Anyhow I was just fine by the time we were at Pelorus Bridge for lunch |
Able to enjoy the fine scenery |
Thus |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Anyhow I was just fine by the time we were at Pelorus Bridge for lunch |
Able to enjoy the fine scenery |
Thus |
By the time I got back to the marina, two double-trailers were off-loading the mussels in huge bags |
Thus |
Thus |
And thus |
Each truck, I later learned, carried 28-30 tons of mussels, so each of these bags weighed about a ton |
I timidly asked whether, if I brought my own bag, could they maybe spare just a few? |
And so I scored about a kilo, which was all I thought I could eat in one evening (our fridge was full) |
We set up camp at the Elaine Bay DOC campground |
And I was a happy camper, New Zealand green lip mussels and a nice soft Marlborough wine |
First of three skillets steaming in butter, garlic, shallots, whitewine ... |
Another, larger mussel boat pulls into the marina |
Better than manna from heaven |
As the fifth of the trucks whizzes by, 150 tons of greenies headed for the processing plant in Christchurch...less a kilo for me |
The pavement ends at Elaine Bay |
Thus |
Elaine Bay's tiny commercial marina |
A kilometer or so down the track, way beyond any homes or buildings, some kind soul had left a couple of lawn chairs |
And further down still, two nice wooden chairs; we took this as a good omen |
The track goes on through the bush mostly with nice views of the coast and islands |
We walked as far as Deep Bay, 5km |
And rested at a fisherman's hut there |
Nice views on the way back too |
Tall timber |
Elaine Bay |
West facade; hmm, well, the square top night suggest Art Deco; Gothic Art Deco? |
Integral buttresses; flying would hardly do in an Art Deco structure, right? |
Interior stern shot; painted wooded ceiling, matching piers; well the mauve maybe is somewhat Art Deco |
Starboard transept, with maze, just like at Chartres |
Looking abaft, through the choir (no misericords!), from the altar |
Port transept, overwhelmed by the organ |
Rose window? Is this what an Art Deco rose window would look like? |
History of the building; something went terribly, terribly wrong... |
Elevation; we couldn't decide whether it is a blind gallery or a blind triforium, but it's definitely blind |
Bell tower |
As seen from town; we didn't quite grasp what was Art Deco here, but if Lonely Planet and Rough Guide say so, then so it must be...and anyway, we'll be back in France in just a few more weeks.... |
Thus |
Thus |
And thus |
View toward Nelson |
Weird rocks in the vicinity |
We'd had enough adventure for the last several days and crashed in a cabin at the Maitai Motor Camp near Nelson; an administrative day and then a do-nothing day |
Of course, only a couple hundred meters away, near the "static" part of the camp, was another lovely Kiwi rig |
6k down the road and you're at Cape Farewell, northernmost point on the South Island, looking out again into the Tasman Sea |
Thus |
And a few kilometers beyond that and you're looking out over the Farewell Spit, jutting 17 miles out into the sea, dividing Cook Strait and the Tasman Bay |
Said to be the longest natural spit...and still growing |
Looking south now, across Golden Bay and Tasman Bay toward Nelson |