Also, the water is so fresh you can drink it, so we all filled up our bottles from this stream |
The next day was a day of information, including a Maori performance class where we learned a song ( apparently that is used by the All Blacks Rugby Team) and a game. I also went luging up the Queenstown mountains! We took a gondola up to a ski lift, and sat in these odd little black plastic boxes with bike handle bars. It was really cold yet really entertaining ( although I crashed on a turn at one point, oops). Here are so pictures from the top of the mountain, where we also ate dinner on our last night there.
The next day was a free day, so I chose to go bungy jumping. Queenstown is actually the place it originated, and we passed the first one on our way up the mountain. The ride from the town center to the place we were jumping was about 40 minutes which really heightened our nerves. A group of girls from my program and I went together and we were all newbies. To get to the jumping platform , you have to take a gondola across to a box suspended over a canyon. The gondola ride itself was terrifying and made us want to turn back. We waited for about 45 minutes in the hanging box, all suited up, nerves high, but due to the winds being too strong, we couldn't jump. We were sent back to the main base to wait some more as it was cold at the jumping station. I was pretty bummed out that I might miss the opportunity to bungy as it was our last full day. However, the staff ( who were the coolest, chillest people ever) informed us shortly after that the wind had died down and we could go leap. ....And I did it. The first 2 seconds were pure horror on the free fall, but after that it was the most amazing thing ever. You feel so alive even though your dangling by a cord strapped to your ankles. Oh also this was 143 meters of a jump, called the Nevis, which is the highest in NZ. Go big or go home, right?
Later that night I met up with my roommates whom decided to go luging instead of jumping and we went to one of the ice bars of Queenstown. It was $36 for two cocktails, entrance and the ability to wear their parkas. However, you had 30 minutes to chuck down these frozen themed drinks served in ice cups, so that was interesting. It was a tiny room with some ice sculptures, a bar and some seats ( covered in fur so your butt doesn't get cold). It was one of those things where we could say been there done that sorta thing. It was okay- a lot of syrupy drinks and cold noses in my opinion.
That was our last night before heading out to Wellington, so we visited some local bars as well, but failed to get Fergburger like a true tourist would! I want to go back for a weekend hopefully and do some more of the extreme sports! Well, I know this is super long, so sorry, but hey! I finally posted something!
No comments:
Post a Comment