Monday, November 23, 2009

WWOOFING!


   I'm a Willing Worker On Organic Farms and I'm heading to my third today.











My first wwoofing experience was in Silverdale, North Auckland with the Kettles at Vedic Academy Produce. It's a property with three houses and the meditation temple. They practice Transcendental Meditation, but I didn't get an opportunity to learn much about it. It's from India, and I think the Beatles were into it. I did get to do a lot of gardening, weeding, and helped making a path in the "bush". I planted kumara, a sort of sweet potato brought to NZ by the indigenous Maori, basil, corn, leeks and other veggies. We made a hot compost pile with grass clippings, manure, and garden waste. We probably should have added more carbon as it was getting too hot at 70 degrees Celsius, potentially destroying valuable nitrogen! I participated in Betsy's horticulture and permaculture classes, helping to make some raised garden beds with native ponga fern tree trunks.


   In my off time, I visited some parks and enjoyed the wonderful native flora and fauna. The bird life is incredible, as NZ has evolved seperately from the rest of the world and without land mammals until approximately 900 years ago. The Tui has a birdsong reminiscent of an Aphex Twin track. Fantails fearlessly follow you, darting about to scavenge insects you may have stirred up walking. Unfortunately the introduction of possums, stoats, cats, dogs and other animals have decimated the bird population, and most of the native bush has been cleared for pastureland for sheep and cattle.


   I'm finishing up my stay at my second WWOOF host today in Mangawhai. Jennifer and Marvin are an older couple, but they still have plenty of energy to run Olive Branch Farm. I've been hauling plenty of olive branches around, as the trees were overgrown and needed lots of pruning. I also planted some lettuce, weeded, trimmed, and fed goats. There are four adult goats and seven kids here, and they are damn adorable. 11 goats are a lot of work, and I think Marvin might regret getting them a bit... Marvin is from the U.S. and lived for quite a while in Washington State. Jennifer is a native kiwi, but has lived in San Francisco, Philadelphia and WA where she met Marvin. I had some great conversations with them discussing politics, philosophy and life.






On my day off yesterday I visited Goat Island, a marine reserve with no goats present. I snorkeled and saw some rays (mantas?), red mokis and other fish.











   One consequence of my skipping over to the southern hemisphere has been my having to experience my spring allergies for the second time this year. The snot has really been flowing at times, and it's not yet December, the equivalent of June in the north and the worst month for me... Sigh.










 


Today I'm headed to my next WWOOF host in Kohukohu, driving up through old Kauri forest and on the ferry across the Hokianga Harbor.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

I'm in New Zealand!!!

Welcome to my new blog, where I will share my adventures in New Zealand and beyond...



I've been planning this trip for a while now, wanting to do some WWOOFing and defy nature by skipping winter. I was pretty nervous before I left, travelling to a strange land for five months and all. Stopping in the L.A. airport, whose terminals looked like the setting of an alien zombie shooter game I used to play, didn't help. As soon as the plane reached site of our destination though, I could see I was entering a beautiful green inviting place. Upon arriving at the Auckland airport, I encountered BioSecurity. After answering a survey asking if I had recently visited a farm or forest or was carrying certain items, they confiscated my cheese and washed the farm shit off my shoes.



As I was contemplating my trip months ago, I was pleased to see that the NZ dollar had dropped to half the value of the US$. It's up to about 75 NZ cents to the US dollar now. Oh well, stuff isn't cheap. I went shopping for some shoes but they're twice as much as back home, because they have to buy them from the U.S.

I considered bus travel and hitchhiking as a means of getting around, but that was before I saw her. A vintage 1988 Honda Civic hatchback! For only NZ$1000! Sure it doesn't have A/C or power steering, and I have to put on the choke and warm it up for a few minutes before I drive, but I enjoy roughing it! For some reason everyone in this country drives on the wrong side of the road, so I've been forced to do the same. It's a bit weird, but I'm geting used to it.




Auckland is a nice clean modern city. It's very multicultural - lots of Turkish kebab restaurants, British backpackers, Chinese students studying English, and a guy from Zimbabwe who sold me my car. They've got a great museum, a nice zoo, and lots of lovely parks. I took a ferry across the bay to Rangitoto Island, a 600 year old volcanic landmass for some scenic views from the top. Mt. Eden and One Tree Hill also provided nice panoramas of the area, the latter also sporting a healthy sheep population.



 I arrived here at my first WWOOF host today, a short drive north of Auckland. I was supposed to come three days ago, but the French girl who was here before me had nowhere to go next and remained in my room until yesterday. My first task was sharpening the slasher and felling some tree sized thistles. My host, Betsy, is originally from Iowa and teaches horticulture/permaculture classes here. There's a meditation center here as well.


edit:
As you can see, I figured out how to get photos to appear on the blog. They are all posted here: http://picasaweb.google.com/alxble