November 13

Without the bulwark of Thanksgiving to dampen their appetite, retailers in NZ are free to get the party started right after Halloween.

Semi tough

We already had plans to go out for dinner with our recent friends Emily and Brian when she called and said “what about going to see the rugby?”

It was the semi-finals of the Women’s World Cup, NZ (defending champions) vs France (who beat NZ earlier this year). $20 for upper deck seating that was perfectly fine. We’re in!

For the second time in our quixotic search for good Mexican food here, the supposedly great taco truck we were aiming for was not at its appointed spot. Grrr! We had fried chicken which was ok.

Entering Eden Park was exciting. Even though it’s the biggest and best stadium in the country, it’s also just in a neighborhood a few train stops from home. So it’s like being transported to this magical world of spectacle without any fuss.

Once inside, although we were in the cheap seats, it was fine. The weather held, and even if we couldn’t really see the action at the far end, there’s a giant screen, and we had a closeup on our side.

As a Francophile and a Kiwiphile, it didn’t much matter who won, I’d have something to cheer about either way. I always feel a big stir of pride or patriotism or something when the national anthem is played at sports events… some silly sentimental thing. I still don’t know the words to the NZ national anthem in Te Reo Māori, but it was fun to belt out La Marseillaise.

And the game itself was was thrilling, with the lead going back and forth the whole time. The French fans are always out in force, and the shouts of “Allez les bleus!” sometimes drowned out “Let’s go Black Ferns.” It came down to the last few seconds… up by one point, NZ only won because the French team missed a kick. Whew! And admittedly I’m glad the Black Ferns won.

We play England next weekend in the finals… but tickets were already sold out when I went online to look.

At halftime, I took this picture of the sky looking out over the practice field. Beautiful colors.

A glass act

There’s the new windows, which make all our secondhand furniture look better, don’t you think? And more importantly : All the leaks that led us to this point are fixed.

After a series of delays and more cost than we really wanted, we’re all cozily buttoned up with actual double-paned windows that open to a nice amount (two down, all the rest to go). We’ll remember fondly the idea of having what a window repair guy with the gift of the gab called a ‘small conservatory’ (just a bay window in fact), but actually the new arrangement is nicer and more functional.

Now… what’s the next project going to be???

Aura Hotel Wellington

Last week was busy in Wellington, such that none of the hotels on the Ministry’s approved list were available. Not wanting to cancel the trip, I pushed a bit and got them to approve a stay at the Aura.

Fantastic location, cheap price, but many bad reviews…

Above is the nice-enough view from my window on an early drizzly morning. Well, not my room exactly, but the common area shared by my pod of six rooms, whose only windows gave onto the corridor and were therefore worse than useless… they let in unwanted noise and light and for what?

The Aura lives inside the James Smith Corner building, which was a big department store for most of its life. There were still some original 1930s details here and there.

So why and how does the Aura exist? There were too many little problems and weirdnesses to list here, but I can see why they had vacancy when all the other places were full. I’m glad I got to make the trip as planned, and nothing actually bad happened at the hotel, but I wouldn’t choose to stay there again.

Commonwealth Walkway Wellington

Although it’s the unexpected flair seen on manhole covers and other kinds of ‘utilitarian’ street furniture that first caught my eye, I’m not immune to the more intentional charms of plaques like this one.

It’s part of the Commonwealth Walkway project, which hopes to get people out walking more by commemorating important sites around Wellington and other cities, installing some plaques, and infusing the whole thing with a spritz of royal patronage. Although I’m generally in favor of this sort of feel-good project , I know that one of the many reasons political life doesn’t appeal to me is the thought of so many such efforts, all needing (and deserving to whatever extent) to be Taken Quite Seriously.

Ika Rere Electric Ferry

Wellington’s new electric ferry, the Ika Rere (which means ‘flying fish’ in Te Reo Māori).

I just snapped this picture hurrying by on the way to the pub, oooh look at the cool new boat!

But will the Eileen Duggan poem on the plaque — or at least the sentiments that led to its emplaquification — have a longer-lasting impact on the city than this fancy new catamaran? Is windy Welly a city of writers / readers or a city of fancy green tech? Or maybe a more important question is: can you make the improbably difficult and expensive decision to adopt green tech if you’re NOT a city of writers and readers?

Artichauts chauds

Apart from some chives and herbs, here’s our first garden produce of the year… Artichokes!

From the single plant given to us last year, three sprung up this winter. And there are another 20+ fruits where these came from.

Yay! since this is a food we love but we’ve never seen for sale here.

Not where you’d expect it

We’ve been taught to believe, thanks to our exposure to Hollywood movies, that in order to find platform 9 3/4 you have to bash yourself into a brick post and hope that the magic works for you.

But in the Wellington train station, things are slightly easier. There’s a big sign. You still have to pay attention, because platform 9 3/4 is not where you expect it, but rather tucked somewhere between platforms six and seven. Even so, I find it quite generous of the Wellington Wizarding community to be so helpful.

The hellhole of the north

There’s the buoys that were supposed to guide me (and a couple hundred other swimmers) from Paihia to Russell the following morning. Looks easy enough… you can see all the way across and the water is flat as.

Ah, but weather forecasting has improved over the years. We knew that by morning there would be a stiff breeze blowing directly across our course, with meter-high swells on the far side.

I’ve swum in worse. Luckily my dominant breathing side was away from that wind and the slappy waves. But still, it was a tough slog. You can’t really see those buoys in waves like that without stopping (or I can’t anyway) so I mostly just tried to keep up with someone else and hope they were a better navigator than me.

I finished right in the middle of the pack… good enough! But I was still slower than all three under-14 girl medalists and the lone over-80 man, who cheerfully accepted his medal and shook the imaginary hand of all the competitors he’s outlasted.

And so on to the festivities! Between my pool and open water groups, with family and friends, we made up a table of about 30, great fun. An hour and a half of swimming and a full day’s revelry… just right.

We stayed at the celebrated Duke of Marlborough hotel, which has been there since 1827, when Russell was known as Kororāreka, and also “the hellhole of the north.” Now it’s just a ridiculously relaxing and picturesque holiday spot. I feared the hotel would be a faded flower, trading on its reputation, but our room was really nice, full of thoughtful touches.

Here’s a few pictures from walking around town…

The old cannon.

A sand dollar washed up but not all bleached and dried out yet.

The headlands.

On Sunday the weather was expected to get even worse, so we woke up and left straight away. Let’s beat the traffic! But a tree fell across the road… more or less the only road to get to that part of the world without a massive coastal detour. So we added one more check mark to the trip, sitting in a line of cars on Sunday waiting to get back to Auckland.

Working bee

Out behind the pétanque terrain is… was… a very fine stand of bamboo. Very invasive bamboo.

And so a bunch of us banded together to get it chopped down, and a few weeks later to haul it behind the maintenance shed where it will decompose in a year or two.

Playing pétanque with people, I suppose like any social activity, teaches you a bit about who they are. Some people take it too seriously, others not so much. Some cheat, others break the rules apparently without meaning to. But I’ll now say that trying to organize a dozen people to haul some bamboo stalks, or even to just be one of the people being organized, is an even more concentrated lesson in personality. Bossy, hero,shirker, shouldn’t be allowed near sharp objects, steady worker, it was all on display.

But, somehow it all worked and we got the job done in time for cocktails!

We voted!

NZ had its local elections last month, and its one of the neat things here that as non-citizen residents we get to vote. Although this election was not online, they still make it pretty easy… drop your ballot in the box or the mail, any time during the three weeks leading up to Election Day. Besides the many mailboxes around, ballot boxes were at every library, post office, and supermarket.

A year ahead of national elections in which St. Jacinda of Arden might face real competition, everyone and their dog is trying to parse the results. There does seem to have been a rightward shift. Certainly the Auckland mayor’s race … the biggest prize… resulted in the resounding victory of a grumpy white boomer over a Pasifika candidate, a real slap to Jacinda’s Labour Party. But so far, the more scary kind of assault on democratic norms seems limited to a fringe-y bunch of alt-media zombies. And we are happy to be two five-millionths of the electorate charged with keeping it that way.

There’s no place like home

And after a long uncomfortable flight, I’m back home in NZ. That’s me in the background fiddling with my watch, but I felt as happy as my big friend Etienne coming out of the water that morning. (and credit to Tracy, wife of Malcolm on the left and a prolific photographer and videographer, for the photo)

I was glad to see that the US wasn’t a smoking ruin. On some level I thought that four years of Trump and two years of the pandemic might have wrecked everything. But no, most things were just normal. But I still count myself lucky to have found a different place, a slightly different way of building a society.

Never say forever, but NZ is really nice and I hope we’ll get to keep on enjoying it for a long time.

Go fish

You don’t see as many of these magnetic car fish any more, but I love them still… it’s just the right way to tweak the IXOYE crowd that I believe came up with these first.

Lee even got a copyright for her “hash fish” design celebrating the joys of being a hash house harrier…

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