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  • Decades of Travel | Holiday 1995-2024 – Exploring the World

    Discover decades of travel across the globe with real stories, tips, and diaries. Explore Holiday 1995-2024. DECADES OF TRAVEL DECADES OF TRAVEL DECADES OF TRAVEL DECADES OF TRAVEL Three Decades of Long‑Haul & Motorhome Adventures Real travel diaries from 1995 to Today across Australia, New Zealand, Canada, USA, Europe, Asia, Pacific Islands and a whole lot more Content being continuously added by KeefH Web Designs New? Start here Explore More The Journeys Route Plans Join Us Best Travel Blog On Desktop view at 80% Make Your Own Choices Select via Tag Decade for Travel The 90s The 00s The 10s The 20s Region for Travel Australasia North America Pacific Islands Asia Travel Style Motorhoming Cruises Family Travel with Friends About Us WHAT & WHY! 3 Decades of Travel Blogs This site is dedicated to showing all the travels we Hellinger's (i.e. Keef & Annie) have had between 1995 & 2024 and beyond, mostly in a motorhome but not exclusively, and is both a merge and an upgrade in style and currency in website design terms over our 4 existing "Travel Diary" blog websites created at the time , they have been recreated here in one merged website by KeefH Web Designs. Featuring travel across the 90s, Noughties, 10s & 20s, so come with us and discover photos, dairies, hints and tips across North America, The Pacifics, Oceania and Asia. Dig deeper & enjoy Learn More WHO! KeefH (KHWD) As the designer and developer I have had great fun bringing my 4 older style websites up into the mid 20s style, they feel fresher and more relevant whilst retaining some of the look and feel of the old sites via background colours, based on Australian , Canadian, Malaysian and generic site colours. All the textual data and videos are migrated , see what you think! Our Long Haul Journeys Explore Now EXPLORE MORE About Journeys Our motorhome travel blogs celebrate the joy of life on the road, blending practical touring advice with warm, first‑hand storytelling. They chart scenic routes, campsite discoveries, and real‑world tips for navigating long haul destinations around the world in a home on wheels and more. Holiday 1995 Australian Travels in NSW, ACT, Victoria & Queensland Initially staying with Annie's brother in Sydney, then hiring a car, travelling to Canberra, and then along the Great Ocean Road in Victoria, flying up to Cairns and hiring a 6 berth motorhome to see the Atherton tablelands and beyond Holiday 1997 Disney 25th Celebrations Travels in Florida, USA Mostly centered around Orlando, staying in Kissimmee, with trips to theme parks for the boys, but travel across state to Clearwater, St Pete's, West Palm beach, Naples, Cocoa beach, Cape Canaveral, Boca Rotan, Key West, Melbourne beach as well as the Everglades , Disney's 25th Celebrations. Holiday 1999 The Rockies Travels in the Western Provinces of Canada Hiring an All Drive Classic 3000 to travel both British Columbia and some of Alberta to visit friends who live in Edmonton, we saw amongst others the Rockies, the Inside Passage, Prince Rupert. Started with car hire in Vancouver across to Vancouver Island Holiday 2007-8 Long Haul Travels down under in 2007-8, lots in a motorhome Follow a year‑long 2007–8 gap‑year adventure across the USA, Australasia, and Asia, with travel stories, photos, videos, and tips from KeefH Web Designs. Highlights were New Zealand and travel on the Ghan, but there were many more, dive in why don't you? Holiday 2010 Canadian & USA Travels across most Provinces of Canada Explore our 2010 motorhome journey across Canada and into the USA in a brand new hired motorhome (scary) with diaries, photos, videos, and province‑by‑province highlights from a 92‑day coast‑to‑coast adventure. Combined with our 1999 trip we have now been all the way across Canada in a motorhome Holiday 2013 Long Haul Travels with a Round The World Ticket Follow our 2013 adventure across Malaysia, New Zealand, Australia and Singapore, featuring wedding celebrations, motorhome travels, photo galleries, diaries and immersive travel stories, hopefully to inspire you , maybe even create a bucket list for retirement, it is what happened for us Holiday 2014 French Travels including Monaco, Switzerland and San Remo Italy We journied through France on an unforgettable three‑month motorhome adventure. Explore scenic routes, charming villages, stunning coastlines, and real on‑the‑road stories from 4,611 miles of travel. Perfect inspiration for anyone dreaming of freedom, discovery, and life lived one breathtaking stop at a time. Holiday 2016 Motorhome Guide Scandinavia Plan your perfect European and Scandinavian motorhome adventure with real‑world tips, border advice, fuel insights, route ideas and practical guidance from months on the road. A traveler's guide packed with experience, helping you navigate Europe and Scandinavia with confidence, ease and unforgettable freedom. Holiday 2017 Friendship Travel Diary for 2017, The Big Trip with pals We can thoroughly recommend travelling with friends, double the motorhome experiences. Discover our 2017 ‘Big Trip’ across Singapore, Australia, the Cook Islands, New Zealand and Malaysia, with friends, motorhome adventures, travel diaries, galleries and immersive photography Holiday 2018 Motorhoming around Ireland Explore Eire through our 2018 motorhome adventure—scenic coastal drives, hidden bays, campsite reviews, practical tips and real on‑the‑road experiences. Discover wild Atlantic views, historic towns and the best stopovers for a smooth, memorable journey across Eire’s stunning landscapes. Perfect inspiration for planning your own Irish road trip Holiday 2019 Discovering the delights of the Faroe Islands & Iceland Journey through the Faroe Islands and Iceland in our 2019 motorhome adventure—rugged cliffs, fjords, volcanoes, remote campsites and dramatic coastal roads. From ferry crossings to geothermal wonders, this guide captures two wild Nordic worlds and offers inspiring, practical insight for anyone dreaming of an unforgettable northern road trip Holiday 2022 Family Travel Stories , returning for Disney's 50th Celebrations. Returning to Florida again we stayed in my little sister's timeshare in Davenport. We had a great time with our son and his family and sharing Disney through the eye's of our grandchildren was magical. It also showed us that we have definitely altered our energy levels since our trip in 1999. #haha Holiday 2024 Combined Cruise & Road Trip , Alaska and Canada Combining a fabulous cruise to Alaska, which we had planned to do in our hey day but was too expensive, for my 70th with my sister and hubby, and then time on Vancouver Island with friends from Edmonton, and then driving across British Columbia into the prairies to meet up with Annie's cuz in Stettler. Holiday 2025 Our latest long haul trip to Scottish Islands Less haul , more road miles really! Discover our 2025 campervan adventure through Scotland, Shetland and Orkney—remote islands, rugged coastlines, ferries, wildlife, quirky campsites and unforgettable northern scenery. A fun, practical guide packed with real experiences, mishaps and highlights to inspire your own wild and windswept UK island road trip. KHWD Other Motorhome Travel Blogs More Motorhome travels ,over 200 travel blogs with Hints & Tips Although the travel diaries featured here on this website mostly are précised in our motorhome travels blog site there are many more of our trips featured there especially 3 months around Scandinavia, 2 months in France and 2 months on the Faroe Islands and Iceland, amongst others, enjoy! KHWD Travel Video Blog site Decades of Adventure Captured on Film This is our totally responsive version of this website created by KHWD using WIX studio. A heartfelt archive of 30 years on the road, this travel video blog captures the joy, wonder and nostalgia of exploring the world. Each film feels like opening an old diary—full of colour, memory and meaning—inviting you to relive adventures and spark new ones of your own. Route Planning - These are overall help but each travel year has it's own suggested travel route Часто задаваемые вопросы Travel Inspiration Travel Stories Travel Diaries Motorhome Adventures Long-Haul Travel Family Trips Maps & More Where can you find inspiration for your next trip? Explore our curated travel stories, photos, and guides to spark ideas for your upcoming adventures. What is KHWD Holidays 1995–2024 Plus? KHWD Holidays 1995–2024 Plus is a modernised archive of nearly three decades of long‑haul travel, motorhome adventures, maps, diaries, and videos created by Keef & Annie. It merges four older travel diary sites into one updated, easy‑to‑browse platform. Are the travel blogs useful for planning my own trip? Yes. Each trip includes: Real‑world itineraries Campsite and route suggestions Practical motorhome tips Honest reviews and personal insights Maps, videos, and day‑by‑day diaries Does the site include family travel content? Yes. Family‑focused trips include: Florida 1997 Disney’s 50th Anniversary in 2022 Multi‑generational travel with grandchildren How do you travel long‑term in retirement? Long‑term travel in retirement is all about freedom, planning, and pacing: Travel slowly — enjoy each destination without rushing. Choose comfortable accommodation — motorhomes, apartments, and long‑stay lodges. Build rest days into your itinerary — especially on multi‑month trips. Stay connected — use mobile data, local SIMs, and travel apps. Budget realistically — long trips are easier when costs are spread out. Prioritise health and insurance — essential for peace of mind. Our site’s 3‑month and 2‑month adventures are perfect inspiration for retirees planning similar journeys. +44 7843962729 KeefHWebDesigns@outlook.com Decades of Travel Images Travel Video Blog by KHWD 143 Longmoor Lane, Sandiacre, Nottingham, NG10 5LT England, UK Privacy Policy Accessibility Statement Cookies Adventures of a Lifetime, Holidays 1995-2024 Long Haul Travel Blogs Original Travel Archives Join our mailing list Email* Subscribe I want to subscribe to your mailing list. Just coming........................................... The live "Travel Video Blog" by KHWD "History of Travel" lectures which influenced Lonely Planet Books 50 years ago, The Hippie Trail was a huge influence.... Tony Wheeler is a bit of a hero of mine

  • 2013 New Zealand Travel Blog | Holiday 1995-2024 | Motorhoming Kiwi Trip Advice

    Discover a full 2013 North Island New Zealand motorhome route with campsites, highlights, scenic drives, local history, and must‑see attractions motorhoming 4 all New Zealand by Motorhome, 2013, Kiwi Campsite Guide & Blog New Zealand 2013 North Island only , including amongst others Papamoa beach, Russell, Whangamomona and Cape Reinga, 1 visit 6th February to 5th March, 28 days in total We returned to New Zealand which we both love and found we loved it even more. We just (careful Keef, others have to work) had one month here this time as opposed to our 4 months last time and that was all spent in the top half of North Island going back to see the things we didn't have time to see last time. This meant much more time in Northlands, The Bay of Islands, Mata Mata & Hobbiton plus Whangamomona (the Republic's capital) - where the current president is a sheep and the previous one was a dog hee hee oh and lovely delightful days of R&R on NZ's superb beaches. Like 5 years ago this was the best summer they had ever had . A kiwi @ Orewa said you poms have history we have beaches. So true! Our Mercedes Sprinter 313 motorhome was good but not as good as the equivalent one in OZ. We picked it up in Auckland and returned it there. We definitely miss the land of the long white cloud. We drove 2559 miles in NZ. To see all the images have a look at the individual visits via the dropdown menu Whilst camping in New Zealand we joined the following two organisations which saved us a lot of money, these site clubs were called Top 10 and Kiwi Holiday Parks campsites. Just a thought for fellow motor homers , it may help. HIGHLIGHTS:- 35th Wedding Anniversary Cape Reinga, Russell, Keri Keri & Whatuwhiwhi Forgotten world highway Art Deco Napier Lake Taupo & Kinloch The Coromandel Peninsular Hot Water Beach Hobbiton at Matamata The wonderful Papamoa beach, Ocean drive Lamb curry @ Kiwi Airport Motel And completing the NZ census Orewa beach & revisiting Waves Motel All the fab Campsites we stayed at during our 2559 miles of North Island exploration The friendliness of all the Kiwi nation, Big Tick LOWLIGHTS:- None 🌿 Discover New Zealand Like You Were There With Us New Zealand’s North Island is one of those rare places that stays with you long after you’ve left—and this page brings that feeling back to life. Our 2013 journey wasn’t just a holiday; it was a rolling adventure through beaches, forests, geothermal wonders, iconic film locations, and the warm, easygoing rhythm of Kiwi life. Whether you’re dreaming of your own motorhome trip, planning a future escape, or simply love losing yourself in real travel stories, this is the kind of page you’ll want to bookmark and return to. 🚐 A Road Trip Told Through Real Moments From the freedom of travelling by motorhome to the joy of discovering hidden bays, quirky towns, and unforgettable viewpoints, every stop is captured with honesty, humour, and detail. You’ll find campsite insights, scenic drives, personal anecdotes, and the kind of practical tips only travellers on the road can share. It’s not a brochure—it’s lived experience. 📸 Photography That Pulls You In The page is packed with original photos that show New Zealand at its best: sweeping coastlines, volcanic landscapes, Hobbiton’s magic, and the everyday beauty of life on the road. It’s visual storytelling designed to make you feel part of the journey. 🌏 Why Visitors Come Back Because this isn’t just a travel diary—it’s a growing archive. Every visit reveals something new: a detail you missed, a route idea you want to save, or a spark of inspiration for your next big trip. It’s a place to wander, revisit, and dream. Here is a HIGHLIGHT movie culled from the talkies movie we have here on the site. We created a more up to date one, created and uploaded by KeefH Web Designs in November 2023 (KHWD), enjoy. The total movie is almost 4 minutes long and covers all the areas we visited in New Zealand's North Island, notably Cape Reinga, Hot Water beach, Tongariro area and Taupo, Whangerei & Harura Falls and Hobbiton at the Mata Mata farmstead. New Zealand touring by Motorhome, 28 Days, 6th Feb-5th March, some wonderful campsites on North Island Read the Travel Blog Diaries, Look at the Travel Blog Slideshows, See the You Tube Videos, Use the 2013 CHOICES MENU to Explore, 3 Days at a Time (mostly) Have Fun, This travel blog is referenced as our 3rd Holiday of a Lifetime to cover our trips in 2007/8 (Downunder) & 2010 (Across Canada), we have since had a 4th in 2017 (Downunder) All the usual travel blog information can be found here. and for New Zealand North Island is broken down into areas we visited, namely the lovely Orewa , we would live there if we moved to NZ, Tutukaka Coast, Keri Keri, Coromandel, Bay of Plenty, Hawkes Bay, Tongariro, Taranaki, Auckland and of course our 35th Wedding Anniversary back at that lovely restaurant in National Park. Campsites we stayed at 1 mar 2013 pitch 7 hamilton 12 feb 13 keri keri campsite, northlands 1/59 PLAY NEW ZEALAND, North Island, Orewa Etc.,6-8 Feb 2013 Northlands including Auckland, Orewa, Bream Bay Area & Whangarei, New Zealand, Northlands 6-8 feb 2013 auckland, orewa, bream bay area, whangarei, covering amongst others 63 selective slideshow images, steak and cheese pies plus frankly any kiwi pie just fab from service stations everywhere, put brit pies to shame, auckland airport, kiwi airport motel, wonderful homemade lamb curry, kiwi census, orewa, countdown supermarket car park in orewa, New World Supermarket for phone stuff plus Vodafone for wi-fi dongle (the height of technology back in 2013), the mad butcher revisited for bbq meat, auckland, norfolk pines, pohutakawa trees, red fronzes, surf club, waves hotel revisit, top 10 sites at orewa and whangerei, joined Top 10 club, twin coast discovery highway, aratoa way, bream bay, hen and chicken islands, helicopters, mangawhai, mangawhai heads, info boards, maori fables, ruakaka beach, waipu cove, spolit soil contaminated by cows, sunshine, relaxation, deep joy in northlands. We were previously in Orewa & Whangarei in 2007 and then again in 2017. annie outside our kiwi merc motorhome us _orewa 1/32 Wednesday February 6th 2013 Arrived in Brisbane Queensland Australia at 2.35 p.m. local time, bags were in transit. We then flew on from Brisbane to Auckland, North Island, New Zealand mid afternoon local kiwi time. We were now 5 hours ahead of the local time in Georgetown Penang Malaysia, so our body clocks were somewhat out of kilter. We were both very tired from both the flight and body clocks, super jet lagged, but managed to get a free pick-up van to the kiwi motel near the airport and unpacked some stuff and fell into bed for about an hour. Had showers, it was really all a blur, airports, planes, luggage, movies, music, eating at weird times etc etc. We then went and had a meal in the Kiwi Motel restaurant , lamb curry which was very nice and cooked by the Indian family who manage the motel. We will return and indeed did in 2017. We even did the Kiwi census here even though we are tourists, they insisted. So if any of our descendants in the future are into Genealogy they will find us in New Zealand’s census and wonder why, this is the answer. Interestingly my parents would have emigrated to New Zealand in the mid-50s but because of Dad’s apprenticeship papers they went to Australia instead as did I since then born. We went as a family to Melbourne 1960-63. Thursday February 7th 2013 Summary today we collected our rental van and went from the airport kiwi motel to the wonderful Orewa to the north of Auckland. We had a continental breakfast at 8 a.m. at the Kiwi motel, we paid them $10, approximately £5 to take us to the motorhome company which was about 8 minutes’ drive away. After doing some necessary admin and watching a DVD on how to drive the motorhome and how it all works (kind of familiar to us already from previous hires) we set off from Auckland using our Sat Nav. Keef had loaded on both New Zealand, Australia and Singapore maps to our gadget back home saving some dosh in hiring the companies Sat Nav, good news. We drove across the bridge over Auckland harbour and arrived in Orewa where we did our food shopping in the Countdown supermarket, we remembered from our 2007-8 Gap Year trip. We also unpacked our travel bags in their car park, so we had the van all straightened out for our fun times ahead. We arrived at the Top 10 campsite in Orewa at midday and joined the club as members kiwi $49 which provided a $4 discount each night camping, roughly £2 so easily covered the cost of membership for the time we were in NZ. The campsite and our pitch were fronting onto the beach, lovely blue seas, and skies and just a beautiful summers day with no humidity. We had steak and cheese pies & cobs for lunch. Frankly any kiwi pie is just fab , available from most service stations (servos) everywhere, put our British pies to shame. We then walked along Orewa beach, beautiful views, and trees especially the Pohutukawa trees and Norfolk pines. A local woman (her parents lived in Grantham, small world) kindly took our photo on our camera for us, our trusty Canon Powershot G7 which we took down under in 2007-8, sadly by 2022 it was now defunct, and we have bought Annie a new one, I use my phone. This local lady had been in New Zealand for 37 years, we noted she now had brown leathery skin, beach ready ha-ha. We had a long chat to her and then walked to the Vodaphone shop to sort out the internet and wi-fi for our trip, we purchased a dongle for the duration which worked well even in out of the way places. We also bought a kiwi phone SIM and topped it up with $20 at the New World Supermarket at the till. We walked back to the campsite having seen the Waves hotel that we stayed at for Xmas 2007 with the boys when we were on our Gap Year. Phoenix joined us there for Boxing Day. See the HOLIDAY in 2007-8 . It was a lovely motel just by the beach. We noted all the lovely architect designed houses along the Orewa beach front as we strolled back, bare feet in the sand. Dinner was beef escalope’s, new potatoes, salad, and an apple each for after's. It gets dark around 8.30-8.45 p.m. here , quite noisy with traffic during the day past the campsite which was on the edge of town but on its main through road, but very quiet at night. Reckon we walked about 2 miles around Orewa today. The Britz campervan mileage at the start of our trip was recorded as 246,253 kilometers , recorded just so at the end of our time in New Zealand we can work out how far we had travelled. Clever, eh? Friday February 8th 2013 Summary of the day, Orewa to Whangerei. Cloudy start to the day but got sunnier and very blue skies again by 10 a.m. We left the site at Orewa for town and visited the Vodafone shop (again) to sort out the equipment for our netbook to view the internet and emails whilst we were travelling, yesterday eve had proved it didn’t quite work as suggested, typical. Took a while but eventually got it all working with their help. #Tick We then set off from Orewa up the highway and along the coast using the famed twin coast discovery highway initially to Mangawhai Heads where we had lunch. Beautiful scenery, lovely homes, plus views along the coast and beach. We very much liked his place. Sadly, we saw lots of dead possums on the road, known as Kiwi pizza in NZ but protected in Australia. We then drove to Waipu cove where we paddled and walked along the beach. Lots of small bits of seaweed in the sea so we decided not to swim, a seaweed bath despite costing a fortune at health spas was not for us today. We then went to a lovely bay called Bream Bay with views of Hen & Chicken Islands. We then turned off the highway to Ruakaka where there was a stunning beach of soft fine sand and no seaweed and fab views along the bay. You could walk for miles along this beach. Keef got the chairs from the motorhome which was a Britz Mercedes automatic (love this model had them a few times) and we sat on the beach until 5.45 p.m. Then we drove to the Top 10 camp site at Whangerei (pronounced fangari) and arrived at 6.45 p.m. Annie did 2 lots of washing and Keef cooked a nice meal with wine. It got dark at 8.30 p.m. We had showers at the site to wash off the sea spray and beach sand and then Keef checked the emails. We booked 2 nights at the Whangerei Top 10 site so we could rediscover the area, we had been here before with the boys and phoenix in 2007-8. NEW ZEALAND, North Island, Coromandel Peninsular,15-17 Feb 2013 Northlands including Matakohe, Coromandel Peninsular & Hot Water Beach, New Zealand, Northlands 15-17 feb 2013 matakohe, coromandel , hot water beach, covering amongst others 113 selective slideshow images, matakohe, coromandel peninsular, apihara, bamboo, 90 mile beach, dargaville river, Dargaville town, arapohue, matakohe, banana bread, our new step, arapaoa river, citrus fruits, twin bridge gorge, dargaville revisit, coromandel range mountains, tree ferns, the kauri pioneer museum , lake Omapere, Kaikohe, twin bridge gorge, post offices, pioneer church, log haulers, helensville, art work, brynderwyn, thames, kawau parau inlet, muriwai and muriwai beach, black sand, coromandel town, tricky roads, views to die for, matarangi, whitianga, mercury bay, sunsets, bruises from steps, Shipwreck Bay, Kaitaia, revisiting Greenlane & Remuera in Auckland, Sir Edmund Hillary. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. slow start to 90 mile beach ahipara whitianga beach 1/56 Friday February 15th 2013 Summary Ahipara to Matakohe Left the Kiwi Park campsite at Ahipara and went down a side street and parked and walked down to 90 Mile beach. There were vehicles using beach as a road, 4-wheel drive only allowed allegedly. There was big surf today as very breezy, however today there was no one surfing, kite or cart wise. We took photos of shipwreck bay and the sweeping 90-mile beach and then returned to Kaitaia and south on State Highway 1. Lots of mainly cattle farms and then dense scrub lands and tree ferns everywhere zig zagging up and down the mountain sides. It felt very “New Zealand”. The roads were very wiggly. All this area in the far north and I guess a lot of Northlands are very Māori inhabited including Ahipara and Kaitaia. We passed lake Omapere and then turned right to Kaikohe where we re-fueled $70 or £35 for ¾ of a tank of diesel which was somewhat cheaper than the UK at the time. Again, Kaikohe is mainly a Māori town with one road of shops running right through it. We then took the inland road to Dargaville near the west coast, a town we know well having 1st camped near there with the boys back in 2007-8 on our gap year. We stopped for lunch at twin bridge gorge. The weather was cloudy and much cooler than yesterday. Again, some very nice rural countryside heavily enhanced with the tree ferns which we love, do so wish we could get them back and growing in the UK (cheaply) but guess we don’t have the right climate for that. Arrived Dargaville around 4 p.m. and Keef posted a postcard to his Mum. Anne looked in a craft shop. Decided to move onto Matakohe to stay at the Kiwi Park campsite there, especially now we are fully paid-up club members, as we are with Top 10 sites, it widened our overnight stay options quite nicely as they are the major camping chains in NZ. The site was just down the road from the kauri pioneer museum which we had already visited with Craig & Doug in 2007. A very nice campsite with views of the Arapaoa river and surrounding farmlands. Annie did some ironing and chatted to an Aussie woman in the laundry. Keef did lamb steaks (just so good in NZ), and kumara chips on the barbeque again, becoming quite a staple meal for us, lovely cheap and fresh local produce, you can’t beat it! There were a few spots of rain this afternoon (arvo) but nothing much. NOTE This was the first meal we have eaten in the van since we arrived in NZ, rain, eh? Brian and Gina have returned to the UK from their holiday in Borneo / Malaysia. Saturday February 16th 2013 Summary Matakohe to Coromandel Town We travelled south on State Highway 1 (the kiwi’s main lifeline one feels!) then onto highway 16. We visited Muriwai beach, a black volcanic sand beach, sadly not very attractive but different. Summary is Muriwai, also called Muriwai Beach, is a coastal community on the west coast of the Auckland Region in the North Island of New Zealand. The black-sand surf beach and surrounding area is a popular recreational area for Aucklanders. The Muriwai Regional Park includes a nesting site for a large colony of gannets. The New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "water's end" for Muriwai It was cloudy at first again today and then cleared and turned very warm. All the grasslands and farms we passed looked very dry. Not much livestock either. We joined highway 1 again and stopped off at the Green Lane exit for Remuera, we stayed at the motel here on our last trip in 2007-8. The gay couple who owned it, lovely people, had sadly now moved on and it certainly looked a bit different. Such lovely memories and a nice suburb to Auckland, Sir Edmund Hillary came from Auckland and died in Remuera. We then continued south and across to the Coromandel peninsular. We purchased diesel at Thame cost 80p a litre or in kiwi money 60 cents. Keef chatted to a Pom from Leicester who worked in the garage. We then drove along the scenic road north with the bay on our left, all hair pin bends and very windy roads, then we climbed the Coromandel range, which was very steep, but lovely views in the afternoon sun. Arrived at the Top 10 campsite in Coromandel town , cost $45 per night with $4 dollars discount as members so not too bad but on the higher price side compared to other sites. This is where we had previously camped in a tent back in 2008 under the large tree there. We had a swim in the campsite pool which refreshingly was now heated. We had had a long drive today with some tricky roads on the peninsular where you really needed to concentrate, kiwis with boats towed certainly drive fast with no particular concern for what is coming in the opposite direction, just an observation folks’ tee hee. We showered and then had a chat to an old couple in an old-fashioned motorhome parked next to ours. She was 88 and he was 84 and they still loved travelling in their van, do hope we are the same assuming we get to that age. The campsite was full as a weekend with Aucklanders who have got away for the weekend. Coromandel was where the first gold was discovered in New Zealand. Sunday February 17th 2013 Summary Coromandel to Hot Water Beach, Joy’s birthday today Chatted to a couple from Welwyn Garden city who were camped at the Coromandel campsite. Small world as this is where Annie lived as a child for 10 years. We then had a walk through the town which on reflection we didn’t think had changed much in the intervening period. We then drove out of town on Highway 25 and turned off at Matarangi, a beautiful sandy beach which we walked along, with some very expensive holiday homes and golf resort. Hot and sunny but sea breezes. Then we went on to Whitianga and Mercury Bay where we had lunch and swam in the sea. It was a gently shelving sandy beach and therefore ideal for swimming and a much needed cool off. We bought boysenberry ice creams and walked through the towns and saw the shops although it was quite a small town really. Then we drove along highway 25 again onto Hot Water Beach and the Top 10 site there. It cost $41.40 to camp there. The site was very dry and dusty with the grass almost gone due to lack of rain, a true drought in NZ currently. There were water restrictions on the Coromandel in place. We had dinner and then drove the van to a car park near Hot Water Beach. We had been loaned two spades for digging from the Top 10 campsite for $20 deposit. We only needed them for that night’s sunset. We walked along the beach to where lots of people were digging in the wet sand at low tide at about 6.45 p.m. There are hot springs under the sand at about 2 kilometers deep and if you dig down to about 9 inches to a foot the hot water comes up, quite an experience. Steam was coming out of many people’s sand holes and they were sitting in them like baths. There were even some Japanese and Brazilian tourists as well as weekend Aucklanders and us Brits. It was great fun. The water was quite hot, but Keef loved doing some digging to create our own little bath. Deep Joy! We took loads and loads of photos. We then walked back along the beach and returned in the van to the campsite at 8.10 p.m. The sun had set. We had showers to get rid of the sand and retired to bed happy but exhausted. It had all been good fun. NEW ZEALAND, NORTH ISLAND, TONGARIRO AREA,24-26 Feb 2013 Including Tongariro area, 35th Wedding Anniversary & the Forgotten World Highway ending at the Republic of Whangamomona, New Zealand, Tongariro area 24-26 feb 2013, whangamomona, national park, lake taupo triathlon, ruepehi, 35th Wedding Anniversary, covering amongst others 203 selective slideshow images, highway 43 to the republic of Whangamomona, national park anniversary meal, Tongariro, mount doom, Tongariro Alpine crossing walk, ruapehu, Mt Ngauruhoe, Raurimu Spiral, 35th wedding anniversary, day & meal, volcanoes, active and otherwise, the shaky isles, aotearoa, Maori influence, chateau tongariro, black swans, lake rotiari, station restaurant, kumara, forgotten world highway i.e state highway 43, gravel roads, tranz scenic railway better known as the Northern Explorer, tawai falls, gollums pool, makatote viaduct, waikato river, totara, pohutakawa, republic of whanga, turangi, tracks, Tawhai Falls, Tongariro National Park, targarakau gorge ,tapu island, whakapapa village, desert well maybe, rangipo, huka falls, moki tunnel, hobbit hole, ohakune, raetihi branch bridge, mangateitei stream, waimarino old name for national park railway station, tongariro river, motuopuhi, otunui riverboat landing, taumarunui, herlihy’s bluff, stratford, taranaki, whanga, tahora, republic, passport stamped, heritage trails, New World Supermarket at Turangi. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. ❤️ 35th Wedding Anniversary Our 35th wedding anniversary will always feel like a story written in sunlight and mountain air. New Zealand gave us the perfect backdrop: the gentle rhythm of the TranzAlpine, the quiet charm of the station restaurant, and the peaceful stillness of our campsite tucked beneath the national park’s towering peaks. Wandering through Whakapapa Village, watching for kiwis at dusk, and ending the day under a sky painted with a glowing sunset reminded me how lucky I am to have shared this journey with you. Every moment felt like a celebration not just of a milestone, but of us — of the laughter, the adventures, and the way we still choose each other after all these years. That day in 2013 captured the heart of our marriage: simple joys, shared wonder, and a love that keeps finding new horizons. We went to the same restaurant we had been to with the kids back in 2007-8, you can see about our 30th Wedding anniversary stamping our passports ROW annie on tawhai falls walk 1/78 Sunday February 24th 2013 Summary, Taupo to Tongariro National Park. We left the Taupo Top 10 site and went to see Huka Falls again. Despite drought the rapids and falls were still going strong, so majestic. We last visited in 2008 when we went on the rapids jet boat with the kids, great fun. 360 was the call ha-ha. We drove around Lake Taupo, there was a triathlon taking place today and part of state highway 1 was closed off because of it. We headed for Tongariro National Park. We stopped for a coffee break in a lay-by. We had lunch in a small village Ohakune with a giant carrot, supposedly the Carrot capital of New Zealand. Here there were lovely views of the 2 active volcanoes, one had snow on its top the other was Mount Doom (from the Lord of the Rings Trilogy of films), its real name of course is Mount Tongariro. They are both famous for the Tongariro Alpine crossing walk. We then called in at National Park village to the railway station restaurant and café to book a table for our 35th Wedding Anniversary coming up on the 25th .,tomorrow for 6 p.m. The station is the stop point for the Trans Scenic Railway. It is now called the Northern Explorer and if you like is the sister train journey to the TranzAlpine on South Island. Some words about this journey are: - The Northern Explorer train service is a scenic rail journey through the five unique geographical regions of the North Island - travelling between Auckland, New Zealand's largest city - home of the Sky Tower, through the central heartland of the North Island to Wellington - New Zealand's harbour capital and arts and culture centre. Along the way, you will see fantastic views of New Zealand farmland, rugged bush landscapes before ascending up the world famous Raurimu Spiral to the volcanic plateau passing the majestic volcanoes of Mt Tongariro, Mt Ngauruhoe and Mt Ruapehu - the home of the North Island ski fields and descending through stunning river gorges to the farming landscapes and rocky seascapes of the lower North Island - all from large panoramic windows and the open air viewing deck of the Northern Explorer train. The Northern Explorer carriages have an advanced air bag suspension system for quieter and smoother travel, un-tinted, non-reflective, panoramic side, and roof windows to capture the dramatic coastal and mountain views of the magnificent North Island. GPS triggered journey commentary in five languages at your seat via headphones, plus information displays and overhead HD video and are centrally heated/air conditioned for passenger comfort. We then drove to Whakapapa village and Chateau Tongariro. We went to the campsite in the village and booked 2 nights at $38 a night, good value when one considers the amazing location. We did a walk along the river, rapids, and gorges with a bridge over the rapids. We then did a short nature walk near our van pitch, both great fun and great views. Anne did some handwashing and Keef cooked dinner, we then took our torches at dusk to look for kiwis along the nature trail , a full moon was helpful, we listened intently for any searching for insects, grubs, or worms in the undergrowth but disappointed to see nothing. Kiwis are amazingly illusive #fact We then returned to the van for boysenberry wine instead. Monday February 25th 2013 Summary, Our 35th Wedding Anniversary Day at Whakapapa Village and tour around Tongariro National Park. Opened our anniversary card from Linda & Ian. K did bacon cobs for breakfast. We headed north for Turangi direction. On the way stopped to see the archeological remains of a Māori village by a lake which was deserted by 1850 after inter-tribal musket wars. Then we got the view of Lake Taupo and surrounding area from a lookout point. We saw Sulphur and steam coming out of an active volcano from the road, which were marked on the map as exploding craters. We took lots of photos. In Turangi we looked at shops, a small square of pedestrianised shops. Some were empty. We got hot pies and cakes from a bakery for lunch. We found out from the info tourist board that the Trans Scenic railway runs from Auckland to Wellington and vice-versa 3 times a week. Sat in the van and Keef checked emails as there is no wi-fi at the campsite, it is to be expected as so remote. Drove back to the site via Rangipo. Had showers and got changed for our Anniversary meal at the Station for 6 p.m. We had a lovely meal, 3 courses, wine, and coffee. Keef had a rack of lamb with cracked pepper, kumara and carrot mash, veg in blueberry jus and lime oil. Annie had beef strips in salsa. For pudding we both had banana and macadamia nut spring rolls in a caramel sauce with ice-cream and cream, just yummy! Podged we returned to the campsite and got changed and went kiwi spotting again with torches, or as it happened not spotting, tee-hee. We think however we did hear one calling in the bushes some distance away but not confirmed. Tuesday February 26th 2013 Summary, Whakapapa Village to the Republic of Whangamomona. It was a very cold night around the Tongariro region, which I guess is understandable with so many mountains. Today’s daytime temperature was 28 degrees centigrade. Nice. Stopped the van on the outskirts of the village to do the 20-minute waterfall walk. Its start was on the road past the Tongariro chateau and was called the Tawhai falls walk. We then went onto Turangi again and did some shopping at the New World supermarket there. We then headed to Taumarunui, a small town at the start of the Forgotten World Highway, a heritage tourist route. Keef checked emails and paid the Barclaycard whilst Annie went to the Tourist Information centre to get stuff about the Forgotten World Highway route. We called in at the McDonald’s for a McFlurry ice-cream before setting off on the heritage route. We passed a lavender farm and quite a few farms with sheep, cows, and deer. Venison is now so big in NZ I would suggest it outstrips sheep farming. One farm was sheep shearing in the sheds, we watched. The scenery was very unusual, hobbit-like hills, deep blue gorges and a river that was almost dry. Lots of abandoned sheep farm buildings. We drove through what was called the Hobbit hole, a tunnel cut through rock about 4.5 meters high and just wide enough for one vehicle, luckily not much traffic on the Forgotten World Highway. Lots of the hills were volcanic ash and pumice stone, now covered in grass where the Taupo area had erupted millions of years ago. About 12 kilometers of the highway was gravel road, we had no choice but to travel on it. Fab views of Tongariro in the distance. We arrived at Whangamomona at about 5.45 p.m. We took many photos of the hotel and other heritage buildings. The campsite was $20 in the grassed area of the old school. We had a meal in the pub and got our passports stamped as Whanga declared itself a republic in 1986. It cost $2 to get your passport stamped, rather a touristy gimmick but hey why not, its fun. The history is locals were angry about local boundary changes so went independent and elected a pig as the mayor and even have sentry boxes on the town’s outskirts, ha-ha. There were lots of historical pictures on the pub wall that were fascinating. All in all a great place to visit if you like quirky, we do! NEW ZEALAND, North Island, Tutukaka Coastline, 9-11 Feb 2013 Northlands including Whangarei, Tutukaka Coast & the fabulous Russell, New Zealand, Northlands 9-11 feb 2013 whangarei, whangarei marina and town basin, hatea bridge, and Huarahi o te Whai Hātea Loop Walkway, tutukaka coast, covering amongst others 133 selective slideshow images, the Warehouse DIY chain store, buying that fatal plastic step (oh the benefits of hindsight 😉), russell, hatea river, pouihi carvings, clapham clocks, boardwalks, top 10 sites, raeburn house, town basin, kauri factory, our lovely kauri bowl with paua shell inlaid 35,000 years old, many other European nations at the campsite, whangarei falls, otuihau, sandy bay, ngungunu, tutukaka marina, whangaumu bay, whale bay, church bay, beach baches, designer houses, wooley bay, posh yachts, poor knights islands, tarakihi fish (yummy), air roots on trees, pohutukawa trees, matapouri rocks, oakura campsite at whangaruru south, flowers, BBQ's, the strand, museums, pompallier mission, weak, kowharewa bay. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017 see the links in the trailer below to visit. anne on the strand, russell, nz along the hatea river 1/67 Saturday February 9th 2013 Summary, Whangarei 79 degrees Fahrenheit 26 degrees Centigrade Woke at 9 a.m. Lots of Dutch and Germans at the campsite. Had breakfast outside and Anne collected in most of the washing. Another sunny and hot day in New Zealand, yippee. Drove the van to the Warehouse DIY chain store in town and bought a few extras for the campervan / motorhome such as pegs to keep curtains together, 2 hand towels and a plastic step for the van as 2 foot drop down to the ground out on the van was a little tricky for oldies like us at ages 59 & 58 respectively. This proved to be not such a great idea if you read on under Russell later. Then did a bit of shopping for bread, milk etc. in the Countdown supermarket. We then walked along the boardwalk by the boats moored at the old quayside, and saw the old heritage buildings with cafes, restaurants, and shops. The whole area was very nicely landscaped, surrounded by trees and bushes, and with fab views, we adore the marina and town basin area. Whangarei has a very large harbour and although it is termed a city to us it feels so much more like a small town. A comparison would be a UK city like Nottingham Population 794,000 whereas Whangarei’s population is 54,300, Erewash which includes Long Eaton is 115, 490… I rest my case my lord! We missed the craft market up on the hatea river bridge (sometimes known in Maori as the Huarahi o te Whai Hātea Loop Walkway, which had finished at 1.30 p.m. but went into some craft shops instead which had some very expensive items, so we didn’t buy anything. We then drove to the Kauri clock factory outside town on a small industrial estate, interestingly run by Germans. There were lots of massive kauri tree stumps in the yard looking very weathered. We took some pictures. They turn these into beautiful wood clocks, highly polished. We bought a kauri round bowl inlaid with NZ paua shell which cost £60, well worth it, it looks lovely and is highly unusual. Then we drove out along the harbour edge which was the residential area and a bit swampy. There was also a port with oil refineries. We then returned in the van back to the campsite. Anne did some ironing and Keef cooked lamb steaks on the camp barbeque. Annie also reorganised storage of some of our clothes in the van and put her undies in the microwave, hot, eh? 😉 to save space. Keef did some photos on the laptop. Got dark around 8.45 p.m. Showered and then went to bed. The England cricket team had played the Black Caps in Whangarei a couple of days before we arrive, shame would love to have seen it, Collingwood and McCullen era. Note we did see them do battle in Christchurch on South Island back in 2007-8. Note the inscription on the back of our kauri bowl “Far North New Zealand, swamp kauri , 35,000 years old, with paua shell , radar” 1/2 Sunday February 10th 2013 Chinese New Year, the Year of the Snake, big love to Mr. & Mrs. Douglas in Singapore celebrating. Summary. Whangarei to Oakura Road Holiday Park & Motel site, Whangaruru South, located at address 4, Te Kapua Street Ōakura 0184. Whangaruru is a rural community and harbour on the east coast of Northland, New Zealand. Mokau, Helena Bay, Whakapara, Hikurangi and Whangarei are to the south and the Bay of Islands is to the northwest. Woke at 8 a.m. and had boiled egg and toast for breakfast. Drove out to Whangarei falls, Keef took some photos but as we had already visited them with Craig, Doug back in 2007 we only stood on the top platform rather than doing the circular walk around down to the bottom platform views. We then took a circular route to the coast north of Whangarei to Ngunguru and Tutukaka harbour. The harbour had a huge marina, and it was Sunday many kiwis were boating and sailing. What’s the line, one in 2 kiwis’ own a yacht. There were art and craft shops and cafés. We stopped at Matapouri beach, but it was very busy and difficult to park the motorhome, so we went onto Wooley’s Bay, a lovely long curved beach. We had lunch there then cooled off in the sea. People were body surfing on boards. Another hot day with blue skies and sea, ah bliss! There was so much lovely scenery along this coastline. We chatted to a Scot who had emigrated in 1965 to Auckland. We left the beach at 5 p.m. and intended to take the road to Russell but must have missed the turning and went 16 kilometers out of our way on State Highway 1. It was difficult to find a turning point on the highway but we eventually managed to and found a campsite at Oakura near Whangaruru South, on Oakura Road and not to be confused with the Oakura Bay near New Plymouth some 300+ miles away. Oakura was a tiny place with lovely views of the sheltered bay. The campsite cost $39 and was quite basic. Keef cooked pasta carbonara with chicken. We read for a bit and went to bed at 11.25p.m. Note and we saw lots of these, Pohutukawa trees have red flowers at Christmas and massive aerial roots. We saw lots at Tutukaka especially around the landscaped harbour area as well as naturally all along that coastline. Monday February 11th 2013 Summary Oakura site Whangaruru South to the wonderful Russell, one of our fave places in NZ. Anne woke at 7.30 a.m. Keef at 8.45 a.m. After a light breakfast we drove along the loop road to Russell through lots of bush with NZ tree ferns and many cattle and sheep farms. It was very twisty roads and hilly scenery but nice. We arrived at the Russell Top 10 site at 1 p.m. to book in. $23 per night, not bad with our Top 10 card discount. It is a lovely site overlooking the Bay of Islands and Paihia. The site is on 4 levels, and we were on the top level. We returned to the same spot in 2017. We wanted to do the Tall ships sailing excursion for 2 hours in the afternoon but on that Monday they only did a full day and we had arrived too late, becoming a bit of a theme that after craft market in Whangarei ha-ha. Anyhow after filling the motorhome with water, we walked into town and saw many wooden houses with verandas, some built up hillsides with decking on stilts. We also saw a weka, an NZ flightless bird, which scuttled away into a garden. We walked around the town and the jetty and then visited the museum along the front and saw a video about the town’s history. The town had been notorious in the Victorian era for lawlessness, drunk sailors, whalers, and prostitutes. It is however now very touristy but sadly not many historical buildings are left. We had fish and chips, yummy, the fish was tarakihi, a white fish, $10 each or £5, very tasty. We then walked back to the campsite and wrote some postcards to Craig, Doug, Margaret of 90 mile beach which we hadn’t reached as yet. We fed the ducks bread and a weka who came quite close by. He was a brown and black bird, size of a hen with long curved beak and 3 toes. Now the really bad news, Annie fell off that plastic step we bought at the Warehouse store to make getting out of the van easier, she was probably not concentrating, who knows , not nice, very painful and eventually developed into a huge bruise, way worse than the ones from the bouncy boat in Langkawi Malaysia. There were lovely views at twilight and beyond of the lights across the bay in Paihia. We talked to a couple on the next pitch from Cambridge who were also touring NZ. They had also just been to Georgetown, Penang, small world. We heard the noise from the nocturnal kiwi birds at dusk and in the night. They were in the bushes across from our pitch and up the hillside, we tried looking but didn’t find any, they are quite illusive flightless birds, but the New Zealand emblem and populations namesake. We have only seen them in captivity at the Otorohanga Kiwi House. NEW ZEALAND, Bay of Plenty,18-20 Feb 2013 Bay of Plenty including Papamoa beach, Hobbiton,Rotorua and Gisborne, New Zealand, Bay of Plenty 18-20 feb 2013 papamoa, rotorua, gisborne, covering amongst others 145 selective slideshow images, Britz Mercedes motorhome, matamata, hobbiton, hobbit holes, sam wise gangee, lord of the rings, peter Jackson, hahei beach, cathedral cove caves, frodo, bilbo baggins, waiha beach, katikati and wall art murals, pukeko, Tauranga, james cook, farthing woods, te karaka, papamoa beach, ocean drive, fave campsite in all the world, Tip Top icecreams, boysenberry, hokey pokey, the Pacific Ocean, precious, dragon inn, gandalf, party tree, mount manganui, waioeka, opotiki, White Goose Winery, Gold medal plum wine, Feijoa (unique friut to NZ), top 10 campsites, kiwi campsites, whakatane, ohope, the ngaitai maoris, white island (smoking again in 2017 sadly a death trap dec 2019), whangamata, beaches, kahikatea range, young nick, Captain James Cook (definitely one of our heroes), otahu river, ocean beach, hauturu island, maukaha rocks, karangahake gorge, paeroa, waikino, railway café, bay of plenty, i-site, Maori poles, holiday baches. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. hobbit coat rack young nick gisborne 1/73 Monday February 18th 2013 Summary, Hot Water Beach to Papamoa Beach It rained at 8am but not for long. We left the campsite and drove to Hahei, Hahei beach and Cathedral Cove caves. Hahei is a small beach with lots of holiday homes most of which are closed, and empty given away by the shuttered blinds on windows. Clearly holiday baches. We then drove down along the highway to Waihi beach where we had lunch. There were steep roads crossing the Coromandel Ranges to get there. Some background info on Waihi Beach is it is a coastal town at the western end of the Bay of Plenty in New Zealand's North Island. It lies 10 kilometres to the east of the town of Waihi, at the foot of the Coromandel Peninsula. The main beach is 10 kilometres long. The town had a permanent population of 2,730 as of June 2021. At the northern end of Waihi Beach, the 145 hectares (360 acres) Orokawa Scenic Reserve offers several short walking tracks along the coast and to Orokawa Bay. While the main beach is backed by the residential area of the township of Waihi Beach, Orokawa Bay is undeveloped and surrounded by native bush including pohutukawa, puriri, and nikau palms. At the southern end of the beach is the small settlement of Bowentown and the northern side of the northern Katikati entrance to Tauranga Harbour. Waihi beach is a lovely sandy bay. We saw 2 men fishing with long nets from a few metres off the beach, but they did not catch any flounder or snapper which they said was what they were after. We then drove further on down Highway 25 through KatiKati which is the township with lots of wall art as murals. Often referred to as the Mural Town. This time we didn’t stop as we had seen them before, but we did pay a revisit in 2017 see out HOLIDAY2017 site with pals https://www.holiday2017.co.uk , thanks for looking We arrived at Tauranga , a very busy city with an oil refinery, harbour and port with many container ships, a real working transport hub for New Zealand. We drove through quickly and on to the wonderful Mount Manganui., which is a volcanic peak and along the beach stretching for miles to Papamoa. There are lots of expensive looking houses and apartments fronting the beach. We checked into the Top 10 campsite right on the beach at Papamoa. It cost $44 a night (£22) and paid an extra $4 for a beach plot on Ocean drive. Worth every penny, this is our fave campsite in all the world. Anne put some washing in the machine in the laundry costing $4 and then we both walked to the local shops to buy ice creams as by now it was hot and sunny. Anne hung up washing when we were back and chatted to a couple from Windemere, Cumbria , the Lake District, UK. Then we took our chairs onto the beach , we also went in the sea to jump the big waves, exhilarating, it is the Pacific Ocean. We sat on the beach and watched the surf club on speedboats and canoes practicing. We then had showers and dinner, it was a lovely day and a lovely place to be and the end of the day. Tuesday February 19th 2013 Summary, Papamoa Beach to Rotorua Light rain very briefly. Grass still very dry and brown everywhere as no proper rain for 2 months we were told. There were now some water restrictions in New Zealand as most reservoirs were low or running dry. Keef did dump station black water and took on fresh water in the van ready for our onward travels today. We drove onto the outskirts of Tauranga which had grown so big from our memories 5 years ago, then onto Matamata and Hobbiton. It is based on the Alexanders farm just outside Matamata. This is the Hobbit village movie set for the Lord of the Rings (and Hobbit) movies made by Peter Jackson. We had booked our tickets online the previous night $150 for 2 tickets i.e., £75 total in English money. We got the tour coach from the information centre in Matamata which drove 20 minutes to a local sheep / cattle ranch. The film scouts had searched for a location that matched the description in the Tolkien book and found this farm was ideal. Took 9 months to film and the farmers had to sign a non-disclosure and confidentiality agreement so nothing leaked out into the public domain. The tour guides took us around the village, a lovely setting with a lake, mills, the Green dragon pub, all thatched, and hobbit homes set into the hillsides with quaint little gardens, just so cute. We saw a big tree up on the green and Bilbo Baggins and Frodo’s house, not inside obviously as those scenes were filmed in Wellington at the studios. It was very interesting to hear about the logistics of filming and creating the set. The tour was about 2 hours long and ended with a free drink in the Green Dragon pub. A real Wedding had recently been held on the set with the ceremony held under the big tree and all the guests get the option to wear the stick on ears, feet and hands of a hobbit, hilarious. We returned by coach to the town and had McDonalds and milkshakes as it was now getting late. We then drove to Rotorua which took about 1 hour and camped at the Top 10 site there by the Blue Lake. The price was $41.40. The smell of Sulphur as we drove past Rotorua Lake was most distinctive and what we remembered well from our last trip there. We shopped at Countdown for supplies, the campsite was fringed by bush and hills but sadly there were no kiwis calling, maybe they don’t like bad egg smells either tee-hee. Wednesday February 20th 2013 Summary, Rotorua to Gisborne via Whakatane Shopped at Pak N’ Save Rotorua and Anne went into Spotlight and bought some fabric. We then drove on Highway 30 past 3 lakes and saw someone swimming and schoolgirls canoeing / kayaking. The weather was warm and sunny. We stopped for lunch at Whakatane by the jetty and council offices. There were some heritage buildings in this town. On leaving the town for Ohope we went up a very steep curving hill. Ohope had an inner estuary with people sun bathing on the grass, it was a very hot sunny day. Some info on Ohope is Ōhope, until 1974 known as Ohope Beach, is a beach settlement in the eastern Bay of Plenty, on the northeast coast of the North Island of New Zealand, six kilometres east and over the hill, from Whakatāne We then went onto Opotiki, a very long beach with lots of driftwood and tree logs washed up on its shores. We took a photo of a Māori carved totem pole here. Some info on the town of Ōpōtiki is it is situated exactly on latitude 38° South. The climate is temperate. Summer temperatures reach the mid-20s (Celsius, mid-70s Fahrenheit) on the coast and encourage a continuation of the beach culture of the Bay of Plenty. Winter days are often cloudless, the daytime temperature never drops below freezing but there may be a mild frost at night. Winter snow falls along the crest of the ranges, and on the higher peaks (over 1000 m) may remain for a few weeks. Rain occurs at any season. Severe localised rainstorms ('cloudbursts') may occur in the high country and have caused flash flooding including past inundations of Ōpōtiki township. To give it is full name it is Ōpōtiki-Mai-Tawhiti. Here is a picture taken in 1871 at Opotiki, a very interesting township. We then turned south along Highway 2 to Gisborne, it was a very twisty road through the Kahikatea Range, a bush trees and forest area. Lots of lorries use this route we discovered, and many were loggers. We stopped for lunch by a picnic area near the big bridge over the gorge and river. The road then went through a hill farming area and again the grass was very dry and brown. We arrived in Gisborne late afternoon and stayed at the Top 10 site there, costing $32. This site was not as listed 4 stars but, in our opinion, only 2 stars. The facilities were poor and very old fashioned. We went for a walk along to the statue of Captain Cook and young nick who was his cabin boy who spotted landfall in New Zealand and is immortalised in bronze rightly for this. They landed in Gisborne and a Maori haka made them think they were being attacked so Cook’s crew sadly killed them. We bought boysenberry ice cream just outside Whakatane and some yummy plum wine from a Liverpool man’s house called White Goose winery, corner of SH30 and Luxton Road. Superb $15 a bottle he had won gold medals for it, he showed us around and even let us try his passionflower fruit that was growing up the side of his house, so scrumptious. Home of Feijoa, Plum and Berry Fruit wines, Whakatane's first boutique winery established in 1983. That’s all for now folks. NEW ZEALAND, Taranaki area,27 Feb - 1 Mar 2013 Including Taranaki area, Whanga, New Plymouth, Waitomo, Hamilton, New Zealand, Taranaki area 27 feb – 1 mar 2013, new plymouth, waitomo caves, hamilton, covering amongst others 145 selective slideshow images, whangamomona, te rewa and the te rewa bridge, douglas, forgotten world highway, state highway 34, tupare gardens, hallard gardens, kiwis, bbqs, cape light house, doves, east end beach, fruit wines, plum, boysenberry, whakatane, flowers, stratford, all things shakespeare, the bard, Glockenspiel town clock, otorohanga, opunake, surf highway, strathmore, mount taranaki, cape egmont, opunake, egmont national park, Mt Messenger, Matau, state highways 3 & 3A, visitors centres, Te Kuiti, rugby, hamilton gardens , taumarunai, whanga, wanganui national park, fitzroy beach, waiwhakaiho river, tupare house, orangery, ferns, sir ed hillary, top 10 sites, waikato river, Otorohanga kiwi house, bought kiwi as replacement for phoenix (lost original found in dressing gown 2019 stored in our garage ), greenslade house, hayes paddock, turtle lake, hamilton gardens, rogers rose garden, paradise gardens, Chinese scholars garden, japenese garden of contemplation, Indian char bagh garden, Italian renaissance garden, English flower and American modernist gardens, te parapara maori gardens. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. annie _ te rewa rewa bridge blue kiwi chick 1/73 Wednesday February 27th 2013 Summary, The Republic of Whangamomona to New Plymouth. Set off along the rest of the Forgotten World Highway, State Highway 34. Climbed some very high mountain ridges and zig zag roads, with sheer drops to the river gorge and valleys below. Bit scary. Took lots of photos along the route. There was a small hamlet called Douglas in the valley, mainly farming made is chuckle and take a photo for later doctoring especially for Mr. Douglas. The Forgotten World Highway ended at Stratford. All streets were names after Shakespeare’s characters from his plays. We went into the Tourist information centre and met the local lady MP. The Glockenspiel town clock chimed several times a day, sadly we missed it as allegedly spectacular. Click on the link in the summary on the Taranaki page to get more details about this fascinating town. We then went through Eltham , which is an old town starting circa 1912 and turned to go into Opunake, a black sand beach with poor surfing conditions which is odd because it is on what was inaptly names the Surf Coast Highway, ha-ha. We then carried on the surf highway to Cape Egmont and saw a small lighthouse, with black basalt housing edging the Tasman Sea. We arrived in New Plymouth where we had previously camped with the kids , we drove through the city and the main shops to the Top 10 site which cost $43 for the night. We the n went for a swim in the site’s heated pool, very nice and relaxing. We chatted to a local farmer who bragged about his cars, farm, motorcycles etc, Were we impressed, guess? He then told us he was paralysed from jumping from a great height into a pond, brawn rather than brain but we did show some sympathy. Annie did wash in the laundry, a little black and white kitten was roaming around the campsite. We talked to some Aussies from New South Wales who were here on holiday. They were in a very tiny tent. Thursday February 28th 2013 Summary, New Plymouth to Waitomo Caves. Drove around the city centre and then visited the new wave design bridge called Te Rawa over the Waiwhakaiho river and board walk just north of the city centre. There were lots of landscaped parks and picnic areas. The board walk was used by both walkers and cyclists. We then visited Tupare Gardens, In 1932 Sir Russell and Lady Matthews started to create a garden from a gorse covered wilderness on the edge of the Waiwhakaiho River around their family home. It was very steep as built on a hillside , there were nice shrubs and plants and it had been superbly landscaped. We liked it a lot. We then drove to North Egmont visitors centre on a sealed road. Mount Taranaki as it is better and now know , using its original Māori Name rather than that bestowed by the Brits, is 2518 metres high. A dormant volcano which last erupted in 1755. It was covered in cloud today at the top. It was a very windy & winding road to get to the Visitors centre. In winter the volcano is totally covered in snow. We then headed north on the 3a motorway and then the number 3 highway east. Many farms then the scenery got dramatically hillier around Mount Messenger. We stopped for a very late lunch around 4 p.m. at Matau for a snack. It was a very scenic route on highway 3 up to Te Kuiti, the NZ sheep shearing capital, we saw a few sheep on farms, all of which had very yellowing grass, it was a large town but realistically not much worth seeing so we drove through reasonably quickly. We turned off for the Top 10 campsite at Waitomo Caves. Costing $41.40 so on the more expensive end but worth it. We had seen the glow worm caves before , use the link in the overview if you wish to see more. The campsite was quite modern with both a swimming pool and hot tub. Had a swim, shower and cheese and biscuits with the lovely Plum wine we had got from the White Goose Winery near Whakatane. Yummy. There were schoolboys in the cabins on an excursion, they were very noisy and that was added to by teachings trying to control them, and if I’m honest failing. Friday March 1st 2013 Summary, Waitomo Caves to Hamilton. 30 degrees centigrade or 86 degrees Fahrenheit. In the 5 years since we had been to Waitomo caves the area had changed a lot, the new Top 10 campsite, a café, tourist information office, and lots of other touristy things. Indeed, the area was now a Mecca for tourists because of the Glow worm caves. We then set off for Otorohanga, we called in at the Kiwi House to get a replacement kiwi for Phoenix as she had lost the one Doug had bought her here back in 2008. In fact we bought 2 kiwi’s one chirps when you squeeze it, novel. Saw the same noisy school trip again who had sadly landed at the Kiwi House, we left pronto. We then drove onto Hamilton, luckily our Sat Nav came in useful as Hamilton is a very big city, 2nd we guessed only to Auckland in size, Wellington feels more compact. Sprawling suburbs in Hamilton and plenty of road works. We did a shop for food at New World supermarket. We then had a bit of a nightmare getting to the campsite because of the major road works improving Hamilton’s ring road. Annie did some laundry $4, and Keef prepared lunch. It was another hot sunny day . We then drove off to park near the Botanical gardens so we could do the river walk along to them. The campsite owner had told us where to park, very useful. It was about a mile walk to the gardens but fun however the views of the Waikato River were not great as it was totally overgrown with trees and bushes. We found the gardens and it was free entry, which was nice. We saw a lot of roses then found the i-site information office and picked up a map of the gardens which proved very useful. We then visited lots of individual paradise gardens including , with the Indian garden with nice Mogul architecture in a courtyard garden with a fountain and raised terrace. The English flowers throughout the Māori garden were interesting, plus gourds and kumara growing and lots of traditional wood carvings. We then walked back to the motorhome; it must have been over 3 miles we had walked in the boiling hot afternoon sun in the end. We then returned to the Hamilton holiday park campsite, which cost $38 to stay at, we were both very tired. It got dark at about 8.30 p.m. NEW ZEALAND, North Island, Keri Keri, 12-14 Feb 2013 Northlands including Keri Keri, Cape Reinga, Whatuwhiwhi & Manganui, New Zealand, Northlands 12-14 feb 2013 kerikeri, cape reinga, Manganui, 90 mile beach, car stuck in the sand with tide coming in oh dear!, apihara, Whatuwhiwhi, covering amongst others 174 selective slideshow images, long beach outside russell, cape reinga, okiato, opua, car ferry, paihia, haruru, haruru falls, waitangi, waitangi river, rainbow falls, Christ church Russell alledgedly the oldest in NZ , waipekakoura river, million dollar view, kumara, whangaroa, woodland walk, stone store, st james church 1868, kerikeri basin & woodland walks, Kemp mission house, cavalli islands, matuari bay, st paul's rock, marlin hotel, blue marlin, doubtless bay, mill bay suites where we stayed 2007, Pak N' Save supermarkets, endless fruit, wine and veg especially kumara in Northlands, karikari peninsular, parakerake beach and bay, waipapakauri, mitimiti stream, te kao, state highway 1, sheep, kiwi parks and top 10 camp sites, st. james church grounds kerikeri where annie's edmonds rellies are buried, awanui, kaitaia, brancott estate wines, bbqs, karikari coastline, John Edmond's house ruins off Edmonds road is a New Zealand National trust heritage building and rightly so, the true work of a great stonemason. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. whatuwhiwhi pronounced fat-u-fi-fi but we prefer watch-u-wee-wee us at millionaires view 1/88 Tuesday February 12th 2013 Summary Russell to Kerikeri Woke at 7.35 a.m. had showers then breakfast. Posted 3 postcards and then visited the church in Russell, allegedly the oldest in New Zealand. It was a hot sunny day again. We then drove through the town to see long beach a little sandy bay. We then drove to the car ferry catching it at okaito to opua, cost $18.50 which is about £9.50 pounds, saving a massive journey around to get to Paihia, foolishly we didn’t do it in 2017 and Chris slowly punctured his tyre on the gravel roads manufacturing itself fully near Cape Reinga. Paihia, we had gone on a boat trip back in 2007 with Craig & Doug to see the dolphins. We gave it a miss this time around. We then went to the Waitangi treaty grounds (1840) and Haruru Falls (meaning in Māori unlimited water). We arrived at the campsite in Keri Keri at 12.20 just after noon. It is a small town with lots of fruit and wine farms and spin off shops. We walked about a mile through the shops to St. James church where some of Annie’s Edmonds relatives were buried. We then walked to the Stone Store and paid $10 for a guided tour of Kemp House (mission) next door, and an upstairs exhibition about the mission and the history of Māori in the far north, all very interesting. John Edmonds born 1799 in Swanage, Dorset, England died Kerikeri 1865, was a stone mason who emigrated with his family to work for the Church missionary society in Kerikeri. He was Anne’s 2nd cousin 4 times removed as witness by our family tree, a man to be rightly proud of. The lady who did our guided tour around Kemp house for just the two of us was very chatty. Anne found records about John Edmonds but as it was 5 p.m. and the Stone Store was closing the kind shop staff said we could return tomorrow with the same tickets to continue our genealogical research, think really, they found it quite interesting to have visitors from the UK who had a link to this Stone Store and Kemp house. We chatted to Kawi, a Māori lady who worked at the stone store shop who told us she had 2 aunts who had married Edmonds. She was very smiley and helpful. She told us there had been an Edmonds reunion in Kerikeri the last year, which was a huge gathering from far and wide, plus there were still Edmonds families living in Kerikeri. Another kind Kiwi lady gave us a lift back up the hill in her car. We had dinner at 7.15 p.m., a busy but fruitful day with lots of history about both New Zealand and the Bay of Islands area, great fun. Wednesday February 13th 2013 Summary Kerikeri to Whatuwhiwhi (pronounced Fatufifi not as you might expect what you wee wee which always makes me laugh ha-ha) After breakfast we went again to the Stone Store as Anne wanted to look at some books there about John Edmonds. We took lots of photos. We then drove along the inlet road to Edmonds Road to the old ruins of the Edmonds family dwelling. Acres of land with black basalt dry stone walling, perfect for a stone mason. The house was a ruin, no roof, windows or doors but the walls and chimney were still standing. It is now registered as NZ National Trust as a heritage building. We saw old peach and fig trees near the house which was quite large for the time. It took 18 years to build in stages adding extensions. We then returned to town to see the other side of the water looking back at the stone store, wonderful views. We did not go into the Māori village as very touristy reconstruction and besides we had seen a more realistic one at Rotorua back in 2008. We spoke to an old NZ couple from Hamilton. We then visited Rainbow falls which is 27 meters high. We bought 4 avocados from a house on the inlet road for $2 a bargain. Fruit & veg and wine is grown all around Kerikeri. We then bought some vegetables and 2 steak and cheese pies from a local grocer. We then set off for Matuari Bay along the coastal scenic road and stopped for lunch as a viewpoint called million dollar view which was true, with fab view of Matuari Bay, the whole coastline and the Cavalli islands, just superb. At Whangaroa we drove 2kilometres further to the harbour, it is the Marlin fishing capital of NZ. We weren’t disappointed as some guys had just brought in 2 huge Marlin on a boat. One weighted 165 kg apparently took 2 hours to reel in and the other was large as well. The largest caught there was 195 kg, see the pictures to get an understanding of what a whopper these fish are. We understandably took lots of photos, what a privilege to have witnessed it. We then drove through Manganui on a nostalgia trip re snapping the Mill Bay suites for old times sake. We then turned up the Kari Kari peninsular to Whatuwhiwhi Top 10 campsite arriving at 6 p.m. This was an expensive site costly $45 but in a fabulous position right on the beach. We walked on the beach and paddled in the sea. K cooked garlic prawns and coconut rice. It was 26 degrees Centigrade today. Thursday February 14th 2013 Summary Whatuwhiwhi to Ahipara via the top end 90-mile beach and Cape Reinga. 24 degrees centigrade. Anne got up at 7.30 a.m. and did some washing in the laundry. After breakfast we drove back down the Kari Kari peninsular and then took the route to Cape Reinga. We stopped at Waipapakauri beach to see 90-mile beach which is designated a road by NZ authorities, 4-wheel drive cars only of course. We saw an ordinary car stuck fast in deep sand by a kiwi drive, not a tourist. The beach is 64 miles long. We returned to the main road and continued north through farmland, mainly cattle as sheep no longer profitable. It was lovely scenery mostly coast and sand dunes. Another hot and sunny day but with sea breezes to cool you. We arrived at Cape Reinga and parked the motorhome and walked down the sloping zig-zag pathway to the lighthouse. Māori legend says this place is where the dead spirits depart and is therefore sacred to them. Also, the Tasman meets the Pacific here. We could not see any whales despite looking. We had lunch in our van, such great views. Anne got melted tar on her sandal it was that hot. We returned down the same route on State Highway 1 and stopped at a pack n save supermarket for groceries. The guy’s car stuck in the sand was now encircled by water, poor chap but maybe should have read the warning signs first. There are lots of Māori’s in this far north area, we tried not to stare at some of the Māori ladies with their faces heavily tattooed as that is disrespectful to their culture, but it was hard as to us anyhow so unusual. Found a Kiwi Park campsite at Ahipara (we joined this campsite chain as well) which is at the south end of 90-mile beach. Anne did the laundry, Keef did a lovely barbeque of steak, sausages, salad and grilled kumara (sweet potato) chips on the camp BBQ. We sat at a huge kauri table and bench , beautiful wood, to eat it and washed it down with a lovely kiwi Brancott estate sav blanc. We chatted to a retired couple from Rotorua. Tomorrow we are heading down towards Dargaville via the kauri forests. NEW ZEALAND, Hawkes Bay Area, North Island, 21-23 Feb 2013 NEW ZEALAND, New Zealand, Hawkes Bay area, 21-23 feb 2013, wairoa, QE2 and American tourists in Napier, taupo, earthquakes, Lake Taupo is the same size as Singpapore, views of Tongariro National Park from Lake Taupo, rose gardens and parks, Spa Park in Taupo, we have covering amongst others 103 selective slideshow images, rotorua, mount doom, lake rotorua, boysenberry & feijoa ice-cream, hoki poki, ruepehi, sunken gardens, art deco, black swans, fejioa, bungee jumping, earthquakes in this region, huka river, criterion hotel, 1930s, kinloch, lake tuito, marine parade, museums, artwork, hawkes bay, whaiapunga falls, pohutakawa trees in bloom, top 10 site taupo, bay view, gisborne, wairoa river, waikiki lagoon, picnics, mohaka river, viaduct, berry farm and berry ice cream, Bay View Snapper holiday park (now Napier Beach) , kiwi parks campsites, thermal explorer highway (state highway 5), fruit ice creams, yummy, kaweka forest park, lucky escape Wairoa had an earthquake at 4.3 on the Richter scale at 7.15 p.m. on the 22nd, we were only there yesterday. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. keef, huka falls in the background lunch sh2 mohaka railway viaduct 1/52 Thursday February 21st 2013 Summary, Gisborne to Wairoa to Bay View just north of Napier We drove around Gisborne on the way to Wairoa. Gisborne had many palm trees down the centre of the main street, it is quite an old town, New Zealand of course calls it a city, despite in UK terms its relative size. We stopped in Wairoa which is on a large river. In 1930 it had been flattened by an earthquake although some of the buildings had survived. We used the walkway by the river which had huge date palms and cycads and Pohutukawa trees. It was very sunny, but our stroll allowed us to take in both river views and the architecture of the high street. We then drove through the town after our circular walk back to the van, out to a point where there was a beach, we had camped in Wairoa in 2008 and remember with some fondness the BBQ made from the back end of an old 1950’s car. Wairoa had seen better days, most of the shops were tatty and a lot were now sadly empty. We then carried onto Bay View, just north of Napier. Highway 2 which we traveled on was very twisty up and down mountains lined with a lot of bushes, also a lot of lorries transporting timber in the form of newly cut logs. We arrived at Bay View having stopped at a real fruit ice cream place on the highway as it was a very hot day and who are we to refuse the opportunity of yet another ice-cream, well not us ha-ha. We stayed at the Kiwi Parks Bay View Snapper Holiday Park (by 2022 it has been renamed at Napier Beach) Anne was not impressed it was supposedly 4 stars, she thought more like 2. Very overpriced at $44. The beach was black shingle and looked a bit like a highway roads depot gravel supply. As it was sunny weather Anne did some hand washing, the showers cost $1 extra which was a complete rip off as we thought the site was charging too much anyhow. Not impressed. It rained slightly overnight. Friday February 22st 2013 Summary, Bay View Snapper Holiday Park to Napier Town to Taupo. We slept in until 9.30 a.m. obviously tired. It was cloudy and overcast when we got up which made the site feel even drearier than it was. Drove into Napier which we have seen before but it is a lovely place. Very 30s after the earthquake forced a complete rebuild. The QE2 cruise ship was in port which made the place incredibly busy with American tourists. We walked along Marine parade gardens which are just lovely, and all the flowers were out in full bloom. Just so colourful. We then saw Scottish bagpipers in the shopping precinct, Napier has a strong Scottish feel , their influence is quite widespread in NZ but not particularly welcome in places like Waitangi where they exchanged vast acreage of land for a couple of sheep, now that is what I call taking advantage of the natives. There were lots of old vintage cars to take tourists on a trip around the town. We walked around the town and bought a small hand luggage sized flight bag on wheels costing $59 (or £31) in a deep purple colour. We stored it under the seat in the motorhome ready for use on our trip to Oz and Singapore to carry a few extras. Earthquakes, it should be noted that in 1931 Napier had an earthquake that was 7.8 on the Richter scale, in 1932 Wairoa had an earthquake that was 6.8 on the Richter scale and today (remember we were there only yesterday) Wairoa had an earthquake at 4.3 on the Richter scale at 7.15 p.m. a lucky escape me thinks! They don’t call it the shaky isles for nothing. The epicenter was actually 35 kms south of Wairoa but it was well and truly felt there. We then took highway 5 out of Napier heading north to Taupo on the Thermal Explorer Highway. We saw forests, gorges, and mountainous scenery plus a waterfall, all very nice. This journey took about 3 hours as we stopped for a brief lunch at a picnic stop. We arrived at Taupo to sunshine, a very blue lake which in case you don’t know is massive, the size of Singapore in fact. We visited it with C&D&P in 2008 where we attempted fishing not with much success, tee hee. Taupo itself is a very busy city stretched out over a wide site but with no high-rise buildings. We got to the Top 10 5-star resort campsite in Taupo at 4 p.m. We then spent the rest of the afternoon in the thermally heated swimming pool with a constant temperature of 30 degrees centigrade, just lovely. The weather was very warm at 24 degrees centigrade, and there were lots of tents, motorhomes and families on the site being as it was the start of a weekend and kiwis love the outdoor life. Saturday February 23rd 2013 Summary, Taupo. 26 degrees centigrade and overcast at first but sunny and blue skies by 10 a.m. Sadly a little girl in the tent on a pitch behind us screamed continually until 5.30 a.m. Annoyingly the parents did nothing to comfort her. Other campers made complaints to the Top 10 site office but there wasn’t much they could do about it and anyway the night was over by then. We went into Taupo to Pak N Save to do some food shopping and drew money out of a Westpac Bank machine. We then walked around the fascinating harbour area, with great views of the 3 mountains in the Tongariro National Park, one had snow on top. We then visited the rose garden and a small park beside the harbour. Lake Taupo looked fantastic, blue clear waters and surrounded by mountain ranges. The lake as I think we said earlier is the same size as Singapore. The country not just the city. It is huge. We then drove out to Kinloch round the lake and had lunch thereon our camp chairs. It was a shingle beach but there were lots of people swimming and riding on jet-skis. A lovely bay, we could not see Taupo as Kinloch sets it apart via a promontory. A man got cramp whilst wearing flippers and snorkeling off the beach, he called out for help and a family who had a jet ski rescued him and bought him back to shore, good stuff. We had an ice-cream (again tee hee) It was Tip Top again, the best in NZ in our opinion. Boysenberry obviously. We bought them from a café in Kinloch. We then drove back to Taupo and stopped at the Spa Park. Lots of people were walking down the hill to go to the hot springs and spa. We then went to watch the bungee jumpers down Spa Road, near our campsite. Besides dangling from an elastic band there was also a chair on a rope option. You wouldn’t get us on them but fun to watch even over the screams, ha-ha. They were jumping down a river canyon. Back at the campsite we went swimming. A very relaxing day and gorgeous weather. Back home in England it was 2 degrees centigrade with more snow, I think we made the right choice. NEW ZEALAND, Back to Auckland, 2 - 5 Mar 2013 Back to Auckland via Papamoa Beach, Karangahake Gorge & More, New Zealand, Back to Auckland 2-5 mar 2013, Tauranga, Papamoa beach 2nd time, Shopping Mall at Papamoa including the Warehouse store, Cambridge - horse breeding area, Hamilton city centre has some 1930s architecture, karangahake, manukau city, Farmer's department store, kiwi hotel, covering amongst others 47 selective slideshow images, kiwi hotel, Auckland, ocean drive, beach road, sunsets, chillin, mainland creamy blue cheese and biscuits washed down with plum wine, sunsets and waves crashing, music on the beach, 2nd visit this time to our fave campsite, kite surfing, wake boarding, mount manganui, beach strolls, waves and warmth from the sun, ice creams, reading, tea breaks, karangahake river, gorge, bridges, info boards, goldmining, suspended walkways, NZ census, talisman mill. We were previously in this area in 2007 and then again in 2017. wobbly bridges _ karangahake gorge views from ocean drive, papamoa 1/24 Saturday March 2nd 2013 Summary, Hamilton to Papamoa Beach. 24 degrees centigrade. Another lovely summers day. Drove through Hamilton city centre to see it, nothing to write home about I’m afraid, just another busy city. We saw the Waikato River again from the other side. We would class Hamilton as a small town rather than a big city, but we come from the UK. The city centre had 3 main streets with some 1930s architecture. We then took Highway 1 through to Cambridge, which is a horse breeding area. We then headed for Tauranga on the Pacific coast and back to Papamoa beach again as we liked the lovely long sand beach and waves so much first time. We can now officially call it our fave campsite in the whole world having returned in 2017. Maybe that won’t be the last time. You never know. We arrived at 12 noon so before check in time for a Top 10 site so we went down the road to Papamoa’s shopping mall. Keef bought a Hawaiian shirt for $8 in the sale in the Warehouse. Then we had a drive around the area, some new houses on estates and saw all the colleges and schools, reminded us of California in look and feel. However, in our humble opinion Papamoa beach rivals any Californian beach. We eventually checked into the campsite at 1p.m. $45 per night, booked 2 nights as we like it so much, same pitch as last time with a view of the beach and so close to it, we even get an outside shower at the end of the pitch to wash off the sand, what more could you ask for. Spent the afternoon on the beach listening to music and watching kite surfers. We both went in the sea, there were some pretty big waves, so we didn’t venture far. Had a lovely dinner with the last of the plum wine , cheese and biscuits , our fave creamy mainland blue and we sat outside the motorhome at dusk watching the sun set and listening to the sound of the waves crashing on the beach, just perfect, so love Papamoa Beach. Sunday March 3rd 2013 Summary, Papamoa Beach. 28 degrees centigrade, 83 degrees Fahrenheit. Spent a very relaxing day on the beach and the campsite. There were a few clouds first thing in the morning, but they soon moved inland. Then it was blue skies, sea, and sunshine all the way, yippee! The light sea breeze kept the temperature not too hot. We walked along the beach towards Mount Manganui, which is another supposedly extinct volcano., along the waters edge and foreshore for about an hour. Had lunch on our picnic table and then sat on the beach in the afternoon. There were kite surfers, body surfers , a surf lifesaving boat but only a few people on the beach considering it was good weather and a Sunday. We had changed our pitch site as caravans on either side of us had gone this morning so we could get the pitch right next to the sea. We were now Pitch S9, Beach Street, pole position. Previously we have been in S7 and S8. At 6 p.m. after a nice cup of tea Annie did some hand washing, Keef did BBQ chicken, bacon, egg and salad on the campsite gas barbeque up in the kitchens. We noticed it now gets dark at 8.15 p.m., still no lovely sunsets to photo though. The east coast of New Zealand is nicer than the west for beaches, apart from Napier and the Gisborne area. Monday March 4th 2013 Summary, Papamoa Beach to Manukau City. We left the campsite at 10 a.m. and drove to the mall at Manukau to look for a T-shirt for Doug. Sadly, we did not find anything at all suitable, so we drove on to the Top 10 site at Manukau City. Good job we had the Sat nav if not we would never have found it. Annie did some final hand washing after a late lunch. Decided we would pack our stuff in the Kiwi motel car park. Anne cleaned the inside of the motorhome. By 7pm the campsite was packed full as it is the nearest one to the Auckland airport. Tuesday March 5th 2013 Summary, Manukau City to Kiwi Motel Auckland. We had to hand back the motorhome by 2pm to Britz. We left the campsite at 10 a.m. and went to another shopping mall to look for a T-shirt for Doug. Had a look in Farmer’s a department store in the Westfield shopping centre in Manukau. We drove to the Kiwi motel at 12 noon but could not check in yet, so we packed up our belongings into our suitcases in the motorhome. We then checked into the motel and dropped our fully packed bags off into our room. We then drove the van to the motorhome depot to drop it off. The total mileage on the clock was now 250, 370 km. No damage to the van. We told the employee there about the squeaky brakes and a few other minor problems with the van, no doubt they would take no notice, however Keef managed to get 1 days compensation out of them, $180 was refunded, not bad really. We returned to the Kiwi motel, had a shower, and ate there in the evening. We had to complete the NZ census forms as visitors and handed them into the motel reception. Very tired went to bed as have to get up early tomorrow for flight to Australia. Miles driven in New Zealand. 250, 370 minus 246,253 kms equals 4,117 kms or 2, 559 Miles 🌏 Summary of “2013 Travelling North Island New Zealand by Motorhome” The page chronicles a month‑long motorhome journey across New Zealand’s North Island from 6 February to 5 March 2013, forming part of a wider long‑haul adventure through Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore. It is presented as a rich blend of travel diary, campsite guide, photo archive, and personal storytelling—particularly meaningful because it includes the couple’s 35th wedding anniversary, celebrated in Tongariro National Park. The narrative begins with arrival in Auckland after long flights from Malaysia via Brisbane, complete with jet lag, a memorable lamb curry at the Kiwi Airport Motel, and even completing the New Zealand census as visitors. After collecting their Mercedes Sprinter motorhome, the couple heads north to Orewa, rekindling memories from their 2007–08 gap‑year trip. They join the Top 10 and Kiwi Holiday Parks networks, which become essential throughout the journey for affordable, reliable camping. The early days explore Northlands, including Orewa, Whangārei, Tutukaka, and the Bay of Islands. The diary captures everyday pleasures—steak and cheese pies, pohutukawa trees, beach strolls, chats with locals—and practicalities like buying a Wi‑Fi dongle and SIM card. Highlights include Whangārei Falls, the marina and town basin, the Kauri Clock Factory, and the scenic Tutukaka Coast. A mishap with a plastic step leads to a painful bruise, adding humour and realism to the account. From Russell, the couple travels to Kerikeri, where family history becomes central. They visit St James Church, the Stone Store, and the ruins of the Edmonds family homestead—significant because Annie’s ancestors were early settlers and stonemasons in the area. The journey continues to Cape Reinga, the spiritual northern tip of New Zealand, and along 90‑Mile Beach, where they witness a local driver’s car becoming stranded in the sand. Heading south, the route passes through Matakohe, Dargaville, and the Coromandel Peninsula, with its winding roads, kauri forests, and dramatic coastal scenery. Stops include Muriwai’s black‑sand beach, Coromandel Town, Matarangi, Whitianga, and the famous Hot Water Beach, where they dig their own thermal pool at sunset—one of the trip’s most joyful moments. The Bay of Plenty section features Papamoa Beach, Rotorua, Gisborne, and the iconic Hobbiton movie set at Matamata. Papamoa becomes a favourite campsite, praised for its long sandy beach, warm Pacific waters, and relaxed atmosphere. The Hobbiton tour is described in detail, from the Green Dragon pub to Bilbo’s house, offering behind‑the‑scenes insights into filming. The journey then moves inland to Hawke’s Bay, Napier, and Taupo. Napier’s Art Deco architecture, cruise‑ship crowds, and Scottish influences stand out, as do the region’s earthquakes—past and present. Taupo offers thermal pools, lake views, rose gardens, and a visit to Kinloch, where a swimmer is rescued by jet‑ski. The emotional centrepiece of the page is the Tongariro National Park section, where the couple celebrates their 35th wedding anniversary. They revisit the Station Restaurant at National Park Village, where they had celebrated their 30th anniversary with their children. The diary describes volcanoes, the Raurimu Spiral railway, Tawhai Falls (Gollum’s Pool), Whakapapa Village, and attempts at kiwi‑spotting by torchlight. The anniversary dinner—rack of lamb, beef strips, and banana‑macadamia spring rolls—is lovingly detailed, symbolising the trip’s personal significance. From Tongariro, the couple drives the Forgotten World Highway to the quirky Republic of Whangamomona, famous for electing animals as presidents and stamping visitors’ passports. This stretch features gravel roads, tunnels, abandoned farms, and dramatic volcanic landscapes. The final leg covers Taranaki, New Plymouth, Waitomo, and Hamilton. Highlights include the Te Rewa Rewa Bridge, Tupare Gardens, Mount Taranaki, the Waitomo glowworm region, and the Hamilton Gardens with their themed “paradise” sections. The journey ends with a return to Papamoa Beach for two final days of sun, surf, and sunsets before heading back to Auckland to return the motorhome. Across 2,559 miles, the page blends humour, history, scenery, and personal memories. It serves as both a practical guide for motorhomers and a heartfelt record of a couple revisiting beloved places, discovering new ones, and marking a milestone anniversary in the land they love. 13 NZ Coromandel 13 Bay of Plenty 13 Hawkes Bay 13 Tongariro 35th WA 13 Taranaki 13 Auckland 13 NZ NI Summary

  • 2013 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Third Holiday of a Lifetime Trip

    A real 2013 travel diary across Malaysia, New Zealand, Australia and Singapore. Photos, stories and motorhome adventures from a once‑in‑a‑lifetime trip done 3 times. Long Haul and World Wide Travel Blog 2013 2013 Travel Long Haul Route Full travel route (chronological) Leg 0 – Departure from UK Home to Asia: Route: East Midlands/UK → Kuala Lumpur (via long‑haul flight, likely with a hub such as Dubai/Singapore). Trip start: 22 January (what would have been Dad’s 86th). Leg 1 – Malaysia (first visit, 23 Jan–5 Feb) Kuala Lumpur (KL): Base: Central KL hotel (near HOHO bus route). Key spots: HOHO city tour, Chinatown, Little India, Batu Caves, Concorde Inn, Hard Rock Café T‑shirt. Langkawi (wedding): Route: KL → Langkawi (domestic flight). Key spots: Kuah Town, island‑hopping (Bunting Island, Beras Basah, Pregnant Maiden Lake), wedding venue on Langkawi. Penang – Georgetown: Route: Langkawi → Penang (ferry/flight). Base: Cheong Fatt Tze’s Blue Mansion, UNESCO area. Key spots: Georgetown heritage streets, Chinatown, Little India, exotic fruits, Nasi Goreng, Batu Ferringhi. Exit Malaysia (1st time): Route: Penang/ KL → Auckland (via Asian hub). Leg 2 – New Zealand, North Island loop (6 Feb–5 Mar) Auckland pickup: Route: Arrive Auckland → collect Mercedes Sprinter 313 motorhome. Direction: Anti‑clockwise loop of upper North Island plus central regions. North of Auckland / Northlands: Orewa: First coastal stop, beach walks. Tutukaka / Whangārei area: Coast and Haruru Falls region. Bay of Islands: Russell, Keri Keri, Whatuwhiwhi. Far North: Ahipara/Apihara area, 90 Mile Beach, Cape Reinga (traffic fine picked up near here). East coast & Coromandel / Bay of Plenty: Coromandel Peninsula: Coromandel town, coastal drives. Hot Water Beach: Digging pools at low tide. Papamoa Beach (Bay of Plenty): Ocean Drive, long beach days. Hawke’s Bay & central plateau: Napier (Hawke’s Bay): Art Deco town. Lake Taupo & Kinloch: Lakeside camping, volcanic scenery. Tongariro area: National park landscapes and walks. Forgotten World & Taranaki: Whangamomona: “Republic” capital, remote roads. Taranaki region: Around Mt Taranaki and rural routes. Return to Auckland: Orewa revisit & Waves Motel: Final nights. Route end: Return motorhome in Auckland, 2,559 miles driven. Exit NZ: Route: Auckland → Sydney (flight). Leg 3 – Australia (6 Mar–6 Apr) Sydney & New South Wales: Base: Vaucluse / Eastern Suburbs. Key spots: Coastal walk Vaucluse → Watson’s Bay, Bondi and North Shore beaches, ocean pools, family & friends. Tasmania: Route: Sydney → Hobart (flight). Key spots: Time with family, Bruny Island, coastal scenery. Adelaide & South Australia: Route: Tasmania → Adelaide (flight). Pickup: Britz motorhome. Base: Adelaide Shores and surrounds. Eyre Peninsula & outback: Port Lincoln & Coffin Bay National Park: Coastal drives, seafood, national park. Coober Pedy & outback: Opal town, desert landscapes. Nullarbor crossing (3‑day epic): Route: Ceduna → Nullarbor Plain → Norseman. Distance: About 1,194 km / 742 miles. Notes: Slow puncture from cracked wheel rim en route. Western Australia coast: Esperance: Great Ocean Drive, beaches. Indian Ocean Drive: Coastal run north. Geraldton & Port Denison: Picnic on the shore, Indian Ocean views. Perth area & finish: Base: Perth region. Route end: Return Britz motorhome, total 3,810 miles driven in Australia. Exit Australia: Route: Perth → Singapore (flight). Leg 4 – Singapore & Malaysia side‑trip (7–21 Apr) Singapore base: Base: Geylang East, staying with Doug & Phoenix. City highlights: Gardens by the Bay & Marina Bay Sands (MBS). Botanic Gardens. Clarke Quay: Day and night river cruises. Jurong Bird Park. Little India & hawker centres. Raffles Hotel Long Bar: Singapore Slings. Local life: Geylang swimming pool, library, MRT everywhere, durian tasting. Malaysia side‑trip from Singapore: Route: Singapore (Woodlands crossing) → Johor Bahru → Melaka (Malacca). Melaka: UNESCO old town, Mr Li’s tea house, riverside walks, Hard Rock Café T‑shirt, some “rats & smells” along the river. Return: Melaka → Johor Bahru → Singapore. End of trip: Last night: Bad tummy, emotional goodbyes. Route: Singapore → UK (long‑haul flight back to East Midlands/Derbyshire). 13 Route Visuals 🌏 2013 Long Haul Trip — Summary Each item follows the structure: Stop | Country | Location | Date(s) | Notes Malaysia (Leg 1) Malaysia | Kuala Lumpur | Kuala Lumpur City | 23 Jan–26 Jan | HOHO bus, Chinatown, Little India, Batu Caves Malaysia | Langkawi | Kuah / Island Hopping | 26 Jan–31 Jan | Wedding, Pregnant Maiden Lake, Beras Basah Malaysia | Penang | Georgetown | 31 Jan–5 Feb | Blue Mansion, UNESCO old town, Batu Ferringhi New Zealand (Leg 2) New Zealand | Auckland | Auckland Arrival | 6 Feb | Collect motorhome New Zealand | Orewa | Orewa Beach | 7 Feb | First coastal stop New Zealand | Tutukaka / Whangārei | Tutukaka Coast | 8–9 Feb | Haruru Falls region New Zealand | Bay of Islands | Russell / Kerikeri | 10–12 Feb | Far North touring New Zealand | Ahipara | 90 Mile Beach | 13–14 Feb | Cape Reinga area New Zealand | Coromandel | Coromandel Town | 16–17 Feb | Coastal drives New Zealand | Hot Water Beach | Coromandel Peninsula | 18 Feb | Hot pools at low tide New Zealand | Papamoa | Bay of Plenty | 19–21 Feb | Long beach days New Zealand | Napier | Hawke’s Bay | 22–23 Feb | Art Deco town New Zealand | Taupo | Lake Taupo / Kinloch | 24–25 Feb | Lakeside camping New Zealand | Tongariro | National Park | 26 Feb | Volcanic landscapes New Zealand | Whangamomona | Forgotten World Hwy | 27 Feb | Remote republic town New Zealand | Taranaki | Mt Taranaki Region | 28 Feb | Rural touring New Zealand | Auckland | Orewa / Waves Motel | 1–4 Mar | End of loop, return motorhome Australia (Leg 3) Australia | Sydney | Vaucluse / Eastern Suburbs | 6–10 Mar | Coastal walks, Bondi, Watson’s Bay Australia | Tasmania | Hobart | 11–15 Mar | Family time, Bruny Island Australia | Adelaide | Adelaide Shores | 16–17 Mar | Collect Britz motorhome Australia | Port Lincoln | Eyre Peninsula | 18–20 Mar | Seafood, national park Australia | Coffin Bay | Coffin Bay NP | 21 Mar | Coastal scenery Australia | Coober Pedy | Outback | 22–23 Mar | Opal town Australia | Nullarbor | Nullarbor Plain | 24–26 Mar | 3‑day crossing, cracked wheel rim Australia | Esperance | Great Ocean Drive | 27–28 Mar | Beaches Australia | Geraldton | Port Denison | 29–30 Mar | Indian Ocean coast Australia | Perth | Perth Region | 31 Mar–6 Apr | End of Australian leg Singapore & Malaysia (Leg 4) Singapore | Singapore | Geylang East | 7–12 Apr | Staying with Doug & Phoenix Singapore | Singapore | Marina Bay / Gardens by the Bay | 13 Apr | MBS, Supertrees Singapore | Singapore | Clarke Quay | 14 Apr | River cruise Singapore | Singapore | Jurong Bird Park | 15 Apr | Wildlife Singapore | Singapore | Little India | 16 Apr | Hawker centres Malaysia | Johor Bahru | JB City | 17 Apr | Cross-border trip Malaysia | Melaka | Melaka Old Town | 18–19 Apr | UNESCO area, Mr Li’s tea house Singapore | Singapore | Geylang / City | 20–21 Apr | Final days, return prep Return Home United Kingdom | UK | Arrival | 21 Apr | Singapore → UK flight Malaysia, New Zealand, Australia & Singapore 2013 OUR "THIRD HOLIDAY OF A LIFETIME" HELLINGER TRAVEL RECORDs for 2013, Replicated by TRAVEL BLOG 167 Travel Blog fun. We have been lucky enough to spend 3 months away again recently, firstly in Malaysia where our youngest son "Mr. Douglas" got married on the lovely island of Langkawi. Our time in Malaysia included Kuala Lumpur (KL to its friends), Langkawi , Georgetown (Penang) and latterly Melaka (Malacca - the UNESCO World Heritage site) via Johor Bahru (JB to its friends). We then hired a Motorhome for a month to travel around the top half of North Island New Zealand (NZ). We had already spent 4 months seeing North & South island of this lovely country back in 2007/8 and wanted to see the places we missed out on last time, namely Cape Reinga, 90 mile beach, Hot water beach and the forgotten world highway. After NZ we returned to Australia both of us for the 4th time. Starting in Sydney with family & friends we had a great time. Then Tasmania again with family we flew into Adelaide to pick up our motorhome to travel the Nullabor plain from east to west but this time with a built in external gas BBQ, bliss! Including our previous trips to OZ we have now travelled around the outside from Cooktown (QLD) to Geraldton (WA) plus Broome, Kunannarra, Darwin (NT) and thru the middle on the Ghan including Alice & Uluru. We have been to all States and can thoroughly recommend Oz to anyone wanting an adventure. We HEART Oz & Nz big style. We finished our trip with 2 weeks in lovely Singapore with Doug and his new wife "Mrs. Phoenix". If we tot up the miles / kilometers we drove on this trip we can say we drove the equivalent of the distance from London to Tashkent (Uzbekistan).It is nice being back in the UK now to our own little Motorhome with a whole host of new & exciting trips to look forward to which you can see on our website motorhome-travels. This website shows some of our best pictures and Anne's diary as a memory of a truly wonderful time. Love K&A . We drove 7253 miles in total whilst away in both hire cars and motorhomes. Summary of those travel blog total miles driven is as follows:- In Motorhomes described via this travel blog 6369 (2559 in NZ, 3810 in Australia of which 742 were crossing the Nullarbor Plain), In Cars 884 (Sydney 187, Langkawi 342, Johor 2 Melaka 355) I suggest you read each travel blog section visited in conjunction with the appropriate travel blog days dairy, thanks for looking Hints and Tips - Weddings on Langkawi Island Weddings on Langkawi Island, Malaysia, what you need to know! Langkawi Island, located in Malaysia, is a serene and breathtaking destination that attracts visitors from all around the world. Nestled amidst the Andaman Sea, this tropical paradise is not only known for its stunning beaches and lush greenery but also for its enchanting wedding venues. If you are planning to tie the knot and are looking for a destination that offers unrivaled beauty and a touch of exoticism, then Langkawi Island may be the perfect choice for your dream wedding. Let's delve into what you need to know about weddings on Langkawi Island. First and foremost, when it comes to planning your wedding on Langkawi Island, it's important to find a reliable and professional wedding planner who specializes in destination weddings. These experts are well-versed in the local customs, laws, and procedures, ensuring a hassle-free and smooth planning process. They will assist you in securing the necessary permits, arranging transportation and accommodation for your guests, and curating the perfect wedding experience. Langkawi Island offers a plethora of stunning wedding venues, ranging from luxurious beach resorts to private villas and even traditional Malay kampong-style settings. One popular venue is the Four Seasons Resort Langkawi, boasting elegant spaces with breathtaking views of the Andaman Sea. This secluded resort provides an idyllic backdrop for exchanging vows and celebrating with your loved ones. Another distinctive option is The Datai Langkawi, an exquisite rainforest resort that seamlessly blends nature with luxury. Its pristine beaches and lush surroundings create an ethereal atmosphere for a romantic and unforgettable wedding ceremony. For couples seeking a more intimate and private affair, Langkawi also offers secluded beachfront villas that can be exclusively reserved for your special day. These secluded havens provide an intimate setting with personalized touches, allowing you to create memories that will last a lifetime. This is the full travel blog diary of our trip, stop the travel blog slideshow where you wish to read, however it is worth noticing that each individual travel blog page on the site has the travel blog diaries specific to that particular visit, mostly 3 days at a time. OUR ROUND THE WORLD FLIGHT TICKET ROUTE Pre Planning Makes perfect, I even enjoy the mental exercise, but it always pays off, the first Gallery shows Flags (with start and finish dates for each place visited) , Currency converter cheat sheets and finally the coins and notes of each nation, clearly the rates are somewhat different today (2022) 😉 ✅ Malaysia Footer kiwi flag hdr and footer start to end 1/10 2013 Slideshows Now follows a Summary slideshow of some of the memories from that lovely third trip of a lifetime, they are organised sequentially, clearly the complete set of images and slideshows is available under each 3 day diary write up , thanks for looking. The slideshow / gallery will run at 2 slides per 4 secs viewing , if you hover over and then click you will see full screen pop up and be able to scroll through at your own speed, the controls at the bottom of each gallery allow for forward or halt. NOTE this applies to all galleries throughout the site, enjoy and happy viewing Weddings on Langkawi Island Continued . One of the advantages of having a wedding on Langkawi Island is the abundance of natural beauty that surrounds you. From the azure blue waters to the stunning sunsets and lush rainforests, Langkawi Island offers unparalleled opportunities for breathtaking wedding photographs. Capture the magic of the island as you embark on your journey as a married couple. Aside from its natural wonders, Langkawi Island is renowned for its warm hospitality and delectable cuisine. Traditional Malay dishes intermingled with flavors from various cuisines are readily available to tantalize your taste buds. Plan a customized menu with your wedding planner and savor a gastronomic experience that will leave your guests craving for more. To make your wedding on Langkawi Island a truly memorable experience, take advantage of the nearby attractions and activities the island has to offer. From island hopping, thrilling water sports, to exploring the UNESCO World Geopark, Langkawi Island has something for everyone. Create unforgettable memories with your loved ones as you embark on new adventures together. In conclusion, if you envision a wedding in a breathtaking tropical paradise, Langkawi Island in Malaysia is an ideal choice. With its stunning venues, warm hospitality, and natural beauty, this island offers the perfect setting for your dream wedding. Enlist the assistance of a professional wedding planner who can guide you through the entire process, ensuring a seamless and enchanting experience. Celebrate your love in a destination that will leave you and your guests in awe. Long Haul Holiday Travel in 2013, 3 Months Away, 22nd January (what would have been Dad's 86th) and Snow to 21st April and Spring Bulbs Read the Travel Blog Diaries, Look at the Travel Blog Slideshows, See the You Tube Videos, Use the 2013 CHOICES MENU to Explore, 3 Days at a Time (mostly) Have Fun, This travel blog is referenced as our 3rd Holiday of a Lifetime to cover our trips in 2007/8 (Downunder) & 2010 (Across Canada), we have since had a 4th in 2017 (Downunder) Here is a schematic of the trip with the round the world (RTW) route mapped out including length of flights and number of days spent in each location. All the usual travel blog information can be found here. trad wedding photo, langkawi island, malaysia so happy for them 35th wedding anniversary, new zealand another wedding celebration, went to this lovely restaurant back in 2007-8 taken by nice japanese lady easter time, gardens by the bay, singapore trad wedding photo, langkawi island, malaysia so happy for them 1/13 Jan13 Final Feb13 Final Apr13 Original Jan13 Final 1/8 PLAY keef by the blue mansion door georgetown in very old age 1/78 PLAY Your Choices for 2013 Travel Guides Malaysia Travel Summary Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Kuah Town Islands Plus Wedding Penang Georgetown Malacca Travel Summary New Zealand Orewa Tutakaka Keri Keri Coromandel Bay of Plenty Hawkes Bay Tongariro Taranaki Back to Auckland Travel Summary Australia Vaucluse Sydney North Shores Tasmania Bruny Coober Coffin Bay Nullabor Esperance Geraldton Perth New Zealand Australia Travel Summary Singapore Hop on Hop off Bus Sentosa Island Jurong Bird Park Little India Singapore Malaysian Long Haul Travel Guide 2013 Including amongst others Langkawi,Penang, Malacca, Georgetown , 1st visit 23rd January to 5th February , then the second visit 12th April to 14 April, 17 days in total MALAYSIA 2013 OUR "THIRD HOLIDAY OF A LIFETIME" HELLINGER TRAVEL RECORDs for 2013, Replicated by TRAVEL BLOG 167 We were in Malaysia twice during our 3 months away. Initially for Doug & Phoenix's wedding on the lovely island of Langkawi and then again when we visited them at their home in Singapore where we slipped back over the border via Woodlands crossing into Johor (JB) before driving up to the Unesco World Heritage site @ Malacca (Melaka in Malay). Our 1st stay in Malaysia was initially centred around Kuala Lumpar (KL) using the Hop On Hop Off bus (HOHO) to look at various things then onto Langkawi then for 3 days at the end in Georgetown Penang another Unesco World Heritage site at Cheong Fatt Tze's Blue Mansion. Annie kept a diary and you can read that here on the website day by day as well as see the pictures we took as memories on each day. If you prefer to speed that viewing up you can view the slideshows for this country on each of those days. HIGHLIGHTS:- Doug & Phoenix's wedding Unesco Blue Mansion Georgetown Exotic Fruits Chinatown & Little India, Georgetown Evening tour of Malacca Food @ Concorde Inn KL Mr Li's tea house Melaka Monkeys on Bunting Island & Basah Bahai Pregnant Maiden Lake Hard Rock Cafe T-shirt from Malacca & Batu Ferrighe Penang Nasi Goreng LOWLIGHTS:- Bumps on island boat hop Langkawi Rats in roads & smells on Melaka River MALAYSIA, Kuah Town, Langkawi Island, 25-27 January 2013 Arriving from KL and meeting up with family at the De Baron Hotel, Malaysia 25-27 Jan 2013, Kuah Town, Capital of Langkawi Island, plus a verbal reading of the diary covering amongst others leaving the Concorde inn KL and flying to Langkawi island, De Baron Hotel, hire car, lovely swimming pools, sunset views and strolls, no durian in lifts, Taylor Swift's red, straits of Malacca, jacaranda trees and pods, family arriving for wedding, 1st meal of tricky curried prawns at sunset, air con, such fun! The number of images in the selective slideshow is 51. Feel free to look at what Langkawi has to offer, click HERE Friday January 25th 2013 Still at Concorde Inn Hotel near KL airport. Woke up early again at 5.45 a.m., must still be jet lag, heavy rain. Yesterday we found all Malaysians friendly and very helpful and all spoke very good English, we tried out our pigeon Malay whenever we could to try and be good but in general their English was way better than our Malay. Annie did Indonesian at school in Australia and said many of the words were similar. We had an excellent breakfast at the hotel, Keef did some online banking and emails, we then when swimming / sunbathing at the hotel pool. It was very hot and then like clockwork the rain clouds gathered and around 6 p.m. there was another terrific rainstorm with thunder and lightening. The rain was tremendous, and we mean TORRENTIAL! Anne had a little siesta as was suffering from jet lag and tired. We then had a lovely evening meal in the hotel restaurant, Annie had chicken satay with rice, curd cake and carrot cake for pudding, Keef had nasi lemak , chicken, rendang sauce, coconut rice, with an anchovy and nut garnish followed by cheesecake for pudding, all very yummy and hugely well prepared, thanks Concorde Inn Hotel staff, much appreciated. We then organised the taxi pickup for the next morning to take us to the Low Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT) in Kuala Lumpur for our Malaysian internal flights at 10 a.m. (arriving at the terminal 2 hours earlier as directed) Never know what that is all about, mostly to get you to spend money at the terminal. Night night we will be up early tomorrow. Saturday January 26th 2013 Today we travel onward to Langkawi Island, Malaysia, a chocolate (tax free) holiday paradise island for all Malaysians and the place where our youngest son is due to get married. Tick! Got up at 6 a.m. and had breakfast at 7.15 a.m. we then got the taxi to Kuala Lumpur’s LCCT terminal to catch our 10 a.m. flight on Air Asia to Langkawi. We had to be at the terminal 2 hours in advance. In the end the plane left at 10.15 a.m. and took about 1 hour to get to the island. It was very hot in Langkawi, about 30 degrees C, we checked in at the De Baron Hotel , a 2 star hotel, having picked up our hire car from the airport for 1 week. It cost about £230. The hire car had air con, 4 doors and seemed very good. Apparently, there are monkeys and buffalo on the roads away from the main Kuah Town although on our journey to the hotel we didn’t see any. Cars drive on the left in Malaysia. We unpacked our bags in the hotel room, which was not as good as the one at the Concorde Inn in KL. We then went for a stroll around the hotel and grounds to familiarise ourselves with where we were. We then walked to the nearest shops to find a restaurant for some food. This is hilarious, we ordered fish and chips, but the waiter only bought one plate. He naively assumed it was only the man eating, wow now that is a cultural difference. 😉 We asked for the 2nd meal which duly arrived, but the fish was not cooked properly. We left in disgust and found another restaurant. Anne had lemon chicken (not very good) and pineapple rice which was wonderful. We then found a wine shop and bought both red and white for D&P’s wedding. Both of us has a siesta as knocked out by the massive heat or more succinctly humidity. Keef took sunset pictures from the hotel grounds. Brian and Gina arrived at De Baron Hotel, Kuah Town, Langkawi Island at 10.15 p.m. Sunday January 27th 2013 Went for a swim and met up with Brian and Gin who had got up early and had breakfast and walked along the bay to the Eagle Square statue (famed on Langkawi and visible in all the tourist brochures). It was again very hot today. We all got sunbeds around the pool which had 2 lovely slides. K&A went off to collect Craig and Leanne from the airport at 12.15 p.m. and then once they had both checked into their room they joined us on the sunbeds which we had rotated to be in the shade, a very good move for us pasty skinned Brits abroad, ha ha. 😉The only 2 awake around the pool were Annie & I as we had now arrived in the right time zone body wise. In the evening we had dinner at our hotel outside in the gardens overlooking the bay a bit cooler and a lovely romantic setting and great company, what more could you ask for. We took some sunset photos over the bay. Hotel had wonderful and beautiful views of the bay which is part of the straits of Malacca. Being a Muslim country, they did not serve alcohol, but we took along some beers etc. and sat along the bay frontage and watched the sun set, just magical. That afternoon Keef & Brian had walked 10 minutes to the quay to book an island-hopping boat tour trip for 9 a.m. the next day, so looking forward to that. This is an extract from a tourist brochure from Langkawi. “Kuah, the main town of Langkawi, is a good starting point for visitors who travel via ferry. While clear white stretches of beaches are non-existent here, ships are ever-present in the distance and the looming mountains on the nearby islets are visible during the day. The town is well-regarded as a shopper’s haven, housing many excellent duty-free stores selling everything but the kitchen sink. Due to its relatively large population and the number of hotels in the area, visitors can also find a good range of dining venues to choose from while places of interests that are great for picture moments can be found in Kuah. Kuah, Kuah Town or Bandar Kuah is a town, mukim and district capital of Langkawi, Kedah, Malaysia. It is the entry point for those coming by ferry from either the mainland or Penang Island. The town is centred on its jetty, which is a point of arrival for tourists from the mainland. Kuah has become a major town due to the growth of visitors after Langkawi developed into a tourist centre since 1986. Kuah is the most important town on Langkawi Island. Though it is not an actual city, local people from Langkawi refer to it as a city. Kuah is a nice and small town with a relaxed atmosphere. There are no big malls, no heavy traffic and no places to eat on every corner but more than enough to satisfy your appetite. Langkawi Island has a duty-free status. You can buy cheap liquor, cigarettes, fragrances, and other souvenirs in Kuah. Kuah has a couple of hotels, but you will find better accommodation outside of the city. “ The hotel address was de BARON resort, Bandar Baru BARON,07000, Kuah Langkawi, Kedah Darul Aman. MALAYSIA, Berjaya to Penang 31 Jan-2 Feb 2013 Leaving family after the Wedding, Oriental Village, Elephant rides & Lebanese meals then goodbyes and onto Penang, Malaysia 31 Jan-2 Feb 2013, Skycab, Oriental Village, Berjaya hotel resort Brian & Gina's hotel in the south west of Langkawi Island, Plus Reading Annie's Diary, covering amongst others airport, berjaya hotel resort, eagle quay, shops, pantai chenang, pantai kok, seaweed crisps, batik fabric prints, penang, bayview hotel, Georgetown, drove 225 miles on langkawi, hire car, taxi, permata kedah, langkawi jewel of kedah, skycab, cable cars, oriental village, mount machinchang, family, parascending, parasailing, Lebanese meal in Pantai Kok, yacht harbour, farewell to Brian & Gina, Craig & Leanne, Doug & Phoenix, Air Asia flight to Penang , only 18 mins our shortest flight ever, 51 images in the selective slideshow Thursday January 31st 2013 Brian and Gina transferred to their new hotel, Berjeya Hotel Resort on the southwest of the island at 4 p.m. Got up late and had breakfast in the Sands restaurant in the Tanjung Rhu hotel. We chatted to John & his partner Tammy. We had to check out of our room at 12 noon, but Doug and Phoenix were staying on until Friday. We put our baggage in the hire car and then spent the rest of the afternoon by the pool as did the whole of Phoenix’s family. Brian and Gina then left at 4 p.m. for their next hotel. We got showered to leave at 6.30 p.m. Unfortunately only B&G caught Phoenix’s Mum to say goodbye, we didn’t manage any of P’s party, the whole of her entourage were not around, B&G did say farewell to Doug & Phoenix however who were off for a spa treatment, luxury eh but true honeymoon stuff for Mr. & Mrs. Douglas (as they became known by the hotel staff tee hee). They were also doing snorkeling on Friday morning before flying to Penang to briefly stay with their friends Kim & Jayne, who were also wedding guests. Kim volunteered to show us around Georgetown his home when we got to Penang in a few days’ time but we decided against it as in fairness didn’t know him that well and wanted to look around at our own pace. We will stay with Doug & Phoenix at the end of our trip for two weeks in April so its as they say not goodbye but more au revoir ha-ha With Craig and Leanne we then drove to the tourist resort of Pantai Chenang again and had a lovely Thai meal, this was the scene of C&L’s parascending experience tomorrow having worked up the courage watching other on our previous visits here , something we are not sure Leanne would do again. Very tired as late night previously so we all went to bed when we returned to the hotel De Baron in Kuah Town. One thing we remember from around the pool at Tanjung Rhu resort was the pompous Brits who told as they always holidayed here every year and were complaining about the riffraff lowering the tone for the plebs wedding, little did they know that was us, awful snobs and people for that matter, happy never to see folk like that again, thank you very much Friday February 1st 2013 Had breakfast at 8.30 a.m. with Craig & Leanne and then returned to Pantai Chenang for them to do parasailing, which cost them £12 for 10 minutes in the air. The speedboat took them out for a very small island offshore where they took off from its beach. Then we drove to the southwest side of the island and visited the Oriental Village with shops, a lake with koi carps, fish, monkeys etc. maybe click on the link on the website page for the oriental village Langkawi Island to see so much more. We saw the cable car but the queue to get on was so long we just didn’t have time to do it so Craig & Leanne did an elephant ride instead. Their elephant was called Lasah, we took lots of photos of them then K & A fed him afterwards with bread slices and bananas provided. We saw a small boy with a python wrapped around his neck. We then went into the spa shop where Craig & Leanne put their feet into a pool where small fish nibbled the hard skin on their feet, it made Craig giggle. We had already done this with Linda & Ian in Cornwall before we came so gave it a miss this time around. We then drove to Brian & Gina’s new resort hotel which was quite close to the Oriental Village and spent the afternoon on the beach and in their pool which had a waterfall. Their hotel grounds were nicely landscaped with tropical palms etc. Maybe click on the link for the Berjaya hotel resort to see more. We took the little bus up the hillside to their chalet amongst the trees, it was an extremely steep road, so transport was most welcome. We all had a shower there and got changed ready for the evening. There were monkeys in the trees. We went to dinner in a fab Lebanese restaurant along the coast in Pantai Kok, which is a lovely fishing and yacht harbour. The food was very tasty and we had to do the usual walk to the far corner of the restaurant to wash our hands under running water as we mostly used our ands to eat, a cultural and maybe religion practice within Muslim countries, who knows! Brian and Gina returned to their resort by taxi. We all said our goodbyes and C, L,K&A returned to the De Baron hotel in Kuah town. We went to bed at 10.30 p.m. as an early start tomorrow. Brian and Gina were spending a further 7 days at the Berjaya resort before flying onto Borneo for the rest of their holiday. We had spent a lovely time together, such wonderful memories especially the Wedding at Tanjung Rhu, will remember it forever, very special. Saturday February 2nd 2013 Langkawi Island to Penang for Keef & Annie and the next leg of our Holiday 2013. Got up at 5 a.m. and took Craig and Leanne to Langkawi airport for 6 a.m. for their return flight to the UK. It was very dark outside but with the sound of prayer call in the air from the many mosques en-route. Keef sent emails and photos of the Wedding to family and friends in England an Tasmania. The photos came out very well and are a fab reminder of such wonderful times. We then had breakfast at De Baron and drove to Eagle Quay one last time, but it was very busy with tax free shoppers so decided to give shopping there a miss. Went back into Kuah town and Anne bought 2 lots of batik and Keef bought some seaweed pringles as we so liked Craig’s. We had previously checked out of the hotel but returned to get changed. We then returned the hire car to the airport at 3 p.m., we loved its air con ha-ha. And then had to wait until 5.30 p.m. for our Air Asia flight to Penang. The plane left early and took only 18 minutes, possibly one of our shortest flights ever. Got taxi coupon, 44 ringgits, approximately £5.50 in British pounds and then the taxi to our Georgetown hotel called the Bayview on the northeast of the island of Penang. Georgetown is its capital and highly colonial from its past. We stayed on the 15th floor with lovely views of the bay which is in the Melaka Sea and of colourful buildings and the red roofs of Chinatown from our own room. We had showers and unpacked. The air con was not working, and the room was hot so we called the man to fix it which made it a little bit cooler but not perfect by any means. We went to dinner at the hotel at 9 p.m. Annie had a prawn salad and Keef the chicken curry and we both shared some strawberry ice cream for pudding. As it was a long day we were very tired and collapsed exhausted but happy into bed soon after dinner. We had driven 225 miles on Langkawi Island. in brian and ginas room elephant ride return 1/26 ✨ 300‑Word Malaysia Travel Summary Malaysia in 2013 delivered the perfect blend of tropical adventure, vibrant culture and unforgettable travel moments — and this detailed travel diary is designed to help fellow travellers plan their own Malaysian journey with confidence. From the moment you land in Kuala Lumpur, the heat, colour and energy of the city hits you. Iconic landmarks such as the Petronas Twin Towers, Menara Tower, Istana Negara, Chinatown, and Dataran Merdeka offer a rich mix of history, architecture and local life, all easily explored using the city’s excellent Hop‑On Hop‑Off bus. From KL, the trip moves to the island paradise of Langkawi, where travellers can enjoy island‑hopping boat trips, quiet beaches, wildlife encounters and the laid‑back charm that makes Langkawi a favourite for couples, families and backpackers alike. Highlights include Kuah Town, Tanjung Rhu, and the famous Langkawi island‑hopping tour, perfect for photography lovers and nature enthusiasts. The journey continues to Penang, known for its colonial architecture, street food, and the cultural melting pot of Georgetown. With its blend of Malay, Chinese and Indian influences, Penang is a must‑visit for travellers seeking authentic Malaysian cuisine, heritage streets and vibrant markets. This diary doesn’t just document a trip — it provides practical insights for planning your own Malaysia holiday. Travelers will find tips on navigating Kuala Lumpur, choosing the best island excursions, understanding local customs, and making the most of Malaysia’s diverse landscapes. Whether you're researching a Malaysia itinerary, planning a Langkawi beach holiday, or looking for Kuala Lumpur travel inspiration, this guide offers real‑world experience, honest reflections and hundreds of photos to help shape your perfect adventure. 🌴 Dreaming of Malaysian Travel? Dreaming of a Malaysia adventure? This inspiring 2013 Malaysia travel diary is packed with real experiences, stunning photography and practical tips to help you plan your own unforgettable trip. Explore the buzzing streets of Kuala Lumpur, wander through colourful markets, visit the iconic Petronas Towers, and discover the city’s hidden cultural gems. Then slow the pace on the tropical island of Langkawi, with crystal‑clear waters, island‑hopping tours, wildlife encounters and peaceful beaches perfect for relaxing or exploring. Continue the journey to Penang, home of world‑famous street food, heritage architecture and the vibrant charm of Georgetown. Whether you’re planning a first‑time Malaysia itinerary or looking for insider tips on KL, Langkawi or Penang, this diary offers honest insights, real‑world advice and plenty of inspiration for crafting your own Southeast Asia adventure. Perfect for travellers researching Malaysia holidays, island escapes, KL city breaks, or Southeast Asia backpacking routes. Click through to explore the full travel diary and start planning your Malaysia dream trip today. MALAYSIA, Islands Boat Trip Plus Pantai Chenang, Langkawi Island, 28-29 Jan 2013 Beras Besah & Dayang Bunting Islands, Parascending and Water world, Malaysia 28-29 Jan 2013, Islands & Pantai Chenang, plus a verbal reading of the diary covering amongst others palau (or islands), salat began nyior, dayang bunting, beras basah island, palau tuba, kentut basah island, underwater world, pantai chenang, family fun, lunch at yellow beach café, smelly drains, taxi, hire car, sunsets, parascending, birds, fishes, reptiles, rain forest gardens, sun burn, ice creams, fresh water lake named the lake of the pregnant lady on dayang bunting island, just so cooling for feet dangling and swimming. The number of photos we took was 126 and they are all in the selective slideshow, maybe view in conjunction with the diary , either written or audiobook. Monday January 28th 2013 Early breakfast for us all and then got boat trip at 9 a.m. from Eagle Statue quay side. It was a longish boat with sun shades over seats and we rightly had to wear life jackets. There was bright sunshine, but it was breezy. The guy who drove the boat drove it very fast and it was incredibly bouncy. It bounced on some large waves which made us bounce on our metal seat structures quite hard so much so that Craig got a huge bruise on his lower back and Annie one on her arm. If I was being unkind I would say the pilot was doing it on purpose, i.e. an inert dislike of tourists, however I would say most strongly “don’t bite the hand that feeds you” PLEASE!!! We arrived at a small island with palm trees and a lovely beach. This was on reflection the island of beras basah. We had a short walk to the main jetty where there were other tourist boats, he had landed up on the sand as otherwise it was too crowded. The other boats were mainly full of Malaysian tourists. We all went for a cooling swim and then came onto the beach and saw a monkey steal someone’s plastic carrier bag and grab a slice of toast from within. He sat there proudly eating it and we all took lots of photos. We spent ¾ (three quarters) of an hour on that island , Craig having a go in the provided hammock, and then got back on the boat and went to another island where we saw eagles swooping to catch fish and the while island surrounded by mangroves. The last island we visited, dayang bunting, had lots of cheeky monkeys and we walked through the trees on a path with lots of steps to the island’s major lake with a floating pontoon. Craig swam and the rest of us sat on the decking and soaked our feet in the cool waters, this freshwater lake was called the lake of the pregnant maiden. We got on the boat from the dayang bunting jetty after a leisurely stroll back from the lake and lots more monkey pictures and returned to the quay at 12.30 noon. We swam in the De Baron hotel pool and got water, wine, and beer from the town locally in the hire car. After some hassle with the car not starting and having to call out the hire company to fix it (damn it looked like a new vehicle, not good) Keef , Brian & Gina finally arrived at the “passage to India” restaurant where we all had our evening meal after what had been a fun but slightly tiring day out. Its worth noting that the locals only came out to swim in the evening to avoid the heat of the day, oh well mad dogs and Englishmen as they say tee hee. 😉 Tuesday January 29th 2013 We all spent time around the pool relaxing in the morning after our usual friendly and substantial breakfast. Late afternoon we took Craig & Leanne in the hire car to Pantai Chenang and met Brian and Gina there, they had got a taxi outside to Underwater world which we all loved but lost Gina in tee hee. It was a very hot and humid day again, we saw the aquarium and the rain forest area with animals and birds and surprisingly penguins who were in what seemed to be a fridge area, we tried to stowaway (not really ha-ha). It was all very good. Brian had to do a search party for Gina who was reported lost as taking so many photos she strayed away from the rest of us. After this we all walked along the main road in the Pantai Chenang resort where we found a small sandy beach where there were jellyfish at the edge of the sea, after it had disappeared we went for a dip to cool off. We had lunch and drinks at the lovely beach bar, with great views of the Anderman sea and main beach where there were jet skis, banana boats and parascending / parasailing activities. We went for a swim in the sea and watched the lovely sunset at 7.30 p.m. We then collectively set off to look for a restaurant for dinner and found a nice fusion one serving southeast Asian cuisine. It was lovely food. We all got changed out of our wet swim wear in the loos after our swim. Brian and Gina got a taxi back to the hotel and us 4 returned in the hire car, all in all a great day out. yellow beach cafe lunchtime views yet another cheeky monkey island 1/63 MALAYSIA, Georgetown Penang 3-5 Feb 2013 Stayed Bay View Hotel, Saw UNESCO World Heritage Mansion, plus a lot of this historic Town, Malaysia 3-5 Feb 2013, Georgetown Penang , 2 selective slideshows includes reading diary, covering amongst other the blue mansion, UNESCO world heritage, lonely planets top 10 visits, cheong fatt tze’s mansion, Penang bridge, Georgetown, bay view hotel, Fort Cornwallis, batu ferringhe, town hall, wedding poses, china town, little India, temples, incense, the esplanade, industry, shop houses, hard rock café, hard rock hotel, lazy river, the Beatles memorabilia, Penang, airports, air asia, Komtar Centre & Tower, Chinese New Year was the year of the snake. There were 133 images of our wonderful cultural experience in Georgetown. Sunday February 3rd 2013 Georgetown, Penang, Malaysia, 97 degrees Fahrenheit, wow! Georgetown is a busy city with lots of high-rise buildings, but the historical area is preserved and has world heritage status i.e., UNESCO especially for Cheong Fatt Tze’s Blue Mansion. It is a very busy city as over 200 years old and got UNESCO status in 2008. We had a substantial breakfast at the Bay View hotel and then did some sightseeing and visited the Chinese Blue Mansion which cost 12 ringgits each, £2.40 pence in English which on reflection for such a world wonder was incredibly cheap. It was extremely interesting; the house was preserved but all the furnishings were new. Cheong Fatt Tze’s house had 38 rooms, 7 staircases, 5 courtyards, he was a millionaire who left China to make his fortune at 16 and went to Indonesia and then Penang in Malaysia. He had 8 wives and died in 1916, he was a trader and a banker. The house had gone to rack and ruin but was restored between 1990 and 1997. It has lovely wood carved panels and courtyards. By 2022 it was also used as a hotel and restaurant (sadly). After leaving the Blue Mansion we walked around the British colonial area to see the white buildings, City Hall, the museums, and cathedral. By this time, it was 12.30 p.m. and extremely hot and sunny and humid. We tried to walk in the shade wherever possible but it was exhausting. We Brits will get used to it eventually honest. We saw the esplanade and the bay near Fort Cornwallis. Then decided the heat was so intense that we walked (hard going) back to the hotel for a cold drink in the bar, shower than a cooling swim in the hotel pool. Luckily the pool was very cold, yippee! We had booked the buffet dinner in the revolving restaurant on the 16th floor of the hotel for 7.30 p.m. It was lovely Thai food with singing from a live professional act on karaoke who also dis requests from the diners. Keef requested some Adele songs. We also saw Georgetown lit up at night with illuminated fire flies hitting the restaurant windows, quite spectacular form of lighting and / or fireworks, tee hee. Some words about it are “Town heritage, traverse into the eclectic charm of George Town Penang’s illustrious history as you step into the world of Cheong Fatt Tze’s Blue Mansion. Conceived and constructed before the end of the 19th century, The Blue Mansion sets the standard for Penang’s boutique heritage hotel landscape and stands today as one of the most iconic boutique hotels in Malaysia. It is the only one to have won the prestigious UNESCO Conservation & Heritage award. The transcendental quality and timelessness of the mansion has been perfectly poised for over a century on firm foundations of architectural, cultural and historical superlatives. Here, time comes to a halt as you meander along the mansion and revel in the harmonious medley of history and culture. The Blue Mansion seamlessly blends old world charm with modern comforts. A wide array of amenities includes an exquisite dining experience at Indigo restaurant, a courtyard dining room and an idyllic terrace. There are guided mansion tours daily which give you further insight into the story behind the architecture and history of George Town’s first heritage hotel. The Blue Mansion is centrally located at 4km from the Gurney Drive seafront promenade, 9km from Kek Lok Si Buddhist temple, and just a 5-minute walk to China Town and other significant heritage spots in Penang.” In our humble opinion it is just a truly spectacular building. And here is some UNESCO words for Malaysia, we have been to both. “Melaka and George Town, Historic Cities of the Straits of Malacca Melaka and George Town, historic cities of the Straits of Malacca have developed over 500 years of trading and cultural exchanges between East and West in the Straits of Malacca. The influences of Asia and Europe have endowed the towns with a specific multicultural heritage that is both tangible and intangible. With its government buildings, churches, squares and fortifications, Melaka demonstrates the early stages of this history originating in the 15th-century Malay sultanate and the Portuguese and Dutch periods beginning in the early 16th century. Featuring residential and commercial buildings, George Town represents the British era from the end of the 18th century. The two towns constitute a unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.” Monday February 4rd 2013 Georgetown 91 degrees Fahrenheit We set the alarm for 6.30 a.m. to start sightseeing early to avoid some of the heat of the day. At 7.45 a.m. we set off for the free hop on hop off shuttle bus around the old part of the city. We used that bus to alight in the Chinese area which is very old and saw interesting herbal medicine shops. We walked through a market and saw some strange fruits (well they were strange to us at the time, having been in Asia quite a bit since that novelty has worn off). We visited a Chinese temple yard where people lit incense for good luck. Chinese New Year, the year of the Snake was on the 10th of February that year. Red paper lanterns were up everywhere. We got off the bus at the National Museum which cost 1 ringgit each entry fee, 20 pence in English money. It was an excellent museum all about Penang and Georgetown in particular. It has been UNESCO world heritage since 2008. We then returned to the hotel for a swim, jacuzzi and shower. Annie found the cleaner had taken her flannel from the room, it was white like the hotel towels, and they had mistaken it as theirs for washing. The staff searched all the laundry but could not find it, so they gave her a hotel flannel. We were just about to go out at 5.20 p.m. when a torrential downpour and gusting winds started and the resultant lightening made us turn around from the lobby and return to our room. We were going to get a bus to Batu Ferringhe along the north coast of Penang and have dinner at the Hard Rock Café hotel there but rightly changed our minds. Instead, we watched TV and then had dinner at 8 p.m. in the hotel restaurant, we had nasi goreng, yummy. We then did our packing as travelling tomorrow however the hotel manager said we could check out at 1 p.m. Tuesday February 5th 2013 Today we left Georgetown for Auckland New Zealand via Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Got up at 7 a.m. had a quick breakfast and got free hop on hop off shuttle bus to the KOMTAR CENTRE then bus 101 to Batu Ferrighe along the north coast of Penang Island. All buses are air conditioned which was wonderful as again it was very hot and sunny. The bus took a while to get out of Georgetown as it’s a very busy and congested city. Initially all urban sprawl then the coastal road with views of the sea and large rocks. We got off the bus at the Hard Rock hotel past a lot of tourist hotels and restaurants. Keef bought his obligatory T-shirt from the HRC shop proudly displaying “Penang”. We looked around the hotel, it had a nice beach nearby plus pool and lazy river with rubber rings which cost £2 a day to hire. There was lots of rock and pop memorabilia. Got there at 11 a.m. and then took the same bus back to the hotel which took ages as Georgetown was very hectic. We got to the hotel at 12.55 p.m. luckily, they gave us an extra ½ hour to check out, we had showers and took our bags down to the foyer. We got the taxi to the airport at 2.15 p.m. The flight to Singapore on Jet Star Asia was 1 hour in duration and we then had to kill time in Changi Airport, Singapore until our flight to Brisbane at 9.30 p.m. that evening, we couldn’t meet up with D&P because they were elsewhere and in reality, would not have had enough time to check out and back into the airport. Keef watched Lincoln on the plane, Annie watched bits of films but could not concentrate as so tired. Both of us only got about 2 hours sleep that night in transit. our plane for penang from langkawi nice starter 1/67 Our Days in Malaysia MALAYSIA, Kuala Lumpur 22-24 January 2013 Tuesday January 22nd 2013 After collecting the hire car from the East Midlands airport and dropping keys etc around Craig’s house, we set off for Heathrow. Heavy snow in fields in countryside but Heathrow was clear. We flew British airways 8.30pm to Singapore, although the plane was waiting to taxi down the runway for 45 minutes. We had a few hours snatched sleep on the plane and arrived at Singapore at 5.40pm on the Tuesday. The flight was 12 hours 35 minute long. British Airways food was Ok but not enough seat space / leg space , cramped conditions, definitely what we call “cattle class” . We were cheeky and asked for an upgrade but were told there were no first-class seats available. Wednesday January 23rd 2013 Arrival Kuala Lumpur via Singapore Arrived Singapore (in transit) for Kuala Lumpur (KL), Malaysia, sent text message to Doug. Phoenix’s parents staying with them currently in Singapore, where they were officially married at a civil ceremony on the 24th. We only had 1 hour 30 minutes to sort out our transit arrangements which was stressful since baggage had to be checked out and checked back in at the Changi counter, time flew by. Singapore lovely airport (Changi surprisingly was once a prison used by the Japanese to hound Singaporeans, bad news) and modern , tube used to take passengers to baggage hall / passport check etc. Flew Jet Star (operated by Quantas) 7.40pm to KL. Liked the airport in KL , clean modern etc. Flight was about 50 minutes. Found free shuttle bus at KL airport to take us to the Concorde Inn Hotel very near to the airport. Nice spacious deluxe room and wet room shower. Arrived at the hotel at 10.10 pm very tired and hot. After snow and freezing temperatures in England, arrived in jungle heat and then a ‘terrific tropical storm’ directly overhead with thunder and lightening. The thunder was os loud it was like an explosion. Spent 24 hours travelling fron the time we left home to arriving at the hotel in KL. Thursday January 24th 2013 Kuala Lumpur Woke at 6.20am. Bit jet lagged. Went into Kuala Lumpur city today having had a lovely hotel breakfast. The coffee machine inspired my 60th birthday present. Bought a batik fabric from the hotel foyer gift shop and practiced our Malay language skills. Got free shuttle bus from hotel to main airport and then took rapid train into the city (took 28 minutes) passing many palm tree plantations. Train cost 70 ringgits each return (about £14 at the time) and was like a very modern tube train. Got hop on hop off (HOHO) coach tickets from outside the station, cost 35 ringgits each or £7 which was very good value. The bus tour took in all the city sights / sites (😉 ) , old colonial buildings and those that were ultra-modern, including the world famous Petronus Twin Towers, 3 green belts in the city with flowering shrubs and trees. We saw monkeys outside the national palace fence. The whole bus tour took about 2-2 ¼ hours as they stopped for photo opportunities on several occasions. KL was not very crowded surprisingly. The Chinese shops were very interesting and lots of market and food stalls were available. We visited the national museum of Malaysia and saw traditional long houses and the Sultan’s throne and a man with a yellow python. Also on the 2nd tour around the city we stopped at a traditional crft centre and chatted to a batik designer / artist from Borneo. Terrific tropical storms again at 5.50 pm, we got back on the bus tour but interestingly the bus well and truly leaked 😉 We had a chicken meal at the main station got back to the Concorde In hotel at about 9.20pm tired, happy and educated (travel definitely broadens the mind) and very ready for bed. Arriving from the UK with snow into Malaysia at KL (Kuala Lumpur) to 30c & Jet Lag & Discovery, Malaysia 22-24 Jan 2013, Kuala Lumpur , plus a verbal reading of the diary covering amongst others concorde inn , leaving uk in snow, istana negara / national palace, menara tower, st marys cathedral, petronus twin towers, batu auch, batu linting, year of the snake, china town, burial poles, malay traditional housing, national museum, dataran merdeka square, cricket, colonialism, poverty, endless motorcycles , lovely hibiscus flowers, hop on hop off bus tour , total number of images with text is 121 in selective slideshows flamingoes _ the birdpark ahhh as a gardener i loved gardens by the bay 1/1 uni towards the palace panorama 1/61 MALAYSIA, Tanjung Rhu Resort, Langkawi Island,30 Jan 2013 "5🌠" Wedding Doug & Phoenix's Wedding, Tanjung Rhu Resort with family and friends, karaoke, food, ceremony on the beach, wedding breakfast and Chinese tea ceremony , beach skittles and the band, a lovely day ,the number of images in the selective slideshows is 93, so so happy for them both Wednesday January 30th 2013 Doug and Phoenix’s Wedding Day, Langkawi Island, Tanjung Rhu Resort definitely 5 star Set off from the De Baron hotel in Kuah Town with Craig & Leanne in the hire car. Brian and Gina took a taxi across the island and surprise, surprise got lost, you would thing the taxi drivers would know their way around. Anyhow we all arrived at the Tanjung Rhu hotel resort where the wedding was to be held late afternoon. We spent some time around the pool before the wedding and met up with D&P and Phoenix’s parents, her 2 cousins (including Shren whom we have got to know much better over the years as like P she went to university in the UK for about a year, since married in China). Again, a very very hot day. Lovely beach views and loved the hotel rooms and gardens, dead posh. The wedding was lovely and very romantic and held on the beach at 6.30 p.m. to take some of the days heat away. Phoenix looked lovely in her bridal dress escorted across the sand by her dad and 3 bridesmaids all in yellow dresses whilst hers was pure white. Doug looked very smart in grey trousers, waistcoat, white shirt and gold bow tie and cummerbund. The ceremony was very emotional and beautiful at the same time. They then went off for formal photos and then we went into the hotel for the traditional Chinese tea ceremony with her parents and the bride & groom. Then followed a beach barbeque and feast as by now dark skies, with a really good live band. The speeches were all excellent, Ps Dad, John the best man (one of Doug’s university pals) and Doug who did a long speech in both Mandarin and English. We are very proud of him, and the Chinese contingent laughed in quite a few places so it must have been good. He also recited a poem he had written to Phoenix which was very romantic. We then had dancing on the sand with Phoenix even doing lead vocals with the band at one point, she has such a lovely voice. Then wedding cake and did some beach games… China versus England, ha-ha. Skittles and throwing coconuts as the ball. Then more music and dancing and then we moved inside the hotel for some karaoke which finished at 2.30 am. The Chinese were great at Karaoke, we however tanked up on booze to give us the confidence to finish with Bryan Adams and Bon Jovi numbers, The summer of 69 and Living on a prayer respectively. All very tired but happy we retired to bed. Doug & Phoenix both seemed very happy with how it had all gone, what a wonderful wedding day! MALAYSIA, Malacca "The Historic State" 13-14 Apr 2013, also spelt Melaka Stayed at Mr & Mrs Li Wee's traditional Tea House with Doug & Phoenix, Malaysia 13-14 April 2013, Malacca “The Historic State” plus reading diary, Melaka or Malacca, city of bridges, mr and mrs li wee, tea house stay, UNESCO world heritage site, Melaka river, "Venice of the East" cruises, jambalan tan bin seng, chan koon cheng, old bus station bridge, kompung morten, waterside edge walks, shop houses, bastion Victoria, jonkers walk, night market, mr li’s taxi trip, famous chicken and rice, St John's Fort, chetti village, museums, Maritime museum, jonkers gallery, many churches, early Christianity, mosque by coast, sila tanggalhan, street kebabs and portugese shell fish restaurant by the harbour, orang utan shop, great to spend so much time with doug & phoenix, west ham drinks glasses, 112 images in the selective slideshows but poor doug and phoenix getting ill through eating some suspect street food, maybe the kebabs were not fully cooked who knows. Saturday April 13th 2013 Malacca or Melaka, Malaysia Guest house owners Mr. and Mrs. Li were very friendly and polite. Phoenix had booked this accommodation from Singapore. We had arrived in the hire car we picked up just across the border into Malaysia at Johor Bahru or JB in everyday parlance tee hee. We did the awful crowded lengthy Woodlands crossing by shuttle bus (cattle class tee hee) over the Johor Causeway bridge from Singapore to Malaysia. Not fun as the weekend when many of the Malaysian workers return to JB to their families after a week away working in the better paid country of Singapore, remember before independence on the 9th of August 1965 Singapore was a state of Malaysia. Mr. Li offered to give us a guided tour of Melaka at 6.45 p.m. We went to a local Chinese cafe for breakfast, our guest house is in the old part of town so very traditional. Melaka is now a UNESCO world heritage site along with Georgetown Penang which we went to early on this trip. After breakfast we walked around the old town down by the river, which was very smelly and sadly polluted. It was a dirty green sludge colour. We saw lots of old churches, one was built in 1756, which was when Malacca was on the spice route and had both Dutch and Portuguese colonies. There were lots of men on rickshaws covered in fake flowers driving tourists around the old town. Plus, lots of Chinese tourists on coach tours. Culturally the Chinese do like to travel in convoy which makes sense when language is an issue, potentially less so here in Melaka which is very multi-cultural as indeed Singapore is. It is worth noting we were some of the only westerners we saw. We saw monitor lizards in the river, they lived in holes in the walls at the rivers edge and came out to swim in the sunshine. After lunch of some Chinese food in a riverside café we went on a boat cruise for a few kilometers up the river and then back again affording a view of some of the surrounds. There was a fake sailing ship, a Dutch East Indies ship that had originally been shipwrecked off Melaka in a storm circa 1650. We then returned to the guest house which as it doubled as a Chinese tea house was a real treat and experience. We had fermented China teas, the ginger one was the best. We sat and rested there and chatted to Mr. Li. Then we had showers and at 6.45 p.m. he drove us in his battered car around the city and showed us the sights which was lovely. We visited a Muslim Mosque on the coast with views of the Malacca Straits, old Malay Chetti Village houses down by the river, and the old St. Johns fort where we saw monkeys and then went on for a Portuguese meal in the open air by the sea. We also saw people launching Chinese lanterns into the sky, all quite atmospheric. Mr. Li carried on our tour until about 10.30 p.m. when he dropped us all off at Jonker’s Walk to see the night market. It was busy and bustling and we remember the humourous advert for Mr. Potato Head crisps the ad poster being Wayne Rooney ha-ha. We then returned to the guest house which was close by, tired , had a shower and went to bed at 12 midnight. A very interesting day all in all. And here are some UNESCO words for Malaysia, we have been to both Melaka & Georgetown, Penang. “Melaka and George Town, Historic Cities of the Straits of Malacca Melaka and George Town, historic cities of the Straits of Malacca have developed over 500 years of trading and cultural exchanges between East and West in the Straits of Malacca. The influences of Asia and Europe have endowed the towns with a specific multicultural heritage that is both tangible and intangible. With its government buildings, churches, squares and fortifications, Melaka demonstrates the early stages of this history originating in the 15th-century Malay sultanate and the Portuguese and Dutch periods beginning in the early 16th century. Featuring residential and commercial buildings, George Town represents the British era from the end of the 18th century. The two towns constitute a unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.” Sunday April 14th 2013 Malacca back to Singapore Had breakfast at 10.30 a.m. in a Chinese café was dim sum. Then we walked around the old town a different area from yesterday, seeing old Chinese temples, Chinese theaters, and a lot of little shops, busy with Chinese tourists. Keef bought some new flip flips (or thongs as our aussie friends would call them). Phoenix was not well and frequently sick, not sure if it was the street food kebabs in the morning or the sea food at the Portuguese restaurant the previous evening, who knows but poor Phoenix. K & A headed back to the guest house for a rest, the humidity was getting to us. D&P arrived back a little later and she went to lie down to try and recover. Mr. Li made us a lovely local coffee and then his wife kindly made us and Doug some winter melon tea, a vegetable we now know extremely well but didn’t at the time. We all chatted and rested up a bit. Phoenix recovered after her little nap and rejoined us. We all went off to a Chinese restaurant for lunch, we had already loaded all our bags into the hire car boot at this point anyhow. After lunch we set off at 3.15 p.m. for the long drive back to the city of Johor Bahru which is the Malaysian city on the border. We stopped at a service station for a comfort break. We played hunt the western loo ha-ha. It was mainly palm trees lining the motorway on the way back stretching for miles on either side. Not many signs of towns or villages. Palm tree oil (not great in COP26 times) and rubber are the main Malaysian exports. We used the sat nav to try and get back to the lady’s house whom we had got the hire car from but it took us to the wrong area, many are named the same in JB. By 7 p.m. we had already spent an hour circling around JB in a vain attempt to find the right address. Despite many phone calls to the lady to ask for directions she and her husband were not very helpful and did not know any of the local road names to the point where they could only tell us the name of the shipping mall that was nearby them. Very frustrating. Jalan Balau which was the road we wanted came up 14 different areas on the sat nav, so we methodically tried them all, grr! We needed Jalan Balau 1 to be precise. A nightmare to find but we eventually got there. Not a trip any of us would want to do again but as years pass, we would always remember it. We then took a taxi back to the border crossing; it was not so busy on a Sunday evening so getting into Woodlands crossing was a breeze. We all got back to Geylang flat at 10 p.m. Went out for a Chinese meal locally and then had showers and flopped into bed very tired, but happy to have spent such a lovely adventurous weekend away with Mr. & Mrs. Douglas, fun times. us HRC malacca brothers in arms or alms geddit ;) 1/56 2013 KL 27 jan 2013 first full evening get together in kuah town poolside dolphins 1/26 2013 Kuah Town 2013 Islands plus 2013 Wedding the wedding itinerary happy to nina simone 1/46 2013 Penang 2013 Georgetown 2013 Malacca Melaka 2013 Summary Malaysia Travel

  • 2019 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Europe Faroes Iceland Motorhoming

    Explore our 2019 motorhome guide to the Faroe Islands and Iceland—routes, ferries, campsites, tips, and stunning Nordic landscapes for an unforgettable adventure. 2019 Travel Guide - Faroes & Iceland 🗺️ 2019 FAROES & ICELAND — COMPLETE MOTORHOME ROUTE MAP Trip No. 38 — 5 May to 3 July 2019 Total distance: 5,257 miles • UK → Holland → Germany → Denmark → Faroe Islands → Iceland → return via Denmark, Germany, Holland → UK. 🇬🇧 UK → 🇳🇱 Holland → 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇩🇰 Denmark Derby → Hull Harwich Port (DFDS ferry) Rotterdam / Hook of Holland Northbound through Germany (A7 corridor) Hirtshals, Denmark – ferry port for Smyril Line to Faroes/Iceland 🇫🇴 FAROE ISLANDS (Outbound stop on Smyril Line) FULL ROUTE (20 day stopover on the ferry route in May 13-27th) Tórshavn (port) Transit through the Faroes en‑route to Iceland BUT not until we have explored the Faroes and its many islands for 14 days, details coming up 13 May - Arrival in the Faroe Islands Tórshavn – arrival from MS Norröna at 6 a.m. Parking by sports stadium Walk around harbour, marina, back streets of Tórshavn Police station (parking disk fine) Tórshavn Campsite – overlooking the sea 14 May - Local explorations, Kaldbaksfjørður & Kirkjubøur Kaldbaksfjørður – waterfalls, salmon farms Kirkjubøur – Roykstovan (oldest inhabited house) St Magnus Cathedral (roofless, under repair) Domkirke (being repainted) Views to Kirkjubøhólmur Return to Tórshavn via Highway 54 Drive to Vestmanna (Streymoy) via: Hoyvík Leynar Kvívík Valur Bay Vestmanna Campsite – tie‑down hoops, run by sea‑captain’s wife 15 May - Vágar Island Day Return via Leynar Vágatunnilin (toll tunnel) to Vágar Island Sandavágur – church, village walk Miðvágur Sørvágur Sørvágsvatn / Leitisvatn (lake) Buttercup Route 452 – coastal drive with views of Tindhólmur and Gáshólmur Tunnel to Gásadalur Walk to Múlafossur Waterfall Return via tunnels Kaldbak – ancient church, village Back to Tórshavn Campsite (night stop) 16 May — Tórshavn Day Tórshavn town Parliament buildings Return to campsite (sea view) 17 May — Return to Vestmanna Mountain road (instead of tunnel) Vestmanna (craft shops, harbour, bridges) Vestmanna Campsite (second stay) 18 May — Streymoy North & Eiði Oyrareingir Hósvík (harbour walk, wildflowers) Hvalvík Saksun (museum, church, coastal walk) Haldarsvík (sailor’s memorial, church visit) Tjørnuvík (Giant & Witch sea stacks, village walk) Bridge to Eysturoy Road 62 → Eiði Eiði Campsite (football field) 19 May — Funningur & Gjógv Funningur (village walk, bridges, river) Road 662 → Road 632 Gjógv (2‑night stay) Clifftop motorhome area Views to Kalsoy Facilities block Village walk (chain-haul system, old school, harbour) 20 May — Gjógv Day Breakfast outside Long village walk Watching MS Norröna pass Relaxing at campsite 21 May — Funningsfjørður → Fuglafjørður → Æðuvík Funningsfjørður inlet Skipanes (tulips) Road 10 → Gotueiði Road 70 → Syðrugøta Gøtugjógv Norðragøta (harbour, Blásastova museum, Joannis K. art) Fuglafjørður (harbour lunch, whale‑bone‑style arches) Skálafjørður (views to Skála) Æðuvík Campsite (heated room, Faroese TV) 22 May — Leirvík → Klaksvík → Kalsoy Faroes football stadium Viking parliament site Leirvík (Viking settlement) Norðoyatunnilin to Borðoy Klaksvík (2nd city) Ferry to Kalsoy (£44 return) Sydradalur (arrival) Húsar Mikladalur (Kópakonan statue) Two long, dim tunnels Trøllanes (end of the world) Kalsoy United Campsite (car park with EHU) 23 May — Return from Kalsoy → Klaksvík → Skálafjørður → Hósvík → Tórshavn Early ferry back (snow on Kunoy) Klaksvík (town walk) Tunnel back to Leirvík Drive full length of Skálafjørður: Skála Strendur Bridge to Streymoy Hósvík Harbour (lunch, sunshine, boat repairs) Return to Tórshavn Campsite (4‑night stay) 24 May — Tórshavn Day Ferry terminal (Nólsoy) Oldest street Costume shop Community buildings Return to campsite 25 May — Kirkjubøur & Sandoy Attempt Kirkjubøur (clear weather this time) Queue for Sandoy ferry → abandoned (risk of not returning) Relax at St Magnus Cathedral viewpoint Views to Hestur Island Return to Tórshavn 26 May — Rest Day Tórshavn campsite Coastal wall walk Castle Relaxing 27 May — Departure for Iceland Tórshavn → Ferry Terminal Board MS Norröna (both allowed to stay in van) Cabin on Deck 15 Evening meal Overnight sailing to Iceland 🇮🇸 ICELAND — MAIN ISLAND CIRCUIT (A Standard Ring Road approach) & THEN OUR ACTUAL ROUTE Arrival & Loop Suggestion Seyðisfjörður (arrival port) Eastfjords → North Iceland Egilsstaðir Borgarfjörður Eystri Vopnafjörður Húsavík Lake Mývatn region Goðafoss Akureyri Siglufjörður Ólafsfjörður Dalvík Blönduós Hvammstangi (seal peninsula) Westfjords West Iceland → Snæfellsnes Borgarnes Snæfellsnes Peninsula Arnarstapi Hellnar Kirkjufell / Grundarfjörður Stykkishólmur Golden Circle → South Coast Þingvellir Geysir Gullfoss Selfoss Hella Hvolsvöllur Seljalandsfoss Skógafoss Vík Reynisfjara Kirkjubæjarklaustur Skaftafell Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon Höfn Return to East Iceland Djúpivogur Breiðdalsvík Fáskrúðsfjörður Return to Seyðisfjörður for ferry 📍 28 May — Arrival in Iceland (Seyðisfjörður → Seyðisfjörður Campsite) MS Norröna docks at Seyðisfjörður (snow flurries, very cold) Drive through town to Seyðisfjörður Campsite (near old church) Hook up, heater on Long walk around: Lake Old streets Church Ferry terminal Craft shop School Town hall Supermarket (Skyr!) 📍 29 May — Seyðisfjörður → Egilsstaðir → Reyðarfjörður Heavy overnight snow Decision: clockwise around Iceland Highway 93 — Seyðisfjörður Mountain Pass Driving snow, zero visibility Frozen lakes on both sides “Most frightening drive of the trip” Pass Heiðarvatn Egilsstaðir Museum visit (moose, winter survival) Supermarkets, petrol Highway 1 south Reyðarfjörður Campsite Hard standing Waterfall, river, mountain views Ducks, clean air One of your favourite campsites 📍 30 May — Reyðarfjörður → Eskifjörður → Neskaupstaður → Djúpivogur Drive around Reyðarfjörður Highway 92 to Eskifjörður Stop at Stromholmi viewpoint Wild lupins everywhere Campsite too hilly Helgustaðir Spar Mine Nordfjardargöng Tunnel → lush valley near Hólar Neskaupstaður (tip of fjord) Return to Reyðarfjörður → Highway 1 Fáskrúðsfjörður Craft shop Chat with local woman Stöðvarfjörður (rock lady’s garden) Breiðdalsvík (volcano, brewery, post office closed) Djúpivogur Harbour walk Campsite behind café Fish & chips with curry batter (loved it) 📍 31 May — Djúpivogur → Höfn Eggin í Gleðivík sculpture walk Waterfall between Hnaukar & Hvalnes Lónsvík grit bowl (sandblasting winds!) Lunch stop Höfn Museum Harbour walk Ice‑breaker ships Beach Campsite (hard standing, windy) Dutch couples struggling with awnings Keef nearly blown off cliff taking photos 📍 1 June — Höfn → Jökulsárlón → Vík Fill water Highway 1 south Views of Vatnajökull glacier Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon Blue icebergs Crowds → then peaceful Ice breaking off Hjallanes memorial Long drive to Vík Campsite Skaftafell views Lakes, mountains, glacial landscapes Big campsite, limited EHU Backpacker‑heavy kitchen → cooked in van 📍 2 June — Vík → Reynisfjara → Skógar → Hvolsvöllur → Stokkseyri Reynisfjara Black Sand Beach Sneaker waves (tourists ignoring warnings) Basalt columns Dyrhólaey arch Reynisdrangar sea stacks Katla Geopark Lava fields with moss Skógafoss (magnificent waterfall) Hvolsvöllur Lava Centre museum (volcano history) Stokkseyri Campsite Icelandic ponies behind pitch Beautiful sunset 📍 3 June — Stokkseyri → Golden Circle → Grindavík → Sandgerði Walk around Stokkseyri harbour Golden Circle (190 miles) Haukadalur (Geysir, Strokkur eruptions) Gullfoss Þingvallavatn Selfoss Þorlákshöfn Stampar Crater (lost mudguard!) Grindavík (loved it) Sandgerði Campsite Electrical chaos Helpful lady → working socket found Attendant unconcerned 📍 4 June — Sandgerði → Keflavík → Reykjavík Visit Keflavík Airport Reykjavík Campsite (large gravel site) Hop‑On Hop‑Off bus (2‑day ticket) First loop around city Opera House & harbour photos Views to Viðey Island (Imagine Peace Tower) 📍 5 June — Reykjavík Day Old harbour area Maritime Museum Dry dock Gullborg Icebreakers Warehouses → craft shops Murals, chain‑bike art Greenpeace ship Art Gallery & Craft Market (closed) Heritage boards (Viking & Scottish links) City centre (restaurants, puffin & whale menus) Steam engine display Tjörnin Lake Doctor’s visit (antibiotics for Keef) Last HOHO bus → local bus back to campsite 📍 6 June — Reykjavík → Hvalfjörður → Varmaland Dump station near cruise terminal Hvalfjörður lunch stop (lupins) Borgarnes (provisions, craft shop) Varmaland Campsite Lumpy field Muddy track Cash‑only payment 📍 7 June — Varmaland → Stykkishólmur → Snæfellsnes → Tröð (Tradir) Campsite Highway 54 → 56 Hraunsfjardarvatn viewpoint (volcanic landscape) Stykkishólmur Harbour Lumpfish catch Music performance Heritage area Modern church on hill Snæfellsnes Peninsula loop Grundarfjörður Ólafsvík Rif (lighthouse, tourist office) Tradir Campsite (near Búðir) Shower boiler failure → Keef “Tourette’s moment” Hotel showers granted Great views 📍 8 June — Tröð → Búðir → Borgarnes → Bifröst → Laugar Explore Búðir lava fields Highway 54 → Borgarnes (provisions) Highway 1 → Bifröst (lava hotel) Turn onto Highway 60 (mountain road) Laugar Campsite Very poor facilities Uneven ground Worst campsite of the trip 📍 9 June — Laugar → Flókalundur (Westfjords) Attempt gravel road to Flókalundur (17 miles) Extreme shaking, slow progress Fire fell off wall Flókalundur Campsite Beautiful coastal views Decision: do NOT continue gravel loop, worried about puncture 📍 10 June — Flókalundur → Reykhólar Slow return along gravel road Highway 60 → 607 Reykhólar Salmon farms Herring factory Green dredger Reykhólar Campsite Farmer’s field Hot tubs filled with seawater Lovely facilities One of your favourite campsites Dinner outside in sunshine 📍 11 June — Reykhólar → Westfjords → Ísafjörður Highway 61 Long, spectacular fjord drive Reykjanes (diesel stop, geothermal pool) Mjóifjörður Skötufjörður Litlibær Heritage House Walk to seal colony (binoculars provided) Multiple waterfalls Arrival in Ísafjörður Campsite Annie later gets Keef’s cough → hospital visit 📍 12–13 June — Ísafjörður Region Hospital visit for Annie (antibiotics) Explore town, harbour, tunnels, fjords Relax and recover 📍 14 June — Ísafjörður → Súðavík → Hólmavík Súðavík Arctic Fox Centre Long fjord drive Hólmavík Campsite (quiet, remote) 📍 15 June — Hólmavík → Laugarbakki → Blönduós → Sauðárkrókur Highway 61 → 1 Laugarbakki Blönduós (river island church) Sauðárkrókur Campsite 📍 16 June — Sauðárkrókur → Hofsós → Siglufjörður → Dalvík → Akureyri Hofsós Infinity Pool (views to Drangey) Siglufjörður (herring town) Ólafsfjörður Tunnel Dalvík Akureyri Campsite 📍 17 June — Akureyri Day Town walk Harbour Church Shops Relaxing 📍 18 June — Akureyri → Goðafoss → Mývatn → Reykjahlíð Goðafoss waterfall Lake Mývatn region Pseudocraters Lava fields Hot springs Reykjahlíð Campsite 📍 19 June — Mývatn → Húsavík → Ásbyrgi → Dettifoss → Egilsstaðir Húsavík (whale‑watching town) Ásbyrgi Canyon Dettifoss (Europe’s most powerful waterfall) Long drive back to Egilsstaðir 📍 20–21 June — Egilsstaðir → Reyðarfjörður (Return) Return to favourite campsite Relaxing, walking, enjoying scenery 📍 22–23 June — Eastfjords Slow Days Short drives Fjord walks Photography Preparing for return crossing 📍 24 June — Reyðarfjörður → Egilsstaðir → Seyðisfjörður Final mountain pass (this time clear weather!) Return to Seyðisfjörður Campsite Final Iceland walk 📍 25 June — Seyðisfjörður → MS Norröna (Departure) Board ferry Cabin Evening meal Overnight sailing 📍 26 June — At Sea Relaxing Reading Watching waves 🇫🇴 FAROE ISLANDS (Return stop) Tórshavn (return stop on Smyril Line) 📍 27 June — Arrival in Denmark (Hirtshals) Iceland leg complete Continue Europe return journey 🇩🇰 Denmark → 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇳🇱 Holland → 🇬🇧 UK Hirtshals (arrival) Southbound through Denmark Germany (A7 → Netherlands route) Hook of Holland / Rotterdam Harwich (ferry arrival) Derby (home) Map, Postcard, Video SUMMARY Derby Harwich Hook of Holland Germany (A1/A7) Hirtshals Tórshavn Vestmanna Gjógv Klaksvík Tórshavn (return) Seyðisfjörður Reyðarfjörður Höfn Vík Reykjavík Snæfellsnes Peninsula Ísafjörður Akureyri Seyðisfjörður (return) Hirtshals (return) Derby Explore our 2019 motorhome guide to the Faroe Islands and Iceland—routes, ferries, campsites, tips, and stunning Nordic landscapes for an unforgettable adventure. Dive into our 2019 motorhome adventure across the Faroe Islands and Iceland—two wild, weather‑shaped worlds of cliffs, fjords, volcanoes, and unforgettable roads. From ferry crossings and remote campsites to dramatic coastlines and geothermal wonders, this guide captures every twist of the journey. Perfect inspiration for anyone dreaming of a rugged Nordic road trip with breathtaking views at every turn. Icelandic views, a fish smokery The write up is coming......

  • 17 Australia | Decades of Travel

    TBA for australia by KHWD it needs doing after the page has been created AUSTRALIA - Aussie Adventures 4th February - 9th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Arrived in Perth, WA from Singapore. We saw the town before picking up the motorhomes and seeing Monkey Mia, Carnarvon, Rottnest Island & the adorable quokkas, Margaret River, Cape Leeuwin, Albany, Northam, Wave Rock, the wheat belt and a whole lot more before picking up the wonderful Indian Pacific railway to Adelaide, flight to and from Alice springs before picking up a 2nd set of motorhomes to see the Barossa Valley and more. We crossed over into Victoria from South Australia at Portland where we saw a Koala crossing the main road right in front of us. We headed around the coast taking in the fab Great Ocean Road, London Bridge, Loch Ard Gorge, The 12 Apostles to name but a few sights before crossing into New South Wales just above Mallacoota. We saw a lot of wildlife in Victoria especially at Kennet River where once again the Koalas obliged. Once in NSW we headed up for family time in Sydney, oh and Tassie for K&A. In Sydney thanks to Allyson we saw the wonderful spectacle that was Carmen in the harbour. Feb 17 Diary Mar 17 Diary April 17 Diary "From Carnarvon in Northern WA, On the Indian Pacific Railway, Thru the Red Centre and then around the Coast Adelaide to Sydney, Plus Popping over to Tassie & Rellies" Our 39th Wedding Anniversary at the Shag Inn, Perth #haha Desert Park, Foothills of the Gap, Alice Springs, Northern Territory BBQ at our place in Beacon Hill, Sydney, NSW - April Fools Day (who knew?) haha Roadhouse Blues, Western Australia, halfway between Geraldton and Carnarvon 2017 Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/9 gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/5 £10 Poms return to Connor's landing, Freo, Western Australia Australian Ad Campaigns - so much better than ours 2008 2017 Australia has never been shy about shaking drivers awake, and two of its most memorable campaigns hit harder than a rogue kangaroo on the bonnet. In 2008, the anti‑speeding ad “No one thinks big of you” used a tiny finger‑wiggle gesture to mock macho drivers, turning bravado into national embarrassment overnight. Then in 2017 came “Hey, you tosser!”, a gloriously blunt litter‑shaming campaign that called out roadside rubbish‑dumpers with the subtlety of a megaphone. Both ads worked because they were bold, funny, and brutally direct — classic Aussie public‑safety messaging that sticks in your head long after the drive is over. WESTERN AUSTRALIA 4th - 27th February 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Includes Perth (3 days), Freemantle (Freo), Ledge point, Pinnacle National Park, Cervantes, Thirsty Point, Jurien Bay, Indian Ocean drive, Greenhough hanging tree, Geraldton, Northampton, Nerren Nerren, Billabong & Overlander roadhouses, World heritage drive, Monkey Mia, Shark Bay, Shell beach, Denham, Carnavon, Nanga, Hamelin Pool (where the desert meet the sea), Space Museum, Gascoyne River, Port Denison, Badgingarra, Moora, Brand Highway, Avon River, Northam, Crossing the flooded road nr Hyden, Wave Rock, Kalgarin farm stay, Wheatbelt, Snake, Blue tounged skinks, Tin Horse highway, Kulin, Dumbleyung, Bluebird, Mens Sheds, Railway, Farming, Boot fences, Kojonup - possibly the best campsite in the world NOT!, Rosellas, Mount Barker, Porongurup, Albany Highway, Castle Rock at the Porongurup National Park, Brig Amity, Princess Royal harbour, Middleton beach , Scenic drive Wilsons bay, Denmark, Greens pool, Elephant Rocks, Parry beach (for lunch) and the hippy in the van, valley of the Giants red tingle trees and tree top walk, Quokka on the path, Northcliffe eco park and roos plus roos jumping across road at dusk,Pemberton, Augusta, Cape Leeuwin and lighthouse, Leeuwin-Naturaliste national park,Margaret river, cape Mentelle winery, Lenton Brae winery plus tour and ladies picture of a family house in Lenton, Nottingham, we will try and find it, cheeky monkey brewery, Cowaramup, Busselton and the pier / jetty, Bunbury and Koombana bay , plus non dolphin watching, although in fairness Chris & Allyson did see one on their walk. Mangrove board walk, sub tropical flowers, Lechenault inlet and estuary, swimming in the site pool, sunbathing, chilling, intersting sub tropical birds, Avalon beach, Mandurah, Rockingham, Penguin island, seals, little blue penguins, board walks, conservation areas, Freemantle or Freo, Ferries, Van bumps, Rottnest island, Quokkas again, cycle rides, swims, guided tours, walks in the sun, history, lunch, cafes, ice creams, friends, fun, rocks, boats , blowholes, blue seas and skies and ice creams , royal perth hotel, lucky shag bar and aqua bar for our 39th wedding anniversary in perth Feb 17 Diary SEE THE FULL WESTERN OZ EXPERIENCE, 1hr 19mins Gold Class Ale across the Nullarbor One small step, about to enter Apollo 11 "From Perth to NASA at Carnavon" Album cover, Busselton pier Make like Quokkas, Rottnest Island And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 2017 Western Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/32 🌞 The Great WA Ramble: A Humorous Chronicle of Two Travellers, One Van, and Several Quokkas We began in Perth, easing into the adventure with three days of sunshine, city strolling, and the smug feeling that comes from knowing you’ve remembered your sunhat. A quick hop to Fremantle (Freo) gave us coffee, markets, and the first of many moments where the van made a noise we pretended not to hear. Then it was north — Ledge Point, Pinnacles National Park, and Cervantes, where we admired the limestone spires and tried not to think about how many snakes might be admiring us. At Thirsty Point we were, indeed, thirsty. At Jurien Bay, the Indian Ocean sparkled like it had been Photoshopped. We cruised the Indian Ocean Drive, stopping for the Greenhough Hanging Tree (a tree that looks like it’s had a very long day), then on to Geraldton, Northampton, and the legendary roadhouses of Nerren Nerren, Billabong, and Overlander — each one a reminder that civilisation is optional in WA. The World Heritage Drive took us to Shark Bay, Monkey Mia, and Denham, where dolphins turned up for everyone except us. Shell Beach dazzled, Hamelin Pool impressed (“where the desert meets the sea”), and Nanga and Carnarvon kept us fed, watered, and slightly sunburnt. We even squeezed in the Space Museum, because nothing says holiday like contemplating your insignificance in the universe. Southbound again: Gascoyne River, Port Denison, Badgingarra, Moora, and the Brand Highway, which delivered us to Northam and the Avon River. Then came the flooded road near Hyden, where we bravely crossed like pioneers… except pioneers didn’t have rental insurance. Wave Rock waved, Kalgarin Farm Stay hosted us (along with a snake and several blue‑tongued skinks), and the Wheatbelt rolled on forever. The Tin Horse Highway at Kulin gave us comedy sculptures, and Dumbleyung gave us Bluebird history and a reminder that Australians will race anything. We admired Men’s Sheds, railways, boot fences, and then reached Kojonup — “possibly the best campsite in the world… NOT!” The rosellas were lovely though. Onward to Mount Barker, Porongurup, and the mighty Castle Rock in the national park. Albany brought the Brig Amity, Princess Royal Harbour, Middleton Beach, and a scenic drive to Wilsons Bay that made us consider buying a drone and pretending we were travel influencers. Denmark, Greens Pool, Elephant Rocks, and Parry Beach delivered postcard views and a hippy in a van who looked like he’d been there since 1974. The Valley of the Giants gave us towering red tingle trees and a treetop walk that tested our bravery and our knees. A quokka even appeared on the path, clearly moonlighting away from Rottnest. At Northcliffe Eco Park, the roos greeted us politely, then later jumped across the road at dusk like they were auditioning for a wildlife remake of Fast & Furious. Pemberton, Augusta, Cape Leeuwin, and the lighthouse kept the coastal drama going, while Leeuwin‑Naturaliste National Park and Margaret River added wineries to the mix — Cape Mentelle, Lenton Brae, and a photo of a house in Lenton that we now apparently need to track down in Nottingham. Cheeky Monkey Brewery lived up to its name, Cowaramup gave us cows (of course), and Busselton gave us the famous jetty. Bunbury and Koombana Bay offered dolphin‑watching… except the dolphins didn’t get the memo. Chris and Allyson saw one though, so we’re counting it. We wandered the mangrove boardwalk, admired sub‑tropical flowers, and enjoyed the Leschenault Inlet. There was swimming, sunbathing, chilling, and bird‑spotting — all very civilised. Then came Avalon Beach, Mandurah, Rockingham, and Penguin Island, where we met seals, little blue penguins, and enough boardwalks to close our daily step rings twice over. Back to Freo for ferries and van bumps, then across to Rottnest Island for more quokkas, cycle rides, swims, guided tours, sunshine, history, lunches, cafés, ice creams, rocks, boats, blowholes, blue seas, blue skies, and — did we mention? — ice creams. Finally, we wrapped it all up in Perth with drinks at the Royal Perth Hotel, the Lucky Shag Bar, and Aqua Bar, celebrating our 39th wedding anniversary with style, views, and the knowledge that we’d just completed a trip worthy of a book, a documentary, and possibly a sitcom. Then it was up early in Perth to get a taxi out to the Indian Pacific Railway station for our wonderful train journey across the Nullarbor to Adelaide between the 26th and the 28th February, magical travels! SOUTH AUSTRALIA 28th February Plus 3rd - 9th March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Arrived by Indian Pacific Railway to the Adelaide Parklands station, we to BIG4 campsite, C&A started their cricket ground tour. Pool, beach, swimming, relaxing, reading. Adelaide airport, lockers,off to NT for a few days in Alice springs. Glenelg,Oyster bar, sunset walk, Tram, Fringe, Marina pier, Collect the vans, Tanunda, Barossa Valley, Wolf Blass, Stockwell, Angaston, Rowland Flats, Jacobs Creek, Hahndorf, Pioneers Park, Rubble,Everything Germanic, McLaren Vale, Tintara estate, Hardys, Strathalbyn, Langhorne Creek, Milang, White cockatoos or Corellas, South Australian Light railway museum, Wellington chain ferry, Charles Sturt, Lake Albert, Salt marshes, Meningie, Chinese cigars, Birdman of the Coorong, Kingston SE, Rosetown, Larry the lobster, Cape Jaffa historic lighthosue, Norfolk pines, Robe, 9 mile beach, circular town walk, Customs House, Matt Flinders,Chinese memorial, Flag hill, Harbour, Marina, Ray, Arthur Fennell Way, Pier, The Obelisk, Millicent for lunch, Mount Gambier, Blue Lake, Crater Lakes - leg of mutton (empty), valley (green algae), Hentys Monument, Wildlife park, Centenary Tower,Limestone sculpture, Pukeko or Australian swamphen,Town centre, Cave gardens, Sink Hole, Northumberland point, Port MacDonnell, Border crossing into Victoria Feb 17 Diary Mar 17 Diary SEE THE FULL SOUTH AUSTRALIA EXPERIENCE, 18 mins Outside Jacob's Creek Winery, SA Cheers, Oyster Bar, Glenelg "South Australia fun times, Glenelg Oyster bar, Hats in Hahndorf & walking Robe(s)" It's gum nuts, you numb nuts haha The Langthornes at Langhorne Creek Cool hats in Hahndorf, larking about Larry the Lobster, Kingston SE, Naff Icons 2017 South Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/17 And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 🍷🦞 The Great South Australia Wander: A Humorous Chronicle of Lakes, Lobsters & Light Railways We rolled into Adelaide Parklands Station courtesy of the mighty Indian Pacific Railway, feeling very trans‑continental and only slightly crumpled. Straight to the BIG4 campsite, where C&A immediately launched into their personal mission: visiting every cricket ground known to humankind. We, meanwhile, heroically tested the pool, the beach, and the art of doing absolutely nothing except reading. A quick detour to Adelaide Airport to stash bags in lockers, then off we flew to the Northern Territory for a few days in Alice Springs — because why not add another climate zone to the itinerary. Back in SA, Glenelg welcomed us with the Oyster Bar, a sunset walk, the tram, the Fringe, and the Marina Pier — basically everything except a marching band. Then came the big moment: collecting the vans, our trusty chariots for the next leg. Into wine country we went: Tanunda, Barossa Valley, Wolf Blass, Stockwell, Angaston, Rowland Flat, Jacobs Creek — a tour so full of vineyards we’re amazed we didn’t start photosynthesising. Then Hahndorf, where everything is Germanic, including the souvenirs, the sausages, and possibly the pigeons. Pioneers Park offered rubble, history, and the sense that early settlers were made of sterner stuff than us. Southward to McLaren Vale, Tintara Estate, Hardys, and then Strathalbyn, Langhorne Creek, and Milang, where flocks of white cockatoos/Corellas screamed overhead like feathery car alarms. The South Australian Light Railway Museum delighted the inner trainspotter, and the Wellington chain ferry carried us across the Murray with all the drama of a slow‑motion action scene. We passed Charles Sturt country, Lake Albert, salt marshes, and Meningie, where we discovered Chinese cigars (don’t ask) and the legendary Birdman of the Coorong, who may or may not be a myth, depending on how much wine you’ve had. At Kingston SE, we met Larry the Lobster, a giant crustacean who looks like he escaped from a 1970s tourism fever dream. Rosetown, Cape Jaffa lighthouse, and rows of Norfolk pines led us to Robe, where we tackled the 9‑mile beach, the circular town walk, the Customs House, the Matt Flinders connections, the Chinese memorial, Flag Hill, the harbour, the marina, Ray, Arthur Fennell Way, the pier, and the Obelisk — all before lunch. After a refuel in Millicent, we reached Mount Gambier, home of the Blue Lake, the crater lakes (one empty, one green, one dramatic), Henty’s Monument, the wildlife park, Centenary Tower, limestone sculptures, and a pukeko/Australian swamphen who strutted around like it owned the place. We explored the town centre, the Cave Gardens, the Sinkhole, and Northumberland Point, before cruising to Port MacDonnell for a final blast of sea air. And then — with a flourish, a cheer, and probably a van rattle — we crossed the border into Victoria, leaving South Australia behind with full hearts, full cameras, and a strong suspicion we’d eaten our bodyweight in oysters, wine, and bakery goods. NORTHERN TERRITORY 1st - 3rd March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Flying from Adelaide to Alice Springs over the Simpson desert and the red centre outback, MacDonnell ranges, salt lakes, dirt tracks, Elkira motel, pool, heat, humidity, flies, cockroaches (poor Allyson),Court house, The residency, Queen & Prince Phillip, Heritage area, RFDS-Royal Flying Doctor Service, Aboriginal Art, Anzac park, Anzac Hill lookout, Red Ochre Grill, Todd River & boat race, Alice springs desert park, Bush Bird display, Nocturnal red centre animals, Dingoes, Many Birds, the town of Ghan, MacDonell Ranges, Great talk from Margaret on bush tucker and medicines, Cinema experience, Roo at the Red Ochre and Pizza , Shuttle to and from airport, Airport displays, Desert scenes and clouds, close up on Adelaide and the shores.... and back in South Australia March 17 Diary See the full Northern Territory experience, approx.. 8 mins Near the Royal Flying Doctor Service "Flew into Alice for a few days, Desert Park and all, Red Ochre Grill but no Didge Show" Flying over the Simpson desert, Adelaide to Alice Springs, NT My all time favourite Aboriginal art by Helen McCarthy Tyalmuty 2017 Northern Territory, Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows 1/10 Desert Park views, just outside Alice A Humorous Summary of Our Alice Springs Adventure Flying from Adelaide to Alice Springs felt like we were being dropped onto Mars — if Mars had salt lakes, dirt tracks and a motel pool we could dive into fully clothed. The Simpson Desert and MacDonnell Ranges stretched out below us like someone had tipped a giant bucket of red paint across the outback. We checked into the Elkira Motel, where the heat, humidity and overly friendly flies greeted us like long‑lost cousins. Cockroaches also made an appearance — much to poor Allyson’s horror — proving even insects enjoy a good getaway. Alice Springs rolled out its full cultural carpet: the courthouse, The Residency (complete with Queen & Prince Philip history), the heritage area, and the RFDS where we learned how heroes fly doctors across half a continent. Aboriginal art, Anzac Park, and the Anzac Hill lookout added proper gravitas… before the Todd River boat race reminded us that Aussies will race anything, even a dry riverbed. The Desert Park introduced us to nocturnal critters, dingoes, and birds that looked like they’d been designed by committee. Margaret’s bush‑tucker talk taught us which plants heal us and which ones probably don’t. Evenings meant cinema trips, Roo at the Red Ochre Grill, and pizza — because nothing says “authentic outback experience” like a good slice. The airport shuttle whisked us past desert scenes and clouds, before the plane carried us over the coastline and back into South Australia. A trip full of heat, history, wildlife, and just enough insects to keep us alert. VICTORIA 9th - 19th March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Entered Victoria from South Australia just after Mount Gambier near Portland, Koalas, Non Fish & Chips, Speeding fines, Frightened waitress, "Kind" man who disconnected my electrics, Cape Breakwater, Discovery bay, Petrified forest, Coastal Walkway, Wind farm, Port Fairy, Poor pies, 41st Folk Festival, busy busy, Flagstaff hill, Warrnambool, Logans beach, no whales but surfers, The Great Ocean Road including Bay of Islands, Bay of Martyrs, Loch Ard Gorge, The Arch, The Grotto, London Bridge, 12 Apostles, Apollo Bay, Scenery and then some, bank holiday weekend, Princeton DOC, Giltbrook river, failed campsites then the 5* motorway service station outside Geelong, Echidnas, 3 Koalas at Kennett River, Snakes, Rock wallaby, Mt Macedon, The hump, Hanging rock, Reserve, Summit, Picnic at Hanging rock, Historic Woodend, Coburg, Melbourne, Federation square, Heritage Trams, MCG, Rod Laver arena, Olympic park, Shane Warne sadly passed aged 52 in 2022, there is an image of us posed by his statue at the MCG, the Don , Dennis Lillee, Greek Quarter, Chinatown, James Squire brewery , Busy drive out of Melbourne, Mornington peninsular, St Kilda, Brighton, Luna Park, Elwood (keefs old home in pine avenue), Beach and pier at Mordialloc, Chris for a swim, Lunch at Mornington, Shopping in Frankton, Drive to Traralgon BIG4 on Princes Highway, Historic Port of Sale, White cockatoos, Lakes Entrance lookout, Lakes entrance connecting Gippsland lakes to the Bass Straits, 90 mile beach, Wood carvings, Fishing trawlers, Wood carvings, nice walks, Orbost, Snowy River, Marlo, Sammy the seal, Where the snowy river meets the bass straits, Banjo Paterson, Quirky Hats, Dredging, Sailors grave beach, cape Conran, Steps, Mackenzie river rain forest walk, Gypsy Point, Roos, Boats, Mallacoota, Pelicans, Harbour, Nasty brown snake warning, Koala at campsite, Lucy's for brekkie, Shady Gully walk and nice plants, Tasman sea lookout, boats and more, Double Creek in the Croajingolong National Park fairly near the border with New South Wales. March 17 Diary SEE THE FULL VICTORIA EXPERIENCE, 22 Mins Picnic at Hanging Rock , Macedon plus a hand break turn by a very tall roo, mid run "Victoria, my many homes as a child in suburbs of Melbourne, home of the Great Ocean Road" The best place to find Koalas, Kennett River Iconic, my home area destination station for quite a few years, Lalor to Flinders And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! Time for a rest, vans parked up at Portland 2017 Victoria Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/23 🌊🐨🚐 Our Wild & Wonderful Wander Through Victoria 🇦🇺✨ We rolled into Victoria from South Australia just after Mount Gambier, cruising toward Portland with the confidence of seasoned travellers and the diet of people who thought they were getting fish and chips… only to discover they were getting “Non Fish & Chips,” a culinary mystery best left unsolved. Koalas lounged in trees like they owned the place, while we collected speeding fines like they were souvenirs. A frightened waitress fled from us (we swear we were polite), and a “kind” man helpfully disconnected our electrics — because nothing says welcome to Victoria like accidental sabotage. Cape Breakwater and Discovery Bay gave us windswept drama, the Petrified Forest looked like a set from a sci‑fi film, and the coastal walkway tried to blow us into the ocean. The wind farm waved at us with every rotation. Port Fairy offered charm but terrible pies, and the 41st Folk Festival was so busy it felt like half of Australia had turned up with a banjo. Warrnambool’s Flagstaff Hill was brilliant, Logan’s Beach promised whales but delivered surfers, and then came the big one: The Great Ocean Road. The Bay of Islands, Bay of Martyrs, Loch Ard Gorge, The Arch, The Grotto, London Bridge, the Twelve Apostles — scenery so spectacular it made us forget the bank holiday crowds and the fact we were basically living out of the car. Princetown DOC, the Giltbrook River, and a series of failed campsites eventually led us to the unexpected luxury of a 5‑star motorway service station outside Geelong. Honestly, it felt like the Ritz. Wildlife kept us entertained: echidnas shuffling around like spiky vacuum cleaners, three koalas at Kennett River doing their best “don’t care” faces, snakes slithering about, and a rock wallaby posing like it wanted a modelling contract. We climbed Mt Macedon, tackled The Hump, wandered Hanging Rock, and debated whether we’d vanish mysteriously like in the film. Woodend charmed us, Coburg bustled, and then Melbourne swept us up in its energy: Federation Square, heritage trams, the MCG, Rod Laver Arena, Olympic Park. We posed by Shane Warne’s statue — bittersweet knowing he passed in 2022 at just 52. The Don and Dennis Lillee watched over the cricketing faithful, while the Greek Quarter, Chinatown and James Squire Brewery kept us well fed and watered. Escaping Melbourne’s traffic required nerves of steel, but the Mornington Peninsula rewarded us: St Kilda, Brighton, Luna Park, Elwood (Keef’s old stomping ground in Pine Avenue), and Mordialloc where Chris bravely went for a swim. Lunch in Mornington, shopping in Frankston, and then off to Traralgon BIG4 on the Princes Highway. We explored the historic Port of Sale, admired white cockatoos, and took in the Lakes Entrance lookout where the Gippsland Lakes meet the Bass Strait. Ninety Mile Beach stretched forever, wood carvings popped up everywhere, fishing trawlers bobbed in the water, and the walks were gorgeous. Orbost, the Snowy River, Marlo, and Sammy the Seal greeted us where the river meets the sea — Banjo Paterson would’ve approved. We admired quirky hats, watched dredging, wandered Sailors Grave Beach and Cape Conran, and tackled rainforest steps on the Mackenzie River walk. Gypsy Point brought roos and boats, Mallacoota gave us pelicans and a peaceful harbour, and a nasty brown snake warning kept us alert. A koala at the campsite supervised us like a furry park ranger. Breakfast at Lucy’s was perfect, the Shady Gully walk was lush, and the Tasman Sea lookout reminded us how far from home we really were. We finished at Double Creek in Croajingolong National Park, not far from the New South Wales border — tired, dusty, happy, and full of stories. Victoria had given us scenery, wildlife, mishaps, pies of questionable quality, and memories we’ll laugh about forever. NEW SOUTH WALES 19th March - 4th April, then 8th-9th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY A Potted History Entering New South Wales (NSW) from Mallacoota (Victoria), Eden, harbour & whale museum, Old Tom, Ben Boyd , Whale lookout, Twofold bay, Pambula beach, fishing, roos, birds, Rosellas, Brewery (closed), Farm stores, Horse food, Merimbula, Tura beach, Tathra wharf and beach, Catching flatheads, plaice and salmon (well almost), Bermagui, Dalmeny, Central Tilba Historic Village (went there in 2007-8 but had forgotten its name), Borrell, Meeting up with Steve & Laura, Forsters Bay, Wagonga inlet, Narooma, Wagonga princess, Sexist jokes (not good!),Eurobodalla NP, Mill Bay boardwalk, Rays, Rain (lots), Overpriced fish & chips by campsite, Mogo, Batemans Bay, Kings Highway (B52), Great Dividing Range - no pics too scary driving,Braidswood, Bungedore,Bywong,Goulburn, Marulan, Mittagong, Rural NSW, Balmoral, Buxton, Thirlmere, NSW Railway museum, Cockatoos, Horses, Silverdale, Warragamba dam, visitors centre, Haviland Park, Narabeen Lakes, Class driving campaigns, Handing van back at Britz in a new area of Mascot by airport , Public transport (bus/train/bus) back to Beacon hill apartment, Chilling, Views, Pool, BBQ, Movies, Food, Wine, Beer, Friends, Family, Bus to Manly, Manly Ferry, Harbour & Manly views, Voyager of the Seas cruise liner (D&P&C were on it 2 months later), Botanic gardens, Picnic, Mrs Macquaries chair, Sunsets, Opera, Carmen, Voyager of the Seas, last ferry back, Possum in the park in the dark, Sunny pool days around the Bali hut, No 169 bus route & timetable i.e the Manly bus from our pad in Beacon Hill, if you are NERDY enough click HERE to see that full bus timetable, anorak's at the ready, Opal cards, Seeing LION at Warringah Mall on a rainy day , C&As time in Sydney with Laura & Steve visiting Blue Mountains & Parkes observatory , Jervis bay, Snakes, Walking, Rain, Hannah and Connor visited and we had a play in the pool, Balgowlah, Lamb dinner (yummy), Lovely seeing David & Hannah again, heavy rain for a day, bright sunshine, day out in sydney centre, manly ferry, circular quay, barangaroo wharf, cockle bay wharf, darling harbour, harbourside, Hard Rock Cafe, Circular ferry trip, Pyrmont bridge, History, Milsoms point, MacMahons point, Balmain East, Luna Park, Emerald Princess, Maritime museum, Endeavour, Sunsets, Rained all day so watched goldstone (poor), noctural animals (good) and oz gogglebox, Train trip to Broadmeadow, Newcastle to visit Annies cousin Susan, Gosford, Wygong, Hawkesbury river, back from Tassie, Ibis budget airport, Doughnuts (never again), fire alarm, Flight to NZ March 17 Diary April 17 Diary SEE THE FULL NEW SOUTH WALES EXPERIENCE, 47 mins Beers at Manly just by the Ferry terminal "NSW from Eden to Newcastle cousins, Beacon Hill stay in Sydney, and meeting up again for NZ" Opera Sydney, harbours edge sadly had to leave before the encore to get the last ferry back to Manly The Opera House from our Ferry to Watson's Bay Beacon Hill, pool and BBQ fale, our Air B&B Historic Central Tilba store, National Trust colonial village Our boat trip on the Wagonga inlet, Narooma 2017 New South Wales Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/30 And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 🌊🦘🚐 Our Big, Bold, Bonkers New South Wales Adventure 🇦🇺✨ We crossed from Victoria into New South Wales via Mallacoota, rolling into Eden where the harbour shimmered, the whale museum beckoned, and Old Tom the killer whale stole the show. Ben Boyd’s history loomed large, the whale lookout scanned Twofold Bay, and Pambula Beach gave us fishing, roos, birds and Rosellas — basically a wildlife documentary with sand. The brewery was closed (rude), the farm stores were open, and we somehow ended up buying horse food. Merimbula, Tura Beach and Tathra Wharf kept the coastline gorgeous, while our attempts at catching flathead, plaice and salmon were… optimistic. Bermagui and Dalmeny drifted by, and Central Tilba — which we’d visited in 2007–08 but completely forgotten — charmed us all over again. We met up with Steve & Laura around Forsters Bay and the Wagonga Inlet, cruised on the Wagonga Princess, and endured some sexist jokes that really should’ve stayed in 1973. Eurobodalla National Park, the Mill Bay boardwalk, rays gliding underfoot, and rain — lots of it — filled the days. Overpriced fish and chips by the campsite filled the stomachs (barely). Mogo, Batemans Bay, and then the Kings Highway (B52) hurled us over the Great Dividing Range — no photos because the driving was too terrifying. Braidwood, Bungendore, Bywong, Goulburn, Marulan, Mittagong… rural NSW rolled past in a blur of paddocks, cockatoos, horses and towns with names that sound like they were invented during a pub quiz. We wandered Balmoral, Buxton and Thirlmere, where the NSW Railway Museum delighted the inner train nerd. Silverdale and Warragamba Dam gave us engineering, a visitors centre, and Haviland Park. Then it was up to Narrabeen Lakes for some “class driving campaigns” (your words, Keef), before handing the van back to Britz in a new Mascot depot that felt like a maze. Public transport whisked us back to Beacon Hill — bus, train, bus — and then came the good life: views, pool, BBQs, movies, food, wine, beer, friends, family. The Manly bus (Route 169) became our chariot, the Manly Ferry our cruise ship, and Sydney Harbour our daily screensaver. We spotted the Voyager of the Seas (D&P&C would be on it two months later), picnicked in the Botanic Gardens, sat at Mrs Macquarie’s Chair, and watched sunsets that deserved applause. Opera night brought Carmen, the last ferry brought a possum in the dark, and sunny pool days around the Bali hut brought pure bliss. Opal cards kept us moving, and a rainy day took us to see Lion at Warringah Mall. &A had their own Sydney chapter with Laura & Steve — Blue Mountains, Parkes Observatory, the works. We squeezed in Jervis Bay, snakes, walks, rain, and a pool play‑session when Hannah and Connor visited. Balgowlah hosted a lamb dinner (yummy), and it was lovely seeing David & Hannah again. Sydney gave us one last weather mood swing — heavy rain then blazing sunshine — before another day out in the city: Manly Ferry, Circular Quay, Barangaroo Wharf, Cockle Bay, Darling Harbour, Harbourside, Hard Rock Café, a circular ferry trip, Pyrmont Bridge, Milsons Point, McMahons Point, Balmain East, Luna Park, the Emerald Princess, the Maritime Museum and the Endeavour. Sunsets wrapped it all up like a postcard. A rainy day meant movies: Goldstone (poor), Nocturnal Animals (good), and Gogglebox Australia (chaotic brilliance). Then came the train trip to Broadmeadow and Newcastle to visit Annie’s cousin Susan — Gosford, Wyong, the Hawkesbury River — and finally back from Tassie to the Ibis Budget Airport, where doughnuts betrayed us and a fire alarm kept things lively. And then… the flight to New Zealand.New South Wales had given us beaches, rainforests, ferries, friends, fish (sometimes), snakes, sunsets, possums, culture, chaos‑free fun, and enough stories to fill a season of travel TV. 169. Manly – City a Sydney bus via Narraweena & Seaforth Our stop Highlighted - full anarak 209541. Belgrave St near Raglan St, 209542. Pittwater Rd near Steinton St, 209543. Pittwater Rd near Pine St,209544. Pittwater Rd near Collingwood St 209545. Pittwater Rd near Balgowlah Rd,209546. Pittwater Rd near Eurobin Av,210030. Pittwater Rd near Queencliff Rd, 210032. IPittwater Rd near Oliver St 210033. Pittwater Rd near Riverview Pde,210034. Pittwater Rd near Western Av,210035. Pittwater Rd near Wakefield St ,210036. Pittwater Rd near Kentwell Rd 210037. Pittwater Rd near Sterland Av,2100111. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Mall,210015. Pittwater Rd near Roger St 210016. Pittwater Rd near Winbourne Rd 210017. Pittwater Rd near Pine Av,210018. Pittwater Rd near Federal Pde,210019. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Rd,209911. Pittwater Rd near May Rd 209912. Pittwater Rd near Pacific Pde,209913. Pittwater St Davids Av ,209996. Fisher Rd near Lewis St,209997. McIntosh Rd near Vale Av,209998. McIntosh Rd near Victor Rd 209999. McIntosh Rd near Beverley Job Park,2099100. McIntosh Rd near Mundara PI,209917. Alfred St near Oceania St,209918. Alfred St near Warringah Rd, 209992. Warringah Rd near Consul Rd,209993. Warringah Rd near Northcliffe Av,210067. Warringah Rd opp McKillop Rd,210068. Warringah Rd near Beacon Hill Rd (see 24-30 March) 210069. Warringah Rd near Willandra Rd,2100141. Warringah Rd near Earl St,210070. Warringah Rd near O'Connors Rd,210071. Warringah Rd near Goverment Rd, 210072. Warringah Rd near Jones St,208642. French Forest Rd near Patanga Rd,208643. Frenchs Forest Rd near Hurdis Av (Annie's old residence), 208644. Frenchs Forest Rd near Skyline PI,208637. Wakehurst Pwy near Frenchs Forest Rd,208674. Warrringah Rd near Bantry Bay Rd 208638. Wakehurst Pwy near Warringah Rd 208655. Wakehurst Pwy,208712. Wakehurst Pwy near Manly Dam Res,208713. Wakehurst Pwy near Kirkwood St,209254. Wakehurst Pwy near Judith St 209246. Wakehurst pwy near Burnt St,209247. Wakehurst Pwy near Armstrong St,209231. Wakehurst Pwy near Lister Av,209232. Wakehurst Pwy near Castle Cct 209233. Clontarf St near Montauban Av,209234. Frenchs Forest Rd near Montauban Av,209235. Frenchs Forest Rd near Baringa Av,209257. Frenchs Forest Rd near Macmillan St 209252. Sydney Rd near Hope St,209335. Manly Rd near Heaton Av,209212. Manly Rd near Avona Cr,208812. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,2088186. Spit Rd near Medusa St 2088187. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,2088188. Spit Rd near Stanton Rd,2088189. Spit Rd near Awaba St,2088243. Spit Rd at Clifford St,2088190. Spit road near Military Rd 2088192. Military Rd near Wudgong St,2088193. Military Rd near Lang St,2088194. Military Rd near Belmont Rd,209059. Military Rd near Cabramatta Rd 209019. Military Rd near Hampden Av,208944. Military Rd near Rangers Rd,208913. Military Rd near Wycombe Rd,208959. Military Rd at Bydown Lane,208960. Military Rd at Watson St 208912. Military Rd near Watson St,2000133. York St at Lang Park,200035. Wynyard Station, York St - Stand N,208657. Cemtery Front Gate Hakea Av,208671. Forest Way near Warringah Rd 208697. Naree Rd near Rabbett St,208649. Rabbett St near Holland Av,208664. Warrringah Rd near Bantry Bay Rd,200025. Wynyard Station, Carrington St - Stand E,200021. Wynyard Station, Carrington St - Stand A 208947. Military Rd near Watson St,208948. Military Rd near Wycombe Rd,209021. Military Rd near Hampden Av,209058. Military Rd near Cabramatta Rd,2088176. Military Rd near Prince St 2088177. Military Rd near Lang St,2088178. Military Rd near Bond St,2088179, Military Rd near Cowles Rd,2088180. Spit Junction, Spit Rd,2088181. Spit Rd near Awaba St 2088182. Spit Rd near Bickell Rd,2088183. Spit Rd near Quakers Rd, 2088184. Spit Rd near Medusa St,2088185. Spit Rd near Pearl Bay Av,208811. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,209213. Battle Bvde near Manly Rd 209214. Battle Bvd near Seaforth Cr,209215. Palmerston PI near Alan Av,209216. Ponsonby Pde near Palmerston PI,209222. Ponsonby Pde near Panorama Pde,209223. Ponsonby Pde near Sydney Rd 209224. Frenchs Forest Rd near Ellery Pde,209225. Frenchs Forest Rd near Macmillan St,209236. Frenchs Forest Rd near Baringa Av 209237. Frenchs Forest near Redman St 209238.Clontarf St near Montauban Av 209239. Wakehurst Pwy near Castle Cct,209240. Wakehurst Pwy near Lister Av, 209241. Wakehurst Pwy near Armstrong St,209242. Wakehurst Pwy near Burnt St 209243. Wakehurst Pwy near Judith St,209253. Wakehurst Pwy near Kirkwood St,208711. Wakehurst Pwy near Manly Dam Res,208630. Wakehurst Pwy,208631, Wakehurst pwy near Warringah Rd 208639. Frenchs Forest Rd near Skyline PI 208640. Frenchs Forest Rd near Romford Rd,208641. Frenchs Forest Rd near Inverness Av,208617. Frenchs Forest Rd near Patanga Rd 2100142. Warringah Rd near Jones St 2100143. Warringah Rd near Ellis Rd 2100144. Warringah Rd near Oxford Falls Rd,2100113. Warringah Rd near Cornish Av,2100114. Warringah Rd near Willandra Rd 2100139. Warringah Rd opp Beacon Hill Rd ,us again on the return journey, 2100140. Warringah Rd near McKillop Rd,2099106. Warringah Rd near Princess Mary St 2099107. Warringah Rd near Waratah Pde,2099108. Warringah Rd near Alfred St,2099119. Alfred St near Warringah Rd,2099120. Alfred St near Amaral St,2099122. Alfred St near McIntosh Rd 2099115. McIntosh Rd near Mundara PI 2099116. McIntosh Rd near Victor Rd 2099117. McIntosh Rd near Vale Av 2099118. Fisher Rd near St David Av,209922. Pittwater Rd near Howard Av 209923. Pittwater Rd near Pacific Pde,210021. Pittwater Rd near Harbord Rd,210022. Pittwater Rd near Carter Rd ,210023. Pittwater Rd near Mitchell Av,210025. Pittwater Rd near Chard Rd 210026. Pittwater Rd near Orchard Rd,2100131. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Mall Stand A,210041.Pittwater Rd near Sterland Av 210042. Pittwater Rd near Corrie Rd 210043. Pittwater Rd near Wakefield St,210044. Pittwater Rd near Western Av,210045. Pittwater near Riverview Pde ,210046. Pittwater Rd near Oliver St 210047.Pittwater Rd near Aitken Av 209547. Pittwater Rd near Eurobin Av,209548. Pittwater Rd near Balgowlah Rd 209549. Pittwater Rd near Collingwood St 209550. Pittwater Rd near Pine St 209551. Pittwater Rd near Carlton St,209552. Pittwater Rd near IRagIan St,209553. Belgrave St near Sydney Rd 209554. West Esplanade Stand B - MANLY 🌅🚍 A Day in the Life: Riding the 169 From Beacon Hill Morning light slid across Pine Avenue, catching the tops of the gum trees and the cockatoos already arguing about absolutely nothing. We stepped out of the old Beacon Hill pad, that familiar mix of sea breeze and eucalyptus drifting up from the valley. The hill sloped away beneath us — steep enough to wake the legs, gentle enough to pretend it wasn’t exercise. Down Pine Avenue, past the houses with their sun‑bleached fences, then left onto Beacon Hill Road. Cars hummed along Warringah Road below, the great concrete artery of the Northern Beaches. That was our target: the 169 stop, the gateway to Manly, Narraweena, Seaforth and the city beyond. We reached the stop just as the bus crested the rise — that classic blue-and-white Sydney livery, the driver giving the tiniest nod as if to say, “Hop on, mate.” Inside, the air‑con blasted like a gift from the heavens. Seats were a mix of schoolkids, office workers, and the occasional surfer who looked like he’d been awake since dawn. The bus rolled down Warringah Road, swung toward Dee Why, and then began the climb into Narraweena — the exact stretch you’ve got open on YouTube right now, maybe if you are viewing the Bus route video, it is an exact replica of the route. The houses leaned into the hill, the ocean glinting in the distance. At the top, the view opened up like a postcard. Through Seaforth we went, the bus weaving past sandstone houses and jacarandas. Then came The Spit Bridge, that iconic pinch point where the harbour suddenly appears — blue, bright, and full of boats that cost more than the bus itself. Neutral Bay brought cafés, commuters and the smell of fresh pastries we never quite had time to buy. And then, as always, the final glide into Wynyard, the city rising around us like a steel canyon. We stepped off into the hum of Sydney — ferries, trams, skyscrapers, the whole lot — knowing that at the end of the day, the 169 would carry us back up the hill, past the ocean, past the gum trees, and home to Beacon Hill (our Air B&B with pool for a week) and gave us and especially Annie many memories from her teenage years. A simple bus ride, but one stitched into memory like a favourite old photo. TASMANIA 4th - 8th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Early morning flight from Sydney to Launceston, Car hire, Evandale, Midland Highway, Powranna, Epping Forest, Cleveland, Campbell Town, Convicts, Nice egg and bacon pies, Wood carvings, Sunshine, Elizabeth river, Loggers, Conara, A4 Esk main road, Avoca, Fingal, St Mary's, Volcanic Mount, Purple possum café, Break O'Day municipality, Cornwall, Gray, Chain of Lagoons, Seymour, Douglas River, Tasman Highway, Bicheno, Picnics, Views, Scuba Divers, whales (if only!), Apslawn, Cranbrook, Swansea, John & Diana - so nice to see them again, wonderful hospitality, 9 mile beach, Mayfield, Rocky hill beach, Spiky bridge & beach, Swansea pier and beach, Freycinet national park, visitors centre, Wine glass bay, Cape Tourville lighthouse, the Road rage guide, Gravel roads, Friendly beaches, sunshine, fun, walks, Surfing, pristine empty beaches, Oyster bay, The Hazards, Coles bay, Triabunna, Maria island, Ferry, Tassie devils, Orford, Prosser estuary, Café, Cricket, Raspins Spit & beach & dunes, Petanque, History, East coast heritage museum @ Swansea, Tarleton, Thylacine, Family, Up early, Say goodbye, Back to Launceston Airport, John and Diana had moved to Swansea from Huonville, which is why we came into Launceston airport April 17 Diary SEE THE FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE, 10 Mins Memorial to the convict road, Campbell Town "Fun days with family in Swansea and beyond " So lovely to see John & Diana again Sunset over Swansea, we love Tassie Drive slowly, usual clever Kiwi road sign 2017 Tasmania, Pals stayed in Sydney & NSW with their family Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/13 ✈️🌞 THE FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE — IN 10 MINS! With a small injection of Humour! 🛫 Launceston Landing & The Great Pie Pilgrimage Touchdown in Launceston, grab the hire car, and off you zoom through Evandale and along the Midland Highway, ticking off towns like you’re speed‑dating Tasmania: Powranna, Epping Forest, Cleveland, Campbell Town. Campbell Town, of course, offers: Convict history Wood carvings Egg & bacon pies so good they should be heritage‑listed The sun is shining, the Elizabeth River sparkles, and the local loggers look like they’ve stepped straight out of a 1970s forestry calendar. 🚗 Eastward Ho! Through Volcano Country Onwards via Conara and the A4 Esk Highway, through Avoca, Fingal, and St Mary’s, where a volcanic mount looms dramatically and the Purple Possum Café tempts you with wholesome goodness. You officially enter the Break O’Day municipality, passing Cornwall, Gray, and the wonderfully named Chain of Lagoons. Then Seymour, Douglas River, and finally the Tasman Highway leads you to… 🐧 Bicheno — Where Whales Should Be Bicheno delivers: Picnics Views Scuba divers And whales… well, theoretically. (They must have been on their tea break.) 🏡 Swansea — The Reunion Tour Through Apslawn, Cranbrook, and into Swansea, where the real highlight awaits: John & Diana, freshly relocated from Huonville and offering warmth, hospitality, and enough food to feed a small rugby squad. Local attractions include: 9 Mile Beach Mayfield Rocky Hill Beach Spiky Bridge & Spiky Beach Swansea Pier Swansea Beach Basically: beaches, beaches, and more beaches — all pristine, empty, and showing off. ⛰️ Freycinet: Where Postcards Come From A day trip to Freycinet National Park brings: Visitors Centre Wineglass Bay (ridiculously beautiful) Cape Tourville Lighthouse Friendly Beaches The Hazards Coles Bay You also consult the Road Rage Guide, which is presumably a polite Tasmanian pamphlet saying, “Please don’t.” Gravel roads, sunshine, walks, surfing, fun — the full Tassie sampler platter. 🦘 Triabunna, Maria Island & Devilish Encounters Next stop: Triabunna, where the ferry whisks you to Maria Island, home of: Tassie devils History Wildlife And the kind of scenery that makes you consider quitting your job and becoming a ranger Back on the mainland, Orford and the Prosser Estuary offer cafés, cricket, Raspins Spit, dunes, petanque, and more history than you can shake a thylacine at. Speaking of which — the East Coast Heritage Museum in Swansea gives you a good look at the legendary thylacine, plus a reminder that Tasmania does museums just as well as beaches. 🧳 Homeward Bound - Well Back on the trail to Beacon Hill Air B&B and Sydney Up early, bags packed, hugs exchanged. Back to Launceston Airport, because John & Diana’s move to Swansea means this is now the official family gateway. A whirlwind, sun‑drenched, pie‑powered, beach‑blessed FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE — all in one glorious loop.

  • 2016 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Europe Scandinavia Motorhoming

    Practical tips for motorhoming across Europe and Scandinavia in 2016—routes, costs, campsites, planning advice and insights from months on the road. 2016 Travel Blog & Guide - Scandinavia 🗺️ SCANDINAVIA 2016 — MASTER ROUTE LIST Chronological - All locations extracted directly from Blog 100 motorhome travels 🇬🇧 UK → 🇳🇱 Netherlands 8 May – 11 May Harwich → Dovercourt (Green Acres) Harwich → Stena Britannica ferry → Hook of Holland (Europort) Zandvoort (De Branding campsite) – 2 nights Amsterdam (day trip) 11–13 May Zandvoort → Koudum (Vakantiepark De Kuilart) – 2 nights Koudum → Weidum (Wiedumerhout campsite) – 2 nights 🇳🇱 Netherlands → 🇩🇪 Germany 15–16 May Weidum → Wingst (Knaus Campingpark) Wingst → Wischhafen → Elbe ferry → Glückstadt Rendsburg → Sehestedt ferry → Schlei-Karschau (pitch 7) 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇩🇰 Denmark 17–19 May Schlei-Karschau → Flensburg → Mommark Marina Camping (pitch 63) – 2 nights Sonderby → Rømø → Havneby → Ribe → Esbjerg (2 nights) 21–23 May Esbjerg → Billund → Silkeborg → Viborg → Farsø Farsø → Limfjorden → Aalborg → Hirtshals → Skagen (pitch 76) 23–26 May Skagen → Randers → Aarhus → Jelling → Middelfart Middelfart → Odense → Svendborg → Tåsinge → Langeland (Emmerbølle Strand) – 2 nights Langeland → Sio → Tåsinge → Nyborg → Storebælt Bridge → Roskilde → Holbæk (2 nights) 28 May Holbæk → Helsingør → Kronborg → Fredensborg → Frederiksborg → Holbæk 🇩🇰 Denmark → 🇸🇪 Sweden 28–29 May Holbæk → Øresund Bridge → Malmö → Lund → Kristianstad → Åhus (campsite) 29–31 May Åhus → Karlshamn → Karlskrona → Kalmar → Öland Island Beijershamn Ottenby / Långe Jan lighthouse Mörbylånga (campsite) 30–31 May Mörbylånga → Borgholm → Solliden → Pataholm → Mönsterås (pitch 8) 31 May – 1 June Mönsterås → Oskarshamn → Västervik → Sandvik → Källvik → Valdemarsvik (fjord campsite) 1–2 June Valdemarsvik → Göta Canal (Norrköping) → Oxelösund (campsite) 🇸🇪 Sweden — Stockholm Region 2–5 June Oxelösund → Stockholm (Bredäng campsite) – 3 nights Gamla Stan Vasa Museum Harbour cruise ABBA Museum (outside) Hard Rock Café City sightseeing bus 5 June Stockholm → Kapellskär (campsite) 🇸🇪 Sweden → 🇫🇮 Finland (via Åland Islands) 6 June Kapellskär → Finnfellow ferry → Långnäs (Åland) → Naantali (Finland) Naantali campsite (sea views) 7–8 June Naantali → Hanko → Helsinki (Rastila campsite) – 2 nights Helsinki HOHO bus Market Square Cathedral Olympic Stadium Harbour Hard Rock Café 9–10 June Helsinki → Porvoo → Vaalimaa (Russian border) → Hamina (campsite) 10–11 June Hamina → Turku → Naantali (pitch 51) 11 June Naantali → Finneagle ferry → Kapellskär (pitch 16) 🇸🇪 Sweden — Northbound 12–14 June Kapellskär → Uppsala → Dragon Gate → Gävle → Rättvik → Mora → Orsa → Älvdalen (2 nights) 14 June Älvdalen → Nusnäs (Dala Horse factory) → Särna → Idre → Cross into Norway 🇳🇴 Norway — Fjords & Mountains 14–15 June Idre → Engerdal National Park → Hedmark (campsite) 15–16 June Hedmark → Hanestad → Tynset → Tolga → Os → Røros (UNESCO) 16–17 June Røros → Støren → Hell → Trondheim → Vikhammer → Flakk (campsite) 17–18 June Flakk → Halsa ferry → Kanestraum → Surnadal → Kristiansund (Byskogen campsite) 18–19 June Kristiansund → Molde → Vestnes → Stranda → Loen/Stryn (Lo-Vik campsite) 19–20 June Loen → Jostedalsbreen NP → Fjærland Glacier Centre → Sogndal (Kjørnes campsite) 20–21 June Sogndal → Mannheller ferry → Fodnes → Lærdal Tunnel → Aurlandsfjord → Nesbo Tunnel → Hovet (Hol) 21–22 June Hovet → Gol → Dokka → Lillehammer → Øyer → Hunderfossen (campsite) 22–24 June Hunderfossen → Oslo (Ekeberg campsite) – 2 nights Frogner Park Fram Museum Viking Ship Museum Royal Palace Harbour Karl Johans Gate 🇳🇴 Norway → 🇸🇪 Sweden → 🇩🇰 Denmark 24–25 June Oslo → Ski → Momarken → Ørje → Töcksfors → Årjäng (Midsummer festival) 25–26 June Årjäng → Trollhättan → Göta Canal → Stenungsund → Orust Island → Ellös (campsite) 26–27 June Ellös → Gothenburg → Varberg (campsite) 27–30 June Varberg → Helsingborg → Malmö → Copenhagen → Køge (Stevns campsite) – 3 nights Køge Rødvig Stege 🇩🇰 Denmark → 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇳🇱 Netherlands → 🇬🇧 UK 30 June – 1 July Køge → Farø Bridge → Guldborgsund → Lolland → Sakskøbing Rødby → Schleswig-Holstein ferry → Puttgarden Puttgarden → Plön (Plönsee campsite) 2–3 July Plön → Hamburg → Garlstorf (campsite) Garlstorf → Hemslingen → Bremen (campsite) 4–5 July Bremen → Osnabrück → Tubbergen (Netherlands) Tubbergen → Bilthoven → Utrecht (day trip) 6–7 July Bilthoven → Gouda → Delft → Delftse Hout campsite Delft → Hoek van Holland → Harwich (delayed ferry) Home (3 a.m., freezer disaster!) 16 Route Visuals SUMMARY United Kingdom – Essex – Harwich Netherlands – South Holland – Hook of Holland Netherlands – South Holland – Rotterdam Netherlands – North Holland – Zandvoort Netherlands – North Holland – Amsterdam Netherlands – Friesland – Koudum Netherlands – Friesland – Weidum Germany – Lower Saxony – Wingst Germany – Lower Saxony – Wischhafen Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Glückstadt Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Rendsburg Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Schlei-Karschau Denmark – South Jutland – Flensburg Denmark – South Jutland – Mommark Denmark – South Jutland – Sønderby Denmark – South Jutland – Rømø Denmark – South Jutland – Ribe Denmark – South Jutland – Esbjerg Denmark – Central Jutland – Billund Denmark – Central Jutland – Silkeborg Denmark – Central Jutland – Viborg Denmark – North Jutland – Farsø Denmark – North Jutland – Limfjorden Denmark – North Jutland – Aalborg Denmark – North Jutland – Skagen Denmark – South Jutland – Jelling Denmark – Funen – Middelfart Denmark – Funen – Odense Denmark – Funen – Svendborg Denmark – Funen – Tåsinge Denmark – Funen – Langeland Denmark – Funen – Nyborg Denmark – Zealand – Roskilde Denmark – Zealand – Holbæk Denmark – Zealand – Helsingør Denmark – Zealand – Fredensborg Denmark – Zealand – Hillerød Sweden – Skåne – Malmö Sweden – Skåne – Lund Sweden – Skåne – Kristianstad Sweden – Skåne – Åhus Sweden – Blekinge – Karlshamn Sweden – Blekinge – Karlskrona Sweden – Småland – Kalmar Sweden – Öland – Beijershamn Sweden – Öland – Mörbylånga Sweden – Öland – Ottenby Lighthouse Sweden – Öland – Borgholm Sweden – Öland – Solliden Sweden – Småland – Pataholm Sweden – Småland – Mönsterås Sweden – Småland – Oskarshamn Sweden – Småland – Västervik Sweden – Östergötland – Valdemarsvik Sweden – Östergötland – Norrköping Sweden – Södermanland – Oxelösund Sweden – Stockholm County – Stockholm Sweden – Stockholm County – Kapellskär Åland Islands – Åland – Långnäs Finland – Southwest Finland – Naantali Finland – Uusimaa – Hanko Finland – Uusimaa – Helsinki Finland – Uusimaa – Porvoo Finland – Kymenlaakso – Hamina Finland – Southwest Finland – Turku Finland – Southwest Finland – Naantali (return) Sweden – Stockholm County – Kapellskär (return) Sweden – Uppsala County – Uppsala Sweden – Gävleborg – Gävle Sweden – Dalarna – Rättvik Sweden – Dalarna – Mora Sweden – Dalarna – Orsa Sweden – Dalarna – Älvdalen Sweden – Dalarna – Nusnäs Sweden – Dalarna – Särna Sweden – Dalarna – Idre Norway – Innlandet – Engerdal Norway – Innlandet – Hedmark region Norway – Trøndelag – Røros Norway – Trøndelag – Trondheim Norway – Møre og Romsdal – Kristiansund Norway – Møre og Romsdal – Molde Norway – Vestland – Stryn Norway – Vestland – Sogndal Norway – Viken – Hovet Norway – Innlandet – Lillehammer Norway – Oslo – Oslo Sweden – Värmland – Årjäng Sweden – Västra Götaland – Trollhättan Sweden – Västra Götaland – Göta Canal region Sweden – Västra Götaland – Orust Island Sweden – Västra Götaland – Ellös Sweden – Västra Götaland – Gothenburg Sweden – Halland – Varberg Denmark – Zealand – Copenhagen Denmark – Zealand – Køge Denmark – Zealand – Farø Bridge Denmark – Lolland – Rødby Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Puttgarden Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Plön Germany – Hamburg – Hamburg Germany – Lower Saxony – Garlstorf Germany – Bremen – Bremen Germany – Lower Saxony – Osnabrück Netherlands – Overijssel – Tubbergen Netherlands – Utrecht – Bilthoven Netherlands – Utrecht – Utrecht Netherlands – South Holland – Gouda Netherlands – South Holland – Delft United Kingdom – Essex – Harwich (return) Practical tips for motorhoming across Europe and Scandinavia in 2016—routes, costs, campsites, planning advice and insights from months on the road. 🗺️ Planning a European or Scandinavian motorhome trip? Our 2016 guide brings together real on‑the‑road experience: routes, costs, campsites, border tips, fuel insights and the little things that make long‑distance touring smoother. From Norway’s dramatic landscapes to Europe’s easy‑rolling highways, this guide captures what we learned over months on the move so you can plan with confidence. Camping with a view, Norway The write up is coming......

  • 17 New Zealand | Decades of Travel

    needs to be created by KHWD once the 2017 new zealand page has been created NEW ZEALAND - Kiwi Adventures 9th April - 30th May 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY NORTH ISLAND We landed in Auckland back from the Cook Isles and picked up our motorhomes and headed north to Cape Reinga, (don't mention the tyre). Love Northlands. We also visited Orewa & Whangerei together before C&A principally did the west coast and us the east pulling in Coromandel, Port Jackson, Papamoa beach, Gentle Annie pass, Hastings before making our way south to Wellington where we met up before catching the Interisland ferry to south island. We also met up at Whakapapa village en route. SOUTH ISLAND We landed at Picton and visited the fabulous Queen Charlotte sound before taking in such places as Nelson (WOW museum of wearable art and classic cars) , Abel Tasman NP , Kaikoura , Christchurch (although sadly still devastated by the 2010 quake), Dunedin & the Otago peninsular, Akaroa, Milford Sound, Queenstown, Te Anau and a whole lot more before returning to Christchurch and a last Lone star meal before flying back via Sydney to Hong Kong & Singapore respectively. April 17 Diary May 17 Diary Sheep Street , Dunedin, World's steepest "North & South Island by Interisland Ferry, Wellington to Picton" Prior to our Tandem Bungee Jump NOT!, Queenstown, South Island Te Mata from the Top, Hastings, East Coast, North Island Drive slowly, usual clever Kiwi road sign 2017 New Zealand with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/13 gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/62 gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/48 NORTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND 9th-10th April then 18th 30th April - 11th May 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY NORTH ISLAND This is a verbal summary Arrived (1st time) in Auckland from Sydney, Overnight then Cook Isles, Walk, Wait, Agapanthus, Arrived (2nd time) from Rarotonga, Cook Isles. 3 days central area, harbour, wharves, ferries,coast to coast walk (for C&A) , Maritime museum, murals, tepid baths,Britomart, Queens wharf, Quay st, Federal St, Churches, slopes,Hobson west marina, Masters games, Wynyard quarter, amazing architecture,Fish market, Heritage landing, North Wharf, Sarah, Pier 4, Rangitoto, Volcanic explorer tour,Summit views, Motutapu, Lava, Sunshine, Day out in Devonport, The Arcade, Esplanade Hotel,Victoria Road, King & Queens parade, various reserves, Mount Victoria, Clarys, Haircut, Hauraki gulf, Auckland art gallery, Maoiri paintings,The body laid bare exhibition, Joseph at the Civic, Collecting vans at Richard Pearce drive, Mangere, Auckland, Extra hidden costs, Orewa, Beach, Man with tourettes, Orewa beach,Countdown/Pac-N-Save/New World,shells, historic Puhoi, Twin coast highway, Mangawhai heads, Ruakaka beach, Whangerai, Hatea river, Town basin, glassblowing, canopy bridge, Tutikaka, Matapouri, Kawakawa, Ohua, Okiato, Russell, Hundertwasser, Hangi,Clapham clocks, Waterfall , Manawoara, Rawhiti, wetlands, marae, Waimarama bay, Bay of Islands, Historic Russell, pier, boat ramps, ferries, sunshine, exotic sub tropical plants, Tapeka point, Rocky bay reserve, Weka, Paihai, Water taxis, Waitangi, Whangaroa, marlin, wharfs & jetties, Volcanic plus, 90 mile beach, Twilight beach, Tapotupotu bay, DOC, Tyres R Us, Kevin the AAman, Cape Reinga, Lighthouse, Te Paki reserve, Old Kahina tree, Views to die for, Te Paki sand dunes, Broadwood, Kohukohu, Hokianga ferry, Twin coast highway, Rawene, Opononi, Aria-te-aru reserve, South heads, historic Dargaville, meeting up with C&A again in countdown car park, Donelly crossing, loggers, fab kiwi trees, Kaiwaka, farm stay, outside loo with a view, C&A visited lake Kai Iwi on the way to Dargaville, we did east coast, they did west coast, remet Whakapapa village then Wellington, Kaipara coast sculpture park, Helensville, Ginger crunch railway cafe, flat whites, Railways, Thames, Coromandel peninsular & Forest park, Wharf, Ferry, Shelly beach, Colville, Horse, Wahine, Music festival, Buddist retreat, Port Jackson, gravel road,Top of coro, Mercury bay, Tairua, freedom camping, waves, rain (lots),fishing off rocks, Waihi beach, Katikati, murals, Mount Manganui, Pilot bay, Marine parade, Motuotou & Moturiki islands, boysenberry icecream, Papamoa beach, beach street, strelitzia,Maori sculpture, bluebiyou restuarant, chalets, sunshine, relaxing, fun, chatting to guy from england , Pikowai, Pacific coast highway, Te Puke, Thornton, Whakatane, 2 islands, Smokin' volcano, Edgecumbe floods, Mt Edgecombe, Galatea road, sickly horse, Lunch at lake Aniwhenua, autumn colours, Hydro electric dam, Kopuriki, Road only just opened due to floods, Murupara, Maori funeral, Forests, Lake Taupo, Reids Carving, Breweries, Fooderies, Outrigger boats, Tourist info, icecream, Lake lookout, DOC site, Free, Tongariro views, sunsets, fishing boats, great sleep, cold at night - getting so, 5 mile bay site, Motuoapa bay, licorice (spelling haha!) cafe, flat whites, black swans, novelty VW cabins, Desert road, Turangi,National Park, Restuarant (not this time), Tranz Alpine station, Whakapapa village, rain, meeting up with C&A again at the dump station, Visitors centre, Cafe coffee, snow, Chateau Tongariro, Taihape, Gumboots, Spooner hill road, sheep, cows, Gentle annie pass, Moawhango, views to die for, Rangitikei river, Silverdale historic bridge, Valleys, Mountains, Hastings , 1930s architecture,Queens & Railway St, Westermans, Clock tower, Te Mata peak, Ocean beach, Waimarama, Blue cod, Fish & chips St Aubyn st, Surfers, Havelock north, Duart house and gardens, Murals, Wineries, Tukituki river, Kairakau beach, reflections, Paua shells, ice creams at waipawa, Waipukurau, Lake Hatuma, Wanstead, Wallingford bridge, sheep (again), Porangahau, Never finding the beach down the gravel road (cooks tooth), Longest name of place in the world (no don't ask me to spell it ;) ) ,Pacific Ocean, Cape Turnagain, Our hero Capt Cook, Herbertville, Wimbeldon, Route 52, Pongaroa, Eketahuna, Pagans, Hippies, Sacrificing virgins (ok maybe not!), Electricity, Late at night, Kiwi country, Herberts store, Steak & Cheese Pies, Museum, Masterton, Wool shed, Joseph Masters, Queen Elizabeth park, Aratoi, Maori ripoff, Tinui, Anzac church & cross, Castlepoint, Deliverance cove, Riversdale beach, Wairarapa wine region, late night into Martinborough, Memorial square, Pain & Kershaw, lake Ferry, Lake Okone and spit, old motorhomes, Cape Palliser, Paua shells, Palliser bay, Ngawi, Tractors, Rock lobster, Road slips,Putangirua pinnacles , Wellington Top10 campsite (so changed), Harbour from Pencarrow head to Lyall bay, shells, ferries, Ward island, Wellesley college, Eastbourne, Day bay,Wahine disaster,Moa point, Middle earth, Trolley buses, Waterfront at night, Te Papa, Macs Brewery, Curry, up early for Interislander ferry, Traffic jams April 17 Diary May 17 Diary SEE THE FULL NORTH ISLAND EXPERIENCE, 1hr 55mins "North Island from Cape Reinga to Ferry at Wellington" Pals, as far north as you can go in New Zealand, Cape Reinga Our beloved Papamoa beach site, best in the world in our humble opinion Class eh? I'd say Australia has more naff icons but I could be wrong #smile Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/62 North Island New Zealand — A Coherent Travel Story We first touched down in Auckland after the hop from Sydney, just long enough for an overnight pause before flying out again to the Cook Islands. When we returned a few days later from Rarotonga, Auckland became our base for a deeper wander. Three days exploring the central city gave us harbourside strolls, ferries, murals, the Maritime Museum, the Tepid Baths, Britomart, Queens Wharf, Quay Street, Federal Street, and those famously steep slopes. We drifted through Hobson West Marina, the Masters Games crowds, Wynyard Quarter, the fish market, Heritage Landing and North Wharf. Sunshine followed us out to Rangitoto for the Volcanic Explorer tour — lava fields, Motutapu views, and a summit panorama worth every step. Devonport gave us its arcades, the Esplanade Hotel, Victoria Road, reserves, Mount Victoria, and even a haircut at Clary’s. We dipped into the Auckland Art Gallery, admired Māori works, browsed The Body Laid Bare exhibition, and rounded it off with a night at Joseph at the Civic. Collecting vans at Richard Pearce Drive in Mangere came with the usual “extra hidden costs”, but soon we were rolling north toward Orewa — beach walks, shells, supermarkets, and a memorable encounter with a man with Tourette’s. Puhoi’s history led us onto the Twin Coast Highway, through Mangawhai Heads, Ruakaka Beach, and into Whangārei’s Hatea River precinct with its town basin, glassblowing studios, and canopy bridge. Tutukaka, Matapouri, Kawakawa and its Hundertwasser touches, Ohaeawai, Okiato and Russell followed — a swirl of subtropical plants, marae, wetlands, waterfalls, Waimarama Bay, and the Bay of Islands sunshine. Russell’s pier, boat ramps, ferries, and Tapeka Point gave us Weka sightings and rocky bays, while Paihia and Waitangi added water taxis, history, and harbour life. Whangaroa’s marlin stories and volcanic landscapes set the tone for the long drive north. Ninety Mile Beach, Twilight Beach, Tapotupotu Bay, and the Te Paki dunes were wild and unforgettable — though the tyres weren’t, thanks to Tyres R Us and Kevin the AA man. Cape Reinga’s lighthouse and the meeting of the seas were breathtaking. From there we looped through Broadwood, Kohukohu, the Hokianga ferry, Rawene, Opononi, and the Aria-te-aru Reserve. South Heads and Dargaville (where we reunited with C&A in a Countdown car park) led us through Donnelly’s Crossing, logging country, and forests of magnificent Kiwi trees. Kaiwaka brought a farm stay with an outside loo and a view. C&A detoured to Lake Kai Iwi while we took the east coast, meeting again later at Whakapapa Village and eventually Wellington. Before that, though, we wandered the Kaipara Coast Sculpture Park, Helensville, and the Ginger Crunch Railway Café — flat whites and railway nostalgia. Thames and the Coromandel Peninsula gave us wharves, ferries, Shelly Beach, Colville, horses, a Wahine, a music festival, a Buddhist retreat, and the gravel road to Port Jackson at the very top of the peninsula. Mercury Bay, Tairua, freedom camping, waves, rain (lots of it), fishing off rocks, Waihi Beach, and Katikati’s murals carried us east toward Mount Maunganui. Pilot Bay, Marine Parade, Motuotou and Moturiki Islands, boysenberry ice cream, Papamoa Beach, strelitzias, Māori sculpture, and dinner at Bluebiyou made that stretch a highlight. Further along the Pacific Coast Highway we passed Pikowai, Te Puke, Thornton, and Whakatāne with its offshore islands and smoking volcano. Edgecumbe’s flood scars and Mt Edgecumbe’s silhouette led us inland via Galatea Road — sickly horses, autumn colours, Lake Aniwhenua for lunch, hydro dams, Kopuriki, and roads only just reopened after storms. Murupara brought a Māori funeral procession, then forests opened out toward Lake Taupō. We visited the Reids carving, breweries, eateries, outrigger boats, the lookout, DOC sites, sunsets, fishing boats, and a very cold night’s sleep. Five Mile Bay, Motuoapa, the liquorice café, black swans, novelty VW cabins, and the Desert Road carried us south to Turangi, National Park, and Whakapapa Village — rain, snow, the Chateau Tongariro, and another rendezvous with C&A at the dump station. Taihape’s gumboots, Spooner Hill Road, sheep, cows, and the Gentle Annie Pass gave us sweeping views over the Rangitīkei River and the Silverdale historic bridge. Hastings welcomed us with 1930s architecture, Queens Street, Railway Street, Westermans, the clock tower, Te Mata Peak, Ocean Beach, Waimarama, blue cod, fish and chips on St Aubyn Street, surfers, Havelock North, Duart House, murals, wineries, and the Tukituki River. Kairakau Beach shimmered with reflections; Waipawa offered ice creams; Waipukurau, Lake Hatuma, Wanstead, Wallingford Bridge, and more sheep filled the road south. Porangahau teased us with a beach we never found down a gravel road, and the world’s longest place name (which we absolutely weren’t spelling). Cape Turnagain honoured Captain Cook, while Herbertville, Wimbledon, Route 52, Pongaroa, and Eketahuna added their own rural quirks — pagans, hippies, sacrificing virgins (or not), electricity outages, and late-night Kiwi country vibes. Herbert’s Store delivered steak and cheese pies, and a small museum stop rounded things out. Masterton brought the Wool Shed, Joseph Masters, Queen Elizabeth Park, Aratoi, and a Māori “ripoff” moment. Tinui’s ANZAC church and cross, Castlepoint’s lighthouse and Deliverance Cove, and Riversdale Beach led us into the Wairarapa wine region. We rolled into Martinborough late at night, circled Memorial Square, stocked up at Pain & Kershaw, and carried on to Lake Ferry, Lake Ōkore, the spit, old motorhomes, Cape Palliser, paua shells, Ngawi’s tractor fleet, rock lobster pots, road slips, and the Putangirua Pinnacles. Finally, Wellington — the Top 10 (much changed), the harbour from Pencarrow Head to Lyall Bay, shells, ferries, Ward Island, Wellesley College, Eastbourne, Day’s Bay, the Wahine disaster site, Moa Point, Middle‑earth filming spots, trolley buses, the waterfront at night, Te Papa, Mac’s Brewery, curry, and an early start for the Interislander ferry… plus the inevitable traffic jams. A long, winding, unforgettable North Island odyssey — full of beaches, bays, forests, ferries, food, friends, and the kind of moments that only happen when you let the road decide what comes next. SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND 11th - 30th May 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY SOUTH ISLAND This is a verbal summary Arrived in Picton from Wellington on the Interislander ferry, Early morning start, Very wet day (haha welcome to south island), Shakespeare bay, Queen Charlotte Sound, Queen Charlotte drive, Ngakuta bay,Havelock, Green Mussels (yummy), Read all about mussels opposite (please) its very informative, Lady from Auckland, Freshness, straight from the sea, Long windy wet drive to Nelson, Town centre camp site over a bridge with a stream, nice calming stream noises, WOW museum and classic cars, so many clever costumes (see the slideshows),Lippydeema, Lord Maharajah and the Star bride, Goodbye Versaille starring Mrs Du Barry's monkey, Ishmaelian wingflapper to name but a few... go on look, you wont be disappointed.... What's the line "WOW makes Lady Gaga look like a librarian", Amazing Bras, Cars were Minis , Locomobiles, Vauxhall Vivas, Shaguar and many more, Tahunanui beach reserve , Board walks, Lunch, Winery areas, Pears, Apples, Kaiteriteri, Beach front history, sunsets, Wilsons ferries, Beached Whale pub, Fire, Singing barman, Rugby - Christchurch Vs Wellington, Abel Tasman National Park, The man who emptied his loo in the water area and covered it with leaves (Yuk! Sick!), Abel tasman boat trip, Totaroa, Awaroa, Medlands, Tonga Quarry, Torrent Bay, Bark Bay, Picnic, Coffee, Wind & Sun, New Zealand fur seal, Adele island and many other islands, kayaking, Solar panels, Tides , Motueka river, Kahurangi National park, Low cloud, Hinetai hops, Tapawera,Railways, Old police stations, Wooden Cow, Eels, Lake Rotoiti, Mr Angry and his boat, St Arnaud, Lake Rotoroa, Wet feet, nature walk, Red toadstools, Trees, colourful leaves, Buller river, Murchison, Heritage area, Fuel fillup, Buller Gorge Swing bridge, Waterfalls, Earthquakes, Floods, 2010,1929,White creek peninsular circular walk, Wagtails, Wekas, Bushline walk, Araki waterfalls, Logging on the buller,Springs junction for a pie lunch, Lewis pass, Waiau river, Kaikoura range, Road to Kaikoura Highway 70 via Rotherham and Waiau as SH1 closed due to Kaikoura earthquake 2016, Kaikoura camp site, Fish & Chips in town at No2, the best one (Tiki Takeaways) was sadly closed, Fyffe Quay, Old House chimney remains, Mountains, Snow covering, Boardwalk, The Point, Seal colony, No fishing, Smells, Views, Seals asleep on boardwalk and rocks, Road back, Many roadslips, Woodchester, Monet autumn views, man with coffee, Rejoin empty SH2 via Waiau, Christchurch, Britz office, Extra bedding, C&As van fixed - brakes/ headlamp bulb, Ours for internal light only, School party and rain at Christchurch Top10 site, Blue route bus into Bus station, Ballantynes department store, Devestation, Sad, Cathedral, Customs House, Chalice sculpture, Vintage trams, New Regent Street, Murals, Container City, Quake museum, Kiwi humour in the face of adversity, Columbo street, Mexican restuarant, Workman everywhere, often playing, Rain, Loosing each other on ring road around the airport, Sheffield pies,West coast road, Lake Lyndon, Castle Hill, snow, mountains, roads, State Highway 73, Kumara Junction, Great alpine way, Grasmere, Lake Pearson, great farming flats, Cass laggon track, Otira gorge and viaduct, Jackson tavern, Arthurs pass, Arthurs pass national park, Waimakariri river, Railways,Tranz alpine, Bridal veil falls and lookout, Visitors centre, Cobb & co stagecoach, Devils punchbowl bridge,Kumara gold town, Theatre, Hokitika, Tasman sea, Old town, Signs and chairs, Glow worms, Rainbows (lots of them), Ross Gold mining town, gaol, Heritage walk, Gold panning, Chinese influence, Jones flats, Museum, De Bakker cottage, Philip Ross May (local hero & Historian),Autumn colours, Mine shaft, Catholic church, Mining Memorabilia, New ross gold mine, Hari Hari, Guy Menzies, 1st solo flight Oz to Nz, Southern cross junior, Lunch, Whataroa river, Glacier flights, Rain, Glacier highway, Franz Josef wet walk, receding glacier, pain in knees , Lake Ianthe, Fox Glacier, Blue lake, Moraine, Haast valley, Bruce Bay, Stones for messages, Lake Matheson walks and views, Cafe, Coffee, Snow cover peaks, Knights point lookout, Whale watching, Mother and calf, Fox Glacier ski village, Pollax point peaks, Haast village, Haast campsite, Sunset, Eeerie colours on the peaks, Having to move pitches as the power didn't work at Haast Top10, Haasy-Jackson Bay road, Oturu, Harbour, Fan tails, Oturu river, Whitebait, Lobsters, Bridges (many), Neils Beach, Shearwaters, Hannahs crossing, Jackson Bay, Wharf (dodgy), Visitors centre, Whalers chimney remains, Whale (sighted by Annie), Pioneers, Fishing community, Return to Haast, Fuel station out, haast pass, Cameron Flat, Lunch, Mt Brewster and others, more snow, Mount Aspiring, Lake Wanaka, The Neck, Lake Hawea, Boundary Creek, Makarora Jack, Albert Town, Hawea, Wanaka, Snow predicted -2 it didnt arrive (hooray), Cold at night, Wanaka shore line, Luggate, Old motor cars, Town hall, Luggate - Cromwell Road, Tannersley estate vineyard, Lake Dunstan, 45th parallel, Lowburn, Mountain reflections, Cool seed pods, The Remarkables,Cromwell town - both new and old, Printing presses, Horses, Cartwheels, Paua art,Fruit town, sunshine, Goldfields, Kawarau gorge, Roaring Meg, Hydro power, A J Hackett bungy jumping, Warm outdoor fires, kawarau bridge, Shotover gorge, Queenstown campsite, Lake Wakatipu, Rainbows, Snow, Lumsden junction, Kingston, Old railway bridge, Garston, Mossburn, Stock crossing, Te Anau, lake Te Anau, Picture drome, Library, Coffee, Float planes, Kelpler track, Layby with Kea, Naughty alpine parrots - Kea, Car stripping trims, Homer Tunnel, waterfalls, Road slips, Rain, Milford sound lodge and camping ground, Milford village, Cruise terminal, Milford Mariner (our nature cruise boat), Nature cruise, NZ fur seals, Heron, Milford Sound is one of the true modern wonders of the world, Sigh loved it and nice to do it with pals, Low clouds, Mitre peak, The footstool, Sindbad gully, Many cruise liners, Massive crowds, Fur seals, Coffee, Warmth, Winds and cold,Tutoko Historic Suspension Bridge , Valley and river, Hollyford river and lookout, The Chasm walk and Kea (again) , Homer tunnel return, Mirroe lakes, such reflections, Ta Anau again, pitch where we camped in a tent in 2008, still there by the roses, Mossburn deer capital of NZ, red tussock grass, Lumsden, Gore, Clock tower and art gallery, Balclutha for a fab fish & chip lunch, Southern scenic highway, Dunedin, Otago peninsular (right hand coast), Taiaroa head scenic reserve, Royal Albatross centre, Prince Charles, Pilots beach, Blue Penguins (see video part 4), Portobello, Company bay, Broad bay, Wycliffe bay, Hooper inlet, Sandfly bay, Cape Saunders, Pilot beach viewing platform, Waiwhakeheke bay, Lighthouse, Dick Road, Allan beach, Sheep branding, Flotsam & jetsam, Lovely beach flowers, Highcliff road (scary and roadslips but great views), Dunedin city, Signal Hill lookot and memorial, University Oval cricket ground Dunedin, Baldwin street (the steepest in the world and I have the t-shirt somewhere to prove it!), Dunedin station lit up, travelling back to Portobello around the peninsular at night spectacular lights, Dunedin Vogel street murals, Blueskin Road, 19 Fathoms Foul memorial, Robert Falcon Scott memorial, Blueskin bay, Quarentine and Rakiriri islands, Waikouaiti and river, Karitane, Seacliff lookout, Pies in Waikouati village, Bushy beach reserve, Hide, Yellow eyed penguins, Oamaru victorian precinct, Jetty, Friendly Bay,Farmers market, Grain stores, Brewery, Distillery, Station, Picture frame, Steam punk (lots of it - class),Fat controller and the steam railway,Rakaia - salmon capital and goal, Banks Peninsular, Hilltop views, Akaroa, French very french, Jetty, Cinema, Passport office, Monet, Bedroom with a view, Churches, Roses, cats, Barrys bay, Little river, Silo stays, Over the hills in the rain, Gebbies pass, Dyers pass,Sugar loaf scenic reserve, Riccarton, Apollo motel (room11), Lone star last supper, Early rise, nice family, Airport off to Singapore (us), Hong Kong (C&A), tears, coffee in Sydney airport airside, Great times May 17 Diary SEE THE FULL SOUTH ISLAND EXPERIENCE, 1 hr 57mins "South Island as far as the Albatross sanctuary in Dunedin" Mussel men at Havelock Pot Yummy, what a menu, want more To see the Dunedin Albatross live webcam, click here View More Milford Sound Lodge and Camping was where we stayed, so convenient , a simple walk to the jetty for Sound boats View More We love Hokitika, glow worms, cinema show with sofa and wine and all Cromwell Historic Precinct , Central Otago gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/48 Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows The wonderful Milford Sound South Island New Zealand — A Coherent Travel Story We arrived in Picton on the Interislander after an early, bleary start from Wellington — straight into a very wet South Island welcome. Shakespeare Bay and Queen Charlotte Sound were moody and misty, and the drive along Queen Charlotte Drive to Ngakuta Bay and Havelock was long, winding and dripping. Havelock’s famous green mussels warmed us up — fresh from the sea, explained enthusiastically by a lady from Auckland — and the museum opposite told us more about mussels than we ever expected to know. The rain followed us all the way to Nelson, where we camped in a town‑centre site over a little bridge with a calming stream. The WOW Museum was a revelation: classic cars, outrageous costumes, and creations with names like Lord Maharajah and the Star Bride, Goodbye Versailles, and the unforgettable Ishmaelian Wingflapper. As the saying goes, “WOW makes Lady Gaga look like a librarian.” The bras alone were a spectacle. The cars ranged from Minis and Locomobiles to Vauxhall Vivas and a Shaguar. The rain followed us all the way to Nelson, where we camped in a town‑centre site over a little bridge with a calming stream. The WOW Museum was a revelation: classic cars, outrageous costumes, and creations with names like Lord Maharajah and the Star Bride, Goodbye Versailles, and the unforgettable Ishmaelian Wingflapper. As the saying goes, “WOW makes Lady Gaga look like a librarian.” The bras alone were a spectacle. The cars ranged from Minis and Locomobiles to Vauxhall Vivas and a Shaguar. We wandered Tahunanui Beach Reserve, boardwalks, winery country, pear and apple orchards, then headed to Kaiteriteri for sunsets, Wilsons ferries, and a memorable evening at the Beached Whale pub — fire roaring, a singing barman, and rugby on TV (Christchurch vs Wellington). Abel Tasman National Park gave us golden beaches and turquoise water, though it also gave us the man who emptied his loo in the water area and covered it with leaves (still yuk). Our boat trip took us to Totaranui, Awaroa, Medlands, Tonga Quarry, Torrent Bay and Bark Bay — picnics, coffee, wind, sun, fur seals, Adele Island, kayakers, solar panels, and shifting tides. Motueka River and Kahurangi National Park brought low cloud, hop fields, Tapawera, old police stations, a wooden cow, and eels. Lake Rotoiti gave us Mr Angry and his boat, St Arnaud, Lake Rotoroa, wet feet, red toadstools, and autumn colours. We followed the Buller River through Murchison’s heritage area, filled up with fuel, crossed the Buller Gorge swing bridge, and walked through waterfalls, earthquake zones (1929 and 2010), and the White Creek peninsula. Wagtails, Wekas, bushline walks, Ariki Falls, and logging trucks filled the day. Springs Junction meant pie lunch, then Lewis Pass, the Waiau River, and the Kaikōura Ranges. With SH1 closed from the 2016 earthquake, we took Highway 70 via Rotherham and Waiau to Kaikōura. Our campsite sat under snow‑covered mountains. We had fish and chips in town — sadly not from the best shop (Tiki Takeaways) which was closed — then wandered Fyffe Quay, the old chimney remains, the boardwalk, The Point, and the seal colony. Seals slept on the rocks and even on the boardwalk. The smell was… memorable. The road back was lined with slips and detours. Woodchester gave us Monet‑like autumn views and a man with coffee. Eventually we rejoined SH2 and reached Christchurch. At the Britz office we sorted extra bedding and C&A had their van fixed (brakes and a headlamp). Ours needed only an internal light. The Christchurch Top 10 was full of school groups and rain. We took the blue route bus into town: Ballantynes, the devastation, the cathedral ruins, Customs House, the Chalice sculpture, vintage trams, New Regent Street, murals, Container City, the Quake Museum, and that unmistakable Kiwi humour in the face of adversity. Colombo Street, a Mexican restaurant, workmen everywhere, and more rain. We even managed to lose each other on the ring road around the airport. From there we headed west: Sheffield pies, Lake Lyndon, Castle Hill, snow, mountains, SH73, Kumara Junction, the Great Alpine Way, Grasmere, Lake Pearson, farming flats, Cass Lagoon Track, Otira Gorge, the viaduct, Jackson Tavern, Arthur’s Pass, the national park, the Waimakariri River, the TranzAlpine line, Bridal Veil Falls, the visitor centre, Cobb & Co stagecoach history, Devil’s Punchbowl Bridge, and Kumara gold town. Hokitika brought the Tasman Sea, old town charm, glow worms, and rainbows. Ross gave us gold‑mining history, a gaol, heritage walks, Chinese influence, Jones Flats, a museum, De Bakker Cottage, and the story of Philip Ross May. Autumn colours, mine shafts, a Catholic church, and mining memorabilia filled the day. Hari Hari celebrated Guy Menzies, the first solo flight from Australia to NZ. We lunched by the Whataroa River, passed glacier‑flight signs, and drove the Glacier Highway in the rain. Franz Josef was a wet walk to a receding glacier (knees complaining). Lake Ianthe, Fox Glacier, Blue Lake, moraine fields, and the Haast Valley followed. Bruce Bay offered stones for messages; Lake Matheson gave us reflections and coffee; Knights Point gave us whale sightings — a mother and calf. Fox Glacier village, Pollux Point peaks, Haast village, eerie sunset colours, and a power‑less pitch at the Haast Top 10 (we had to move). We drove the Haast–Jackson Bay road: Oturu, fan tails, whitebait, lobsters, bridges, Neils Beach, shearwaters, Hannahs Crossing, Jackson Bay’s dodgy wharf, the visitor centre, whalers’ chimney remains, and another whale sighting (Annie’s this time). The fishing community felt like the edge of the world. Back through Haast (fuel station out), over Haast Pass, Cameron Flat, lunch under snowy peaks, Mount Brewster, Mount Aspiring, Lake Wānaka, The Neck, Lake Hawea, Boundary Creek, Makarora, Albert Town, and Wānaka again — cold nights, shoreline walks, Luggate’s old cars and town hall, vineyards, Lake Dunstan, the 45th parallel, Lowburn, mountain reflections, seed pods, the Remarkables, Cromwell old town, printing presses, horses, paua art, fruit stalls, sunshine. Goldfields, Kawarau Gorge, Roaring Meg, hydro power, AJ Hackett’s bungy bridge, warm outdoor fires, Shotover Gorge, and Queenstown’s campsite by Lake Wakatipu — rainbows, snow, and mountain drama. South to Lumsden, Kingston’s old railway bridge, Garston, Mossburn, stock crossings, and Te Anau — the picture drome, library, coffee, float planes, the Kepler Track, and a layby full of naughty kea pulling at car trims. The Homer Tunnel led us through waterfalls and slips to Milford Sound — the lodge, the village, the cruise terminal, and our nature cruise on the Milford Mariner. Fur seals, herons, Mitre Peak, the Footstool, Sindbad Gully, low clouds, icy winds, and the sense of being in one of the world’s true wonders. We loved doing it with pals. The return gave us the Tutoko suspension bridge, the Hollyford River, The Chasm, more kea, and Mirror Lakes with perfect reflections. Back to Te Anau — past the pitch where we camped in 2008 — then Mossburn (deer capital), red tussock, Lumsden, Gore’s clock tower and gallery, and Balclutha for a superb fish‑and‑chip lunch. The Southern Scenic Highway carried us to Dunedin and the Otago Peninsula: Taiaroa Head, the Royal Albatross Centre, Prince Charles’ visit, Pilot’s Beach, blue penguins, Portobello, Company Bay, Broad Bay, Wycliffe Bay, Hooper Inlet, Sandfly Bay, Cape Saunders, Dick Road, Allan Beach, sheep branding, flotsam, flowers, and the dramatic Highcliff Road. Dunedin gave us Signal Hill, the university oval, Baldwin Street (steepest in the world — and yes, you have the T‑shirt), the station lit up at night, and a spectacular night drive back around the peninsula. Vogel Street murals, Blueskin Road, the 19 Fathoms Foul memorial, the Robert Falcon Scott memorial, Blueskin Bay, quarantine islands, Waikouaiti, Karitane, Seacliff lookout, pies in Waikouaiti, Bushy Beach’s yellow‑eyed penguins, and Oamaru’s Victorian precinct — jetty, Friendly Bay, farmers market, grain stores, brewery, distillery, station, picture frame, and glorious steampunk. Rakaia (salmon capital), Banks Peninsula, the Hilltop, and Akaroa — French charm, jetties, cinema, passport office, Monet vibes, roses, cats, Barry’s Bay, Little River, silo stays, rain over the hills, Gebbies Pass, Dyers Pass, Sugarloaf Reserve, Riccarton, and the Apollo Motel (Room 11). Our last supper at Lone Star, an early rise, a lovely family farewell, and then the airport: Singapore for us, Hong Kong for C&A. Tears, coffee at Sydney Airport, and the end of a magnificent South Island odyssey.A journey of mountains, seas, wildlife, weather, friends, mishaps, magic — and nearly two hours of video to prove it. Craft village by the sea, read more, enjoy

  • 2022 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Famiy at Disney's 50th

    A sun-soaked family adventure through Florida’s best moments — Disney magic, iconic parks, and the full 2022 USA holiday story brought to life. Dive into the photos, the memories, the laughs, and the little details that made this trip unforgettable. If you love travel diaries, theme parks, or a good nostalgia hit, this page is a must‑read. Ready to relive the journey? 2022 Travel Blog For Disney's 50th Celebrations 🗺️ USA 2022 – Travel Route Summary (Florida) 🏡 Base Location Davenport, Florida (Regal Palms Resort, Berry Town Centre area) Bay Lakes area, Florida Travel mainly via US‑27 (Purple Heart Highway) and US‑192 (West Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway) 🎢 Theme Parks & Attractions Visited Walt Disney World – All Four Parks Magic Kingdom (50th Anniversary fireworks) EPCOT (50th Anniversary fireworks) Animal Kingdom (entry via Sherberth Road) Hollywood Studios Other Major Parks Disney Springs Universal Studios Orlando (Craig & family only) 🛣️ Local Areas & Towns Kissimmee (regular visits for food, access roads, and park routes) Davenport (accommodation, shopping, dining) Berry Town Centre (local amenities) 🍔 Travel Pattern Based on the diary description, your daily route pattern was: Davenport → US‑27 → US‑192 → Disney/Universal parks Return via the same highways Occasional diversions via Sherberth Road for Animal Kingdom access 📍 Full Route List & Summary This is the distilled list of all unique locations mentioned, in clean sequence: Davenport (Regal Palms Resort) Berry Town Centre Kissimmee Magic Kingdom EPCOT Animal Kingdom Hollywood Studios Disney Springs Universal Studios Orlando Bay Lakes area US‑27 (Purple Heart Highway) US‑192 (Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway) Sherberth Road (Animal Kingdom access) Read more under Blog 183 if you want to or just read here on this site USA 2022 Florida (FL) USA with the grandchildren for the 50th anniversary of Walt Disney World resort, Walt had built it from the late 60s when he purchased the land from Irlo Bronson Sr, rancher and Democratic senator for the state of Florida, it opened in 1972 hence the 50th celebrations including fireworks at both Magic Kingdom and Epcot which were spectacular. Family Holiday to Orlando, Florida, USA - Theme Parks for Disney's 50th at Magic Kingdom A wonderful family holiday for 3 weeks staying at Regal Palms Resort in the Davenport and Bay Lakes area of Florida, just off the Purple heart highway (no 27) and mostly using the 192 Highway (West Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, both father and son Irlo Bronson (Sr & Jr) were prominent Floridian Democratic Politicians and the father is best known for selling some of his ranch land to Walt Disney to construct Disney World, there you go a bit of relevant history for you). The 192 got us to Disney (& Universal) theme parks and all the obvious American eateries, some of which are to die for (sadly in some folks cases literally) just loved the all American "big and brash" approach to life for 3 weeks. Not sure I could live there, the gun thing and school shooter issue is very prominent every day in their newscasts (dominated by adverts #smile) plus Florida's republican governor Ron DeSantis has views I could never align with , BUT 3 weeks to explore a highly interesting culture that really defines the term "2 nations that speak the same language but are separated by it" was truly a wonderful opportunity spent with my loving and fun, caring extended family, I am a VERY HAPPY MAN #fact Note also entry to Animal Kingdom off the 192 should be via the Sherberth Rd (entry point) Art Work If the Video Includes our Grandchildren you need ask to view else they are private DISNEY SPRINGS We went twice to Disney springs, I guess it is the mega replacement for what Paradise Island was back in the day as the entertainment element of Disney World Resorts offering. Disney springs is huge with many car parks, named after fruits, i.e., Lime, Watermelon, Orange etc. etc. All car parking is free. The first time we went we had a good look around, security is good on entry, all the typical posh shops and of course Disney & Co. which we did spend quite a bit of time in. Keef looked at buying Levi's, traditionally a cheap purchase in the States, but even with the 30% discount they were still way more expensive than the UK, must be the exchange rate or prices in the US have gone ballistic. The Lego shop was fun, Edie played with the available bricks to entertain the kids, Grandpa made a car #teehee We then avoided a mega downpour and eventually legged it over to Planet Hollywood for our pre booked table getting a little wet on route. What a fascinating restaurant. Reminded me of my fave Hard Rock café but with film memorabilia and some fab sing-a-longs. #magic Our second return was to watch Cirque Du Soleil, which was wonderful. You can park in the surface car park for free just in front of the purpose build big top. Disney don't do things by halves #haha UNIVERSAL STUDIOS We had a day off when C&L and family visited Universal, it is located about an hour away from Davenport in what is basically south Orlando. They had a lovely day mostly in the Harry Potter area with Edie using her Hermione wand to make stuff "move", i'll try and find some images, they stopped for donuts on the way back, but as the kids were flagging didn't make it through to 9 pm for the fireworks which was an original intention. It as fun place, much changed I'm sure from our 1997 visit but ET is still there although massively updated. Edie had great fun with her wand , now what exactly does "Expelliarmus" mean, well I'm so glad you asked Harry fans, here you go..... Expelliarmus is a disarming spell, and is used to knock the opponent's wand from their hand. It is commonly used in the dueling club of Hogwarts and in many of the Harry Potter movies. Although called the 'Disarming Charm', it is only used to take wands from your opponent, whereas other spells can be used for summoning or pushing away an object. There is a very brief you tube video of Craig & Leanne's day out FIREWORKS We were lucky enough to be at Disney's world resort to celebrate their 50th anniversary which meant spectacular fireworks every evening at both Magic Kingdom and Epcot, on reflection we all agreed it was the Magic Kingdom ones that were the best which is to take nothing way from Epcot who used huge screens to coordinate Disney classic songs and screen time with the fireworks over the world lake. By fireworks down main street in front of the castle at Magic Kingdom just edged it for us it was , sorry to repeat the word, just MAGICAL! Do hope these videos do it justice. It should be noted that each "performance" at both parks lasted about 20 minutes with a crescendo finale, our video has captured about 20 minutes combines across the 2, you will easily see which park is which, over the lake at Epcot and in front of the Castle at Magic Kingdom. EATERIES AND SHOPPING We went to very few shops apart from those inside Disney Parks for various souvenirs and gifts, Keef bought himself a NASA T-shirt inside EPCOT but for those outside we got SIM cards from AT&T, Food shopping from Publix, and we visited the old style US store Cracker Barrel and the Magicians Gift Store on the 192. Restaurants we eat at or got take aways were in no particular order, i-Hop and Applebee's at Berry Town Centre , Ponderosa on the 192, McDonald's on the Disney World Resort Estate, Mexico and China in EPCOT, Planet Hollywood at Disney Springs, take away fish and chips from the English bar in Berry town centre, where I had a draft pint of old speckled hen whilst waiting, a great place run by a nice English guy from London who had been there for 14 years. Plus for breakfasts Rainforest café in Animal Kingdom and the Royal Table in the castle at Magic Kingdom, all very magical. I think thats it... oh C&L ate at a Donut place on the way back from Universal on the last Thursday. We also did up sandwiches etc. which we ate in the parks to save a bit of money but mostly in that heat and humidity it was drinks we needed, lots of iced water and Sprite , which worryingly cost about £4 for a small bottle. Here is a short slideshow to capture those events Chinese lunch at the Nine Dragons, China, Epcot, absolutely scummy Final Applebee's meal. What a nice place and great food all just up the road at Berry Town Centre #ace 2022 24 Days Between July 29th & August 21st For this trip I will mention where we went and what we did which included Davenport, Berry Town Centre, Kissimmee, all 4 parks, i.e. Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, Disney Springs, Universal Studios (although that was only Craig and family) as near Septuagenarians by then having walked 37.5 miles around parks in blistering heat and humidity we were to put no finer point on it... knackered #teehee, we returned again in 2018 on our 40th Wedding Anniversary cruise, click HERE to see that Blog. This Family trip is also replicated on the motorhome-travels blog as BLOG 183 . We had been before BLOG165 but if you prefer to stay here on this site there is a almost identical version of that here as USA 1997, thanks as always for looking folks, best KeefH Web Designs . FIREWORK FUN DIARY Fun times with the family, use this to see what we did and where we went on our 24-day holiday with Craig, Leanne, Edie and Tate. It of course included that very special day on the 16th for Edie's 6th birthday, it was also the last of our 14 days continuously at the Disney World Parks, a fabulous time of rides, shows, shops, restaurants and meeting celebrity Disney characters, getting their autographs and having cuddles with them and getting our pictures taken with them a true delight for grandchildren #magical Have I said as yet, we almost Septuagenarians, walked 37.5 miles around the parks, not bad in that heat and humidity #creamcrackered Note on the 17th we returned to Disney Springs in the eve to watch Disney's version of Cirque du soleil, but I sadly left that off the calendar #dumbkopf (see I do know some other languages) #haha WEEK 1 - 29th July to 7th August 2022 Summary: There are 660 images in a slideshow lasting 21 minutes followed by a video with speech lasting for 43 minutes. Since we are in movie land the ones with speech we will call "The Talkies" #haha #hollywood The contents of which cover flying from Manchester Airport on the Saturday having stayed in the Premier Inn, quite a posh modern one, and eating at their attached pub, nothing special but good for the Friday eve before flying and it avoided any unforeseen obstacles to getting on the plane, most relaxing. We took quite a few pictures of the takeoff over England before hitting the cloud and Soarin' through it (this is a reference to the mega ride experience in Epcot which was a 4D hit with one and all in our party, how to fly around the world in less that 80 minutes (well seconds maybe #haha) rather than Mister Verne's days. Our seats were over the right-hand wing and engines so a little noisy, Keef took his headphones which were far superior to the free Virgin Atlantic free ones. Watched 3 movies on the way out. The best of which was The House of Gucci (Lady GaGa is excellent) and Kenneth Branagh's Belfast a close second, it certainly passed the time as well as playing with / chatting to grandchildren over the seat tops, they were all in the row in front of us. Food also not bad and well designed with eco sentiments in mind. I guess if you are burning fuel at a rate of knots as an airline it's good to contribute in some small way #COP26 We landed and the least said about the rest of the night probably for the better, if you really wish to indulge them have a read of the LOWLIGHTs, I've warned you it wasn't a great time and boy were we all tired after 22 hours traveling. The kids had a bit of a melt down at the start of driving the new hire car but who can blame them being 5 and 1 a piece. I think the adults were probably close to it as well, but we are HELLINGERs and soldiered on. So besides doing some shopping in the very convenient and hugely stocked Publix supermarket a stone's throw away up the road in the Berry Town centre area and lots of swimming in the Regal Palms complex with its lazy river, 5ft pool and paddling area Keef, Craig and Leanne tried out the "fast water slide" into the pool. Only Craig was brave enough to lie down whilst descending although I can vouch for it building up speed even if you were sitting on that last bend #fun Loved the Reggae playlist music that adorned the swimming complex, I could almost believe with the sun that I was back in Jamaica. We also went out for breakfast at the i-Hop, a pancake place, and Applebee's, a trad American bar / diner which did fab chicken dishes especially the Lime chicken and meltdown chocoholic puddings with ice cream. Overall, I would rate US ice-cream but not eat it in tub loads as sadly many Americans must appear to do whilst watching TV. Don't get me started on the quality of US TV! Both these establishments were on the Berry town centre site. So, what else did we do in that 1st week. Got AT&T Sim cards, unlimited data, for Craig and my phone, Visited all 4 Disney parks for the first time. Ate a buffet lunch out at Ponderosa, a nostalgic visit inspired by Leanne's extended family visit over 20 years ago. I will always remember those brightly coloured sugary drinks and Edie's dark blue and bright red Jelly (or Jell-O as our Patriots call it) Addendum she didn't eat it after the 1st mouthful #notsurprising Saw and recorded the magnificent 50th anniversary firework shows at both Magic Kingdom and Epcot, both late nights for the grandkids but they were great and loved them. I now know a lot more Disney "toons" than just let it go, Annie & I are determined to watch a few of the Disney's we don't know well, sorry we are old skool ...from Snow White probably only as far as Sleeping Beauty, one of my favourites is Dumbo. Bambi was I think the first movie I saw at the cinema as a kid when Mum took us. We did 1 Magic Kingdom visit, 2 Animal Kingdom visits and 2 Epcot visits in that first week. At Animal Kingdom whilst collecting stickers for Edie's conservation book we visited Gorilla Falls Exploration Trail, Harambe Market, where later in the trip we saw the truly wonderful Lion King show in the theater just behind on the riverbank. Plus, the whole conservation area where animals are housed getting there via the old train. At this centre Granny, Edie & Grandpa joined the artwork class and drew Pula (the pig) from the Lion King, great fun. See our artwork BELOW. We saw various animals and fish which the kids loved. On those 2 Animal Kingdom visits visited mostly Oasis, Africa, Rafiki's Planet watch and bits of Discovery Island. WEEK 2 - 8th to 14th August 2022 There are 738 images in a slideshow lasting 25 minutes followed by a video with speech lasting for 43 minutes. Week 2 kicked off with our first visit to Disney Hollywood Studios, which seems to have been designed on a 1930s film set theme. Very classy, liked it here a lot, the Star Wars theme now they own Lucas has expanded massively from 1997 and their rides are enhanced, Tate was even quizzed by a stormtrooper, he didn't seem interested #haha The Mickey / Minnie / Goofy train ride was very classy and some of the shows were good. Due to thunder and lightning our 1st Indiana Jones show was wiped out, just too dangerous and because of the loud bangs Edie was not interested in a 2nd attempt although Keef & Annie did for old times' sake. Lots of hats were tried on in the various shops and Minnie ears for Leanne and Edie. Street parades (nothing like Magic Kingdom) featured the Incredibles and others. We did a few trips to regal palms pool area this week as well as having a few meals out plus a splendid Planet Hollywood bonanza for our first visit there as well as a late night for the fireworks at Magic Kingdom and breakfast at the Rainforest café in Animal Kingdom, what a surprise that was, just amazing, only at Disney, with thunder and lightning inside the café on the half hour with real rain showers over you. #Amazing The restaurant also had a whole host of animatronic animals as well as giant fish tanks, the grandkids loved these. We did a 2nd visit to Hollywood studios as well, getting to know our way around by now. Sadly the white knuckle ride themed on Aerosmith the band broke down just as Leanne and I were about to get near the front of the queue , Friday this week was a lazy one, but one we all picked up a bit of sun burn despite factor 50 sun tan lotion at waterpark Typhoon lagoon. Just shows how intense the sun is in Florida, 34-39c often and very humid. We also did our final Epcot visit this week and Edie had to say goodbye to her beloved Soarin' ride , she went on 5 times in total, it is a very clever 4D experience. It was also our final visit to Animal Kingdom, mostly spent in Asia area just across from the stage Dino land we had been in earlier in the week. Edie and I did the triceratops rid twice. Want to see more then look its all here on the blog via picture slideshows etc. Note we also visited Typhoon Lagoon, for which we don't have a site guide but it can be found here and Disney Springs which is included in the set of guides. That's it for week 2 EPCOT We visited this park 3 times and saw the spectacular Sonne et Lumiere fireworks show around the Lake, plus travelled on the wonderful rides Soarin' and Galaxy. There are 330 images lasting 9 minutes. The talkies are included elsewhere under weeks 1 thru 3. Thanks for looking, best KeefH Web Designs x DISNEY HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS We visited this park 3 times and went on the fab Mickey and Minnie train ride in Main Street. We also due to thunderstorms had to have 2 attempts to see the whole of the Indiana Jones re-enactment of stunts. Its wonderful and not much changed from 1997 only that those stunt men and women have now retired #tooold There are 162 images lasting 6 minutes. The talkies are included elsewhere under weeks 1 thru 3. Thanks for looking, best KeefH Web Designs x We missed out on this one (Aerosmith Rock & Roller) having used a Lightening Lane and queued a bit when it broke down (again apparently last time was for 14 days!!!) they refunded our pass, but it didn't restart during the time we were there that day, good job that in the "white knuckle" ride stakes we did eventually get on Guardians of the Galaxy ride at EPCOT july 2022 august 2022 his 1921 business card, obviously worked july 2022 1/3 2022 24 Days Between July 29th & August 21st WEEK 3 - 15th to 21st August 2022 There are 461 images in a slideshow lasting 12 minutes followed by a video with speech lasting for 44 minutes. Week 3 started with the last trio to Disney Hollywood Studios and the kids both dancing and singing along to the Frozen show, the male compare was great at ad lib, and very funny. Tuesday saw us finish our very enjoyable 14 days at the Disney parks with what was probably both our longest and most fulfilling day , it was Edie's 6th birthday, we started with a bit of present opening at 257 Bergamo followed by a very posh breakfast in the Royal Table restaurant within Magic Kingdom's Castle, Grandpa discussed Grits with the the suitably medieval attired waiter, he liked them with sugar, YUK! but why does that not surprise me, the gouda ones I had were superb. We then went to more shows and on more rides than we ever have and the wonderful "It's a small world" was included. Wednesday we did a bit of shopping and all ate out at the Australian themed Outback restaurant, great grub cobber. Edie even went to the Sheila's. We had a family swim in the eve before tea. Thursday C&L & Co went to Universal studios and K & A had a chill day mostly eating, drinking and watching awful movies however the Meg Ryan / Hugh Jackman time travel romance from 2001 called Kate and Leopold wasn't bad. Friday was a relaxed day with an early morning swim, our last, then packing and getting ready for the big trip home, you don't wanna know about the car dying on us as we left for the airport, but if you do read the LOWLIGHTS, Grr. We finally managed the full Indiana Jones show, hooray. Used both ferry and monorail at Magic Kingdom. Edie could have had a go on the cable car at Hollywood studios , there and back but we just didn't find the time, sadly. The pilot of the river boat cruise was a hoot. Belle was so nice and Cirque Du Soleil back at Disney Springs on Thursday eve was possibly , no definitely, the best circus show G&G had ever seen. Giant donuts and weird picture templates spring to mind, that’s it folks, take a look in more detail through the rest of the menu, I hope there is something to delight each and every one of you. Best KeefH Web Designs. x To see more details of both Magic Kingdom (for Edie's spectacular 6th birthday) and Disney Springs for Cirque Du Soleil which we visited in Week 3 , that's it for week 3 REGAL PALMS RESORT We stayed at 257 Bergamo drive for 3 weeks and used most of the available facilities bar the Spa and eating at the Grill bar, towel hire for the pool was $10 deposit returned when you gave them back and for that deposit you could return them as often as you like, soaking wet during a days swimming if you wanted to. Granny & Grandpa got Edie and Tate a lilo and rubber ring which made journeys around the lazy river a little more fun. On the last day I had to walk from Bergamo back to the office to check out because of our broken hire car but in general one drove everywhere, after all this is America #teehee The pool stuff in fairness was a little too far from where we were. There were minor issue with our stay in the Bergamo villa but nothing particularly serious, more niggles. If you want to read about those click HERE Overall we thought the accommodation and location were great. Above are copies of the guides we were given, the housekeeping phone number was very useful, they got to know me after 3 weeks, indeed their manager did see my point of view when suggested they couldn't come until Tuesday in the last week #assertive Here is a slideshow of Regal Palms resort and the wonderfully relaxing pool time we spent, enjoy Tate loved the Regal Palms pool, especially the shallower baby pool bit where he could play, he has no fear of water and loved going around the lazy river on the Lilo but mostly in Mummy or Daddy's arms MAGIC KINGDOM We visited this park 3 times and saw the parade twice, well at least Edie and I did the second time, Tinkerbell and Chip & Dale were her favourites along with all the Princesses. We celebrated her 6th birthday there on our 3rd and final visit, starting with a fab breakfast in the Royal Table restaurant in the castle. Craig & Leanne had steak, I had old Gouda Grits, you gotta taste local food, so much better than the only time I've had Grits before. Edie's birthday cake was a chocolate mickey head and eats, yummy Clearly stuff is included in the weeks 1-3 You Tube videos but I have combined at least the images here. There are 278 images lasting 7 minutes. The talkies are included elsewhere under weeks 1 thru 3. Thanks for looking, best KeefH Web Designs x ANIMAL KINGDOM We visited this park 4 times and saw the Lion King Show in the Theatre in Africa. Here are some official photographer pix of us all There are 307 images lasting 15 minutes. The talkies are included elsewhere under weeks 1 thru 3. Thanks for looking, best KeefH Web Designs x 29th july his 1921 business card, obviously worked 21st august 29th july 1/25

  • 2014 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Europe France Motorhoming

    Explore our 3‑month 2014 motorhome adventure across France—campsites, routes, photos and stories from a 4,611‑mile European road trip. 2014 Travel Blog & Guide - France French Holiday 2014 – Clear Route Summary (Motorhome Trip No.17) 14 May – 1 August 2014 Total: 4611 miles Countries: France → Monaco → Italy → Switzerland → France 🧭 FULL ROUTE IN ORDER 1. UK → France Home (Notts) Folkestone Ferry/Eurotunnel to France 2. Central & Southern France (Provence / Côte d’Azur / Rhône‑Alpes) Lempdes‑sur‑Allagnon (Auvergne–Rhône‑Alpes) Lunel (Occitanie) Agay (Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur) Cannes Nice Grasse Port Grimaud Saint‑Tropez Cavalaire‑sur‑Mer Le Rouet / Salernes Gorges du Verdon Volonne Annecy & St Jorioz (Lake Annecy) 3. Monaco (Day Trip by Train) Biot Gare → Monte Carlo Menton (passed through) 4. Italy (Sanremo) Border at Ponte San Ludovico Sanremo – Villaggio Dei Fiori campsite Local hill walk & Giro d’Italia passing through 5. Switzerland (Lac Léman / Lake Geneva) Saint‑Gingolph (entry) Montreux Lausanne Geneva St Julien‑en‑Genevois (exit back to France) 6. Eastern France → Burgundy & Jura Jura Mountains crossing Mesnois Cote d’Or (Burgundy) Louhans Chalon‑sur‑Saône Meursault Commarin Lac Panthier Lac Marcenay Vincelles Saumur Abbaye de Fontenay (UNESCO) Châteauneuf‑en‑Auxois Canal de Bourgogne 7. Loire & Atlantic Coast Concourson Piriac‑sur‑Mer La Baule St Nazaire → St Brevin bridge Guérande (historic walled town) 8. Brittany (Bretagne) – Finistère & Beyond Clohars‑Carnoët Doëlan Concarneau Bénodet Penmarch / St Guénolé Eckmühl Pointe du Raz Douarnenez Locronan Châteaulin Camaret‑sur‑Mer / Pointe de Penhir Pointe des Espagnols Roscanvel Le Faou Plougastel‑Daoulas Landerneau Brignogan‑Plages Plougasnol Pointe de Primel (Plougasnou) St Quay‑Portrieux Dinan St Malo Domaine de la Ville Huchet campsite 9. Normandy Mont‑Saint‑Michel Granville Les Pieux Anneville Saint‑Vaast‑la‑Hougue Ravenoville Utah Beach Omaha Beach (St‑Laurent‑sur‑Mer) Carhagnolles (Flower Camping) Bayeux Arromanches‑les‑Bains (Gold Beach) Falaise (William the Conqueror’s birthplace) Beuvron‑en‑Auge Deauville Trouville Honfleur Étretat St‑Valery‑sur‑Somme Abbeville Miannay 10. Return to UK Calais Densole (Kent) Home (Notts) 14 Route Visuals Route Summary – France 2014: Folkestone → Calais → Lempdes‑sur‑Allagnon → Lunel → Agay → Cannes → Nice → Port Grimaud → Cavalaire‑sur‑Mer → Verdon Gorge → Volonne → Annecy → Monaco → Sanremo → Montreux → Lausanne → Geneva → Jura → Côte d’Or → Chalon‑sur‑Saône → Meursault → Saumur → Piriac‑sur‑Mer → La Baule → Concarneau → Penmarch → Pointe du Raz → Camaret‑sur‑Mer → St Quay‑Portrieux → St Malo → Mont‑Saint‑Michel → Utah Beach → Omaha Beach → Bayeux → Honfleur → Étretat → Calais → Folkestone. Explore our 3‑month 2014 motorhome adventure across France—campsites, routes, photos and stories from a 4,611‑mile European road trip covering in part Monaco, Switzerland and Italy as well . 🚐 Three unforgettable months on the road, 4,611 miles across France, and a motorhome packed with stories. From coastal drives and hidden villages to favourite campsites, food stops, and the rhythms of long‑term European touring, this 2014 adventure captures the freedom of life on wheels. Dive into the full route, photos, memories and moments that shaped one of our most iconic Motorhome Travels trips. Port Grimaud France The write up is coming......

  • 2007–8 Gap Year Adventure | Explore Online Holiday Diary Ideas with KeefH Designs

    Explore online holiday diary ideas and immerse yourself in our 2007–8 gap year journey through stunning destinations. Start today! Discover Inspiring Online Holiday Diary Ideas from Our 2007–8 Gap Year Adventure Explore and create your own online holiday diary ideas with inspiration from our 2007–8 gap year journey. Travel through picturesque locations like California, Fiji, and New Zealand, and let our tips and resources guide your storytelling. Begin your adventure today and craft memories to treasure forever! Step into our journey and explore unique online holiday diary ideas. Discover unforgettable experiences, tips, and resources to document your travels. Start your adventure today with our online holiday diary ideas! 🌍 2007 Travel Route Map (Up to 31 Dec 2007) USA → Fiji → Samoa → Tonga → New Zealand (North Island) 1) USA – California (26 Oct – 1 Nov 2007) Route sequence Los Angeles (arrival) San Jose (Delta 7772 to SJC) Morgan Hill (base) Monterey Carmel Big Sur (Highway 1) Santa Monica County Park Henry W. Coe State Park Leroy Anderson Lake Quicksilver Mercury Mine Cannery Row Rocky Creek Bridge San Francisco (Candlestick Park etc.) Return to LAX → onward flight to Fiji 🌴 2) Fiji – Viti Levu & Vanua Levu (2–13 Nov 2007) Route sequence Nadi (arrival on Viti Levu) Flight to Savusavu (Vanua Levu) Sewaka Beach Cottage (base) Savusavu town Hibiscus Highway Labasa (north Vanua Levu) Hot Springs Hotel (Savusavu) Jean‑Michel Cousteau Resort Urata Village Return to Savusavu Airport Flight Savusavu → Labasa → Nadi → Samoa 3) Western Samoa – Upolu & Savai’i (13–28 Nov 2007) Route sequence Upolu Apia (Princess Tui Inn → Insel Fehrman Hotel) Aggie Grey’s Hotel Apia town & harbour Ferry terminal (Mulifanua) Savai’i Ferry Upolu → Savai’i Savai’i Lagoon Resort (base) Alofaaga Blowholes Lava Fields Swimming with turtles Villages along the north & south coasts Return ferry Savai’i → Upolu Back on Upolu Outrigger Hotel Robert Louis Stevenson House Cross‑Island Road Beaches & coastal villages Faleolo Airport → flight to Tonga 4) Tonga – Tongatapu & Atata Island (28 Nov – 10 Dec 2007) Route sequence Nuku’alofa (arrival) International Dateline Hotel Tongatapu Island loop Houma Blowholes Atata Island Local villages, markets, harbours Royal Palace area Return to Nuku’alofa Airport → flight to Auckland 5) New Zealand – North Island (10–31 Dec 2007) (Covers only up to 31/12/2007 as requested) Auckland Region (10–16 Dec) Auckland (Remuera base) Newmarket Parnell Downtown Auckland Harbour Bridge Glenfield Sylvia Park Auckland Botanic Gardens Mission Bay / St Heliers / Kohimarama Devonport (via ferry) Herne Bay Sky Tower Ice Bar (Lenin’s) North of Auckland (16–25 Dec) Orewa Warkworth Snells Beach Sandspit Puhoi Dargaville Baylys Beach Waipoua Forest (giant kauri) Rawene → Kohukohu ferry Mangonui Coopers Beach Doubtless Bay Paihia Haruru Falls Waipu Cove Central North Island (27–31 Dec) Base: Golden Springs (between Rotorua & Taupo) Rotorua Wai‑O‑Tapu Thermal Wonderland Polynesian Spa Huka Falls Jet Prawn Park Lake Taupo Taupo town Turangi Tongariro National Park (volcanoes, Chateau Tongariro) Ends 31/12/2007 Taupo (New Year’s Eve at Finn McCoull’s) Return to Golden Springs 7 Route Visuals SUMMARY Los Angeles San Jose Morgan Hill Fiji (Nadi) Fiji (Robinson Crusoe Island) Fiji (Nadi return) Samoa (Apia) Samoa (Savai’i) Samoa (Apia return) Tonga (Nuku’alofa) Tonga (Fafa Island) Tonga (Nuku’alofa return) New Zealand — Auckland New Zealand — Whangarei New Zealand — Paihia New Zealand — Kerikeri New Zealand — Waipoua Forest New Zealand — Dargaville New Zealand — Hamilton New Zealand — Waitomo New Zealand — Rotorua New Zealand — Taupō New Zealand — Tongariro National Park 🌍 Travel Route for 2008 (Starting 1 January 2008) New Zealand → Australia → Singapore → Hong Kong → UK & Home New Zealand (North & South Islands) 1 Jan 2008 → mid‑Feb 2008 Auckland Coromandel Peninsula Whitianga Hot Water Beach Hahei Rotorua Taupō Napier Wellington Picton Nelson Abel Tasman National Park Greymouth Hokitika Franz Josef Glacier Fox Glacier Haast Wanaka Queenstown Te Anau Milford Sound Dunedin Oamaru Timaru Christchurch Kaikōura Blenheim Picton (return) Wellington (return) Auckland (return for onward flight) Australia mid‑Feb 2008 → March 2008 Sydney Manly Bondi Blue Mountains Katoomba Cairns Great Barrier Reef (cruise/reef trips) Kuranda Brisbane Gold Coast Surfers Paradise Byron Bay Coffs Harbour Port Macquarie Newcastle Sydney (return for onward flight) Singapore March 2008 Note in fairness in 2008 we were just passing thru Changi en route but all the following we have been to on our many trips to Singapore Orchard Road Clarke Quay Boat Quay Singapore River Chinatown Little India Sentosa Island Mount Faber Singapore Zoo / Night Safari Raffles Hotel Marina Bay (early development era) Hong Kong Late March 2008 → trip end Kowloon Tsim Sha Tsui Nathan Road Mong Kok Hong Kong Island Central District Victoria Peak Aberdeen Stanley Repulse Bay Lantau Island Po Lin Monastery Big Buddha Star Ferry Temple Street Night Market 8 Route Visuals SUMMARY Auckland Coromandel Whitianga Hot Water Beach Hahei Rotorua Taupō Napier Wellington Picton Nelson Abel Tasman Greymouth Hokitika Franz Josef Fox Glacier Haast Wanaka Queenstown Te Anau Milford Sound Dunedin Oamaru Timaru Christchurch Kaikōura Blenheim Wellington Auckland Sydney Blue Mountains Cairns Great Barrier Reef Brisbane Gold Coast Byron Bay Coffs Harbour Port Macquarie Newcastle Sydney Singapore Hong Kong Our Outdoor Travel Blog for 2007 & 2008 GAP YEAR Travel Blog | HOLIDAY 2007-8 | KeefH Web Designs On the 31st July 2007, I had the opportunity to take early retirement and a redundancy package from my then employer, which afforded us the chance to travel and realize a lifelong dream of returning to Australia, the place of both our youths. We named this experience HOLIDAY 2007-8. While planning that HOLIDAY 2007-8 opportunity and packing up our property (we let it through an agency to Polish railway workers, which helped provide additional funding for our HOLIDAY 2007-8 adventures), I also focused on ensuring our website reflected the best travel website design standards to share our journey effectively. We decided to include stops in California, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and several Pacific islands, drawing inspiration from my love of rugby, especially the Fijian 7s rugby. Annie took early retirement too, and together we embarked on the first big adventure of a lifetime. Created for customer by KeefH Web Designs, a travel blog website that covers the holiday 2007-8. This site covers a gap year long holiday to America, California, the pacific islands, Fiji (both main islands), Western Samoa (both main islands, savaii and upolu), tonga (and 1 island , daydream resort), Australia, New Zealand (all 3 islands, north, south and stewart) and a break touchdown at changi airport, singapore. That is Holiday 2007-8 in a nutshell. Read on, see more of our exploits from our Holiday 2007-8. annie, close up, cable beach reflections of watsons bay 1/66 postcard to mum 180508 from broome postcard to mum 060508 from kalgoolie airmail letter from savusavu fiji page2 091107 postcard to mum 180508 from broome 1/18 2007 and 2008 A Gap Year "Down Under" We visited California, USA, Pacific Islands...Fiji, Western Samoa & Tonga, New Zealand, Australia, Singapore & Hong Kong Family-Friendly Activities for Holidaying in 2007 and 2008 Creating Cherished Memories for Everyone When it comes to planning a family holiday, finding activities that cater to everyone's interests and create lasting memories can be a challenge. Thankfully, Holiday2007-8.co.uk offers a wide range of family-friendly activities that are sure to delight both children and adults alike. With a focus on creating cherished memories, this website is a go-to resource for families looking to make the most of their vacation. One of the highlights of Holiday2007-8.co.uk is its extensive selection of outdoor activities. Whether you're looking for thrilling adventures or more relaxed outings, there is something for everyone. From hiking and biking trails to water sports and fishing, the website provides a comprehensive list of options to suit every family's preferences. With picturesque locations and breathtaking scenery, these activities offer the perfect backdrop for creating unforgettable memories. For families who prefer indoor entertainment, Holiday2007-8.co.uk has got you covered as well. The website features a wide range of family-friendly attractions, including zoos, museums, and amusement parks. With interactive exhibits and exciting rides, these venues provide endless fun for children while ensuring that parents can also enjoy their time. Whether it's learning about wildlife, exploring historical artifacts, or enjoying thrilling roller coasters, families are guaranteed an unforgettable experience. In addition to activities, Holiday2007-8.co.uk also offers valuable information on family-friendly accommodations and dining options. The website provides an extensive list of hotels, holiday cottages, and resorts that are known for their excellent facilities and services for families. From spacious rooms to on-site recreational activities, these accommodations go the extra mile to ensure a comfortable and enjoyable stay for all. Furthermore, the website also offers recommendations for family-friendly restaurants, ensuring that delicious meals are always within reach. What sets Holiday2007-8.co.uk apart is its emphasis on creating cherished memories. The website goes beyond providing a list of activities and attractions by suggesting ways to make the most of these experiences. It offers tips on capturing special moments through photography, journaling, and even creating personalized keepsakes. By encouraging families to document and reflect on their holiday adventures, the website helps create a treasure trove of memories that can be cherished for a lifetime. In conclusion, if you're seeking a family holiday filled with fun and memorable experiences, look no further than Holiday2007-8.co.uk. With its multitude of family-friendly activities, accommodations, and dining options, this website provides all the necessary resources for a successful vacation. From outdoor adventures to indoor entertainment, there is something for every member of the family to enjoy. So, why wait? Visit https://www.holiday2007-8.co.uk/ and start planning your next vacation, where unforgettable memories are waiting to be made. For more information contact us anytime via the KeefH Web Designs website PLAY FULL TRIP DIARY The first 160 days Motorhome Travels Blog 162 Part 1 & the next 169 days Motorhome Travels Blog 162 Part 2 PART1 PART 2 oct 2007 calendar nov 2007 sept 2008 oct 2007 calendar 1/12 near san jose california usa California USA keef at the sewaka platform Venua Levu, Fiji's second island Visit family, east coast australia 1995 Trip to Australia near san jose california usa California USA 1/20 GAP YEAR TRANSPORTATION : Below is the detailed summary of our round the world travels in 2007-8, where we travelled on trains, boats and planes and a whole lot more for 10½ months through America, Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, New Zealand, Australia, Singapore & Hong Kong - starting and ending at Heathrow interestingly our Round The World (RTW) ticket said we started and arrived at Heathrow Terminal 1,but by the time we returned Heathrow had been reorganised and we came back to the now infamous Terminal 3 (T3 Tears as it is known in our family) 2008 Diary Pre Trip Planning 01. 01. 01. 01. INTRO Words from our 2007-8 gap year trip were written before we left home , we constructed the old photo website, which we used on our travels to let people back home know what we were doing or possibly more importantly that we were still alive. A few pictures and details were added pre-travel to show what we expected and had planned to do. The reality as always was probably slightly different but the big picture in the plan we fundamentally achieved and we are very proud of that fact! (Note our original words written on our travels are in ITALICS ;) ) You will see them at the start of each page. They were culled from our old Graphicorps website. NOTES it was Polish railway workers who rented our house not as suggested by Belvoir! Austrians. Whilst we were away on our 2007-8 trip , we paid A$31 each for a 6 month Australian Visa. Post being there, Samoa has since swapped to the other side of the international date line, which makes travelling from Fiji to Samoa to Tonga, which we did a whole lot easier. “where did we lose that day?” Also whilst there our rip-off Samoan taxi driver told us they were looking at changing the side of the road they drive on, which would be a huge expense for a poor Pacific Island country, not sure they ever did! WORDS We leave on the 26/10/2007!!!! for our HOLIDAY 2007-8 trip, yippee! A few things as we prepare for our GREAT ADVENTURE. It has been interesting packing, getting lodgers (we now have a bunch of Austrian engineers) and generally booking the trip. In between we have been visiting / saying our goodbyes to various friends and relatives (you may be in the rogues gallery here!!!) we will miss you all but remember a year isn't that long and technology (one of Keef's favourite words) will keep us in touch. It just ain't like Vasco De Gama's day these days....Bon Voyage, and hopefully enjoy the site All overall feedback on this site should be directed to keefhwebdesigns@outlook.com and should cover only HOLIDAY 2007-8 Note: You can leave ratings against any photo, we would love to see them UPDATE in 2020 Sadly you can no longer do this technically for site HOLIDAY 2007-8, apologies 02. 02. 02. 02. 03. 03. 03. 03. To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key. To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 10 Saskatchewan | Holiday 1995-2024 | Travel Guide and Blog

    Explore Saskatchewan the fun way—big skies, bigger prairies and a motorhome that battled every gust of wind. This 2010 Saskatchewan travel guide follows KHWD across Regina, Saskatoon, Wanuskewin, Lake Diefenbaker and more, mixing diary notes, 79 photos, wildlife moments and classic road‑trip mishaps. Perfect for RV travellers, Canada‑trip planners and anyone chasing adventure across the Land of Living Skies. 2010 Saskatchewan Travel Guide & Blog SASKATCHEWAN - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. For Saskatchewan the following were some of the highlights, Saskatchewan landing provincial park and camping there, a bit of a write up on this campsite we stayed at is, Straddling the South Saskatchewan River Valley at the west end of Lake Diefenbaker, the Saskatchewan Landing Provincial Park celebrates the site of the first historic crossing on the South Saskatchewan River. A great area to be enjoyed by all ages, the park is popular for its fishing, sun-bathing, and hiking opportunities. This park features several interpretive trails and historic sites including the handsome Goodwin House, now home to the park’s visitor centre, main office and interpretive centre. The boat launch is located on the north side of the lake while the main beach area, located on the west side of the park, is a perfect place to enjoy a warm summer’s day. We remember with some fondness saskatoon, Regina, visiting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police - RCMP "Mounties" academy, chapel and museum in Regina (capital of Saskatchewan), Goodwin house, red river cart, the fantastically interesting wanuskewin heritage centre, and here are a few words about its heritage, and what it hopes to show, Wanuskewin Heritage Park sits above the Opimihaw Creek and the South Saskatchewan River near Saskatoon – a window into a part of Canada’s history that remains largely undiscovered, and a link to our past unlike any other National Historic Site in Canada. Wanuskewin’ s uniqueness is not just the fact that there exists evidence of ancient peoples, but rather the composition of many different aspects of habitation, hunting and gathering, and spirituality – all in one place. The Wanuskewin area contains some of the most exciting archaeological finds in North America, many of which pre-date the pyramids of Egypt. To date, 19 Pre-Contact archaeological dig sites have been identified on the terraces and point bars in the Opimihaw Creek valley bottom or coulee depressions along the valley wall of the South Saskatchewan River. As soon as the Opimihaw Creek valley became available for human occupation 6,000 years ago, virtually every Pre-Contact cultural group recognized across the Great Plains visited this location. The result is a remarkably complete and intact record of cultural development in the region over that time span. The archaeological resources of Wanuskewin are exceptional and among the finest examples of Pre-Contact occupation of the Great Plains of North America. Indigenous peoples of the Northern Plains came to the Opimihaw Creek area year-after-year, following the bison and range animals who provided sustenance, and gathering plants of the prairies. Their way of life evolved to suit their unique environment. Wanuskewin today gives us the opportunity to delve into the past and discover what life was like for these nomadic hunter-gatherer peoples. The theme of Wanuskewin Heritage Park is one of interpretation – exploring and explaining the meaning of Plains cultures to gain a better understanding of ourselves, Saskatchewan’s Indigenous peoples, and our common heritage. Saskatchewan, Canada, Travel Guide for Motorhomers keef with the mountie bear annie with the mountie bear 1/40 Other things we remember in no order are, it is called the land of living skies and we can see why, the old colonial government house in Regina, swift current battle field, wheat and barley fields and grain stores everywhere, Lake Diefenbaker and memories of that TV show from our childhood, cranberries growing in fields, Shaw street marching, bison heads, railways and cedar clad out buildings, there is just so much local wood in Canada via its massive forests that you would expect houses, apart from the risk of fire, to be built with wood, they often are, north exhibition artwork, which was just so brilliant, chief sitting bull, the wheat belt town of Kyle across the windy plains, the Hudson bay company heritage in Regina, fort Ellice on the elbow trail, and a whole lot more, maybe have a look at the slideshows and images on the website to accompany these fine words, thanks Enjoy Saskatchewan , we certainly did 2010 5 Days in Saskatchewan, Canada between 29th May and 2nd June INCLUDES 79 PHOTOS 5 Days in Saskatchewan, Canada - 29th May-2nd June 2010, 79 Photos, the summary slideshow is selective, amongst others we covered saskatchewan landing, saskatoon, regina, visiting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police - RCMP "mounties" academy and heritage centre, chapel and museum in regina , goodwin house, red river cart, wanuskewin heritage centre, heritage, prairies, railways, swift current, elbow, lake diefenbaker, davidson, moose jaw, First nations including cree, matis, lakota tribes, hudson bay company, meewasin park in saskatoon plus we saw bears and we have now been right across canada in a motorhome and we loved it #FACT The wind on the Prairies and having to take the van back into the Canadreams depot in Regina to get the steering sorted, as a new van it was incredibly dangerous to drive in high winds with it badly attuned, they agreed and fixed it thank god, then we had no further problems, rf prairies, railways, swift current, elbow, Davidson, First nations including Cree, matis, Lakota tribes, Hudson bay company, meewasin park plus we saw bears and moose.

  • Famous Train Journeys | Decades of Travel

    Explore iconic train journeys from 1995–today, including the TranzAlpine, The Ghan and Rocky Mountaineer, with stories, photos and unforgettable rail adventures. Our Train Journeys Exploring Iconic Train Routes Since 1995, KHWD Holiday has taken travelers on unforgettable train journeys. From the scenic Transalpine in New Zealand to the majestic Rocky Mountaineer in Canada, we curate experiences that inspire adventure. All aboard for the world’s greatest excuse to sit down, stare out of a window and call it “adventure.” This collection of famous train journeys celebrates the art of travelling long distances while doing absolutely nothing except eating, gawping at scenery and wondering why life isn’t always this civilised. From desert crossings to mountain climbs, these iconic routes prove that trains aren’t just transport — they’re moving theatres with better snacks. So settle in, sip something fancy, and enjoy a whistle‑stop tour of the planet’s most unforgettable rail escapades… without lifting more than a finger. Kuranda TransAlpine The Ghan Indian Pacific Rocky Mountaineer Kuranda 1995: Cairns to Kuranda, Queensland, Australia "with the lovely Simone" The video showcases the Kuranda Scenic Railway winding through lush North Queensland rainforest, crossing bridges and tunnels carved into the mountainside. It highlights sweeping views of Barron Gorge, Stoney Creek Falls and the historic 1891 railway engineering, capturing a calm, scenic journey from Cairns to Kuranda in crisp 4K detail. Discover More The Kuranda Scenic Railway runs between Cairns and the rainforest village of Kuranda in Far North Queensland. The journey climbs from sea level into the Barron Gorge National Park, passing waterfalls, deep ravines, 15 hand‑cut tunnels, 37 bridges, and dense tropical rainforest. Travellers enjoy views of Stoney Creek Falls and the impressive Barron Falls along the way. The trip takes around 1 hour 45 minutes each way and uses beautifully restored heritage carriages. Built in the late 1800s, the railway remains one of Australia’s most iconic scenic journeys, offering a memorable blend of history, engineering, and natural beauty. Our Images from 1995 “Ride the historic Kuranda Scenic Railway through lush rainforest, waterfalls and mountain gorges. A spectacular Queensland journey packed with scenery, heritage and adventure.” See a 360º TranzAlpine 2008: Christchurch to Greymouth South Island, New Zealand Our 30th Wedding Anniversary The TranzAlpine Railway runs across New Zealand’s South Island between Christchurch and Greymouth, travelling from the Canterbury Plains through the Southern Alps to the West Coast. The journey crosses wide braided rivers, rolling farmland, deep gorges, and the dramatic alpine landscape of Arthur’s Pass National Park. Highlights include the Waimakariri River, the Otira Tunnel, and sweeping mountain vistas from panoramic carriages. The trip takes around 4 hours 45 minutes each way and is considered one of the world’s great scenic rail journeys. It offers a memorable combination of engineering achievement, rugged landscapes, and ever‑changing natural beauty. Discover More The TranzAlpine glides from Christchurch across the Canterbury Plains, climbing into the Southern Alps beside braided rivers and deep gorges. It crosses viaducts, forests and snowy peaks before descending through lush valleys to Greymouth, revealing one of the world’s most spectacular rail journeys in just five unforgettable hours. Retro postcard celebrating five legendary rail adventures — Kuranda, TranzAlpine, The Ghan, Indian Pacific, and Rocky Mountaineer — across Australia, NZ & Canada. The Ghan 2008: Darwin to Alice Springs, Red Class seats, 24-26 May If only, not back in 2008 on a Canon Powershot...But...Sweeping drone shots, endless red desert, a long silver train cutting through Australia’s outback, dramatic curves, vast skies, rugged landscapes and fast‑paced visuals capturing the essence of The Ghan’s iconic journey. Discover More The Ghan runs through the heart of Australia between Darwin and Alice Springs, travelling from the tropical Top End into the vast red landscapes of the Northern Territory. The journey crosses floodplains, desert scrub, mountain ranges, and remote outback regions that few travellers ever see. Highlights include the Adelaide River floodplain, the sweeping desert views south of Katherine, and the dramatic approach into Alice Springs. The trip takes around 24 hours and is known for its spacious carriages, off‑train excursions, and relaxed pace. First launched in 1929, The Ghan remains one of Australia’s most iconic long‑distance rail experiences. Big thanks to Elisa & Max, “A fast, stunning 54‑second look at The Ghan, capturing Australia’s iconic outback rail journey with sweeping desert scenery and dramatic aerial shots.” The Indian Pacific 2017: Perth to Adelaide Our 39th Wedding Anniversary The Indian Pacific rolls out of Perth and glides through the Avon Valley before opening into the vast, golden emptiness of Western Australia’s wheatbelt. The landscape stretches wider with every mile until the train reaches the legendary Nullarbor Plain, crossing the world’s longest straight railway line. Remote outposts, red earth and endless horizons define the journey as it pushes east. Short stops at Rawlinna and Cook reveal tiny settlements shaped by isolation. As the terrain softens, the train descends into South Australia, finishing in Adelaide after an unforgettable trans‑continental crossing filled with scale, silence and pure Australian drama. Read the February diary 26-28 for the full details of our experience Discover More February 17 Diary Longest Straight Stretch of Track in the World gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/5 Rocky Mountaineer 2024: Banff to Vancouver, Alberta to Vancouver, British Columbia Gold Class seats The Rocky Mountaineer's "First Passage to the West" route from Banff to Vancouver is a spectacular journey through the heart of the Canadian Rockies. Here are some key details: Route Highlights Banff to Kamloops: The journey begins in Banff, a charming mountain town, and travels through the Spiral Tunnels and Continental Divide. You'll witness breathtaking mountain passes and dramatic canyons. Kamloops: After a full day on the train, you'll arrive in Kamloops, a lovely town where you can enjoy a stroll along the riverside. Kamloops to Vancouver: The next day, the train continues its journey to Vancouver, offering stunning views of the Canadian wilderness along the way. Experience Discover More The Rocky Mountaineer glides out of Banff and follows the Bow River through towering peaks and glacier‑cut valleys. The train sweeps past Castle Mountain and into the dramatic Kicking Horse Canyon, where cliffs, rapids and engineering feats define the route. Crossing the Continental Divide, the landscape softens into forested slopes and wide river plains. In British Columbia, the Fraser Canyon delivers roaring waters and sheer rock walls before the scenery opens into fertile farmland. As the train approaches Vancouver, mountains give way to coastal greenery, completing a spectacular daylight journey built entirely around views, comfort and pure Canadian grandeur. Daylight Travel: The train operates exclusively during the day, allowing you to soak in the scenery and take plenty of photos6. Luxury and Comfort: You can choose between GoldLeaf Service with dome cars for panoramic views or SilverLeaf Service with comfortable seating. Overnight Stops: Since the train doesn't offer sleeper services, you'll stay overnight in hotels at Kamloops. Season and Schedule Travel Season: The train operates from mid-April to mid-October. We were on the second to last trip which was great as snow had fallen on the 1st part of the journey. Complimentary Transfers: Motorcoach transfers are provided between the train and hotels in Kamloops. Passengers often describe the experience as "unforgettable and luxurious" and "the best way to explore Canada’s Rocky Mountains" and we would whole heartedly concur with that. To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 17 Singapore | Decades of Travel

    Discover Singapore through family moments, vibrant city adventures and unforgettable food. This page captures two heartfelt visits filled with East Coast Park walks, hawker‑centre feasts, iconic museums, Chinatown wanderings and a blissful Malaysia beach escape. A warm, personal travel diary celebrating culture, colour and precious time with loved ones—your perfect inspiration for a Singapore getaway. SINGAPORE - Marine Parade & About in the City 2 Visits, Start of Holiday 31 Jan-3 Feb the End of Hols 30 May - 12 Jun INTRODUCTION & DIARIES 2 visits at start and end of the holiday Stay 1 - Sadly just 3 days on route to the southern hemisphere to break the journey but it was a chance to catch up with family and see our lovely grand daughter again. Plus some good eats esp. Quentin's Eurasian with family and C&A. The Escher exhibition at Art/ Science was a particular favourite of mine. MRT coming 2023 to a station near you at Marine Parade. Love East Coast Park, helped somewhat in the jet lag stakes. Stay2 - A much longer stay this time around. 2 glorious weeks with family. National Gallery Biennale kids exhibition, Liao Fan Michelin Hawker centre, Singapore Zoo, Wet Wet Wet (Wild) park, Mustafa's, Chinatown, East Coast Park BBQ and walks, Parkway Parade, The supercool Library and a fab long weekend in Malaysia at Lotus Desaru Beach Hotel Read Stay 1 Read Stay 2 Try the Travel Videos, Singapore fun! "Family Time with Doug, Phoenix & Charlie" East Coast Park Walk with granddaughter Fab Indian Food at Mustafa's roof top restuarant Science / Art museum Singapore 2017 Singapore with Family Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/18 gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/1 Relaxing in East Coast Park, Singapore

  • 10 USA Maine| Holiday 1995-2024 | Motorhome Travel To Bar Harbor

    Follow our 2010 journey down the Maine coast to Bar Harbor—scenic drives, lighthouses, seafood stops, and classic New England charm on a relaxed summer road trip. 2010 USA Maine Travel Blog & Guide MAINE (USA) - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. We dropped over the border twice once into upstate New York around Niagara Falls on Lake Ontario and once into Maine via the Vanceboro- St Croix border crossing over the St Croix River which separates Canada and America. The crossing is sometimes named McAdam. In the early 1900s, this crossing was located at the adjacent lock structure a short distance to the north. At some point in the distant past (at least prior to 1930), a bridge existed to the south of the railroad bridge, extending from Public Crossing Road on the Canadian side. Concrete footings for this bridge remain on the US side at this site. Some of the Maine visit highlights were Independence Day (4th) , bar harbor, Lincoln, st croix vanceboro bridge and border crossing if the truth be known we thought we had found a crossing that would be somewhat less officious after our experience coming into Upstate New York, it wasn’t quite so bad but still a huge number of checks and they came on the van to check we weren’t smuggling anyone across, still they were only doing their job and extremely good at doing it they were, we’d come over on highway 4 in NB then highway 6 in Maine from Lambert Lake thru Lee to Lincoln, then travelling the Interstate Highway 95 through to Bangor, then Edinburg & Argyle (notice anything Scottish here ha-ha) down to Bar Harbor, fish warehouses, 6 sailed yacht as sunset, the red sails blending in which we watched as the sun started to set just fabulous really, cedar clad buildings everywhere, lobster claus xmas humour, state flag, number plates, geddys down under aussie bar, lobster pots and floats, camping at both bar harbor and lubec, Quoddy Head State Park, heritage shops and historic buildings, yummy ice-cream, envy for airstream motorhomes and harley davidson motorbikes, , welcome to maine, the way life should be and who are we to disagree, memorial gardens, Sunkhaze Meadows, Holden, Elseworth, Trenton, also spednik lake, lubec town and its harbour and coastline, washington county, endless fish options, clam chowder, eden market, the cat bay ferry from yarmouth nova scotia which we also saw up in Yarmouth when visiting, west quoddy lighthouse which is the eastern most point in the whole of the United States, shopping for milk in Lincoln "near the guns, rifles and bullets, sir!", 4th july at campsite near bar harbor, flags, burgers and beers, plus crossing back to canada , Jonesboro, st croix river, blueberries growing wild, lobster rolls (yummy) from gas stations and even Maccy D's , probably the last time we went in one, tee-hee but the lobster rolls in Maine were just so tasty and fresh, mentally swapping back to miles not kilometres and cheap gas. We have now been from one side of Canada to the other and visited quite a few states in America. #tick Here is a bit of a write up on the whole area we visited in Maine, namely Washington County Washington County is sometimes referred to as the "Sunrise County" because it includes the eastern most point in the United States, and where many believe the sun first rises on the forty-eight contiguous states. Natural resources comprise a large portion of economic activity in the county. Blueberries play a major role; nearly 85% of the world's supply of wild blueberries comes from Washington County. Lobsters accounted for over $45 million dollars of economic activity in 2014. Washington County was established June 25, 1789, in conjunction with Hancock County. Originally Washington County stretched along the eastern border of New Brunswick all the way to the disputed northern boundary with Canada. Machias was established as the shire town. Named for George Washington, the county encompasses two cities, forty towns, three plantations and two Native American areas. It covers 3,258 square miles (2,563 square miles of land and 695 square miles of water, or 21%). The population is 32, 856 (2010) which works out to about 13 people per square mile. The population is located, for the most part, along the coast. This makes sense historically because water travel brought settlers to the area in the first place. Vast natural resources were the attraction and served to support the establishment of many communities. The more interior half of the county is considered Unorganized Territories and holds about 1200 people. What makes Washington County so special is a question of an entirely different sort and demands a different response. It takes four hours to drive from one end of the county to the other. During that drive the topography changes, reflecting the glacial scouring of 10,000 years ago. Left behind were rock formations, lakes and streams, and wide-open expanses to rival the plains. And in that landscape an independent sort live, work and raise their families. Washington County is a lot of things. It is the most gorgeous, has the deepest cargo port, the longest coastline including the Bold Coast, the highest tides, and produces the most lobster and clam landings. What Washington County does not have is lots of traffic lights (only three in the whole county), an interstate, a Red Lobster Restaurant, or poisonous snakes. Welcome to Washington County. We Liked Maine a lot, relaxed feel , fab sights and lobster so fresh it could almost walk up to your plate. Maine, USA, Travel Guide for Motorhomers front bar harbor floats 1/34 2010 3 Days in Maine USA 3rd-5th July including "Independence Day" 4th July INCLUDES 69 PHOTOS We visited amongst others bar harbor, Lincoln, st croix vanceboro bridge and border crossing, highway 4 in NB then highway 6 in Maine from Lambert Lake thru Lee to Lincoln, then travelling the Interstate Highway 95 through to Bangor, then Edinburg & Argyle (notice anything Scottish here ha-ha) down to Bar Harbor, fish warehouses, 6 sailed yacht as sunset, the red sails blending in, cedar clad buildings everywhere, lobster claus xmas humour, state flag, number plates, geddys down under aussie bar, lobster pots and floats, camping at both bar harbor and lubec, Quoddy Head State Park, heritage shops and historic buildings, yummy icecream, envy for airstream motorhomes and harley davidson motorbikes, , welcome to maine, the way life should be, memorial gardens, Sunkhaze Meadows, Holden, Elseworth, Trenton, also spednik lake, lubec town and its harbour and coastline, washington county, endless fish options, clam chowder, eden market, the cat bay ferry from yarmouth nova scotia, west quoddy lighthouse, shopping for milk in Lincoln "near the guns, rifles and bullets, sir!", 4th july at campsite near bar harbor, flags, burgers and beers, plus crossing back to canada , jonesboro, st croix river, blueberries growing wild, lobster rolls (yummy) from gas stations and even Maccy D's , probably the last time we went in one, tee-hee, mentally swapping back to miles not kilometres and cheap gas. We have now been from one side of Canada to the other and visited quite a few states in America. #tick 1/1

  • 10 New Brunswick | Holiday 1995-2024 | Travel Guide and Blog

    Explore New Brunswick’s French and English heritage, scenic bays, historic towns and coastal drives in this 2010 motorhome travel diary across Canada’s Maritime province. 2010 New Brunswick Travel Blog & Guide NEW BRUNSWICK - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. For New Brunswick the following were some of the highlights, alma, campbellton, lighthouses, miscou island and our lovely walk along the peat bog boardwalk here across the bridge to the island, lots of waterlilies and wild flowers, lamere island, kouchibouguac national park, bay of fundy national park, the world beating tidal height changes in the Bay of Fundy, we watched it, it’s just amazing how far it drops down to the mud beds deep below the coastal edge, all New Brunswick’s provincial parcs as well as National ones, butland's lobster, beaver tails resaurants and Tim Horton coffee, art and art galleries, music, arcadians, Micmac’s a native Indian tribe whom the band we saw in France in 2014 took their name from, indeed we liked the band so much we bought their CD, McAdam station and tourist information and museum, cape jourmain, confederation bridge, sea dogs ice hockey, covered cedar bridge tunnels, hopewell rocks, grand anse, baseball, bog walks, board walks, plant life, harbors and now in English harbours ha-ha, sun and rain in equal measures, magnetic hill and taking the van to it and getting a feeling you were going backwards, magic village, Bathurst with its fabulous coastline and viewing platforms and lighthouses plus its fab village hill, val-comeau and its board walk, cap egmont, Moncton – which in fairness we were not that impressed with, sadly another big town / city that just didn’t do it for us, Saint john (as opposed to st johns in newfoundland) looking for Annie’s rellies as well as moving back from the edge of the precipice in its campsite to a somewhat safer pitch although in Keef’s humble opinion the view in the 1st pitch was fab,also we visited the home of the St John Sea Dogs ice hockey team, ice hockey is huge in Canada, witness mr Horton, we back in Nottingham have an English team called the Nottingham Panthers who aren’t bad either, petitcodiac river, possum in the road kill cafe, whose rather worrying catch phrase is “you kill ‘em, we grill ‘em”, keef bought one of their T-Shirts. Fredericton for Canada Day 1 July , it was Canada’s 143 birthday, and was just so nice , it was lucky we were able to get a slot at the campsite for Canada Day as it was incredibly busy and the main celebrations were on in town which was lovely, dogs dressed as Mounties and Anne of Green Gables, live music, food, drink, people with flags and all forms of Canada memorabilia from chairs to jackets and t-shirts, we joined in by waving, furiously, the provided mini Canada maple leaf flags, true patriots that we are. Also, very friendly people at the shindig. We spent a couple of days in Fredericton exploring the town and museums as well as celebrating Canada day. The old Town hall was very interesting. The other thing we remember is a crowd of Japanese tourists at the campsite asking if they could come and have a look inside our motorhome as it is not anything they had ever seen before, hilarious, reminds me of when Phoenix’s parents came to stay with us from China in the UK and asked a lot of questions about our Wendy House motorhome. We returned the second time to pass thru to Prince Edward Island as David & Cathy were on holiday there. Here are some words about the Confederation Bridge, an amazing feat of engineering, that we had the pleasure of traversing 4 times on our Canada holiday in 2010. The Confederation Bridge joins the eastern Canadian provinces of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, making travel throughout the Maritimes easy and convenient. The curved, 12.9 kilometre (8 mile) long bridge is the longest in the world crossing ice-covered water and continues to endure as one of Canada’s top engineering achievements of the 20th century. The decision to replace the existing ferry service with a fixed link followed a heated debate throughout the 1980’s. Farmers, fishermen, tourism operators, and residents of Prince Edward Island had sharply contrasting opinions about how year-round access to the mainland would affect their way of life and livelihood. Eventually, it was decided that the debate would be settled at the polls. The federal department of Public Works and Government Services selected its favourite bridge design out of several proposals from the private sector, and on January 18, 1988, Premier Joseph Ghiz asked Prince Edward Islanders to make the final decision in a plebiscite. At the polls, 59.4% of Islanders voted “Yes” to a fixed link. After four years of construction using crews of more than five thousand local workers, the Confederation Bridge opened to traffic on May 31, 1997. Today, the Confederation Bridge is operated by Strait Crossing Bridge Limited, headquartered in the shadow of the bridge in Borden-Carleton, Prince Edward Island.. Ontario, Canada, Travel Guide for Motorhomers us in bathurst new brunswick arcadian grand anse 1/83 There are 131 of these historic wooden structures in Canada and 58 in New Brunswick – almost half the country’s total! 2010 14 Days in New Brunswick, Canada between 24th June & the 25th July, in 2 visits, 24th June-8th July & 21st July INCLUDES 78 PHOTOS We visited amongst others alma, Campbelltown, lighthouses, Miscou island, Lamare island, Kouchibouguac national park, bay of fundy national park, provincial parcs, bay of fundy's world leading tidal change in height, butland's lobster, beaver tails fast food and restaurants washed down by Tim Horton coffee, art and art galleries, music, arcadians, Micmac's, McAdam station, cape jourmain, confederation bridge, sea dogs ice hockey, covered cedar bridge tunnels, hopewell rocks and cape, grand anse, baseball, bog walks, plant life, harbors, sun and rain in equal measures, shippagan, magnetic hill, magic mountain village, bathurst, val-comeau, cap egmont, moncton, vanceboro st croix border crossing to Maine, st croix river, saint john (as opposed to st johns in newfie) looking for annie's rellies, petitcodiac river, possum in the road kill cafe, fredericton for canada day 1 july, note during Covid lockdown this is what happen on the corresponding day in 2021 and lots of places in between. We have been from one side of Canada to the other

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