Christmas day was full of food, fun. family and friends. Then came 27th December the first picking day from the first crop of cherries harvested from Forest Lodge Orchard. The night before we prepared the lunch (salads and other nibbly food) and then on picking day rostered ourselves to food, child minding and picking.
We had finished by early afternoon and the cherries ("red gold") were carted to the pack house by a friends Tesla - possibly New Zealand's first environmentally sustainable crop of cherries.
It is hard to describe the festive feeling of picking that first crop. Jubilation, excitement and relief all come to mind.
And after all that picking... we dropped Mike off in Wanaka for his kayak race and we biked down the river to the bridge towards Luggate. It was a lovely trip, only problem was we had to share the narrow path with bikers, push chairs, dogs, runners and walkers. On the way back, we took an inland route and found a nice cafe/bar for lunch. Probably spent too much time sitting in the sun, but we reminded ourselves we are on holiday.
We also managed a walk around Lake Hayes, biked along the Clutha and went to lots of parks with the kids.
All too soon it was time to move on. Disappointingly we missed the second harvest by two days. The trip up the island was uneventful. The Lindis Pass could be seen (the last time we came through a thick fog) and then on to the Clay Cliffs (last time they were closed due to the devastating fires at Lake Ohau). Down a gravel road, and through a dust storm (from returning cars) and then a short bumpy walk to the cliffs. It was busy - and once again we wondered what it would have been like if our borders were open.
Twizel is a quiet little town - and we were surprised at how many people there were out and about. The supermarket was ultra busy - but we found what we wanted and escaped as quickly as we could. The motor camp is full - motor cycles, kayaks, bikes - tents of all sizes. Lake Ruataniwha was sheltered with plenty of picnickers and swimmers - a pleasant place to eat our takeaways. Did a couple of bike rides (one along the river through deep deep mud) and the other towards the canals.
One bike ride was from the Ohau Weir to Ohau Alpine Village. Part of the A2O trail. Ohau village was 13 kilometres away and the track meandered beside the lake. The first 1km of the track was bumpy and I did wonder if it continued how far we would get. After a hill, it became smoother and we biked through pretty summer flowers with the lake and mountains to keep us company. After our bike ride we stopped at Loch Cameron for lunch before heading back to our digs for a rest and then a walk around the Lake - or some of it.