UNESCO World Heritage Site

That's me, snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef. As you can see, not too crowded.

That’s me, snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef. As you can see, not too crowded.

Cairns is a typical jumping off place for all the adventure that northeast Australia has to offer, especially the rainforests and the Great Barrier Reef. We didn’t take advantage of all that in Cairns because we had the time to dig in a little deeper and get a little closer.

Our first stop from Cairns, then, was the Silky Oaks Lodge just outside of Massman, a little town near the World Heritage listed Wet Tropics of Queensland. These “wet tropics” stretch more than 250 miles along the northeast Australian coast and are noted for their natural beauty and rich biodiversity. Biodiversity indeed. Sitting on the balcony of our cabin just the first day a few parrots hung out playing or fighting, I couldn’t tell. And regularly you’d see the sunlight hit a stunning florescent blue butterfly that just made you swoon. I’m sure a serious nature guy would have seen more than butterflies and parrots, but they made me happy.

The pool at Silky Oaks Lodge

The pool at Silky Oaks Lodge

The lodge itself was beautiful, quiet and peaceful, set just inside the start of the rainforest itself. It was a perfect setting for me. You were clearly in a rainforest, heaving with lush plants and beautiful butterflies and parrots and all that kind of thing. But because it was on the edge, it was easy to step away and go for a run, too. Perfect.

The “quiet and peaceful” part was a bit of an issue one day, though, as they were renovating a cabin right next to ours. But we didn’t complain because when the manager found that we were planning on just laying low that day, with nothing scheduled except reading and relaxing, he offered us two free spa treatments to get us out of our room, so that worked out just fine. Beyond that the lodge was right on the Mossman River and, with an energetic 20-minute hike upriver on a well-marked trail, we could get to a beautiful and pretty remote swimming hole. Not the best swimming hole in the world, but a very pleasant place to swim, relax, and find a rock to read on.

How's that for a great swimming hole?

How’s that for a great swimming hole?

The big event from Mossman was a drive into Port Douglas down on the coast for a snorkeling adventure on the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest collection of coral reefs and truly a wonder of the world. Mark & I made it here once before, when we vacationed in Australia in 2004. It wasn’t a great experience for us then; we remember it as being too crowded, too many snorkelers in too small a space. This time, though, it was fabulous, definitely putting the Great into the Barrier Reef. There were only maybe 30 or 40 snorkelers on our boat, and we stopped at places with no one else around so there was plenty of room to spread out. No pictures, unfortunately, since we don’t have an underwater camera, but it was fabulous.

In some ways the most important part of our stop in the Wet Tropics was a realization by both of us that we’re getting tired of traveling like this. When we started in 2013 I assumed that after just a couple of years we would start spending longer periods – a month or even two – in any one place. We did stop for a month in Puerta Vallarta, but that was nearly two years ago and we’ve been going pretty steady ever since. Three-and-a-half years now of mostly three- and four-day stops is a little too much.

We’re still eager to spend the next couple weeks exploring Australia so no immediate change of plans but then we’re going to slow down. Probably rent an apartment and spend a month in Bali shortly after New Years, then maybe another month somewhere in Thailand. Both places we know we love. March will bring us more travel and adventure – we’re going to spend a few weeks in over March and April in Japan – but we’re ready for a couple longer-term stays. After we finish up with Australia.

Lunch at the lodge: steak, salad, glass of rosé, rainforest. Not bad.

Lunch at the lodge: steak, salad, glass of rosé, rainforest. Not bad.

Lots of this, everywhere you looked

Lots of this, everywhere you looked

Mark and his parents as we set off across New Zealand

Mark and his parents as we set off across New Zealand

And so the Trans-New Zealand journey begins. We flew back to Auckland from New Caledonia on November 16, spent a quick night in the City, and met Mark’s parents the next day after their l-o-n-g flight from Michigan. For some unknown reason hotel rooms were suddenly almost nonexistent in Auckland; Mark had been watching options, there were a bunch, and then … poof … all of a sudden the city was all but booked. But we found one – another hotel with a washer and dryer; I’m starting to like this New Zealand trend – and then had a great dinner. Soul is a restaurant/bar down on the waterfront where one of the bartenders makes great Vespers. Unfortunately he wasn’t working but the martinis were still good and the little plates of bar food were small but amazing. So we were set for starting out the next day with Mark’s parents.

We met them at the airport, loaded our luggage in a rental car (no small feat for four bags when two of them are big enough to hold nearly everything Mark & I own), and took off for Rotorua. This is one of New Zealand’s major attractions, a land of volcanic activity, bubbling hot springs, and flowing geysers. We got in too late to do anything interesting but the next morning, on the drive out, we stopped at Wai-O-Tapu, a private park of geysers and that kind of stuff. Definitely a little cheesy; the geyser goes off promptly at 10:30 AM, but only after they add chemicals to make it blast off. Still, there was a nice hour-long hike out into the lava fields with some gorgeous spring-fed lakes.

This green lake in Wai-O-Tapu was stunning

This green lake in Wai-O-Tapu was stunning

And later on there was this yellow one!

And later on there was this yellow one!

From there we headed to Lake Taupo, the biggest lake in New Zealand. The plan has been to cross the North Island pretty quickly so we can take a ferry across to the South Island and spend most of our time there. Our ferry ticket was booked for November 21, so we have to hurry down to Wellington pretty quickly. Unfortunately very shortly before we got to New Zealand there was an earthquake on the South Island, so we’re not too certain what conditions will be there. The good news, though, is that although the ferry quit running for a few days, the day of our reservation is the first day it’s running again.

At any rate, one of the great things about this trip through New Zealand is the beautiful scenery: lakes, hills, mountains, greenery. And cows and sheep. Lots and lots of cows and sheep. But a key reason to travel in New Zealand is for the great hiking, or tramping, as it’s known down here. So stop two was in Turangi right off Tongariro National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and even one of the 1,000 Places to See Before You Die (it’s a book…).

New Zealand has scenery, at least when the weather is good

New Zealand has scenery, at least when the weather is good

They best hike in the park, often described as the best day hike in all of New Zealand, is the 12-mile Tongariro Alpine Crossing. Spectacular scenery, steaming vents and springs, moonscapes and amazing views. Or so they say, at least. We planned on spending two days in Turangi so we could do the hike on our full day in the area. We discovered, though, that the weather was going to be terrible. It had snowed pretty heavily just the day or two before we got there, an unusual late-spring storm. And it was going to cold and wet and windy for the day we had available.

Still, we figured what the hell. At the least we could drive with Mark’s parents up to the trailhead. If it was awful we’d just go for a drive. Instead it was … marginal. Not too wet or cold to not hike tramp, but probably too cold and wet to really enjoy it. You only live once, though – or at least you likely only get to Tongariro National Park once – so we decided to give it a go.

Here we are, happy, warm, and dry at the start of the Alpine crossing. We were not to stay that way for long.

Here we are, happy, warm, and dry at the start of the Alpine crossing. We were not to stay that way for long.

Relatively early on the trail  was easy and we were having fun despite the inclement weather

Relatively early on the trail was easy and we were having fun despite the inclement weather

Mark's yellow raincoat made everything seem so bright and cheery. For a while.

Mark’s yellow raincoat made everything seem so bright and cheery. For a while.

The good news was that the trail was relatively empty; the commercial tours had all canceled and while we certainly saw other hikers it wasn’t nearly as crowded as it normally would be on a Saturday. And the first four or five kilometers were beautiful in their own way: certainly foggy and wet, but nice. Then we got to the point where the Alpine Crossing part got going in a serious way. First it was just a little more difficult; the trail a little rougher, the elevation a little steeper. As we got higher, though, it got wetter. And windier. And then even wetter and even windier. And steeper. At one point we seriously considered just calling it quits and going back; the brutal winds were getting dangerous. Turning back, though, would have been turning into the wind. So we kept going.

Getting higher and colder, but it's still fun

Getting higher and colder, but it’s still fun

Suffice it to say we survived, or we wouldn’t have been able to post these pictures. There were moments, though, when it didn’t seem this was the wisest thing we’d ever done. With essentially no visibility we had no idea how long the climb would go or when we’d cross the pass and (probably) get out of the wind. So we kept going up, the snow getting thicker, the wind getting stronger. At one point we were crossing a relatively narrow ridge, unable to see much, not knowing what was ahead, but confident that if we fell off in either direction we’d fall a long way. Finally we started the decline and within seconds the wind fell away. Still cold and wet, still too much snow, but at that point you know the worst is behind you.

This is still before the weather got totally hellish, but you can get a sense for how great the visibility was (or wasn't…)

This is still before the weather got totally hellish, but you can get a sense for how great the visibility was (or wasn’t…)

Near the end of the trail the weather was comparatively normal again. I have a sense that we would have seen a lot more of this had we been able to see anything.

Near the end of the trail the weather was comparatively normal again. I have a sense that we would have seen a lot more of this had we been able to see anything.

All in all it was exciting, exhausting, and – best of all – behind us. Mark’s parents picked us up at the end of the trail, where a warm car seemed like heaven. Until we got back to the hotel and a hot shower really was heaven.

The next morning we got back in the rental car and drove to Wellington, New Zealand’s capital. Again, a beautiful drive, this time with gorgeous snow-capped mountains in Tongariro National Park in view for a good part of the drive. I kept remembering, of course, that the beautiful snow-capped mountain had been a hellish ordeal the day before, but now that it was sunny and we were in a warm car it looked fabulous.

There are a lot of sheep in New Zealand

There are a lot of sheep in New Zealand

Another pretty unique experience during the drive: I got a speeding ticket, going 115 in a 100 zone. Those are kilometers, though, so essentially I was going 71 mph in a 62 mph zone. I’m pretty sure it’s the first speeding ticket I’ve gotten since 1973, when I was a brand new driver in a three-speed manual transmission Ford that was older than I was. I’m hoping to go another 43 years before another speeding ticket.

After slowing down, then, we got into Wellington too late to do too much except for lunch and then shopping for a new iPhone. The one casualty of the hike was that when I realized my iPhone was getting wet I put it in what I thought was a waterproof pocket of my rain jacket, a little compartment seemingly custom-built for a cell phone. What probably happened, though, is that the phone was wet when I put it in there and so it just stewed in the moisture for the last four hours of the hike … and died. That’s why there are no pictures of Mark on the hike; they were on my dead iPhone. Sad. I do have a new iPhone 7, though, so it’s not the worst tragedy ever. [Ed. note: A few days later my old iPhone revived enough to recover those pictures which I added here, explaining why now there are pictures of Mark on the hike.]

The waterfront in Wellington

The waterfront in Wellington

From here we take a ferry across to the South Island. We’d planned on working our way down the west coast, but that appears to have been the most severely damaged part from the earthquake; on the flight from New Caledonia Mark talked to someone who said the main highway had been destroyed. So we’ll probably figure something else out. At least this is better than our planned trip to Nepal a couple years ago when an earthquake shut the country down and we couldn’t even get in. It will add a little taste of uncertainty to our generally uncertain ramblings.

The geyser at Wai-O-Tapu. Looks pretty impressive, huh?

The geyser at Wai-O-Tapu. Looks pretty impressive, huh?

Fortunately they don't even try to hide the fact that they artificially induce the eruption

Fortunately they don’t even try to hide the fact that they artificially induce the eruption

Mark at Wai-O-Tapu. I took this with a flash because of where the sun was and we think it makes it look as though he's posing in front of some cheesy photographer's fake backdrop

Mark at Wai-O-Tapu. I took this with a flash because of where the sun was and we think it makes it look as though he’s posing in front of some cheesy photographer’s fake backdrop

Here I am with some carved owl

Here I am with some carved owl

And one last picture of Mark and some sulphuric lake

And one last picture of Mark and some sulphuric lake

The bunch of us - Dan, Charlie, Mark, Jim, Laura, and Elizabeth - in Piazza Navona

The bunch of us – Dan, Charlie, Mark, Jim, Laura, and Elizabeth – in Piazza Navona

Traveling can be full of surprises, one of the reasons I love to travel. Even traveling to places you’ve been lots of times before.

I wasn’t too keen on coming back to Rome, particularly in August. Been there several times, too hot, too many tourists. A lot of old rocks. But how could Dan & Laura come to Italy and not show Elizabeth and Charlie Rome? So from Venice we hopped on a high-speed train for a comfortable ride south. Or at least, it was comfortable for me. I had headphones on and was listening to music while a baby cried and cried in the back of our car. And then apparently some guy got up and started brow beating the mother about getting that kid to be quiet. According to Dan & Laura, who were sitting closer to them, the fight went on and on and on. And I missed the whole thing, blissfully enveloped in music.

Rome, the Eternal City, sometimes changes. This is the Via die Fori Imperiali, a major street that runs between ruins of the Roman Forum and the comparatively newer Imperial Forums. It used to be clogged with traffic but apparently now it's car free. Not only makes it more pleasant but fundamentally changes your perspective on the two-thousand year old ruins on either side of you.

Rome, the Eternal City, sometimes changes. This is the Via die Fori Imperiali, a major street that runs between ruins of the Roman Forum and the comparatively newer Imperial Forums. It used to be clogged with traffic but apparently now it’s car free. Not only makes it more pleasant but fundamentally changes your perspective on the two-thousand year old ruins on either side of you.

To my surprise, I loved Rome. Yes, it was unbearably hot, well up into the 90s every day. And yes, over the years – I first came to Rome in 1975 when I was stationed just a little south in Naples, and this was the fourth time Mark & I have been there in the last 20 years – I’ve seen the Roman Forum and the Colosseum and St. Peter’s too many times.

What I discovered, though, is that after you’re done with the regular tourist haunts there are amazing churches and museums that aren’t remotely crowded. I discovered I love Renaissance Rome perhaps even more than ancient Rome. You can just stumble into some church that you’ve never heard of before and find some Caravaggio or Raphael or Bernini or Filippo Lippi or something that just grabs you. Similarly, some of the lesser-visited museums are extraordinary. So despite myself, I loved Rome, though to be clear August is not ideal.

Last time we were in Rome the Trevi Fountain was blocked off and under renovation. Now it's clean and all but new.

Last time we were in Rome the Trevi Fountain was blocked off and under renovation. Now it’s clean and all but new.

It’s worth noting that we did the usual stuff: we went to the Colosseum, the Roman Forum, St. Peter’s, the Trevi Fountain, and up to the Palatine Hill. Thanks to Laura & Dan’s planning efforts we had tickets to the Sistine Chapel and Vatican Museums. We even had a tour of the Vatican crypt, with St. Peter’s alleged burial site. As interesting as those things are, though, there are only so many times you need to see them. Yeah, definitely a First World problem. So what was it that I found this time that made Rome great?

There were two museums that were really great. The Capitoline Museum isn’t quite off the beaten trail; it’s a pretty standard “must see” destination. Still, it was not at all crowded and had lots of good stuff – great old statues; a beautiful painting gallery with all the Titians, Tintorettos, and Caravaggios you’d expect; a spectacular view of the Roman Forum. And it had one of the best audio guides I’ve ever used. Then there was the National Museum of Rome (Museo Nazionale Romano: Palazzo Massimo alle Terme), all but empty except for a great collection of statues and mosaics. Totally worth the sweat I worked up walking to it in that god-awful heat.

From the Capitoline Museum, Mark and I both loved this old statue of a drunken woman clinging to her wine bottle

From the Capitoline Museum, Mark and I both loved this old statue of a drunken woman clinging to her wine bottle

The lesser-known churches were certainly some of my favorite stops. The Church of Santa Maria del Popolo, built on the spot where Emperor Nero was supposedly buried and where his ghost was still haunting Rome, with two Caravaggios and a Raphael chapel. The Church of San Luigi dei Francesi with three Caravaggios. The Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore, with 13th century mosaics and a piece of the baby Jesus’s manger; the real one! The Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, built on an old temple to the goddess Minerva, with a statue by Bernini outside, a little-known Michelangelo inside, and the (headless) body of St. Catherine of Siena under the alter; recall that we saw her head in Siena, so now we’ve got the whole picture covered. The Church of the Jesuits (Chiesa del Gesù), where Jesuit-founder Ignatius Loyola lived the last 12 years of his life and where he’s buried in an opulent tomb. The Basilica of St. Peter in Chains with its stunning Moses by Michelangelo and the very chains that held St. Peter in prison. The Basilica of St. Andrew della Valle, with a couple old pope tombs and just general awesomeness.

Caravaggio's "Crucifixion of St. Peter", hanging in the Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, is one of many great paintings strewn about churches in Rome

Caravaggio’s “Crucifixion of St. Peter”, hanging in the Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, is one of many great paintings strewn about churches in Rome

You get the idea. It seemed as though any church we went into just drew us in and gave us something to gawp at. And we’ve seen a lot of churches over the years!

So we loved Rome. Our hotel was a few rooms in a residential building right smack on Piazza Navona, perhaps the best location we’ve ever had in Rome. The hotel wasn’t perfect – on our first night we got stuck in a brutally hot and airless elevator for 40 minutes or so – but the location was ideal. Then there was the 50-minute wait at a store for a five-minute transaction to add time to our phone SIM cards. It was classically Italian in the confusion, the absence of any idea how long it would take, the staff taking repeated cigarette breaks while there were huge numbers of customers waiting.

A morning view of the Piazza Navona from our hotel room. In a few hours it would be packed with people but in the morning and evening it was beautiful

A morning view of the Piazza Navona from our hotel room. In a few hours it would be packed with people but in the morning and evening it was beautiful

And then there was that perfect moment, when you saw Italians had learned a thing or two about tour groups. At Michelangelo’s statue of Moses, a dazzling work of art intended for the tomb of Pope Julius II, there was a sign that read in Italian, English, and French

It is forbidden to stop in front of the statue of Moses to give explanations to the groups.

We were so impressed; Rome really does change. Everyone should do that, we thought. Until Dan and Laura went there the next day … and said there was a tour guide standing right there with her group blocking everyone else’s view while she droned on and on about the statue. Damn, and they almost got it right.

From Rome we’re off to a week-long “vacation” in the Loire Valley. But first here are more of the reasons I fell in love with Rome all over again.

Yes, we made it to the Colosseum. Brutally hot. But I learned where the name came from. Near the entrance there had been a replica of the great Greek statue, the Colossus of Rhodes. Long after it had fallen into disuse, the site became known as the Colosseum in memory of the now long lost Colossus statue.

Yes, we made it to the Colosseum. Brutally hot. But I learned where the name came from. Near the entrance there had been a replica of the great Greek statue, the Colossus of Rhodes. Long after it had fallen into disuse, the site became known as the Colosseum in memory of the now long lost Colossus statue.

Laura & Elizabeth

Laura & Elizabeth

Oh yeah, there was food in Rome, too

Oh yeah, there was food in Rome, too

Michelangelo's stunning Moses, where tour guides are not supposed to block your view

Michelangelo’s stunning Moses, where tour guides are not supposed to block your view

Michelangelo's "Last Judgment" in the Sistine Chapel. For centuries art critics have been dazzled but Mark thought it was ugly. I think history is going to have to rethink Michelangelo's genius.

Michelangelo’s “Last Judgment” in the Sistine Chapel. For centuries art critics have been dazzled but Mark thought it was ugly. I think history is going to have to rethink Michelangelo’s genius.

A bigger view of the Sistine Chapel. Mark & I went there late in the day and by the time we got here it wasn't quite as empty as this makes it look, but there weren't many people in it.

A bigger view of the Sistine Chapel. Mark & I went there late in the day and by the time we got here it wasn’t quite as empty as this makes it look, but there weren’t many people in it.

The Vatican Museums have a whole bunch of Raphael, including this one showing the world's great philosophers discussing stuff

The Vatican Museums have a whole bunch of Raphael, including this one showing the world’s great philosophers discussing stuff

A random Michelangelo - a very masculine Jesus - in the Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva

A random Michelangelo – a very masculine Jesus – in the Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva

The Museo Nazionale Romano: Palazzo Massimo alle Terme had an enormous and grand selection of statues, including this classic discus thrower

The Museo Nazionale Romano: Palazzo Massimo alle Terme had an enormous and grand selection of statues, including this classic discus thrower

A closeup

A closeup

An athlete, another original Greek bronze from the Museo Nazionale Romano

An athlete, another original Greek bronze from the Museo Nazionale Romano

Arguably the most ornate sarcophagus I've ever seen. Note that in the middle there is a face that's unfinished. That was left to display the person who ultimately was going to buy and pay for it.

Arguably the most ornate sarcophagus I’ve ever seen. Note that in the middle there is a face that’s unfinished. That was left to display the person who ultimately was going to buy and pay for it.

This is a small part of a fresco taken from the walls of the country home of Livia, Augustus's wife. The fresco covered all four walls of the room.

This is a small part of a fresco taken from the walls of the country home of Livia, Augustus’s wife. The fresco covered all four walls of the room.

And finally, one last piece from the National Museum of Rome. This ivory face has a room of its own in the museum and a great story, to boot. It was found in the 1990s in a barn in Italy. As officials investigated they discovered that it was being hidden there by a cabal of archeologists who sell to secret collectors in violation of all sorts of national laws. This particular group was busted, but apparently sales of this sort of stuff to secret collectors is quite a thing.

And finally, one last piece from the National Museum of Rome. This ivory face has a room of its own in the museum and a great story, to boot. It was found in the 1990s in a barn in Italy. As officials investigated they discovered that it was being hidden there by a cabal of archeologists who sell to secret collectors in violation of all sorts of national laws. This particular group was busted, but apparently sales of this sort of stuff to secret collectors is quite a thing.

The body - minus the head - of St. Catherine of Siena, from the Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva

The body – minus the head – of St. Catherine of Siena, from the Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva

A wooden Baby Jesus that's supposed to be great at healing. Now, though, a replica, as the original was apparently stolen a few years ago. And there's a little basket next to it where you can leave a message. There are even note cards available that start with "Dear Baby Jesus". Isn't that just precious?

A wooden Baby Jesus that’s supposed to be great at healing. Now, though, a replica, as the original was apparently stolen a few years ago. And there’s a little basket next to it where you can leave a message. There are even note cards available that start with “Dear Baby Jesus”. Isn’t that just precious?

A view of the Roman Forum

A view of the Roman Forum

Part of Jesus' manger!!

Part of Jesus’ manger!!

Statue of Giordano Bruno in the Campo de Fiori just south of the Piazza Navona. Every evening we'd meet here for a drink before dinner and admire his gloomy face. He was a most unusual Dominican Friar, since he didn't believe in the Trinity, the virginity of Mary, the divinity of Christ, or transubstantiation. You know, so he was a heretic. Who was burned at the stake but is now considered a martyr to science. Cool guy.

Statue of Giordano Bruno in the Campo de Fiori just south of the Piazza Navona. Every evening we’d meet here for a drink before dinner and admire his gloomy face. He was a most unusual Dominican Friar, since he didn’t believe in the Trinity, the virginity of Mary, the divinity of Christ, or transubstantiation. You know, so he was a heretic. Who was burned at the stake but is now considered a martyr to science. Cool guy.