Sunday, 27 January 2008

vegie garden

Hi readers! Happy Australia Day to all. We're having a holiday on Monday too, it's coincidentally Auckland anniversary day. It's been fairly warm here lately, though I say that in local terms - 25-27 is about as hot as it gets. Nothing like Melbourne lately.

We finally have a decent microphone for the laptop, so we can talk clearly on Skype if you want to have a chat/video call. Search for "drjoking".

The sale process for the house here has begun, so we have had to tidy it up on the weekends and vacate for 45 minutes while people wander through. There seems to be a bit of interest so hopefully we won't have to do this for too many more weekends.

We spruced up the herb pots late last year (about November or so), planted some basil and tomato seeds. And after that I remembered to actually water it every day. So things went nuts growing quickly.


After the pots became overgrown, I replanted half of their contents to the empty patch in the garden of the house, and they took off again. Like I said, most of these were only seeds about two months ago:

And we have some little green tomatoes growing rapidly too! The biggest of these is maybe 4cm diameter now.
Hopefully they will be fully grown (and not eaten by bugs or birds) before we leave!

Monday, 7 January 2008

Movies

Something I was going to write in the last post, but forgot. (That doesn't sound anything like me does it?)

"I miss you more than Michael Bay missed the point
when he made 'Pearl Harbor'."

So was sung in a lament in 'Team America: World Police'. Sadly I now know what that means.
This 4-hour turd was squeezed out over two consecutive nights on TV here recently. The upside of this is that I completely missed the first night's screening, which meant when the bombing started in the first minutes of the second night's screening, I knew I had missed out on two hours of... well, probably nothing important. Apparently there was something about a love triangle in there that has nothing to do with the Japs, planes, ships and bombs which (call me simple) would appear to be the most important ingredients to this story.

"I need you like Ben Affleck needs acting school
he was terrible in that film."

Again, an accurate summary. The 'acting' consisted largely of Affleck grimacing and shouting. With Bay directing, I think actors are probably superfluous anyway (they get in the way of all the explosions - ref: Bad Boys, Armageddon, Transformers...).

The summary concluded that a high risk invasion revenge bombing raid on Tokyo was the "turning point" in the war, and the start of the ascendency of the US over Japan. Hmm.

Last night's movie made up for it - Pink Floyd The Wall. Though I still have no idea what it's about (should probably have paid a bit more attention).
I think I need to see this again in a theatre with a good sound system. Hmm, wonder when it's on at The Astor?

Saturday, 5 January 2008

Bay of Islands

The holidays are nearly over! Almost time to go back for work... Jo and I spent about 10 days up north staying in the town of Paihia. Accommodation was a supposedly luxury hideaway self-contained apartment, but its proximity to the adventure park (next door) and the main road to the nearest large town, right where the 100 zone started, belied the serenity...

The weather was up and down - certainly never as hot as Melbourne has been thankfully, but a few wet days thrown in as well. We usually spent those days relaxing inside and reading.

On the drive up (about 3 hours) we stopped at the Winiana household, to say hi to the cousins (whilst avoiding the sick ones), and drop off some Christmas gifts.

Christmas day was one of the quietest on memory, for the first time I can remember we didn't have any family around. Which left more champagne for just the two of us.
On Boxing Day we went over to Waitangi, to the grounds where the treaty between Maori and pakeha was signed. Not a very exciting place, but nice enough.
We took some short trips on subsequent days, to Kerikeri for some shopping, and to Russell to check out the scenery. Russell is visible across the bay from Paihia (accessed by car ferry), but a world away in terms of vibe. While both are predominantly waterfront holiday towns, Paihia is filled with cheap motels, boat-trip package tours and backpackers, and Russell manages to maintain some sense of small-town style, particularly along the waterfront.

The 30th was of course our first wedding anniversary. We didn't do much for the day itself, but for dinner we took the car ferry across to a winery (Omata). Spectacular views and excellent food (and wine of course).


New Years Eve, and Jo's 31st birthday. We got up early (relatively speaking!) and rented a little motor boat to go explore the islands themselves. After a while of being screwed around by a dive shop (we'd arranged to rent some snorkelling gear, but they were late to open, then didn't have the gear there anyway), we finally launched and made our way out to the nearest island (Roberton). The views are impressive from the peak, and there's a shallow lagoon to swim in, where I managed to teach Jo to breathe through a snorkel long enough to see some fish. But the water was pretty cold, so we didn't last long.

We'd arrived at low tide, which meant that by the time we left, the boat was only accessible by swimming out to it. We should have left it stuck on the beach where it ended when we'd first arrived... gotta work on those boat piloting skills.

After an adventurous day we didn't even make it to midnight.

The trip back to Auckland was very slow - with a couple of sections of gridlock on the country's main highway, over 100km from Auckland. We first stopped at the Kawiti caves to see some glow worms hiding in the darkness, then at the Andersons (Jenny and Stuart) to catch up with more cousins.

Life otherwise has been fairly busy: lots of preparations for returning to Melbourne, trying to sell things (anyone want a car?), arranging shipping, kicking our tenants out, applying for jobs, and so on. It will be good to get home and back to a steady routine!

Love to all!