Blow me down

This morning Joe and I were up very early to participate in the Scorching triathlon series. However it had been raining since Sunday afternoon and was not looking good when we left the house. By the time we reached  Scorching Bay it was decidedly unpleasant. The rain was very heavy, it was cold and the southerly froze the bones.

We decided not to participate as waiting an hour to start our events, then being active, then having to wait about an hour before we could leave meant we would have died of hypothermia. As it happened were were not the only ones to leave.

Then this afternoon Isaac had cricket practice in blazing sunshine, and we have just finished sitting on the deck, lapping up the late rays, before dinner.

“four seasons in one day……..”

Hello to all, after such a quiet period.

It again has been lack of time rather than lack of comment. The swine flu response means that work has been getting in the way on life, with late finishes, fatigue, and poor sleep. The response up until this point has been “keep it out” and “stamp it out”. with border control, tracing of symptomatic travellers, and their isolation and their treatment, andf then cluster control with treatment of cases and isolation of their contacts. Spread within NZ was and is inevitable, and we in Wellington showed community transmision first, by going to look for it. The main focus was on travellers, and so if you only test travellers, then you will only see cases in travellers…..
So the Ministry has now moved to managing the epidemic, which from the perspective of the frontline in Wellington is no before time. It appears there was an unwillingness to acknowledge the presence of community spread, and so delay in moving on with the respnse, and so pushing the frontline, already under stress of limited resources, fatigue, and sense of futility, too far.

So things have changed, and I am due to move on. It has been an worthwhile experience, and enlightening, but thankfully I have some time to finish off other work before I enter the doors of the Ministry of Health.

More news soon.

May 21, 2009James Ihaka with NZPA
Photo / Kate Ward, Weatherwatch
Cold snap hits NZ

Related links:
Snow blocks roads in North and South Islands
Heavy snow forecast for central North Island
Roads reopen as sun melts snow

Bad weather continues to plague the country with slips in the central North Island and avalanche warnings in place.
The cold spell across the country is expected to continue into next week, MetService spokesman Bob McDavitt said.
Windy cold conditions were easing, but another cold front was forecast to cross the South Island tonight and tomorrow morning, then hit the north in tomorrow afternoon and evening, he said.

The above from the NZ Herald.
The weather has been terrible. Lots snow in South island, and low temperatures. In Wellington 8-10C in the last few days, with a southerly blast to give a wind chill of 2C.
Even at the work it is cold.
So winter has come early-is it climate change???
Lucky then that I have been doing my penguin stuff under the house, though I have yet to finish. Last weekend I was at it again and found it very difficult under the lower corners of the house. Maybe a bit like those Colditz tunneller types?

So we are back from holiday.

The first stage was the cricket camp at Hastings, our third attendance. Joe stayed in camp, while we enjoyed the luxury of a motel with a pool. The cricket went reasonably well for Joe, though not really with the bat. He bowled well in a couple of games out of the five, and picked up two wickets in one game, and again was on a hat-trick! He did not get much of a bat, other than when he was put in at number 3 when the team responsibilities were mixed up. He did not enjoy the experience, and hung around, and played and missed, for a low score.
The team only won a single match, but were competitive in 4 of the 5 games. There were some impressive players on view in some of these teams, though the same could be said of Joe’s team, as four went onto represent Wellington the following week, and of those three made it to the full Wellington rep team that played last weekend against Canterbury.

After cricket we moved onto a new venue for us-Lake Waikaremoana, though the trip involved the horribly winding road after Napier, and then an interesting road from Wairoa, which is 62Km long, of which 25Km is unsealed. The family ‘mobile was not the ideal vehicle for the journey. The campsite was busy, full of fishermen and boaty types. Both “bogans” , and affluent JAFFAs, we decided. Probably they were estate agents, and had arrogance and bad manners oozing from their skin, as they tried to take over the facilities with no regard for anyone else.
We did a few brief walks, which is what one does there if one does not have a boat. The more serious types walk around the lake, but that takes a few days, and does not suit little legs.

Then it was onto Porongahau. The campsite was quiet, we were one of the few there for the first four days. The weather was great, warm, and sunshine though with plenty of opportunity to be burnt. The boys took to the sea and surfed, though dad did demonstrate he is still the dude with the body board. The men went off to the local golf course, paid the $10 into the honesty box and played a few holes, with the three clubs between us, one of which a scaled down 9 iron for Isaac. Everyone enjoyed their swings, and limited success.
The night sky was great with absence of “light pollution”.
Some runs were done, with Sara achieving greater distances. The achilles tendonitis is still a limiting factor.
On the Friday the place suddenly “filled out”. Hardly busy but we still felt invaded. Saturday was the return journey, everyone crammed into the car with all the gear again. The fishing rod was ever present, but not used.

Eleanor joined our party a day late as she went to a gig to see the Arctic Monkeys. Maybe she will find time to describe it for the blog if she can find time to put fingers to keyboard.

Hello- Eleanor here.
Last weekend i participated in a speech competition, the oshea sheild.
Its heaps of catholic schools that meet up and compete to win the sheild. Oratory, Religious Drama, Impromptu, Religious Questions, Scripture Reading and Junior Prepared- which i did.
My school didn’t win, but the weekend was absolutely amazing! Lots of boy schools, lots of interesting convos and so much fun.
The best event was either impromptu or drama- but all were very impressive.
I didn’t win my event, my brother school did. But apparently i was very good.(:
I was soooooooo tired at the end, but was allowed a sleep in on monday!
I cant wait to it again in 7th form.
Best bit of the weekend?
Getting a badge!!!!!!!!

Birthday


Birthday boy today.
Very excited this morning about being the focus of attention and the presents to come his way. So far, a new basketball as he has just started playing, a magic set to confuse us with, The Amazing Race board game following on from watching the tv show, and lovely cash courtesy of Uncle Mike and Auntie Tina.

Of course Mum produced a fine made cake-yum.

Time in the suburbs

So, a funny old weekend.
Joe’s rugby cancelled as it poured down overnight. Super 14 final ruined as a game and spectator event by the all enveloping fog, which of course would not have happened if it had been due to play in Wellington.
A Sunday trip to the club followed by Confirmation session for EQ.
Then parents did their gardening stint to spruce up the place, and felt all the better for it afterwards. This was followed by a walk at Oriental Bay and a “well earned pint”.
Middle class bliss?

Is it the FA Cup?

Super 14 final today, which features The Hurricanes and The Crusaders, two Kiwi teams. A big event and so continual talk and newspaper articles all week. The enemy are the favourites. Nearly a domestic competition, or at least a mini -international one that NZ teams do well in.
As an event I suppose close to FA Cup, or maybe Champions League final.
Go the “Canes”.

The inevitable march of time?

Back to the knee then.
Saw the bone doctor yesterday and arthroscopy booked for June 29th as long as ACC approve. ACC?-essentially an alternative health and support service if your problems are accident related. I did mine intially sailing, then a whole ot worse when I went running and knee went “squeeelch!”
I certianly cannot run at monment and even walking is limiting, and pain at night…….
So a bit of repair to the ageing body.
The most worrying bit of seeing the man yesterday was how he noted the muscle wasting around my knee that I was not aware of.
Sara’s biggest concern was that I was not wearing my best pants.