Saturday 16 March 2013

Weet-bix TRYathlon


 Bright and early last Sunday morning we were at Tahunanui Beach with Jackson getting ready to participate in the Weet-bix TRYathlon along with 1777 other kids ages 7-15.  It was super organized, but quite overwhelming.  The kids were colour-coordinated in age groups and numbered, so all of the 7 year olds had white swim caps.  They stagger started the kids in small groups of 15 or so. 


 Off they went on a 50 m swim in the sea (see all of the great volunteers on foot and in kayaks, making sure they go the right way and don't drown??) . . . 


Cheering him on as they head up the beach towards the transition area to get their bikes.

 
 Unfortunately I don't have a good photo of Jackson on his bike, with 1778 bikes all spread out in rows, the transition area is massive and the bike leg of the race headed down the road away from the park.   He had to bike 4 km, so it took about 15 minutes for him to reappear.  (Nervous mommy waiting).  Clever boy, he had remembered to dry off after swimming, put on his socks, shoes, shirt and helmet all my himself, then finding his spot again to put his bike back in the row of white flags, he even remembered to take a drink and remove his bike helmet - WOW!  No parents are allowed in transition, but there are a few volunteers to help out if needed.    Beginning the running leg of 1.5km here: 
 Finishing the race!  Exhausted?
  All smiles now that he has a cup of water, his medal and his finishing time.  You can watch the finish line video at
 
Select the "Nelson Sprint Cam" and go through the video segments to the right of this (they will be title like 0939-0942 which references the time of day) and find the video segment titled 1006-1009.  Jack appears around 10:06:50 and runs past the camera at 10:06:56.  You can tell because he runs his arms stay straight as he swings them!
 
You can also look at the "Nelson Finish Cam" clips and again he is in the 1006-1009 segment, getting a medal hung around his neck at 10:07:02.  It's just a rolling start and finish the whole morning, so kids are not ranked or placed at all, everyone who finishes gets a medal and waterbottle. 

 The aftermath:  All of the kids are corralled in front of display boards to have their photo taken.

 Chowing down on a some yogourt tubes (they are $7 here for 8 tubes - ON SALE! so we don't buy them often) at the school tent (there were about 20 schools that participated).



Here a pic of Xavier in a rare happy moment for the day - unfortunately he was rather disturbed that he was too young to participate and felt quite left out. 



 Random shots of the crowd around the finish line and waiting for a turn on the inflatable obstacle course.
 Coffee prices from $3.00 - please don't ask me what a flat white or long black is, at these prices, I can't afford to figure it out. 
 
Only a few of the kids from the school out of the 75 that participated, they were the last school to get photographed, so most people didn't wait around for the extra hour and they took a group photo at school on Monday morning.  Overall, a great sporting event - the largest children's sporting event in the world apparently - with over 20 000 kids participating each year in about 15 locations around NZ. 


 PS  Weet-bix is a cereal company - traditional breakfast foddle for kiwi kids (and adults), so there was a FREE breakfast tent set up for all of the participants.  Maybe Shreddies would sponsor an event in North America??


Friday 15 March 2013

Road Trip: Rocks & Water

 

We drove down to Lake Brunner to meet up with my parents and Aunt Val & Uncle Wayne who had just made it to NZ after a cruise around Australia in recent weeks.  We rented a holiday home and enjoyed the view!  This post has some lovely scenery shots, primarily of rocks and water with a few trees and birds thrown in.  Water of all kinds: lakes, the sea, waterfalls, rivers etc and rocks: flat ones, tall ones, pink ones . . . you get the picture!  
 
 
 The mist over the lake in the morning
 

The sunset at night
 

And the white herons on the shore before we left.
 

We headed inland for the day through Arthur`s Pass, which is the highest of the three mountain passes that cross the Southern  Alps in NZ.  This is one of Dave`s favourite places on earth.  His family often went hiking here together, especially around Easter time. 

 This road is a viaduct, a marvel of engineering because of the length of it, the S curve shape as well as the unstable ground surrounding it.  There`s a wonderful viewing spot at the top so everyone can stop and marvel at it.  :-) 
 
I think this part of the road is very cool though, when you drive underneath two different tunnels, one is to protect the road from rock slides and the other from a waterfall.  
 
 
There are also friendly reminders for hikers not to feed the Kea.  They are very curious and friendly mountain parrots, but are easily killed when they hang out on the roadway after being overfed by tourists, too heavy and slow. 

All of the waterways are very low throughout the country, it`s been a very dry summer here.  The waterfalls in the area are much more spectacular after some rain.



We headed up on a one hour return hike to the Devil`s Punchbowl Falls. 








 On our return journey we drove out to the west coast to take the scenic route (big surprise!) and something called the pancake rocks.  A little bit of farmland to cross through first . . .



Then you`re right on the coast! 


 There are so many campervans on the road in NZ, heaps of people come here on vacation and rent a motorhome or campers to travel around it.  There are some places  you can freedom camp (no charge for a campsite and no faciilities) or you can use department of conservation sites for about $6 per adult or holiday parks for about $40 - 60 per night.  The roads are challenging to drive though!

 Especially when you are distracted by views like this!


 These are Nikau palm trees.  Plentiful in this area and in a few other places around NZ, they are Dave`s favourite tree.  Unique! 


Time for a picnic lunch while the boys chase the weka.

 And these are the PANCAKE rocks, so cool!  The Punakaiki Rocks are limestone columns worn away by the pounding surf and there are several blowholes where the water splashes up violently at high tide.  No one knows why the rocks are in layers though.   But, yes, there is a little shop that opened here that serves pancakes, amongst the tourist displays, if you get into the spirit.  
 







( Don`t worry, we didn`t see any penguins, nor did we run over any - good driving Dave!) 

Turning inland once again near Westport, we followed the Buller River back towards Nelson.  Note how green the water is compared to the sea. 



 Pit stop at the longest swingbridge in the country, right across the Buller Gorge.  Cool little jetboat happening but at $90 per adult and $50 per child, we just took our chances crossing on foot. 






Yes, my mother was a little hesitant about the  bridge, but she made it across both times with relative ease, the second time though we had the kids go BEHIND her instead of in front of her . . . that made for a few less ``Be careful Xavier!`` and ``Hang on tight Jackson`` comments, but we still had the  ``Don`t jump Dave!`` comments!  Love you MOM, we had to get you to do one daring thing in NZ!  The day ended with ice cream:  Raspberry Lemonade Fizz, Caramel Fudge Swirl, Goody Goody Gumdrops and Boysenberry flavours!