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Author: Claire

Italy – Part 2

Italy – Part 2

Rome, Amalfi Coast & Cinque Terre

 

The day before we were due to leave the east coast I realised I was a day ahead of myself and wasn’t supposed to be arriving in Rome on a Thursday, it was meant to be a Friday! Eeek! No accommodation was booked. A quick look on Airbnb and we found a perfect place halfway between the east and west coasts. On the way there Little R spied a beautiful old town out her window about 5 minutes away from our apartment. It was called Spello, we enjoyed exploring its alleyways which were so beautifully dressed with flower pots.

The following (correct) day it was off to Rome. Our friends from London flew out again to see us. They had booked an apartment about 500 meters away from the Vatican for us to stay in and Rouge (our car) got emptied out and parked on the road for a few days rest. The next day it was up early to join the queue for St Peter’s Basilica. BK and I hadn’t seen it last time we were in Rome. The queue moved very quickly and we were inside within 15 minutes. It was an amazing and very expensive looking church! Wee R was hopeful to see ‘Pope’ but it wasn’t to be. However while we were in there they opened up the basement so we saw the tombs of past popes. BK took R home, leaving our friends, C and I to climb the dome. Amazing views of the city. I purchased some postcards to send to some friends for their birthdays this month, then it was back to the apartment for a rest.

The next day we hauled ourselves out of the apartment at 7.30am to bus to the Colosseum. It was free that day (see my tip below) and evvvvvveryone was there, the queue was at least 2/3rds of the way around the base. Disheartened we decided to not go in, but to see if the Roman Forum was having a free entry day too. When our friend went to ask, she was scooted to the front of the queue, got us the 6 free tickets we wanted and managed to score us an extra special skip the line pass for the Colosseum, she’s 8 months pregnant soooo it obviously has its perks! So we happily walked back to the Colosseum where a man took our tickets and escorted us past the normal queue, past the skip the line queue and right up to security. High fives all round. We enjoyed an hour wandering around. Apparently back in its prime it used to seat 50,000–80,000 people, wow! After that it was through the Roman Forum, past the Trevi Fountain, up and down the Spanish Steps and lunch at pizzeria, a quick visit to the Pantheon, then home to our apartment for a well deserved nap! 20,000+ steps that day. After two very full days it was goodbye to our friends, we’ll see them again in London after their baby has arrived.

Top tip – if it’s a free day (first Sunday of every month) go really early or line up and see if you can get a skip the line ticket by the entrance to the Roman Forum, the ticket allows entry to both.

On the way to Naples in the rain, we had our first motorway issue. The toll machine wouldn’t give us a ticket! With the barrier arm still open from the car in front of us and traffic behind us we drove onto the motorway with no ticket so when we got off it was a bit of a drama using google translate to tell the person in the toll booth where we got on so could pay the correct toll, then he gave us a fine for €96 and directed us to ‘punto blue’ so we turned up with our fine and our google translate again trying to explain ‘YOUR MACHINE WOULDN’T GIVE US A TICKET WE SHOULDN’T BE PAYING A FINE!!!’ He understood and canceled our fine and we were on our way.

Due to us being so exhausted from the driving, the big weekend in Rome and the rain we spent the first day resting, which meant we didn’t see central Naples. The following day was perfectly blue skies and we headed off to the stunning Amalfi Coast! Wow! Wow for two reasons, the scenery which was amazing but also driving the road there which was quite the challenge, it took both mine and BK’s full attention in parts. We were glad Rouge was so little, and at one point a car got so close to us the GPS started screaming because the car were too close to the sensors on our bumper. Ugh. Anyway we got there and enjoyed a walk at one of the little villages called Maiori and pizza for lunch on the outskirts of Sorrento. A quick look at Pompei then back home to pack and start the 2000km drive north.

Our first stop heading north was Florence to meet up with my Aunty and Uncle who’d brought a few things over for us. It was lovely to see some familiar faces. Thank you Aunty and Uncle! Unfortunately while in Florence we drove into a restricted traffic zone and think we’ve got ourselves yet another fine! I’ve emailed Peugeot to tell them.

Next stop was Cinque Terre. A set of 5 beautiful seaside villages. We had arranged last year to meet up with some friends from home. We started early and went to the furthest away village of Monterosso. We had a focaccia snack while walking around. We then met our friends in Vernazza where we had another focaccia snack and all the kids found the sand and had a wonderful time. We pushed on to the next one Corniglia and had drinks before meeting with our friends again in Manarola for gelato. We were going to keep going on to the last village, Riomaggiore, but when the train stopped we couldn’t face anymore walking so we skipped it. We got back to Rouge and found we’d gotten ourselves yet another fine! We hadn’t parked in a proper car space as we’d just followed everyone else’s idea of parking on the kerb.

It was a stay in your PJs all day kinda day the next day. Totally exhausted from moving so fast through Italy. Laundry, school and naps 💤

So that was Italy. It’s been nice to see some different bits of the country BUT I will not miss the roads.

I also won’t miss some of the citizens who seemed to have an ‘I’m better than you, get out of my way’ attitude but the beauty and history will always bring me back. Next time it’s your lakes and islands!

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update :

Italy : $1684 under

Total budget : $2912 under

#nailingit 😎

Italy – Part 1

Italy – Part 1

Venice and San Marino

 

Last time BK and I were in Europe a highlight of ours was Venice, we visited in November on my 25th birthday. So I was looking forward to returning but didn’t want the same kind of trip repeated. At least it was going to be warmer this time!

 

We decided to stay out at an outlying beach area. Then got an all day pass on the ferries and spent a lot of time out on the water. The first day we stuck around our apartment, did a beach walk, a look at some shops, and that ever pesky school work!

 

The following day we set out on a ferry toward Murano, the island known for glass blowing, we went via Burano, the one known for lace making but didn’t stop there. We found a glass factory and got a booking time to go back and see the glass master in action. There was still a bit of time until then and lunch time was approaching so we found a park, the kids had a play and I prepared some sandwiches we’d brought along. As we sat and ate I realised this was not a park, there were bags, and classrooms…it was a school! Whoops! So it was a quick walk to somewhere else followed by lunch.

 

The glass master was amazing, he’d been an apprentice for 10 years and then a master for 30. Talk about a life career! He made a glass apple, vase and horse in front of us. The furnace was cranking at 1100 degrees! Hot! We had a lady explaining things to us, she swapped between English, Italian and French speaking all of them fluently, she later told me she also spoke a bit of Venetian too! Wow!! Of course on the way out I found a glass Christmas decoration so that’s another one to add to the collection! 😃

 

Then it was off to the main Venice island, which was a quick ferry ride via the cemetery island, we did not get off! We walked from one side of the island to St Marco’s square on the other We managed to get lost on our way to St Marco’s as we lost the signs pointing that way to go but we carried on, however trying to find your own way in Venice never works because you always seem to end up down an alleyway facing a canal with no bridge to cross. So we retraced our steps and refound the signs to carry on! Gelato helped our situation 😎

 

Making the most of our 1 day pass we chose a ferry that does a loop through the grand canal. It was good to sit on the back of the boat enjoying the sights rather than walking it, though I did walk 18k steps that day!! After that we tried to find a toilet but at a cost of €1.50 each to use it we held on till we got home!

A long but great day. We didn’t do the famous gondola ride, because at €80 for a 30 minute ride we decided ‘Nah, we’ve done one before, the kids can do it when they’re older’.

 

The following day was a rest day, no one felt like walking anywhere! So school work, laundry, supermarket and sandcastle building on the beach it was.

 

See you again Venice, I wonder if it will it be another 10 years?

 

It was then off down the east coast of Italy, can’t say much about the east coast beaches, they were pretty average. I also seemed to get us an Airbnb which was not close to anything interesting so we had lots of rest. One of the days we went for a drive an hour northwest of where were staying to a mini country called San Marino.

We went early, as we’ve learnt that’s the thing to do! We got a park by the gondola and went up into the old town. It seemed to us that it may have been tax free country as there were lots of duty free type items, and guns!?

We walked around, ate lunch at a restaurant…pizza 😄 Talked to a couple of Swiss cyclists who were having a long weekend cycling around the area, we told them what we were doing and all of a sudden we had a captive audience of everyone sitting around us (who all of a sudden could understand English 🙄) they, like 99% of people we have encountered thought it was an awesome idea and what great parents we were (ego boost ✔️ haaaa!) and lucky LUCKY kids.

I found a Christmas shop which had signs ‘no photos’ plastered everywhere and also bought my first Christmas gift. Then it was back to the apartment to work out how on earth I was going to keep the present in good condition while we finished off our 4 months left in Europe! Hmm.

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update will come on the next blog 😎

 

Slovenia

Slovenia

It was an easy drive back out of Croatia, we passed through border control, made a quick stop to buy a vignette, (which is a sticker that goes on your windscreen, we think it’s instead of tolls), then onto some beautiful big highways which we found totally bizarre because on our way to Croatia we had already driven through Slovenia and the main road was like a rural back road in New Zealand so we were surprised to find highways here after that.

 

We were only the second Airbnb guests our hosts had hosted so I had been hesitant to book there with no reviews to go by, but it turned out great. They had kids the same age as ours and they all had fun playing together.

 

We woke up to a beaut day and even though it was Sunday and we had been warned it would be busy we headed up to Lake Bled anyway. We went early and got good parking which is key. Then we walked around the lake, and what should have taken an hour took two thanks to a few stops to watch rowing competitions, the inevitable loo stops, and photos galore.

 

After we’d finished walking we had a rare occasion, we ate lunch at a restaurant! We got a magnet (for our collection) then headed to the capital city, Ljubljana. After driving around for awhile looking at things we decided to cruise back to our apartment but not before a stop at the beer fountain in Zalec. Yes, you read that right. A beer fountain! You can buy a mug for €8 which has a microchip on the bottom which  allows 6x 100ml fills. You put the cup under the pourer and it gives you 100ml of that type of beer. There were 6 types of beer to choose from so BK sampled all 6. R played on a nearby playground and made some little friends. C and I wondered around. There was a band playing and I hope to put a video of it on Facebook to show you.

 

The following day BK took the kids to see a castle, they clambered round it. I stayed home and enjoyed the silence! More packing and playing with the host’s kids then it was bedtime!

 

A quick trip but a good one! In hindsight we probably should have stayed longer but oh well!

Country #17 ✔

 

Till next time!

 

Claire

 

Budget update :
Slovenia : 316 under
Total budget : 1228 under

 

 

Weeks 3 & 4 in Croatia

Weeks 3 & 4 in Croatia

After our friends left for London we stayed in Split but moved a little further south of the city on the coast. The views and sunsets were amazing. We spent a few days catching up on laundry, schoolwork and rest.

 

We found a fortress high high high on a hill. We decided we’d climb it, so off C and I climbed while BK got left behind helping little R. A looooong 45 minutes later we reached the top. After a quick stop to take photos we headed back down again to the car where we had left the water and snacks.

 

After 3 weeks in Split it was time to move on. 3 weeks is the longest we’ve spent anywhere since moving out of our home in mid December. We headed to the south of Croatia but as we went we had to drive through a small part of Bosnia to get to the back into Croatia. Bosnia was beautiful, a lot of people (including me) still have pictures in their minds from the media of war torn Bosnia, but the small part we saw was really not like that. We stopped and had a picnic lunch, then carried on our way. Our passports were counted as we went into Bosnia but they didn’t even open them to check they were actually OUR passports. However on our way out BK’s passport was stamped, I assume it was because he was the one driving.

 

We arrived at our destination of Cavtat, pronounced ‘sarve tat’, it is a bit south of the city Dubrovnik and a bit north of the country Montenegro.

 

Our first day there we ventured to Dubrovnik. BK had been told by a colleague in Split to expect it to be like Disneyland and yep it sure was! If you weren’t a tourist you were selling to a tourist.

 

C and I walked around the city walls, it was expensive, but great to have some one on one time with him plus the views were amazing. We reunited with the other half of the family and had a picnic lunch overlooking the cute little harbour and a bit of walking around the streets, hello Christmas shop! BK went and retrieved the car from its parking spot faaaaaaaar away so the rest of us didn’t have to do anymore walking.

 

That evening we went into Cavtat and walked around the old town as the sun was going down, it was very pretty.

 

The following day we drove south to Montenegro. Luckily Peugeot Eurolease had given us the correct paper work when we picked up Rouge because they wanted the car’s papers plus our passports to get in. As we were following our GPS, it wanted to put us on a ferry to cross a small patch of water! After a quick check we were allowed to put our car on a ferry and checking the price I drove Rouge onto her first ferry ride 😎 only a short 7-10 minutes then it was off to the city of Kotor! After another few hours of walking the old town I was officially done with ‘old towns’ so we headed back to the ferry via a picnic spot for lunch and headed home. We had purchased a pre-made lasagne for dinner and BK encouraged C to take care of the family dinner and offered to be his sous chef. It was a great dinner of lasagne and home made garlic bread. Well done C!

 

So that was the south done in record time and it was time to start the journey north. The next stop was Zagreb, which is the capital of Croatia. We arrived at our Airbnb with the actual host being the daughter of the family however she was out of town for two days so she had left her parents to look after us. They lived downstairs and were amazing. On the first day they helped us move in and answered all my questions, when their dog got too excited and jumped up little R, she burst out crying and the Mum rushed out with a banana for R. On the second day the Mum made us homemade buns with chocolate or marmalade inside them! Team Knowles scoffed them down in a split second, yuuuummmmm! On the fourth day the Mum brought up my washing for me.

By this time the official host was home and I happily told her if she was missing parents at the end of the week they were packed in my bag and coming home to NZ with me! Haa!

 

In Zagreb I took the kids to the zoo, it wasn’t world class but for NZ$11 for all 3 of us no one was complaining. I also took them to a technical museum, I thought of my Uncle Tom the whole time. It was full of engines from marine to aircraft to mining. It showed how solar power and wind turbines work. Amazingly fascinating! I even saw an iron lung (which is a thing polio survivors lay in to breathe).

 

The last full day we walked around Zagreb. We went on a funicular, otherwise known as a cable car, it’s the shortest one in Europe, it took a whole 40 seconds 😄😄😄. We walked through a tunnel built during WWII, saw a few churches, had some bakery food and an ice cream…healthy! Then we bought some flowers for our amazing hosts and headed back to our apartment. Our host made us fudge and a chocolate cream cake on the day of our departure. Yum!

 

It was the most amazing month in Croatia. Everything we had dreamed of and more. We are so glad we went to there to rest before carrying on with our trip. Such kind people, so many supermarkets and the scenery, just stunning! We lived like locals and apart from a couple of days when we paid for big toll roads, we lived on the same budget as we did in Asia. BK achieved some good project work and topped up the bank account while he was at it. I also booked and paid for our flights home later on in the year so we now have an end date to work toward.

 

Now, the budget. Obviously Asia and Europe costs are VERY different but if I’d worked on my new Europe budget per day I would have come out at $3404 under budget for the month in Croatia, pretty ridiculous! Mid month BK and I realised we didn’t need the full Europe per day amount so decided that we’d do it on the Asia budget so…the official budget…

Croatia – $404 under
Total budget – $912 under

Lets just say the spare happily paid for our flights home.

 

Till next time!

 

Claire

First 2 weeks in Croatia

First 2 weeks in Croatia

We picked up our 2018 Peugeot 208 in Geneva, Switzerland and started driving. Wow the highways here are expensive but amazing! Europe appears to be just one big never ending highway. On our first day of traveling we spent NZ$153 on tolls, half of that was to go through the Mont Blanc tunnel. This is an amazing engineering feat which is 11.6km long and has a ton of rules including the slowest speed you can do (50km/h) as well as the fastest speed (70km/h). There are also blue lights along the walls to show you what they expect your following distance to be (150m).

 

At 2pm we stopped at a service center and booked accommodation for that evening, yep that’s the latest we’ve ever left it but we didn’t know how far we’d get that day. However we turned up to find the host had not got the Airbnb email to say we were coming so we prepared the apartment together. She suggested a pizzeria down the road for dinner and we are so glad we took up that suggestion. It was amazing pizza!

 

After a good night’s sleep and brekkie provided it was back on the road. We weren’t far away from the border to Slovenia and everything looked very Russian to us. We had our passports stamped into Croatia, got back on the highway and headed down the coast, Salmonella Dub cranking. Then our GPS directed us inland which we thought was odd but we didn’t have any better ideas so we followed it and as we went more inland we went up and up and up and the snow got thicker and thicker and thicker and our speed came down as we crept along a big snowy highway. We made it to a service center for a nice lunch then carried on as the road looked ok but after a while we saw signs saying the highway was closed. So we get off but the GPS got confused so we had to manually navigate, oh what a hard life to have to use a map!!! 😄 We continued on our way and saw a truck tipped over, literally centimeters from falling down a very high cliff, luckily we were up against the bank. On our way we go again and soon we noticed the traffic coming to a standstill at the bottom of the gully but didn’t think much of it as we were due to turn back onto the highway before then. However it turns out the highway is still closed and another truck has tipped over, so we wait 2 hours for it to be cleared (by a digger shunting it, which takes 5 minutes once it gets there!) By this time we’ve well in truly missed the check in time for our Airbnb and low on petrol so we stop at the next petrol station, send a quick email our hosts to explain our situation and we are on our way to Split, Croatia! An hour later we are checked in. The next morning we’re told we were lucky to get in as they closed the roads behind us.

 

We spend the next 6 days resting and relaxing. We do school work and take walks to the park. BK and I practice our suburban driving on the wrong side of the car and on the wrong side of the road. We take naps and I do lots of laundry. BK find an amazing co-working space and gets some solid days of work done.

 

We then move into central Split and I collect some friends from the airport who’ve flown in to spend Easter with us. We explore the old town which has the oldest cathedral in the world that’s still in use and has not been completely rebuilt over the centuries. We were very fortunate to come across the starting of Catholic mass on Good Friday and saw boys and men singing through the streets (which are actually very small walk ways between buildings which a built quite close together!)

 

We also explore the Krka National Park and wander our way around the waterfalls for a few hours. I got my first injury, I slipped on some stones and grazed my knee! We also spend some time stuck at our Airbnb because it rained and everything was shut for Easter!

 

The day before our friends left, the sun came out and it was a beautiful day.

BK kindly offered to stay home with the children while the rest of us went to Brac Island which was a sleepy little island as the summer season hasn’t quite started yet but it’s very pretty. We found a restaurant, have lunch then made our way back to the mainland. 7 glorious hours away from our kids was just what I needed. Being with them 24/7 can be quite challenging.

 

After that it’s time to say goodbye to our friends, they’re off home to London but we’ll see them again in Rome.

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

3 months on the road

3 months on the road

Must be time for a summary!
Sleeping

Number of beds slept in = 22

Best bed – Ho Chi Minh City

Worst bed – Hong Kong

 

Flying

Number of flights flown = 15

Number of airlines used = 7

Best flight – The first Emirates one out of NZ to Melbourne even though it was delayed 2 hours

Worst flight – Colombo to Dubai on FlyDubai

Best take off – Dubai to Istanbul

Worst take off – Istanbul to Athens, I don’t think we got enough speed up on the runway so had to use the bumpy bit at the end of the runway😧

Best landing – None really stand out

Worst landing – Hong Kong to KL, the pilot put us down pretty heavy on the runway, it wasn’t comfortable and the plane internals went crack!

Best staff – Swiss and Emirates. It’s all about how you treat our kids for me. Coloring books and lollies? yes they’d like that thanks! Getting to their level and having a chat with them, that’s treating them with respect, yes we like that thanks!

Worst staff – FlyDubai. To be fair they were dealing with the worst load of passengers we’ve ever experienced.

 

Ground transport

Number of different modes of transport = 11

Over ground train, underground train, tram, cable car, car, van, bus, tuktuk, motor boat, ferry, and our feet!!!

Number of versions of tuktuk = 3

Number of steps walked since leaving NZ = 836,964 (thanks for counting them fitbit, a bit lower than I expected)

Peugeot lease car = 1

After entrusting our safety to others for 3 months. We now are exploring Europe with our own 4 wheels! Her name is Rouge 🚗

 

Clothing purchased

Number of new jandals = 2

Number of new running shoes = 3

Number of new clothes for R = 1 dress

Number of new clothes for C = 1 pair of trousers

 

Sickness :

Number of fevers = 2

Number of bodies covered in welts = 1

Number of vomiting sessions = 1

Number of bouts of travellers tummy = 0 (I put this solely down to the oral vaccine we had just before we left NZ called Dukorol. It’s expensive but so very worth it and I definitely recommend it)

 

School work

Maths – going well

Writing – both kids do not want to write, about once a week I set a bribe of an ice block and get a very half hearted effort

Reading – is a task and a half

Science and Spelling – non existent

Art – Twice is ok in 3 months isn’t it? 😀

History, Geography and Exercise – excellent!

 

BK working

Co working spaces used – 3

Some places are better than others. Moving slowly works well, as does when he can find a co-working space to do a good solid chunk of work with fast reliable internet away from the fam. Having a friend in NZ monitoring our company emails helps too.

 

Favorite country or experience

This is like being asked to pick a favorite child, we liked and disliked different things about each place.

However the elephant experience in Chiang Mai still sticks out as do Singapore and Taiwan. Plus the extra cuddles, kisses and chats as a family.

 

If there’s anything you’d like to know that I haven’t covered you can put a comment below, or on Facebook comments or private message me. Happy to answer (most) questions!

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

Dubai, Istanbul, Athens

Dubai, Istanbul, Athens

At stupid o’clock (4.30am) we got up and headed to the airport to depart Sri Lanka. The process was slow going, we arrived 2 hours early but only got checked into our flight 50 minutes before it departed.

 

We were happy to arrive in Dubai and celebrated that we had come so far under budget in Sri Lanka by getting a taxi to our accommodation. We arrived too early to check in, so we took turns staying with our gear and taking a kid exploring around the area.

 

Once we actually got into the accommodation, we dump our gear and go for a walk to the beach. On the way back home we see a very talented hang drum player. A beats festival had just started so even though we are hungry and thirsty we stand and watch for a good 10 minutes. (I’ll put video up on Facebook). That night BK cooked dinner in our apartment.

 

The following day was a Friday, we head to the MRT, only to discover that at 9.45am the trains aren’t open yet…how do you operate a city with no trains before 10am we think??!! Turns out their weekend is Friday/Saturday! When the trains start running we head to one of the biggest malls in the world, the Mall of Emirates. After a look around we head back to our apartment to get ready for the Desert Safari.

 

We are picked up right on time, collect two more passengers then head out to the desert. After a pit stop to give us the opportunity to ride quad bikes which we decline we head to some dunes for ‘dune bashing’. I enjoyed it for approximately the first 2 minutes but after that it wasn’t fun for me, we got stuck in the sand a couple of times and by the end I’m completely over it. All the others enjoyed it though!

 

We headed to our ‘desert camp’ to have a snack and we get to hold a falcon and ride camels. (On a side note, since we were ethically opposed to riding elephants I wonder if we shouldn’t have ridden the camels…) We watched a dance show and ate dinner both of which were amazing. We got back to our apartment at 10pm, fall into bed for two hours, then get up and go to the airport at 1.30am!

 

Our flight was meant to leave at 4am but ends up leaving an hour late. We originally had 2 hours to connect to our next flight in which I had great ideas of eating a Turkish Delight in Turkey and having a lovely time but in reality we now only had one hour and we’re tired so we speed to our gate instead. Nice to see you quickly Turkey! We stepped on your ground outside so you are officially in the country count!

 

We have a quick flight to Athens, check in to our accommodation with no issues and sleep the afternoon away. The next day we wake up and are ready to explore! We head to the Acropolis, to see the ancient sights. Our kids can’t understand how old all this stuff is so BK gives a small history lesson.

Bk also leans over a rocky wall at the top of a cliff to take a photo, at that exact moment a gust of wind comes and blows his (very expensive) sunglasses off his shirt and they join the ruins.

To be honest it was a little underwhelming for us. We only spent 2 hours there and everything is fenced off. I think we were a bit spoilt by the ancient temples in Cambodia which you can clamber through.

 

After a nap for R we head out to Plaka, otherwise known as old town Athens, we wander through little streets with gelato in hand. It seems that every corner you turn reveals more ruins fenced off. Lots of stores were closed as it was a Sunday. Even the supermarket was closed!

 

The next day everything burst into life. We went to the Acropolis Museum, there are no photos allowed inside so I can’t show you but take my word for it, it was AMAZING. The actual building was beautiful too. (If you’re reading this Rose, you would have loved it.) It has won many awards. The floor was glass and we looked down to the excavated ruins. Some were quite far down so it is not for the faint hearted.

 

We found a baby store and purchased two car seats ready to put in our car which we are leasing from Peugeot. The afternoon is spent resting, in hindsight we probably should have explored the waterfront or something!

 

Countries 11/12/13✔

 

One more flight, and then we pick up our Peugeot and start exploring Europe on 4 wheels! Hope we remember how to drive after 3 months of not driving! 😄

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update :
Dubai/Istanbul/Athens – $146 over!! (This was purely the Desert Safari pushing us well over)
Total budget – $508 under (Thank goodness for that buffer I’ve built up!)

Sri Lanka – Week 2

Sri Lanka – Week 2

We find out that social media has been cut off due to an incident in Kandy while we were there, a small truck knocked off a wing mirror of a tuktuk. The truck driver was very sorry and gave money to repair it, but one was Muslim and one was Buddhist, and so started riots and not very nice things. Therefore the government locked down social to stop incorrect info and scare mongering being spread.

 

At first I thought my phone was having issues so I updated my apps, I swapped wifi networks, then I googled and found out it wasn’t just me! Quite a step to take by the government, pretty much crippling us tourists connecting with home. Luckily my mum has an iPhone and the iMessage was still working so I could quickly inform the Mothership of happenings, and that we were safe. Fortunately email was also still working.

 

The social media drama aside, we still got out and about. We visited the Halpewatte Tea Factory where BK drew comparisons to how they process hops for beer brewing! It was very interesting to have just seen the tea being picked by the tea pickers to then see it get processed ready to be shipped out in big bags. The building was very tall, lots of up and down steps during our tour!

 

After that we transferred to Tangalle, on the south coast. Our driver, Saman, was very informative and stopped to let us see a waterfall, a pepper tree, get some curd and honey, and a bathroom/iceblock break. He also drove us through a ‘nature road’ where we saw lots of wildlife. Finally we were at the coast and glad to be even further away from Kandy. We settled in and went for a walk.

 

We were staying right by the beach so the next couple of days included walks on the beach, laundry, supermarket, buying new jandals for me since mine broke, plenty of local food and generally lazing around.  We had a particularly good lunch experience at a place called Dream Family restaurant. The Dad catches the fish, the Mum cooks it, and the son serves it. The food was delicious, and they gave us free ice cream to finish up, ice cream always goes down well!

 

Another fun experience I had, when going to the beach to look for the rest of my family who were, supposedly there, was getting convinced to help pull in fishing nets with the fishermen, there were 8 guys tugging, and weakling me it was quite fun, but I was too preoccupied in my mind looking for my family to fully engage and see the net 100% pulled in.

 

We tried to see turtles but the only option was going out in the dark at 8:30pm, to hope to see a Mummy turtle lay eggs somewhere between 9pm – 11pm, just too late for us so we skipped it.

 

Then it was time to move on to our next stop. We went by public bus. Bus drivers here are crazy! But we loved being with the locals and R had many admirers. All up travel cost NZ$11 for all of us to travel 2 hours west along the south coast.

 

We all still had energy when we arrived so BK and C went to the shop and little R and I had a swim at the beach. That evening BK wasn’t very well so not much sleep was had!

 

After a quiet morning and afternoon, BK felt well enough to go out so we chose to go to a turtle hatchery. It was amazing to learn about the different turtles, we saw some injured ones that fishermen had brought to hatchery to recover. Then we got to release a baby turtle which was only 1-2 days old! I placed it on the sand and it found its way to the water and a wave came and scooped it up and pushed it out to sea! He was so little I didn’t dare ask what the survival rate was…

 

After a good solid sleep by everyone we were picked up by our driver and taken to Galle Fort, it was so interesting to see a museum full of Portuguese, Dutch and English artifacts. We saw the wall that was supposed to have stopped the Tsumani in 2004, but the waves came through an open gate and flooded the place out anyway.

 

Our final day in Sri Lanka was spent on a 2 hour train trip beside the ocean to Colombo, we got a group of 4 seats together but a few stations later a monk got on, and it turns out the sign on the wall above R’s seat says its for ‘clergy’ and he wants to sit there, so we all reshuffle and then the monk gets a lesson on hatchimals, care of little R and her toys! After getting off the train It was a bit of a mission to get to our accomodation. Our host had told us to ask the bus driver to drop us in a particular, random, place. Several people around us tried to speak to us in their language and make sure we were sure that’s what we wanted, once we were dumped on the side of the road with our gear we realised what they were trying to say! Fortunately I was in constant contact with our host who within a few minutes came and got us and took us to where we were staying. When we got there we realised how much we had been compromising on our accommodation in Sri Lanka. This place was lovely and the attention to detail was much appreciated. Even though we were only there 13 hours it was the best place we stayed at in the whole country! It was NZ$33 per night, and we got two rooms so a total cost of NZ$66. We had a lovely dinner by the lagoon as the sun was setting which finished off the day perfectly.

 

We did awesome on the budget. The only thing we didn’t do which would have taken a big chunk of money was a safari, but after reading you ‘only’ see elephants, birds and lizards we decided a safari could wait for an African trip. Also our Thai experience with the elephants was more than enough to help with the wait.😎

 

Sri Lanka – $435 under

Total budget – $654 under

 

Now we head North West, one more stop then we arrive in Europe!

 

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

P.S. Social media still wasn’t back on when we left, lots of embassies were making noise about it damaging tourism and business etc. so I think it was due to come back on in the next couple of days. I was very thankful for our VPN that allowed me to tunnel through the Internet and make it look like I was in Australia, therefore staying in sporadic contact as I had to be on reasonably fast internet to get the VPN to connect. All a bit of a challenge!

Sri Lanka – Week 1!

Sri Lanka – Week 1!

Leaving Hong Kong was an experience.

We found the same express bus back to the airport, got our transport cards refunded then checked in. I was given a map of some kind with my boarding passes but took no notice of either the map or the boarding passes. We then proceeded to try to find our gate…

Turns out Hong Kong is a massive airport. We cleared immigration then found ourselves in an underground train station, um? Is this where we are meant to be? We didn’t miss a turn did we? We got on the train and went to the next station to find it was another terminal which still didn’t have our gate number, so it was back on the train to the next station/terminal. Yes, gate 203 was here, a very long walk away, we walked, and walked! When we finally got to our gate we discovered the seats all have plugs and USB ports so we pulled out all of our electronics and topped up their charge. Very handy.

 

As I was walking toward the plane I finally bothered to look at the boarding passes and map, ahh I see why they gave me a map now, but why are all 4 of us sitting in random spots and not together? I complained to the flight attendant and she managed to seat one child with one parent.

 

We had a few hours in KL to eat and mill around before we boarded another Air Asia flight, the final flight I had booked with them and had a great flight to Sri Lanka. We got a visas on arrival which was not a speedy process, found our luggage (hurrah it did it’s transfer in KL), made it to our accommodation, checked in and fell into bed, our bodies thought it was 2am 💤

 

The following day was pretty much a write off, we were staying by the beach so we had a small walk, ate at the same restaurant for lunch and dinner and were early to bed. After a day of rest we were ready to move inland. A NZ$2 Uber to the bus station, a NZ$4 bus to Colombo, and a NZ$5 train to Kandy, we’d arrived at our next city. NZ$11 total travel cost for all 4 of us for the day wasn’t bad. It was mine and BK’s 11th wedding anniversary so that evening we went to a cultural dance show and had paninis and chips for dinner.

 

The following day BK did some work and I took the kids to the botanical gardens. We saw a tree that had been planted by NZ’s Former Prime Minister John Key in 2016. We also saw the largest fig tree in the world. The gardens were really impressive to me but the heat got too much after an hour and the kids weren’t having fun so it was back to our hotel. The kids then proceeded to play quietly on their beds for an hour+ (!!!???) maybe drawn to the cool air conditioning? Maybe still tired? We’d later be thankful we stayed away from the city centre that day.

 

The next day it was up early and on the train for one of the most beautiful train rides in the world. We had a plan…I’d get on with R and find us seats then BK would ferry the luggage between C on the platform and me. The train arrived, I threw R on the train, uh oh, no seats!!!! Not even one! Back on the platform, BK wants to bail, he can’t even get our gear on. Someone tells him to go to 3rd class. I get on to the 2nd class carriage with R and sit on the floor, (this is becoming a pattern I think to myself). The train departs. I hope like heck BK got all our gear and C on.

 

As the train goes inland we all find our space, a few people get off and it becomes a little easier to move.

We meet a French family, a Chinese couple, 2 young female British doctors and have plenty of chat. R likes the two doctors and sits between them on their seats and plays games on her tablets. R also sees a little Sri Lankan boy get on the next carriage at some point and waves at him as he stares at her. She decides she wants to give him some stickers (I’d purchased kiwi pens/pencils and stickers for each of the kids to share during our trip) so cue me opening my big pack in the middle of the carriage to make this happen. She walks over gangway to the next carriage (I hold onto her firmly, Mum!) and he receives the stickers with a smile. Love our girl’s kind heart! He gets off a while later and furiously waves at us as the train pulls away from the station.

 

The train comes to a stop a while later, 40 minutes pass…one of our new friends asks a train guard why we are stopped, apparently a tree fell on the track. We eventually start going again.

 

Our new friends watched ‘the baby’ (little R) while I had 5 minutes to myself. I spent some time hanging my legs out of the carriage door watching the views go by.

The seeing tea plantations and watching the tea pickers was amazing. The 6 hour journey turned into 7 hours thanks to that tree so we are glad to arrive in Ella. (Train NZD$4 for all of us). We walk in the light rain to our guest house and dump our gear and go out for dinner, showers, bed.

 

The following day our host cooks us the most amazing breakfast, we eat a days worth of food then set off on a hike up ‘Little Adam’s Peak’ we wind up through tea plantations and up some stairs to the top. It takes us about 45 minutes. The kids are excited to see a snake charmer along the way! Beautiful views and drinks of water at the top, we also see our Chinese friends from the train. We find a light lunch and have a rest.

That afternoon Facebook, Messenger, Whatsapp and Instagram stop working…

 

To be continued…

Hong Kong & Macau

Hong Kong & Macau

Our time in Hong Kong started with a very smooth travel day from Taiwan. We took the train to the airport, checked in (both very efficient) found our gate, sat around, loaded onto a plane, ate lunch (thanks Cathay Pacific!) arrived into Hong Kong, processed through customs, got cash, got a SIM card, found a bus that was express into the city, got dropped on the side of the road (got to love those times when we land on the side of the road with all our gear), walked 4 mins to our hostel, the receptionist/owner gushed over our kids and gave them Chinese New Year ‘lucky money’ each (HK$20 = NZ$3.50), were shown to our room and wondered how the day had been so simple!

 

So, still having energy and with dinner time approaching, we went for a walk, and found a park with a lovely aviary. Then we kept walking and found the ocean! It had been 6 weeks since we’d seen the ocean so we just stood and smelt it. Ha!

 

The following day we spent the morning resting while BK worked across the road at Starbucks. We were staying next to a school so we spent a lot of time peering out the window at it. Turns out a school is a school is a school. School Mums stand at the gate with their Mum friends chatting, little boys come up with crazy silly games and there are after school activities galore.

 

One thing I noticed about this school that kiwi schools don’t do (as far as I’m aware), is take all the kids temperature (by zapping their foreheads with no touching of the child) as they enter the gate, then gave them all a squirt of hand sanitiser. It’s winter in Hong Kong at the moment so every second person is coughing or sniffing. Anyway they processed the kids really fast and I think it would be an excellent way to attempt to keep the school as bug free as possible, catching out those ‘she’ll be right’ parents.

 

**I know you’re reading this Marcus, I thought it was an excellent idea for terms 2 & 3! Difficult to manage the 3 entry points to our school though.**

 

That afternoon we did some more exploring and I got distracted at the Sketchers shoe store…Budget? What budget? 😛 New shoes for me and little R ✔ My runners were falling apart and her feet are growing! Funnily enough R is able to walk much further in her new shoes without complaining so maybe I was a bit slow in realising she was growing.

 

Wednesday was spent waiting for BK to finish off some work and calls in the morning then it was off to Hong Kong Island. We crossed on the star ferry which had been operating for 100+ years, cheap too! 50 cents for each adult and 30 cents for each kid (NZD). It was fun to get out on the water and see the city from a different angle. We then found the central mid levels escalators, which are 800m of escalators! No, not all one escalator, wouldn’t that be an engineering feat if it was. Lots of separate ones that all joined together by 2-5 metre gaps. Fun times!

Up up up we went!

 

Then along to the Hong Kong Zoological and Botanic Gardens, which were beautifully maintained and free! I saw my fave scarlet ibis birds again, they had a lovely enclosure there. Also there were very active monkeys! Then it was onto the Peak Tram, us Kiwis would call it a Cable Car, it works exactly the same as the one in Wellington, but it is twice as long, and much steeper. (If you’ve been to the Blue Mountains and seen that tram/cable car it was almost that gradient!) We were propelled up the hill to ‘the peak’ which had magnificent views of the whole city. We found a playground and had a nice sit in the sun.

 

Back down the cable car and MRT’d back to our hostel but not before stopping off at a ‘Mammys Pancake’ for a bubble waffle. Yum is all I have to say, I’ll put a photo up on Facebook to show you what it looked like, but let’s just say I didn’t share very much of mine with the fam.

 

On our last full day in Hong Kong we took a ferry (Kiwis – think those fast/comfortable/look like an aeroplane inside ferries to Waiheke) to another country, Macau. It was meant to be a 50 minute dash but due to very thick fog it was more like 90 mins, which obviously we were fine with, preferring to be alive and not in a ferry crash!

 

Once we got advice on which bus to take from the ferry terminal we were off to the Main Street, it had beautiful Portuguese architecture which was lovely to see. Also there were a lot of Catholic Churches rather than temples, a nice change! We went up to the fortress, where I had read there was meant to be 32 cannons, but we only found 23 so that was a fail! We also saw China mainland. I couldn’t quite believe it so asked a security guard and yep that was definitely China. We would have popped across if it wasn’t for the NZ$160 visa cost, each! Under the fortress we went to the Museum of Macau which had free WiFi (our HK sim didn’t roam in Macau) and aircon…oh and some interesting things to look at. We also attempted to go to the Grand Prix museum, only to turn up to find it’s closed and has been since July 2017. That’s the second time this year we’ve tried to go to a museum only to find out its shut indefinitely! (The King’s residence in Bangkok being the other one)

 

I had also read that egg tarts were a must try in Macau so we scouted out the best price and got a couple to share, very nice, it had something like baked custard on the inside and lovely fresh flakey pastry on the outside, it wasn’t sickly sweet either.

Then it was back to Hong Kong, we caught the ferry with a minute to spare. This time it took about 70 minutes as the fog had lifted on the Macau side but still a bit low in Hong Kong.

 

So Hong Kong, you’re expensive but a great stop over, you’ve got some good free things to enjoy. I enjoyed Macau a lot, it was $221 for all 4 of us (return), not cheap but worth it I think 🙂

But we managed to scrape in just under budget! Whoop!

 

Till next time!

 

Claire

 

 

Budget – $11 under!

Total budget – $219 under

  • Disclaimer – Does not include $160 spent on shoes 😎