Sunday, 19 December 2021

Christmas and New Year in New Zealand 2021

It has been another strange year. Good that we are still Covid and cancer free; good that we managed to travel to Italy to sell our house, pack up our stuff and send it to NZ; good that we had a whirlwind trip to UK to see family and a few friends and survived managed isolation together for 14 days back in NZ. We tend to look on the bright side and be positive and thankful for what we have got.

Probably, like us, you had to cancel several travel plans in 2021. We were also supposed to holiday in Australia (NSW, Queensland and Tasmania) Ireland, Scotland, Spain, Portugal and Morocco, playing golf, opera, theatre, cycling, walking with friends. Instead, we spent most of the year exploring more of New Zealand. Not a bad option considering its outstanding beauty.


New Zealand is still cut off from the rest of the world until at least May 2022; it is very quiet in the South Island. As we write, Aucklanders are just being allowed out to visit the rest of the country after several months of lock down. In Otago, we have been lucky. Only a few weeks lockdown this year; Covid has been contained so far and 90% of Southland are double jabbed with booster jabs on the way. We have been able to explore the mountains, hills, golf courses, tracks, vineyards and beaches. The air is fresh; the people friendly; food and wine great.

Here are some of our highlights:

Sunrise Balloon trip

Tramping in Fjordland

Opera in the local gardens

Trip up the West coast.

Walked the Old Ghost Road 

Golf trips to Blenheim, Dunedin and Nelson, Kinloch and Wairaiki GC

Cycling the Timber trail with Robbie and Marti.

Kayaking the Whanganui

Drove a BMW race car at speed at NZ equivalent of Silverstone. 

Flew around Mt Cook in a helicopter on a blue sky day. 



Celebrating Becky and Alan’s wedding anniversary in Kinloch lodge, near Glenorchy in June

Vaccination month. Euphoric that we could book a slot  in MIQ to get back into NZ. This meant we could travel.

I started making cheese. So far we have Camembert, Brie and Stilton (similar). 

Sarah started learning to play the piano and to play bridge.

July/ August. Italy and UK.

Wrote blogs on our travels as we experienced them

Italy:

https://joandsarahcrimbo13.blogspot.com/2021/08/ciao-italia.html

UK: 

https://jojobucketlist.blogspot.com/2021/09/whirlwind-trip-to-uk-august-2021.html

Abel Tasman kayak + walk


Health wise, it was a mixed year. Sarah is still going strong but worried by aching joints and cholesterol. Must be something to do with too much cake (Can one have too much?)

I had a nasty dermatitis in January, with swollen hands and feet; I lost several layers of skin. Off sport for 6 weeks. 

My Mum has had a hard time with cancer, ileostomy and still suffering from a stroke. Mum is so brave; so resigned, so stoic; yet still cheerful. Dad is doing very well despite everything. 

In November I had a very sore chest and difficulty breathing; suspected Pleurisy. After several rounds of painkillers and anti inflamms all fixed. 

On 21 December, we (along with 6 friends) start a 72 hole golf marathon around Arrowtown in aid of the Cancer Society. 


We expect all seasons in one day, playing 4 different courses, starting at 6am and finishing at dusk. All our adventures are on the following links.

To follow us on the day: 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/6610866498983600

Link to interview on Sports Radio 

https://drive.google.com/file/d/19z0Tg5CGNz5oXED83_aQoPNLTkDlduOG/view?usp=sharing

Our sponsorship page:

https://longestday.org.nz/thebirdies


Apart from the golf marathon tomorrow, Christmas will be up a mountain somewhere near.

So on to 2022.

We wonder how anyone is still in the travel business. We are wary of booking as Covid, with all its variants just keeps on developing. We hope for everyone’s sake, we all can learn to live with it and that the world opens up again to travel soon. Maybe we will get our trip to Ireland and Scotland for The Open 2022.  

We hope to see you next year somewhere.

We wish you a Happy Christmas and all the best for 2022.

love Jo and Sarah

xxx

Monday, 2 August 2021

Ciao Italia

 Italy July 2021


A whirlwind trip to Italy to say goodbye to our house; 


our European summer home for the last 16 years, now sold. 




The views from the house never disappoint


Preparing it for sale involved checking everything worked, removing the contents and cleaning it thoroughly. 

As we had not been there since mid 2019, lots to be done. 

Deciding what to ship to where, had to be done ahead of our visit from guess work and photos. On arrival, we found we had more stuff to sort than anticipated, mainly boxes not opened since moved to Italy. Needless to say, Sarah and I spent almost 2 weeks sorting, itemising, packing, chucking, cleaning, scrubbing, until the house was spick and span and everything sorted. We went to the Isola Ecologica (local recycling centre) with 7 car loads; 2 extra car loads went to the clothes recycling bin. Surprising what you take with you around the world. Sarah had not had a sort out like this since she left the UK in the 90s. Evenso, professional packing and removal took 4 more days. 


It was sad to leave, but also a big relief. In one word: maintenance: no more pruning of roses; 2-3 hours mowing the lawn; tending the garden. No more negotiation in Italian with the electrician, plumber, security man, shutter man, heating engineer, gas man, WIFI provider, gardener, cleaner, DIY person; local farmer; pool man; person to mend the track; to sort out the latest issue. 

We will miss the pool, the fresh produce, the beautiful evening light, the excellent food and wine,




the cycling, the Sibillini mountains; all the characters we met along the way; holidays with friends and family. Our time in Le Marche is something we will always cherish.


We had to leave Italy via Pisa (closest place where we could find a COVID test result in English) in order to comply with UK regulations. 



This gave us a few days spare to cram in a quick visit to Sienna


 where the truffles are as big as rocks.

2 operas in Torre Del Lago (home of Puccini) 




a sculpture park outside Sienna; we met the owners and had a tour of their house. Last 5 nannies were all from NZ!



Gourmet dinners in Volterra; 




paddling at sunset on the beach at Via Reggio, after everyone else has gone for dinner



hair raising/dusty tour of the Carrara marble mines; Huge blocks cut from the side and from inside the mountains






sculpture in Pietra Santa






the garden at Villa Reale Di Marlia, now owned by the Swiss;




wall walking in Lucca;





and Pisa (up and around the leaning tower).


Not many people here.
Inside the hollow tower. 
Imposing

Sarah in her Waiheke T shirt with the famous tower behind.

So far we have avoided quarantine in Italy but had to isolate with my parents on return to UK. 

After 3 negative COVID tests in 6 days, we are now free to roam. Let the fun begin.