A Travellerspoint blog

New Zealand

Volcanoes, Glo-Worms, and Waterfalls

sunny 25 °C

Hello!
I'm sitting here at the computer on a beautiful sunday evening having just arrived back from another successful weekend trip with my trainee friends. I haven't updated this blog in a while so I will give you a quick recap on what I've been up to.
Because there are so many of us trainees around here AgriVenture has organized a few weekend trips for us because everyone has every second weekend off (but lucky me, I have every weekend off!). The first trip was to the White Island off the west coast, it is NZ's only active marine volcanoe. It was an hour and a half boat ride out to it, then we had a guided tour around the safe parts of it. We had to wear gas masks for part of the trip because the air is is acidic that it makes breathing difficult. It was a pretty fun day trip. It was 5 trainees birthdays that same weekend so we rented out a pub and a backpackers hostel and had a massive party that night. The next weekend was one that most people worked but those of us who had it off climbed a nearby mountain for a beautiful view and went to Hamilton for some Christmas shopping. This weekend we just had was another AgriVenture organized one and it was by far the best thing ever!!!
It was called "Blackwater Caving" and it was just an awesome trip! We did a 5 hour trip in groups of 8. We were outfitted head to toe in spandexy wetsuit type material and helmets and boots. We first abseiled (like repelling) down a hole 100m down into caves, then were hooked onto horizontal cables and whisked along and down deeper. All our helmets had lights on them but the guides made us turn them out a lot because we really didn't need them due to the glo-worms! There were so many they were just like stars in these caves. Did you know the glo-worm is actually a maggot and the flourescent quality is actually in their feces? The caves were like a labyrinth, some big spaces and some parts where we had to crawl through on our stomach. We had to jump off a cliff in one cave with an inner tube around us and paddle through the water for a long time. Our guides were pretty cool, they liked having fun with such an international group like us. We ditched the tubes and had to alternatively swim and walk through water for miles is seemed like, we went over a waterfall on a slide and had to stand under or behind a huge rushing waterfall that was almost deafining as we waited for our guides to help us one by one to climb the waterfall!! I thought it would be harder to do, but the rocks were different - they weren't slippery even when wet! So we climbed 2 waterfalls it was amazing and then somehow we swam/climbed up out of the caves into the daylight! It was so awesome! Exhilarating! Amazing!
I want to do that again! But it was quite expensive and I think we got a special deal because we are so many. But yeah, it was the best thing I've done so far!
After that everyone went to one of the fellow trainees Tammy's host family's beach house on the west coast. Had a bbq, soccer game (scandanavia vs. world) (World killed them!), beach party. Then today we just hung out on the beach, got sunburns all around, you know that old chestnut.
So back to work tomorrow...... It's going alright, but I think you may be able to tell from reading above that I have been living for the weekends. We have started to get some little calves (the smallest is 57 kg) coming in. This will be there home for the next 2 years till they become milk cows. They are so frustrating at the moment. I try to move them to a new paddock and they get near the gate and just SCATTER!!!!! It drives me bonkers!!! When I am not moving heifers I have been fencing, washing windows, clearing grass away from newly planted trees, hammering insulators onto posts, slaying weeds left and right. I think we are getting some more calves this week......more fencing I think.....more weeds....... Next weekend - camping trip to Cormandle Pennisula weeeewww!!!
Till next time!!!
Gill

Posted by gihagg 9:10 PM Archived in New Zealand Comments (0)

New Place, New People, New Job, New Home.........

rain 16 °C

I am in New Zealand!!!!
It was very sad to leave Britain - all my friends and my parents again. But once I actually got on the road (or in the air I guess is better), it was ok. I think I will be going back in May, after a stop at home to see all my Canadian peeps! The journey from England to NZ was LONG!!! But if you look on the globe those 2 countries are like the two furthest apart on the world. Once I get back to Canada I will be able to say I have been around the world (even if it is only by air!)
Anyways, I arrived in Auckland along with 38 other young people on Monday, and got whisked off to Hamilton Airport Hotel where the orientation seminar was to take place. The next 2 days we learned all about NZ, we had sessions on laws, driving atv's, agriculture, kiwi culture to name a few. There are 7 of us Canadians on the North Island, 4 from BC, me from Alberta, one from Saskatchewan, and one from Manitoba. 6 of us live within an hour of each other on the island. I am in a really great location - in the west wakito area. There are 4 of us on farms within 10-15 minutes of each other. 2 from Denmark and 1 from Germany. So we should be seeing a bit of each other over the next couple months as Agriventure organizes all sorts of events for us while we are here. Every wednesday night is pub night where we all meet up after work to catch up. In november there are 3 white water and blackwater rafting trips, then in feburary is the big 2 week south island trip, which I am already signed up for.
So Scott and Jodi, my host "parents" picked me up on the wednesday. They are 24 and 28 years old, so living with them is like being back at university, it's fun! We haven't eaten a meal at the table yet! Jodi is a teacher in a nearby town, so she is away during the day. We live on one of 2 farms that Scott owns. The other one is 5 minutes down the road. Now I will tell you about the job.
When you are a dairy farmer (what Scott and his brother and dad used to be), you rear the calves apart from the cows then you keep a portion of the heifers you want to keep for milking. But what do you do with those heifers when you are so busy milking like 500 cows twice a day? (There are tons of huge dairies around here)
answer: you send them to us!
What we do is take care of the heifers from many different farms on these two farms (350 and 400 acres). The acres are all divided up into paddocks (some bigger than others) and we shift the different groups of heifers from one paddock to the other. It sounds easy but there is quite a bit of thought involved because you don't want to ahve two groups right beside each other, and when it is wet, you can't have them in a steep paddock, and when you shift them you have to be really mindful of the power source, so you don't kill it for the rest of the fences, and you don't want to overgraze one paddock and undergraze another. So I have just been going out with Scott the past few days, then today was my first day by myself on this farm, and I did everything right, so I have been handed the reins and I am in charge of 300 heifers!
It is quite easy to move them though, they are so energetic and curious that I just have to get the right gates open and they follow me in and Mac (my dog Scott has given me for my time here) brings up the stragglers. Because the heifers are all other peoples we kind of have to cater to their demands like drenching (that is like giving ivomec) and weighing each heifer every 6 weeks, but they are all so docile that it is so easy to work with them. So every morning Scott goes to the other farm and works there and I stay at this farm and do the heifers here and drop herbicide granules on weeds that I find. It's so great.
The weather has not been great, rainy since I arrived pretty much, but it doesn't make it less beautiful. It is so green! I thought England was green, but this is something different! I sometimes forget where I am, then I see like palm tree looking trees and waterfalls in the paddocks and I remember, wow, I am in New Zealand! The house is quite big, 5 bedrooms and the one side of it is all like patio doors- glass and the doors are kept open during the days. Why not? No flies to get in!
There is a nice big pool just outside the house, but we haven't got it up and running yet. Hopefully soon! So yes, it has been an eventful week.......full of events..... Haven't got my sports sorted out yet, but hope to be doing yoga with Jodi, and maybe play soccer. Scott and Jody have bought a car for me to use while I'm here, I just pay the insurance and the gas. 1993 Nissan Bluebird, it's pretty sleek! I think I'll be putting the klicks on it heading to the beach on my afternoons off!
That's about it for me! Now that I have updated all of you, bring on the emails, and return the favor!
Bye for now!

Posted by gihagg 10:11 PM Archived in New Zealand Comments (1)

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