Postby rosemary johnson » Fri 24 Feb 2006 9:50 pm
I was in NZ last spring (ours; their autumn).
The rap water is fine to drink, wash hands, etc.
tap water, even; oh, my typing!
It's a lovely country.
The pharmacies we tried were very helpful though didn't try getting any lens stuff.
If you take amidose on a plane, be aware of how you are going to get into it. If you pack scissors or similar in your hand luggage, they'll be confiscated at security. I've been advised to ask the cabin crew "can you o pen this for me, please?" - they will have scissors/a knife, though of course you don't know how clean it is.
DO book in with your airline for special assistance at the airports you travel through, and make yourself known to the cabin crew. I went iwth my mum and we got taken on board first, helped off the plane, helped round the airports, etc. SOme are better than others, but the guy who met us and escorted us as Auckland when we landed was just great - didn't mind at all being asked to escort us first to a ladies' and wait for(probably) ages while I put a scleral back in - noror to having to escort us to the biosecurity vetting areas, because i was hoping to go horse-trekking and had turned up in my jodhpurs and riding boots!! (NZ have very strict rules about not letting in anything that might have animal dieseases, woodworm, etc as hitch hikers).
I've never tried putting a lens back in on a plane - the bit I wouldn't like would be wasing the lens first - or rather, washing the cleaner off once I'd cleaned the lens. So I adopted the strategy of getting assisted off the plane at the end and to the nearest ladies where there's water to wash hands, space to spread etc.
Or getting escorted onto the tube at Heathrow when we got back, on the grounds I could get home from there OK - I only had one change, and it was the station where I used to change trains going toa nd from work for years.
The staff at LHR airport were fine, and the guys at Heathrow tube station wonderful - and very solicitous, offering to ring ahead to by change station and home station to get me met there!
Do be aware that plane cabins are very dry. Do keep drinking plenty of water/juice - the cabin crew won't mind if you flag them down at all hours to ask for another glass of water or a dampt towel.
Think jet lag when making your plans! - I found I don't get jet lag in terms of upset body clock - maybe I'm lucky, or maybe it's a sign of having no sense of the passage of time at home!! But I have found after long flights that I put my lenses back in when I arrived in the morning at my destination, and they were fine - and the **following** day my eyes let me know all about how much they didn't like long flights! SO do give yours time to recover from the shock.
Have a wonderful time in NZ!
When I was in Africa, we had filter jugs. People used to fill the top half from the tap, then put them in the fridge. The water filtered through the middle section and turned from lager colour (occasionally) to colourless and had the gubbins filtered out. And had a cold glass of wter ready for when they got home in hot weather. I used to drink the tap water as-was unlss it was really brown and nver had any ill-effects, but often used to pour out a bowl-ful from the jug in which to wash the cleaner off my lenses (then dried them with a tissue, then wetted as normal). I had lots of problems with hay fever, smoke and fumes from mosquito coils or mats, very bright sun, even with two pairs of sunglasses, heat, and having had a hydrops only three months previously, but nothing attributable to the water.
Note: comments here seem to be assuming the hazard posed by dodgy water abroad is of microorganisms. Where I've seen water I've not wanted near my lenses, my concern has been more that it mat have sand in it that would cause abrasion (I think I had this problem at least once).
Rosemary