Wonderful Wine Country in Blenheim, Part 1 (South Island, New Zealand)

June 2 – 3, 2016

With our next possible weather window a week away, we decided to take advantage of our extra time in Nelson and visit an area we hadn’t yet gotten to: Blenheim.

Blenheim is a big-gun wine area, sort of the Napa Valley of the South Island. It’s about a half hour drive from Picton or Havelock, or an hour and a half from Nelson. They make many wine varietals, but their big claim to fame is sauvignon blanc–no place on this planet does better sauvignon blancs than New Zealand, and no place in New Zealand does better sauvignon blancs than Blenheim..

Technically Blenheim is considered part of the Marlborough Sounds area, but in reality it couldn’t be more different. While the Sounds are mountainous, forested, and subject to passing cloudy fronts, Blenheim lies across the mostly-flat Wairau Plains, all golden and grassy and surrounded by its signature dry hills. It’s known for having warm, dry summers and even now in the fall it felt blissfully warm and sunny.

Below, a few photos of the Wairau Plains. (click to enlarge and scroll through any of the galleries that follow).

As usual, like a kid in a candy store, I had to pick and choose among the many appealing options of places to visit. We’d only have two days here and I wanted to make the most of them. Luckily many of the wineries are close together (if traveling by car), and a few of them were on the way to our hotel.

We started with the Allan Scott Family Winemakers. Not surprisingly, the cellar door was beautiful (this is, after all, serious wine country), all modern and wood, the manicured grounds planted with dry-area plants. The tasting was very reasonable, $2 for 3 wines plus champagne, refundable with a purchase. (Most wineries will charge for tastings that become free if you make a purchase.) Because Rich was the designated driver, I did the tastings, but he enjoyed smelling and a few sips of my wine. We had agreed not to do any mercy buys today, only to purchase the good stuff. Well, we had good stuff here so we bought a couple of bottles. Free tastings, yay! Fun purchases to bring home, yay! A beautiful place and an afternoon wine buzz, yay!

Next up was Cloudy Bay, one of the biggest winemakers in New Zealand and conveniently across the street from Allan Scott. More beautiful grounds, another beautiful building with lots of big wood beams and light wood, and a fire burning in the fireplace. Glass walls looked into a cellar filled with wine barrels and poster-sized photos of the vineyards. This was a showplace, and it was done very well. It was $10 for the tasting but $5 with purchase, and I should mention that the person pouring the wines was generous. We had not planned on buying wine here, but the Te Koko sauvignon blanc grabbed us and wouldn’t let go (damn you, Te Koko, making us purchase more wine against our will!)

Our next winery would be Brancott, another big player in the New Zealand wine business and a worthwhile-sounding place to stop for lunch. While Blenheim is mostly flat, a few wineries sit on hills and Brancott is one of them. The parking area is down the hill, and they’ve made the walk up to the winery into a nature walk (although apparently they’ll come get you in a golf cart if you’re not up for the climb). Walking up that hill in the warm sunlight, views of vineyards and golden grass around us, mountains the distance, felt like a wine country publicist’s dream. The winery building itself was a long and low glass-walled building with views out over the surrounding Wairau plains.

We were seated next to one of the windows and were able to order a flight of wines for tasting along with our sweet potato pie and beef brisket choices for lunch. All of it: the scenery, the view, the building, the food, the service and the wine, was amazing. This is my favorite part of a wine county experience: being lulled into a state of happy relaxation from the tastings, after which you really take in your beautiful surroundings and, often as not, extra-good food.

Because we buy Brancott all the time we didn’t think we’d be making any purchases, but lo and behold they had one of our favorites that had disappeared from grocery store shelves (it just doesn’t sell well enough and will probably go away). So, we brought some of the Living Land series home with us, figuring this endangered species would be our rescue wine of the day.

After lunch we took a special path down the hill to see the winery’s Karearea (New Zealand falcons) in an aviary below the winery. One bird had been rescued after being badly injured–a run in with a car, I think–and while she’s OK now, she’s not fit to live in the wild again. The other bird has been brought in to be her companion.

It was interesting to read the informative panels explaining what skilled and able hunters falcons are compared to fat, lazy hawks who just glide around on air currents and look for easy meals of carrion. Apparently these panels were written by a falcon! In any case, we came away appreciating the magnificence of falcons and for a long time couldn’t help but think “fat lazy birds” when we’d see huge hawks soaring above us. The falcons had an excellent publicist! Below, the falcons . . .

And a photo of a lazy, good-for-nothing hawk looking for an easy meal of road kill while falcons (not visible but I’m sure they’re around) remain hard at work doing real hunting 🙂

After Brancott we went to check into the Chateau Marlborough. The place puts up a good front: pretty and stylish, but it really is more motel than hotel at heart. No matter, it was clean and comfortable and a good deal. And it seems from the display in the lobby that they, too, are falcon fans. The poor hawks just can’t catch a break in this neck of the woods.

After taking a rest, we headed out to see more three more wineries before calling it a day.–Cyndi  (Click to enlarge/scroll through any of the photo galleries above.)

Final Days in Nelson (South Island, New Zealand)

May 2016

When we first came to Nelson in April, I worried about finding a weather window to the tropics by the time our visa expired near the end of May. A few neighbors, well-experienced cruisers, assured me not to worry, a window would surely come. It goes to show that there are just years when you can’t count on “dependable” weather patterns. In the end, we needed to extend our New Zealand visa and opted to do so by flying out of, then back into, the country. (Melbourne, Australia, was the cheapest option we found for this trip.)

Returning a few days later, we now had the time we needed, but we couldn’t ignore the changing season. It was disconcerting to watch the colorful leaves now falling, to wake up to snow on the mountains and colder temperatures, and to see local places lighting their fire pits at night.

We still hoped to get that weather window that would take us up the west side of the North Island and on to the tropics, but we had to start considering another option: hopping up the east coast of the north island and leaving from Tauranga or Opua. Other cruisers were starting to do just that, but we didn’t want to give up yet. We decided instead to do a small road trip, a final place to see before we left (and something to keep us from obsessing about weather). Again it was a tough choice, but in the end we decided to head to Marlborough’s wine country in Blenheim (which will be the next posts).

For the moment I want to mention one more interesting area in Nelson: the South Street Cottages, a small neighborhood of cottages dating back to the 1860s. These charming little houses have been saved from demolition, lovingly restored, and are now of a protected historical site. –Cyndi

A First in Four Years

May 26, 2016

catalina-38-melbourne


We just got back from our little four day, renew-our-visa trip to Melbourne, Australia. While there, we saw this boat in a downtown marina. This is the first Catalina 38 we’ve seen since we’ve been on this adventure of four years, so far. That’s interesting, at least to us, because Legacy is a Catalina 38.

(OK, for you boat aficionados, don’t scoff at the name Catalina–which brings to mind mostly coastal cruisers. The 38 is an S & S design and very much unlike other Catalinas. It used to be the Yankee 38 and was used in the congressional cup races before Catalina bought the mold and made 366 of them. We don’t claim it’s the ideal cruising boat, but it’s worked well for us. OK, enough with the apologies and justifications, back to our regularly scheduled story.)

We thought we’d see more out here. When we cruised to Hawaii, we found five others in Nawiliwili harbor. Lynn and Larry Pardey endorsed it as a cruiser and it really is a lot of boat for the money.

But no. Not a one. Not until now. And while it had a wind generator and solar panels, I’m not sure Boheme (that’s it’s name) is used for cruising. We’ll keep looking – searching every idyllic bay in the Pacific if we have to.

In the mean time, we’re back in Nelson after a wonderful trip to Melbourne. More on that very soon. -Rich

Note from Cyndi:  Life was easier before Melbourne.  We’d been to Australia.  Australia had issues.  I loved it in spite of the issues, but they were too much for Rich.  End result: New Zealand was our place down under, plain and simple.  Then, to renew our NZ visas as cheaply as possible, we took a trip to Melbourne, Australia.  End result:  We love Melbourne, Australia.  We love Melbourne so much, we want to go back and stay there. Australia is now back on the table as a cruising destination, and suddenly life has become more complicated.  Where will we end up next year?  It could be New Zealand, or–I never thought in a million years I’d be saying this–a second round of Australia.  It’s amazing how quickly things can change.

The Big Update (Nelson, New Zealand)

May 24, 2016

kangaroo-past

Why’s he posting a picture of a kangaroo? They don’t have them in New Zealand?!

No they don’t, but we’re going back to Australia. Let me explain…

weather

We’ve been waiting for weather to sail to New Caledonia but it’s mostly looked like this (today’s weather). All those colors are bad!

Our New Zealand visas expire on the 27th of May. “No problem, we’ll just renew them” he naively said.

Cost to renew: application-$165, doctor visit-$250, x-rays-$230,  blood tests-$170 for a grand total of $1,630 for the two of us.

That’d give us three more months to leave, but we’re hoping to be out in the next week or ten days. Sixteen hundred bucks is a lot to pay for a few extra days.

It turns out, at least in theory, that if we leave the country and come back, our visas will be renewed for another three months. We can go on “vacation” in Melbourne, Australia, spending four nights in a luxury hotel (thanks wotif!) for about $1,200 total. Needles and doctors or a luxury hotel? You do the math!

And by the way, it’s really time to leave NZ. This was the view this morning from our dock…

snow-kidding

Why yes Matilda, that is snow on the mountains! And it’s cold here!

We’ve been so lucky here in Nelson with the weather. We’ve had mostly warm, summer-feeling days with some rain overnight and an occasional grey day. Nelson has a reputation for the best weather in NZ and it’s not a lie. It’s been wonderful. But even in this magical pocket of summerly weather, we can feel the change a commin.’ Time to leave.

And in fact, we were all set to leave. It looked like we might get a good (or good enough) weather window, our bags were packed and we were ready to go, but not only did the weather window evaporate, but this happened while we were sitting in our slip…

damage-1

damage-2

The new owner of a boat called Cochise lost control while backing out of the channel. Luckily for him, Legacy was there to stop him. (Not so lucky for us though!)

repairs-started

Our repairs are started and a new paddle for our monitor windvane is due to arrive Monday. The weather window that we would have taken earlier turned into another low and associated front, and it brought in rain to slow down the fiberglass work.

Oh well. Champagne problems compared to our lives back in the real world.


Tiger Bait Again…

Nehaj-departing
Here’s Susanne on Nehaj departing for the tropics this morning, despite the weather (she’s tougher than we’ll ever be). There were a few cruising boats here in Nelson and they’re all gone now, leaving Legacy trailing behind – tiger bait once again. -Rich

The Beautiful and Bizarre Labyrinth Rocks Park (Golden Bay, New Zealand)

May 23, 2016

Our final destination for the day was a place called Labyrinth Rocks Park. It wasn’t in my guidebook nor in the local brochure guide I had; so I must have stumbled across this on the internet. I certainly know what caught my attention: it’s a karst geology extravaganza!

We picked up one of the little maps at the entrance gate and it instantly became apparent that seeing the entire place could take a couple of hours. We just made our best guesses as to what might be most interesting and set out into the park.

The park is truly a labyrinth with paths that wind through fantastical rocks, most of them with intriguing side paths that we couldn’t resist exploring. It’s also a very lush green place with lots of moss, ferns, vines and trees. Like the Grove Scenic Reserve, it’s quite beautiful yet surprisingly doesn’t seem to get many visitors–we were the only people there.

Below, some photos of our walk though Labyrinth Rocks Park. (click to enlarge/scroll through gallery).

There is one very unique feature here: the figurines. Whoever’s in charge of this place has scattered little toys (about 1 to 2 inches in size) amongst the rocks with the idea that they would surprise and delight small visiting children. I’m not sure at what point in the weathering process a toy goes from being cute to being scary, but a few of the toys had passed that mark. While I appreciate the intention, I don’t think these items are an asset to the park. Still, the place is beautiful enough that the strange toys don’t really detract from it. This was definitely a cool place to visit.–Cyndi

Below, a few photos of the park’s toys. Enlarge and scroll at our own risk; we will not be responsible for any nightmares that may result. –Cyndi