Friday, October 25, 2013

Wharekauhau: sheep, eels, and seals

Written by Charles October 19, 2013

Yesterday we did a lot.  We started by doing a helicopter tour of a mountain range and a glacier.  We took off at nine and flew over the most turbulent patch of air in the world.  The helicopter was going up and down like a massive roller coaster a hundred feet from a snowy mountain.  It was the middle of spring, and there was still snow on top of the mountains.  We flew down a river valley, and the river was grey with silt. 




We flew past Mt. Aurum, which means Mt. Gold in Latin.  I got a really good picture of it as we flew past.  We flew to the glacier, but that was barely visible beneath all the snow.  After, we flew around the mountain with the glacier for about five minutes.  We did the most exciting part of the ride and flew ten feet from the ground, and we were going a hundred and fifty miles per hour!

Then we landed on top of a mountain, which I was not expecting because I wore crocs.  My feet were frozen solid by the end of the excursion on top of the mountain.   We flew back to the airport after that and rushed to the terminal to catch the flight.  The flight was uneventful except that there was one awesome thing about it. There was no Security!!!!!!!!!!!!  We did not have to go through security because it was a domestic flight.  I was thinking to myself that this was definitely not America. 

We landed in Wellington and went to a movie studio.  It was not as awesome as it sounds.  We only saw how the people sculpt the weapons and armor for the movies.  (Did you know that Sauron from the Lord of the Rings was actually wearing rubber armor?)  Then we went and saw a museum, which was supposed to be really cool but it wasn’t.  We drove an hour and a half and finally got to the place we are staying.  (As the helicopters flies its only 12 minutes.)  The place that we are staying at is called Wharekauhau (pronounced Far-ee-co-ho), which is an awesome resort on the other side of some mountains.  I have no idea what we are doing tomorrow, but I hope it will be fun.




Written by William October 20, 2013

Best day ever! Today we went on a tour of the farm where we are staying. Our teacher, Miss Jenn, was thinking of cuddling with a baby lamb. But our first stop was seeing a baby sheep being shaved (or sheared, as its called). Then our next stop was even more funny. They sent out three dogs that were trained to gather the sheep. Our last stop was their version of a beach, which was rocks with a little sand. Somehow there was an upside to it; there were lots of good skipping rocks.




When we got back to our cottage, we went to skip rocks in a little pond nearby. I successfully failed at skipping rocks. Charles had one skip five times somehow. Then we did archery, where the target was a balloon. I could only pop 2, and Charles popped the rest of them. For me, it was point and shoot because I was too short to look down the sites. Charles was tall enough to look down the sites, so he hit all of them on his first try...except for one, which stayed intact for about 50 arrows, and then of course he hit that one too.





Written by Charles October 20, 2013

Today we did a tour of the farm that we are staying on. We saw how they sheared a sheep, rounded the sheep up with dogs, and saw the giant cliffs. I thought that shearing the sheep was mean. I won't go into details because I was upset for the sheep. After that we saw the sheep dogs running around herding the sheep. I thought that it was hilarious because the sheep ran exactly where the dogs wanted them to go. The real funny part was when the sheep tried to escape the herd, but they got cornered by two of the dogs.

We went on to the boring part of the tour because we drove around looking at sights. It was boring even though we saw some pretty views. At the end we were driving back, but then the driver turned off the road and headed for a pond. I was completely confused until we got out. There was a sign saying Mr. Joe's eels. I was still mildly confused until I saw them. The eels were being fed by other people. They were 'slithering' up almost onto the shore. Me and my brother were completely freaked out. William had run up to the car, but I stayed down on the shore.

Our guide pulled out a bin of meat and some skewers. He put the meat on the skewer and started to feed the eels!  Then he asked me to to do it, and I did!  The eels were really strong and almost pulled Miss Jenn in! (Editor's note: Minor exaggeration. Miss Jenn got surprised when they popped up in her face, so she fell back on her bum on the dock). If you thought that was disgusting, just wait for this. Our guide stuck his hand in the water, then he touched an eel!  He asked me if I wanted to do it. I did it!  I was really grossed out. It was like touching the softest thing ever, but it was squishy at the same time.

After that we went to the pond near our room and skipped rocks. (There were no eels in there!)  William completely failed at skipping the rocks but did okay.

Later we did archery with balloons, and we killed all of them. I called it the balloon massacre. The rest of the day we did school. Tomorrow we are doing a tour of a seal colony. I have no idea how that will turn out.

Written by Charles October 21, 2013

Today we went to the seals. It was an hour and a half drive to the colony and an hour and an half back. The seals stunk, and they were lazy. Some flubbered around barking at each other. The others played on the rocks getting a tan. I don't know how they could get a tan with grey skin, but I think they were trying. We all sat down on some rocks near the seals, and we took photos. All of a sudden this one seal started to charge at me. I was minding my own business at it waddled right at me. William ran for it, but the rest of us held our ground!

Then my mom and Miss Jenn ran. Then when the seal got five feet from me, my dad and the guide ran. I knew I had to run when it got to the rock behind me!  I got up and ran for my life!  It was still chasing me, but I moved faster. I agreed wholeheartedly. Tomorrow we are flying to Auckland, and I think we are sailing on a big boat for the afternoon.   








Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Doubtful Sound and a helicopter tour over the glaciers


10-17-13 Charles

Today and the day before, we were on the boat tour.  It was my least favorite part of the tour. Even though we saw penguins, dolphins, seals, trees, some more trees, water, more water, some more water, more water, waterfalls, and a lot of rain it was still boring.  We saw everything (except the trees, rain, water, waterfalls, and clouds) for about five minutes.  We only saw the penguins’ heads and the dolphins’ fins.  


The seals, on the other hand, were cool because they all lifted their heads at us and went back to sleep.  There were a few seal pups, and they played tag with each other. Most of the time we played games around the boat with a friend that we met named Andrew. We played a game of walking team tag. Then I played cards with my parents. William and Andrew played connect four.  It was gray and raining all day, night, and morning. William, my mom, my dad, and I said that it was a waste of money!

When we got back to Queenstown we tried to go sky diving again, but it was too windy.  We finished watching the second Lord of the Rings movie and then we went to bed. I have no idea what we are going to do tomorrow, but I think it involves lots of school.



Written by William October 17, 2013



We went on a very boring boat tour in a place called Doubtful Sound. It was like a ferry you sleep on. We played with the only other kid on the boat; his name was Andrew, and he is from Southern Australia. We speed walked around the deck, and we tried to tag whoever was hiding. I saw a lot of seals and a few penguins. We just saw the little penguins' heads pop up and go back down. Then we had to go to bed, sadly. The next morning Charles woke me up, and it was not fun at all. He shook me and said earthquake! 45 minutes later I woke up. We saw a lot of waterfalls and a lot of ocean. 

Written by Charles October 18, 2013

Today was a school day. We did school all morning and most of the afternoon. We took a break to do the world's most awesome putt putt golf course ever. It was a mini city that was golf friendly. They had a castle, lumber mill, church, river, ski run, downtown, and even a factory.  You could golf through the obstacles. We did not really do anything really exciting today. We are sadly going to leave Queenstown tomorrow, and I think we are going to Wellington.


Written by William October 19, 2013

For some odd reason, my parents made me get up at 6:30am today. Before I knew it, we were going on a helicopter ride. Oops, have to turn off electronics; I'll be right back....Ok, I am back. Charles went on the helicopter with Crocs, and then we landed on a mountain. Of course there was snow where we landed, so his feet were really cold. We saw glaciers, waterfalls, and snow. We went around 20 feet from the tops of the trees, and that's when you feel like you're going really fast. 

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Skipper's Canyon


10-14-13 Written by Charles

Today we went on the tour of the back hills of New Zealand.  It was pretty cool, but the end was the best.  I’m not saying anything bad about the tour.  It’s just we panned for specks of gold!  I got a flake of gold about the size of two or three grains of sand in a triangle.  Sadly it blew away in the wind.  It was only worth about a cent (American Dollars), so I didn’t lose my fortune.


The other really exciting part was that we saw the Ford of Brunhen.  It was an important scene in the Lord of the Rings.  The Lord of the Rings was entirely filmed in New Zealand.  Our tour guide was one of the people that helped organize all the transportation for the movies!


We are staying in Queenstown, which is right smack in the center of the South Island.  There is the second largest lake in New Zealand right in front of our condo.  There aren’t really any buildings over three stories tall in Queenstown.  (Our condo is a small house!) There are massive mountains all around the lake and the town.  The town is built on the rolling hills, and the mountains just pop out of the hills.  If there was no town it could come right from a scene in the Lord of the Rings or the Hobbit.  The lake is so cold that if you swam in it for twenty minutes with a normal swimsuit on you would die.  The town is a modern town, but there is still a warm and cozy feeling about it.

Written by William October 14, 2013

This week we went off-roading in the mountains, called Skippers Canyon. During the gold rush in NZ all the people went digging for gold. They got 6 tons of gold in the first 6 months. Back then there was a city called Charles Town; now it is just ruins. We were boring and did school the rest of the day.





10-15-13 Written by Charles


Today was supposed to be a rest day.  If you’re with the Flaherty’s, there is no such thing as a rest day.  We did school in the morning, and we were supposed to do something fun in the afternoon.  It was the first sunny day since we got to New Zealand, so we wanted to go skydiving.  William was just under the weight limit, but he didn’t want to go.  We were going to do a fifteen thousand feet jump!  My dad and I signed all the papers, and we got to the airstrip.  Then we saw it coming.  It was a massive rainstorm.  The winds kicked up to high for the jump before we even left the ground.  Skydiving was canceled sadly.  Tomorrow we are going on an overnight cruise on the eastern shore, which might be boring or fun.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Queen's Town

Written by Charles October 14, 2013


When we landed in New Zealand it was about 50 degrees Fahrenheit.  For five people who live in Puerto Rico and just arrived from Hawaii, it was freezing.  It is the end of spring and it was still that cold.  (Yes, we’re that bad of wimps.)  So we landed in Queenstown, got lunch and my mom and Miss Jenn took a nap.  Me, my dad, and I went to get a coat and hat for everyone.

After getting the coats, we went down a luge track.  It is basically a golf cart path down the not so steep part of the mountain.  We had little sleds that had wheels and barely any brakes.  We all got three goes on the luge.  It was really awesome, and we all went super fast.


After that, we went down the gondola and walked back to the hotel room.  Then we got pizza and watched the Lord of the Rings.  We only got through half of the first movie.  Tomorrow we are doing a tour of the mountains in a jeep, which will either be fun or boring.

Written by William October 14, 2013


Three days ago we went on a plane ride from Hawaii to New Zealand, and now we are in Queenstown, NZ. We got on the flight, and I was really surprised by how nice the seats were; they were lay down seats, and they had tempur-pedic mattress toppers with blankets and overnight kits. I nicknamed them bubble seats because it was as if you were in your own little bubble. We also had our own TV monitors with remote controls that had phones on the back. I slept for 8 hours during that flight.





Sunday morning we arrived in Queenstown, NZ. Our teacher and our mom didn’t sleep at all on the flights, so they were boring and took naps. My brother, dad, and I went on the luge, which is 1.5km long. Charles was a speed demon and went mach 10. I tried to keep up with him, but I crashed a lot. On our second round I didn’t try to keep up and went a little slower, so I stopped crashing. I kept cutting off my dad. Ha ha, it was so much fun. He kept on trying to pass me for some odd reason. 


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Swimming with Manta Rays and Becoming One Day Younger

Written by Charles October 10, 2013



Yesterday we went snorkeling twice!  One time was at the hotel off the beach, and the other was the manta ray snorkeling. Regular snorkeling was fun because we saw turtles and lots of coral.  There was brain coral and finger coral of all sizes!  There were two huge schools of fish that I saw.

Two words for the snorkeling with the manta rays: amazing and cold. It was at night in a little bay just off the airport. We took a catamaran (a boat with two hulls) and then got our snorkeling stuff on.  We jumped into the water, and we nearly drowned at how cold the water was.  After five minutes in the water, I was already shaking. After everyone got in, we all grabbed onto this surfboard with handles on the side. The strangest thing was that there were lights on the bottom.  We swam over to this huge area of light in the water, which I thought was the light from lava coming out of the ocean floor.  It turned out to be a huge set of spotlights facing straight up.  The guide told us that the light attracted plankton, which the manta rays eat.

You can see where this is going; ten freezing people in the water, holding onto a surfboard that attracted plankton.  After a few minutes, what looked like a bunch of dust was swarming around our lights, and that's when it came at me. I thought at first it was a shadow. The shadow came right at me, and I started to get worried that it was a shark. It turned out to be a manta ray because it came right at the lights with its giant mouth wide open. The manta ray started to do back flips, catching all the plankton around our board. It kept on coming right at my face, which made me scared. These things aren't the cute cuddly stuffed animals that you would probably imagine. These were ten feet wide with mouths about four feet wide. The manta rays are really amazing though. I would describe them as a giant underwater bird stuck in slow motion. It would flap its fins just like a bird's to move, and its fins kind of moved in the same way too.




This went on for about thirty more minutes; us being cold and amazed, while the manta rays had a feast.  Finally we got back onto the boat because the manta rays had eaten all the plankton, and all the humans had frosted over solid and could be used as ice cubes! Then I found out that my brother was scared of them, so he didn't get in and got to sit on the boat cozy and warm.  William does not really like large animals in the water, and I don't blame him.  They got inches from your face and it could freak you out.

Written by Charles October 11, 2013


We went snorkeling again and saw the same awesome stuff today. We are leaving Hawaii today and going to New Zealand!  After snorkeling, we rented paddle boards and played around on those. Later we did school work for two hours, like everyday, with the same horrible wifi. (I'm in an online school, so I need good wifi.)  After that we packed our suitcases and said goodbye to Hawaii.


Do you want to hear something confusing? If yes, keep reading; if no, shut the computer down because this is a head spinner.  On the flight from Hawaii to New Zealand we get nine hours in the air. You might say "so?" but just keep reading. We have to skip Saturday completely!  Yup, completely. I think it will be the only time in my life I can say its Friday and tomorrow's Sunday.  So that means that I'm one day younger or something.  In my head its all really confusing.

It has to do with crossing the dateline near midnight, and you skip a day going west.  Going east, you lose a day, so there I guess there is what I call some funny business going on here.  (My brother usually does all the funny business.)

A Quick and Funny Story:
In 1990, there was a volcano threatening to erupt on Hawaii. A vulcanologist found the lava tubes that were supplying the volcano with lava.  The vulcanologist told the military where to drop bombs, and they did.  The military stopped the lava flow and saved a city.  The US can remember that day as the day that the US claimed victory over Mother Nature!
True Story!



Written by William

We went on a boat ride to snorkel with the manta rays. I was really excited until I saw one, and it was really big! I got nervous...five years ago when I had my bone marrow transplant, the doctors told me I coudn't go within 100 feet of an animal because I had a high risk of infection and dying from it. Since then I have been scared of animals. I stayed on the boat with my dad and watched from above. There were some other boats with divers and snorkelers, and we noticed a light mast with red and white lights to indicate there were divers. We saw three manta rays, and we heard all the snorkelers going "oooohhhhh" and "whoaaaa!" when the manta rays were passing.