From London to the rest of the world... and back!

Friday, 25 March 2011

Chile and Argentina

Santiago
We arrived in Santiago on Monday afternoon at 2pm which was very confusing as we had set off at 6pm Monday from New Zealand.  That day ended up being 40 hours long! Understandably we were exhausted and it took us a couple of days to get over it.  We decided to go south to Pucon after a couple of days in Santiago.  We got an overnight bus which had seats that turn into little beds and an attendant who brings you drinks and snacks, it was great!  We loved Pucon as soon as we got there, it’s a small town on a lake with a volcano and mountains in the background with lots of wooden cabins, and we stayed with the loveliest lady in a great little hostel.  In the winter it is a ski resort and has that kind of feel to it, it made us both miss skiing lots!


Professionals, complete with crampons and ice picks!


Real live volcano!


Sliding down in the snow, action man!

The volcano from Pucon town centre
The main thing to do in Pucon is to climb the volcano which we did the day after we arrived.  The weather was amazing all the day and the views were spectacular the whole way up.  We decided to climb it all instead of getting the ski lift up the first part, a decision which we regretted as soon as we saw everybody else going up on the lift whilst we slogged up in volcanic sand!  It took about 4 hours to get up to the top and I think it is the hardest thing I have ever done, at some points you just have to concentrate on putting one foot in front of the other and breathing – the altitude makes it extra hard, Tim had a rough time because his boots weren’t big enough and hurt his feet.  We did eventually make it though and it was worth it, we looked right down into the volcano crater and could see the smoke coming out and hear the lava bubbling and the volcano rumbling.  It was pretty surreal.  The view was the best though, it was so clear we could see for miles including the lake by the village and another volcano over the border in Argentina.  After spending 4 hours climbing the volcano we strapped on our protective nappies and back down in the snow on our bums.  We had to use our ice picks to control our speed (or not!) and it took us all of 45 minutes to get back down. 
Pepe - Such a sweetie!

Best way to see the Andes- from the back of a horse.

View of the lake- Amazing!

The next day we went over the border to San Martin De Los Andes in Argentina.  It had a similar feel to Pucon, a ski town by a lake.  We met up with Yvonne, a friend of a friend, and she took us out for a lovely steak in a family restaurant followed by amazing ice-cream – two things which Argentina does particularly well according to Yvonne.  The next day she took us up to her riding stables and I went out riding with her and a friend whilst Tim sunbathed, took in the view and relaxed by the lake with a book.  The ride was fantastic, we had proper cowboy style saddles and I felt like Clint Eastwood the whole time.  We rode for about 2 hours and went up to some brilliant viewpoints where we could see the Andes and the lake.  The scenery is so amazing, it is so beautiful here. 

Tango dancers in Buenos Aires
We caught a bus from San Martin to Bariloche, stayed one night then headed up to Buenos Aires on a bus which took 22 hours.  It’s not as bad as it sounds as they show films and we slept for a lot of the journey.  We wandered around the city earlier and got thoroughly lost, the city has some really beautiful buildings and monuments.  We watched Juan, another friend of a friend, play with his band which was really good then the next day enjoyed the celebrations for Memorial Day, a national holiday in Argentina.  It was crazy with parades and dancing everywhere.  In the evening we saw a free open air concert with Domingo (one of the 3 tenors) with about 200,000 people.  We had to leave early because we had to get the night bus to Montevideo, Uruguay.  What we saw was fantastic though.        

Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Yachts and The Royal Wedding!

On Bliss with Ross in Auckland
 We met up with Ross Haerle in Auckland.  He is the captain of this beautiful yacht Bliss which is just amazing- worth millions too!  It was great to catch up  with him and have a look round the boat too. How the other half live!
From there we flew over to Sydney ready for Alec and Sophie's wedding.  Rachel (who we met in thailand ) is now living there so we caught up with her over a few glasses of vino and homemade pizzas which was in Rach's words) loverly!  We also saw Katie again and met her two beautiful kids Bodie and Sharnie, I didn't get any photos though sorry!






In the hotel before with the best man Adam, his wife Annette, and Tom.
With just a hint of nerves!
 Then it was the wedding, Alec and Sophie got married in a park overlooking part of the harbour in, after some initial worries about the weather, blazing sunshine.  It was a gorgeous ceremony and the bride looked beautiful as you can see.
    
Here comes the bride - looking amazing!

Exchanging the rings


In the restaurant
































Cutting the cake on the boat
 Alec's speech was amazing - a real tear jerker though.  There was one line "there may be a royal wedding this year, but there's only one princess" brought the house down, not a dry eye in the place! 

Proud parents Trevor and Jean
After the meal in the restaurant we headed on a cruise around Sydney Harbour which was really spectacular and special.  Then from there - Cargos! 




Tim with Tom and Ben
It was rumoured that from there the bride and Groom went to McDonalds and many people have photos to prove it! Unfortunately we got there 10 minutes too late.  :0)

We had a great day at Bondi on the following day too, although I found it a struggle with my HUGE hangover, never again ... until about 6 that evening, we never learn!

We loved spending time with everybody running up to and during the wedding and thank Alec and Sophie (and Tom) for squeezing in our 'few' items to take home! We hope you guys enjoyed your mini break to Hamilton island too and you all had a safe trip home.  

Monday, 7 March 2011

The last of New Zealand


With Michelle (brunette) and Liv (blonde), the Blackpool girls!
We went from Napier up to Lake Taupo and waited around for a day or so to see if the weather cleared enough to do a skydive, we met up with Liv and Michelle again and had a catch up.  We booked one dive and had it cancelled then decided if the next day was cloudy that was it, no skydiving.  We woke up in the morning to clear blue skies, and I thought "Oh no, I'm actually going to have to go through with this!"  


Just before the skydive in all our gear-
 yes, that little thing was the plane we went up in!
We did go through with it though and were so glad we had, Tim took it all in his stride obviously, but I was so scared.  I was last in the plane so first out which was a good thing as I had to just go for it.  It was amazing- 45 seconds of freefall then a parachute trip for about 5 minutes.  The views were fabulous and the rush was fantastic- I keep thinking back to it and can't believe we actually did it.  


Also, my skydive instructor was like a brown haired Robbie Savage, which in my eyes is a good thing!  




Huka Falls after the sky dive. 




From Taupo we headed north up to Rotorua where we went to a few of the thermal springs and Huka falls, then spent the next few days travelling up through Auckland to the Northlands so we could go diving at Poor Knights, which is one of the top ten dive spots in the world.  
Thermal springs- like another planet!
Poor knights was amazing, it isn't coral reef it's kelp and it is all protected as a marine reserve so there are loads of fish and wildlife.  We saw loads of huge stingray, some were about 1.5m across and there were shoals of fish and caves to explore too.  It was really different to places we've dived so far.  




Thermal geyser
We went for a walk by this waterfall in Whangarei.  35mins round trip- we returned to the van 2 hours later, soaked, covered in mud (I fell over) and Tim had only one working flip flop left.   


  

A vintage steam train we rode at Kawakawa

Over the last few days we have found some lovely places to camp along the coast so there are a few photos of them too.  We're heading over to Sydney again tomorrow, for Sophie and Alec's wedding then after that off on the next leg- South America! 
Poor Knights dive site is the island in the distance




Sunny bay before the diving
Near Omaha