
Playground fun.
I don’t remember any playground equipment as cool as this from my actual childhood.
Brattleboro Adventure – the Auckland Edition
In which we find ourselves in another part of the world

Playground fun.
I don’t remember any playground equipment as cool as this from my actual childhood.
A twilight walk down the hill through this beautiful old graveyard…





Baby seagulls on the Moonies (sorry I meant the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification) chimney across the street.

We wandered down to the La Cigale weekend market with Astrid last weekend. We don’t go to that market as often, as it’s further away than the Parnell farmers market, bu La Cigale certainly has a lot of nice stuff.
The pohutukawa are in full bloom this time of year, lovely! This little park is on the route, and it was our first experience of the NZ jungle, even though the jungly part is only an acre or two.

And they are redoing the porch on this house, but they left the old car in place under there.


For the second year in a row we walked over to the Auckland Domain for the Christmas in the Park concert.
Sponsored by Coke, by the way.
Again a showcase for people who want to be on the Voice, and again with the horrifyingly bad announcers. But not quite as horrible as last year.
And then the fireworks, our real reason for going, were choreographed to Bohemian Rhapsody, and that part was AWESOME!
We went to the zoo last weekend, not because we so love zoos, but more because it’s an Attraction, and while here we should see the Attractions.

The baboons were playful, but many of the other animals seemed pretty sleepy, and who could blame them? It was a warm day, and napping in the sunshine was definitely a savvy option.
We glimpsed an elephant getting a bath…

and pregnant zebras munching apples and carrots…

And by the way, once you’ve had the chance to say zebra with a short e, you’ll never go back to zeeeeebra.
There were lots of cool birds, although I didn’t get any really inspired pics of them, they were mostly too far away or moved too fast. But the tortoise was obliging of my slow shutter finger…

It’s a pretty big place and we were definitely tired by the time we got done. Would be fun to go back at dawn or dusk sometime when the critters might be more active.

We went to the zoo last weekend, which is near the Museum of Transportation and Technology, which has an airplane on a stick out front. Ever since working on the ex-navy-base in Alameda (20 years!!!) I have a fondness for such things.

Coming home the other night we happened across a carol sing in the Cathedral courtyard. Fun! But warm weather Christmas still feels funny.




The company Christmas party was a harbour cruise again this year. I missed last year’s edition, so it was a new experience for me. It was a nice tidy experience: chat, dinner, drinks, dancing, and back to the dock by 9:30.

Am especially cool utility box on Parnell Rd. All those shadows are actually painted on. Bokeh, eh!

Fall colors however you find ’em.

Turkey before ⤴️ and after ⤵️


From the recent HINZ meeting. A great giveaway except I can’t even remember the company’s name.


I’m writing this from a train, because the driveway project is taking much longer than I expected and the mighty minivan is trapped.
After smashing the concrete, they dug a big hole and shored up the retaining wall that keeps us out of the downhill neighbors kitchen. Then, they installed these massive blocks of styrofoam… I don’t yet know how that works.
Apparently we’ll be done in another 10 days…
Last week, on the way home from the farmers market, we could see a helicopter doing something close by, low to the ground. We stopped to investigate.

It turned out that this impressively large tree had to come down. Don’t know why exactly, although the apartment building behind it is undergoing some sort of major construction, and it sits on a very steep slope above railroad tracks.
People who know what they’re doing must have looked at this tree and decided it was quicker to do it this way then any other way. So, they roped a couple of guys up into the tree and used the helicopter to take sections across the railroad tracks to a giant shredder waiting on the other side.

We were mesmerized. We stood there and watched for well over an hour as the helicopter pilot, leaning out the door, guided the line with a hook on it to the waiting hands of the lumberjacks. I don’t know if all helicopter pilots are that good, or if he had some sort of amazing auto-pilot, but whatever was going on, he could put that line exactly where he wanted it and then hover there without any indication of difficulty.
Once they had the line, the lumberjacks clipped in a section of limb, let’s say 15 to 20 feet long, fired up their saws and cut it off. I’ve spent some time with a chainsaw, but I’ve never actually seen a professional working like that. The bar must’ve been at least 36 inches long, on a saw I could barely lift over my head with both hands. once. These guys were swinging the saws around with one hand, while roped into a tree, all day long, and cutting through 2-foot thick sections of tree like a hot knife through butter, inches from their faces.

Each cycle, cut fly drop shred, took just about one minute. The level of precision, the level of teamwork, as well as the amazing physical strength of the the guys in the tree, combined with some pretty serious actual danger, made this spellbinding. We both walked away wishing we could figure out how to get our workplaces to function with anything like that level of coordination.
We learned later in conversation that there is a fair amount of logging in NZ that happens on protected land, where no roads can be built. Therefore, in fact there is a cadre of people who do helicopter logging for a living, so maybe not as exceptional as we thought. But still… Wow!
Kinda sad for the tree, but there is a lot of vegetation here, and what a show!