Dave brings up some good points. ( Actually he always does) Operating a motorcycle with extreme jet lag or lack of sleep is certainly asking for trouble.
Some things factor into how much time you want to take for traveling along with days on the motorcycle such is how much money and how much time you have. For us we had very limited time (and not a lot of money either) so our only choice was to get the flying over with and get to Christchurch. One thing for sure, you don't want to land and head for your bike rental the first day while trying to get used to the time change and recovering from a long flight. Be sure and schedule a non riding first day for sure.
The majority of flights leaving from the west coast depart late at night after 11pm and then fly all night to arrive NZ in the morning around 9 am. When we departed Dallas to LAX our bodies were already two hours later on central time so by the time we got on our 11:30 flight departing LAX, it was really like 1:30 am for us. An hour or so into the flight they're serving dinner so it's like eating dinner 3 o'clock in the morning. Luckily we had special seats that reclined so we managed to sleep pretty well for a plane.
Point is if you can get some sleep on the plane you can feel halfway decent when you land and kind of be in sync for the first day there. The connecting flight from Auckland to Christchurch is about an hour flight so my thought was better to continue on from the same airport and be done with flying.
The trick is to stay up as late as possible the first day arriving there, which will end up being around 9pm if you do it right. If you go to sleep around 6pm, which you'll feel like doing, with 8 hours of good sleep you'll wake up feeling refreshed at 2am. The first few days with a great night’s sleep you can be up around dawn with plenty of time for breakfast and packing. By the time it was ready to ride our second day we felt very refreshed with a great night’s sleep. Down side is you want to be off the road early since your body starts to get tired early. Luckily the long daylight was a big help as well.
Other connecting cities in addition to Auckland which are great stops would be Sydney or Fiji. Just depends on where you need to be and where you'd like to stop.
Dave is right; it feels like a throwback to 40-50 years ago there. Much more relaxed pace and nobody seems to be stressed or uptight there.
Some things factor into how much time you want to take for traveling along with days on the motorcycle such is how much money and how much time you have. For us we had very limited time (and not a lot of money either) so our only choice was to get the flying over with and get to Christchurch. One thing for sure, you don't want to land and head for your bike rental the first day while trying to get used to the time change and recovering from a long flight. Be sure and schedule a non riding first day for sure.
The majority of flights leaving from the west coast depart late at night after 11pm and then fly all night to arrive NZ in the morning around 9 am. When we departed Dallas to LAX our bodies were already two hours later on central time so by the time we got on our 11:30 flight departing LAX, it was really like 1:30 am for us. An hour or so into the flight they're serving dinner so it's like eating dinner 3 o'clock in the morning. Luckily we had special seats that reclined so we managed to sleep pretty well for a plane.
Point is if you can get some sleep on the plane you can feel halfway decent when you land and kind of be in sync for the first day there. The connecting flight from Auckland to Christchurch is about an hour flight so my thought was better to continue on from the same airport and be done with flying.
The trick is to stay up as late as possible the first day arriving there, which will end up being around 9pm if you do it right. If you go to sleep around 6pm, which you'll feel like doing, with 8 hours of good sleep you'll wake up feeling refreshed at 2am. The first few days with a great night’s sleep you can be up around dawn with plenty of time for breakfast and packing. By the time it was ready to ride our second day we felt very refreshed with a great night’s sleep. Down side is you want to be off the road early since your body starts to get tired early. Luckily the long daylight was a big help as well.
Other connecting cities in addition to Auckland which are great stops would be Sydney or Fiji. Just depends on where you need to be and where you'd like to stop.
Dave is right; it feels like a throwback to 40-50 years ago there. Much more relaxed pace and nobody seems to be stressed or uptight there.
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