These mountains are called The Remarkables. Later you will see pictures of them with fresh snow on top.
We arrived at Milford Sound later in the even. The drive out there was dark so we didn't get to see any of the surrounding area. We stayed at the Milford Sound Lodge and waited eagerly for our next day cruise along the water.
Tuesday: Cruise Day. This is the first thing we saw when coming out of our room, huge mountains everywhere we looked with tons of waterfalls flowing down them. It was absolutely stunning.
We drove down to the visitor's center when you met to get on your boat. This was one view we had while waiting.
We drove down to the visitor's center when you met to get on your boat. This was one view we had while waiting.
The pictures hardly do it justice. I mean it was absolutely amazing out there. It's one of the most spectacular things I've ever seen.
At one part of the trip they brought us right up to one of the waterfalls and brought the tip of the boat underneath it. But the wind was blowing so hard that before the water fell on us, it would sweep away to the left.
The trip brought us along one side of the mountains to the open ocean and then along the other side of the mountains. While we were in the open ocean, our boat was getting pummled by huge waves. We had to hold on for dear life in order to keep ourselves from flying all over the boat cabin or fall off the boat.
Back on land. The cruise was amazing. I think everyone should see Milford Sound some time in their life. It is by far my favorite thing we've done in New Zealand.
There is a tunnel you have to go through to get to Milford Sound. It was the scariest and crummiest tunnel I've ever seen. I thought the roof was going to cave in on us.
On our drive home from Milford Sound we stopped at this one area along the road. I was downloading some pictures to make more room on the camera and Dave went exploring. He found a couple green stone or Jade stones, so I'm going to see if I can make some jewelry from them. Jade is really expensive out here.
All the little white spots on the hill are sheep. It's a little hard to see. If you click the picture, it might show up bigger.
Ah yes, the all famous kiwi bird.
On Wednesday we hung around Queenstown. We walked around downtown and then headed to Deer Park Heights where they did a lot of film for the second Lord of the Rings movie. You have to pay $20 to get in which is kind of a bummer. We thought about walking, but it was super cold outside and quite a long ways to walk.
On Wednesday we hung around Queenstown. We walked around downtown and then headed to Deer Park Heights where they did a lot of film for the second Lord of the Rings movie. You have to pay $20 to get in which is kind of a bummer. We thought about walking, but it was super cold outside and quite a long ways to walk.
Here are the Remarkables behind Dave with a layer of fresh snow from the rainfall the previous night.
It was so cold and windy outside. It gets a lot colder on the south island than the north island.
It was so cold and windy outside. It gets a lot colder on the south island than the north island.
This is a Korean prison built as a movie set in 1986 for a childrens Wal Disney movie called "The Rescue". The prison cost $1 million to make.
For you Lord of the Rings fans, this lake may look familiar. It is the same place where they shot the scene of the Rohan people fleeing to Helms Deep.Here's what it looked like in Lord of the Rings.
This is the spot where Gimli fell off his horst while talking to Eowyn.The cliff again.
Dave jumps off the same cliff where Aragorn falls off.
And this is where Legolas spotted the wargs and starts shooting bows at them.And I think around here is where they come out of the Paths of the Dead. There wasn't a sign like the other places so I wasn't quite sure and I don't have my Lord of the Rings movies to check.
There were some llamas along the road you are allowed to feed, if you wish. Dave was afraid this one was going to spit on us.
Queenstown below.
Also by the top of the Gondola they have this thing called the luge where you ride in little one person carts around this track. It looked pretty cool, but we didn't have the time or money to do it, so I got my thrills from this little guy.
That night we went to town to have a nice dinner. We stopped at the Casino and found a game of Bingo being held. The entire audience consisted of people around their mid 20's. Queenstown seemed like a very younger crowd type town. It was really nice to be around people our age. We were able to join in on the Bingo. We didn't win anything, but it was really fun playing.
We ate at a Thai Restaurant which was tasty. I had a seafood bowl with pinapples and a coconut sauce. Mmm, mmm, good. Dave had a chicken dish with seafood and veggies. Also mmm, mmm, good. We had some gelato for dessert.
Our hostel had a free spa, so I checked it out. I could see steam coming from the water and no one was in it, so I quickly ran back to the room to tell Dave. We put on our swimsuits and jumped in. Let me also note this was an outside hot tub. We were in there for about 2 minutes and then left as quickly as we came. It was so cold! We were not impressed.
On Friday we woke up early to drive to Lake Wanaka. It had been pretty rainy for our whole trip and we had hoped to go skydiving. We kept calling the skydiving office to see if they would be jumping and it would always be too rainy, but when we called this morning they said it was a go.
On our drive to Lake Wanaka.
Queenstown from a distance.
On our drive to Lake Wanaka.
Queenstown from a distance.
Lake Wanaka.
We arrived at Skydive Lake Wanaka with a beautiful blue sky above us. The weather conditions were perfect. We went inside and were asked to fill out a form and initial here and sign there saying blah blah blah and if you were to die, it's not our fault type papers.
Here's the person packing our shoots. I was really hoping he was checking and double checking to make sure it opened properly.
We then watched a movie telling us about the basics of what to when you jump out of the plane. Head back. Tummy out. Feet back. Feel the tap then spread arms for freefall position.
It was an incredible feeling. First you're tumbling through the air not knowing which way is which, seeing the horizon spin around you. Once you get situated, the instructor taps your shoulder to let you know you can spread your arms. From there its 45 seconds of free fall with the wind rushing at your face, drying out your mouth, making your eyes tear and your ears pop. I tried screaming, but I was going so fast no noise could come out of my mouth.
After the freefall, the instructor opens the parachute, which didn't jerk your body at all. I guess they have special parachutes that open slower than usual so there's not much of an impact on you. Then it was smooth sailing from there. He did a few circles to check the parachute. I could see Dave floating along above me.
For the landing they have you put your legs up so you slide along the ground on your butt. It was a really soft landing. I slid for about 5 ft and was done. No bumps or bruises, broken bones or death. It was absolutely incredible!
Safely back on the ground, in one piece. We got free shirts from coupons we found at our hostel, which was pretty sweet. The shirts cost $39 otherwise. It would have been cool to get the video and photo package, but it was way too expensive and I just wanted photos anyways. But we were able to purchase our exit photos, which is really all we need. Everyone should try this!
From there we drove back to the Queenstown airport to fly back home. I had one last picture taken with the Remarkables.
Views of Deer Park Heights from the plane.
Arriving in Auckland.
1 comment:
Quite a trip you guys took. I'm impressed you went sky-diving, although I'm not sure your mothers were! Not afraid of much are you? The mountains were "remarkable", quite different than those in Washington! Thanks for the pictures.
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