Thames

Hot Water Beach: check!

Low tide was slated for 8PM; we arrived at sunset at 7. Eric is a pussy, averse to being cold, being wet, being sandy, and potentially growing too hot–the worst offense of them all. And so, I experienced this thermal phenomenon solo. After a fish and chips feast, laying on our bellies in the back of the van, I set out. My first mission was intended to be surveillance only, however after I arrived at my destination, I put the kibosh on all future missions. Instead of laboring to dig a kiddie sized pool into the steaming sand, I opted to remain aloof from the shovel wielding masses. I listened to their shrieks, their laughs, and their yells as too much cold water sloshed over the side and too much hot water bubbled up from beneath.

Instead, I was content to burrow up to my ankles in the sand, feeling the hot spring below ebb and flow. I watched the stars, hoping to catch a fleeting glimpse of one falling. I watched the waves, marveling how the moon could turn each crest to quicksilver as they curled and crashed. I stood there, stepping patterns into wet sand, thinking all the standard thoughts that float past when you’re trying to brew up a moment: How wonderful the world is. How fortunate I am to have found Eric. How absolutely incredible this entire trip has been, both life changing and life affirming.

Although eventually I did grow too cold, too wet, too sandy, and too hot, and decide to strike back to the van, without the grand “moment” I figured I ought to be having out there. Still in hot pursuit of that elusive spiritual experience, I attempted to hasten things along by singing Celine Dion songs from the 90’s while trying to forget I had to pee. A bit of a fail on both parts, but hey! I experienced the magical, mystical wonders of a thermal pool at the beach, however terrestrial it turned out to be.

-K

2016-05-10_0008^ Our first hot spring experience in Rotorua. Bucket list, whaaaat! 

2016-05-10_0009^ This one was especially rad, for it was free, still natural, and something of a local secret. 

2016-05-10_0010^ Chasing the light around the springs. THIS one did allow me soaring moments of joy and gratitude. Another reason this gem is so special: it’s hot AND cold. I could have one foot in the oven, another in the freezer. We had it all to ourselves for the majority of the time, and I delighted endlessly in attempting to homogenize the temperature around me by wildly flailing my arms.

Cathedral Cove

Today has been the type of day that makes you doubt there’s any other REAL alternative to van living. The kind so full of sunshine, smiles, and small adventures that makes you beam, end to end. This is what I hoped this trip would be like. Of course, with the exception of my 6AM sobs this morning, in realizing that we never set an extra alarm and that the sun was rising without my permission nor my participation. Damn.

We were camped overnight at Cathedral Cove with the intention to take advantage of a good weather forecast and take some long exposures before the masses awoke and arrived. Four AM came and went and we were soon back asleep following the lone alarm. Two hours later I was the one sounding the distress call that Eric still doesn’t quite know what to do with: tears.

After hauling ass down to the Cove, still whimpering that we were missing out on the entire show, we made it 10 minutes before the sun was to crest the horizon. We promptly scouted a flat rock and sat down to wait. I put my camera aside, I rested my head on Eric’s shoulder, and I focused my gaze seaward. Exhaaaaale. And the reset button was engaged swiftly, yet gently.

Why do I get so fixated on having specific experiences? Why do I allow myself to set such high, inflexible expectations that don’t adapt to reality? Why do I even need photographs? Why is it so hard to accept and enjoy what’s before me, with the understanding that this beautiful moment, whatever it is, is the one I’ve been given, still deserving of my appreciation despite my expectations?

The day that followed (is following!) was superb after all the selfish sobbing was mopped up/stopped up. We parked the van at Hahei Beach and wallowed in it’s sunny windows like lazy cats all morning. With the sound of the waves in our ears, cups of hot coffee in hand, we allowed ourselves the rest of the day to do nothing.

Being allowed to “do nothing” does sound admittedly silly, given that we are the navigators of this adventure, but it’s not always an easy concept. I can’t speak for Eric, but I oftentimes feel like I’m expected to be collecting a certain amount of stories and photographs, living up to the “I’m so jealous!” comments that have been populating our social media streams since this trip began. I don’t want anyone to live vicariously through me! I don’t want the pressure to produce, however self imposed it may actually be, to prove that my wandering is relevant! I want to live in my van, read books, drink wine, and make out with my boyfriend. Why do I think I’m expected to do otherwise?

And it’s funny to me, that in letting ourselves off the hook for the day, that we ended up stumbling sweetly upon our small adventures, born out of genuine desire and joy.

I went for a solo walk down the beach, closing my eyes at intervals to better experience the onset of every wave. It was a true fucking delight. It was mindfulness.

I found a rope swing. I was able to coerce Eric into the position of pusher, being too chickenshit to jump from the tree to which it was attached. Dangling from that rope, watching my personal tide go out and come in, was the most concentrated form of basic pleasure.

Later, we each indulged in a scoop of mochaccino ice cream from the Tip Top case, a short walk away at the general store. We licked our cones, lapping up the cream, while reading the community notice board and appraising the for sale properties posted up outside the shop.

Throw in salami sandwiches, a swim, and some intermittent dozing, and I’m ready to award this day as one of the very best in the last 5 months. Today we let things happen. And they happened to be utterly delightful.

-K

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^Our Pinnacles hike in the Coromandel Peninsula. A composite on the left (Eric didn’t reckon endangering our lives for a photo was a good idea) and the fern filled trail to get there.

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^Scared AF. The rest of the photos at this location are of my clinging to the rocks for dear life.
^It’s fall in the Southern Hemisphere. Heh.

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^Cathedral Cove + one of New Zealand’s most famous hunks of rock.

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^ My dear. 

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^”Now go stand alone on that rock and look off.” Secret to Instagram success right there, I tell ya.
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^My happy place.

2016-05-10_0018 2016-05-10_0019^Eric’s anatomy wasn’t quite suited for the rope swing. I did manage a few snaps before he dismounted, grabbing his crotch. More swing time for meeee! 🙂

Thames

This morning in the predawn dark, I lay listening to the rain. My lover’s steady exhalations, whispering softly against my shoulder, lull me sweetly back to sleep. My utter contentment carries forth into my dreams.

-K

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Rotorua

Some days we sit and watch surfers. At other moments, it’s sailboats on a small country lake. Often it’s simply the color of the sky. The texture of a fern upon my palm. Even more frequent is the taste of a freshly opened wine on the tongue. (Yummy, yummy. Gobble, gobble.)

There’s a filmy kind of brilliance to going slowly. There’s a boundless amount of depth and feeling to be discovered. For it seems that when I coax my body into stillness, when I focus outwardly upon every sense, therein lies the most pure nuggets of joy. Joy! Unbridled, unfiltered gratitude and astonishment!

Filed under: life is grand.

In a similar vein, let’s talk molecular science. Everything in this big, bad world is just a frenzied mass of atoms, all vibrating, pulsing, humming to it’s own tune. So: what happens when you align your own rhythm to the cacophony that surrounds you? Is this another key to the lock that guards the secret to happiness and contentment?

Last week Eric and I ambled on over to a waterfall. After following a meandering dirt path through the forest, we came upon a high white cliff face hosting a brilliant shower of cascades. My clothing was eagerly shed and discarded; feet quickly submerged, navigating the slippery rocks below. In the presence of such grandeur, my brain hardly registered the glaciality of the waters I was wading into. It was not enough for me to be at the waterfall; I needed to be of it. I needed to stand beneath it, head tilted back, arms stretched wide to the sides. I needed to close my eyes, find it’s pitch, then add my hum to it’s natural chorus. (I also needed to sing TLC in loud volumes and kick about in the water like it was a stage, but that’s a separate, ah, spiritual experience.)

And when it happened–that alignment–I felt fully and powerfully giddy in that connectedness. The wind blew in, throwing a baptismal spray upon me, making patterns upon my body. I inhaled strength and assurance, drawing in full balloons of breath as I filled my lungs to capacity. And it was so. goddamn. beautiful. To feel alive, to feel full, to feel vital and connected. To have that moment all to myself, and to realize that feelings like this are always within my reach, as long as I’m willing to stretch for them.

And THEN… I hustled back to the riverbank to put my clothes back on so I didn’t get caught by any picnicking parents gettin’ my naked on in a public waterfall.

Filed under: life is really damned grand.

-K

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Rotorua

“Even though it’s my birthday, I want to pamper both of us; what’s mine is yours.”

And so, Eric’s 31st has come and gone. There turned out to be very little pampering involved–the epic hike of the preceding 2 days so thoroughly exhausted our minds + bodies + souls–but the day’s merit didn’t slide past without due recognition.

I recited again the 30 things I love about him (last year’s birthday gift.) We splurged on a table for 2 at a small town Indian restaurant and devoured CHEESY naan bread. I carved a “HAPPY BDAY MY LOVE!” into the powdered sugar of a grocery bought brownie, and he blew out a citronella candle after I sang the requisite song. I tried for 31 [good natured] spankings, but got tired at around 13 and forgot to administer the rest.

Happy day, oh Eric!

-K

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Kihikihi

I’m going home.
Come April 28th, I’ll be strapped aboard a 6AM flight, bound for Minneapolis by way of Sydney and Los Angeles.

And so it was, that on April 28, 2014, I was undertaking the same itinerary. I didn’t simply leave Australia. I moved away from a country, a life, and a lover I had all adapted to call my own. It’s overwhelming. Emotional. Sublimely beautiful in a heartbreaking fashion.

This will be my full circle journey–my do over. An opportunity to do this routine again, but with a dignity, wisdom, and purpose that hadn’t yet evolved before.

&I feel ready to cry already.

-K

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Taihape Soul Cafe

My knees are busted. My hips creak and complain. I feel like I’m hungover. But I can now cross multi-day hike off my bucket list. Hooray?

Depending on the mile marker, our destination was either Howlett’s Hut! Or How Let’s NOT. Given that we’d up end traversing 51.5 MILES (according to Siri) it was more often the slander of the latter. (Sorry, Mr. Howlett.)

To begin, it seems appropriate to record and rant about the hike first. E’erbody likes a happy ending, so we better get the ugly outta the way. That being said, why don’t we just zoom forward to the first emotional breakdown, eh?

The circumstances: Day 1, about 7 hours into our “8 hour” hike. Wet feet, weary bones. Eyes hopeful as we crest every ridge, eagerly scanning each new horizon for the hut. Eric: “Well, it looks like we go down this dip, up that peak, and 4-5 ridges over. We’re probably 1.5 hours away yet.” After repeated reassurances that my darling was not joking, I lasted 10 minutes before the onset of the deluge. I fell into a ditch covered by a bush and wept. Full, gasping sobs that didn’t fully subside until we reached our destination 2 hours later.

Breakdown #2 set in when the sun did. Following the smallest suggestion of a “track” we were constantly stumbling into bogs, being scratched and skewered by hardy alpine flora, attempting to race the sun. Darkness was quickly descending at the same rapid pace that my right knee was beginning to scream with shooting pains.

And it was in this condition, my weakest hours, that we were saved. A mirage in a desert of tears, a bloody deer head in hand, a group of strangers promised to show us the way. And when we arrived to the promised land, we found beer. Lots of it. And chocolate chip cookies. Bags of them. And I’ll be damned if we didn’t smash that manna from heaven, double fisting each, before being offered 2nds, 3rds, and a cup of jello. I thank those same heavens that those hunters were there. For that foursome who showed us the way, filled our bellies, and entertained us for a few hours before bed, all the while keeping that furnace piping hot. BLESS YOU, YOU GENTLE SOULS.

Day 2.

In addition to the squad of lively deer hunters overnighting at Howlett’s, we also shared our bunkhouse experience with a fellow named Phil. Former schoolteacher, former husband, he quit both and decided to hike the length of New Zealand. On the morning of our second day, the 2 of us watched the sunrise together from the front porch. I traded him a mandarin for a hot cup of coffee and he explained that the root cause of my knee pain was buried in tight, overextended quads. And just like that, my life was saved all over again on the trail! Praise! Our new friend ended up accompanying us for the next 4 hours on the trail, after setting out from our little shelter. I was grateful for the distraction, conversation, and inspiration. We socialize with strangers far less than I ever anticipated on this trip. It’s been an unexpected disappointment as that–people, interactions, characters!–are usually the most interesting meat of my travels.

We came to a crossroads around lunchtime at mile #11. Sitting on the saddle, munching on the last set of sandwiches, it was decision time. Go back the way we arrived, trudging again through the marshes up the mountain, or opt for the longer, more gentle and mysterious route back to the car park, skirting the ominous unending vertebrae of Mt. Tunupo. With a great sigh, we heaved our packs back onto sore shoulders and took the fork on the right: the longer, hopefully more leisurely option.

And it sucked.
Whoops.

But at least I was more mentally fit to undertake the 17 miles remaining. My manta: I will be grateful for this day, one step at a time. And I was. Part of the time. We were up against a whopping set of challenges–low food and water stores, poorly marked and overgrown trails, nightfall when we still had 2 hours remaining–but we also had each other. And while that’s the cheesiest statement to enter the journal in some time, the truth and value of it are indisputable. We helped each other. We encouraged each other. And we pulled each other up, both literally and figuratively, when things got particularly precarious. When he says, “We’re a team,” I say, “And I’ll follow you anywhere, darling.”

-K

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^One of the only photos of me on the hike. This was when I was still happy and wanted that sort of thing. Allllmost at the top of Mt. T.

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^ This was the site of the first breakdown. I was in bad shape, but even through my misery I could recognize the value of dragging the camera out.

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^A less artistic shot from the same moment. Although THIS one shows how far we had to go. The hut is somewhere buried below the 4th ridge or so to the right. Also recall, I thought we would be DONE by this point.

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^Again, quite distraught, bit still able to unzip the pack for the Canon. That light!

2016-05-09_0017^Howlett’s Hut exterior + interior. It’s a first come, first serve, cozy little 10 bed structure. They’re usually MUCH more primitive, but the hunters we bunked with took a helicopter in with an ungodly weight allowance. (They woke us up the next morning with BACON sizzling for their BANANA PANCAKES. I appreciated their generosity the night before, but this was a keen cruelty when we were down to peanut butter and jelly.)

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^ About to set out on the return hike. Trying to stave off feelings of panic at the day I knew was waiting for us.

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^ Bye, Howlett’s.

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^ Lunch.

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^ Hiking buddiez.

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^Parting ways with Phil.

-K

Woodville… Driving…

In our noble quest for lifelong learning, we got drunk. But damn me if I didn’t take notes along the way! I now know that “legs” on a wine are largely meaningless, that some varietals have the same chemical structure and smell as cat piss, and that you really do have to pretentiously swirl to unlock every flavor. Tadaaa!

Yesterday was vineyard day in Hawke’s Bay: NZ’s 2nd most celebrated growing region. We chose our first farm on the basis that we were lost, I was thirsty, and it was within sight. We had a friendly and informative pourer, a prime spot in the sun, and we walked away toting a $20 bottle of white.

Our 2nd winery was chosen for their logo, on an area map boasting 31 different cellar doors. I had high hopes for this one, not only from the vintage prop plane slapped up on their shingle, but also deriving from the luscious reams of toilet paper they had stocked in their bathroom. (I’m easily impressed these days.) We learned little of wine at #2, but gleaned all sorts of tidbits about our designated employee’s personal life.

From there we had planned to round out our afternoon with one last tasting, but after our last disappointment and a chance encounter with a gypsy caravan, we changed course. Instead of another round of “Mmm, yummy!” we bought a bag of 10 “American style” donuts and watched fire twirlers. From there we drove to the ocean and set up camp. The end.

-K

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^ Complete with stars and stripes. HA! In case you were wondering, “HOT FRESH AMERICAN DONUTS” are simply fair donuts.

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^ Vino + vino

Hastings

There are instructional videos all over Youtube for this sort of thing. Hold here, pull that, snip this. None promise nor provide world class results, but perhaps they could have saved us from this catastrophe. Given that Eric’s luxurious mane is closer to a mat of wool than a silky head o’ hair, I decided that the film about sheep shearing we watched last month in Wanaka would suffice as a tutorial. Go fast, be gentle, but be thorough, was the take-home message. How hard can it be beyond that?

Phase 1: Preparation
Like the competent beautician I am, I gathered my tools. Scissors, beard trimmer, video camera. Eric meanwhile set about the task of MacGuyvering a haircutting cape from a spare sheet. His handiwork produced an electric blue garment closer to a choir robe, but it would serve it’s intended purpose.

Phase 2: Execution
Operation Afro Obliteration is underway. Eric sends up several warnings from the hot seat (which was actually our toilet resting in the grass at our campsite) while I snip and shear with increasing confidence. I pull the hair away from his scalp in slow, even strokes and slice it away where it sprouts up between my knuckles. Although despite my best intentions and imitation, it still looks like one of the many maimed Barbie doll scalps I’m forced to take responsibility for from my youth. Whoops.

Phase 3: Conclusion
We collected and bagged Eric’s mass of clippings–a whole grocery load. We reviewed the video footage, laughing till we cried later in the evening. Eric has decided to stick with his baseball cap as an everyday accessory, but hey! At least the afro has been demolished. Mission accomplished.

The end.

-K

Almost to Napier

A volcano! Peanut butter and jelly! (Sound familiar?) The famed Emerald Pools glimmering in all their sulphuric glory! And whassat? A foreign camera tucked suddenly between our ears!

YeahNOPE.

Tongariro Crossing, you suck.

I do not accept your prestigious status as being among the top 10 day hikes in the world. You’re a pretty little thing, sure, I’ll grant you that, and you happen to possess an otherworldly beauty, I’ll agree. But your soul! Ack, your soul is battered, abused, and you attract the worst kind of self indulged savages that are only interested in you for your looks. And you! You do nothing to defend yourself! Their only intent is to parade you around in front of their friends, their cocky smiles proof that they’ve done you. And they may have touched you. Mounted you. But they haven’t FELT your curves, haven’t OBSERVED you in your natural state. I’ll bet those strings of admirers don’t even know what your breath smells like in the morning, or how you really act when no one’s looking. You’re meaningless to them, merely a memory and a photo that they’ll pull out at the bar when they want to impress their next conquest. And you let them walk all over you! Le sigh.

But alas, I let them walk all over me too when I didn’t smack back the motherfucker’s hand when he stuck his Sony Powershot all up in my grill. Furthermore, I let the opportunity float away to yell HELL NO at the ass clown that asked me to move outta his way so he could take a selfie. Sure, want me to hop down this cliff face here, as you and your 6 pals are blocking the only exit? Should, coulda, woulda. Damn that Minnesotan passive aggression, that fighting spirit beneath that’s only allowed release in the pages of my journal. Eric and I had crawled out onto an out-of-the-way ledge once we reached the main event in order to eat our celebratory sandwiches in peace, when this all went down. We were allowed to eat for 5 minutes before our location was seized upon by eager passersby with selfie sticks (mentioned above) asking us to move so they could stand in our spot for a photo. (I realize the drama is a bit unclear, getting lost in the rage and metaphors. OH to the WELL.)

Closing notes on the Tongariro Crossing:
I kept getting irritated with Eric on the hike before I realized he wasn’t intentionally releasing toxic plumes of suffocating gas. He wasn’t at all, in fact. But if you did opt for the Indian last night, the sulphur would be the perfectly sour scapegoat.

Another pro tip: a breakfast before you begin of hard boiled eggs is ill advised. I had to try very hard to suppress the contents of my stomach to keep them from crawling up, out, and all over the track.

We are opting for less popular hikes from now on. The more tourists we find, the less fun we tend to have. It’s also dirtier, louder, and a hubbub of overexcited activity centered around selfies. Pass.

-K

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^ Sunrise! If you’re not starting a hike with a flashlight, you’re not doing it right.

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^ View from the bottom (ish) to the top (ish.) The little hut to the right while adorable, is currently unusable. A chunk of volcano fell on it 4 years ago. Crashed through the roof. And there’s still glass and debris scattered about in the bedroom, while the eruption and crater are being studied. Yikes, eh?

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^”DEAR!”
“What, does the light look good on me?”
*Sheepish grin + a nod + a snap*

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^ Pretty.

2016-05-09_0011^ Before we were interrupted by the rude gang. Lovely, eh?