Showing posts with label church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label church. Show all posts

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Day 116 Port Chalmers & Careys Bay

Today was a longer walk as I combined finishing the streets in Port Chalmers with walking the streets in Careys Bay.  I walked 22 streets today

1561. Bernicia Street
1562. Bellevue Place
1563. Fox Street
1564. Meridan Street
1565. Harrington Street
1566. Laing Street
1567. Burns Street
1568. Daly Street
1569. Mount Street
1570. Church Street
1571. Ajax Road
1572. Borlases Street
1573. Blueskin Road
1574. Kohi Place
1575. William Street
1576. Coombe Hay Terrace
1577. Harbour Terrace
1578. Cemetery Road
1579. Willmott Street
1580. Slant Street
1581. Henry Street
1582. Macandrew Road
 
My walk today took me over the top of the hill at Port Chalmers, although I did have to walk up and down the hill a couple of times as I walked each street completely.  
The houses on the streets that I was walking today were positioned on the hill so that they looked either towards the harbour or towards Mt Cargill.  Today the harbour was calm with great reflections of harbour cone. 
Mt. Cargill has dominated the view in many parts of the city that I have walked although I haven't seen it from this angle before.  Mt. Cargill has the transmitter on it with Buttars Peak beside it and Mt Holmes further along.
 
Port Otago is obvious from most streets in Port Chalmers.  I have been able to see the crane gantries and ships or hear the noises from the port during my walk of the streets.

Having seen the Iona Church from most parts of Port Chalmers, this is as close as I got to walking past it.  Built from Port Chalmers Blue Stone and Oamaru Stone, Iona Church was built in 1872 and is still used for services today.

After walking past Iona Church, I continued walking up the hill behind Port Chalmers.  This was a great place to be able to see the streets that I have been walking.  It is always a good feeling looking back and knowing that I have walked every street that I can see.

As I walked further up the hill, I crossed the railway line.  I have been around this railway line many times during my challenge to walk every street.  From here I had beautiful views looking down the harbour towards the city and closer are the houses of Roseneath.

Eventually I walked all the way to the Robert Scott Memorial Lookout.  The views from the look out are fantastic and I was able to see most of Port Chalmers, both Goat and Quarantine Island in the middle of the harbour and harbour cone on the peninsula behind. 

I was also able to look down onto the port with two container ships.  It was fascinating to watch the gantries and straddle carriers moving about, lifting and loading containers.  From this height everything looks small, however I remember how big and high the rows of containers were when I was walking down near them.

 
Built in 1913, the Scott Memorial commemorates the ill-fated Scott expedition that left Port Chalmers for Antarctica on 19 November 1910

Also at the site of the Scott Memorial is this large iron anchor from an unknown sailing ship that often got caught in local fisher nets, it was hauled ashore in 1978.

From the lookout, I took a track past the Port Chalmers cemetery to Careys Bay which is the next bay around from Port Chalmers.  The streets of Careys Bay are steep and the houses are nestled amongst native bush.

Most of the houses in Careys Bay have a view of the marina and habour.  Today the habour was calm with no wind and it was a beautiful place to be walking. 

 
Careys Bay is also close to Port Otago.  It was easy to see from this angle how much the port dominates the area with the containers stacked high.

Once down from walking the streets on the hill, it was nice to be beside the sea and watch the boats bobbing on the harbour while I walked back along the road around the bottom of the hill.

 
One of the lovely old buildings I walked past today is the Chick's Hotel beside Port Otago.  Built in 1876, Chicks operated as a hotel and more recently a music venue until it closed in 2016. 

The Careys Bay Hotel was another historic hotel that I walked past today.  Built in 1874 from Port Chalmers Blue Stone, the hotel has been continuously serving alcohol and today is a popular seafood restaurant particularly during weekends.
Another historic building that I walked past was the old Port Chalmers School.  There has been a school at Port Chalmers since 1856 on various sites.  This school building has been turned into a home.
 
I walked past the memorial to where the local Ngāi Tahu sold the Otago block to the New Zealand Company in 1844.

I have often driven past this large tree that has grown beside the road.  The footpath goes around the tree and it is obviously a notable tree but there was no plaque or sign to say why. 
 
The bus stop at Port Chalmers is painted to match the suburb with a boat, the harbour and Mt. Cargill as the main features. 

I walked past three interesting letterboxes today.  The house shaped letterbox was similar in shape to the house that it belonged to and the castle letterbox looked nothing like the house that it belonged to.  I thought the anchor letterbox was very appropriate for the home it belonged to - near the sea.
 


And finally, below is the map of the streets that I have walked in Port Chalmers and Careys Bay as well as Sawyers Bay and Roseneath. 
 
 Distance walked:  10.9 km         Walking time  2 hr 3 mins    

Total distance: 960.5  km          Total walking  179 hr 11 mins 

Friday, November 19, 2021

Day 114 Port Chalmers

As I walked the streets of Port Chalmers, I was able to watch as a large container ship being loaded in Port Chalmers tonight. I walked 10 streets tonight.

1539. Currie Street
1540. Scotia Street
1541. Aurora Terrace
1542. Kaio Lane
1543. Island Terrace
1544. Campbell Buchanan Lane
1545. Constitution Street
1546. Grey Street
1547. Magnetic Street
1548. Mary Street

During the first part of my walk I was able to look over to the historic Iona Church on the hill opposite. The Iona Church was opened in 1872 and is made from Port Chalmers Blue Stone and Oamaru Stone.

As I walked to the top of the hill overlooking Port Chalmers, I was rewarded with a great view of Goat Island and Quarantine Island.  Quarantine Island is the bigger island in the harbour.  Now a reserve and open to the public, the island was a quarantine station from 1863 to 1924.  When ships arrived into the harbour with infectious diseases, they stopped at the island to quarantine their passengers for a few weeks until they were no longer infectious.  In the 60 years the island was used, there were 9000 people quarantined and 70 deaths.  There is a small cemetery on the island.

Once at the top of the hill, there is a look out over the port where I was able to watch a container ship being loaded.  It was fascinating to watch the gantry cranes loading the containers into the ships and the straddle carriers moving around the port collecting containers for the gantries to load into the ships. 

From the lookout, I was able to see how small the township of Port Chalmers looks beside the huge container ship.  I could easily see the Iona Church and how the buildings cluster around the Port. 

The lookout also gave me a great view looking towards the harbour mouth.  This would be a great spot to be to see the ships arriving into the port. 

Further around the hill, I walked to the end of another street that gave me a great view of the other side of the port and I watched a forklift empty a wagon.  It was also a great spot to see how close the two islands are in the harbour with only a small opening for ships to travel down to Dunedin City. 

From the streets on top of the hill, I was able to look over other streets that I still need to walk as well as the street around the bottom of the hill that I walked yesterday. 

And then I was walking streets looking towards Mt Cargill in the distance.  I am enjoying walking in Port Chalmers as the views keep changing as I walk around the hill.

 
At the Port Chalmers lookout is the time ball that I saw while walking around the road the bottom of the hill yesterday.  The time ball is which has stood on this spot since 1867 with the ball dropping at 1pm each day so ships officers could set their  chronometers used in navigation.

 
During my walk tonight, I walked past the Hotere Garden Oputae.  Ralph Hotere was a Maori artist whose studio was on the point near the time ball, overlooking Port Otago.  When the port was expanded, part of the land was removed and in 2005 this garden was established in Ralph Hotere's memory.  There are a number of his sculptures in the garden.

 
I was surprised to find during my walk a number of conveniently placed seats that overlook parts of the port or harbour.  These are great places to stop and admire the view. 

 
Distance walked:  4.1 km         Walking time  49 mins   
 
Total distance: 942.3  km          Total walking  175 hr 46 mins 

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Day 104 Mosgiel

 Today I was back walking the streets of Mosgiel where I walked 11 streets.

1382. Park Street
1383. Bishop Verdon Close
1384. Laing Street
1385. Cargill Street
1386. Church Street
1387. Glasgow Street
1388. Irvine Street
1389. Argyle Street
1390. Lanark Street
1391. Montrose Street
1392. Berwick Street
 
Like yesterday, the streets I walked today are long, straight and flat.  Today there was cloud/fog covering most of Saddle Hill. 
Whichever direction I walked today, the views were pretty much the same.  Walking the flat can become monotonous as each street starts to look the same and I need to concentrate to make sure that I don't miss any streets. 

I walked all of Church Street today and in Church Street is this impressive Presbyterian Church dating back to 1912, which I am guessing the street is named after.  It looks like there have been some modern touches added with the glass front.

Also in Church Street is the St Mary's School.  Originally founded in 1892, the catholic school was held in the church until 1912 when this building was available and the school with around 50 students moved in.  In the 1950's the roll had grown and a new school was built nearby.

Another interesting building that I walked past is the old fire station that has been turned into a theatre and is home to the Taieri Dramatic Society. Founded in 1949, the Taieri Dramatic Society held two shows a year in the Mosgiel Coronation Hall until it purchased the old fire station in 1989 and now has it's own home.

I walked past this tanawha painted on the side of a building.  Maori legend has it that Saddle Hill is the remains of the tanawha Matamata which was the guardian of a Maori chief and warrior who lived in a village beside the Otago Harbour.You can see that the back and head of the tanawha are in the shape of Saddle Hill.
 I also walked past this wall that is a beautifully painted ANZAC memorial.  The painting is very large as the soldiers are painted in life size. 
I have not seen many interesting letterboxes lately so I was very pleased to see this fun All Blacks letterbox during my walk today.
This map shows the streets I have walked in red.  It is easy to see how many streets in Mosgiel I have walked compared to the streets that I still need to walk.
Distance walked:  8.5 km         Walking time  1 hr 30 mins   
 
Total distance: 859.5  km          Total walking  160 hr 50 mins 

Friday, July 2, 2021

Day Seventy North East Valley

 It's winter and the sun sets early so tonight I walked some streets closer to home.  I walked  7 streets today.

850. Dolphin Street
851. Carlyle Street
852. Cornhill Street
853. Allen Street
854. Northumberland Street
855. Paris Street
856. Crown Street

Today I was walking along the flat of North East Valley from the Gardens corner, walking along the streets on the left of North Road.  These streets are narrow with mainly student flats.  One student flat that I  walked past is this old historic stone cottage.


Another historical building I walked past is the Santa Sabina complex overlooking the valley.  This historic building was built in 1929 and housed Dominica nuns until the buildings and land was sold in the early 2000's. Apartments has been built on the land and the building has been turned into flats.  
The streets that I walked tonight were on the flat of North East Valley and I was able to look up towards Opoho.  I have not walked any of these streets yet.

 As I walked the streets, there was a beautiful sunset  with lovely reds and blues.  The night air was very cool with the feel that there will be a frost tomorrow morning.

During my walk, I crossed the Lindsay Creek.  The creek flows from Mount Cargill and travels the length of North East Valley.  There is a strong community focus on the health of the creek.  

 
I walked past some very nice public art. This striking Kaka is a reminder of the Orokonui Ecosantuary Halo project which aims to develop an urban ecosantuary with predator trapping and native plantings  that will ultimately encourage native kaka back into people's gardens.

The other piece of art is this dinosaur advertising the dinosaur display in the Otago Museum. 


Distance walked:  4.3  km         Walking time    47 mins  
 
Total distance: 561.9 km       Total walking  105 hr 19 mins 

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