Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Tuesday 24th November - local protest meeting

The local education administrators are proposing to remove the school bus which serves our locality to cut their costs. Between 40 and 50 children use the bus daily to attend schools all over Napier and Taradale.

Last night there was a protest meeting in Taradale High School where Chris Tremain, the local MP had to defend the National government decision. It was an interesting meeting. The two men who had called the meeting had a short introduction and then threw it over to the floor to makes their views clear to Chris Tremain. Tremain looked very uncomfortable. I think he had been ambushed and not expected the largish crowd who turned up. The meeting did not have a real agenda and was a bit chaotic. Tremain did not even know the route the school bus followed and was unaware of the numbers using the bus. The meeting was inconclusive but Tremain is sure to lose many votes if the decision goes through. He has lost my potential vote for his performance on the night!

The meetings to protest the proposed dump at the Donegore quarry were much better organised. And the politicians seemed to have done their homework!

Tuesday, 24th November - 3 years in New Zealand

Today is our anniversary day for arrival at Auckland Airport.

No party today, J is still working for his exams which finish on Thursday afternoon.

We should kill one of the calves to celebrate!!!!

Monday, 23rd November - fadge

We had some old potatoes which I decided to experiment on. I looked up a recipe for fadge ( potato bread ) on the internet and made some this past weekend.

This northern irelanders mother and aunts would be amused at me having to look up the internet for the recipe. :-)

Anyway, over 3 years after leaving Northern Ireland we have finally had some fadge... not as good as mother would make but still pretty good. Had some fried for dinner, the best way to eat it, I think!

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Thursday 5th November - Guy Fawkes night

Believe it or not tonight is Fireworks Night in New Zealand.

5th November is celebrated here like it is in England.

Fortunately, by law, fireworks are only sold in the 3 days leading up to 5th November thus limiting the amount actually sold and let off!

We do not have fireworks going off for months!!! :-)

Thursday 5th November - a MAJOR milestone

In the autumn 0f 1919, my Great Uncle Jim and Great Aunt Eliza left Ireland ( not Northern Ireland) to set out for New Zealand to start a new life there. Jim had served in the Great War the Inniskilling Fusileers and had been invalided out of the Army. Eliza had nursed him back to health.

Their daughter Essie was born on the ship in the Red Sea on its way to New Zealand on 3rd November 1919.

Essie celebrates her 90th birthday this week. The family are having a party at Moyola Station near Whakatane in the Bay of Plenty all day Saturday. Four generations of the clan are gathering from all over Australasia for the event.

We are travelling up on Saturday morning to Moyola to take part in the celebrations. I am looking forward to meeting people I have not seen for 25 years.

Happy Birthday Essie!

Thursday 5th November - What would you do?

Some time ago David, a friend of mine in Wellington, and I were talking about different things we would try and do if we changed careers. David said he would want to become a helicopter pilot. I said I would learn to drive forklift trucks and use that do do other interesting work.

Today I gained my forklift truck licence!

:-)

Tomorrow I am going to update my CV and submit it to a couple of agencies to try and find seasonal work in Hawke's Bay for the summer.

I think David has not done anything about his helicopter licence yet.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Tuesday 20th October - bucket lists

I have been talking with friends recently about our 'bucket lists' - those things which you dream of achieving or are planning to achieve. My friend Mark is very organised... every new year he picks one or 2 things and sets a target of doing before the year end... probably the way to go!

Some peoples' lists seem to be all about travel... Iceland used to be on my list of places to visit... but having seen volcanic New Zealand... I think it is more interesting... although I would still like to go to Iceland someday... it is on my B list at the moment. The North Western US states have been on my explorer list for a long time as has the Yukon in Canada... not this year!

Bucket lists change depending on circumstances and experiences... my list is much curtailed at the moment... still on the travel list is exploring Hawkes Bay mountain ranges especially the Kawekas... much more convenient and cheaper than the Rocky Mountains or the Cascades!

Another think on my list is making some furniture which becomes treasured as heirlooms... one of my northern irelander friends has told me of his delight at now possessing a piece of mine. I intend to have more of those!

The secret is to make your dream a reality! Plan for it!

That log cabin in the woods is much more fun than castles in the sky!


Tuesday 20th October - birthday

It's J's birthday today. He is 16.

He has not been driving on the road yet... a major relief!

Tuesday 20th October - the cat

Our itinerant cat seems to have disappeared. It has not been around for about 3 or 4 weeks.

The neighbours have put down weed-killer to kill their whins and thistles. Maybe the cat was poisoned... or maybe it just found a better home!

Tuesday 20th October - quail

As I sit in our study, a pair of quail are walking across the lawn. They are nesting somewhere on the section this springtime and are very tame. They come right up to the house... funny walkers :-)

There are pheasants nesting somewhere on the section as well. Their screeches can be heard now and again... new wildlife!

... and talking of wildlife, rabbits are appearing regularly... a young one even sits on the deck. Time for action I think!!!!

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Tuesday 6th October - a blast of winter

We have had a cold blast of weather the last 3 days... Taupo has been cut off from Napier since Sunday. Over 300 cars were trapped in the snow drifts on Sunday! It took police and army most of 24 hours to rescue all the people.

Napier was cut off from any easy route north.

The southern exit was also cut off for about 24 hours when a rogue gunman went amok and started shooting at anyone he could see near Norsewood. He escaped across the countryside. The police had to search about 3,000 hectares. Farms were locked down and everyone told to stay indoors. Some dairy herds were not milked for 48 hours. The police took 3 days to find him! He was hiding in Norsewood Golf Clubhouse.

Hawke's Bay police are having an awful year with rogue gunmen...

Tuesday 6th October - mobile phones again

A good friend is having problems with an erratic heart rate....

... I am wondering if the mobile phone is a cause... I am deeply suspicious of our heavy use of microwaves near our bodies... especially if metal is involved like fillings in our teeth or frames of glasses or pens or...

I once said to my dentist in Templepatrick that my fillings were irritated by my mobile phone but he had not heard of that before... time will tell.

Tuesday 6th October - I'm back

I seem to have been hibernating for September...

Thanks to those of you who have been asking where the blog has gone...

It's reassuring to know there are some readers!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Thursday 27th August - golden Hawke's Bay

There are hundreds of thousands of acres of pine forest to the west of Hawke's Bay.

Most of central North Island is pine trees.

In July and August with the prevailing wind, the air is full of pine pollen. It covers everything with a golden dust. Walk on grass and shoes or boots are covered in the golden dust.

The car sale-yards have fun every morning having to dust/wash their cars!

The air in Hawke's Bay is currently golden!!!!

Yesterday we had a schorcher of a day too with the temperature up to 35 degrees in the sunshine on our deck. A good August day anywhere in the world! :-)

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Thursday 20th August - update on the calf

To update those of you reading about the neighbouring farmer... see previous entry

The dead calf was left for 8 days... He finally removed it last weekend before about 24 hours of rain flooded the paddock.

Thursday 20th August - Coleraine - where is it?

The Irish name 'Cuil Raithin' was anglicised to Coleraine by the Planters in the 17th century.

Cuil Raithin is Irish for 'ferny corner'. Coleraine would have been a great name for New Zealand with the multitude of ferns found here!!!!!! I vote for that name if the current name is ever replaced!!!! In its early days, the North Island was once called New Ulster and the South Island, New Munster because of the host of new Irish settlers here!

Coleraine was also the name of the county which is now Londonderry. (The county was never historically County Derry.) The county was renamed County Londonderry by the London Companies in the Plantation of the 17th Century.

One of Coleraine's most famous sons was Bonar Law who became Prime Minister of the UK after the Great War. His grandson is Lord Coleraine. I will return to Bonar Law another time on this blog...

People who left Coleraine to settle in other parts of the world have taken the name and given it to their farm or town. So there are Coleraine's all over the United States, Canada and Australia.


We have a Coleraine in Hawke's Bay. A man from Coleraine named his farm after his home town when he settled on the slopes of Te Mata near Havelock North. His descendants run the farm as a vineyard now.

Coleraine is the top red wine in New Zealand. It is also the most expensive!

R and J gave me 2 bottles of Coleraine 2005 when I started my last contract. I think I will open one bottle and have a glass when I start my next contract!

Good years are 2005, 2006 and 2007 if you are looking to buy a bottle! :-)

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Wednesday 19th August - child abuse by any other name

You can drive in New Zealand from the age of 15.

The New Zealand government finally came to its senses yesterday. They announced that they are seriously considering raising the driving age to 17.

Many years too late I think!

Last year young drivers aged 15 to 17 were responsible for one third of all deaths from road accidents in New Zealand - 120 deaths out of a total of 400!!!!!!!!!!!

They interviewed lots of 15 and 16 year olds on the TV news last night. They all thought they were safe drivers! Good job they cannot vote at 15!

R had an accident on her way to school this morning. A 16 year old rear-ended the car in traffic. The cars were damaged but noone is hurt. The boy was in one of her classes yesterday! He will have a huge repair bill.

A good lesson for J to see being a young driver on the road can be an expensive luxury!


Wednesday 19th August - Who do you think you are?

Living we New Zealand, we sometimes get the opportunitiy to see other versions of British TV programmes. We are currently watching a series of the Australian version of 'Who do you think you are?'

Australians seem to have a fascination with their families criminal past and seem to deify criminal forebears. We saw an example a couple of weeks ago where an Aussie actor was on the show searching for his roots. He found that he had 2 sets of Irish forefathers. One from Ulster turned out to have done well in Australia and been one of the most wealthy families in Australia at the start of the last century.

The actor chose to research the other branch of his family and discovered that his relative had been transported to Australia as a criminal rather than be executed in his native Munster. His reaction was amazing!

Australians must be the only people in the world who treat their criminal forebears as 'royalty'!

Wednesday 19th August - Would you eat your best friend?

A Tongan family in South Auckland were found to be barbequing their pet dog at the weekend.

Apparently dog is a delicacy in Tonga!

And it is not illegal to eat dog in New Zealand so the SPCA cannot prosecute!

How would you like your dog cooked?

:-)

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Tuesday 18th August - identity

New Zealanders delight in the nickname 'kiwi'.

A kiwi is a strange bird that fistles around in the dark when everyone is asleep... probably right definition for New Zealanders who are awake and active while Europe sleeps... :-) Kiwis are on the verge of extinction... the birds that is!

Kiwi is used in the definition for everything and was/is sometimes used as a racist way of separating the identity of europeans from maori here...

I was amused to see 'real kiwi pies' advertised in a bakery the other day. What was really in the pies... did they catch the kiwi, kill it, and then cook in pastry????

Tuesday 18th August - not really a beehive

The late winter / early spring flowers are coming in to bloom. One of the most spectacular is the kowhai tree which is sometimes claimed as the national flower of New Zealand. Search out kowhai on google to see more. Also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kowhai

It's much better as an emblem than the shamrock but up there with the flax flower!

The HQ of New Zealand government is nicknamed 'the beehive' but if you look closer you can see the inspiration for the architect was actually the kowhai tree and its flowers...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beehive_(building)

It's not a beehive, it's a kowhai tree!!!!

Monday, August 10, 2009

Friday 14th August - what is a bad farmer?

The paddock next to ours has had beef cattle in it for about 2 weeks. There are a number of new calves.

Last Tuesday evening about 9pm, I heard one of the cows roaring appearing to be in distress. I went out to check if it was in our paddock but it sounded further away.

Wednesday morning on the way to school, J and R noticed a calf on the wrong side of a drain between the drain and the fence. J checked to see if it was alive. It raised its head.

Wednesday afternoon when R came home, she told me about the calf and I went to check. It was still lying in a ball in the shade. It was cold. I got it to its feet. It was unsteady so I carried it across the drain to a sunny spot. His mother came to check what we were doing. The calf struggled to its feet again and tried to feed but the mother was no help. R saw the farmers daughter-in-law and told her about the calf. She said she would report it to her father.

Thursday morning, I walk down to the postbox and see the calf lying alone. It's mother has abandoned it. I watch during the day and the calf is struggling to follow its mother but is still not feeding. I phone the farmer and tell him that calf is struggling to feed. He says that he will check.

Friday evening, I see calf lying at bottom of hill below our house. It is unable to get to its feet because it is so weak. The mother cow is roaring because the calf will not get up. I walk across to see the farmers son and tell him that calf is in very poor state and will need attention. Son tells me that they are his father's herd and he looks after them.

Saturday morning, calf is dead in same spot where I saw it last evening.

The farmer did not look once near the calf in the last 3 days although we had given 3 messages. I know many a farmer whose own health would have suffered to try and keep animals alive.

Sunday afternoon. The mother cow is sleeping beside her dead calf.

Friday morning. Nearly a week later the dead calf is still lying down there. The farmer drives past the dead calf every day. When does it become a health hazard?

R and J wanted us to adopt the calf on that Wednesday afternoon. I said that was stealing. I wish we had done what R and J wanted. The farmer would not have cared.


Monday 10th August - a third driver

J passed the theory test which permits him to become a learner driver. There are 35 questions and he did not have any wrong. The pass mark is 32.

At 15 and three quarters I think he is still too young to be driving on the road.

I have a few battles ahead.

Monday 10th August - the Armoy Races

Road racing on motorbikes is one of the most dangerous sports.

There is a generation of young men from Armoy who are dead or crippled because of crashes while road-racing.

The brains trust who decided to permit the Armoy Races on Saturday should have their heads examined!!!!

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Tuesday 28th July - 90 years in Ballyhome

My great-grandfather bought the Ballyhome farm in 1919. He had 4 sons all farming. Two sons had just returned from service in the Great War and he needed more capacity than the Ballyrock farm could provide.

Ballyhome has been home to 4 generations of the family since then.

90 years - a reason to celebrate!

Tuesday 28th July - do swallows make a summer?

When I was in New Zealand in December, 2004, I was surprised to see swallows here. My Uncle Robert said that he had first seen them on his farm in the Wairarapa in the 1950's nesting under a bridge.

New Zealand has a mixture of wild birds 'imported' from other parts of the world. Colonists in the 1850's and 1860's wanted to create a New Britain and brought many native British birds to settle. Guthrie-Smith in his book Tutira notes their progress through the late 1800's as they expanded round the coastline from Auckland. We have sparrows, finches, thrushes, blackbirds, yellowhammers among others. All these nest in our trees.

I have been wondering if the swallows are migratory and where do they go in winter? Hawke's Bay on most winter days is as warm as an average British or Irish summer day. Why migrate?

This cool winter I have seen many swallows flying around Poraiti and Napier. There must not be many flies and bugs out there for them to feed on so why are they still here? Are they confused because they are not in Africa? Do most of them go to Australia or further north?

A puzzle...

Tuesday 28th July - snow

The wood delivery man, Andy, last week said he had been out to Poraiti a lot this winter. It was our second delivery of firewood this year. When the first lot came in May I expected it to last until 2010 but we have had a log fire on nearly every day since then.

Andy, a local, says that he has never seen snow on the hills like we have this year. Even the hills close to Napier are white. Further west, Kaweka mountain is 43 km away as the crow flies and it has been looking like a skiing mountain since May. We have now had countless frosts - it was down to minus 2 this morning... the countryside was lovely and white before sunrise.

So what about global warming?

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Monday 20th July - twelfth week in Napier

We had no
  • hall burnings
  • bonfires
  • marches
  • riots
  • people going out of their way to be offended

Boring... not!

Had some sunny days... 26 degrees max. :-)

Cricket (al Lords), Golf (at Turnberry), Rugby (at Eden Park) on TV

Perfect!

Didn't Tom Watson do well... seems like nothing has changed in 30+ years!

:-)

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Saturday 11th July - most horrible place

My friends have left Northern Ireland after their short tour.

Sounds like they had a great time on the Causeway Coast.

They identified their 'most horrible place' as Newtownards. Funny that!

Friday, July 10, 2009

Friday 10th July - mid year and mid winter

July 2nd was actually mid-year with 182 days left in 2009. It is a lovely mid-winter day today starting with a frost but beautiful blue sky.

It's a bit like a (very) good April day in Northern Ireland...

The wattle trees are coming in to bloom and the daffodills are coming out... early spring!

It feels like time for a new year resolution! Last year my resolution was to lose 10kg in weight... didn't believe I could do that myself but there was a 'Biggest Loser' competition at work which helped the motivation. By Christmas Eve 2008 I was down 15kg to 81.3kg, the lightest I have been in 30 years... I think I was the biggest loser. :-) I have been feeling much better and more active! My picture on my Facebook profile in January seemed to worry some correspondents! Resolution for 2009 was to stop losing any more which I have achieved. Target at the moment is to keep (get) fit... More cycling and walking called for!!!!

Friday, July 03, 2009

Friday 3rd July - school holidays

School holidays today with the start of the 2 week mid-winter break.

J has organised his time around sports.

He is leaving tomorrow to go with friends to Tauranga on the Bay of Plenty for a tennis tournament. J comes home from that next Thursday. ( If he had remained in Northern Ireland he would have been playing in the Ballycastle July tournament! I think he will be warmer and drier here! )

The next week is the New Zealand Schools National Orienteering Championships over in Manuatu. His school have been the NZ boys champions for the last 3 years and will be keenly defending their title!

The cat will miss him!

Friday 3rd July - new source of timber

The native New Zealand woods like rimu and matai are impossible to find or buy as logging of native trees is illegal.

Up until now I have been working with imported American oak and ash. I have been looking for sources of recycled NZ timber and this week I have found a recycling yard in Hastings with a good supply of old beams at least 2 inches thick. There are lots of thinner boards but they are full of nail holes.

The timber yard was suffering this week as their roof was leaking and there was a lake inside the shed!

I bought 2 beams of rimu 9 inches wide and over 2 inches thick. I will make a small table this weekend to test out the wood and see if it is worthwhile working with recycled wood. It costs about the same as American white oak but it is magical working with wood which is probably at least 80 years since it came out of a forest and is original NZ timber!!!!

Friday 3rd July - cat update

The cat now spends about 4 of 5 nights a week in the house. It knows which nights are too cold or too wet to go outside and has worked out that J is the most friendly of its keepers and sleeps all night on his bed!

Friday 3rd July - visitors to Northern Ireland

I have some friends from New Zealand who are visiting Northern Ireland this weekend. They are planning to go up the Antrim Coast, visit Rathlin Island and walk along the Causeway headlands.

I hope the weather is better than the forecast there for the next few days!

Thursday 2nd July - visit to the cattle-market

One of our neighbours is interested in buying J's three steers. He wants us to come up with a price and maybe he will deal.

I went to the Wednesday market at Stortford Lodge in Hastings yesterday to do some market research. I now have an idea of the approximate weight of the steers and price J should ask for.

Cattle were sold in batches of up to 20 at one go. They are weighed on scales in the auction ring. and the priice per head and kilo displayed on a screen above the auctioneer.

A large number of beef animals sold were from the Chatham Islands. They had been brought over by boat on Tuesday. They looked a lot ligher by age that J's 3 steers. There must be a shortage of good grass over there...

There were also some good young beef steers sold from Wairoa. If I had the land, I would have bought them!

Thursday 2nd July - 4th July 2001

As I walked of the 'red-eye' flight at Heathrow on the morning of 4th July 2001, 3 plain-clothes policemen were immediately in front of me. One took a call on his mobile phone and told his colleagues that there had been a murder in Antrim town.

I checked the BBC news on the internet when I got to my office that morning. A young man was shot dead as he waited for his pickup for work on the Greystone Road in Antrim.

I thought back and remembered a couple of unusual things I had seen in Parkgate village as I drove to work early that morning. I contacted the police and notified them. It took the police a week to come and interview me and only after prompting by someone else.

8 years on...

No one has ever been found by the police to account for that crime.

I have always thought that the police knew exactly what happened that 4th July morning but they have no proof.

Thursday 2nd July - rain rain rain rain sun

After 4 days of continuous rain, we have a sunny day. It was at 19 degrees in mid-afternoon. The rain was very welcome but a smaller quantity would have done!!

When it rains, small showers just run off the hard surface so it is good that we get a good soaking at least once a winter. It is wierd to stand in six inches of water and see cracks at least 2 inches wide in the ground!!!! The remnants of the droughts in late 2009 and early 2009!

All we need is some overnight warmth and the grass will grow!

When we have rain in winter, it snows in the mountains about 20 miles inland... On a sunny day like today they are absolutely beautiful covered in white!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Wednesday 24th June - the cat

About 6 months after we moved in to Rotowhenua Road, a cat appeared and would linger around the house for a few days and then move on. We occasionally would give it some milk outside but never feed it properly. Our next door neighbours named it and fed it too. No one knows where it originated. It is smart enough to be able to climb in through open windows...

It arrived back with us in April this year and R & J started feeding it. It has now adopted up and expects to be fed on a daily basis. We now have a pet cat which on the coldest nights sleeps indoors beside the log fire. It knows its comforts...

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Tuesday 23rd June

I have reviewed the last few comments on here... I think they are all on the negative side....

So need to put a few more positive stories up here.

Thanks to all of you out there who are being very supportive. I enjoy the humour!

I have started putting up links to some of my friends more oddball blogs... referenced at the right-hand side of this page.

Tuesday 23rd June - A H1N1

The flu virus is spreading through the three main New Zealand cities with hundreds now infected. They predict at least a third of the population will be infected over the next two years.

It has not managed to get over the mountains to Hawke's Bay yet but it will in time.

We are being told to stock up with enough food to survive for a week if we are infected. Those with the flu have to stay at home until they recover!

The government health ministry has pulled away from shutting down workplaces and schools if there is new infections. I expect they did not want to be hit with huge expense claims from employers if they stopped companies trading. So in the event of a real pandemic, do not expect the government to think of health... they will think of the cost first!!!!

The flu virus has managed to find its way into a Wellington prison. It would have been funny to see a prison being shut down and everyone sent home. :-)

Friday, June 19, 2009

Friday 19th June - perspectives

One of my friends who reads this blog was talking to me yesterday about how people are changing their projected image in the challenging workplace environment...

... people will do strange things to protect their jobs!

... and talking of strange things...

Last week in a job interview I was asked if I would be comfortable working with a team of people who would obviously be much younger than me! Strange question!!!! Work is work!!!!

I worked as a recruiter in Northern Ireland for many years and would NEVER have entertained asking that question! New Zealand has an age discrimination law and I never declare my age on any job application I make... I think I have just been discriminated against... they came back a few days later and said I was too experienced!!!

I must be getting very experienced! :-)

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Thursday 18th June - little northern irelanders

... 'if you're Irish come into the parlour... there's a welcome there for you....'

... if you are Romanian??????????

People living on the island that is Ireland have migrated to other places for thousands of years to try to make a better life for themselves... you can meet many of their descendands in different parts of the world today.

Why can Romanians not try to make a better life for themselves in Northern Ireland?????????
We certainly live in a global village... bad news travels very quickly!

Thursday 18th June - weather today

It's a lovely sunny Hawke's Bay winter day... started off about 3 degrees this morning at 8am. If there is not a southerly blowing, it usually gets up to 15 to 20 degrees by midday. Almost a summer day in Northern Ireland!!!!

The mountain ranges about 20 miles to the north and west are coated in snow. A beautiful winter scene!

Luckily we can look from a distance and not have to experience the snow or ice in Napier.

The grass continues to grow although slowly... this has been the coldest Hawke's Bay autumn / winter for a few years. Normally this is the growing season and farmers from elsewhere in the North Island winter their stock in Hawke's Bay but not this year!

Talking of growing, I am about to plant my onions and garlic for the new season. The first venture into the garden for a while! The rain in mid May to early June has left the ground very damp. Garlic is a new experiment... I will keep you updated on progress.

Thursday 18th June - employment

I have been out of work for several weeks... a victim of changing circumstances...

I am currently chasing IT work anywhere in New Zealand but also taking the opportunity to sort out the section and do other long delayed work on the property.

I have my workshop totally wired and am starting to make some pieces which I intend to place in one or two craft shops to see if I can gain alternate income. It is a challenging time but I am hoping that there will be some interested buyers out there...

Thursday 18th June - update on the shoulder

J and I were involved in a car accident in April 2008. I drove round a corner and met Swedish tourists who had forgotten which side of the road to drive on... a head-on collision. Fortunately the only damage apart from our car being written off was to my shoulder.... a broken bone which took a while to heal. It was starting to click and be painful with the onset of autumn 2009 here and I went back to the doctor in May.

He diagnosed early osteoarthritis (OA) developing in the joint and recommended me seeing a physio. So now I am seeing a physio for my shoulder and my hip which is also giving early OA problems. Discovered the hip problem when playing squash recently... it almost stopped me moving for about 4 days!

I need to keep active and build up the muscles in my joints to keep the pain away...

Another funny thing... my physio is Richard McConnell, a New Zealander with a Northern Irelander surname... His parents hail from Belfast... and his sister is living in Carrickfergus... Northern Irelanders everywhere!!!!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Wednesday 17th June - update on the herd

In mid October 2008, J made his venture into farming. He bought 2 young Friesian steers which had just been weaned. They were about 12 weeks old and he planned to keep them for 6 to 8 months to graze in our paddock and hopefully J would make some money with the project.

By Christmas, we saw that despite the spring drought in October to December, the calves were not keeping ahead of the grass and J bought 2 weaned Hereford - Friesian cross steers to keep the first 2 company. He was a proud farmer managing a herd of 4 steers.

It rained over the Christmas break and the grass greened up a bit in January but by mid-February a summer drought meant that we had to buy some hay to keep the herd going through March. It rained a bit in March and April to keep the grass green.

By Easter, the 4 steers were growing fast and were clearing all the green grass as it grew in our paddock. We had a decision to make, sell the older 2 or find pasture elsewhere to keep the herd together. One of our neighbours has a paddock of about 2 acres that he had let grow all spring and summer without any cattle or sheep grazing. We approached him and he let us have his paddock for free. All he wanted was the grass to be kept down.

We moved the herd in to their new paddock in early May. The paddock has a steep hill at about 45 degrees and J fretted that the hill was too steep and the calves would fall. I tried to reassure him that cattle had 4 legs and would be more stable than humans...

About a week after we moved the herd, I went over to check the herd and found one of the older steers lying flat on his side. From a distance I thought he was dead but as I got closer, he lifted his head. He was warm and sweating but unable to get up.

I went back to the house, phoned a vet and told J. The vet arrived about an hour later and diagnosed that the steer had a broken neck and it was paralysed below the break. The steer would have to be put down. J could not watch... he petted the calf goodbye and walked away before the vet injected the calve.

We had to get an excavator to come in about 2 days later and bury the calf in our paddock.

It was a shock for us all but especially J that we lost one of the herd. He had watched over his animals every day and even though they were a business to him, they were still pets.

The vet had never seen a calf or a cow with a broken neck before in his career. Noone else I have spoken to has ever seen that either...

(David T. - have you ever seen the like????)

We can only conclude that a dog spooked the calves while they were near the top of the hill and unfortunately the calve fell and rolled down the hill, breaking his neck.

The steers are still grazing in the steep paddock and are thriving. We are keeping a watch for dogs.

( The vet, a New Zealander asked me where I was from... it turns out that he had spent some time in Ballymena and had been to a wedding in Bushmills Distillery! A small world!!!!)

Saturday, June 06, 2009

Saturday 6th June - weather update

As we approach mid-winter, Napier today was the warmest place in NZ with a high of 16 degrees...

We have had the chilliest autumn in NZ so far with 5 white frosts so far during autumn in Hawke's Bay, the coldest being on Thursday morning when we got down to minus 0.7 degrees... :-)

Last winter we had 4 frosts from May to October.... so we are exceeding that already!!!!!!!!!

We have our log fire going most nights... it keeps the house really warm. The logs cost about $230 (about 90 UK pounds) for the winter so that is much less than oil or gas central heating for a year!

Last weekend was very cold with snow down to 200m. We are at 90m above sea level but we had hail at our place and there were a couple of snow showers in Napier!!! Very unusual.

The Kaweka Range (about 30 miles west) is now snow covered and will be that way until late September. It was actually covered in white for a couple of days in March when we has a cold blast of weather come up from the South Pole.

Global warming is not happening in NZ this year!!!!!

Saturday 6th June - the return

I have returned to blogging...

Some of my good friends have noted that I have not posted any news for six months.

I have a few tales to tell and will be adding some stories happy and sad from the first half of the year as well as current news.

As they say after the ad break on TV News, ' Welcome Back!' ... it always puzzles me that they say that when it's them who have been away...

... More soon :-)