains in the world to rise directly out of the sea. The Welsh theme continues with the 6600-ft Mount Pembroke, set behind the picture-perfect Harrison Cove (see pictures). What's most striking about 5000-ft sheer drops is their propensity to dwarf even the largest objects around you. This is the case when you look at the sound's two waterfalls, Lady Bowen Falls and Stirling Falls, which spring out of the cliff faces. Bowen Falls is 531 ft high, Stirling Falls is 498 ft high, and they are separated by a distance of over five miles. And yet they look as though they couldn't be half that size, or half as far apart when framed against the backdrop of the mountains with nothing but water in between. Between the two waterfalls is a seal colony that likes to sleep atop a rock in the water. Lord knows how they slap their way up there with those tiny flippers of theirs, but they probably deserve the nap afterwards. Not only that, but Milford Sound is home to a colony of Fiordland penguins. They must have been busy fiording while were we there, as we didn't see them.

Our last stop on our southwards journey was the pretty waterside town of Queenstown, not to be confused with the pretty inland town of Queenstown in Singapore. The New Zealand incarnation might be the best place in the country for reckless abandon. It is a hub of adventure sports, has a thriving nightlife and hosts a small wildlife park where they hatch birds out of kiwifruits. I was up for an adventure sport or two myself, but had to recklessly abandon the idea upon discovering the extent to which bungee-jumping would eat into my remaining funds. So, another one for next time. They don't call it bungee-jumping. They call it "bungy-jumping", so I'm not too upset about missing it, because I do not presently have sinus trouble, so they probably wouldn't have let me do it anyway. We did have a go on the luge, though. You can get a gondola right to the top of the hill and the views from there, of the sprawling town climbing down from the hills and meeting the blue waters of Lake Wakatipu, are astounding (see pictures). From the top, the luge will get you down in about two or three minutes, but fear not, for you can keep going to enjoy the view all over again. We went up five times!

Queenstown is the third-largest settlement on South Island, but it's considerably smaller than Christchurch and Dunedin. It's so small that I think the residents only have one hairdresser between them. I had this thought when I saw the same woman walking around everywhere. It took me a few attempts to realise that it was a different woman each time -- and on one occasion, it was a man -- but that they all had the same haircut, late-coalition era Theresa May. Now it may well be that there are many hairdressers in Queenstown, all of them offering the chance to look like the British Prime Minister. Given the omnipresent feeling of a time-lapse that follows you around New Zealand, I wonder if they have just received the news that she's been elected an MP...

Queenstown crowned, it was back to a more solid bed in Christchurch in time for the New Year. Some folks know how to have a good time down there, despite the occasionally sleepy nature of the place. The nightlife is concentrated around Hagley Park, the city’s main public common, complemented by the greenery of the nearby Botanic Gardens. As we walked around the place on New Year’s Eve, my favourite sight was a group of made-up, middle-aged lady friends strolling down the road with each other, laughing and having the time of the year! Most people were headed to the free concert at Hagley Park, where they also had a fireworks display set up (see pictures). The concert comprised local musicians performing a variety of original and cover songs, mainly rock music. At 23:30, the acts changed, and the lead singer of the band coming on announced that their job was to see off 2016 in the right style. Accordingly, I wondered if members of the band were going to drop dead suddenly throughout the set! Fortunately, it was not that literal of a style, and they instead performed some rousing classics to see us into the New Year, pausing only for the fireworks at midnight!

And it was the following day, the final day, New Year’s Day, that we went to Akaroa (see pictures), and it was there, at long last, that I finally found the golden Speight’s I had been looking for, the one beer in all of New Zealand that was better than Singapore’s Speights. There it was, in this hotel pizza bar in a sleepy town next to sleepy (and extremely hungover) Christchurch. But find it I did, and so I could tender my resignation and fly out of New Zealand the following day a contented man.


Over the last couple of days of the trip, I did have time to buy one or two mementos. On that note, does anyone know any nice things to do with Mesopotamia blue? It's not souvenir paint; it's cheese. And it's not from Mesopotamia; it's from a shop next to 'Subway' in one of those miscellaneous Otago hamlets.

---

By:
The Imperial Orange.
12th January 2017

No comments:

Post a Comment