The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot say.
Down from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot say.
Starting a New Zealand post with a LOTR quote seemed like good idea. So this is going to be my last blog post
from the North Island of New Zealand… I have a week left in Auckland, and in
this time I will take one more exam, attend a farewell dinner with all our kiwi
professors, celebrate Thanksgiving with my abroad group, hit up the nightlife a
few more times, and just generally spend as much time as I can outdoors
enjoying the city/marvelously warm weather. Yeah, basically it’s a week to say
‘E noho ra’/goodbye to Auckland, goodbye to Blockhouse Bay and my host family,
goodbye to the University and my favorite study space in the library, goodbye
to hot kebabs on Queen Street, to fish and chips on the harbor, to the trusty
258 and 249 bus lines, and to the volcano hills around the city that I’ve had
so much fun exploring.
A week
left right? Why am I starting to think about all this now? Well I had to say
goodbye to Rob, the students, and my Lynfield College placement already. After we
sat in on his class, he took Laura and I back to Mangere Mountain, to the
pillow lava formations in the bay, and to a kauri forest that was mummified and
preserved in volcanic ash from the eruption. If you’ll remember from an older
post, this is the same area Rob took me on my first day working with him and,
in his words, it was good to “end as we began.” The only difference is that we
also got to share this place with Laura and that I refused to let him buy the
coffees this time; after all the awesome things he’s taught me this semester
the least I could do is treat him to a “cuppa”. In the spirit of working with
kids, I also gave him a friendship bracelet I made and explained that when I
work at the American camps, the staff and kids usually make these for friends
who have significantly impacted their experience/life… and yeah all that was my
first tough goodbye of the trip.
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| gannet colony at Muriwai |
UM in other world news, I also got
a new host sister last week from Brazil named Veri. She’s awesome; her English
is still in the works so we communicate largely by charades and misunderstandings
but it’s actually very funny and fun. Because my workload hasn’t been bad
lately, I have been spending a few hours each evening helping her with her
English homework. At the end of every study sesh she always says, “thanks for
helping…. I’m soooo sorry it took so long” to which I always remind her that I
am a teacher!! I love helping students with material and somehow never get
tired of it. In regular conversation, Lorna (who’s British) and I compete with
eachother in convincing Veri to pronounce words the “right” way… so far we have
had major debates on the ‘proper’ pronunciation of garage (brits call it
GAR-idge), advertisement (ad-VER-tis-MENT), Adidas (aah-dee-daas), and glacier
(glass-ee-er). Haa silly British. Veri came out Salsa dancing and partying with
me and the other Americans this weekend, which was awesome…
![]() |
| White Waikato cliffs |
a limp empty harness being reeled back into the launch pad.
It reminded me of the scene in Jurassic Park,
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| T-rex bait |
| Hiking along the Waikato River |
| Craters of the Moon geothermal park |
| band photo in front of the hot waterfall |
| Reminds me of Geneva NY this time of year |
The next day we woke up at 5:30 am
to catch a shuttle to the Tongariro National Park to attempt the very
challenging Tongariro Alpine Crossing that is renown as New Zealand’s best day
hike. The hike is through an active volcanic field, climbing up the steep “aa”
lava flows to the snow covered summits, along a massive steaming blood-red
crater, down a steep ashy slope comprised of loosely packed footing that
crumbled away with every step, along the electric blue Emerald Lakes with the
smell of sulfur in the air, through fields of sloshy wet snow where vicious
snowball fights broke out, and finally a loooooooong decent down grassy
Lord-of-the-Rings style paths that endlessly winded back and forth and up and
down. The whole ordeal took about 6 rigorous hours and 3 delicious granola
bars, but we survived and, as a group, felt like we had just conquered the
world. For me, it was a stunning and powerful experience that I can’t entirely
share with photos and words. That evening was spent treating our muscles to the
hot stream and soaking up guitar music and cider at our hostel.
| Mount Ngauruhoe/"Mt Doom" on the left, active stratovolcano |
| LOTR landscape, Lake Taupo in the distance |
| Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli looking longfully at the Emerald Lakes |
| on top of the steamy red crater |
| Jumping into a very cold lake |
the Maori navigator, Ngatoroiangi.
| Sailing up to the Maori carvings |
The weekend before that we went to
Coromandel Peninsula, which was also awesome. Just like at the end of every
post, I’m getting burned out from all this writing so I will link my friend
Kat’s blog post called “Cathedral Cove looks like a church” which has more about
the weekend. The highlights of this trip were an afternoon of sea kayaking in
kayaks that were not made for the sea (serious flippage), hiking to the beautiful
Cathedral Cove which was carved out by sea erosion, celebrating Guy Fawkes day
with massive fireworks and a giant bonfire on the beach, taking a mini-train
ride up into the Coromandel Mountain Ranges, and laying on the “Hot Beach”
where you can dig a hole in the sand and let the geothermally warmed waters
seep through and fill your “bath”.
And with that, I have successfully updated my blog! I know this post has some formatting issues, but I really can't be bothered to fight with this website because I always lose and it always wins. I have the day off, so my plans are firstly to go snarf the carrot cake that Lorna left me and then I’ll grab my guitar, head to Mt. Hobson, and meet up with Laura who plans to do some artsy sketching of the city. After months of deliberation, I have finally named my travel guitar “Whittaker” (Wit-ta-ker) after an amazing New Zealand chocolate brand. I think Whittaker and I could use some exercise and sunshine so I’m off. Hopefully I’ll be good and get another post up after my travels in the South Island and Sydney, but hey, I’m pretty proud I kept up with this all semester so it’s whatever. Okay America, see you soon but not too soon!
| packing the bags, can't wait to be on the road again |







