Buzz Summer Camp Directory
BELLAIRE • MEMORIAL • RIVER OAKS • TANGLEWOOD • WEST UNIVERSITY

Beauty at the end of the world

Tracy L. Barnett
Click the Buzz Me button to receive email notifications when this writer publishes a new article or a new article in this column is published.
Kevin Boyle, Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle

 

Stunning vistas out of Lord of the Rings, a charming and ethnically vibrant culture, verdant landscapes, classy cuisine – New Zealand has it all. Consistently ranked among the Top 10 bucket-list destinations, the country has worked hard to preserve its pristine environment and welcome travelers.

We caught up with two repeat New Zealand travelers who saw the country in very different ways: Kevin Boyle, with his two young sons, from behind the wheel of a rented camper van; and Virginia Mampre, from the glass bubble of a helicopter, the wind-blown deck of a ferry, the picture-window views of Rail New Zealand and the aerial vistas of Air New Zealand.

While Kevin chose to immerse his boys in nature, traveling to campgrounds and cooking in their camper van, Virginia sampled top-chef cuisine and five-star hotels. Both returned enamored of the country’s charms.

“The time for New Zealand is really now,” declared Virginia, who traveled the country recently on a site visit and scouting for a media project. “They’ve done so much to move that country forward to make it user-friendly. It’s always been a wonderful environment, but from 20 years ago to today, there’s been a huge change.”

South Island by campervan

Kevin’s recent trip with Kevin Jr., 9, and Sean Patrick, 8, was inspired by his dream to run the Queenstown Marathon. He’d already taken the boys on adventures in 30 states and several continents; they’d come to New Zealand for Spring Break and loved it so much they decided to go back in November for a cross-country tour.

They flew into Queenstown and kicked off the trip with a seaplane flight over the mountains into the fjords of Milford Sound – the Eighth Wonder of the World, according to Rudyard Kipling – where a boat tour brought them close to waterfalls and wildlife, including the winsome fur seal. 

Then it was time for what would be the peak experience of Boyle’s life to date. He’d hired a babysitter – a student from the U.K. listed through a recommended agency, Babysitting Queenstown – to take care of the boys as he ran, and to take them on the kids’ Fun Run that was happening simultaneously. Kate was her name, and she came the day before to meet them, and then arrived at 3 a.m. so he could get to the starting line – and then she surprised him. “Instead of meeting me at the grandstand she was right there on the course with the boys, and I just broke down in tears. It was fantastic to be able to run through the streets the last kilometer together and cross the finish line as a family,” he recalled, still smiling at the memory.

Now it was time to begin their journey in earnest. Boyle had rented a Jucy “Condo” campervan, equipped with the comforts of home – which it would be for the next eight days – going from campground to campground in Top 10 Holiday Parks

Most meals were purchased at the grocery store and cooked in the camper’s kitchen – except for the unforgettable visit to Pedro’s House of Lamb. “One menu item, so good they don’t need anything else!” Boyle commented.

Before their trip to New Zealand, the Boyles watched all the Lord of the Rings movies to prepare – and with good reason. “Almost every place you go is a Lord of the Rings area – everywhere you go somebody will say, ‘Oh, this scene was filmed here,’” said Kevin. “Yes, there are formal ‘hobbit towns’ that have more of the remaining movie sets, and we didn’t do any of that, but we certainly stumbled across many different places that were the settings for the movies.”

Highlights of the trip included a thrilling Shotover Canyon jetboat ride; paddleboarding at Kaiteriteri Beach; visiting seals and kiwis at the Cape Foulwind Seal Colony; and staying at Motueka, gateway to pristine Abel Tasman National Park. They followed a lead down a footpath where they found a couple dozen people marveling in silence at thousands of glowworms. “No entrance gate, no signs, no admission,” said Kevin. “Just raw nature at its finest.”

They visited with Maori artisan Garth Wilson, and watched as he made Kevin Jr. a necklace from the West Coast jade his family has worked with for generations. “There’s a way to carve and tell the person’s life story,” said Kevin Sr. “He talked about when you wear something your essence gets on the jewelry – they call it ‘mana.’”

Another day, they awoke to the sound of bleating sheep in Wanaka, where they ordered takeout from Erik’s Fish & Chips with fried kiwi (the fruit, not the bird) for dessert, and packed it up Mount Iron for a picnic.

Of course nothing helps you love a place like the kindness of strangers, which they experienced when Kevin Sr. locked the keys to the camper van inside – on the way to the airport. “As we were standing there in the parking lot looking dejected and the boys being very frustrated, a nice young man – a construction worker with a curious background, perhaps – had some tools in his car and in a matter of seconds he was able to pick the lock and free us,” said Kevin.

Virginia Mampre

 

New Zealand then and now

Virginia Mampre, whose extensive world travels included New Zealand two decades ago, had the chance to explore changes in the country on a recent visit for her incentive travel business. She was entranced by the country’s timeless magic, as before, but also impressed to see how it has developed as a modern tourism destination.

“If I had to describe New Zealand in two words, it would be ‘magnificent’ and ‘majestic,’” she said. “The peaks are extraordinary; the greens are greener than green. It’s pastoral; it’s just absolutely spectacular.”

In those days, it was sheep farms and breathtaking views of the mountains and glaciers and fjords that rose to the top. This time it was that, plus world-class cuisine and accommodations and an infrastructure designed to whisk tourists around – for example, Air New Zealand now features an accessible schedule almost like a bus service, zipping travelers from Queenstown to Auckland to the Bay of Islands and beyond.

While the Boyles limited their recent visit to the South Island for a deeper immersion, Virginia went back and forth. For her, the South Island is most outstanding for its breathtaking wild beauty, while the North Island shines for its pastoral beauty, the Bay of Islands and the Maori cultural experience – which is everywhere, but especially accessible in Rotorua in the north. 

A few highlights:

  • Crossing the entire South Island on the Christchurch to Greymouth railway journey – Named by National Geographic as one of the 16 best train trips in the world. The nine-hour round-trip route climbs up over the Southern Alps along the Waimakariri River, the epic landscapes changing with the elevation.
  • Rotorua – famous for its bubbling, sulfurous, geothermal lake and geysers and for Te Puia, a 60-hectare interactive showcase for Maori culture with traditional cooking classes, Haka dance performances and art exhibits. Named a “must visit” destination this year by The New York Times.
  • Waiheke Island, Auckland’s breathtakingly beautiful getaway, filled with artist studios and vineyards; once a hideaway for bohemians, the island has gentrified into what Vogue called “the Hamptons of New Zealand.”
  • Queenstown’s Skyline New Zealand: riding up in a gondola, dining in the Stratosfare Restaurant and enjoying spectacular views of the Remarkables range and Lake Wakatipu. Some choose to take bike trails or the thrilling luge ride down.
  • Virginia enjoyed Queenstown itself and also as a point of departure for extreme sightseeing – helicoptering through fjords, champagne atop a glacier, jetboating on the Dart River with hot cocoa, and crumpets on a mobile dock in the wilderness.
  • Weta Workshop tour, with a behind-the-scene glimpse of the studio where the Lord of the Rings series was produced.
  • Bay of Islands: This stunning subtropical bay is rich in history and wildlife, with 144 islands, whale and dolphin watching and pristine forests of the mighty but threatened kauri tree. Virginia especially enjoyed Kauri Cliffs, a five-star luxury lodge and championship golf resort with cliffside ocean views.
  • Hobbitton: The movie set for The Hobbit film still exists on the North Island, basically unchanged. It’s especially charming to visit the Shire in the evening, have dinner at the Green Dragon Inn and take your little lantern to explore where the houses are nestled into the hills. Just getting there is beautiful in itself, and being there is entrancing, says Virginia, for adults and children.
  • Taking a century-old steam ship across the Lake Wakatipu from Queenstown to visit Walter Peak Station. The “stations” are traditional sheep-ranching communities, and this one offers sheep dog herding and shearing demonstrations, farm tours and dining opportunities in historic homes surrounded by lush gardens.

Virginia was surprised to see the cranes dotting the Auckland skyline, much like Houston’s, and saw the economy booming everywhere as the country prepares for the 2021 America’s Cup and other events. But the intensity doesn’t detract, she assured; on the contrary.

“The country will continue to change and morph, but the natural beauty will always be there.”

  • Kevin Boyle

    Kevin Boyle Sr. fulfilled a dream of running the Queensland Marathon last year, and was able to cross the finish line with his boys. (Photo: Kevin Boyle Sr.)

  • Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle

    New Zealand’s beaches and pristine natural settings were a source of constant wonder for the Boyles (Kevin Jr., left, and Sean Patrick); here, watching the sun set across the Tasman Sea in Greymouth.

  • Kevin Boyle, Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle

    Kevin Boyle Sr. fulfilled a dream of running the Queensland Marathon last year, and was able to cross the finish line with his boys. (Photo: Kevin Boyle Sr.)

  • A ramble through Hobbiton. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

  • Virginia Mampre

    Champagne on a glacier. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

  • Glacier lake near Queenstown. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

  • View from Kauri Cliffs Golf Course. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

  • Kevin Boyle
  • Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle
  • Kevin Boyle, Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle
  • Virginia Mampre

Kevin Boyle

Kevin Boyle Sr. fulfilled a dream of running the Queensland Marathon last year, and was able to cross the finish line with his boys. (Photo: Kevin Boyle Sr.)

Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle

New Zealand’s beaches and pristine natural settings were a source of constant wonder for the Boyles (Kevin Jr., left, and Sean Patrick); here, watching the sun set across the Tasman Sea in Greymouth.

Kevin Boyle, Kevin Boyle Jr., Sean Patrick Boyle

Kevin Boyle Sr. fulfilled a dream of running the Queensland Marathon last year, and was able to cross the finish line with his boys. (Photo: Kevin Boyle Sr.)

A ramble through Hobbiton. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

Virginia Mampre

Champagne on a glacier. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

Glacier lake near Queenstown. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

View from Kauri Cliffs Golf Course. (Photo: Virginia Mampre)

To leave a comment, please log in or create an account with The Buzz Magazines, Disqus, Facebook, or Twitter. Or you may post as a guest.