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Friday, February 28, 2025

New Zealand Cellar Doors and Wineries Surprising Souvenirs and Wonderful Wining & Dining

 

If you are a tourist some top places to visit are

Auckland Area Day Trip to the KUMEU RIVER  region

1 Soljans Estate Winery Cellar Door

A great shop sells wines, and glasses with the letter S (for Soljans, therefore handy if you wish to remember the company, or if your name is Sarah, Susan, Simon, or Smith). The shop also has tempting caps, bags and scarves.

The wine tasting was 15 New Zealand dollars per person for five wines. I loved the great wine from my favourite Gewuztraminer grape.

Kumeu River Winery

Run by the famous Michael Brajkovich, who makes a huge range of seriously interesting wines. He was New Zealand's first Master of wine, a pioneer of the Croation families from the Dalmation coast.

Auckland to Rotorua

 From Auckland, we went to the Rotorua hot springs area, in the Waikato wine region (Wai is the Maori word for water). Near Rotorua we visited the evocatively named 

3 Volcanic Hills winery.

Up the cable car to the tastings at the top. Great view of the top of the cable car and down the hillsides. Huge tasting room. Friendly and knowledgeable staff.

4 In Ohaupo we went to the Vilagrad winery.

Napier Area - A winery open 7 days a week for tastings

5 Urban Winery, in art deco Napier, on Hawke's Bay 'the garden of New Zealand'. Open seven days a week. Wine tastings. Music nights. Some food some hours from a short menu. 

Novelty - Egg shape barrels! In both wood and concrete. You can glimpse the egg barrels through the glass.Their business cards feature eggs with fancy designs.

Concrete eggs are great for fermentation because they keep the temperature level. Natural convection needs no stirring. They know the history of their barrels - the wood is traced back to the selected trees.

We admired one of their six eggs.

As for the wines, the names are amusing. Golden egg wine. Fat and Sassy.

On The Road - weekend tastings

6 Leveret & Mills Reef Winery

 at Katikati in the BAY OF PLENTY WINE AREA

A lovely old vine grows over their entrance forming a shady roof from the sun or maybe some shelter from worse weather. 

Their symbol is three rabbits chasing each other inside a circle. Look carefully and you'll see the number of ears is not six. 

We were greeted by Andrea, who originated from Hong Kong. She had attractively decorated the showroom with orange lanterns for Chinese / Lunar New Year in early February 2025. 

Then she decorated the shop with pink and red hearts for Valentine's Day later in mid February. She even wore heart-shaped ear-rings she'd bought in Hong Kong.

Katikati Cellar Door shop open 9.30 am -5 pm daily for sales only, no tastings.

Wine tastings for your long weekends, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Phone 64 77 552 0795.

WAIHEKE ISLAND

7 Casita Miro, Waiheke Island


The back of their business card.

Another stunning and memorable winery which we visited was Casita Miro, Casito being Spanish for little house, and Miro the artist. Casita Miro is most notable for its wacky, colourful decor. The astonishing and delightful show starts with the long, lively murals along the drive-in, continuing at every turn with pictures and amusing objects around the restaurant, which views the picnic lawn, and in restrooms. 

A wine tasting room cum shop on the far side of the car park. 



A larger restaurant room with views, is a great place for a lunch with wines.

8 Man O'War

Named after the beach which is named after a war boat. Despite a drive along a narrow road, a tour bus comes this way. Tasting room, plus an open sided lunch resturant overlooing the dtrees behind the beach. They say it's the only beachside winery in Waiheke, and probably New Zealand and possibly the world.


NORTHLANDS Wine Region  has four places we visited.

Paroa Bay - Gourmet Dinner

From Russell take a winding road, or the shuttle bus free for diners at the Paroa Bay restaurant. On the hilltop overlooking their vinery is a top grade restaurant, with a tasting menu. At lunchtime or early evening there is a fine view, which we captured when we stopped there and on seeing the menu immediately made a booking. But returning late at night with twilight we found outdoors breezy, chilly, and took their advice regarding tables and happily ate indoors.

We had a private look at the vineyards and winemaking below the next day. The novelty for me was seeing the wines drawn out of the barrel by the winemaking to check the tast, using what looked like a huge pipette.


10 The Omata Estate - for a perfect pizza


We stopped around lunch time, watched them cooking pizza in a hot pizza oven. After sampling wines, we ordered a pizza, the best pizza I've ever had. Just a thin base, not overwhelming you with filling flour, supporting and spread with a mixture of savoury white cheese and sweet red cranberry which was divine.

11 Marsden Winery, Russell, Northlands

Marsden Winery was big and bustling, a very popular eating place. A location with a story. The current, chatty, owner who we met, was greeting regular customers at the door and bar counter. In between, he was keen to tell us how he had bought the place and battled to keep it going as a winery.  Competing interests were thinking the site was better used by uprooting the vines and tradition and introducing a modern new housing estate.

12 Dancing Petrel Paewhenua Island, Northlands

By contrast, the Dancing Petrel is a quiet secluded place. But the label is dinsttive and memorable. It shows a sea bird, the dancing petrel. We sat in the back yard of the owners who are small scale producers, nature lovers, whilst they described the petrel they promote on their label.


13 Millton Vineyard  Winery

We saw the vines and orange trees outside.

Their label Libiamo is from Verdi's opera, the old Italian word which is the equivalent of  'Cheers!'

While the owner was away, we had a private chat with a knowledgeable staff member. He told us that their 2020 Te Arai (grape chenin blanc) is from the Maori words, te meaning the and arai, river.  The cow is the symbol of biodynamic production.

I loved their muscat wines. I always love sweet muscat. The aroma was sweet, though the wine struck me as dry. About 30 NZ dollars a bottle, and $180 for a case of 6. 

Fou can join their mailing list. Freight $12 North island and $18 South Isalnd, with a $4 rural delivery charge. 

14 Mission Estate

Historic estate. Lots of pictures downstairs. Lots to look at.

15 Vilagrad, at Ohaupo, in the Wikato region,

16 Craggy Range

17 Bushmere

18 Matawhero

19 Stonyridge

20 Goldie Estate

Useful Websites

Casita Miro

Casitamiro.co.nz

Leveret

www.wineportfolio.co.nz

Soljans 

www.soljans.co.nz

Urban Winery

theurbanwinery.co.nz


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New Zealand Place Names & Restaurants Using Maori Words to recognize and remember


Flag of New Zealand

Pronunciation

Wh is pronounced f

Word Order

In the Maori language, adjectives follow nouns, the same as in French (moulin rouge, red mill), Italian and Spanish (casa mia is my house).

Double Words

Rotorua  →  roto  "lake" +  rua  "two" = "two lakes" 

Common Words

Te is the, singular. Think of it as the word the shortened with the letter h missing. 


Maori - English

iti - small (think of bitty and little, itty-bitty)

kia ora - hello, thanks, 

kiri - bell, bark (of a tree), skin

komiti - committee

maunga - mountain

miti - meat

motu - island

motuka - motorcar

nau - come / ship

Nau mai / (and or) haere mai - welcome / welcome to (seen on signposts as you enter a region or city)

Nui - big (think of e-normous)

panana - banana

pea - pear

pune - spoon

Rotorua (place name) - literally lake two = two lakes

two

te - the (as in Kiri Te Kanawa the opera singer, New Zealand soprano, sang at British royal wedding) te reo - the language i.e. Maori

Te Arai - The River (the name of a wine from chenin blanc grape, made by Millton Vineyard 7 Winery, Gisborne, North Island, New Zealand

Tereina - train

wai - water (in landscape), drinking water

Wahine - woman/ wife / ladies (toilet)

Waiheke - water cascading /trickling /ebbing

Wai hirere - waterfall

Waitangi - weeping waters (waters weeping) place of Waitangi treaty

whanga - harbour, bay


English - Maori

big - nui

hello - how are you - kia ora

island - motu

lake - in the lake

small - iti

the - te (singular)

two - two

 

 http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/culture/maori-language-week/100-maori-words


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Māori_words_and_phrases

http://www.maoridictionary.co.nz/
https://languagedrops.com/word/en/english/m%C4%81ori/topics/drinks/

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Where To Find Poetry On The Underground in London, New York, Paris, Shanghai - post 7847


 

Poetry on the underground started in London, England and spread to New York, Paris, Moscow and Shanghai. 

I picked up a leaflet of poems advertising the book of them which you can buy.

The latest version of the book is available for about thirteen uk pounds (plus postage if you are not a prime member) from Amazon.

Second-hand copies of older versions are available at about three pounds or more from Awesome books, ebay and others.


One of several editions of Poems on the Underground. From Wikipedia.

Poems About The Underground

I was surprised to find that poems on the underground were used to entertain travellers on the underground with poetry, both classical and modern, on universal themes such as love, rather than poems about the underground.

Poem About The Underground

By Irish poem Seamus Healey

Poem about the UK overground, London to Scotland, commissioned by the railway company pre second world war.

Night Mail by W H Ausen 1936 has the rhythm of the train. This is the first line

'This is the night mail crossing the border ...'

In the USA Poetry In Motion has produced poems in New York city, Washington DC, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Nashville and more cities, as you can see on the Poetry Society website.

You cn also buy books by featured famous American poets.

China

Chinese poems translated into English have appeared on London underground.

In 2017 The British Council organized poems in the English language in Shanghai and other major Chinese cities, as well as English poems translated into Chinese and Chinese poems translated into English..

FRANCE

Back in 1912 Ezra Pound wrote a poem about the Paris Metro, entitled 

In A Station Of The Mero.

The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.

My favourite poem about the Overground is Auden's. I've written my own poem about the underground.


 Brunel statue, Paddington station.

The trains are travelling round and round

The underground with their roar-in sound

The passengers are running up and down

The escalators to the underground


I love the hand-written signs

Which joke and meet and greet

And the kind souls who smile

And keenly offer me their seat


The posters give me information

Something new on every station

There's Sherlock Holmes, and Shakespeare, too

The Elizabeth line which shines brand new


With lifts which keep grandma beside

As escalator passengers ride

The safe glass doors, wide corridors

One of London's new joys for sure.


When overhead you might see rain

Waiting for buses in cold's a pain

Brunel's statue on the overground

Even more to see if you take the lift down.


Sherlock wears a deerstalker hat

I wonder if he has a map?

I'm sure he'll smile and never frown

If he finds himself on the Underground.

-ends-

Useful Websites

UK

poemsontheunderground.org

tfl.gov.uk/poems

https://arts.britishcouncil.org/projects/poems-underground

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poems-Underground

USA

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry_in_Motion_(arts_program)

https://poetrysociety.org/poetry-in-motion

https://poetrysociety.org/poetry-in-motion/all

CHINA

https://www.britishcouncil.cn/en/about/press/british-council-launches-poetry-metro-five-chinese-cities

FRANCE

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_a_Station_of_the_Metro

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Monday, February 24, 2025

Delightful Sights At Auckland Airport, North Island, New Zealand - plane, pilot statue, kiwi mural, mural and robot cleaner


 The first fun item approaching Auckland airport on foot from the hire car company office, was the statue outside of woman aviator, Jean Batten, who started flying from England to New Zealand and back before and after WWII. This is the last fun item as you leave the airport for the city of Auckland.


Singapore Airlines lounge. Colourful, jolly entrance. To our disappointment it was not available for Premium Economy Class passengers. 

The heart sign,, apporpriate for Valentine's Day, February 14th, in February 2025.



Jean Batten statue of the aviator / pilot.


Mural and carpet at Auckland airport.

Robot cleaning carpets at Auckland airport. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

New Zealand bird. Auckland aairport.


Ski hats for sale with the New Zealand flag, and the fern sports symbol

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Australia and New Zealand - what's the same and what's different?


FLAGS


Flag of Australia User DO'Neil on en.wikipedia




Flag of New Zealand

Let's start with the flags. Currently, in February 2025, both flags have a small Union Jack flag of Britain in the top left corner. Both have the four stars of the Southern Cross on the right.These stars are seen in the sky from both countries. But Australia's  flag's stars are white, with many points whilst New Zealand's have five points with white borders. Australia has an extra large white star on the lower. left. Like Texas, How do you remember which is which? Australia is bigger, more points and more stars.

LAND

Next lets look at the land masses. New Zealand has lots of islands. North Island. South Island. Little islands. The third most populated island, pretty, hilly Waiheke. The Bay of Islands. 

Australia is not considered an island but a continent. It's huge. Off the southern coast is Tasmania.

ANIMALS, BIRDS 

The wildlife, symbols and toys are different.

Australia has kangaroos and koala bears.

Australia has laughing kookaburras.

New Zealand has sheep. (also cows, goats,horses.)

New Zealand has and flightless kiwi birds, with long beaks. Also kias which attack car windscreen wipers at ski resorts.


FOOD

Pavlovas

Both countries feature pavolvas, large donut shape white hard meringues with a solid base in the middle supporting mixed fresh fruit. Both countries were visited by the by the British ballet dancer Pavlova and her troupe.

Australians use passionfruit. New Zealanders use green kiwi fruit.

Lamingtons

Both countries sell Lamingtons. Cubes of pale coloured sponge covered in a thin shell of brown chocolate covered in white shredded coconut.

Lamington in New Zealand. Photo by Angela Lansbury.  Copyright. 


ACCENT

Australians and New Zealanders speak English and can understand British English. 

Australians speak louder and you will recognize Australian if you think of Oss- try-lee -er.  The word today sound like to die. This can be unnerving when you are asked what you are intending to do to die.

New Zealanders speak quietly with their teeth closer together.

You can recognize the New Zealand accent if you think of asking a New Zealander a question and getting the answer yiss and hearing the number seven as siven..

NATIVE PEOPLE

Australia has Aboriginies. 

New Zealand has Maoris.

NATIVE LANGUAGES

Australian words you may recognize include

boomerang

Maori words you may recognize include 

kia ora. - greeting familiar to visitors because it is used as a brand name for a drink

Drink to buy with Maori greeting as brand name.

. JEWELLERY SOUVENIRS

Australia has opal jewellery.Opal is the national gemstone. From Coober Pedy.

New Zealand has paoa shell jewellery.

Useful Websites

Australia

https://www.pmc.gov.au/honours-and-symbols/australian-national-symbols/australian-floral-emblem
New Zealand

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_symbols_of_New_Zealand

Kiwi Toys at Auckland Airport, North Island, New Zealand

 



Kiwi soft toys with long beaks at Auckland airport, North Island, New Zealand. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright. 

Sunday, February 23, 2025

How to keep leftovers safe and fresh in a car when travelling and on a touring holiday

 On a fly-drive touring holiday we had to deal with lots of leftovers. To avoid over-eating, we often ordering one starter between two and one dessert between two. Portions in the USA and New Zealand are designed to satisfy the six footers and we are smaller.

What can be done to keep food fresh?

1 Carry an insulated fold up bag in your copious shoulder bag or rucksack.

2 Keep a large insulated styrofoam box in the boot of your car if you don't have to worry about airline weight. (Or travel with your rucksack inside the larger and solid box.)

3 Take a small freezer block which can be frozen before you leave home, later in your hotel bedroom fridge overnight. Make a reminder note in your Last Minute Actions to Get freezer block from fridge.

Photo by Angela Lansbury.


4 Ask the hotel or restaurant for a small bag of ice.

5 If you cannot buy ice, buy the cheapest frozen item from a supermarket, such as peas or vegetables, ideally something you can eat which won't go off, but will help keep other items cool.

6 Wet a paper tissue from your car tissue box, or a hand drier in a public toilet, or a face flannel. Place it over a sealed plastic box containing food inside a plastic bag. The evaporation of the water should help cool the food.

Useful Website


https://www.amazon.co.uk/Freezer-Blocks-Cooler-Travel-Picnic/dp/B096W2C

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What To Eat At The Cosy Cove Cafe Waipu, New Zealand - savouries rather than sweets - and prices should be shown!






The Cove Cafe is a convenient stopping place on your journey from Auckland on your journey to the islands, in fact there is not much else en route.

It is a jolly, busy place. A handy large car park alongside contains toilets. And you can see across the road to the beach and the breaking waves and surfers.

I suspect the savouries are better than the sweet dishes. 

My husband was happy with his coffee and the prices.

Lamington


I tried a Lamington, because that is a favourite food unique to Australia and New Zealand (like pavlova). A Lamington is a cube of sponge cake, coated in a thin layer of chocolate and rolled in coconut.

Priceless

I had trouble making a choice because there was a large display of cakes, which was good, but no prices displayed. This caused me confusion. Maybe I should opt for two if they are cheap. Pick the cheapest if they are dear. Indulge myself in the dearest cake as I'm on holiday. 

My stress level rises. How do I know it's not a con to charge me extra, double because I'm a foreigner and don't understand the value of New Zealand dollars? How do I know it's not an item containing unseasonal fruit, or alcohol, or saffron or truffles, which makes it legitimately, or illegitimately, ten times the standard price of a piece of cake? 

The plus side of seeing price is that the price might tell me it's the one delectable item I ought to take. There's half a dozen Ferraris and Porches parked outside in a regular club rally. I bet they would pay more, so something must cost more to satisfy them. 

The cashier has a list of prices on her computer screen which is hidden from me and says she can tell me the price of whichever item I want. But I can't ask the price of every one of the thirty items. 

I am surprised that you have to ask. In England it's a legal requirement to display prices. 

When I told the young server that in England it was a legal rquirement, he said that he was not aware of any such law in New Zealand.

He said the food is fresh every day, so they can't write up all the prices. 

However, the same applies to meny restaurant's chef's menu of the day, where a menu changes daily. Also most supermarkets stock fresh goods, bakery, as well as fruit and veg, which are replaced each morning by a huge lorry which we see parked outside Tesco supermarket. 

If it's the law, you have to do it. You cannot charge the customer what you fancy. What you think they will pay. Nor only tell them after they have chosen when they are too embarrassed to change their mind.

I asked AI, and received this result -

Yes, it is a legal requirement to display food prices in the UK, New Zealand, and across Europe, 

with the UK's "Price Marking Order" requiring retailers to clearly display the selling price of products, including unit prices for loose items; 

in New Zealand, mandatory unit pricing for grocery products came into effect on August 31, 2023

and in Europe, the "Price Indication Directive" mandates clear and accurate price information for consumers. 

Disregarding the price, what about the food?

Neither I nor my husband liked the Lamington. Not because of it being sponge with chocolate and coconut. I love chocolate and coconut.

I'd had a Lamington previously, the same month, in a restaurant, and it was wonderful. Were other customers happy.

However, our friends who live in Auckland wo had recommended that we stop there hadenthused about The Cove Cafe and its savoury dishes. They don't go for desserts. So maybe I shall try something savoury, something different, if I ever go there again.

UK Price legislation for food consumption on premises and take away food

https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2003/2253/contents/

New Zealand has similar rules regarding display of prices in two places, near the entrance for rpospective customers to decide whether to enter and in each room where customers are ordering

https://legislation.govt.nz/regulation/public/1975/0051/9.0/whole.html

https://www.hygienie.org/a-brief-history-of-uk-food-safety-law UK Natasha's law covers listing ingredients of allergens in food such as sanwiches made on the premises.

Jean Batten, New Zealand's Heroine Pilot

 At Auckland airport on New Zealand's North Island, you see a statue of Jean Batten. The statue is in front of the airport's Novotel hotel. 

A plaque on the ground in front of her statue describes her life and achievements. She made record solo flights from England to Australia and back, and from England to New Zealand and back. Plus other record breaking flights including one to South America. Each journey consisted of several hops from one country to the next whereh she stopped to re-fuel, sometimes crash landed due to bad weather, and had to replace bits of her plane.

Her plane is suspended overhead in Auckland Airport, which has a terminal named after her. She is also honoured in her New Zealand birthplace of Rotorua.


Jean Batten statue at Auckland Airport. North Island. New Zealand. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

Jean Batten. Plaque at Auckland Airport. North Island. New Zealand. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

She lived from 1909 to 1982. She is quoted as saying, 

I was destined to be a wanderer. I seemed born to travel. 

In flying I found speed and freedom to roam the earth.

Picture from Jean Batten article in Wikipedia.

A few days after I arrived in New Zealand, I travelled by car from Auckland to Napier, the art deco city, which was rebuilt after the earthquake.

At the Masonic Art Deco Hotel I stayed in the Jean Batten bedroom suite.

Useful Websites include

https://www.nzhalloffame.co.nz/New-Zealand-Sports-Hall-of-Fame-Inductees/B/Jean-Batten

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Jean_Batten

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Batten

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Jean_Batten#/media/File:Jean_Batten's_Percival_Gull.jpg

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Saturday, February 22, 2025

Spotlight Clothes For Celebrating St Patrick's Day and Any Day

 Spotlight was always one of my favourite stores in Singapore. So I was delighted to see a huge Spotlight sign in Auckland, the North Island of New Zealand. It's a store which has everything for the house and sewing, drawing and DIY crafts

Once inside, I could see it was too big for a trawl along every aisle. Since I was on holiday, not living there, I had no need of cutlery, crockery or cushions. Although my New Zealand friend and host was looking for curtain tie backs.

So she went one way and I went another. 

My purchases included



1 Seasonal St Patrick's Day Socks 

The socks were one size. A great green.


2 A Seasonal St  Patrick's Day Shamrock Tie 

I can use that for meetings on Zoom with a St Patrick's Day theme in March.  Not just on March 17th. Earlier for what are you planning for St Patrick's day. On the Day of course. Then, to answer, what did you do on st Patrick's Day. I wore my green St Patrick's day socks.

I looked to see where they were made. Not in Ireland. So not likely to be cheaper back in Britain. 

In any case, with seasonal items, almost every shop has different stocks. So you have to buy what you want when you want it or it'll be gone with something different next year.

From China? Well, who'd have guessed? I didn't. Silly me.


Spotlight

Spotlaight is a family owned Australian business with stores throught Australia, and in New Zealand and Asia. You will recognize their diverse coloured elongated S below the word spotlight in capitall letters in red which has a filled in letter O like a spotlight. 

They also have online videos about craft products to make and techniques, to instruct adults and entertain children.


Useful Website

https://www.spotlightstores.com/


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Souvenirs From New Zealand - Sheep soft toys, Shell Jewellery, Must Have Ski Hats and Maybe Wine

What gifts can you take from New Zealand to other countries for your children and grandchildren, or other people's? What is unique to New Zealand, yet found in the largest souvenir shops?

Soft Toy Sheep

Soft toy sheep from New Zealand. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

 The numbers of sheep in New Zealand are declining, but the numbers of soft toy sheep seem to be increasing. You find them everywhere. If you still have room in your luggage, you can find them at Auckland airport. The New Zealand sheep have a charming, happy, contented U-shape smile. (Much nicer than the glum bears and scowling dolls sold all over the world.)

Jewellery

In the Around New Zealand shop the Paua shell jewellery is delightful. That iridescent green. Lovely shapes.

It looks like it is set in silver. It isn't real silver? No.

Why not? Silver is cheap. At those prices I would expect silver. Not some unknown metal which might tarnish, or cause a skin reaction. I was worried that my relatives would say that they or their children can only put silver in their pierced ears.

Paua jewellery, ear-rings. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

Despite my misgivings, I bought, mainly pendants rather than ear-rings.

I found a guide to silver ear rings and allergies online from wholesaler Blake Brothers Inc. It seems that with sterling silver, what to beware of is whether nickel or copper is mixed in with the sterling silver. 

At about 30 New Zealand dollars per purchase buying three or four comes to 100 dollars. For a hundred US dollars minimum purchase you can buy sterling silver stud ear-rings from a wholesaler, Blake. But it seems you must pay more for free shipping.

Wines

Wines in the duty free shop at Auckland were at various prices. Although you cannot take food and drink into New Zealand, the amount of wine you can bring back to the UK is large. If you only buy from supermrkets in other countries you might see a bigger variety in New Zealand.

Comparing prices with international online sellers who supplied to the UK, we did not see any irresistable bargains. We had already bought from the wineries' cellar doors some wines which are hard to find and not exported because they are from small producers.

Summer Caps & Winter Hats 

Another last minute gift from the airport was New Zealand ski hats. Beanie hats in rainbow colours. There are also many baseball caps with the word New Zealand.

Never mind the prices. Use up your coins. You can't exchange coins at the airport. Also we found the exchange rate for money from New Zealand dollars in notes to English pounds sterling was not good.

You can find guides to the goods available online to help you make decisions in advance, and you can order in advance, although when you get to the airport you can check the size and weight of all your desired purchases.

I looked at silver plate and 925 sterling silver paua and blue and green jewellery on Temu so if you don't buy and want to look online later.

You can also get Paua shell pendants on ebay and etsy, but note the size, and whether you get a pendant aone, a cord necklace, a thin chain or a thick chain, a rough chain, or a flat, smooth, comfortable chain.

Finally Manuka honey.


Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

Useful Websites

https://www.aeliadutyfree.co.nz/auckland/

https://blakebros.com/blog/is-sterling-silver-good-for-sensitive-ears/#:~:text=In%20general%2C%20sterling%20silver%20is,to%20cause%20an%20allergic%20reaction.

https://www.temu.com/uk/elegant-925-sterling-silver-bracelet-with-synthetic-zirconia-for-women-boho--daily-gift-occasion--jewelry--valentines-en

https://www.temu.com/uk/boho-chic-blue--pendant-necklace-with-4mm-beads-handcrafted-vintage--for--birthday-or-holiday-gift-g-601099719201802.

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Cellar Doors, Wineries and Wine Makers 10 Wine Places To Visit in New Zealand

 

Wineries we visited in New Zealand

Over eighteen days in January and February 2025, on New Zealand's North Island, my husband and I visited eighteen wineries. 

My husband Trevor is a wine writer and photographer and wine educator. Before we visited New Zealand, he had researched the most famous and important wineries and written to arrange a meeting with the owner and /or winemaker. We hoped to have tastings as well as learning all about what made each vineyard and winery unique.

Some places were only wine growers They grew grapes which they sold to other people. Or they had a main grape which they mixed with different varieties. Others bought in some or all of their grapes and bottled and labelled them. Others did both growing grapes and harvesting them, as well as winemaking, involving crushing the grapes, leaving them to ferment in barrels, bottling and labelling the wine.  

He interviewed the enthusiastic staff and I recorded the interviews on my handphone to save him taking notes and to enable him to be in the moment and establish rapport.

Most tourists don't have or want to have details of the wine-making process, why one grape thrives on a sunny slope, or despite clay soil. The customer just wants to taste a couple of wines and find what appeals in order to drink that with their meal and buy a bottle or two, or four or more, to take home.

My husband likes reds, dry reds. As for grapes, he likes Syrah (also called shiraz). And Sauvignon Blanc.

I like white wines, sparkling (including blanc de blanc), and rose, above all sweet wines. Gewurtztraminer. Pinot Gris. (In Europe and the USA, Grenache, also called Garnacha.)

He likes port and sherry. I like sake. So between us we cover most styles.

Cellar Doors

Cellar door tastings are ideal for this sampling of varied wines. The businesses normally charge for three or more tastings. A tasting measure is a small glass.

No Alcohol

The driver might choose not to drink. Or to drink no alcohol alternatives. (Low alcohol is not the same as no alcohol.)

Alcohol Levels

Check the alcohol level on the wine label.

Alternatively a professional, wine taster, who goes to regular trade events, will sip and spit into spittoon, which resembles a small ice bucket.

Rivals Or Good Relations?

In New Zealand I asked one wine maker if the local companies were rivals or friends - or unknowns. He said that they all belonged to a wine growers' association to look after mutual interests. 

Wine Company Links

We also found that many wine growers had moved from one company to another. Even from one country to another (eg back to the USA). Married each other. Were related, from the same ancestry (eg Croatian). Therefore they knew each other well and could compare their own company with others easily and happily.

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If you are a tourist some top places to visit are

Auckland Area Day Trip to the KUMEU RIVER  region

1 Soljans Estate Winery Cellar Door

A great shop sells wines, and glasses with the letter S (for Soljans, therefore handy if you wish to remember the company, or if your name is Sarah, Susan, Simon, or Smith). The shop also has caps, bags and scarves.

The wine tasting was 15 New Zealand dollars per person for five wines. I loved the great wine from my favourite Gewuztraminer grape.

2 Kumeu River Winery

Run by the famous Michael Brajkovich, who makes a huge range of seriously interesting wines.

Auckland to Rotorua

From Auckland, we went to the Rotorua hot springs area, in the Waikato wine region (Wai is the Maori word for water). Near Rotorua we visited the evocatively named Volcanic Hills winery.

In Ohaupo we went to the Vilagrad winery.

Napier Area - A winery open 7 days a week for tastings

Urban Winery, Napier, New Zealand. Open seven days a week. Wine tastings. Music nights. Some food some hours from a short menu. 

Novelty - Egg shape barrels! You can glimpse the egg barrels through the glass.Their business cards feature eggs with fancy designs.


On The Road - weekend tastings

Leveret & Mills Reef Winery at Katikati in the BAY OF PLENTY WINE AREA

A lovely old vine grows over their entrance forming a shady roof from the sun or maybe some shelter from worse weather. 

Their symbol is three rabbits chasing each other inside a circle. Look carefully and you'll see the number of ears is not six. 

We were greeted by Andrea, who originated from Hong Kong. She had attractively decorated the showroom with orange lanterns for Chinese / Lunar New Year in early February 2025. 

Then she decorated the shop with pink and red hearts for Valentine's Day later in mid February. She even wore heart-shaped ear-rings she'd bought in Hong Kong.

Katikati Cellar Door shop open 9.30 am -5 pm daily for sales only, no tastings.

Wine tastings for your long weekends, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Phone 64 77 552 0795.

WAIHEKE ISLAND

Casita Miro, Waiheke Island


The back of their business card.

Another winery which we visited was Casita Miro, Casito being Spanish for little house, and Miro the artist. Casita Miro is most notable for its wacky, colourful decor. The astonishing and delightful show starts with the long, lively murals along the drive-in, continuing at every turn with pictures and amusing objects around the restaurant, which views the picnic lawn, and in restrooms. 

A wine tasting room cum shop on the far side of the car park. 



A larger restaurant room with views, is a great place for a lunch with wines.


NORTHLANDS Wine Region  has four places we visited.

Paroa Bay

From Russell take a winding road, or the shuttle bus free for diners at the Paroa Bay restaurant. On the hilltop overlooking their vinery is a top grade restaurant, with a tasting menu. At lunchtime or early evening there is a fine view, which we captured when we stopped there and on seeing the menu immediately made a booking. But returning late at night with twilight we found outdoors breezy, chilly, and took their advice regarding tables and happily ate indoors.


The Omata Estate - for a perfect pizza


We stopped around lunch time, watched them cooking pizza in a hot pizza oven. After sampling wines, we ordered a pizza, the best pizza I've ever had. Just a thin base, not overwhelming you with filling flour, supporting and spread with a mixture of savoury white cheese and sweet red cranberry which was divine.

Marsden Winery, Russell, Northlands

Marsden Winery was big and bustling, a very popular eating place. A location with a story. The current, chatty, owner who we met, was greeting regular customers at the door and bar counter. In between, he was keen to tell us how he had bought the place and battled to keep it going as a winery.  Competing interests were thinking the site was better used by uprooting the vines and tradition and introducing a modern new housing estate.


Dancing Petrel Paewhenua Island, Northlands

By contrast, the Dancing Petrel is a quiet secluded place. But the label is dinsttive and memorable. It shows a sea bird, the dancing petrel. We sat in the back yard of the owners who are small scale producers, nature lovers, whilst they described the petrel they promote on their label.



Useful Websites

Casita Miro

Casitamiro.co.nz

Leveret

www.wineportfolio.co.nz

Soljans 

www.soljans.co.nz

Urban Winery

theurbanwinery.co.nz

(More winderies being added shortly.)

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