Another innovative use of containers... |
Sea-bed rise |
New beaches, new lagoons |
Old debris |
A changed landscape and seascape |
...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.
Another innovative use of containers... |
Sea-bed rise |
New beaches, new lagoons |
Old debris |
A changed landscape and seascape |
The Lewis Pass leads you eventually to the sea and some of the better seascapes on the South Island |
Seagull City |
Toward Kaikoura |
We'd hoped to see more porpoise entertainment, such as we saw in 2014, but there were only a few to be seen |
Parked at the beautiful mile-long Norfolk Island Pine-lined beachfront at Kaikoura |
First sign of trouble: fence around the Mayfair |
Storefront display on what happened...the store among those closed |
Container shoppes, as in ChCh |
But life goes on, the roads are now open (during daylight hours), and the tourists are back |
Memorial garden walk...the arches are ancient whale jaw bones |
The white-capped rocks give some indication of sea-bed rise; looking toward the marina, which had to be re-dredged so the whale-watching boats could use them again |
Very old and beautiful N. I. Pines line the beach boulevard |
At the marina |
Stopped for lunch at the Slab Hut Creek campground and fossicking area |
Board walk to bathroom |
In case you don't know what fossicking is--we didn't--and we didn't do any since I left our pan in storage in Montana |
The Creek; note the little channel to the right |
In Reefton, a bubble-blowing machine in one of the residences on main street, to amuse visitors |
Thus |
Many interesting shoppes, especially collectibles |
Royal Doulton Shakespearian dishes |
Child's (toy) chain saw |
In another shoppe, with hundreds of dolls (but no Sweetie Pie) |
Quite a few Chuckies |
The Fairlie Engine, 1878; articulated to navigate severe curves in the mountains |
Big-time mining town, once |
Interesting little town |
The Lewis Pass is said to be less dramatic than the Arthur Pass; well, we didn't find the Arthur Pass very dramatic, and the Lewis Pass had its moments |
Another east-bound outwash plain, heading toward the coast; we're still looking for the Clark Pass; we spent the night at a designated Freedom Camp in Rotheram |