New Zealand

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Waitomo Caves

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Today we are touring the Waitomo Caves. You get lots of choices for tours- they range from Rambo ratings out of 10 right down to pussy level. Although Mr Fogg would have loved to do the tours that included a 100m abseil, riding rubber tubes through pitch black underground rivers and jumping into waterfalls (Rambo rating 6/10), I’m afraid I bottled and we did the pussy tours(Barbie rating 0/10).

First one is Ruakuri caves which Maori legend says is named after two dogs (rua as in two). The Maori liked the caves and ate the dogs. The caves themselves are pretty good, we walked for about 1.5 hrs and got to see teeny gloworms on the roof of the cave. Very pretty.

Next stop is the main cave where we will get a boat ride in an underground lake. It’s a short tour but the 5 min boat ride at the end is well worth it. A dozen people sitting in silence (well apart from another screaming child) in the dark (which is why said child was screaming) staring up at hundreds of gloworms. Fab, and not a rubber ring or abseil rope in sight.

Apparently Waitomo means in Maori Wai- water and Tomo- tunnel or shaft.

Haha Mr Fogg, some history stuff for you!! And Mr Fogg actually knows a descendant of the people who found the caves. How cool is that?? Such a cool place to visit, but surprisingly very few people around even on a Bank Holiday.

Next stop is the finding decent restaurant food challenge (we failed this last night and ended up with chips, more chips, potato wedges and burnt fish) before we head off to Hobbiton tomorrow to visit Bilbo.

Stay off the roads Frodo!! Wraiths may be about.

[Posted from Mrs Foggs super cool iphone]

What To Do With A Spare 10 Minutes

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Yup great Movie Moment reenactment number 1, Lord of the Rings with the all seeing eye and the Precious (One Ring to Rule Them All, One Ring to Find Them, One Ring to Bring Them All and in The Darkness Bind Them).

Tomorrow night will be Titanic providing we can get onto the pointy bit of the boat, find a bit of totty well who do you think is gonna hold the camera?) and find an iceberg!

Watching a totally different set of stars from here.

A slice of heaven

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We’ve had five nights in New Zealand so far and this is about to be our sixth. Of all the evenings this is the absolute best for me. Sitting here outside a hobbit hole watching the sun descend down over the far hills, listening to bird chatter across the valley is the closest I have been to Tyddyn for a long time. This is pure perfection. No shops, no loud music, just the incredible sound of nature.

Sitting here on a bench in front of our little hobbit house I am enchanted by small birds as they flit endlessly between the trees, shrubs and eaves of the little house chasing each other and the insects they crave. The flutter of wings and patter of feet blending with the constant song from what could be a hundred different birds. Sheep are grazing around us ( and on the roof of the hobbit house) and spirals of sun glazed clouds drift slowly across the valley sky as the sun slowly descends on the far hills. An eagle shrieks nearby and although I cannot see him I know he will be soaring high, hunting before dusk settles. Below us a camper who has parked for the night gently strums on a guitar accompanying and surprisingly complimenting the birdsong.

Pure bliss. Give me warmth, nature and a bench to watch it all and I’m like a pig in mud.

Now, where’s that nice glass of red?

Mobile Blogging from here.

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[Posted from Mrs Foggs super cool iphone]

Home of L and P

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On the way to Waitomo we stopped off at the famous Paeroa, original home of a famous drink invented and brewed here. We just had to try it.

Paeroa itself looks to have died some time ago (ok so it is Sunday and nothing is open) but any fresh paint and polish seems to have long since faded. However there does seem to be plenty of motability scooters zipping up the high street (complete with flags swinging from the back of them)

So, just in case you were wondering. L&P consists of water, fizz and lemon. Oh and it is now brewed by Coco Cola probably miles away too. Tastes ok though.

Moving on….

[Posted from Mrs Foggs super cool iphone]

Bowl of Coffee for Breakfast

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After checking out from Stallag Pauanui (not a fun night (least of all when cars come in at gone midnight and your bedroom window is carpark level so you have blazing headlights and then they pap their horns for good measure), we headed out to Waitomo today stopping at the Matatoki Farm Cheese shop on the Paeroa Highway, where everything is cheese or milk derivatives.

My breakfast consisted of a 6inch bowl of coffee (jumping all day long) and a triple chic brownie, the Mrs had a more sedate tea and muffin.

So we have two nights in the Woodlyn Park stopping in a hobbit house whilst we visit the Waitomo Caves and then on to Hobbiton (the actual Lord of the Rings film set).

Cheese from here.

Welcome to Hell

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Oh my!!! What should have been a quiet relaxing evening at the Pauanui Pines Motel is in fact hell on earth.

This is the delightful view from our goldfish bowl room, strategically located next to all mod cons- the guest laundry (listen to the gurgle of water flushing out) and the tennis courts (joy).

Did I mention I hate children??? Loud little shits that swing off tennis court gates, trample flower beds and spend endless hours shouting for mummy or daddy and then screaming in some high pitched language that pierces ear drums and vibrates across tennis courts. Oh yes, sorry but I hate kids.

Apparently one of the little darlings has just pooped on the tennis court (says dad) but apparently that’s better than it pooping in the corner of the motel room (also according to dad who yelled this across the tennis courts that we are fortunate to be stuck behind).

So what do you do when stranded in hell? Snarl, pour the wine, growl at brats (it actually makes them run away, believe me).

How the hell did I manage to book this place?? Mr Fogg is not going to let me forget this one. Oh dear.

This delightful shed of a motel cost us $217 for the night – the most expensive yet. So, happy me wandered up to pay this morning and (politely) advised the friendly owner that this was my idea of hell. He was very apologetic (can’t get the right type guests you know) and then (unasked) rang the bill up at only $160 (NZD) instead of full price. Nice man, all nearly forgiven….but no plans to come back anytime soon.

Hobbit hotel here we come..

The Forrest of Galadriel

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On our hike down to Cathederal Cove you go through Galadriel’s Forrest, we looked out for Elves but saw nothing apart from Dwarves, sorry people of small stature (sorry).

Beautiful scenery, shame about Pauanui though, it resembles more of an industrial estate than a luxury getaway. Thank goodness it’s only one night.

Tomorrow it’s Waitomo and the Hobbit Hotel (have a look for Woodlyn Park on the netty thing and we is in of the hobbit homes). Maybe no Internet for a few days (thank goodness say you), but we’ll be back Mr Baggins.

It Is The Greenest Green I Have Ever Seen

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When we toured the US, Mrs Fogg bought a pendant made of Jade and loved it, until one day she dropped it and it broke. Wandering around Coromandel before we set of this morning, she saw an almost exact replica of her necklace so decided to purchase it.

One question before I buy this said Mrs Fogg to the shop owner, what type of stone is this, “Green Stone” came the reply, alrighty then!

And Now we have arrived at what I can only describe as Stallag Pauanui! Oh boy.

Stallag Pauanui is here.

Anorak, Camera, Notebook

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If you were a train spotting geek then this would be the start of your geeky checklist (items not on the list include a girlfriend, coordinated clothing and a life). Any train spotters I am sorry but you are right I am missing something, the Thermos and open toe sandals, whoops.

So we decided to join the throngs on a train journey from Driving Creek, on this hand built narrow gauge railway some several miles up the hillside to the owners “eye full tower”. It really was a feat of engineering by the old boy who maintains the trains and tracks adding tunnels, switchbacks and mountainsides made of wine bottles (ideas with what to do with your empty bottles).

The journey is very impressive and the views from the top simply spectacular, am I a convert, hell no, I’ll stick with a life thank you. Duanne Dibbley out.