June 19, 2017 – Franz Joseph Glacier
Last night we planned our day and decided that we could have
a down morning and still see everything we wanted to. That’s good, since it’s raining when we get
up. We’ll see how the day progresses. Marilyn turns on our flat-screen TV in search
of some news or weather. There is a
Maori channel! It’s all in the Maori
language. How cool is that! The
America’s Cup is big news, especially since New Zealand is dominating America,
3 to 0 at this point. The New Zealand
news people aren’t like ours at home.
They are much more casual, and funny!
Much like their countrymen. We
haven’t worn any make up or been particularly concerned about our hair, since
no one else is. Most activities are
outdoors and relaxed.
The last oatmeal for breakfast with coffee and hot chocolate
starts our day off and we’re off to see the glaciers, rain or shine! We stop first at Fox Glacier, which,
predictably enough, is only a few minutes’ drive! There are several walks of varying lengths
and intensities and we opt for the “thirty minute return”, which we’ve decided
means round trip. That’s the perfect
length of time and rise in elevation.
Miraculously the rain has quit and we are treated to the perfect view of
the glacier, framed with vegetation and even a bit of blue sky. While we’re there a group from Japan and
Singapore join us and one of the young women offers to take our picture with
Marilyn’s phone. Marilyn mentions that
I’ve been to Asia and asks me where I’ve been; when I say Japan the gentleman
responds with, “Singapore very small”.
We assure him that the people are wonderful and that’s what counts.
There is a small town here!
There is a choice of cafes and three shops and the West Coast Wildlife
Center – but the big draw is the glacier.
Again, there are many choices of ways to see it, even a helicopter that
will set you down on the glacier. Since
we touched a glacier in Alaska we don’t see that this one will feel much
different! We sure do want to see it,
though! We choose a path, park and put
on our ponchos as it is beginning to drizzle again. A few steps along and the drizzle quits and
we are protected by the rain gods once again!
We climb and shoot and head back to the car as the drizzle picks up
again! Obviously it’s time to shop!
Marilyn wants to check out a pair of earrings but there
isn’t a mirror handy, so she uses her phone, as you do! She decides against the earrings and we move
on to a second shop, then to lunch at the Snake Bite Brewery. It’s an Asian fusion/New Zealand kind of
place and I have simply delicious chicken pad thai! Marilyn has the fish and chips and while
we’re waiting for our order we are joined by an American woman we had seen on
the glacier! She tells us a LOT about
her travels with her husband and their twenty-year old son. He’s gotten a job at one of the remote ranger
stations for the winter.
While we’re eating, Marilyn discovers that she doesn’t have
her phone. Surely it’s in the car. Our American buddy comes back to the table to
tell us that there is a rainbow over Franz Joseph. Since I never go anywhere without the camera,
I fun outside to capture it. Marilyn
stays at the table since she doesn’t have her camera or phone and turned me
down when I offered to go back to the car for it. It’s only across the street and it isn’t
raining.
When we finish lunch (?) We go to the car to look for her
phone before our back-stage tour of the kiwis as the windlife center. I’ve brought home half of my enormous serving
of pad thai and want to deposit it, anyway.
Well. We’ve turned
the car and it’s contents inside out and upside down. We’re pretty sure Marilyn got her phone back
from the girl on the glaciers and have no other ideas. You’ve probably guessed that it was in the
store with the earrings. Another
customer found it lying on a shelf and the store owner brought it to the police
station. We walk the couple of blocks to
the station and after a bit of QandA the brand new phone – which isn’t even
paid for yet – is back safe and sound.
The policeman asked what color it was, and what the picture
was on the screen. Marilyn has two
different pictures and described both;
but the clincher was when she gave him the passcode to open it. He was very polite and said it happens quite
a bit. We are so impressed with the
honesty of the Kiwis! We say one man get
out of his car, leave it running, and go into a shop! Amazing!
Our tour is booked for 4:30 but we arrive early. That’s good since it’s been moved up to
4:00. We’re the only people on it,
though, so it’s not a big deal Usually there
are eggs and chicks to see, along with the half-hour lecture and video; but it’s just past “chick season”, so we have
the option of just seeing the nocturnal room.
We opt to go forward anyway and are very pleased with our decision. Nikki is our guide. She’s originally from South Africa but moved
to the north island seventeen years ago.
She deoesn’t have the strong Kiwi accent and we can understand every
word!
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She was only 16 when she was struck by a car. They can live to be 60-80! |
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This fluffy chick was only one day old! Look how huge! |
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Poor mama!! |
She shares a wealth of information of her favorite birds and
how their populations are dwindling. We
get to hold a kiwi egg, which is enormous and takes up most of the mother’s
body! There’s an x-ray that shows how
all her organs are squished together to make room for that blue monster! Once she lays her egg, she’s done and the
dady incubates for around eighty days!
Kiwis are much like mammals, in that their feathers are more
like fur and they don’t have hollow bones, since they only have vestigal
wings. They live on the egg sac for a
week or so and since it is so large, the chicks have a difficult time standing
and balancing when they are hatched.
They are fully fledged when they emerge from their eggs and within a few
days are starting to peck around with those long bills for insects and berries. Their nostrils are at the very end of their
beaks and they also have a separate organ right at the tip that senses
vibration. They need their sense of
smell and vibration to locate food since their vision isn’t very gool.
She also showed us how thick and strong their legs are,
taking up nearly half of their body weight!
They are scaly like reptiles and use their three claws and dew claw for
defense. We got to hold a stuffed animal
that weighed as much as an actual full-gown Rowi Kiwi and it’s like holding a
small watermelon! I would never have
guessed they were that heavy! We even
got to hear the difference between the male and females’ calls. The male is much higher pitched, so that it
will carry over his large territory.
After the lecture and video we got to see the incubators
where they have automatic machines that turn the eggs a quarter turn every four
hours, twice in one directions and then back in the other. Then we saw the
boxes in which the chicks are kept until they are large enough to be sent up to
Willowback for continue growing until they can be released on a predator-free
island. The islands aren’t completely
predator free because the evil stoats have learned how to swim seven kilometers
to get to them! They’ve also learned how
to avoid the traps.
Each chick is fitted with a microchip and a transmitter, so
that when they are fully-enough grown they can be collected from the islands
and returned to the forest from which their eggs were collected.
It costs ten thousand dollars to bring a chick from egg to
release! The government doesn’t finance
any of this effort, except that the wildlife centers work very closely with the
Department of Conservation (called DOC, like the word, not the letters) in
their efforts.
Our last educational stop is the nocturnal room to visit the
last two chicks at the center. They are
Dawn and Dusk and after letting our eyes adjust we are able to see them
both! At one point Dusk happens upon
Dawn and they startle each other, taking off in opposite directions!
We’ve stayed past closing and past sundown! Marilyn has to drive back along those hairpin
turns in the dark and it has started raining again. When we get home we decide to park on the
street instead of trying to negotiate the bizarre parking lot. The only draw-back is that it is finally
showing us what a real rain looks like.
Yay for ponchos! You can carry a
lot of stuff under there and keep it dry!
We’ve had another long day and Marilyn doesn’t even want
dinner. I finish my left overs and argue
with the internet for a bit before giving up.
I was able to check my mail at lunch, so I know there’s nothing going on
that I need to know; but it sure is
frustrating not to be able to post. Oh
well. Our ponchos are hanging in the
shower and all is well with the world.
Off to sleep at 7:30! Having the
sun go down so early forces us to come home early. That lets us get the day started early so we
don’t waste any day light!
Now you really have visited the Kiwis! Very cool and nice that you got such a private tour. The rainbow over the glacier is amazing. Almost looks photoshopped in!
ReplyDeleteThey are so adorable!! I never would have imagined that they are as heavy as they are!
DeleteWe even forgave the lady for being such a busy body when she told us about the rainbow!!