Wwoofing on Waiheke – Part 2

Our arrangement with Simon was that we would work three hours in the morning, and then we could stay at the “Hilton.” We needed to provide our own meals, but with our own small kitchen and the bounty of his garden available, it was a pleasure.

Sunset at Onetangi beach

Sunset at Onetangi beach

We settled in to our little routine nicely, which went like this:

1) Wake up and make tea, and while watching the birds in Simon’s yard eat breakfast. We still need to figure out what types of birds they were specifically, but there were four primary  types that spent the mornings near the pear tree: (more…)

Wwoofing on Waiheke – Part 1

Dustin and I spent our second week in New Zealand wwoofing on Waiheke island. For the uninitiated newbies (because clearly Dustin and I are experts), wwoof stands for willing workers on organic farms or worldwide opportunities on organic farms. The gist is that you volunteer three to five hours per day, in exchange for room and board, and some friendly conversation. It’s a good situation for the person or farmer who needs a hand, and a nice way to experience someplace new for travelers and volunteers.

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Catching Up – Photos from Auckland

We spent a couple days in Auckland and had really amazing luck with things working out well (except for the baggage fiasco). The Volvo Ocean Race was in town, it’s the Auckland Arts Festival, we took a walking tour and our guide had some great suggestions that we followed up on (a night market and a great fish and chips place, to name two). We also tried our first AirBnB, which was a real highlight – Sarah’s place was lovely, but even more she was an excellent host. The photos below are a whirlwind snapshot of what we’ve been up to. (more…)

52 Hours to Auckland

Day 1: On Sunday March 1, we set off for our trip! Mom, Dad, and Jeff kindly drove us to Newark airport in a snowstorm (once again – it may be a sign from the universe that Dustin and I shouldn’t travel in the winter) and we dashed through security to catch our flight to San Francisco, and would then leave from there to Auckland. Instead of flying, this is how we spent Sunday evening:

GlenKatieDustin

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A Reason to Travel

When do you choose risk over stability?  That was the question I had to answer when deciding whether or not I should leave my job to live out of a backpack while traversing across three continents for several months to eventually return to my point of departure (Upstate New York).

To some of the readers the dilemma of going on the trip of a lifetime or stay at home doesn’t seem like much of a dilemma at all.  Life is short, so you should go on the trip.  To others who value stability in their lives, the choice seems equally as obvious. I have it good now, don’t throw it away.

Because you’re reading our travel blog it’s obvious what choice I made.  After several long talks with Katie discussing the logistics of how we could make our trip possible, I had one internal hurdle that got me to the point where I said yes.  I asked myself, what would Pop Pop do? (more…)