I took my camera and went out into the sun. The last days I walked the streets for some times, partly to buy things, partly to find points of interest, partly to get to know Wellington.

But until now I haven’t had my camera with my nor did I have such beautiful sunshine at hand. 🙂

Why don’t you just come along:

Wellington has more of small shops than bigger ones

There’s always room for trees and green areas. Well, Wellington is not AS big as there wouldn’t fit any of that…

The “Beehive” is the government buildung. It might be true to its meaning. 😉

You can walk freely on the governemnt grounds. Everything is nice and groomed, a pleasure to the eyes.

As I said. 😀

Shopping here is a little different from home. At least at the smaller supermarket I went to yet… You put your stuff into the basket, proceed to the checkout area and wait in a distance until on of the counters is vacant. Then you put your basket on top of the counter, the lovely madam scans everything after uttering ‘Hi, how are you?’ (I still don’t know what to answer to that, really) she packs it all into bags for you. One word about the selection: There is toast for 1 Dollar!! (and backpackers buy it)

Mt. Victoria in the background

The national museum ‘Te Papa’ is huge.

Especially on the waterfront you see many runners. Everyone is running in Wellington, astounding.

View of the sea, the city behind the back.

Why don’t we standardize those symbols?

As I walked on the pavement today (“today”, “yesterday” and “tomorrow” has a broken meaning anyway, I think :D), with sunscreen factor 70 just to mention it, I encountered an odd picture which I can only describe here as I didn’t carry my camera.
A section of the way was being fenced off by the workers using a handheld STOP sign. So you stop. Then a small digger left the building and when everything was safe again, the sign was turned and GO. I was told that they even use this technique to replace mobile traffic lights on roadworks. That is how the Kiwis are, but I will surely see all of this myself one day…

A different version of our “Weserspucker”…

The green is outstandingly intense and pure, no matter what plant you look at.

The national museum ‘Te Papa’ might just be the coolest attraction around. It is free, you can walk in and out as you please and there is looots to see. You can learn anything about New Zealand here. And there is free WiFi. 🙂 In general there is free WiFi all around the city…

Inspiring words inside Te Papa.

The city as seen from the looking terrace on top of the museum.

Those who like to build scaffolding will like this picture. 😉

At the hostel I sleep in a three-people-bedroom (single bed above double bed) and the lovely Taiwanese girl (who shared her first cooking with me (which was really nice (I hope Google will translate this correctly to Chinese))) turned into a french-italian backpacker couple. Loving people, full of advice and experience and providing the cutest accent mixture ever! 😀 😀

It must be Christmas.

Cuba Street is on of the most beautiful streets for shopping here. Very traditional and
nice to look at as a whole. Many buskers throughout the day complete the mood.

The famous sculpture on Cuba Street. It’s something. 🙂

And you can speak English for the whole day. Even some Germans I met at the hostel spoke only English with me. And all the cinemas show movies in their purest original language. That’s how I pictured it! 😀