Archive for November, 2005

A Good Day for a Movie?

Sunday, November 27th, 2005

Well, after the nasty weather yesterday, today dawned bright and sunny, though the forecast had been for rain all weekend. I guess the weather predictions down here aren’t any more accurate than around Puget Sound!

After Max’s sword class and me finally writing something new in this blog, we went and saw Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (since it was _supposed_ to have been raining today, and we had bought tickets ahead of time). We all really enjoyed it, though they really need to follow the example of The Lord Of The Rings, and produce an extended version. In cramming the main highlights of the story into 2-1/2 hours, there wasn’t any room for continuity and back-story in a number of cases. You will definitely need to have read the book to follow what was going on with everything. But it was great even so!

We’ve been lucky that our kids grew up along with the books, so as the story gets darker with Voldemort’s return to power, they’re old enough to handle it. In the future though, when a ten year old wants to read the whole series, what do you do? The later books would scare a younger child. And it’s such a good story, they won’t want to stop.

Thanksgiving!

Sunday, November 27th, 2005

Last night we had a wonderful expat Thanksgiving at Lin and Larry Pardey’s place up on Kawau Island. Larry, originally from Canada, and Lin from the US, have cruised extensively all over the world, and now (when not cruising elsewhere) split their time between summers here in New Zealand and summers in the Pacific Northwest. (Hmmm, I _like_ that idea!) They have been an inspiration of mine for a simpler, more self-sufficient lifestyle ever since I read “The Self-Sufficient Sailor” many years ago. We met on Bainbridge this past summer (in the States) before we came down, when we bought them dinner in trade for hearing all about New Zealand.

Anyway, we were originally planning to go up in the morning and spend the day exploring the island, since it is an historic reserve with a historic mansion, walking trails, wallabies and kiwi birds. Alas, after a week of sunshine, we awoke to what could be a late November day back in the Northwest – cold, pouring rain, blowing winds. So, we had a nice lazy day inside – Cindy and Max put up some Christmas decorations, while I caught up on paperwork a bit – then we bought tickets to see Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire the next day, then headed up north an hours drive to Sandspit, where you catch a ferry or water taxi to Kawau.

Well, it was blowing spray over the road, and pretty impressive waves rolling into the shore! The water taxi was probably about 20+ feet (~7 meters), and it was quite a ride pounding our way for about 45 minutes through the waves as we crossed to Kawau! Once in the lee of the island, it was much more pleasant as we made one quick pickup in Schoolhouse Bay, then were dropped off at the Pardey’s wharf in North Cove.

Lin and Larry have remodeled an old bach (beach house) into a snug home, which for the evening fit probably close to 30 people along a long row of tables for a wonderful Thanksgiving dinner, replete with turkey (special order down here!), mashed potatoes, gravy, and cranberry sauce! And plenty of wine and good conversation. The half of the guests that I managed to meet were all wonderful, and quite a few lived on Kawau either full time, or splitting their time between island life and city life. We met a couple other expat Americans, one with a farm (and boat yard?) up in the Bay of Islands, and one who left the high-tech boom in Silicon Valley to sail around the world, and ended up meeting his wife along the way, and now living on Kawau with a beautiful baby daughter. He works as one of two software developers for the Team New Zealand yacht, and unfortunetly I didn’t get to talk with him as much as I wanted to. Another couple had spent 8 years sailing around the world, and their daughter, now 20, is in her 3rd (or 4th?) year of medical school. We met a photographer who has two new books coming out, and has a son who has similar interests with Max, so we’re going to get them together at some point. And we met many others! I hope to get back up there in nicer weather, so we can explore the island more, and perhaps run into some of these people again!

We left a bit early (sorry to miss dessert!), but didn’t want to be too late as Max had his Japanese Sword class the next morning. We rode the water taxi back with a father and son who had come over earlier on the same taxi as us to visit someone else in North Cove taxi over – Turns out he’s an architect, so we enjoyed chatting about that a bit (since my father and grandfather were architects, and Max is interested in architecture!), and enjoying the incredibly smooth and fast ride back! (The wind had died down, and we were riding along with the waves.)

Many thanks to Lin and Larry for such a wonderful evening!

Update: Photos at Lin and Larry’s page. (You can just spot Max and us in the background.)

Thanksgiving?

Sunday, November 27th, 2005

So, Thursday was Thanksgiving. But wait, Thursday here is Wednesday back in the States. So, Friday is Thanksgiving. And Thanksgiving is not a holiday down here, so I was at work both Thursday and Friday (being Wednesday and Thursday back in the States – got that?). So, I left work just after “beer-o’clock” (more on _that_ another time!), and got home so I could phone my brother’s house (where everyone was gathered) to say “Happy Thanksgiving” before it got too late in the evening (you see, because it’s 3 hours later there – Pacific time zone, that is, but a day earlier. Are you following me now? It gets better with different daylight savings time changes between here and there, such that it could be up to 5 hours later back in the States, but still a day earlier…)

Kim and Michelle had a house-full, including my Mom and Sarah, so I got a chance to say “hi” to them. Thank goodness for 10-cents per minute international rates!

New Zealand doesn’t celebrate Thanksgiving (being a US holiday, of course), but they do have some other delightful holidays including the Queen’s Birthday, Boxing Day (the day after Christmas), the day after New Years, and each Province’s Anniversary. Others that are different include ANZAC day (which is New Zealand’s Memorial Day, honouring the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) and Waitangi Day (which celebrates the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi between the Maori chiefs and the Crown in 1840, which is New Zealand’s founding government document… which is controversial to this day for it’s interpretation and implementation, though the government is working to redress Maori claims).

New Zealand!

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

Ok, so obviously our most recent “road less traveled” is for me to take a job in New Zealand, and for us to move down here for a year or two or whatever. This whole writing thing is new to me, and I’ll have to see how it goes in terms of my ability and interest to continue. But my intention will be to catch-up a bit on why we came down here, and what all was involved. In the meantime, Cindy has done a great job of describing our adventure.

The Road Less Traveled?

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

So, why “The Road Less Traveled”? It comes from my favroite poem, The Road Not Taken, by Robert Frost. It is meant to serve both as a theme as I write about what I’m doing now and what I’ve done in the past, but also as a constant reminder to myself to make time for what’s important, working towards my goals, trying new things. I certainly don’t lead a radical life, but want to remember that I have done some interesting things in the past, and want to continue doing them in the future.

The Road Not Taken

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

The Road Not Taken, by Robert Frost:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.