From Te Anau we headed south and east across rolling hills
of sheep and cow pastures to Dunedin (pronounced Dun EE din) on the east
coast. It was raining the whole day, so
we didn’t stop to do any sightseeing along the way. Lunch was at a café in a small town (Café
Lola, maybe in Milford) that had good coffee, the food was okay but not
particularly memorable.
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From the history of brewing |
Dunedin is perched on a steep hill overlooking a
well-protected harbor. Two of the major
industries are located right in town, the Cadbury chocolate company and
Speight’s Brewery. We opted for the
brewery tour. Our guide was very
entertaining and took our group through a display on the history of brewing,
through the raw materials rooms where you could sniff toasted barley and fresh
hops (related to cannabis but no you cannot brew beer using cannabis nor would
smoking hops give you a high). They
source both their hops and barley in NZ.
The water comes from their own deep well within the building
complex. There is a tap outside where
you can fill your own water containers for free. You go through some rooms of equipment that
was in use up until fairly recently and then finish in their brand new brewing
area with its stainless steel containers.
There is a second brewery in Auckland that does all the bottled and
canned beer. This one does only kegs for
the south island. And it provides a
byproduct of the brewing process to make Marmite!
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New vats at Speight's |
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Old copper vats at Speight's |
Since it was my birthday we went out for a nice dinner at
Bacchus, second floor overlooking the Octagon in the middle of town. They had a good by the glass wine selection
and what I guess could be described as modern kiwi food. Jake got the pea and mint risotto appetizer
and a double portion of a tuna tartare appetizer, both very good and prettily
presented. I got lamb chops coated with
a sundried tomato olive paste that was tasty but almost overwhelmed the lamb
flavor. For dessert we split a chocolate
brownie with vanilla ice cream that came with a candle on top. And a leafy garnish of angelica, something I
hadn’t seen as a garnish before or tasted. It has a slightly sweet flavor with
maybe a hint of fennel, but the leaves are a little hairy for eating.
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A royal albatross |
The next day we had blueberry muffins and good coffee at a
coffee shop across the street from the hotel. We took the car and explored the
Otago Peninsula which runs about 30 km west of Dunedin. It took us a couple 2 tries to get out of the
city, but once we got going the right way around the harbor it was pretty
easy. The road though is a very narrow
windy road that hugs the coastline. We
went to the far end of the peninsula first to the Albatross center. Sure enough there were a number of Royal
Albatross circling overhead and a huge number of gulls. I didn’t do the albatross tour which takes
you to see the nesting area but the center does have some educational displays
on albatross and other sea life.
Albatross spend most of their life at sea. These particular ones fly from NZ to as far
away as the tip of South America. We
walked down to the public beach where fur seals lazed on the rocks within
spitting distance. We split a slice of
spinach tart at the café there before heading a short way back down the
peninsula to Penguin Place.
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Yellow-eyed penguins in the penguin hospital |
Jake opted to sit on the beach while I did the penguin
tour. There were only 3 of us plus our
guide on the tour. The other two were a
mother daughter from England. The
daughter has been teaching science to middle schoolers in Auckland for the last
10 years. She was about my age. Our guide was a recent environmental
management graduate from the North Island.
He was saving money to travel to southern China before settling into a
full time job. We got a background
lecture on the yellow-eyed penguin’s life cycle. They are not doing well and seem somewhat
evolutionarily unfit for the modern world.
They are fairly solitary penguins and have only one chick a year I
think. Mom and dad feed the chicks until
they fledge, then the chicks are completely on their own. They waddle down to the ocean, jump in, and
have to learn to fish and avoid predators by themselves. Once a year the adults stay ashore for a
month without eating while they molt. If
they haven’t gotten fat enough before molting they die of starvation. If it gets too hot while the adults are
molting (or while the chicks are young) they die from overheating. They will abandon their nests if disturbed by
people. They nest under trees and shrubs
and will not nest within visual distance of another penguin, so with
deforestation their territories get bigger and bigger or they don’t have enough
shade too keep themselves cool. Because
of overfishing, there aren’t enough fish in the sea and this year in particular
they’ve taken in a lot of penguins that are starving. Apparently there are several large Ukrainian
trawlers that go up and down the coast between Akaroa and Dunedin.
So there are about 2000 yellow-eyed penguins in the world (they
only occur in NZ) and at this particular reserve there are usually about 200
penguins. This year there were only 3
nests, and 2 were successful. A bunch of
penguins from this beach got eaten by an endangered sea lion last year. The farm controls rabbits that eat the native
tree and shrub species and stoats and rats that might eat penguin eggs.
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Blue penguin in a nest box |
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Male bachelor fur seals chest bump |
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Yellow eyed molting penguin in the reserve |
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penguin nest boxes |
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cage for young penguins who will self-release soon |
After the lecture we visited the penguin hospital. They were looking after about 8 yellow eyed
penguins, 1 fiordland penguin, and 1 other species. I think they were all there because they were
molting and starving. They’ll all be
released once their new feathers grow in.
From there, we took a van over the farm to the southern coastline. They are reforesting this area and there is a
beach where yellow eyed and blue penguins come ashore. They also have lots of nesting boxes for both
species. We walked around and could see
2 adult molting yellow-eyed penguins and numerous molting blue penguins in
their nest boxes. There were also three
young penguins who were in a self-releasing pen so they could head down to the
ocean when they felt able.
I picked Jake back up and we headed back to town. We walked down to see the very ornamental
train station and then decided to go see “Lady in the Van” at the movie theatre. It was not crowded, fairly comfortable
seats. We went to a busy Japanese
restaurant on Princes St. for a light dinner of a sushi roll and salad. Okay, inexpensive. We stayed at a self-catering hotel on Princes
St. called Scenic (it’s a chain). Very
well located, nice lobby/restaurant area.
The room had great views over the city and a balcony, not inexpensive.
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stainglass window in the Dunedin train station |
On Saturday morning the city was pretty quiet and our coffee
shop from the day before not open yet, so we went to Perc just off the Octagon
instead. Also very good baked goods and
coffee.
3 comments:
Feeling sad about the penguins.
Feeling sad about the penguins.
I know! Such a host of problems facing their continued survival. Apparently the little blues are doing well at least.
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