Tuesday, December 31, 2013

New Zealand's Loo's


The Loo's facinated me in New Zealand...they were all so different and yet run by the government. The Super Loo above probably got the prize for prettiest close to Lake Taupo. We walked around the whole thing oooing and aweing over the flowers before we even tried it out.

The one below on the Forgotten Highway was really sweet...someone had taken the time to paint colorful fern trees to spice it up and make you feel like you really did want to go in even though it was smelly.
The Loo below was on Lake Rotorua and had a real Spanish feel to it. i wondered what the artist was thinking when he or she was painting this on.
This next place was along side an estuary just out in the middle of nowhere...a few houses around but nothing commercial...the planners seemed to know that the location would come in handy to those traveling past.
And this one located off on its own at the top of MacKinnon Pass was very handy.
The next one was plucked off the Milford trail by a helicopter that came along just after Yvonne vacated it.
And on the Kaikoura Peninsula hike at one end there was a lookout and loo close to each other but what i really liked was the Maori warrior you had to pass to get to them.
And below a regular old loo in Christchurch
The I sites all over both islands can be depended upon to always have available loos so if you just can't wait...look for the small i.
But the most bizarre was when we went into the loo that spoke to us. You had to press the codes to get it to work and were locked in by a sliding door. Once the door closed the voice began to instruct you through the rest of your visit, including flushing and washing your hands.
The next one left us a bit flummoxed because there was no seat annnnnd we could lose our car while inside.
We found the next one along side a road we shouldn't have been on but were. Unfortunately we were too early and it wasn't open so some of us relieved themselves nearby.
And i saved this one for last as they must have known i was coming.
See you next year.



Thursday, December 19, 2013

New Zealand Birds...Nov. 2013

The birds in New Zealand are great. Day one we saw a juvenile Fantail displaying along side a river and this bird soon became my favorite and most frustrating to photograph. i tried for five weeks to get a decent pic of its tail while fanned and this is the best i could do, which is really piss poor. Saw loads of fans just couldn't catch them. November is a great time to go for birders because the birds are nesting everywhere and are very easy to see. My camera, that is no longer, was a Fuji F750EXR i had no tripod and was lucky to get any clear pics of birds at all. We saw loads of birds so these are just a very small teaser.
Fantail

Fantail
Black Swans are everywhere...thousands of them

Black Swan
This poor Kaka is in a cage at a wilderness place. The only Kiwi's we ever saw were also at a place you had to pay to go in. Same for the Little Blue Penguin until we saw a few of them swimming while out on the boat. Its a lot more fun to see them in the wild but when you think you might not ever see them well...you do what you have to do.
Kaka
This was one of the two Keas up on top of MacKinnon Pass
Kea
 But this one was sitting on a sign at a car park on the top of Arthur's Pass.
Weka

White-faced Heron

Variable Oystercatcher
Variable Oystercatchers are all over...thousands of them.
Miranda shore bird center is a wild life refuge just off the main road on the North Island. We saw flocks of thousands of Bar-tailed Godwits, some that took to the air in an amazing show. There were pied stilts there in huge flocks and the New Zealand and Banded Dotterel, White-faced Herons and others  couldn't photograph. It is very beautiful there and the hike in is quite pleasant. They usually have a rep. in the blind with a scope if you go in the morning. There is no charge.

Mostly Bar-tailed Godwits but some Pied Stilts in there too

One of the old blinds at Miranda with the Godwits in the background
A White-faced Heron
White-faced Heron
New Zealand Dotterel
New Zealand Dotterel

New Zealand Dotterel
Variable Oystercatchers
Variable Oystercatcher
Paradise Shelduck
Paradise Shelduck
Pukeko(swamp hen). You see these guys all over the sheep farms pecking away on the grass.
Pukeko
I
Red-billed Gull with chicks

Red-billed Gulls
Red-billed Gull chicks below. These gulls are now my favorites...they are so beautiful in flight and when roosting with their brilliant red legs and bills.
Red-billed Gull chicks
Spur-winged Plover
Spur-winged Plover
Variable Oystercatcher
Variable Oystercatcher
Yellow-eyed Penguins
Yellow-eyed Penguin
Yellow-eyed Penguins are very shy and hard to photograph as humans must keep their distance. Again we were lucky to arrive at Curio Point just as they were coming out of the water. They say dusk but both times for us it was more around 4:30pm. Below he is hopping up the rocks to his burrow in the hedge.
Yellow-eyed Penguin
Yellow-eyed Penguins
Yellow-eyed Penguin

Grey Ducks
Pied Shags
Fiordland Crested Penguin
Fiordland Crested Penguin
Monro Beach
We hiked in a long way to see the above Penguins. They nest in burrows at Monro Beach on the west coast of the South Island. It took almost an hour to get to the beach then we had to wait for them to come in from fishing. We were incredibly lucky with our timing as they started coming in within about ten minutes of our arrival around 4:15pm. They are very shy and human presence can disrupt their nesting but these slowly waddled and hopped up the cliffs to their nests.
Northern Giant Petrel
 The Pelagic birds we saw off the coast of Kaikura on a boat trip that went out early in the morning was spectacular.
The Royal Albatross never got close enough to photograph properly but some of the others turned out OK. The pictures here don't do them justice as they are huge and there is nothing to compare them to when looking at their photos.
Wandering Albatross

Wandering Albatross
Salvin's Mollymawk, Northern Giant Petrel, and a Cape Pigeon in the back.
Salvins Mollymawk
The Salvin's is such a regal looking bird...he always looked composed and handsome.
Royal Albatross
The Australasian Gannet colony at Muriwai was incredible. The birds would fly in right over your head and start their mating dance, or add things to a nest, or peck at another bird getting into their circles. It was all very orderly with the oldest birds in the center and the younger less mature ones out around the dangerous edges.
Australasian Gannets


Australasian Gannet
Australasian Gannet

Australasian Gannet
The White-fronted terns had already mated and were sitting on chicks. They like the grassy hillsides instead of the bare rock.
White-fronted Terns

White-fronted Terns
These pics don't do any of these birds justice and are just a small sampling of some of the wonderful birds you can see in New Zealand.