It’s Sunday and if we were home we’d be having waffles.
Waffles, it is, says our host at the Lilac Rose and we enjoy some great tasting
treats with wonderful maple syrup. Maddie lays at our feet under the table
hoping something will drop. Unfortunately for her nothing does. We savor every
bite.
While our host assures us we have plenty of time, we still
leave early to arrive at the train station to get our seats and board the
train. The train has very comfy seats and lots of window space with even a
little above us as well. And the windows look pretty clean except for a spot
here or there. We are in the car just behind the open car where there are no
windows and you can get clear shots of the glorious scenery provided there are
no heads in the way.
Our ears begin to pop as we ascend into the mountain range. The
South Island has mountains that extend through the middle of it called the
Southern Alps even though it is made up of several ranges of mountains. Mount
Cook or Aoraki, the Maori name, is the tallest.
Our train trip is called TranzAlpine. There is a running commentary you can listen
to with headphones. I listen for a while but don’t care to be distracted by the
voice in my ears. I’d rather sit back and enjoy.
I take a few pictures but for the most part, I just want to
soak in the green hillsides and the yellow ones, which the commentary tells Bob
are noxious weeds. We saw them as we drove to Christchurch yesterday—vast areas
of yellow flowers.


In about twenty minutes, we are at the Otira station and
board the train again. The landscape begins to change dramatically as the
rugged mountains become rolling hills green with pasture land. We roll into
Greymouth, a town that is a bit sleepy on a Sunday. Bob and I walk down to the
first intersection looking for a place that is open for lunch. We find one
called Freddy’s. It’s in an old building on the second floor but worth the walk
up. Bob has some great soup and my Panini comes with a tasty salad.

The train leaves an hour after we arrived and this time it
is full. There are no empty seats to spread out in. At Otira we again get on
buses for a ride to Arthurs Pass only this time instead of two buses there are
four.
I spend a little extra time out in the open car taking
pictures. This time I have a good idea of what’s ahead. It’s been a relaxing
day. Bob is full of all sorts of facts from listening to the commentary both
ways. As he says, the nice thing about being old is that if you wait a bit,
it’s all new again.
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