The whitestone townscape of Oamaru contains some of the best-preserved heritage buildings in New Zealand. In the late 19th century, the town prospered through goldmining, quarrying and timber milling. Some of the wealth was spent on elegant stone buildings made from local limestone.
Development slowed, but the population continued to grow until the 1970s. With the closure of the port and the New Zealand economy stalled, Oamaru found itself hard hit. In response it started to re-invent itself, becoming one of the first New Zealand towns to realise its built heritage was an asset.
Oamaru Harbour is home to a colony of little blue penguins – that’s why this small New Zealand town made the itinerary.
Checked into our hotel, The Criterion Hotel, on the edge of Oamaru’s historic Victorian Precinct. Rooms were closet small, bathroom-shared with the entire floor PLUS slept above a local bar – the experience of sleeping in a historic Victorian hotel.
The Criterion Hotel was built in 1877 to a design by Oamaru architects Forrester and Lemon. It was built for its first proprietor William Gillespie and operated as a licensed hotel until prohibition came to Oamaru in 1905.
No penguins ‘til dusk. What to do? Our heavily tatted hotel clerk recommended Steampunk Headquarters. Asked the lady twice, wasn’t sure what she was saying. Steam – what? Only 2 buildings down, in an old Grain Elevator Building – ok, why not?
Outside of the imposing free-standing stone building, a coin-operated “steampunk” engine greets visitors, complete with lights, engine and train while noises, and fire breathing out of its chimney. The building’s exterior walls are decorated with creations such as giant flies made from metal and industrial parts.
Inside, the gallery presents a theme of a dark post-apocalyptic vision of a future “as it might have been”. Contraptions and bizarre machinery featuring heavy use of copper, gears, pipes, gas cylinders, as well as an ensemble of skeletal sculptures are lit by flickering lights and accompanied by projectors and background sounds.
If you’re looking for normal, this ain’t it. First room: dark, uninviting. Large creepy pipe organ. Weird, beyond my comfort zone.
Second room: started connecting/seeing the art. Background music pulled me in, helped open my eyes/added to the experience. And then…the Portal. Green light flashed ‘available’. Entered, shut the door behind me, waited. Like all of Steampunk, wasn’t sure what to expect. Overhead lights dimmed, music started slowly – and the light show began. WOW, whatta experience.
Back outside, walked thru abandoned, vacated rail cars. Giant houseflies garnished the building’s outer walls. A 20ft fisherman dropped bait from Steampunk’s roof. I am better having visited, a New Zealand ‘must see’.
Actually sightsaw most of Oamaru’s downtown & historic district pre-dawn on Thursday morning’s 4 mile run. Christchurch airport, puddle-jumper flight to Hamilton – vacation ends on North Island. Tomorrow’s adventure? Hobbiton.
- Criterion Hotel
- Harbourside Station
- coin-operated “steampunk” engine
- The Portal
- 2 minutes of WOW!
- exterior walls: flies & a fisherman
- Oamaru Public Gardens
- ANZAC Day “Lest we Forget”
- World War I Memorial
- Oamaru limestone (former Post Office, circa 1883)
- ‘every day’s a run day’
Steampunk HQ: The Portal
Oompa Loompa doompadee doo
I’ve got another puzzle for you
Oompa Loompa doompadah dee
If you are wise you’ll listen to me
Never got to meet Willy Wonka – but I did get my ‘Augustus Gloop’ on at Cadbury’s Chocolate Factory.
Early morning start. 9 mile trek on Frankton Track, mix of trail & bike path, east alongside Lake Wakatipu. Shower, apartment check-out, last day in Queenstown – goodbyes to my fave New Zealand town. 3 ½ hour drive, south & far far east today. After a half-week shouldering NZ’s Tasman Sea, would spend the next three days bumped up against the vast Pacific.
Arrived in South Island’s 2nd largest city, Dunedin, early afternoon. First hotel stay since Auckland. Grabbed a map & a rain jacket – CHOCOLATE! Walked past high steeple churches & historic city buildings in Dunedin Central ‘the Octagon’, then continued south toward the water, past Anzac Square to Cadbury World on Cumberland Street.
2 large lumbering storage tanks invade the landscape – one white, one purple, ‘Cadbury’ emblazoned in script. Tour ticket purchased, quick pass thru the factory museum, iconic Cadbury bunny photo shot. Sadly no other pics to share. Cell phones, purses, backpacks all confiscated before eyeing the company’s chocolate making process. No joking with Chocolatiers – take their business mighty seriously.
[Gotta/hafta/must sneak out an everlasting gobstopper (remember creepy Slugworth?) — another Wonka reference 🙂 ]
Inside, pulled a lever, filled my cup with liquid chocolate. How much is too much? Anything more than half a cup…live & learn. Heart racing, sugar-shook remainder of the tour. Oh to be a kid again. Went home with a satchel of marshmallow candy bars.
Return walked thru Dunedin’s historic Railway Station in Anzac Square. Train love.
Inclement weather, one more day. Boardwalk strolled on St Clair Beach, site of the South Island Surf Championships. Stormy day, HUGE waves. Rain or shine – vacation continues. Tomorrow’s quest? To the top of Larnachs Castle!
- Ford Model A: one of Cadbury’s original delivery vehicles
- Chocolate Lovers dream day
- St Paul’s Cathedral
- Knox Church, George Street
- Anzac Square
- Dunedin Railway Station
- stormy day, HUGE waves
St Clair Beach
Super excited to host my sister, niece & nephew last week – their first visit to Colorado.
[Gotta say though, made myself a wee bit crazy cleaning & painting before their arrival. 2 downstairs walls were ‘in-progress’ when I learned they were coming – 6 different splotches of green, blue & slate ‘til I decided on a colour.]
Been an unusually wet summer for my arid home state. Couple that with my sister’s natural string of luck – and we’re talking monsoon rainfall with high in the 50’s…in mid-July. Yep, without bad luck, my sis would have no luck at all. HA>
[Day 1’s hike shortened due to lightning. Horseback riding in Estes cancelled. Rocky Mountain Nat’l Park – fog, rain & snow – Alpine Center closed. Waterworld? Folks were wearing fleeces all week…bathing suits? Not so much. I’m telling ya…she’s got some luck.]
After 3 days of touring the USA’s 2nd most sunniest state – in the rain – I decided to take a day from work to join in the fun.
Wednesday’s forecast – 100% rain, heavy at times. Yikes.
Met up with my family in Boulder, dropped the car at a Park N Ride, and travelled an hour-half west on I-70 to Silver Plume. Train ride in the Rockies & tour of a silver mine – rain or shine, there’s a lot to see & do in Colorado 🙂
[Thanks to a few thrift store purchases the night before, we arrived warm & appropriately layered.]
Colorado rail lines were created in the mid- to late 1800’s when silver mining was the state’s most profitable export. Easy 4 mile ride to Georgetown. Scenic path cut thru lodgepole pines — pretty views. The mine tour however…now that’s a reason to write home. Hippie Mike, our guide, was crazy knowledgeable. Lot of the original [mining] equipment remains abandoned underground. Got a tutorial on mining, learned ’bout Tommy Knockers & nabbed a sizeable stone to remember the day (rock garden addition) 🙂
Next up – St Mary’s Glacier. Who doesn’t wanna see snow in July, right?
Parked, geo-cached & WHOOSH – welcomed by a deluge of rain. My family are good sports – no fuss, no muss – hiked a mile in elevation & heavy precip. Just past St Mary’s alpine lake, another 500ft UP – SNOW, whole lotta snow. FAAANNNTASTIC!
Glissaded down a glacier swath with my nephew – Colorado fun in July 🙂
Glissading is the act of descending a steep snow- or scree-covered slope via a controlled slide on one’s feet or buttocks
Wet & cold – no worries, got it covered. 20 minutes away, finished our day at a mineral springs in Idaho Springs. Temps topped out at 115°F. Hot, soothing & relaxing – super end to a super fun day.
Friday’s plans? Mt. Bierstadt, my family’s first 14er.
- Silver Plume to Georgetown — 4 mile ride near the Continental Divide
- upper right — check out the elevation
- my beautiful family
- rain or shine — much to see & do in Colorado 🙂
- clouds rolling in over Georgetown’s scenic rail bridge – WOW pic!
- train selfie
- hard hats & smiles
- over 900 feet into Leavenworth Mountain
- WHOOSH — whole lotta rain
- St Mary’s Lake
- FIERCE!
- fave shot of the day – LOVE these two!
- hot, soothing & relaxing — super fun day
Glissading in July — only in Colorado 🙂
Lebanon Silver Mine