....Get Up, Dress Up, Show Up."
ok done daydreaming for the morning. It's work time.
xx
Read as you wish. I am sharing my experiences to encourage others to open their mind and create their own. Each post you will find a quote, it may or may not pertain to the blog itself, but is something I pick up through out the day that I find fun, funny, insightful, or just because. "It's not about where you are going, but your journey along the way" :D
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| Days first sunrise 7:03 a.m. March 8, 2013 East Cape NZ |

Drive to Coromandel was nice, full of small towns including Paeroa (Lemon&Paeroa a local NZ bottled drink) which I loved. All the small towns were gentle and sweet. New Zealand is all about small towns with easy going people and spectacular beauty each different in their own right. You must zigzag around them, enjoy the locals and the sites, taking your time otherwise you will pass by some of the best things. In Thames Valley on a twisty road with a steep rock wall to one side and a river the to other I pulled over a one-way bridge in the middle of no where to use a bathroom. There was a small Maori run farm and Caravan stay and if I’d had the time (or caravan) would have loved to stay and get to know the family and their land more than just the restroom. We headed up the West Coast of the Peninsula and stopped off at “The Cheese Barn” and had a picnic of homemade icecream, brie cheese, blue cheese, chutney and crackers, and of course took some time to visit the farm animals. Up the coast another couple hours we pulled into Te Mata Bay for a swim, and lunch, and it was so relaxing I pulled out my yoga cards Ani made for me and put on the relaxtion cd for an improptu 20 minute yoga and meditation. Once in Coromandel town we got fishing gear from Top Catch (thanks for helping me out again TopCatch) ice, fuel, and water. Then took the dirt roads winding up and around the North Point and stayed at Port Jackson beach for two nights. Ahhhh Coromandel. Gorgeous, calm, peaceful Coromandel. Love it here. Coromandel is a Peninsular that looks like it came out of scenes from Jurassic Park. It is also known as the Puhutekawa Coast Line as the roads, beaches, and hills, are covered in this exotic NZ tree. We drove all the way up to the North Point where the beaches are desolate and the water is crystal blue. I took more pictures here then my camera could hold, so if you want to see beauty, see some of my albums. I tried fishing (this is the Coromandel pastime) but without a boat/kayak I did not have much luck. On day two I took the Coromandel Coastal Walkway by myself for a 7 hour hike around the coast to Stony Bay. 7 hours of walking, praying, and bird watching. It clears your mind and your soul, no matter who you are you cannot resist saying Thanks to God that created such beauty and allows us to walk on it. On the way back South again we swerved around and made way down the East Coast of the Peninsular to Waikawau, and New Chums Beach. New Chums is off the main road and once you “arrive” you have to wait for outgoing tide and walk the rocks and a small path to an oasis. If you can find this unmarked beach you will not be disappointed. White Sand, teal blue clear water, small waves, (good surf on a swell) and ¾ surrounded by tall rock and cliff. It’s what I imagine the small islands of Hawaii, or Fiji to look like.