What a week! Good grief! It's still quite quiet here in lazy little NZ, but I've crammed quite a bit in again, and I've had luck on my side, phew! I arrived at Lake Tekapo on Tuesday and the weather was glorious... but my mood was grim. I'm really regretting getting the Magic Bus. It's fine, but I really don't need the 'extras' you get and I wish I'd just gone independently. For example, when I left Dunedin, I didn't fill in any of the activity sheets for Lake Tekapo because I was overnighting in Oamaru first. I don't like having to decide what I'm going to do in a new town, before I've even arrived, so by the time I was collected from Oamaru, the sheets had already been handed around and Tekapo's activities booked. I asked the driver if he could book me into the observatory at Mount John that evening, as the skies were completely clear that day and it looked extremely promising for that night. He said he'd try but there were already 17 people booked in. Fair enough. What he didn't tell me, at 11.30am, was that he'd would only be able to phone at the lunch stop... at 2pm. No surprise that by then it was fully booked! So, my first glimpse of Lake Tekapo wasn't quite the moment I's been hoping for.

Lake Tekapo
I thought I'd ask my hostel, once I arrived, to see if there was space at the observatory, just in case. And there was, at 9pm - all the Magic Bus people were booked in at 10pm, so I don't know why the driver didn't check if there were other tours. Anyway, after another near miss, (as the girl at the hostel said the bus pick up would be at 8.45 and luckily I was there at 8.30, the correct time), I was off up Mount John to the observatory there run by the Universities of Canterbury and Pennsylvania. The sky was perfect, no moon and extremely clear, one of the best 20 nights of the year, our guides Chris and Chris, reckoned! So imagine me, Little Miss Geek, asking questions like "Is Wolf 359 really a star?" "Do Castor and Pollux rotate around each other?" "Why is Orion visible here but I haven't seen Scorpio yet?" I've been a little perturbed that I'd not seen Scorpio since being in the Southern hemisphere, as I thought it was impossible to see it in the North.
Not so apparently, but Chris #1 said Scorpio could be seen here and it would be due to rise that night. Later on, we'd swapped guides and Chris #2 used his amazing laser pointer to show me. Now, first of all, these lasers are genuinely unbelievable (and apparently illegal in several countries) as they shone a clear green beam right up into the sky, so clearly that Chris and Chris were able to pinpoint exact stars. So, it was really easy to see the outline of Scorpio with the aid of the magic green line. And then Emma had her first major moment of the week - the tears came, the words got stuck and everyone there probably thought she was a weirdo, even more so than for the previous half hour! Yes, I saw my starsign for the first time and it was amazing, it really does look like a scorpion and it is in fact the largest constellation. Get in! "I'll be writing about this on my blog!" I cried! That was the highlight of the evening for me, but a very close second was seeing Saturn, complete with its rings, through the main telescope. Indeed, I got choked up again then, it looked just like a glow-in-the-dark shape I used to have stuck on my ceiling as a child. I've seen Saturn's rings, woo hoo!!! Have you?
On Wednesday, I chilled out around the lake with my new pal, Carina (Germany). We met in the dorm the previous evening (when I needed to complain to someone about my intense irritation with the Magic Bus) and poor old Carina was the first person to walk through the door! We did a spot of geocaching and dared to take a dip in the lake that afternoon. Now, that doesn't sound like much of a challenge, but this is a glacial lake and the average water temperature is three degrees centigrade! We did it... twice... but for barely a few minutes each time! Wednesday night was incredibly cloudy, so much so that it was impossible to see any stars, so I felt really grateful I'd asked the hostel to get me on the sky tour that night before!
On Thursday, the sunshine was back, and Carina and I rode horses (for four hours, ouch!) through the beautiful Mackenzie countryside. My horse was called Chief, although I think Mischief would have been more apt! At one point, I'm sure there was a slight rearing of the front legs, but I clung on tight! It was a shame that the terrain was too rough to go faster than a steady walk, but it was hair-raising in some parts as we went up and down many hills, some quite steep, which is rather scary, I can tell you! That pretty much wiped us out for the day, and even sitting around in the hostel's TV room was painful!
On Friday, we headed back to Christchurch. I booked my ferry across to the North Island, found the pesky geocache that had been swamped by a film crew on my last visit, and went out on the town! Christchurch, Friday night, dead as a doornail! Although a guy with a dodgy moustache asked me "Can I check if your boyfriend is here? Husband? Any male at all?" I took that as my cue to leave. So, yesterday, I finally arrived in Kaikoura, home of a huge number of cetaceans and the most reliable spot in NZ to swim with dolphins! Now, Carina and I were still quite tired from the horse riding and late night in CHCH, but we very quietly crept out of the dorm this morning at 4.30am (yes, you read that right!), had breakfast, and were swathed in tight neoprene by 6.30! After the Dolphin Encounters briefing, we were off to the boat and on our way out to sea to spot the little guys. We saw a beautiful sunrise, but I was starting to get worried... there were no dolphins to be seen after what felt like an age in the boat. Until one of the other boats radioed through that they had spotted a large pod and we were on our way to join them. Wow!" said our guide, "There are over 200 dolphins in this pod!" I turned to the left side of the boat and saw them for the first time... and I had been expecting to get a little teary eyed...
"Dolphins!" I exclaimed and began to sob uncontrollably! In fact, I'm getting choked up again just typing this! It was fantastic, although I would like to apologise to Carina for grabbing her and giving her a huge hug. I don't think she was quite expecting that, especially at that hour of the morning! So, my mask was really snotty before I'd even got into the water, which is usually what it is like after an hour of diving!!! Our first swim was extremely hard work; the water was VERY cold and we had no idea how tiring it would be to keep up with the dolphins and make singing noises through our snorkels to attract them. Also, the visibility was very poor, but as several of them swam within a few centimetres of me, there was no mistaking them!

Dusky Dolphin Display
I cannot describe how wonderful these creatures really are, and to swim round and round as a group circle you and look you right in the eye... words fail me! They were extremely fast and we had to move the boat several times to keep up. It seemed like no time at all before we had to hand our gear back in. I was so gutted it was all over, I could have swam with them forever! We did however spend a little time watching them from the boat before heading back to base. And they put on an amazing show for us, jumping, somersaulting, and swimming just inches from the boat! Back at the Dolphins Encounters HQ, I booked myself in to do it all again tomorrow morning! In the end though, I cancelled. It was so good, even though it went so quickly, that I probably would have been disappointed if another trip wasn't as successful. We had good weather and great numbers, and low visibility is quite common here anyway. Besides, it's time to head off to Picton tomorrow and then Wellington on Tuesday. They do have dolphins on the North Island too, though... ;)