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February 18, 2009

in the drek and the drizzle

The snow tonight is heavy, fluffed full and quickly melting in the springtime warmth. Driving south out of Duluth - spray coming up off the roads, the evening dimmed by low clouds, good music on the radio, the thrum of my windshield wipers - the road felt good. It was a hearkening back to many jaunts between seasonal work - late night drives in a cocoon all my own. The road may not be a home, but I can unload my brain some there and sort out the jumble of the last couple of months.

November 20, 2008

travel plan formulation

So in the end, my travel plans for the next month are a far cry from my original intents. Kudos to the exes who have put up with my travel style in the past (a complete avoidance of plans). Today I had to actually plan things out - spent the afternoon calling and booking flights and reservations.

All told, here's what I ended up with:

Sunday, Nov. 23, fly to Cairns, Australia from Christchurch, New Zealand.

Nov 23-25, bum around Cairns and the beaches of the Gold Coast in Australia.

Nov 25-Dec 2, take off on a live-aboard diving cruise in the waters in and around the Great Barrier Reef. Spend time on ten to twenty more dives, get my PADI Advanced Open Water certification, and in general notch up my "ocean-time" by a great deal. I should see all manner of colorful things animal and plant, including sea turtles, manta rays, numerous tropical fish, and possibly sharks.

Dec 3 - fly to Melbourne, Australia to meet up with three Polie friends for a road trip to Uluru (Ayer's Rock).

Dec 3-12 - The above road trip.

Dec 12-16 - Possibly fly back to NZ, possibly continue on with the road trip to Sydney.

Dec 16-18 - back to NZ for certain, then off home to Minnesota for christmas.

Should be a fine ol' trip, and though the economic troubles back home do not bode well for my return to the workforce, in the mean they have left me with excellent exchange rates in NZ and AU (almost two to one). My savings will be little affected by these adventures and plans for next summer will still be funded.

All in all, it's strange to have such an itinerary but nice to no longer have to worry about it. Now all that is left is packing up and shipping out!

November 18, 2008

under the sea

One of the greatest advantages of working contract positions in Antarctica is the ability to travel and explore new pursuits at the finish. For myself, I took after getting certified for open water scuba diving. I'm resting up tonight at the tail end of my open water dives, sunburned, salt-watered, and happy.

In the end, four of us signed up together to take a class through PADI (an international diving certification organization) at a local diving company in Christchurch. Our original class schedule was to have one day of review, testing, and closed-water dives (in a pool) at the dive company in Christchurch and then two easy days in Kaikoura (two and a half hours north of Christchurch) on the Pacific Ocean. In a whirlwind plan to account for rapidly deteriorating weather however, we bounced to Kaikoura a day early, rearranging hotel reservations and packing in under ten minutes after our closed-water dives were completed.

Our instructor (an ex-special forces military man from Quebec) drove our van and trailer at break-neck speeds north to Kaikoura last night, blazing like a rally car driver in the mountain roads to reach Kaikoura in time for our first dive before the sun set.

Rushed is what we all felt, and it built up, adding to the mental game of diving that one must get over in order to do so many things alien to human nature. Our first dive at sunset involved a six foot leap into the ocean off of a dock in full gear into rough water. The visibility was very limited (I could barely see my fins on my feet) and after one of our group had a small panic attack we had to abort the dive. In truth, I was relieved as I was borderline on the mental game of panic myself.

Our later dives, however, were a hell of a lot more successful. Though not everyone in our group finished all of the necessary dives, two of us did. We spent this morning on our final runs, going through open water skills such as mask removal, regulator loss (air), running out of air, underwater navigation, and the like. Realistically, while the surface water can be intimidating and easy to bring panic about, underwater was calm and beautiful. People are not lying when they say that you can move effortlessly and gracefully underwater. The waves disappear, the visibility increases, and new things are everywhere.

Personally, I'm glad that I have not snorkeled in tropical waters before - I had nothing to compare to so the simple browns and greens of the bottom growth plants and the few fish (and giant lobster) we ran across kept me more than entertained. I had a hell of a time following our instructor, not because of any problem swimming but because I kept getting distracted by new things. I would have happily stayed under for hours.

That, however, is not how training dives go. Though they seemed like much longer, our dives were between twenty and forty minutes each and likely never got any deeper that six or seven meters. Still, to me, it was all new - a world unexplored and situations that my body had never before had to deal with. I'm tired tonight but satisfied.

Tomorrow we meet to take our final exam (on paper) and clean up gear. After that I'll try to reconnect with a couple of friends with whom plans were wrecked in the flurry of our class changes. Then, it's off to determine just how I'll be spending the next four weeks. Do I join Lance, Sue, and Jared in Australia for a road trip to Uluru (Ayers Rock)? Do I take advantage of my new (presuming I pass tomorrow) certification and go dive on the Great Barrier Reef? Or do I stick to New Zealand and my original (very vague) hiking plans?

No idea yet what I'll go after but it's damn nice to have choices.

February 18, 2005

floatin' the avon

i survived the mighty avon river in christchurch the other day, rafting my way through a great distance. that is, of course, if you define 'raft' as a small inflatable vessel you can purchase for less than eight dollars, 'mighty river' as a stream not more than twenty feet across and one or two feet deep, and 'survived' as finishing off piles of cheap beer and snacks in the process...

a rather large group of us decided rubber rafts and a riot of laughter were the best way to stroll through a city of over 300,000 people. we floated through the botanical gardens, the bar district, and a number of fancier locales. fortunately for us, it was in the eyes of amusement we reflected - bemused smiles and laughter followed our passage.

now, time to leave the city (far too expensive here) and move south toward the cities of dunedin, queenstown, and wanaka as well as the southern alps of new zealand for some hiking.

March 8, 2004

"holy crap!" it's beautiful (again).

took a bus from the west coast back to christchurch yesterday (probably a good idea since i fly out this afternoon) and, not having access to a book, did nothing but stare out the window for four hours.

nate sighs

the countryside that i saw scrolling by the window surpasses amazing. rolling hills contriving to become mountain ranges as they climb away from ambling rivers. fog and low clouds hanging in the passes, shrinking the larger world to one of small grandeur. romantic would be an apt (but poor) way to describe it. beautiful only slightly covers the sharp intake of breath the next bend around the river brings.

the human hand is here and visable - roads, fencing, pastures, logged hillsides, and the like, but something provides it an air of impermenance. the hand struggles for a solid hold, gamely managing to grasp to loose, wet rock. it is still rugged here in places - the land says so as well as the people.

minds here are of an optimistic, friendly stock - hearts warm as the sun that heats the western coast. with rare exception the average new zealanders i've encountered is a hard working sort - apt to shrug off their nature with a look that says things just are as they are. they strike me as truly genuine - perhaps that is what happens when you're forced to lay in awe of the land that surrounds you. the outside world makes itself known here, pushing for haste, but this island nation seems to stand resolute in its calm and patient nature.

maybe it's just the idealism and optimism that i carry, maybe it's truth, but these are the impressions that i'll leave new zealand with as i begin the long trek home...

March 6, 2004

down by the ol' seaside

seven days of plowing through mud and muck, over massive paths consisting only of roots and moss-covered stones, fording rivers and swaying on cable crossings, then three days of utter and pure relaxation on the tasman sea. i honestly can't recall a ten days better spent for some time.

the respect i have for the average new zealand tramper (read: hiker) has increased tenfold. i spent a week following several river valleys on the leslie-karmea track, covering fifty miles, and i have learned one very important thing: kiwi's are masters of understatement.

for example: if the guidebook says that the trail is "medium-hard" you had best be in great shape and not mind severe risk to your ankles and knees at all times. if you are warned to, "watch out not to trip on the roots, there are a few in this section," you should take care as you walk for a kilometer on nothing but roots, piled three feet deep (the soil being to far below the tangle to touch) and covered in slick green moss. if the guidebook says, "the trail narrows at this point," you can fully expect to be clinging to a rockface, twenty feet above a raging river, with about three inches (maybe) on which to arrange your feet. "fording a few creeks," is a reference best rephrased as, "you'll be over waste-deep in rapid moving, frigid water at least twice each day." and, if you receive a caution that the trail may be "a bit wet," plan on trudging through muck that varies between ankle and knee deep or hiking through streams that qualify as the trail.

hikers in new zealand are nuts - a hardcore group of people if any - no wonder sir edmund hillary felt a need to climb everest. most non-new zealanders i met on trail had been helicoptered in so that they could go fishing...

and still, for all of the hardships and sore legs, i don't know that i've seen a trail as wonderful. i would walk it again in a heartbeat.

new zealand is insanely beautiful. the forests drip in moss and moisture, carrying an air of a northern minnesota spring (if a mn happened to have tropical plants). there are bird calls that echo through the dense foilage, mushrooms and flowers that radiate in shades of red, blue, and purple, and waterfalls in every direction that you look. when you break through the forest and look up, mountains climb the valley walls, reaching into the distance to carry snow upon their peaks. then, as you near the end of the track, climbing over the last saddle into the next valley, you catch a glimpse of the pacific, calm and dignified at a distance, calling you to rest upon the shore.

and that, nothing but rest, is what i've been doing for the last three days. several friends recommended a small backpackers south of the trail end. i hitched the fifty miles and ran smack into paradise.

'the old slaughterhouse' is a pet project of a david, a retired sheap-shearer. he and his wife ena built a house and a couple of bunk rooms buried high on a hillside overlooking the tasman sea - the stretch of the pacific ocean between new zealand and australia. it's a beautiful home, of bare wood and art-filled walls that requires a ten-minute hike to get too. upon arrival you're greeted by david (friendliest bloke this hemispere, i think) and his two black labs. the tour consists of a few hand gestures and then you're off - racing toward relaxation.

the average day consisted of a strenuous few hours in a hammock reading and writing, followed by an evening of cooking, conversation, and wine with the other trampers who're staying on. the kitchen is communal and grabs the focus and friendship of many. in the middle of the hustle (and hustle is a severe overstatement) are breaks to watch the sunset over the pacific and to catch glimpses of dolphins dancing in the distant waves.

it was hard to leave...

February 20, 2004

The Oxygen Deprived

it could be the weather (beautiful and sunny), it could be the final freedom from the snow, it could be the oxygen at sea level. who knows what it is…the gist, however, is that these last few days in new zealand have left me feeling euphoric.

on this note that friends and i will gather up the dough to buy a car and wander into the new zealand countryside. another adventure begins - mishaps, mistakes, and miracles await.