Yesterday I arrived in Wellington via Auckland. Safe and sound. This is home.
I was collected by my sons and we all gathered for a bakery lunch. We feasted on steak and cheese pies, deep fried lasagne squares, filled rolls and sausage rolls, doughnuts with cream and custard squares. Not necessarily in that order. All freshly baked and just fantastic. 
After a wee lie down we glammed up and went out to a very big Christmas Bash at St James theatre down in Courtney Place. Lots of champagne, hugs and meeting up with old friends. And now after waking up nice and early to the roar of lions and the polite remember-me cough of a big dog in the backyard, after attending to my obligatory headache, making a cup of tea and pulling a cardi over my nightie, after climbing back into bed with my computer, we are ready to begin our morning weblog posts again.
When we were tiredly tottering up the steps to my son’s house in the dead of night last night, then standing at the door waving the babysitters goodbye, I deeply inhaled the scent of New Zealand. While listening to the snuffles and creaks of the new baby. 
Every country has a particular scent. New Zealand is a small country in mass but it has a protruding backbone of high mountains and an extensive coastline. New Zealand has the tenth longest consecutive coastline in the world. 14,000 kilometres, (or 8,700 miles) of mostly rugged coastline along its small islands. It is about the size of California but with a tiny population of around four million people and completely surrounded by sea. It borders the more rambunctious Tasman Sea and the gentle Pacific Ocean so the scent of New Zealand is hugely influenced by the sea, open space and trees. There is a hint of salt, beaches, pine and hibiscus even when you cannot see a flower.
Our islands stand in the way of massive currents driven by the trade winds through the South Pacific and across the Tasman Sea that result in a constant tide of warm waters crashing up onto the coastline with a subtropical climate in tow. Because we are so tiny and these winds that drive the sea up to our coast divide and meet again on the other side of New Zealand we are blessed with a wonderful continuous re-freshening of the air by the sea.
New Zealand smells good.
Good morning. Wellington is the capitol of New Zealand and is at the bottom of the North Island. I will be here for a week or so. It is endlessly buffeted by these winds. I have always said that you know a Wellingtonian by the way their heads and shoulders are bent slightly forward all the time, their chins down, leaning into a wind, walking fast even on those few days when there is no wind. People in Wellington do not stroll about, they stride out at speed. But my youngest son lives in a little valley very close to the Wellington Zoo. We are able to duck our heads down below the winds here, and today I shall go out and sit on the steps in the deck, with my cup of tea, camera and paper and pen and just enjoy that wondrous scent of a clean New Zealand, and listen to the lions. As our only native mammals are a bat and a tiny fat pig called a kunekune, you can imagine how incongruous that sentence really is.
Have a lovely day.
celi




75 responses to “New Zealand Travel”
I used to live near to the Cleveland, Ohio Zoo, and could hear the lions on occasion there. Ireland, this time of year, smells of turf fires when the misty cold hangs low over the town, making glowing orbs out of the Christmas lights strung across the Main Street.
Happy landings 🙂
So glad you’re back with us! What a beautiful baby. I love that little bit of drool. Is he/she wondering who you are? Such a quizzical look! Enjoy, enjoy. I’m looking forward to learning about and seeing New Zealand through your eyes and words.
this is so exciting and i can’t wait to see more! i had a friend that lived in new zealand for several years.
Beautiful Captures – Enjoy – Happy Saturday:)
Ourlittleacres mentioned that she couldn’t take the wind, well I’m used to wind, but I think that flight might do some damage! The things we will suffer to get home again…
So glad you arrived safely, Celi, and I can hardly wait for more! ~Lynda
Happy for you c. Welcome home.
cannot reach you by e mail will not send yuk so i am trying this–wondering about success of skirt
Hello grandmother, welcome to our side of the world, the Windy City, animals over whom you have no control and a gorgeous and inquisitive bub 🙂 ! Have a wonderful time! Living in the Highlands here, I know what you mean about the smell of the air!
Glad you got there safely!
What a beautiful baby
lol. I never thought of deep fried, crumb lasagna toppers to be a particularly New Zealand thing. I guess you don’t appreciate them until they’re gone.
Hurrah for air transport….there you are !! I love the description of the air…..enjoy every
moment, breathe it all in…slow down and enjoy !!
I’ve never been to New Zealand though it’s just a short trip across the ditch (as they say)…and hadn’t thought about the smell. Brings me back to my days in Fiji. Funny how you have the tropical mixed in with the oh so cold and windy…one day I’ll get there 🙂
Sounds like a lovely family time for you c x
Glad you are having such a great time – wonderful! Oh New Zealand – I have only been there once and absolutely loved it.
Welcome home Celi, and I love what you say about the smell of NZ. It’s so true, and I’ve forgotten to notice it because it is so familiar. Yesterday was the best and finest day we’ve had since the storms and tornado and today is a true summer day with a light breeze (here in Auckland). How refreshing for you to be here.