Tuesday, October 18, 2011

camping

 

 

 

 
Posted by Picasa



Just got back from a 2 day camping trip out at Diggers Valley. The theme this time was to escape "ediction" so all computers, mobiles, gameboys and other electronic devices were banned. Not as easy as it sounds to go without for 48 hours. Have you tried it?

Paddy secreted a gameboy in the car "just for the journey"! but Stuart ratted on him so it was ejected. We had (Ok I had) picked a couple of days where the forecast was good. It later turned out to be wrong and we were rained on most of the second day.

I have restricted the pictures to just 8 trying to get a variety and to illustrate the main attractions of our trip. We cooked over an open fire. Steak and baked pots for the first night and patsa and tomato sauce for night 2. The flat breads were pouplar and we had lots of cups of tea as well.

One of the boys' friends - Lance came along as well.

We did do some work in amongst all the fun. Clearing trees as Stephan cut them down with a chainsaw. I was impressed at the speed with which a skillfully operated and well maintained chainsaw could cut what would be a whole winter's supply of wood. It took 5 of us to move the brash and logs and we were not doing much standing around.

We had a go at trapping possums, using leghold traps set a metre up in a variety of trees. We checked these every morning at first light. They are not as humame as any other method of controlling possums. The possum gets a limb caught between 2 jaws and waits for you to come back to kill it. The main reason that they are used seems to be because the possum is alive until you come to kill it and so its fur can be removed with ease. It is more difficult to pluck a long dead possum. Plus the traps sell for $10 each which is a lot cheaper than most other control methods. We plan to use our traps elsewhere. Possums are a very serious pest over here. They kill native birds and strip native trees of their foliage killing them in the long run. New Zealand natives evolved in the absence of mammalian herbivores, so they do not have the defense mechananisms found in their ozzy or european cousins.

The flower is of the puriri, one of my favourite NZ native trees. It flowers pretty much all year round and is masive when fully grown.

No comments:

Locations of visitors to this page