Home again

1 September 2019

I’m sitting here in the New Plymouth’s not-so international airport. It’s basically one building, that’s almost one room, but it does the job. The bad part is that it means that we’re about to leave New Plymouth. In about 2.5 hours. We got here early enough so that we didn’t have to panic and could have lunch in the café here. I wonder if Jim Hickey still owns it.

I got woken up at 3am with D.C. trying to find the light switch to the bathroom. I asked her if she was okay, but I don’t think she heard me. Next thing I heard was a bang. So I put my slippers on and went to see if she was okay. She was sitting on the floor of the shower. Being half asleep, coupled with not being able to find the lights, coupled with the slope oof the floor meant that she lost her balance. She was fine, but had bumped her head on the fold down seat, which had folded down when she fell. Once she was back on her feet, I left her to it.

And then had to use the facilities myself. And couldn’t really get back to sleep.

I woke up again at 6.30 and stayed in bed until 6.50 when I got up and had a shower, leaving D.C sitting up in bed, dozing. She was reading when I’d finished the shower. She then went and had a shower of her own, and I packed away my PJs. I then looked out the window, looking south.

There wasn’t a cloud in the sky. So I grabbed my camera, Kally, hat and gloves (it was warm enough to not worry about a jacket, but I thought it could be chilly on top of the hill), told D.C. that I was heading back up Marsland Hill, and took off.

It was warmer than yesterday, which I think must have been the coldest day we’d had so far, and I hardly saw anyone. Of course, I had to get photos of the White Hart Hotel…

Then I got to where you turn off Robe Street and take the path up Marsland Hill. Somewhere around here, if the clouds were willing, it was possible to get to see the first glimpse of Mt Taranaki. But I couldn’t see it for that roof in the way…

It wasn’t a roof.

It was something else conical shaped.

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So I pounded up the hill and emerged at the top of the path.

Not a cloud.

I’d told myself that I’d only take one photograph and then return to the motel…

Yeah. Right.

I was also only going to stay at the top of the hill, and not go behind the observatory again, but, obviously, I didn’t stick to that resolution either. But I didn’t take Kally out of her bear bag, so she had to enjoy the view from my belt.

I was going to walk back down, but decided to read about the Carillion. I then stopped the name Bernard Aris. Now Bernard Aris (we haven’t worked out how to pronounce his last name) was a painter and Uncle Fred has a painting of his. He also designed a book plate for Uncle Fred. I discovered, as I read, that he’d also been the patron of the New Plymouth Observatory, and that there was a seat dedicated to him.

I had to find that seat. It was the one that Kally had toppled over on yesterday. I haven’t downloaded today’s photos of the seat yet as the computer decided not to let me do it – possibly because it’s run out of hard drive space. I’m going to have to have a major clean out when I get home. Starting with all the photos of this trip.

I walked back down the hill, with a detour to get a photo of the grave of the bloke who’d been friends with Keats. The return journey (also with more photos of the White Hart) took me:

943 steps, 0.61km, 8 minutes, I burned 36 kcal, 12’45” average pace, and my heartrate was 199bpm.

I made it back just as D.C. had started her breakfast. She’s got a big red mark down her back, which she wasn’t aware of until I photographed it, that looks like it’s the result of last night’s mishap. She also managed to split her thumbnail about 5mm vertically.

We had breakfast (including some left over Turkish garlic bread and baklava) and finished packing up and checking everywhere.

With nothing else to do, and the shuttle (Scott’s Shuttle!) coming to pick us up just after 10, we checked in our key and the review of the motel. (Lower the cupboards and the microwave bay so that shorties can reach them and you’re not cooking your head; and have an extra towel rail in the bathroom, so that one towel isn’t hanging over the top of the other person’s.)

We then decided to go an sit in the sun. It was a chance to dry the toes of my shoes. They got wet walking through the grass on Marsland Hill. I had dried them with the hairdryer, but not totally. We had a chat with a gentleman who’d come out to enjoy a mandarin and then the shuttle arrived with Ian at the wheel again.

There was already a lady on board, sitting behind the driver’s seat, so I sat behind D.C. (who scored the front seat) for what was an easy trip to the airport. We’re still trying to work out why the sign at the end of the road, on the state highway, points to New Plymouth in one direction and Hamilton in the other.

We checked our suitcases in and got our boarding passes, and then read and wrote until 11.40. Then we had lunch – D.C. a beef and mushroom pie, me a roast vegetable and feta frittata. And, of course, we both had hot chocolates. We’ll have to stop this. The Chaos Café had an old set of scales in their ladies’ restroom so I got onto them. Fortunately, I didn’t need to use the penny hanging on my camera strap as a tripod unscrewer. Unfortunately, it told me that I was 8st 7lb. I had to put that into the converter on my tablet to work out what that was in metric. D.C. was 10 & a half stone. Of course, this was with our clothes on… and before having an Aztec hot chocolate and a Santé bar.

It’s really clouded over now, so I think I was lucky to see Mt Taranaki this morning. There were no clouds around it, just around the older extinct volcanoes.

One thing that I learnt at Puke Ariki, (that I had already seen on YouTube), is that Mt Taranaki is the latest in a range of volcanic eruptions (the Sugarloaf islands and Paritutu Rock are the remains of very early volcanic cones). The vent would erupt, form a mountain, and then collapse before, millennia later, the next eruption would occur. What I want to know is: how long did the collapses take – instantaneous, or over centuries? Also, why is everyone worried about Mt Taranaki erupting again (it’s overdue) and not collapsing? I must email Geonet and ask.

I’m sitting here in the window of the café in the New Plymouth airport at 12.25pm, and I think I’ve written everything I planned to. See you this evening…

2.50pm

… Right, so we’re now at Auckland Airport. It was a good flight, left about ten minutes late, but that’s nothing. The take off was point the nose at the sky and let rip, but the landing was smooth.

We spent part of the time in New Plymouth Airport talking to the lady we’d shared the shuttle with. She’s off to Oz to spend a month with her friend.

Opposite us in the airport and the aeroplane was a mother with her baby. We now know how they restrain babies. They have their own safety harness, with the same buckle arrangement as everyone else, but which has an attached loop that goes through mum’s safety harness. It was a very well behaved baby, as mum had sense to breast feed it throughout the flight – keeping it occupied and sucking to prevent pressure build up. It was probably a little unnerving for the man, a stranger, next to her, but better than a bawling baby in your ear.

We were the last ones off the aeroplane, which mean I was able to snap some quick photos of the craft – once I was off the tarmac.

Our bags were almost the first onto the conveyor belt, so I left D.C. minding our luggage and went and grabbed them both. Then we found another place to sit, somewhere a little less hectic, and sat and read (and wrote) for half an hour…

4.32pm

… In Denny’s in Auckland, waiting for something to eat before we head over the road to catch the bus at 6.00pm. This isn’t as flash as some of the places we’ve been eating, but it’s edible… Except that we just find something that we like, and they discontinue it.

10.04pm

… It was a good trip home. I listened to RNZ’s Kakapo Diaries podcasts about this year’s bumper breeding season of New Zealand’s “Owl Parrot”. I’m learning a lot of interesting stuff about Kakapo sex. As there were only 147 adults at the beginning of the season, clearly they weren’t getting enough. Now there are over 200 adults and I hope that number continues to grow.

We walked home from the bus stop at the i-SITE, and entered the house. The first thing I had to do was turn off the security alarm.

Do you think I could do this? I entered the code over and over again. I used the alarm key to turn it off over and over again. And it would not turn off. So we ended up that I kept the alarm key with me and wandered through the house, waving at all the sensors, until the alarm finally went off and I turned it off.

Highly effective, isn’t it?

It was while we were doing this wander that we realised that the door from the room that’s the entrance to the house through to the next was wide open. I had made a point of shutting it before we left last Saturday. Also my bedroom door was wide open – more open than I would open it if I were in there. And, last week, I’d also made a point of wandering through the house to ensure that every door was tightly closed.

We’ve often thought that we had a ghost, but “Humphry” tends to take red objects, not leave doors open.

Our house is old and wooden, so we always, not only close all doors as fire/smoke breaks, but unplug all electrical appliances and ensure that everything is turned off – including the powered fibre telephone/Internet connection.

Concerned about the doors, I plugged the phone back in and rang our neighbours. The security company had just been ringing them because they couldn’t get us. (Because the phone was unplugged.) They’d also been called by the security company last Sunday evening at 11pm. Right before the VOLUNTEER fire brigade was called out. Our neighbours, being rightly unwilling to wander through our house when there could be a fire or something else, let the fire brigade use our keys to check that all was well. (Unfortunately, they left the two doors open.)

So I’ve spent the evening writing an angry email to Chubb demanding that they attempt to fix this system AGAIN (they’ve been back several times); and that if they can’t, they do something that won’t cost us money. I should have been free to upload photographs instead.

And no, it wasn’t insect activity that had set off the smoke alarm. I’d dusted the entire area around the problematic sensor an hour before we left on the Saturday. Then I sprayed the duster with fly spray and dusted again. Then I carried a daddy-longlegs spider outside. There was no way that insect/spider activity should set the alarm off 36 hours after that.

Anyway, as a last point of interested. Today I travelled hundreds of kilometres… and only walked 7344 steps – most of those up a hill to see a mountain.

See you next time. Whenever that is.

When I upload the rest of the photos, I guess.

FAB

🙂

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This morning…

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Guess what…

It exists!

31 August 2019

Last day of our holiday. Who knows when we’ll get another?

We didn’t really have anything planned today.

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We walked down to Puke Ariki and I felt something fall onto my shoulder. Looking down I could see a bit of plaster that had fallen off a building that was being done up. (But not the area where the plaster had come from.

I was lucky it wasn’t bigger, heavier, or hit me on the head.

As it’s the weekend, we thought that we’d get the chance to check out Richmond House. It was due to open at 11pm and we were there about 10.30, so we went into Puke Ariki – and had our photos taken and a chat with “the Queen”, who was still wandering around. (Today was the children’s party to celebrate the 100 years.)

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D.C., “Lizzy”, Charles the corgi, Sereena, Kally. The photographer was a professional who used my camera. I joked that it would be the best photo ever taken on it and he admitted that he’d put it onto Automatic to be safe.

We went out to Richmond House and it still wasn’t open. So we went back into Puke Ariki (it’s in the grounds. It was originally called Beach House, but when someone bought the land and wanted to knock it down, the locals made a hue and cry and it was shifted to the land next to the museum. It’s only open weekends and public holidays – except for this one because of the 100-years.

So we thought we’d check out the virtual reality in Puke Ariki. It wasn’t going because of the mass of people who were there today.

So we went to the i-SITE and asked what there was to do within walking distance. They suggested hiring a couple of electric bicycles. To my surprise, D.C. was quite keen on the idea, so we walked up to the shop and hired a couple of bikes ($30 each). The problem came when D.C. tried to get on.

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The lady tried to make the seat as low as possible, and I could just mount mine, but D.C. just wasn’t comfortable not having a good grip on the road with her feet. She was also concerned that all our walking had hurt her knee and she didn’t want to put extra strain on it. So we got my $60 back. I don’t think the lady was that impressed.

We decided to head back to Chaos Café just for an Aztec hot chocolate each (and a Whittaker’s Santé bar), but ended up sharing a muffin as well. This lady was pleased to see us… Again.

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Back to the i-SITE for further suggestions, and they suggested the coastal walkway. So we did a gentle stroll in the opposite direction to last time. (With a few minor spits.) We got as far as the Aquatic Centre and had a cheese, pineapple, and onion toasted sandwich each. Which looked very nice on the wooden platter with the little bowl of chutney. The food at the Rock Pool Café was tasty and cheap.

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Back along the walkway to Puke Ariki, in the hope that we’d score some of the birthday cake. I think the multitude of kids had eaten it.

We then went back to the room and relaxed for the next few hours. I should have been sorting out my blog, but I couldn’t be bothered, so I read a few chapters of my latest story I’m uploading to Fanfiction.net and did some proofing.

I’d just decided that I needed to get with my blog, when I remembered that the i-SITE had a web cam shot of Mt Taranaki. What was it like now? So I checked all the ones I could find and it was relatively clear.

I made a decision

Leaving D.C. relaxing on the bed reading about David Suchet and Hercule Poirot, I took off for Marsland Hill.

Typical. Although I could see the nearby Kaitake and Pouakai (I think. They’re older volcanoes.), I couldn’t see Mt Taranaki’s peak. So I had a wander around (as I was doing so my tracker told me I’d done 10,000 steps), and had a chat to an Australian man, who’s currently working in Hamilton and was in Thames last week, who was also hoping to get a photo of the mountain. As it wasn’t coming to the party yet, but could do, he was going to drive out to Te Rewa Rewa bridge and (hopefully) score some pictures there.

He was just leaving when I saw a spot of intense white in the cloud above the mountain. Then as I watched…

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I wondered if I’d get a better view behind the observatory…

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There was an opening in the fence behind the observatory, and it had clearly been used many times as a walkway, and no one appeared to have made any attempts to close it, so I went back there and got a better view.

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It was after I took this photo, that Kally fell backwards onto the other side of the fence.

While I was there I could hear some tinkly music behind me. (Which reminds me of Grandpa, who liked “the tinkley music” of the St Trinan’s series of films.) I couldn’t work out what it was… I didn’t think it was my cell phone. And then I clicked. The carillion was on the hill behind me, and it was playing a tune. The only time I’d heard it.

Kally fell over after I took this photo too. But didn’t fall off.

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I would have liked to have stayed longer, but though it was close to an hour and D.C. could have been getting worried – especially when sirens started screeching along the street.

But it did mean that I missed out on the “golden hour” colouring the peak. But I did get it colouring the Govett-Brewster and White Hart Hotel.

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I checked when I got back and I had done 3191 steps, 2.04km, been gone for 69 minutes, used 115 kcal, 34’05”, and my heartrate was100bpm, which probably wasn’t a surprise when I charged up the hill. It didn’t make for steady cameraship.

But, as I’d found a spot at the bottom of the hill where you could see the summit, I convinced D.C. to come back with me. I made it to the top again, a long time before she did, but she still got to see most of Mount Taranaki. Even if it was getting dark.

It was a good evening, we saw Mt Taranaki, we could hear Tui, and we could smell jonquils, irises, freesias, and daffodils. It was almost a complete sensory experience. The taste came later.

We weren’t sure what to have for tea. I would have been happy to have gone to Café Turquoise again, but D.C. wanted something not exotic. So we found the Marinovich’s Seafood Restaurant. Nothing really appealed to me, but I had the crumbed chicken with aioli and sweet chilli sauce entrée and two side dishes – seasonal roasted vegetables and baked potato with garlic butter. It was very delicious. (The cook even came out to check if I wanted garlic or rosemary and garlic. I said so long as it had garlic…) D.C. had the entrée crumbed scallops and roasted vegetables. She enjoyed that too. The desserts looked very tasty (we were eyeing up the table next to us), but decided against it.

So we came back and I packed my bag.

I did a total of 15,342 steps today. A record!

 

 

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A Topp Day

30 August 2019

Isn’t funny how when you do two totally dissimilar things in one day, it feels like the first thing was done days earlier? Like this morning we were picked up at 9.00am by Ian of Taranaki Tours’ Toyota mini bus. This was nearly as good as FAB1 as Ian could control, not only the windows from the driver’s seat, but also the doors. What was also good was that we were the only ones on the tour. He had had someone else booked in, but they got a cold overnight and had called their booking off. This meant that D.C. had the front seat and I had the central seat behind so we were both able to see straight ahead.

The weather was threatening rain today, but that largely held off – except when approaching Mount Taranaki, but that was later on in the piece. The tour usually included the Wind Wand, the Brooklands Bowl and the Gables, and Marsland Hill, but as we’d been there yesterday with Jenny (Ian had seen us) he skipped those locations.

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Someone has a sense of humour

Instead we went to the port, and saw the swimming pool complex (most vehemently opposed by the older members of the community, most frequently used by the older members of the community) and the port with the chimney and the breakwaters. Then it was to other points of interest, like the views over the city, driving through the various housing styles and prices, and out to Te Rewa Rewa Bridge, which we hadn’t seen before. Its style is based on a breaking wave.

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And, if you’re lucky, a view of Mt Taranaki. We weren’t lucky.

We did get out here for a short walk and a chance to get some photos. Most of the rest of the tour was spent in the bus.

From there we were heading out to the DoC North Egmont Visitor Centre, when Ian asked if we wanted to see Uncle Fred’s house at Sentry Hill. So we went the “long way” to Mt Taranaki stopping off at the truck stop. I recognise the exterior, but the interior has majorly been renovated.

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Still, they had a cat, which Uncle Fred would have approved of.

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He would approve

The mountain still wasn’t playing ball when we got to the visitor centre. But we did get to see this…

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Snow!

The temperature dropped about seven degrees between where we left sea level and the 950m (if I remember correctly – my ears and the pressure they were under could probably tell you) North Egmont Visitor Centre. It also started to rain. Not heavily – the Toyota didn’t have automatic windscreen wipers, but enough to shove Kally into my pocket.

Following that all too short visit, (and having passed the Volca No View Restaurant) we stopped off at Lake Mangamahoe, where we could have also got a spectacular view of Mt Taranaki – if it played ball. Which it didn’t.

But we did see a mallard(?) drake with a fluffy pom-pom topknot. So I asked if I could get photos – of the duck, not the lake – which was man made and has a dam at the end.

From there it was back into town, and Ian asked where we wanted to be dropped off. As by this point it was well past midday (when the tour was due to end), I asked if he could recommend a good café.

He dropped us outside the Chaos Café.

Oh, well. It must be good food if both locals recommend it. So, after thanks and a hug goodbye,  D.C. had a salmon cake and I had a chicken, brie, and cranberry filo. I ordered us hot chocolates, but should have asked for the Aztec Hot Chocolate with the chilli and cinnamon. But we still got the Whittaker’s sante bar to stir it with and suck on.

Lunch finished, what were we going to do?

It was slightly rainy, so we headed back to the Bella Vista and offloaded the gear we didn’t need. Then was popped over the road and past the Monica’s Eatery to the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery. D.C. got in for $10, whereas I had to pay $15.

The first exhibit was a large; very, very large; plastic bag, which D.C. automatically touched (it was pretty much hanging in the doorway) and caused a staff member to come running over telling her not to and that if she wanted to touch something, here was a sample of the plastic.

Still don’t know what the plastic bag was supposed to represent.

Like a lot of the exhibits. “What on Earth and why…?”

We did learn that the exterior of the Len Lye Centre is made of concrete cast in Wellington, covered in steel from somewhere overseas – and, if you know the secret, it is possible to look into and out of the gallery through clear panels.

One exhibition space (where Ann Shelton had displayed her Library to Scale artwork and which must have shrunk since 2007 with the number of layers of paint that would be on the walls) had Len Lye and Elizabeth Thomson. Her stuff I could get (once it was explained to me and I got to touch samples of the cast bronze). His…

We were excitedly told that the “Universe” was going to be set in action. So we went down to the exhibition hall where the Universe was in action. Imagine a large hoop of steel. Imagine that hoop being rocked side to side by electromagnets. Imagine something (that reminded me of an apple, but probably wasn’t) dangling above this hoop and occasionally hitting it with a clang. Imagine that it means something.

Yeah. I can’t either. As an example of Newton’s laws of physics, I got it. As a work of art…

Nope.

The shaving brush made out of fine steel rods at least had some aesthetic value.

Elizabeth Thomson’s artwork appeared to be based around nature. One was a serpentine line of individually cast bronze lancewood leaves – each one precisely larger or smaller than the one next to it. Then there was the individually cast school of fish – different species working together as one. One piece I saw as the pores of skin with hairs sticking out – it was actually the hairs on an ant’s head. And there were giant moss spores made out of glass. Once explained, these pieces made sense, and had an aesthetic quality.

Everything else in the place?

We went back to the motel and uploaded my photos of the morning.

Just after 5.00pm I ironed my slacks that have been rolled up in my bag since I packed it and got dressed in the clothes I’d brought with me for tonight. About 6.00pm we went back to Puke Ariki.

We went in and sat down. It was due to start at 7.00pm, and D.C. wanted to ensure that she got a seat. There were only a couple of soft ones for day to day use. We sat to another lady who explained to us that she was undergoing chemo for cancer, and couldn’t stand outside for ¾ hour. One of the staff members went away and checked, and then came back and said we all could stay. So we stayed, hanging onto her coat tails. We had quite an interesting conversation.

Everyone was treated to a free glass of champagne, but I had to buy our orange juice. We didn’t get a ticket for a $500 jewellery voucher either. It didn’t matter. We would only have tomorrow to spend it anyway.

We hadn’t had any dinner so I went outside and got six pork dumplings. D.C. only ate two, so I scoffed the rest.

The event was started by the CEO of Puke Ariki, welcoming and acknowledging everyone. She then said that it was traditional for people to receive a telegram from the Queen on their 100th birthday, but we were better than that. The Queen was here to act as compare.

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Down the stairs came a lady in a very regal coat, gloves, tiara, carrying a (soft toy) corgi, and wearing sandshoes. She was entertaining to listen to, attempting to do the posh accent but slipping in the odd word like “loo”.

Then we had the first lot of entertainment. A group that sang songs from the 20s. Mostly jazz style, which I didn’t enjoy, but they did move on to a later period, including “Bring Me Sunshine.”

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There was a break in performers, during which time a young lady gave a hoola hoop display.

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Following her was the act everyone had come to see. Some had already met Ken and Ken as they’d wandered around, but now Lizzy introduced two woman who were untouchable. “They are about to come out…” (I said to the lady next to me: “They already have, haven’t they?”

The Topp Twins came out to the strains of Poi E. It’s probably just as well that I can’t upload video to the blog as you had to put up with me beating time to it as I filmed.

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Slinkies and a black light form the backdrop

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Camp Mother twirls her imaginary poi as Camp Leader plays the guitar. (The poi had been left at home.)

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As always expected, the Topp Twins were funny and musical. For those who don’t know them, I once heard New Zealand’s comedy scene as being yodelling, lesbian, harmonica and guitar playing twins. And they are funny. And talented. Check them out on YouTube.

These two did a dance to YMCA.

After the Topp Twins ahd done their set Puke Ariki did the draw for the jewellery vouchers, leaving two very happy ladies, and then they had more jazz style music. We had a look around the museum, said hi to Laura, who was the only person we recognised, and then left. As had a lot of other people after the Topp Twins had performed.

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We came back home and had a cup of tea.

We only did about 2500 steps today.

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More photos

As I probably won’t have time to write up my blog today, here are today’s photos of our bus tour, the Te Rewarewa bridge, what was originally 55 Gill St and is now a truck stop at Sentry Hill, a cat that Uncle Fred would have approved of, a duck with a pom-pom topknot, and some snow!

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Lifting its skirts…

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You’ll never guess what this is!

29 August 2019

One problem with writing up a daily blog. The time it takes to do it. I don’t even know if I’ll get the chance tomorrow. The 100th anniversary of Taranaki Museum/Puke Ariki finishes at 11.00pm. And I’m guessing that the Topp Twins will be the final act.

But still I’m able to get into a nice warm bed. But to plug it in I have to pull the bed out from the wall, get the cable around the side of the bed, plug it in at the head of the bed, switch it on, and make sure it’s at the right setting. And then I have to reverse all that when I want to get into bed.

No sleep interruptions by neighbouring units last night.

But what did we do today?

10.00am we were booked in for a guided walk with Mike Nightingale. Jenny… something showed up. No complaints as in the main she was very good.

About 9.30 it pelted down, so I made a point of wearing my waterproof shoes. They are walking shoes (I wear them to work when it’s raining), but they’re not as comfortable as my Allbirds.

We were the only two on the walk, which always makes for a personalised experience. As was that she had family stories to slip in. Like that the first cow in Taranaki walked all the way here from Wellington. Its name was Jenny. Or that her great-great x? grandfather was in the family home, clinging to his mother’s skirts when one Maori chased another into the house and cleaved his head in to. It was retribution for something, I can’t remember what, but it would have been traumatic for the family.

Some of the things she got slightly wrong – like saying 19## instead of 18##, and she told us that the building on one corner was Art Deco with the flourishes, from 1890 to 1920. The opposite corner was Art Deco with the more stylised features – that was 1920 to 1940. And another corner was a 1960s box. See what’s wrong with this? She meant Art Nouveau from 1890 to 1910. (Wikipedia’s a wonderful thing when you’re looking up things to do with your flapper costume. It’s remembering that information that’s the tricky bit.)

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Art Nouveau on the other side of the street. Art Deco on this side. And the yellow care is parked where the men’s underground toilets used to be.

But aside from these odd slipups, she was very good to listen to – even though we’ve forgotten most of it.

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When the walk was over, we asked Jenny where she would recommend for lunch. She (literally) pointed out the Chaos Café, so we went there. It was noisy, but the staff were fast, friendly, and cheerful. I ordered a Monsieur Croque for D.C., cheese, pineapple and ham toasted sandwich (when did they become toasties?) for me, a big slice of carrot cake for us both, and two Aztec hot chocolates – which, when they turned up, had a large Whittaker’s sante bar across the mouth of the cup. If there’s one thing that’s better than a marshmallow with a hot chocolate – it’s a large piece of Whittaker’s chocolate. The hot chocolate seemed to be layered – coconut flavouring on top, then afterburner chilli, then cinnamon. Yum.

But why do modern establishments have to have the music so loud that you can’t hear each other – and the staff – talk? That was the one thing wrong with it.

After that we went back to Puke Ariki, left our gear in the same locker, and checked out the settlers/life in Taranaki display that we’d managed to totally miss on Tuesday. Another very good display.

Following that we went across the skybridge to the archives library. I said that we were hoping to check out anything on our relative.

“What is their name?”

“Frederick Burdett Butler”

Laura gave us a guided tour. Starting with the archives room where thousands (no joke) of Uncle Fred’s scrapbooks are kept. Do I need to explain his scrapbooks? Probably. Unless I’ve already done it and I’m too tired to remember.

Oh, well. Here it goes.

Uncle Fred would buy three copies of every newspaper and cut out each article. (Two sides to each paper, remember, so the three copies was to ensure he kept everything.) He would go to sales and buy trunk loads of old books. (Literally.) He would take each book that had no value and cut out every second page. Then each book would be covered with wallpaper (we’ve got some of the sample books that he used at home) and labelled with identifying labels on the spine. Perhaps Egmont – 1st January 1954 to 8th April 1954. Or Weather – 4th February 1956 to 29th August 1956. Or a family name. Or one of the first boats into New Plymouth. Or clubs and organisations. Or… just about anything you could think of. The clippings relating to the heading of each book would then be glued into that book as a reference. This meant that if Uncle Fred, or anyone, wanted to find out… say… what the weather was like on Mt Egmont (Taranaki) on the 5th July 1942, when a certain person got lost climbing the mountain – they could look in the Egmont book for that date, or the weather one, or the one that had information about the “certain person.

As Ann Shelton said: This was his Internet.

Who’s Ann Shelton a nationally recognised photographer who was the artist who photographed all of Uncle Fred’s scrapbooks at Puke Ariki in 2006. This artwork became “A Library to Scale”. And it was to scale. She used a large format camera to take the photos and then had to send the film away to get developed and wait with baited-breath for it to return. http://www.annshelton.com/works/a-library-to-scale-part-1

It was also a virtual library. You’d walk in and think you were in a room with real books. “Oh that looks interesting…” and your hand meets 2D print.

Anyway, Puke Ariki has all of Uncle Fred’s books, aside from the few that we still own. At Puke Ariki they line the entire back wall of the archive and two lots of shelving.

What’s gratifying is that researchers still use them. Uncle Fred would be thrilled.

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We then had a look at a “public file” on Uncle Fred and then Laura showed us the display cabinet that houses some of his books and a brief precis about him.

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It’s good to see him finally get recognised. When he was alive he was regarded as a crazy man who always wore shorts (easier to dry legs than trousers), jandels, and – because he only had quarter sight in one eye (One was poked with an umbrella and the other he was jumped on by a bloke wielding a screwdriver) would, when crossing the road, stick his walking stick out in front of him and march across.

Following that we decided to hunt down the site of where his family home had been until he moved it to Sentry Hill. So here is 55 Gill Street!

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Because we’re taking a bus tour tomorrow, we went into a chemist and bought some ginger sweets to ward off motion sickness. (Which D.C. was, unusually, less worried about than I was.) I also bought some earplugs for tomorrow night.

We were told by a man, when we were admiring a duck and her duckling (eel food, he said. To which I responded – “Ah, yes. But which is the native?”) that there were a lot of native eels further up that creek outside a café. So this evening we checked them out. There were a lot.

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Having photographed them, and dodged a passing shower (the first since this morning’s “downpour”) we went to the coastal walkway to photograph the sunset. I left D.C. by the Len Lye Wind Wand and went a short way along the walkway to a lookout.

The sunset wasn’t as orange as Monday’s, and didn’t reflect off Paritutu nor the chimney, but it was still nice.

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Apparently, according to Jenny, the chimney was part of a power station, which had all been pulled down except the chimney – because it was full of asbestos and had become a local icon.

My fitness tracker beeped 10,000 as we walked back to the unit

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This evening we had dinner in the White Hart Hotel. If you can call it dinner and in the hotel. The “restaurant” – it was more of a drinks and nibbles establishment – was called SNUG and may well have been in the original snug. Or just the bar. We sat on cushioned bench seats around low coffee sized tables and tried to select our platter dishes.

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Fortunately, D.C. had brought a torch with her, so we were able to read it. We had “Melon Cooler”: watermelon, lemon and mint to drink. The platters we shared were two fresh steamed (Asian style) buns with sliced BBQ port, mustard greens, and peanuts. (Not sure if the peanuts were there, but it was nice.) Also crumbed kumara and ginger balls. Also very nice. The waitress came over to check we’d got our crumbed kumara and I told her that I should say no so we’d get some more.

Dessert wasn’t on the menu but was banana cooked in spring roll pastry with crystallised caramel and cream. Once again, very nice.

But if they’d asked if I wanted to give them a tip, I would have said “Yes. Turn the music down and the lights up.”

And then it was back to the until to download 143 photos and write this up.

I did 10,845 steps today.

Some of my photos haven’t uploaded, so here’s those that have.

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All photos. Few words.

28 August 2019

Once again, a neighbouring unit kept me awake for an hour or so. D.C. got up at 3.00am to pop next door and when she came back, I became aware of the drone of an extractor fan. There are three switches in the bathroom on the same switch plate: light/extractor fan, light, heater. I didn’t think the drone was loud enough to be coming from our bathroom, but it was loud enough to be irritating. So I got up and checked.

It wasn’t ours.

This meant that, once I’d used the facilities, I couldn’t get back to sleep again until whoever had left their fan going had switched it off.

Then again, we’ve got the heater going at the moment and it’s droning. Maybe our neighbours got cold in the middle of the night. I wouldn’t have thought so. According to TV3 Newshub news, we’ve been having the same weather as Thames.

Today started with a shower. This is a very nice shower, with a large, but soothingly gentle, spray from the shower rose. The rose is detachable, which means that it’s easy to wash the soles of your feet. It’s also a walk-in shower (which is great!), with a curtain surround, and a fold down seat. (Not sure I’d want to put my bare bottom on a wooden seat where someone else has put their bare bottom…)

Anyway, as this is a walk-in shower, there is no shower tray, per se. Instead the entire floor of the room – beneath the shower head, around the toilet, next to the handbasin, from to door – slopes down to a central drainage hole. And it is slightly disconcerting to be standing on one leg washing the sole of your foot, and feeling the world tilt away from you.

Still, it is a very nice shower – with Rosemary, Melissa, Thyme shampoo/conditioner and shower gel.

We were sort of stuck for something to do today. There’s not a lot of touristy stuff in New Plymouth’s CBD to do. We did consider catching a bus out to Sentry Hill to see what remains of Uncle Fred’s houses, but the idea of catching a 40 minute(?) bus ride out to a truck stop, ohing and ahing over the outside of some buildings, and then riding a bus back didn’t really appeal. If we were going to be given a bit of a tour, then yes. But we haven’t contacted them, so we can’t expect that.

So we decided to do one of the heritage walks – tomorrow. You have to book 24 hours in advance, which must work well for the guides as they would be able to plan their days. So we, leaving the rain jacket part of our ski jackets behind, went back to the i-SITE (information centre) in Puke Ariki and booked tickets for 10am, and bought a $10 book.

Did I ever tell you about the time when I was on the committee of our local i-SITE? I came back from lunch one workday and my boss said: “The optometrist rang for you.”

Me: “Optometrist? For me? But I’ve never seen one and I’ve got no plans to.”

Charles: “She said something about eyesight.”

I cracked up.

Anyway, the day wasn’t cold, the skies were clear, but starting to cloud over, and we had several hours to fill – so we decided to do the New Plymouth Coastal Walkway.

It was lovely. We started at the underpass by the Len Lye Wind Wand and then headed east-ish. (Apparently, the mythological Mt Taranaki is to the south, so I’m assuming we went east.) The walkway is wide enough to cater for couples walking and chatting, maybe with a myriad of dogs, or perhaps being overtaken by cyclists. Everyone was very friendly and accommodating. We did our best to stick to the left to give everyone else the chance to have plenty of room to overtake us.

We just took it slowly. There were seats dotted all the way along, so we’d walk a couple and then have a sit and admire the view, listen to the surf, and take photos. This meant that we covered 1.5 km in about two hours. That’s how far I walk to work and that takes me 14.5 minutes, so we were really sauntering.

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As it was, we walked the 2 km to the East End (so I guess we were walking east) Life Saving Club, used the public toilets there, then – as there was nowhere where you could purchase food – or anything, turned back for home.

I seem to remember doing the same thing last time.

We started walking about 10am and sat down for lunch at 1.45pm. We had just walked past Puke Ariki when my fitness tracker vibrated that I’d done my 10,000 steps for the day. Overall, I’ve done 13,401.

After being out in the fresh air, listening to the surf, watching the birds, dodging the (infrequent – and so light I didn’t really worry about my camera nor Kally getting wet), and sharing pleasantries with people and dogs, being inside a noisy, artificial, nature excluded shopping centre felt wrong.

But we wanted lunch.

After our pumpkin penne pasta (D.C.) and lemon chicken couscous (me) and carrot/apple/lemon/ginger drinks, we found Farmers and D.C. bought some handkerchiefs.

I discovered that the centre had a Merric. I once managed to score a couple of pair of nice slacks, in a style that I like, from the one at Sylvia Park, so I wondered if I would strike it lucky this time.

Two different styles for $28 each is nothing to be sniffed out.

After that we returned to the unit to relax and go through 128 photos. Was that all?

6.30 I went back to the Café Turquoise (They know me now and greet me with a big smile and a wave) and bought a falafel salad between us, some Turkish bread garlic and cheese bread, two apple teas, and (when I remembered after the initial transaction) some more baklava. Everything but the baklava was $31, but the gentleman who served me settled on $30, since I paid cash.

Once again it was delicious. If you’re ever in New Plymouth, and want a reasonably priced, tasty, healthy meal – Café Turquoise.

I set my fitness tracker when I went there. I was able to walk at my usual speed going there, but had to be a bit more circumspect, especially with the teas, on the return journey. In total it was 802 steps, 0.51km, took me 24 minutes (including sitting down and waiting), and I burned 30kcal. My heartrate was 89bpm and I can not work out what the 48’00” average pace means. 48 minutes per hour? That doesn’t make sense.

Anyway, I did my full 802 step round trip and then we had our dinner. After that I set up my computer so D.C. could see my photos slide show.

Kally pics

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D.C. pic. Yes , I did take more…

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Photos for next Halloween?

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Looking back at New Plymouth

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Now, that would be the way to drive around Thames! (Electric, of course)

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I don’t think this would be as effective.

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If only…

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We did see one vehicle on the tracks – a light truck that had both tyred-wheels and bogies.

Just interesting…

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Unexpected discoveries

27 August 2019

Oh… Luxury. Who needs the Ritz when you’ve got an electric blanket.

I got woken up during the night, either by the unit above us or next to us, who was obviously making an early (5.00am?) runner. They were thumping about (probably making no more noise than usual) and had a shower. The drone from the shower would have been fine, but I think the gully trap must be outside our unit as I could hear running water. This had the obvious effect, so I had to get up at 6.15 to take care of things.

So I didn’t get as much sleep as I would have liked.

Today we decided that, as the weather should be fine, we’d go to Pukekura Park. Always a must see.

Of course, one of the problems with being a shutterbug, is that you’re likely to take 354 photos and one video, and then need to spend two hours that evening sorting them out.

We started this morning with our sachet porridge – apple and cinnamon flavoured – very tasty with yoghurt.

When we set off it was fine. The sun was reflecting off the Len Lye Centre and onto the White Hart Hotel, so we got some photos.

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We were then looking at the stairway inside, with Charles Butler’s turned balusters (which we always call, at Rangitoto anyway, “Grandpa’s bannisters”.) A gentleman walked past and said we were welcome to go in and look around. We went in and I was taking some photos, including up the stairs. When I saw that there was a public café up top, I told D.C. to come up and we went into the glassed in area of the verandah, to get a closer look at the turned wood.

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A gentleman was going to get past, and I apologised and got out of his way, explaining that my great-grandfather had turned the balusters. It turned out that he owned the building, and was interested in this information. He took us back to his office and wrote the information down. Then he introduced us to Archibald Pattimpaws Outred.

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Found within the building when it was being renovated.

Archibald’s “owner”  owned and lived in the house over the road. He’d sold it and the Len Lye Centre was built there, and he’d put the money towards the purchase and restoration of the White Hart Hotel. The accommodation block down Queen Street was unrecoverable, so they’d demolished that – keeping the original frontage – and knocked down an old kitchen lean-to at the back, and made that space into a covered in courtyard. The “pub” and other accommodation sections have been renovated to make offices and eateries.

D.C. then, cautiously, mentioned that we were relatives of Fred Butler.

“I knew Freddie!”

He then asked if, as he had an appointment, we’d be willing to come back in quarter of an hour to twenty minutes, so we could talk about Uncle Fred. This was fine with us, so we went over the road and got some photos, and the aforementioned video, of the clock tower. There are stairs that go up part the way, but they’ve been gated off so you can’t go past the first level.

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Having got our photos, and the video of the clock chiming the Westminster Chimes, and having seen the visitor leave the office and walk across the street, we returned to the White Hart Hotel. We learnt how Uncle Fred had outbid his mother for the sea chest and grandmother chair that his relative had carted all around New Zealand (21 guineas). When Uncle Fred was leaving New Plymouth, he offered it back to her for the price he paid.

During this his business partner came in and between the three of us we explained about Uncle Fred and Charles Butler.

Following this interesting and totally unexpected event, we returned to the unit (one block away) to make use of the facilities, and then set out for Pukekura Park. Naturally we turned down the wrong street a couple of times when D.C. thought we should be going one way and I was sure it was another.

But one thing about New Plymouth people. They are so nice and friendly. We were asked three times if we needed help. And they could teach Thamesites a thing or two about road rules, and indicating, and being courteous to pedestrians. Especially those who don’t get how New Plymouth roads work.

We eventually found the main gates, along with a map, and went for a wander.

It is a beautiful park, and totally man-made. Each water feature, lake, and green area has been created – some in Victorian times. (They did like their engineering projects, didn’t they?)

The fountain, and waterfall, are both operated by push button systems, and when we first saw the fountain in action, we had the sun behind us (at 42°) and there was a rainbow reflecting off the water.

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The waterfall can also start flowing on a whim.

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Lunch was at the Pukekura Park tearooms, where we had some round things with spinach, feta cheese, and cashews, a bowl of chips between us, and hot chocolates (with a slither of fudge) each.

We found the fernery, which no longer has native ferns, but exotics, and enjoyed there. I also had to get the obligatory photo of D.C. on the stairs. I had that one in 2007.

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The “Buggy” tour driver, was about to head off – possibly to finish for the day – but was quite happy to take us on the 45 minute tour around the park for $5 each. The “Buggy” is a small electric bus (about to be replaced with a better model) and I think the driver is probably a volunteer. The tour was very interesting with the only complaint being that we didn’t have time to stop and take photos.

Hasn’t stopped me taking heaps though.

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We went up as far as the Brooklands Bowl and around parts of the park where we hadn’t been before and parts where we had. The magnolias and rhododendrons are looking great this year.

After that ride we went for another walk, seeing lots of people eating ice cream. Of course, that made me want an ice cream, so we got one from the tea kiosk.

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Dinosaur foot? No 100-year-old wisteria trunk

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And the flowers are rhododendrons, not wisteria

Then we wandered back, stopping to talk to people with dogs and to other people about the amount of Tui in the Kowhai trees. (They’re just starting to come on stream here.)

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During the day there were three heavy showers. The first whilst we were inside the tearooms having lunch. The second whilst we were inside the Buggy and about to get out – so he took us on an extended ride so we didn’t have to. And the last as we wandered around the Fountain Lake – so we sheltered under the trees.

And we finished the day with some more otherworldly cats.

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We managed to find our way back to the White Hart Hotel, and D.C. went home to heat up her leftovers from the last two nights, and I went back to the Turquoise Café to buy a takeaway Turkish falafel burger. The staff remembered me from last night and we had a chat. They didn’t know where Thames was.

Then back to the unit for dinner and two hours of photo processing and one and a half hours of blog typing.

And I walked 11,317 steps today. My tracker buzzed me the 10,000th step as we were walking back from Pukekura Park.

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And I took these photos because they’re artistic. Not because I had the exposure too slow.

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Found us!

26 August 2019

Last night, as a treat, I thought I’d put on the motel’s electric blanket. So I switched it on to three, did other things whilst it warmed the bed, and then switched it off before getting between the sheets.

Electric blankets work a lot better if the power cable is plugged into the wall socket. They are also easier to plug in if the wall socket isn’t behind the head of the bed.

So tonight I pulled the bed out, plugged the wall socket in, switched the electric blanket onto three (eventually), was able to enjoy getting into a toasty bed. Having unplugged the plug from the wall and got the cable out of the way.

This morning after a good night’s sleep (comfortable beds), aside from when D.C. started coughing, we had our showers and then I asked reception where we could buy breakfast. There was Monica’s Eatery, where we had dinner last night, or else a café around the corner in Devon Street. We chose around the corner.

The café’s name was The Empire Café and the people in it were lovely – as was the look of the food on offer. We both decided to splash out – since we were planning on buying porridge for the rest of the week’s breakfasts. D.C. had garlic mushrooms on toast. (She ate all of it.) I had pancakes (no cream), with diced kiwifruit, orange, and banana. And the mint tea was very nice.

We sat in the window and watched the world go by… People pulling up outside, coming into the café for their coffee, or for containers of food, and the Bidfood delivery driver who managed to drop a bottle of something like sauce on the road – which split and started running underneath the truck.

Back to the unit to finish getting ready and dodge the cleaners as we headed out to Puke Ariki. It was fine when we were walking there. That was about the last time today.

resized_IMG_0923 (2)They had those chairs back in 2007. Only I was sitting in them in that photo.

A helpful lady in the i-SITE let us use a locker. Much better then lugging our coats, woolly hats, scarf, gloves, sunglasses all around the place.

When we had our video interviews, the interview was done by Amber… someone. It was she that D.C. was communicating with until a short time ago. Then it became Lucy McFarlane. We tried to contact Lucy, but she wasn’t in the office. So we dumped out coats in the lockers and went and admired the 100 years of the museum display. It was here that D.C. accidently managed to find our video – which she listened to, to make sure that no one had made any unauthorised changes…

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A lot of these displays were of the “odd” things that people collect. “Transformers”, romance novels, royal memorabilia, salt and pepper shakers, computers…

I found the computers display interesting. He had his Sinclair ZX81 and Sinclair ZX Spectrum. (I had one of those! For about a week until I bought a more useful Spectravideo.) And an Amiga 500 – which was Karen’s first computer and I was jealous of her as it had awesome graphics. Until I managed to overwrite one of her games and I had to buy her a replacement copy.

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They even gave you a chance to do a bit of programming a ZX81. I haven’t done that in decades, but managed to follow the prompts and get it to play a tune. (Difficult when using a modern QWERTY keyboard to mimic the old Sinclair. And as a matter of interest, my old Spectravideo had a game of pelmanism, where you could try to pair up things other than cards. One “card” was “QWERTY” and the other “UIOP”. We couldn’t work out what a qwerty and a uiop was… until one day I glanced at the keyboard. This was in the days before I was a touch typist – although I think I’d even struggle now. Touch typists use “finger memory” not conscious memory. If I ever take a keyboard apart to clean it, it’s a struggle to remember where each key goes when I’m putting it back together again.)

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Programming the tune “Frere Gustav”. I’ve got no idea what that sounds like, even having done it.

What’s so odd with collecting old computers? Or “Swanndris”

After we’d finished with this exhibition, we tried to find a place to eat. There was the expensive restaurant, but the waitress directed us to the café. In the library of all places. So we had our lunch, D.C. had a coughing fit, and we enjoyed a slide show of photos taken by Taranaki Daily Mail journalists.

We were about to head back across the skybridge to the museum side of the complex, where we found a display of photos that had originally been taken by one man in 1939. Sixty years later his grandson decided to take the same photos from the same spot to see how things had changed. And in some cases he not only had photos from 1999, but 2019.

Back to the museum proper where was checked out everything else. I found a display of moths – one of which was Austramathes purpurea discovered by Arthur Gardiner Butler. No idea if he’s a relation, but it would funny if he was the discoverer of “purpurea”.

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We found some badly stuffed Kakapo. One the taxidermist has twisted two of its toes so they were the standard bird configuration of three front, one behind for grasping. Kakapo, being parrots, have two front, two back.

I don’t think that New Plymouth has the water issues that Auckland has. The flush of the toilets in Puke Ariki seemed to be powerful enough that if you hadn’t moved away you’d be dragged down with it. And the gurgles at the end were probably the pitiful strokes of those who hadn’t made it trying to escape.

Off to the supermarket again – this time to buy the porridge and yoghurt for breakfast. Unfortunately, it was raining when we came out again. So we sheltered for a bit… and then made a dash for more shelter… and then attempted to cross Courtney Street/State Highway 46 during a “lull” in the rain… And then sheltered some more as the rain blew in.

We finally made it to a long run of verandahs and started hunting out places to eat. I was trying to remember what I’d read in Google last night that was good value and not too expensive. We’d crossed over to Bella Vista’s side of the road when I spied Café Turquoise. I think I remembered seeing that that was good value, so we crossed over again and went inside.

Mark Café Turquoise on your list of places to eat in New Plymouth. It was Turkish style meals and we each had chicken “skewer” (three) shish kebabs on a bed of salad, with homemade Turkish bread, dips of            cacik, hummus, tabouli, and spicy walnut), rice and a choice of two sauces. (I had garlic yoghurt and mint, and D.C. garlic yoghurt and avocado – and had to have a doggie back.) $16 each. I bought two $2 packs of two pieces of baklava for dessert – which we took away with us.

Back to the motel, cups of mint and matcha tea and a piece of baklava, and then to our toasty warm beds.

Only walked 5990 steps today. That’s about the same as a normal Monday – but a lot slower.

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Puddle Jumping

25 August 2019

 

We got up at 7.30, got washed and dressed and went down to the “restaurant” for breakfast.

Now, one of the reasons why we always like staying at the EconoLodge is the quality of the breakfasts. Fresh melon slices, pineapple, grapes, cheese, fruit juices, freshly made pikelets, maple syrup, Weetbix, toast, yoghurt, kiwifruit, orange slices. It was always very fresh and yummy. They’ve gone to the pack, the last couple of times that we’ve stayed there. No melon, no Weetbix, the picklets were overcooked and soggy, the price had gone up (but there was the option for sausages, cooked tomatoes, bacon, scrambled eggs, and hash browns.) It wasn’t nearly as tasty nor appetising as in the past.

We finished that, went up to clean our teeth and finish packing our bags. I’d just finished zipping up my suitcase when I realised that I couldn’t find my V2 lock. This lock is pink and has been halfway around the world twice. It’s also got an easy to remember combination. I had other pink locks in my bag, so locking my suitcase wasn’t an issue, but I didn’t really want to lose the original. Oh, well. I’ll use one of the other locks and ask the cleaners to keep an eye out for the missing one. I reached into my camera bag to get a spare lock…

V2.

Guess I hadn’t lost it after all.

The Skybus left every ten minutes, halfway down the block from the EconoLodge, so – having paid up (I’m paying for food and travel, D.C.’s paying for accommodation) – we went to wait for the bus.

Now, if you know Wellesley Street in Auckland, it’s quite a steep street. I was waiting facing up the hill and looking into the window of a neighbouring shop, appeared to have a lean of about 5°. D.C., with her daypack on her back, kept on overbalancing.

The bus arrived and I tried to pay by credit card (so I can keep track). They can only accept cash or pre-booked tickets. I tried to buy one adult and one senior ticket – you can only buy senior at a kiosk or on-line. I asked for two return, (I had the cash) and looking at my $38 ticket now, I think he’s only charged us for one way. But at least we each had a ticket.

While I was undergoing this high-finance transaction, D.C. was trying to get our cases into the luggage racks. A nice young man picked them up and put them away for her.

For some reason – probably to aid manoeuvrability through a tight space and around a corner, the front seat on the passenger side is a ¾ sized seat. Easily big enough for one person, not so good for two. As I’d held them up with the payment, I left D.C. to it and claimed the front seat on the drivers side, which is behind a lot of luggage racks and with a high wall meaning it’s hard to see out the window. Especially if you’re only 5’1”. So when we got to the next bus stop, I went back to the front (only luggage racks and disability/wheelchair/emergency seats behind D.C.’s seat.) and squeezed in next to her.

Squeezed being the operative word. First corner that we went around to the left, I disappeared off the seat. The driver goes: “I think that’s only made for one person.”

“I think you’re right. I’ll go back at the next stop.”

But there were no further stops, aside from intersections, so we spent most of the 45 minutes with D.C. with her arm looped through mine, hanging on to me, and me sitting kind of side-saddle.

But we made it to the airport with no hiccups. Even though the wind and rain picked up as soon as we hit the motorway and caused the warped door to rattle and flex. Slightly disconcerting, more so because I was concerned what would happen to any vehicles following if it flew loose.

We were deposited at the domestic terminal and had a wander through, working out how and where we offloaded our suitcases. It’s not a totally logical layout at the moment, but there were people to help.

By this stage it was only about 10am and our plane wasn’t due to leave until 2.40, so we went for a wandering through the domestic terminal. We also weighed our cabin bags. According to the rules, they couldn’t be more than 7kg. My camera & laptop bag recorded 7.1kg… 7kg… 6.9kg.

Close enough.

Having completed that, we decided to check out the international terminal. There is a helpful green line painted between the two and it was easy to follow this (stopping off to photograph a Moa and a Kiwi) to the international airport.

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Moa hiding in the Pohutukawa

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Kiwi – having just been visited by a young boy, who’s mum called him back so I could get my photo.

We had a look around and decided to have lunch. Each having a Pita Pit pita. Which was quite yummy – I had falafel. D.C. only wanted a sandwich, but couldn’t find a place that sold plane, sorry, plain old simple sandwiches.

While we were eating, there was a family behind us of mum, dad, grandma, and two kids. Dad was trying to get photos of them all, so I offered to get some with him in. He was very pleased to let me – once he’d switched it over so it wasn’t the camera on the screen side taking the photo. Unfortunately, it was a tablet and not a proper camera. But I managed to get a couple. And then a couple more when they decided that the light behind was too annoying.

We wished them a good flight, and they reciprocated, before we started heading back to the domestic airport. We decided to make this journey a competition. D.C. would take the free bus that travels on a loop between the two terminals and I’d walk. Loser to buy dinner tonight.

The bus pulled up, D.C. got on board, and the driver looked at me. I said: “I’m walking. We’re going to have a race.”

As soon as the bus started moving, so did I.

And I would have done better if my shoelace hadn’t come undone. As it was, I was heading towards the final corner before the stretch of footpath where the buses park when a bus came towards me. The driver saw me and did a double take and smiled. I did a “Bother, I’m last” gesture and she laughed. It only took me 8 minutes to walk, which was probably only about minute slower than the bus. Unfortunately, my fitness tracker (a cheapy) doesn’t let you go back and see your results again, so I can’t remember much more than it was about .73 of a kilometre. I don’t know how many steps I took – but it was around about now that it vibrated to tell me that I’d done my 10,000 steps for the day.

But I was quite hot and thirsty after that walk, (I was wearing my 3-in-one “ski” jacket, my camera backpack, and Kally), so I bought us each a “Mango Zest” TANK drink, remembering – belatedly – to ask to have it without a straw.

“And without a lid?” they checked.

“Yes, please.”

The “paper” cup was probably plastic lined, but at least we didn’t put more plastic than necessary into the landfill.

We found a seat away from the main conglomeration of people waiting for their flight and sat, relaxed, and typed up this blog. 1.00pm we moved down to the more crowded seats, and I did more typing until it was time to board at 13:55 from gate 48 on flight NZ8041.

We sat on the tarmac for quite some time. (We’re now at the hotel and I’ve just found an email from Air New Zealand apologising because the flight was going to be twenty minutes late.) The captain came on the radio an apologised for the delay, saying that it was due to an administration issue. About ten minutes after that the flight attendant spoke to the passenger in the row before us, on the other side of the aisle, then then he had to collect his two(!) bags and leave the plane – leaving his phone behind. D.C. and the people behind us had to tell the flight attendant and she got someone to take it to the ex-passenger.

What I think happened, and this is what I overheard from a conversation between the flight attendant and a man two rows behind us – is that the plane was only allowed to carry fifty. The ex-passenger was allowed on, on the understanding that he’d have to get off and take the next flight, if passengers who had booked before him boarded. They did. So he caught the next flight, which landed almost instantly after we did in New Plymouth anyway.

The flight down was good, the weather relatively clear, an easy take off (not a “point up at the sky and go”), not too many bumps going into the cloud layer, and an easy landing.

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But still no view of the mythical mountain.

Our plane was a turbo-prop(? A name I learned when writing a Thunderbirds story. Also known as a puddle-jumper. But I could be totally wrong about this. I just know it was small and had two propellers.) and we had to walk across the tarmac to board it. And to leave it. And then we had to wait for the baggage train to bring all the bags into a “baggage claim” room, shut the door behind it, and then let us all in to grab our bags. No luggage carousels here!

We found the shuttle service and D.C. scored the front seat and I got the one behind but in the middle so I could see forward too. It was a good drive into town and we were the second drop off of the three stops.

Last time we were in New Plymouth we stayed at the Bella Vista Motel, and having no better ideas this time, we did the same. This time we were given room two, which we think might be directly below the one we had last time, which could have been room eleven.

 

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Having offloaded and decanted everything, we went on our obligatory hunt for a Warehouse. You can guarantee that every time we go somewhere, we have to find a Warehouse. This time D.C. wanted some warmer PJs. I think she’s ended up with a pair of men’s tracksuit pants and a woman’s skivvy. I had seen it at the top of the hill and was heading in that direction, when D.C. stopped and asked someone where it was. I was a trifle snappy when I informed her that it was there!

The Bella Vista recommended two eating establishments, so we went hunting for the one on Molesworth Street. I knew when we found this as I found the Bunnings’ hardware store that’s on that street. Having reached Bunnings we walked back in the direction of the motel, hoping to stumble across the restaurant.

The only thing we saw was a beautiful sunset highlighting Paritutu Rock and the smoke stack, but which had all but gone by the time I got over the road and to a good vantage point with my camera.

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We got back to the Bella Vista still not having found the restaurant. I’ve just checked and it was two blocks the other way past Bunnings.

So, we went over the road to Monica’s Eatery. We both had macaroni cheese, which D.C. found to be too much of a good thing. They gave us some delicious, freshly cooked bread (focaccia?) as well – which was lovely aside from the buttery fingerprints we left on everything. I was planning on having dessert, but didn’t bother when they didn’t come back with the menu having given D.C. her leftovers doggie bag. Our drinks were carrot. apple. turmeric. & ginger (D.C. – very orange) and spinach, something, something, Egmont honey, and mint. (Me – very green)

After that we came “home” and got into bed.

We’d (I’d!) done 12.457 steps today!

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