From our house to yours, Carrie and John wish you and yours a very Merry Christmas this holiday season. As always, Google has had a themed logo all week, and the folks at Google have apparently enjoyed our blog so much that they made this year's theme in line with our adventures. As they say down under, Happy Chrissie, mate!
This is the weblog of our adventures. It started with our trip to New Zealand and Australia, but nowadays is just a place for our day to day posts. Follow us on our adventures and let us know what you think!
Monday, December 25, 2006
Merry Christmas!
From our house to yours, Carrie and John wish you and yours a very Merry Christmas this holiday season. As always, Google has had a themed logo all week, and the folks at Google have apparently enjoyed our blog so much that they made this year's theme in line with our adventures. As they say down under, Happy Chrissie, mate!
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Home sweet home
The international flight RPG
Friday, December 22, 2006
Kuranda tropical rainforest
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Back on dry land
Steve's Bommie
Today was our last on the dive boat. We did three more dives on Ribbon Reef 9 at Steve's Bommie and Flare Point. In total on this trip to Australia, we logged 12 dives and almost 7 hours of bottom time in the water on the Reef. It's been an incredible experience, one of the highlight's of today's dives was seeing a flame file shell, and a dusky nembrotha nudibranch. The dive team on the boat is so great that a dive master jumps in the water first and will mark places on the pinnacle with glow sticks or a flash light where there are cool things to see. In the picture (photo credit Taka Dive Australia) is the flame file shell which likes to sit on the bottom inside ledge of coral formations, impossible to find unless you know it's there and have a flash light to see in. The little white squiggly lines you see along its "lips" look like electricity and they actually flash/sizzle to attract fish in to get eaten. Other exotic things we saw today included a giant moray eel, a scorpion leaf fish, a yellow trumpetfish, and two really cool looking reef cuttlefish.
Monday, December 18, 2006
Bommies and Pixies
Cod Hole
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Resort Day
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Michaelmas Cay
Friday, December 15, 2006
Flynn and Miln Reefs
Thursday, December 14, 2006
AYQ -> CNS
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Uluru
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Kata Tjuta
Monday, December 11, 2006
Keep the comments coming
Fuzzy wuzzy was a marsupial
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Sydney Harbour Bridge Climb
Saturday, December 9, 2006
Sydney beaches
Friday, December 8, 2006
Hallelujah!
Sharks!!!
Thursday, December 7, 2006
Sydney Olympic Village
The Blue Mountains
Featherdale Wildlife Park
Wednesday, December 6, 2006
Picture problems
Sydney
ZQN -> CHC -> SYD
Monday, December 4, 2006
Wine tasting
Saturday, December 2, 2006
Middle Earth...Lord of the Rings
Friday, December 1, 2006
Jet boating
This afternoon, after a brief rest from our crazy adventures in the canyon, we signed up with Shotover Jet to go jetboating in Shotover Canyon. Jetboating is a very unique experience. The closest analogy of the boat is a giant jetski, its jet propulsion system is similar but it's much larger, and it seats 15 people. The drivers are all just a touch insane, as they fly through the narrow canyon at speeds up to 70 kph, deliberating buzzing the cliffsides by mere inches, power sliding around corners, and doing the Shotover Jet's "signature" 360-spin. The spins are tons of fun, as the entire boat gets whipped around in a tight circle, splashing everyone inside. Maybe the most impressive thing in the boats is the creature comforts...they of course provide everyone with splash jackets and life vests so that you don't get *too* wet, but every row of seats comes equipped with heated handlebars! Certainly encourages everyone to hold on as the cold water comes splashing in. (Updated 12/6/06: Video from the Shotover Jet fixed.)
Canyoning
Walter Peak Station
We jumped on the TSS Earnslaw this evening and cruised across Lake Wakatipu over to the Walter Peak Station, an active sheep farm. The TSS Earnslaw is an authentic coal-fueled steamship that is hand-fed coal, at the rate of 1 ton per hour, reaching a top speed of 13 knots. The engine room is completely exposed, allowing visitors to watch the turbines and the crew feeding the boilers. We had a great buffet dinner over at Walter Peak station, and had a chance to watch a hilarious sheep shearing demonstration by a local shepherd, Lindsay. He had some funny wisecracks, including his explanation of where sheep shearing started. It's apparently from the British isles, because a sheep with its wool is called "wooly," an English name (Wally), and a sheep without its wall is called "shorn,", an Irish name (Sean). Get it? lol.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2006
(41)
-
▼
December
(31)
- Merry Christmas!
- Home sweet home
- The international flight RPG
- Kuranda tropical rainforest
- Back on dry land
- Steve's Bommie
- Bommies and Pixies
- Cod Hole
- Resort Day
- Michaelmas Cay
- Flynn and Miln Reefs
- AYQ -> CNS
- Uluru
- Kata Tjuta
- Keep the comments coming
- Fuzzy wuzzy was a marsupial
- Sydney Harbour Bridge Climb
- Sydney beaches
- Hallelujah!
- Sharks!!!
- Sydney Olympic Village
- The Blue Mountains
- Featherdale Wildlife Park
- Picture problems
- Sydney
- ZQN -> CHC -> SYD
- Wine tasting
- Middle Earth...Lord of the Rings
- Jet boating
- Canyoning
- Walter Peak Station
-
▼
December
(31)