Apr. 22nd, 2024

canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
New Zealand Travelog #37
Matamata, NZ - Sat, 20 Apr 2024, 12pm

Where is Middle Earth? In one respect it exists only in fantasy, a creation of J. R. R. Tolkien in his Lord of the Rings trilogy, The Hobbit, and The Silmarillion. In another respect when director Peter Jackson made 4 movies set in Middle Earth starting twenty-some years ago, various real-world locations were used for filming. The crew created an enormous location set for Hobbiton in a farmer's field outside Matamata, NZ. That's where we went today.

Map of the Hobbit movie set tour in New Zealand (Apr 2024)

Yes, you can tour Middle Earth. A bus ride takes visitors from the parking lot to the set of Hobbiton, where there are guided tours throughout the day.

Welcome to Hobbiton! Movie set tour in Matamata, New Zealand (Apr 2024)

There's a lot I could share about this fantastic Behind-the-Scenes tour. I'll keep this entry short to avoid falling further behind in my travelog; I'll follow up with more later. But for now, two things. Well, three.

First, this set is from The Hobbit, not from any of the LotR trilogy movies. That's because after LotR completed filming in 2003 they destroyed the set! Destroying sets, even location sets, is standard in movie-making. Part of the reason is that the sets are constructed with lots of fake materials, made to look just real enough for just long enough to film the requisite scenes. But when they filmed The Hobbit subsequently, it was written into the contracts that the sets would be built durably so they could become a tourist attraction.

Hobbit Hole at the LotR/Hobbit set in New Zealand (Apr 2024)

Second, the Hobbit holes on the set are a mixture of 90% human scale and 60% human scale. The 60% scale construction was used in the scenes where Gandalf was on screen in the village. The 90% scale construction was used when only actors playing Hobbits were around. This created a sort-of forced perspective look that helped sell the idea that average-height human actors were actually 3½ feet tall, like hobbits.

Third, once the former movie set became a successful tourist attraction, the number-one request from paying visitors was, "How about letting us enter one of the hobbit homes and walk around in it?" It wasn't in the original plans to do that, but it's an idea the company liked. Just recently they finished construction on a pair of homes tour groups can walk through. ...And not just look-but-don't-touch walk through, but please-touch-and-feel-everything! I'll share pics and video from our hands-on walkthrough in a subsequent blog.
canyonwalker: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. Travel! (planes trains and automobiles)
New Zealand Travelog #38
Holiday Inn Auckland Airport - Sat, 20 Apr 2024, 5pm

After touring the Hobbiton movie set this morning we tried to go for a waterfall hike. We got to the trailhead... only to find "Trail Closed" signs. And while in other circumstances we might have figured, Aw, let's trying hiking it anyway, today it was pouring rain. We bailed on the hike and just drove on to Auckland, where we're staying for the last two nights of our trip.

One bit of good news on this rainy day is that we got an upgrade at the hotel. Yay, elite status!

Upgrade to a suite at the Holiday Inn Auckland Airport (Apr 2024)

And this wasn't some notional upgrade to a merely marginally larger room, it's a "tower suite" with a fairly expansive living room separate from the bedroom.

Upgrade to a suite at the Holiday Inn Auckland Airport (Apr 2024)

The tower part of the tower suite becomes apparent here in the bedroom. The room is in a turret-like tower on a corner of the building. The ceiling's very high. The tower shape is maybe more obvious in the view from outside:

Holiday Inn Auckland Airport  (Apr 2024)

Here you can also see that the "tower" is only two storeys tall. 😂

Ultimately this upgrade is a good news/bad news situation. Good news: it's an upgrade. Bad news: it's still an airport hotel, meaning it's kind of run down, and it's a Holiday Inn (so not the poshest one to start with) at that.

Oh, but then there's this little number in the bathroom:

Hey, look, international electrical sockets - at the airport hotel (Apr 2024)

International electrical outlets! We could plug in our American electronics here without adapters. Fortunately we have a set of NZ adapters— the same  set we bought for our Australian trip months ago— so we don't have to sit in the bathroom to use our computers, tablets, and phones. 🤣

canyonwalker: My other car is a pair of hiking boots (in beauty I walk)
New Zealand Travelog #39
Kaukapakapa, NZ - Sun, 21 Apr 2024, 4pm

Today we've gone hiking at a few locations west and north of Auckland. We hiked Karekare Falls, walked around on Piha Beach, and hiked the Omeru Falls track. I'll continue here with my approach of not including photos in this journal entry, in the interest of getting through this trip without lagging behind a week or more. (Indeed, as I finally post out this journal I've already been home half a day.) I'll followup with photos and more details later. For now, here are Five Things about today's adventures:

  • I awoke early and puttered around the hotel room. Thanks to our upgrade to a big suite I was able to work on blogs and stuff without bothering Hawk while she slept in. "Shouldn't we get an early leave on hiking instead of writing about hiking?" you might wonder. Yeah, but the weather sucked. Not long after sunrise the persistently gloomy skies opened up with a shower. We waited out the rain a bit to see if the day would improve. It did, but only a little.

  • Karekare Falls is in a regional park on the Tasman Sea coast west of Auckland. The gloomy weather made everything kind of gray, though the daily rains of the past 2 weeks meant there was plenty of flow in the falls. In fact there was even a bonus falls high up on a steep mountainside we could see from the road. After we hiked the falls we hiked out to the beach. The wind was so strong it was hard to stand straight.

  • We intended to hike Kitekite Falls a few miles away but there was a road closure the last mile or two leading to the trailhead. It was one of those "Road Closed - Local Traffic Only" things. We considered going in anyway. But with the gloomy and rainy weather we decided if there were actually a reason for a closure— nominally it's to repair storm damage, but given the neighborhood is all millionaires who're pissy about other people wanting to enjoy their ocean views, the temporary closures seem semi-permanent— today would be a good day to respect that.

  • Instead of hiking Kitekite Falls we spent time on Piha Beach. We walked around the black sands and checked out a really big, imposing hill called Lion Rock right by the water. Again the winds were strong, though not quite hard-to-stand strong. It was weird watching black sand blow around us. It was like a scene in a dystopian scifi movie from a ruined planet.

  • After these hikes near Piha Beach west of Auckland we headed north an hour or so to Omeru Falls. It's in Kaukapakapa, past the outskirts of what could be considered metro Auckland. If Auckland were San Francisco, this would be up in wine country, like Santa Rosa. In fact the area felt like wine country, geography wise. Though it being New Zealand there were way more sheep than grape vines. 😂 Oh, but hiking.... 🤣 Yeah, the Omeru Falls was a great little park. Well maintained trails lead to multiple small waterfalls, the biggest being about 40' tall. We had the park nearly to ourselves; there were only 3, maybe 4, other small groups out there. I guess the generally crummy weather scared people away, though thankfully it didn't actually rain on us while we were hiking.


canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
New Zealand Travelog #40
Auckland, NZ - Sun, 21 Apr 2024, 6pm

A few weeks ago, before we started our trip to New Zealand, I wondered, Are there Costcos in New Zealand? It's not that I'm trying to make a thing of visiting a Costco in every country I travel to but that it'd make a difference in how we packed. There are few things which, if we could have counted on buying them at Costco, we wouldn't have had to pack them. And also I am kind of checking out Costcos in foreign countries I visit. 😂

The good news was there's a Costco is in New Zealand! The bad news was it's a Costco, as in just one in the whole country, and it's in Auckland— which would be at the very end of our trip, not the beginning when it'd make a difference to packing. Thus I wrote it off as a thing to do.

Then a funny thing happened on the way to Omeru Falls today. On the drive north we passed a Costco. The Costco in New Zealand. "Let's stop by on our way home if we take the same route back," Hawk and I agreed.

Entering New Zealand's Costco from the parking garage (Apr 2024)

From the outside this Costco looks positively huge. It's a multi-storey building with a parking garage and offices. I figure the offices are for the company's presence in New Zealand. They likely manage all their imports, inventory, advertising, and staffing there. Once inside it turns out the store's not any bigger than normal for a US Costco... though there is a trick people-mover ramp from the parking garage above the store down to the retail level.

As with our visit to one of Australia's Costcos in December the most impressive thing was how at least half the stock in the store is the same as in the US. Here, 4337 miles away from the nearest US location. (I know the exact straight-line distance because the Costco app helpfully tells me that that's the nearest store, in Kona, Hawaii. Obviously the US-centric app is missing the few stores in Australia as well as the one here in New Zealand... though it does show one store in western China "Opening May 1".

One thing I considered buying at New Zealand Costco to bring home (Apr 2024)

We walked more than half the aisles at Costco, mostly just window-shopping for cultural comparison. Indeed there are a number of things unique items we'd be willing try if we were starting our trip here, not going home tomorrow. One thing I did consider, momentarily, buying here to pack on the plane is a bulk box of TimTams. They're a delicious snack cookie popular in Australia and New Zealand. I've enjoyed them on my trips here, and while I wouldn't mind having some to take home, that's not the reason I thought about buying this box.... It's that while I merely like them, some people in the US loooove them and are willing to pay quite dearly for anyone who brings them over. 🤣

The food court was very busy at New Zealand Costco (Apr 2024)

The other thing I was curious about are the offerings at the food court. There's a fair degree of worldwide standardization here, though some things are different— including the prices, marked in local currency. One thing that gives some US Costco loyalists a heart attack is seeing that hotdog-and-pepsi combo in the center of the menu board for $1.99. In the US it's $1.49, has been $1.49 for a long time, and touches off a wave of panic that even impacts their stock price whenever it's rumored that it might increase.

One obvious tell this menu board is foreign and is not some inflationary test-marketing experiment in the US is that the hot dog is advertised as "ALL PORK". In the US it's all beef, and that's part of the brand identity. (There was a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth, some that persists to this day, when Costco changed from Hebrew National Kosher hotdogs to Kirkland brand non-Kosher.)

Among other differences on the menu are french fries— which, oddly, Costco NZ calls french fries rather than "chips"— and a meat pizza with barbecue sauce.

Do these things sell well in New Zealand? If crowds are any indication, the answer is "Hell yes!" The food court area was mobbed.


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