Life’s Little Ups and Downs

Some of the things that have become themes on this blog might seem mundane, even silly. Manhole covers, duct tape on cars, door knockers, that sort of thing. However, there are moments of excitement…

But rest assured, I don’t travel around the world only to stare at the pavement… There is cool stuff up in the air as well.

In the heart of Hartford 

Last week I took a lunchtime walk around Hartford, enjoying one of the few remaining warm fall days. It was drizzling, but still.

I crossed the tracks, literally and figuratively, into some neighborhoods I’d never been in. As we passed on the sidewalk, a young man admonished me “Don’t nobody need to be knowin your business.”

I headed down Asylum Street toward an area dominated by old insurance company buildings and an improbable collection of churches. There’s a multi-part installation of rocks with etched poems that contributed to the meditative and melancholy feeling.


A statue honoring the American School for the Deaf, and Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet. I stayed at Gallaudet University a while back for a meeting.


The striking, ugly St. Joseph’s Cathedral. I went inside, and there’s lots of nice stained glass, but it still felt like a tomb.


But I can always be cheered up by a nice pair of knockers…

Bye bye love 

Even the airport lattés (which are of course flat whites) are good. 

So, after my initial jet-dazed “meh”, Wellington has grown on me day by day and now I wanna move here. This little rainbow sprite gave me a nice sendoff. 

Wellington to Picton

A few more pics from the ferry ride from Wellington to Picton across the Cook Straits…

Here’s Carol crossing the street in Picton and hoping to look the right direction for traffic… Picton might have been a cute place to explore, but we didn’t have much time and it was raining. 

Access covers Wellington 



And this doesn’t exactly count, but it is on the ground….

This one was a bit of a surprise, right in the middle of what seemed like a pretty unused trail on the side of Mt. Victoria. 

Levers and Switches

You certainly don’t escape the upcoming US election by traveling halfway around the world… It’s a daily topic on the news here, and every local person we talk to asks us about it. All we can do is shrug our shoulders self-deprecatingly… What’s to say?

Seeing this seemingly prosperous, harmonious little island function does make you think about the right and the wrong way to govern. Mostly people can get a lot of things done without the government being involved, but for all the rest, there are as many choices about how we should govern ourselves as there are things that need to be governed.

My first experience of doing things differently here came at my very first meal, on New Zealand Labour Day. When I went in the restaurant, I was told there was a 15% surcharge in effect. OK, I said, too tired to really care one way or the other. It turns out there is mandated overtime pay on state holidays, but restaurant owners are allowed to recoup the extra costs with a surcharge. Some people decide that it’s just not worth it to open up on holidays and so they don’t.

Is that a good policy, or not? Employees get extra pay for working an unusual shift, a common practice in hospitals back home, but not necessarily in restaurants. If some businesses stay closed, does that mean more people spend more time with the family, improving national cohesiveness? Is economic growth helped or hindered by this policy? Who can say? It’s how things work here. They’ve turned a certain set of switches and dials to achieve a certain set of ends.

On our tour of Parliament, we learned about how people vote here: you get two votes, one for the party, and one for your favorite candidate. There is proportional representation in the legislature, meaning it is possible for an unpopular party to seat a popular candidate… and vice versa. Seems to work well for the Green Party, who never win any districts out right, but consistently poll at between 10 and 15%, so they get a few seats.

Wellington Cable Car

Rode the cable car yesterday afternoon, got photobombed…


The car itself is cute, certainly makes getting to the top of the hill easier. 


There’s a nice little museum and gift shop at the top, as well as access to the Carter Observatory (already closed) and the Botanic Garden. 

Meat raffle 

Had to look this one up, and I definitely didn’t expect what I found out…

It turns out this is a raffle where the prize is… wait for it… some meat!

Street Art

There’s a lot of good street art here in Wellington. Between the Māori influence with all their wild graphics and all the folks involved with Lord of the Rings, Avatar, etc., it makes for a big talent pool. 

Wellington Job Interview 


So, you’re hiring, right?

— Yeah, mate, that’s right. You’ve got your Architect Licence, yeah?

— Yeah, that’s right.

— And you’ve got a scooter?

— ‘Course.

— What color is it, then, your scooter?

— Orange, mate.

— All right, I reckon that’s all sorted, then. See you Monday.

— Right, then, cheerio!

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