Saturday, July 28, 2007

Week #3

Well this week went by fast. I had lectures and tutorials, nothing too interesting. Tutorials take the original lecture class and break it into groups of 20-30 people for a closer learning experience. It gives everyone a chance to ask questions and go over the lectures. Anyway, any time I speak up in tutorials (which is a lot) I get funny looks or you can tell people are paying more attention b/c of my accent. It is pretty funny, but also a little intimidating. I also don't know if my questions are because of cultural differences or good questions. No one has complained so far. I have been doing homework in the evenings, planning our two week holiday, and reading Harry Potter. I have to make deals with myself so I make sure I get my homework done. Not good!

Thursday we had a pot luck at Railway Campus. Leigh and I made peanut butter blossoms. SOOOO GOOD!!! everybody loved them. There was lots of good food again and someone made sloppy joes. A girl from Western Europe, but English isn'ther first language and I don't think she is German, saw the sloppy joes and referenced "It Takes Two" an Olsen Twins movie. Nora and I have wached that movie tons of time, probably our first pre teen chick flick! Anyway, no one knew what the girl was talking about until I finally clued in. She wanted to know if they were the same thing from the movie! There is a scene in the movie when one of the twins stuffs her face with a sloppy joe. It was really funny. I told her they were, but later realized the ones at the pot luck were really spicy. So later I went back and told her that the ones I normally eat and ones for kids are not normally spicy. Our cookies were gone really fast, but Leigh and I had our own individual plates in our room.

Friday I don't have class. I was supposed to do tons of homework this day but really didn't get any done. I met Leigh and Victoria for lunch at the Railway Cafe and we were joined by a couple other people. The cafe is good, I had a burger! They put carrots on it, I felt like I had a whole salad within my bun. It was still very good. Then We went out to go by base travel to ask some questions about renting cars on the south island. Across the street from Railway there is another little cafe. I check every day to see what the muffin special is because I promised myself I can stop and get a muffin if I have money and it is a kind I would like. So far they have had pinapple and chocolat chip, passion fruit and banana, banana choc chip, and some others. I never have money with me!!! or I am in too much of a rush, but on Friday they had a strawberry jam muffin and I had money. It is the little things in life. I also went for a long run in the afternoon. I decided it is a thing-to-do for people to yell at runners along the bay. I had two carloads of people yell at me and scare me. One was a group of Asian tourists screaming What's UP!!! I told some other students and they confirmed my idea of it being the thing to do.

Friday night a group of us went to an International Food Banquet held by the church I am attending. We took the bus up town and got there almost an hour early, so we walked around for a bit. After walking in one direction for a ways, we came to a sketch part of town with people smoking who knows what and strip clubs, so I made everyone turn around. I told them I refused to walk past a strip club and everyone laughed and agreed with me. haha! We went the other way and found a music store with a live band. Basically unless you are eating or doing some sketchy activities, all of Auckland closes down at 7 or 8PM. We made it back to the banquet at the correct time. They set up tables in an arcade, which seemed more like a mall or shopping area above an arcade. There were closed shops all around and the tables were facing a big window that looked out at the Sky Tower. There was a stage in front of the window prepared for live music. It was dark, but every table had candles. The food was also great! I think it was mostly Asian food. One dish was Indian and another may have been Malaysian. Really good food. We walked back after the dinner instead of taking the bus. The picture includes Victoria and Riley, both from the States. Victoria is one of the girls I will be traveling with a lot.
Today was awesome!!! The Arcadia group met Kate (our coordinator) at 10 to go to the West Coast Beaches. She stopped on the way so we could get some fruit at a stand. I got a Nima, a cross between an apple and a pear. It was good, but supposedly mine was not totally ripe or soemthing. We went to Maori Bay and it was beautiful. Lots of pictures and we walked around. Everyone brought a lunch and Kate had something so we could make a fire and have tea. It was pretty funny. She also had buscuits for us! Chocolate chip cookies for those not up to kiwi lingo. Then we walked down the other side of the bay on the beach. Some of us rolled up our pants and took off our shoes so we could frolic in the water. The Tasman Sea!!! I got a few shells and they are sitting in my windowsil right now. We went to Kate's house after leaving the beach to make a Pavlova. A traditional kiwi dessert. It is a white, fluffy, cream cake that you add cream and fruit to. A lot like a marange. She also cooked some tamarillos for us to try because most of us didn't know what they are. She is sending us the pavlova recipe, the fool proof version, and I am going to make it at home sometime.
That about wraps up this week! I hope everyone is doing well. Thank you all for your emails and responses. I am sorry I haven't gotten around to replying. I am not totally sure what to tell you other than what I have already written. But I wanted you all to know I am loving the responses I am getting and I am so happy I did this to keep up with everyone. I am glad you are all enjoying it. Oh! and due to popular demand, I am including a few more pictures with myself in them. Not too many though because I think those aren't the good ones.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Week #2 The Real Dirt

Hey all!
Well I cut the last entry short, so now I am going to fill in some gaps. Here are some things I forgot to tell you about.
Tuesday was Fish and Chips lunch at ispace (the international student lounge). Great food! I met two girls from Germany and another girl from the states. It was one of the German girl's birthday, so they brought a cake. Made from scratch (which is an American saying for sure) a red wine cake. It was sooo good! They were so nice to share it with us and we sang happy birthday, but I couldn't pronounce the girl's name. I hate it when I can't say people's names, it has become a new pet peeve.

Wednesday ispace had a wine tasting. Leigh and I came at 7 because that is when we thought it started, but turned out it ended at seven. So they served us both four tiny cups with different wines then sent us on our way with half empty bottles. I thought it was pretty funny that I (of all people) ended up walking through Auckland with a wine bottle in hand. To be exact it is a Nelson Pinot Noir, for anyone that means anything to. I still have the bottle for kicks and giggles, and I don't know what to do with it. I think I might use it as a flower vase. In the end I was none the wiser because I'm still not sure what I like.

Thursday was ethnic food night at ispace. Leigh and I made snickerdoodle cookies, but they turned out a little dry and needed more sugar. There was tons of food there and it was all good. Some of the French students made crepes and then there was some good sushi. A German student brought some beer and I thought that was funny. German kids are crazy. It was all a good time and I am really appreciating all of the ispace events.

Friday Leigh and I don't have class so we went to the market and stuff. By the afternoon we just stayed in. She is having problems with her foot and I wasn't feeling well. After spending Thursday afternoon to Sunday morning feeling bad, I think I got a mild food poisoning from ethnic food night.

I spent all day Saturday inside my room doing homework and trying to rest. Then at 4PM, Max, Victoria, Leigh and I met up to go to the All Black vs. Australia game. This game determined which team would win the Bledisloe Cup and the Tri Nation Cup. We went to the Globe Bar to get our tickets from Base Travel and have our faces painted. They also served us sausages. Then we took group of four buses to the game. At the game we each got a cardboard sign with "Go All Blacks" on it. It had rained lightly earlier, so we wiped off our seats. Right when the pregame performances were beginning, it began to pour buckets! Leigh and I didn't have rain jackets or anything and we were all soaked to the bone. I was sitting in a puddle and water had even gone through my hoodie.

Cold and wet, the rain slowed after about 10-15min and turned into a light shower to mist. The first picture shows the giant All Blacks flag, the band, some players practicing, and a smart person with an umbrella. The picture to the left is Leigh and me not looking as miserable as we were. I heard Max has some more revealing pictures of our rain battle. But it was a rewarding experience in the end. We saw the Haka and the All Blacks won!!!! 26 to 12!!! Although we were so drenched we didn't stay out to celebrate, we still had a great time taking hot showers once we returned. I have been stuck in horrible weather without the appropriate amounts of clothes (NY St. Patrick's Day parade, snow, band uniform) but I think this was the worst! and that is saying a lot.


Today I woke up to go to Rangitoto, a volcano island, for a hike. However, after last night, no one wanted to go completely. The weather was threatening rain again and I was not the only one who felt sick. So we postponed our trip until next weekend. Instead I went back to sleep, then met up with Leigh and Victoria to go shopping at thrift stores. We took the Free Bus to Sky tower. Then went to the thrift store from there. Then we walked back toward Railway Campus. We stopped at Food Town on the way. It turned out to be a beautiful day.
Tonight I went to Equippers Church again for my second time. It is similar to Lake Forest (my church at Davidson) but people jump more. I am really enjoying it and all of the great people. They are so nice at the church and I am really excited about getting involved. They have a group called Raw Life for young adults between the ages 18-25 that is like our Young Life. It is the same group that I went to the BBQ with. The sermon series is using movies to parallel God's message. It is a lot of fun, they hand out popcorn and get really into it. This week was Saving Private Ryan, it was good stuff. We hang out talking after the service and get to meet people. I found out they don't watch "The Sandlot" as kids, so sad.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Week #2


Cheers!
I began classes this week :( Monday is my busy day. I have Anthropology "The Question of Race and Racism" at 10AM. Then I catch a bus to the Tamaki campus where I have my population health classes on Mondays and Wednesdays. First I have Health Care Ethics with a British professor. He is really funny and quick witted, but you want to make sure you are not the subject of his jokes. I think this class should be really interesting and I should be well prepared for it considering courses I have already taken. After this class I have Maori and Pacific Islander Health Care. Right now we are doing the Pacific Islander half, then we will switch after 6 weeks. On Tuesdays and Thursdays I have Health Psychology "Behavior, Health, and Development." Which is specifically for students going into health care, so that they can understand the patients better and their psychological pressures. All of my classes have two hours of lectures during the week, plus a Tutorial which is one hour long. Tutorials take very large classes and break them down into groups of 30. This will promote discussion and give students the opportunity to answer questions. I only have one class with a friend and I am on my own for the rest. Especially the two at Tamaki campus. I see these courses as my opportunity to meet more kiwis, which has been fun. There is a girl in my two population health classes named Edith. She is very polite, but speaks up a lot in lectures to ask questions and your are not really supposed to do that.

Leigh and I both don't have class on Fridays, so we take that as an opportunity to explore the city a little more. This Friday we went to a market that is a lot like our flea market. As we were walking back down Queen St. (the main road) we took a detour into a little mall area on the ground floor of a hotel. We were going to a Warehouse, which is their equivalent of Wall Mart, to get black shirts and white puff paint. There were two guys pushing a huge cart thing through a door into the mall, so Leigh held the door for them. They were surprised to find out we didn't want in the door or stay in the hotel. One guy pulled two black T-shirts out of a box in the cart to give us as a thanks. Then they asked where we were from and told us they were from Spain. Then they said we should watch for them at the Rugby game. It was all very funny, including the fact that the cart looked like it had a bunch of trash in it and that is where the T-shirts came from. Right after that we helped a lady pick up a bunch of things that fell out of her wallet in the mall. So we decided it was our day to do some random acts of kindness.


The Warehouse doesn't have puff paint, but we found a big shoe. Size 20!!! It makes me look tiny.
Then we stopped at Esquires Coffee (the NZ version of Starbucks). It was good stuff.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Week #1

Kia Ora (Maori for hello/welcome)
Well I have been bouncing around Auckland all week. I have a great new friend from San Diego County, California named Leigh. We have been to and from all the different orientation events together. I have met people from New Zealand, Germany, Italy, Canada, the States, Malaysia and many other countries. There are around twenty countries represented within our international students. Some of the highlights have been planning fun trips, game night, the museum, and BBQs. BBQs are a big thing down here and I am about to go to another one tonight!

The museum was a lot of fun. They have a lot of neat Maori and Pacific Islander stuff. We also watched a cultural show done by some Maoris. The "Warriors" were so funny! They would mimic each nationality as they were called out. For Americans they said "Hey! How are you? What's Up?" not as funny in print but pretty funny in real life. I also through the rugby ball around on the sports fields. The Museum is in a really pretty park area.

I have been having a lot of fun shopping for groceries and cooking meals here. I tried to make broccoli and cheddar soup, but they didn't have the right ingredients. For example there is no cream of celery soup or cheese soup here, so I got chicken and corn. Then there isn't any Velveeta cheese, so I got cheddar. Well cheddar doesn't melt and all my ingredients didn't fit completely in my pot. I had to improvise, but it turned out great! and I have enough for the whole week. As well as tons of broccoli. I love the community kitchen! It is a great way to meet people and how I got invited to the BBQ tonight. Everyone has a great time while we are making meals.

I love Auckland at night. We have had a few evening excursions. One to Harry Potter and we ran through down town to the theater. It was really funny and heaps of fun. By the way, movies don't have previews and they start right on time. They also give you an assigned seat with your ticket. The international office hosted a pub night at the Globe Bar. The first drink was free on them, so everyone showed up. There was also a DJ and they played some old favorites (Grease Lightning and Girls Just Wanna Have Fun) plus some crazy techno. Everyone seemed to have a great time. I of course spent most of the nigh on the dance floor with some friends and watched all of the kids from other countries dance. They have some different moves and no one knows the walk-it-out dance of course.

There is a great running path by the harbor that is beautiful, so today Leigh and I took a long walk with our cameras. This was only in the effort to make everyone jealous (especially my Dad b/c his run is not this cool). We then took a long detour that brought us out by the museum and back to our dorms. The pictures are also to make JoAnna come visit because I know she will come if she sees the cool walk she can do!!!! and October would be warmer!

Monday, July 9, 2007

Orientation

Hey Everyone!
Well I am now settled in New Zealand. I have what we would call a suite at Davidson, except minus a real common room. My suite mate is Fran, a kiwi! She is great! There is a huge common kitchen area for the whole building. Each roommate pair gets two cabinets, one has a fridge and the other is to store the pots they gave us to use. Then there are tons of sinks, microwaves and ovens for us to cook our food and socialize. It sounds weird but I love it!

Arcadia took the 8 of us in the program to Rotorua for the weekend. It was our New Zealand orientation. On the way we stopped at Matamata, or more recently known as Hobbiton because it is where they filmed the shire (no explanation necessary I'm sure). Rotorua is a touristy town with a lot of geothermal activity. It smells like sulfur or rotten eggs. Once you get over the stench, it is beautiful! We went to the Agradome for a farm show. They showed us the 19 different kinds of sheep, two kinds of NZ sheep dogs, how to milk a cow and sheer a sheep. It was pretty hokey and fun. Then we went to Rainbow Springs. A nature preserve with fish (trout and salmon) and birds (keas and kiwi). The Kea is a mountain parrot that attacks cars and shiny objects. They are extremely intelligent and known to beat monkeys at some intelligence tests. The kiwi is the beloved endangered species of NZ. That night we went to the Polynesian Spa, where you sit in natural hot mineral water pools. It is ranked in the top ten in the world.

I forgot to tell you about Kate and Jane. They are our coordinators! I love them. Kate is like our adopted Kiwi Mum because she looks after the Auckland students. They were both so funny. Everything they said was warning us about NZ, so we titled their speeches at the top 100 ways to die in NZ. No worries though, because most of them were really stupid things people did (drinking accidents, random sex, ditsy sky diving incidents, etc. not anything that really would happen to me). Anyway, they are great!

So on Saturday we went to Waiotapu te geothermal park. We saw the Lady Knox geyser which erupts when you put soap in it at exactly 10:15. Rotorua is one of the last remaining 4 geyser areas in the world. The fifth one was in Russia and it collapsed a few years back. We also saw Lake Champagne, the Devil's Layer, and The Devil's Pool. These are all things where sulfur, arsenic, and iron have created beautiful green and orange colors in the water or on the stone. It is really cool. Then we went zorbing. I can't explain it. You get in a plastic blow up ball and roll down a hill. Fun and weird. That night we went to the Tamaki Maori Village where we participated in a ceremonial welcome, saw some different native games, songs and dances, plus the well known Haka. We had a dinner they fixed for us in the customary style. I found out I don't like muscles.

On Sunday we returned to Railway Campus and I am too tired to write much more.

A few quick things
Food:
Kumara- a type of sweet potato
Bangers and Kumara Mash Kiwi Style- my dinner one night, it is sausage in a circle with the mashed sweet potato in the center, canalized onions on top and lots of gravy. Too much gravy. It was good, but I mostly liked the onions and potato.
Fish- much like your West Virginia fish, fried
Chips- french fries
Fritters- fried whatever, pineapple fritters with sugar are very good

Sayings-
I'll shout you a drink- buy you a drink
Right on
Our toaster looks dodgy- it looks like it caught on fire