Wednesday, May 25, 2005


Oh are those clouds. Nick and Karla at Kaimaumau Posted by Hello

First family visit.

After 2 weeks travelling around NZ, Nick and Karla joined us for 5 days.
The highlight of their trip so far was probably breaking down on 90 mile beach ,half way up a dune ,no touch , phone and with fading light. Or friend ,Patrick, a guide for the area ,and teacher took Nick, Karla, Mike and Stu out, so they were in good hands. Kiwi's love living dangerously, don't know about Pom's.
It was good to see them both.

LOVELY !!! Posted by Hello

Summer dead? maybe not!!

Ok, so there's been rain, but the weather is still stonking. Cool , chilly mornings ,then up it goes into the early 20's. .

Friday, May 20, 2005

Its raining!

Well the rainy season arrived this week much to everyone's relief. The pasture looks dead, the rugby field lloks painful when they tackle on it and dust rises into the air, I am mindful that the water tank on our new house will be filling up. Over here most rural houses have their own water supply, either a bore or a water tank that stores roof water and is used for all the household needs. If your tank runs dry (which it can do mid-shower!), then you have to buy in a refill from a water tanker at a cost of $100's. In any case the rain here is pretty warm compared to Uk rain. It also has not washed out pollutants from millions of cars and factories on its way to the ground, and by and large it stops raining after a short time and the sun comes out.

Listening to http://www.95bfm.co.nz/default,live.sm over the internet as I write this. I think it an Auckland Uni based radio station. They do witty adverts and the music is to my liking.

It has been another tough week at the chalk-face. (Note to UK teaching colleagues: they still have blackboards with chalk here, I am learning the art of chalk drawing, and if the teaching goes wrong I'll be well on the way to a second ... third ... career as a pavement artist).

Tough because it is raining and we all know that the slightest variation in climate is enough to turn sensitive adolescents into raving banshees. Added to which I am fighting off a bug, checking out the NZ remedies. I have to say that the slight fever has added to my classroom banter. Made an analogy today to active transport and climbing sand-dunes whereas diffusion is like jumping off said sand dunes. Factor in that it is report writing time, have to write for 4 junior classes in what seems like rather a short interval, plus the expected crashes in report writing software, printers and human support, so expected as to be predictable. I am not stressing too much about it. Tell you what though, it is nice to be able to write more or less honestly on a blog rather than write ever so cautiously on a report. How do you report on a child who regularly disrupts your lessons and seems to have experienced a parenting bypass.

Other news: there have been major land slides in the Bay of plenty area after heavy rain, Dover Samuels came to our place today offereing lots of money to rebuild the tec block, The budget was yesterday - and I cannot really make a short witty comment on it.

Closer to home, Eric says he wants to rediscover the extinct moa when he grows up, Stuart is going to be a travelling scientist with a briefcase full of equipment that opens up and a microscope comes out, Patrick played for the Pirates last w/e and played defensively, we even videoed it. Chantelle travelled North today and back along (0 mile beach so we had tua-tua fritters for tea.

Friday night comedy tv is on now so I'm off. Probably won't write next Friday as I am going to Auckland for a course and won't be back till late. Arrividerci.

Friday, May 13, 2005


Patrick plays football against Ahipara. The Pirates lose 4-0. Posted by Hello

Friday 13th May

Just limped to the end of another week, first beer of the weekend has been cracked open and we are into the friday night wind-down. We have just been entertained by a school rugby match on the field in front of our house. Not entirely sure who was playing and what type of rugby it was, but it looked like our lot won.

I was supposed to be going away tonight to stay at a marae near Mangonui with my Te Reo course, but it was cancelled on Wednesday for some obscure bureaucratic reason. I was not too bothered as I was feeling very run down on Thursday and was not looking forward to sharing a mattress on a floor with lots of strangers. So I have yet to experience the joys of a "noho marae". The te reo course is going quite well at the moment. I recognise more of the words than I used to and felt like I was really learning something on Thursday night. Some nights I find it all going over my head. He aha tenei? He kihine tena! (What's this? Its the kitchen). Knowing a bit of Te reo comes in handy at school especially with some of the awkward pupils who try to pull the race card on me!

Chantelle is waiting for Uncle Nick to make contact as he is now in the country. The boys can't wait for him to show up as well, especially Eric!

It is now nit-combing time so I need to log off!

Wednesday, May 04, 2005


MMMM, sould be able to loose the kids there for a couple of hours at least!! Posted by Hello

Our new home- to be

This is our new home. It's about 1.5kms outside Kaitaia. As you can see it has quite a bit of land.
What you cannot see is a lovely pond ,with it's own family of Pukeko on it.
We hope to move in sometime in late june, as there are tenants in there.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Our Coromandel Holiday ...

…gets off to a slow start as we try to combine packing the car with transferring £lots into NZ$ not being entirely sure that the internet transfer will send it to the right account in the UK. I was being all blasé with Chantelle, saying we should leave it until we got back. She suggested we sort it before we went as we could lose all the money. I felt a cold sweat run down my back at the prospect and sent the boys out to the car again.

We had hoped to leave Kaitaia at 10 in order to clear Auckland by 3, but it didn’t work out like that. We got some sense of how far North we are as it took a good 2 hours to get to Whangarei over wooded mountains and through lightly populated farmland. We made the harbour bridge at about 3.30. Got over it and saw the Skytower again. Then we hit slow traffic, crawling along with sophisticated city drivers slowly south towards Bombay. We persuaded the driver to hit the burbs for a break and a stretch and a promised ice cream. We cleared Bombay at dusk and headed for Thames in the gloaming. There is an Autumnal feel to the sky down here, helped by the larger number of deciduous trees that are dropping their leaves.

Dickson’s Holiday Park was a few K’s along the coast from Thames. Friendly owner showed us our shed, a little caravan with a permanent ply board awning stuck on the side. Tiny 2 ring stove and 2 sockets for the whole shebang. Either I am getting soft in my middle age, or it was freezing and I was tired from the journey. We went back to Thames for a KFC and light and warmth before an early crash out. Fortunately we had brought the laptop with DVD’s to chill the boys into a pre-sleep torpor.

Friday
The forecast was best for today so we decided to do the most outdoorsy things we had on the itinery. Drove up over the mountains to the East coast to Hot Water Bay. Scenic drive through mountainous terrain with bendy roads that would keep Uncle Giorgio happy. Hot water beach was well worth the journey, a huge deserted beach apart from one spot where lots of folks were gathered. We had timed our arrival (showing an unusual degree of Bryan organisation) to coincide with the low tide. Hot water was seeping out of the sand and we were able to dig our own bath in the sand. Great fun especially when a friendly nearby family let us borrow their spade. Our bath grew in complexity until we had a lower deep pool that could be topped with hot water from a header pool. Gradually the tide came in and restored all the sand works to flat sand, beat that for ecotourism.

From there we went on to Cathedral cove. This involved a 30-minute walk from the car park through bush and down the hillside. Fantastic views out over green water studded with steep islands; giving the feeling that any moment a whale would jump out of the sea.

Stuart has had a nasty cough for the last 10 days and he did find the walk difficult. It really was worth the effort to get down to the steep sandstone lined cove. It made it more magical. The final descent was down a set of steep steps into a huge Puri (?) tree. When one walked through the branches out onto the sand … WOW! One of those places that it is impossible to capture in a picture.

Saturday
A bit cloudier today as forecast so we went to Thames so that the boys could spend their saved up pocket money and we could check out the market. There was the usual mix of second hand tat, veggies and crafty stuff. We sampled kiwi berries very tasty and got some decent apples (Kidd’s Orange) at last. Salami smoked over manuka and a charming bright picture of 2 pukekos for our new house. Patrick had not managed to source anything so we went to the other end of the retailing spectrum The Warehouse to buy Lego. The Warehouse for those UK readers who are not familiar is a bit like Wilkinsons, cheap and cheerful. Eric was throwing a wobbly cause he had managed to spend all his money before we went on holiday. We went a bit past our site to Te Tapu School. This was where some Lancaster friends had spent a year with their children. School right on the shore with a fantastic ship adventure playground.

In the afternoon we split up and Chantelle went on a goldmine tour with Master History (aka Eric) and Paddy, while I took the other one dripping nose and all in search of the Karaka bird hide. It was found pretty much next to the Warehouse car park and gave some protection from the elements and a view out over the estuary. There were several thousand pied oystercatchers and maybe 1000 pied stilts plus a couple of spur-winged plover but no other waders in view. This surprised me as Thames is reckoned to be one of the best over-wintering estuaries in NZ. They seem to have a lower species diversity than in UK but more of the species, so harriers are very common as are kingfishers. It is sad that the commonest passerines by far are all introduced, house sparrows, starling, blackbird and mynah. I have high hopes for our visit to the Miranda Naturalist’s Centre tomorrow.

Sunday 24th April
Ma and Pa slept badly last night what with high winds and rain combined with an uncomfortable bed, so we got up feeling a bit fragile.

Sold the boys a deal based on them going to the Miranda Hot Pools complex IF they co-operated at the bird place. They just about held it together. I was disappointed with Miranda. The centre was well laid out with some excellent displays showing how it fits into global migration. There was a good display of shells and some stuffed bird displays.

The wind was very strong on the estuary and as the tide was some way out the waders were thinly scattered. Would really need to be there at a high tide in the right place. Did get closish views of a couple of wrybills and a bar-tailed godwit. Later on we found a White heron hiding behind a bit of reed on a slack. It was a bit like a trip to Hest Bank on a low tide with unfavourable light and wind. The difference that conditions made there to viewing was considerable. Never mind, it is only 7 hours from home, so I might visit again!

The boys were less impressed and a minor revolt broke out when we decided that the Hot Springs were not worth it at $41 a family! It was cold out and the pools were out and we would have only been in there an hour so it didn’t seem worth it.

Mum made up for it by buying them a few gems each from the Gem shop in Ngatea. I am not a big fan normally but was impressed. They were further impressed by the trip on the model railway - even Eric!

Back at base camp we crashed out and caught up on sleep and then Eric and Paddy braved the outdoor pool. It’s amazing how much you can pack in on holiday when you don’t have housework and TV and telephones to eat up all the day! I haven’t even mentioned the walk up the valley where we went into an abandoned coal mine, or the epic game of Monopoly we played after tea that finished amicably.

Monday was our last day and we had a bit of a potter about. Went to see the butterfly house on site, very warm with some ace plants. Eric and chantelle hiked up the road to see the bloated possum.
We went out in the afternoon to see the square Kauri – huge but not square.
On Tuesday we drove home and it took us from 9am until 5pm! Coromandel looks quite close to Kaitaia and is about 450km away. We did stop in Auckland for about an hour trying to find Colin’s house to drop off a letter. And we sampled the dual delights of Whangarei and Subway (they have multi-storey buildings in Whangarei!; Subway has too much choice for children).

Tuesday, April 26, 2005


Making a sand-pool at Hot Water Beach Posted by Hello

Under the arch at Cathedral Cove Posted by Hello

Home for our little holiday Posted by Hello

Eric and paddy at Te Puru school Posted by Hello

On board the model railway Posted by Hello

Geologists at work Posted by Hello

A new generation discovers the joys of Monopoly. You can tell who is winning from the smiles... the tears came later. Posted by Hello

Chantelle sniffing a shrub of lemon scented geranium at the holiday park Posted by Hello

Chantelle and shady boys with the 1200 year old 30 foot girth Square Kauri tree Posted by Hello

Saturday, April 16, 2005


Fishing Saturday afternoon Awanui wharf, autumn is here, note the cloud. Posted by Hello
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