Today we took time out to just see something of Wellington. The weather was gorgeous - hot but with just enough cloud and wind to keep it comfortable. We took the cable car from Lambton Quay up to the Botanical Gardens and ate ice creams and took photos.
Friday, January 30, 2009
House Hunting in Welly
One of the hardest things about house hunting in a 'foreign' city is that you simply have no idea of what each suburb is like, or if you're going to like living there. One of the sites I have found quite useful in this regard is Tommy's Real Estate which includes some brief descriptions of the various suburbs in Wellington.
So today we went to a viewing in Brooklyn. Now, in SA, if you are interested in an advertised house or flat, you call up the agent and arrange a time that suits you, the agent and the current inhabitant of the house. The agent then meets you at the house and takes you through and answers all your questions. Here in Welly, things are done a little differently. Agents hold 'viewings' of rental properties. This is a fifteen to twenty minute time slot, picked to suit either the agent or the current tenant of the property, and anyone who wants to see the place just arrives and has a look. If you can't make it at that time ... well, tough luck. (OK, I'm generalizing. We also met a great agent who not only picked us up and took us to see the house he was renting, but then gave us a short tour of the neighbourhood too!) But speaking generally, the viewing seems to be the most common way things are done! It's like speed-dating for renters!!
The house in Brooklyn looked great - on the website! But the ad was misleading. Most of the pictures were of the flat just above - the one with the really great views and deck. The house we saw was underneath, smelled of damp and had a teeny tiny view out of one corner of the kitchen window. But the positives were that we got to see a new suburb and we used the bus system successfully - without all the trauma of the first trip we took!!! And that was a great feeling!!
So today we went to a viewing in Brooklyn. Now, in SA, if you are interested in an advertised house or flat, you call up the agent and arrange a time that suits you, the agent and the current inhabitant of the house. The agent then meets you at the house and takes you through and answers all your questions. Here in Welly, things are done a little differently. Agents hold 'viewings' of rental properties. This is a fifteen to twenty minute time slot, picked to suit either the agent or the current tenant of the property, and anyone who wants to see the place just arrives and has a look. If you can't make it at that time ... well, tough luck. (OK, I'm generalizing. We also met a great agent who not only picked us up and took us to see the house he was renting, but then gave us a short tour of the neighbourhood too!) But speaking generally, the viewing seems to be the most common way things are done! It's like speed-dating for renters!!
The house in Brooklyn looked great - on the website! But the ad was misleading. Most of the pictures were of the flat just above - the one with the really great views and deck. The house we saw was underneath, smelled of damp and had a teeny tiny view out of one corner of the kitchen window. But the positives were that we got to see a new suburb and we used the bus system successfully - without all the trauma of the first trip we took!!! And that was a great feeling!!
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Day Two It Rained!
And that was a Good Thing!
We woke up yesterday morning (after all the fire shenanigans at 4am) to low gray clouds which eventually turned into light drizzly rain. It hung around most of the day and seeing as we'd packed mainly for the glorious Wellington summer we'd been hearing about, we ended up spending most of the day at the apartment, getting busy on the phone and booking times to go meet my new bosses up at Sprott House, to have Livi assessed at WHS and finally, to view our first potential apartment here in Welly which we did last night at six (more on that below).
Mid-afternoon, I grabbed a gap in the weather and speed-walked two blocks down to Cuba Street Mall which is one of the oldest thoroughfares in Welly, and which features a fascinating and funky collection of shops, cafes, bookstores - in fact, anything you could possibly want you'll probably find there. I went to Farmers, a house-and-garden kind of store where I bought an umbrella, pair of closed shoes and a beautiful warm autumn jacket!
At 6pm, we walked down - no first, we walked UP then down! - to 126 The Terrace, where we saw a teeny, tiny apartment on the third floor. Although it was reasonably priced, fully furnished and within walking distance of Lambton Quay, the cable car and the waterfront, we both had an instinctive NO to it: it was a dismally soulless place and looked out onto nothing but other tall apartment buildings. Welly has so much to offer and we are still so new to it - I think we'll probably look at a LOT of places before we find the one that says YES! :-)
OK, now piccy update. A lot of you have asked for Welly pix, so here are a few random shots, mainly from where we are staying now, which is on the corner of Willis and Ghuznee.
This is the link to the ad for the apartment we viewed yesterday - it's on TradeMe, which is THE online shopping site for Kiwis - just like Gumtree and Craigslist, but (imho) even better! I now have a watchlist of about twelve other potential rentals which I need to start pursuing today .. so watch this space for updates!
Love to everyone back home and elsewhere!
L&L
We woke up yesterday morning (after all the fire shenanigans at 4am) to low gray clouds which eventually turned into light drizzly rain. It hung around most of the day and seeing as we'd packed mainly for the glorious Wellington summer we'd been hearing about, we ended up spending most of the day at the apartment, getting busy on the phone and booking times to go meet my new bosses up at Sprott House, to have Livi assessed at WHS and finally, to view our first potential apartment here in Welly which we did last night at six (more on that below).
Mid-afternoon, I grabbed a gap in the weather and speed-walked two blocks down to Cuba Street Mall which is one of the oldest thoroughfares in Welly, and which features a fascinating and funky collection of shops, cafes, bookstores - in fact, anything you could possibly want you'll probably find there. I went to Farmers, a house-and-garden kind of store where I bought an umbrella, pair of closed shoes and a beautiful warm autumn jacket!
At 6pm, we walked down - no first, we walked UP then down! - to 126 The Terrace, where we saw a teeny, tiny apartment on the third floor. Although it was reasonably priced, fully furnished and within walking distance of Lambton Quay, the cable car and the waterfront, we both had an instinctive NO to it: it was a dismally soulless place and looked out onto nothing but other tall apartment buildings. Welly has so much to offer and we are still so new to it - I think we'll probably look at a LOT of places before we find the one that says YES! :-)
OK, now piccy update. A lot of you have asked for Welly pix, so here are a few random shots, mainly from where we are staying now, which is on the corner of Willis and Ghuznee.
Looking down Ghuznee Str - on the left, a high rise apartment building, on the right a beautiful old church with a parking space set aside for the Vicar!
Looking back up Ghuznee - a cool mix of high rises and small houses ...
Looking back up Ghuznee - a cool mix of high rises and small houses ...
Inside the apartment ... sleeping on Day One!
This is the link to the ad for the apartment we viewed yesterday - it's on TradeMe, which is THE online shopping site for Kiwis - just like Gumtree and Craigslist, but (imho) even better! I now have a watchlist of about twelve other potential rentals which I need to start pursuing today .. so watch this space for updates!
Love to everyone back home and elsewhere!
L&L
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Shopping in Welly for the first time ...
Our first purchases (apart from bread, cheese and tomato last night at the superette on Willis and iced coffee down on Lambton Quay today) were these:
A Skype phone from Dick Smith Electronics for $29.95 - installed it and chatted and it works just perfectly!
Food from the New World Food Market on Willis Str - the brands are almost all new to us, but there is a HUGE amount of choice and lots of Asian / foreign food to try out too. This little lot cost us $32.65
Food from the New World Food Market on Willis Str - the brands are almost all new to us, but there is a HUGE amount of choice and lots of Asian / foreign food to try out too. This little lot cost us $32.65
And then there were two ...
..... and those two set off for Wellington, New Zealand on Friday 23rd Jan.
Color-coded travellers! This was totally unintentional - neither of us knew what the other would be wearing as we spent our last nights in different places!
There were four legs to our journey - CT to Joburg, then Joburg to Perth on SAA, followed by Perth to Auckland and Auckland to Welly on Air NZ. For any SAfers flying this route, all I can say is that SAA has gone to the dogs - lousy food, unfriendly staff, tatty airplanes, very poor movie choices - in fact, Livi's TV screen was broken and we told three different people, all of whom brushed us off with a quick 'we'll look into that just now, it probably needs to be reset' - but it stayed broken the whole flight. SAA used to be very, very good but not any more. But Air NZ was absolutely stunning: beautiful, clean, up-to-date planes, warm and friendly staff, excellent meals (not served on plastic plates!), fantastic choices of movies and TV programmes and interactive games etc - and when the TV screen futzed out once, it was reset within three minutes and no more problems. We had a 7 hour layover in Perth, and the Aussies were great! One staff member collected all the passengers transiting to Auckland, checked us through and saw us safely into the transit lounge - no transit visas required! Livi kept herself busy with emergency nail repairs, sleeping, window-shopping and listening to music.
And Wellington!!! It really IS the most amazingly beautiful city! On the shuttle to the hotel, I kept seeing things I'd spotted on Google Street View! The weather was amazing - sunny, light breeze, water twinkling in the sunlight ... but as soon as we got into our rooms, we hit the sheets and slept most of the next twenty-four hours!
Monday only served to confirm what we'd seen so far. Bank accounts validated within minutes and what fantastic deals and service we got from Westpac! We walked all over the place, drank iced coffees, explored the ins and outs of Lambton Quay and Frank Kitts Park, then discovered the Willis Str New World market and shopped for dinner. I guess last night I was still a bit hyped, couldn't get to sleep - and then at 4 AM, we were awakened by the most awful screeching siren - the hotel fire alarm going off! When I finally figured out what it was, we joined all the other residents staggering down the fire escape in various states of dress/undress (I even managed to grab my bag with keys, camera, passports and wallet - yay, go me! LOL!). Within three or four minutes, no less than FOUR huge fire trucks roared up and we watched as they sprang into action ... even though there was no sign of any fire. We later learned that they found a melted down lamp in the reception area ... so it could have been very nasty had it blazed up and spread, but kudos to the fire alarm system and the Welly fire guys who were amazingly calm and efficient.
Color-coded travellers! This was totally unintentional - neither of us knew what the other would be wearing as we spent our last nights in different places!
There were four legs to our journey - CT to Joburg, then Joburg to Perth on SAA, followed by Perth to Auckland and Auckland to Welly on Air NZ. For any SAfers flying this route, all I can say is that SAA has gone to the dogs - lousy food, unfriendly staff, tatty airplanes, very poor movie choices - in fact, Livi's TV screen was broken and we told three different people, all of whom brushed us off with a quick 'we'll look into that just now, it probably needs to be reset' - but it stayed broken the whole flight. SAA used to be very, very good but not any more. But Air NZ was absolutely stunning: beautiful, clean, up-to-date planes, warm and friendly staff, excellent meals (not served on plastic plates!), fantastic choices of movies and TV programmes and interactive games etc - and when the TV screen futzed out once, it was reset within three minutes and no more problems. We had a 7 hour layover in Perth, and the Aussies were great! One staff member collected all the passengers transiting to Auckland, checked us through and saw us safely into the transit lounge - no transit visas required! Livi kept herself busy with emergency nail repairs, sleeping, window-shopping and listening to music.
Sleeping in Perth ...
We landed in Auckland at 5.15 am Sunday and cleared customs and passport control with absolutely no problems at all, then flew the last leg to Welly in a state of almost drunken euphoria - jetlagged after nearly 36 hours en route, unable to believe that the beautiful land beneath us was really and truly the New Zealand we'd been looking at pictures of for so long. The wonderful Air New Zealand plane out of Perth ...
And Wellington!!! It really IS the most amazingly beautiful city! On the shuttle to the hotel, I kept seeing things I'd spotted on Google Street View! The weather was amazing - sunny, light breeze, water twinkling in the sunlight ... but as soon as we got into our rooms, we hit the sheets and slept most of the next twenty-four hours!
Monday only served to confirm what we'd seen so far. Bank accounts validated within minutes and what fantastic deals and service we got from Westpac! We walked all over the place, drank iced coffees, explored the ins and outs of Lambton Quay and Frank Kitts Park, then discovered the Willis Str New World market and shopped for dinner. I guess last night I was still a bit hyped, couldn't get to sleep - and then at 4 AM, we were awakened by the most awful screeching siren - the hotel fire alarm going off! When I finally figured out what it was, we joined all the other residents staggering down the fire escape in various states of dress/undress (I even managed to grab my bag with keys, camera, passports and wallet - yay, go me! LOL!). Within three or four minutes, no less than FOUR huge fire trucks roared up and we watched as they sprang into action ... even though there was no sign of any fire. We later learned that they found a melted down lamp in the reception area ... so it could have been very nasty had it blazed up and spread, but kudos to the fire alarm system and the Welly fire guys who were amazingly calm and efficient.
4 am in Willis Street ... lots of sleepy folk and a few hunky fire guys!!
Friday, January 23, 2009
Goodbye to The Boy
The last few days we've been staying with my brother and his family, cluttering up their house with our backpacks and cases and last-minute frantic organising and phoning and chasing up of documents etc. It's been a non-stop whirl since the beginning of Jan, but at last we are out of the flat with boxes shipped and cases packed.
On Jan 22nd, The Boy left on his own Big Trip - he'll be spending a year or so over in the UK before joining us in New Zealand, hopefully in Jan 2010 or thereabouts.
On Jan 22nd, The Boy left on his own Big Trip - he'll be spending a year or so over in the UK before joining us in New Zealand, hopefully in Jan 2010 or thereabouts.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Counting Down
The Final Countdown is in progress! Today being 14th January, that means ten days to go! Well, ten until The Boy leaves and eleven until Livi and I go.
The flat is almost empty. We sorted out and threw out and the left over stuff went into the yard sale piles ...
... which we held last Saturday morning! It went brilliantly and we cleared almost two-thirds of it in five hours! Yay! Then we started filling the boxes for shipping and ended up with four tea-chests and three book boxes - and that is it! Apart from our bags, those seven boxes are the sum total of what we'll be taking with us to our new life in NZ (and even that feels like too much ... but I'm sure that once they arrive - three months from now - we'll probably be very glad we filled them!) I'm amazed at what we managed to squash in .. books, mainly, but also stuff like my favorite duvet, a persian rug, an old-fashioned electric clock I once bought at a yard sale, teddy bears and board games and photographs and DVDs and CDs and so on...
The boxes shipped on Monday and the guy from the shipping company posed very happily for a picture - in fact, he did it so smoothly that I am quite sure I'm not the first person to have asked him to 'smile for the camera'! LOL!
So now we are down to the bare essentials: a few mattresses, TV, laptop and family computer. Most of the furniture has been sold - the fridge goes tonight and there's a guy coming to see the coffee table on which this laptop now rests!
Hopefully the updates will be a lot more frequent now as the Final Countdown continues!
The flat is almost empty. We sorted out and threw out and the left over stuff went into the yard sale piles ...
... which we held last Saturday morning! It went brilliantly and we cleared almost two-thirds of it in five hours! Yay! Then we started filling the boxes for shipping and ended up with four tea-chests and three book boxes - and that is it! Apart from our bags, those seven boxes are the sum total of what we'll be taking with us to our new life in NZ (and even that feels like too much ... but I'm sure that once they arrive - three months from now - we'll probably be very glad we filled them!) I'm amazed at what we managed to squash in .. books, mainly, but also stuff like my favorite duvet, a persian rug, an old-fashioned electric clock I once bought at a yard sale, teddy bears and board games and photographs and DVDs and CDs and so on...
The boxes shipped on Monday and the guy from the shipping company posed very happily for a picture - in fact, he did it so smoothly that I am quite sure I'm not the first person to have asked him to 'smile for the camera'! LOL!
So now we are down to the bare essentials: a few mattresses, TV, laptop and family computer. Most of the furniture has been sold - the fridge goes tonight and there's a guy coming to see the coffee table on which this laptop now rests!
Hopefully the updates will be a lot more frequent now as the Final Countdown continues!
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