Laurie and Ani were up at 730am. Andy was up at 8, and we woke up our teenager (Miles) at 9am because our Airbnb checkout was at 10am.
Laurie wanted a hearty breakfast, so Andy made potatoes, minced bacon and eggs in hopes of finishing off all of our remaining food.
Then we finished packing everything and loading up the clown car, washed the dishes and were outta there by 1010am.
We drove to the Willowbank Wildlife Reserve 20 minutes away. It was a Monday but given it’s the 23rd of December we figure many people were probably off from work because it was packed.
While in line to pay for admission, we also purchased food to feed the eel and the farm animals.
We wanted to catch the 1045am feeding of the otters but even after walking quickly through the maze that was the reserve, we missed it by about 5 minutes.
Miles complained it was too hot the whole time we were there. And Ani was starting to fade and just wanted Laurie to carry her.
We decided to go see the kiwis, feed the eels, feed the sheep and the goats and leave. Thankfully both kids perked up when they were feeding the animals in the shade.
The Kiwi area was dark and only lit with red lights. Kiwis are nocturnal and this wildlife reserve has done a good job replicating their natural habitat during daylight hours.
We only saw the hind of one kiwi and didn’t linger or try to see more. We left with Miles saying to Laurie that she was having more fun than him on this outing.
We all laughed on our way to feed the eels. This was especially cool because it was novel. Andy found it interesting that ground meat was being fed to eels. And it looked like venison.
Ani wasn’t too keen but Miles and (especially) Laurie were enjoying themselves and looking for the smaller eels to feed.
Around 1pm we left. Ani nursed and fell asleep soon after in her car seat as we drove to the city center for more cream from Rollickin Gelato and another go at Mashawe Mediterranean BBQ.
Sadly the Mediterranean restaurant was closed so Laurie and Miles got ice cream while Andy drove a bit to keep Ani asleep and went to pick them up ten minutes later.
We went to New World to buy some Manuka honey to take home, then to Wenderkrisen campervan rental to return the car seats they graciously loaned to us to use with our rental car, then off to the airport.
After a short gas stop, we parked the rental car, returned the keys to the clown car back to Alamo and entered the madhouse that was the departures terminal in Christchurch.
Airports during Christmas are busy no matter where you are in the world. But the Air New Zealand area of the airport was especially busy due to cancelled flights and people trying to get on other flights. It reminded us of the fiascos with Southwest Airlines of recent years during Christmas travel.
As we mentioned in the last post, while trying to check us in for our flights Andy’s sister was informed that we had been assigned a plane that did not have any skycouches.
Being the quick thinker she is, she called and asked if there was a different flight that had skycouches. Sure enough there was another flight scheduled to depart Aukland 30 minutes later with open sky couches.
She rebooked us all onto that flight. And it was a good thing she did because our flight from Christchurch to Aukland was delayed by 45 minutes, which, turned into a 1.5 hour delay.
When we landed in Aukland we had 30 minutes before our flight to LAX was scheduled to depart.
The flight crew was incredibly helpful and assured us that they had notified all of the connecting international flights of our delay and that they would wait for us.
They also notified the passengers that were not connecting to remain seated to let those connecting deplane first. Some listened, most didn’t.
Once off the plane we were off for the races.
If one misses the shuttle, it’s a 20 minute walk from the domestic terminal to the international terminal. When we walked out there was no bus so we ran for it.
Laurie was carrying Ani, Miles was rolling his suitcase and Andy was carrying Ani’s suitcase and two bags.
In just over 10 minutes and Andy dripping with sweat we arrived at the international terminal. Still having to get through customs we were hopeful things would go quickly, but we were told to go to the family line that was long and slow moving.
With no employee to speak to, we waited, trusting that our bird would still be at the gate. Once through customs we ran to gate 8, only to find a sea of people standing about.
Andy asked someone if they were waiting for the 810pm flight to LAX and was assured that not only had our plane not left, but that they had not even started the boarding process.
Turns out we didn’t need to run after all. At least we got our blood pumping before our flight!
We were relieved, but even more so we were proud of our little travelers. We made this mad dash fun and the kids were in good spirits at the gate.
We boarded the plane and found our seats. Laurie and the kiddos were in one row with a skycouch and Andy was assigned a seat in the middle section two rows behind them.
The kind flight attendant for our section asked a solo traveller to switch with Andy so he could be across the aisle from Laurie and the kids, which she did.
Andy still wanted two skycouches, especially one behind the other and noticed what seemed to be 3 empty rows at the end of the section we were in, all with skycouches.
He went to investigate as we were taxing and saw a solo traveler in the middle row. One of Andy’s mottos is, it never hurts to ask. And another is, you will never be told yes if you don’t ask, so he asked the gentleman if he was willing to move one row forward or back so we can all be together.
The man had no problems with this and moved forward one row. Andy thanked him for his consideration and we all moved before taking off.
It’s a wonderful thing when a plan comes together. Now all we need is for the kids to sleep!
But we are not wed to outcomes tonight. We have set ourselves up as best we can and now we will see how the evening unfolds.
The kids watched cartoons before and while having their dinner consisting of chicken and rice. Laurie ate lamb and rice. Andy was not feeling well and passed on the meal. He ate the breakfast he had made before taking off at the Christchurch airport and now his stomach was very upset.
We helped the kiddos change into their jammies after dinner. As the cabin lights dimmed both Laurie and Andy changed into comfier and not sweaty clothes.
Around 11pm the kiddos went to sleep. Ani fell asleep nursing and Miles fell asleep to Andy caressing his back and stomach.
Once again the sky couches were a godsend. Miles slept for 7 hours and Ani for 5.
We ate the remaining New Zealand fruit on the descent into LAX. Having missed the final trash pickup, Laurie put the half eaten apple and tangerine peels in a bag to throw out after deplaning. But there was no garbage bin to be found.
At customs we were coldly informed that kids need their own Global Entry (not the case for TSA precheck) when traveling with adults, and were escorted to the standard line.
Once at the counter Andy jokingly declared our half eaten apple and we were given the 10-14 code immediately.
Andy still joked around with the agent, but he knew we were going to be taken to a different area. Apparently in LAX they purposefully do not have garbage cans before customs and they encourage you to leave garbage on the plane. We were trying to be considerate, but alas.
Once the customs agents realized that we really only had a half eaten apple to throw out and nothing else to declare, we were finally let through and able to retrieve our 2 checked bags.
All bags accounted for, we headed out to the loud, stinky and busy curbside pickup of LAX’s international terminal. Andy’s dad picked us up and we drove 1.5 hours back through awful Los Angeles traffic to Glendale where Andy’s parents live.
Ani, Miles and Laurie fell asleep on the drive. We decided to wake the kids when we arrived to allow them to play a little before getting in the car again for our final flight to Boise from Burbank airport.
Sadly, our time in Glendale was only 40 minutes. The kids chose to play rather than eat which saddened Andy’s mom who had set a beautiful table with all of Miles’ favorite foods.
She was concerned they would be hungry so she and Laurie packed a bunch of food to go and headed to the Burbank airport.
The traffic on the highway wasn’t bad but it took us 20 minutes to drive the 1/8 mile from the start of the airport to the drop off location. We should have known it would busy at Burbank airport too. Really busy.
Apparently we missed the window for Alaska’s bag drop, arriving 45 minutes ahead of our flight rather than 50. Alaska airlines checked our bags but didn’t assure they would arrive with us in Boise.
To make the longest day ever more interesting, Ani’s bag was selected for screening. From previous travel experiences we have learned that if one item gets selected for screening, TSA often wants to check all belongings in the party. To skip this step Laurie took the remaining bags and the kids to the gate.
Turns out they selected the wrong bag, but the pride of the TSA agents would not allow them to just let Andy leave with Ani’s bag.
Andy’s calm and friendly demeanor payed off and he made it to the gate with literally only a minute to spare. We were the last to board the plane and we took off shortly after.
It was a smooth flight home, with Ani seated with Laurie coloring and Miles seated next to Andy eating and coloring. The final excitement of the day was when Laurie and Ani got caught in the bathroom during a strong bit of turbulence. Luckily it was short lived.
Around 745pm, Andy’s sister picked us up from the Boise airport. After a marathon 24 hour travel day we were finally home.
Returning home is usually bittersweet but we were all ready to rest and just be home, especially Miles, who was already grabbing all of his favorite toys and wanting to play with all of them.
Tonight we get to sleep in our own beds without any concern of bugs!




























