Here is a review I
posted to Hostleworld yesterday.
I gave this hostel a 2 because it's only the SECOND worst
hostel I've ever encountered. For starters it's located ridiculously far from
ANYTHING, way out in the dead-lawn burbs. The guy at the front desk was shifty
and rude, and didn't bother explaining anything (although, to give him credit,
he did show me a map and draw some lines on it). The room was filthy. The bunks
lacked ladders. The mattresses were practically holes, soft, sagging through
the lower bars. And the toilet plumbing dripped and gurgled throughout the
night. I woke up at 2:00 am to catch a spider crawling on my back. Next morning
I left despite having booked two nights. Keep the change.
Yup. Hated that place.
The town itself was okay, a bit drab, but the lake was gorgeous.
AND.
She held the camera to
her eye, watching the lake, the shifting clouds and waves, and the light
painted her dark hair an almost-blue. Her name is Marcina Marie. She smiled and
we walked to the harbor. The plan? She had hopes to crash a boat tour to the
Maori Rock Carvings across the lake. We specked the place like old pros, noting
the shuttle, bobbing at the docks, and the captain, kicked back on the shore.
The tour was pre-booked,
likely packed, and she would merge unnoticed with the crowd. We discussed
integration and waited for them to arrive—gleaning useful information from a
foursome of Belgian girls, just returned. Turns out, the Captain was shifting
shuttles for the last go-round. From a jet-boat, party ship, to a small
sailboat. Which is awesome, but wouldn't make things any easier. Marcina
suggests I join her, but smuggling two could provide difficult, I think. Could
ruin her last chance to see the carvings before leaving. We decide to meet up
in a week in Queenstown. The crowd—mostly Brits—arrived, shuffling down the
docks, cases of beer under their arms for the guys, wine bottles projecting
from the purse of the females, and integration seemed unlikely as the captain
counted heads and called names and rejected several passengers. But we did it.
She sat silently on the boat amid the Brits and I waved goodbye, seated on the
bulkhead as the captain undid the riggings. He looked at me—in my snappy-cap
and ascot and bare-feet—and said, “I need a hand with the ship,” then nodded
for me to come aboard. I slung my bag over the rail and leapt onto deck.
The Captain piloted the ship from the dock and the harbor and into the open sea…
After awhile he summoned me to the wheel and had me guide the shuttle nice and easy toward the peninsula
and the Carvings. Marcina got some good pictures. The sun set, and we sailed
under the night sky and stars atop an inky sea of glass.
1 comments:
Ah. Taupo. Jealous. Let's NOT stay at that hostel, shall we?
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