I arrived on Waiheke Island several weeks ago where my hosts drove me to the highest point on the island and welcomed me to their straw-bale, country farm-house home, surrounded by acreage of permaculture grown gardens and fruit trees, chickens, semi-tropical forests overlooking autumn-tinted vineyards and rolling farm land- all surrounded by white sand beaches and the aqua-marine South Pacific sea. Again, another one of the most beautiful places in the world that I’ve gotten to call home.
Culturally, Waiheke is full of ex-Auckland urbanites wanting a slower paced life and artists and wine-makers catering to the influx of tourists that swamp the island over summer months. I didn’t exactly find the exotic “island life” I was looking for, but rather an affluent population of families with young kids and an old-timer community seeking peace and quiet. I couldn’t complain though, as picturesque postcard views became part of my everyday life. My hosts Darren and Laura were an eccentric couple who were world travelers and worked in the NZ music festival business for years. Thus, they seeping with cooky creativity and were caught in between a constant balancing of maintaining that go with the flow, world traveler/festival go-er partying vibe while making a living and raising a family. And that’s where I came in.
I went on beach walks during the day with the wee ones and spent my nights amongst sleeping toddlers and babies, rocking them back to sleep in the night so their parents could partay. A costume code was strictly enforced, and after going through my hosts’ closet, I found myself transformed into a groovy psychedelic wizard. One night, I couldn’t get a balling newborn back to sleep and swaddled the babe in my wizard robes and meandered through the crowd of aliens, monsters, fairies, and merpeople until I found the parents. I’m telling you, WWOOFing can lead you to crazy things.
Jala
When I wasn’t at exotic, high-end film-industry parties, I spent my days caring for 14 month- old Jasper and often 6 yr-old Jala too. From the second I woke up, little Jasper was in my arms throughout the day until his bedtime came after dinner. Despite being punched, regurgitated on, pinched and pooped on, we became good friends. Though after the first week of working close to 10 hour days, I almost cried. The workload was not one that I expected. I was getting paid $200/wk which seemed enticing as a WWOOFer, but hardly seemed worth it for the amount of hardwork, care, and love put in for their kiddies. The parents had far too much on their plates, and it seemed the WWOOFer bore the burden.
In the meantime, I’ve learned much from living in a home fueled only by the sun and the rain water. After weeks of draught, washing dishes in a wee bucket, not taking showers for days and days, not flushing toilets (we poured dishwater back into the toilet...it’s sort of like flushing..sortof), I’ve never appreciated rain more. On an overcast day I blew the power vacuuming and running the washing machine at the same time.
On my last weekend, the family and I drove to the nearbye Coromandel Peninsula where we stayed at a large eco-community for another friend’s birthday. After two nights with the family in a campervan, I was pleasantly surprised when they offered to leave me behind on the peninsula to explore by myself for 2 days and then taking the ferry back to Waiheke. I spent 2 nights in the sleepy, quaint, fishing town of Coromandel relaxing in a hostel and sleeping in to what seemed like a heavenly hour of 8oclock.
After Waiheke Island, my next family is located at the very tippy top of the country-past the northern most town of Kaitaia, deep into the untouched Northland bush. Here, I’ll be staying with a family who lives completely off the grid with their 3 children. It is both challenging and exhilarating seeing how self-sufficient one can live. I expect this new family and bush-life experience to teach me a lot.
But FIRST, because I decided to leave Waiheke a week early, I’ve got 10 days to travel to an in-between destination called the Bay of Islands. There I’ll stay in hostels in wee little fishing villages and explore what the Bay of Islands has to offer (a total of 144 islands in the area). Looking forward to re-fueling with some more solo time and giving my back a break from carrying babies all day. Spending the night in Auckland before I head up North. The bustling, culturally rich city excites me as much as the mountains do (that is... as long as I’m not here too long). Off to explore Auckland relishing in independent travel, culture, beauty, beach, people, art..a very cool city! I’ll write more after my mini-Phoebe vacation in the bay of islands. Peace!
fully sick pics bro
ReplyDeleteMany hostels limit their population to various groups.
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