New Zealand Sabbatical Journal
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NZ Table of Contents > Dunedin-Otago Dunedin and the Otago Peninsula March 21-24, 2008 We drove 5 1/2 hours southeast to Dunedin, a nice college town where Otago University is located, and another 45 minutes out to its Otago peninsula on the scariest narrow hairpin turns we've ever encountered, usually with no shoulders and no guardrails. The views are breathtaking, if you can look, since you're right on the edge of a cliff with the water way down below.
We also took a tour at Penguin Place, the Yellow-Eyed Penguin Conservation Reserve nearby, set aside on a very large farm. We got to see the penguins close up through hides and tunnels. Some had just come back in from the ocean and were taking tentative steps toward mating dances. It's hard to see that their eyes are yellow. We also saw blue penguins at dusk coming back out of the ocean to their nests, but it was too dark to photograph them. In the water they look a lot like ducks.We were lucky to see one blue penguin sleeping in its nest in daytime.
Naturally, we also walked on the beach and saw a lot of shore birds, giant kelp, and sleeping fur seals.
We hiked up a cliff from one of the bays across a sheep and cattle farm, and on a different hike through a sheep farm, by two steep hills called The Pyramids, to Victory Beach.
Back in Dunedin for one day, we stayed at a motel near the Octagon, the center of town, full of shops and restaurants. The university was pleasant; the railway station was the most impressive sight in town. |
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