Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Help me win the New Yorker cartoon caption competition

All,

I'm enlisting the help of the 3 people who regularly read this blog (kidding [sort of]) to try to ensure victory in this week's New Yorker cartoon caption competition. My competitors, clearly, are the Fred Thompson and Duncan Hunter of caption writing. My entry can be found here:

http://www.cartoonbank.com/CapContest/CaptionContest.aspx?tab=vote&affiliate=ny-caption

So, vote. Enjoy the democratic process. Tell your friends to vote. And then tell your friends to tell their friends to vote. Perhaps even tell people you don't like to vote. In fact, go out and find someone whom you've argued with, and not talked to for a while, and tell them to vote. It'll be, um, good karma or something. (ck)



Monday, April 28, 2008

Saving the Earth

Chris and I decided that when we moved to New Zealand we would become more Earth-friendly. Not that we were ever Earth-unfriendly, but our carbon footprint certainly wasn't as small as we wanted it to be. Now that we're here, we've made changes to our lifestyles that help us believe that maybe we're treating Mother Earth a little better than we were before. In the coming weeks, I'll show you what steps we've taken so far and you can decide if we're saving the planet.

Here's my favorite thing to do so far:


We hang our laundry out to dry now. The first time I hung the clothes out, it rained the next three hours. I was distraught. How are clothes ever supposed to dry if you can't predict the weather? Ever hear the phrase "four seasons in one day"? That's exactly the weather in Dunedin. Luckily, we've become better at reading the sky and predicting whether or not it's a good day to do laundry. So now our clothes dance in the wind, slowly drying and soaking up the sunshine. And instead of manufacturing that clothesline scent, we get it for real. (ETK)

Sunday, April 27, 2008

A Hoiho!!

On Friday, we had the day off work to observe Anzac Day, which marks the involvement of New Zealand and Australian soldiers at Gallipoli in World War One. We took a drive up the coast to Moeraki, where a bunch of strange spherical boulders sit on the beach. They're pretty weird.

On the way home we stopped at a place on the coast where fur seals and penguins get together. We've been here for a while but we haven't seen a single penguin yet. Finally, after sitting quietly for a while, we saw a solitary little yellow-eyed penguin, or a Hoiho, walk out of the breaking surf and hop two-footed from rock to rock onto the beach. Cute little endangered fella.

A guy I work with says he picked one up once. That's probably why they're endangered. This one looked pretty healthy, but we didn't get close enough to pick him up. Not this time, at least. (ck)


Friday, April 25, 2008

The World Cinema Showcase 2008

For a little Gothic Scottish city, Dunedin has oodles of cool. For the next two weeks, the World Cinema Showcase runs at the Art Deco Regent Theatre downtown. There are Romanian, French, Swedish, Australian, German, American, and English movies and documentaries being shown every day. We're two days in and, so far, we've seen a movie both days. We'll try and see a movie every day if we can, but that's a lot of movies. (ck)


Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Wine Hell

It didn't take too long. We've been here for about eight weeks now, but tonight I think I've angered the wine gods. They're up there now, red-faced and mean. For two months we've fostered our best viticultural intentions and we've drunk an awful lot of good wine. And we've remained faithful to New Zealand.

But New Zealand wines are so expensive! They're grown and bottled in the central Otago valley, a couple of hundred miles from here. The climate is perfect, the land is cheap, the expertise is right here: these facts should result in cheap wine.

So, how is it that I can buy a wine bottled in California for half the price of one grown and bottled right here? Or Australian wine, which is cheaper than mouthwash (and tastes like it sometimes too)? I'm not an economist, so I don't know. But I do know that I wanted a cheap drink tonight, and that I couldn't afford another $22 bottle of locally-produced wine.

Jacob's Creek Merlot: $8.99.

Australian. Cheaper than mouthwash. Very dependable. Sorry wine gods. (ck)



Saturday, April 19, 2008

Insane Dunedinite #3


Today, we have Insane Dunedinite #3. This fella pops up all over town, singing and clapping, barking and yelping. He's an entertainer. His clapping follows no discernible rhythm: two loud claps, no claps, three quick claps, then one clap. He sings his own interpretation of the classics, usually rendering them completely unrecognizable. His voice is distinctive and untamed.

Clap! Clap!

I'm a little bit scared of him. I took this photo with my zoom function, from pretty far away. He was standing on George Street, which was busy with Saturday shoppers, rushing through the rain. Emeline tells me he was singing All I Need is the Air That I Breathe. It's fortunate, really, that he's so low maintenance because his profit margin can probably be measured in nanodollars. I was listening too but, for all know, he could have been singing in Hungarian.

Strange vocalizations + unrealistic financial expectations = Insane

(ck)

Boooo ... the first snow!

Incredibly c-c-c-c-cold here right now. Yesterday morning, we drove into work with wet drops of freezing rain hitting the windshield. Too early! (ck)

Thursday, April 17, 2008

I like this picture


Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Another fishing trip ...

Last weekend, we went out onto the peninsula again and tried to catch blue cod for breakfast. This time around I used chicken hearts as bait. I didn't catch a thing, except for some crabs that seemed to like the chicken hearts. Either way (despite our complete failure to catch any fish and having to drive into town for breakfast instead), I can't believe that we would ever get tired of driving along the loops and twists of the peninsula road, watching the city recede behind us into a pale strip of buildings crowded against the harbor.

Us: Nil

The Ocean: Three

(ck)



Sunday, April 13, 2008

What's for dinner?

Living as close to the sea as we do, it's not difficult to find fresh seafood in the grocery store: green-lipped mussels for $2 a pound, clams, blue cod, paddle crabs, tuna, and fresh salmon. On Friday afternoon, I was sitting at my desk at work and I could actually smell the sea. The wind must have been sweeping into the harbor in just the right direction to bring the briny tang of it to my office.

Usually though, the seafood is surprisingly expensive for a coastal city. (Hence the failed fishing expeditions.) And so on Saturday morning I couldn't resist a three-and-a-half foot conger eel for just $2 at the farmers' market. That's about $1.60 in US dollars. There was another eel in the tub that was bigger around than my leg, but we couldn't have carried it home. Emeline was, um, impressed. In her defense, it was really disgusting and covered with mucus.

Next week: What the hell to do with conger eel? (ck)






Friday, April 11, 2008

From the top of Sandymount

This is the view from the top of Sandymount, one of the tallest points on the peninsula. We got here after a two-hour walk across pastures filled with woolly fat sheep. To the left, you can see Sandfly Bay, which supposedly is populated by some territorial seals, and across to the right, is Hooper's Inlet. (ck)

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Panoramatastic!!

Is this a tiny, miniaturized version of Emeline, or is she standing on a huge cliff? (ck)


Monday, April 7, 2008

Will the insane of Dunedin please stand up?

Dunedin has more than its fair share of insane people. It's a small city, but if you spend just a little bit of time in public spaces you'll notice them everywhere. They loiter in the center of town, talking to the seagulls and the statues. They sit in the library stacks, laughing gleefully to themselves. They seem to love buses very much.

Stony, gloomy, and Gothic, Dunedin is perfectly suited for them. Returning the favor, the insane really add something to the city.

There's an alley near the medical school that seems to be a favorite spot for the clinically insane. They sing songs there and play instruments to the passing shoppers. One of the regular characters plays a guitar very badly, sings blues songs and looks just like Slash from Guns N' Roses. Another guy bops around on the balls of his feet and improvises a high-pitched song that sort of goes, "Mi mi mi mimi mimi mi," and sounds more like a little dog barking than a person singing.

That's the sound of dysfunctional brain chemistry, folks.

Someone told me about a man who walks around wearing a top hat with a seagull on top, and that, as the man eats, he stretches his arm up to feed the seagull little pieces of food. I haven't seen him yet. I've seen Speedy though. He has a long bushy beard and walks like a broken wind-up toy, with his arms flapping and his elbows sticking out. He waved at me once, from behind a tree in the park, standing among the ducks.

I'm not sure why so many of them are on the streets. On one level, it's terribly sad to see these lost people, hobbling around in rags and chattering to themselves. What happened to them? How did they get here? Some of them are genuinely disturbing. They sit on benches and argue furiously with themselves. On another level, when you walk down the street and see a neatly-dressed young man having a conversation with a lamppost, you just have to laugh. It's great.

So, hopefully this will be a regular feature of the blog, as I collect images of the insane people of Dunedin (surreptitiously).

*

Today, we have Insane Dunedinite #1, who was sitting on a bench outside the movie theater in the middle of town and having a very heated argument with himself yesterday. And then, every now and again, he'd burst out laughing for no reason. I think he's insane, but he might just have paid money to see Drillbit Taylor.

Arguing with himself on a bench + unexpected laughter = Insane


*

Next, we have Insane Dunedinite #2. She was standing in front of the onions at the grocery store, completely mesmerized. Catatonic. It's as if her body was right there in the grocery store, standing in front of the onions, but her brain was hundreds of feet underwater, at the bottom of the harbor, lost in a kelp forest. She was still standing there when I left with a couple of onions. Onions just aren't that interesting. Then we shared a bus home, which means she lives by us.

Very big glasses + obsessed with onions = Insane

(ck)

Oh happy day!


This is my husband. He is happy here in New Zealand. He makes me laugh every day. He is whom I get to spend most of my days with while we live here in New Zealand.

Oh happy day, mate! (ETK)

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Getting to know my camera


I'm just trying out a nifty option on my camera that allows me to stitch several photos together to create a panoramic effect. More than anywhere I've ever been, New Zealand seems constructed almost entirely out of breathtaking panoramas. So I've decided it's time I learned how to use this setting. Here's a photo of Emeline fishing on the peninsula, taken last weekend, early in the morning, in a pristine little sandy bay we just sort of stumbled onto by mistake.

Incidentally, Emeline didn't catch anything either.

Salmon running? Pshumph.

Us: Nil.

Salmon: Two. (ck)

Friday, April 4, 2008

Oh no!!


This is what happens when you take your eyes off the ball! Emeline and I have been busy at work all week. And so we completely missed a calf sale on Thursday morning. And then we missed the Balclutha calf sale yesterday, too, even though it was clearly posted in the newspaper.

I really had my heart set on 20 steer calves and a couple of heifers. At least there's some 2-tooth Cheviot rams still for sale. Phew. Click on the photo to take a closer look. Do you see the little rhyme?

"If you're thinking about lambing
your hogget flock
with a Cheviot ram
You'll be surprised what you dock."

Now, what the hell does that mean?

Do I even want to know? (ck)

Thursday, April 3, 2008

I'm an NPR geek.

When you leave a place that you once called home, you start to realize all of the things you miss. I may be a geek, but I will shout from the rooftops to let everyone know that I no longer miss and can now listen to NPR in New Zealand!!!

I love NPR.

NPR (National Public Radio, for those of you who don't know) had been an integral part of each day. My morning drive was made less frantic when I was lulled into a comforting trance listening to the voices of Renee Montagne and Steve Innskeep on Morning Edition. Morning coffee wasn't the same without local reports by Chris DeSimio and Mark Hayne. Chris and I would often call each other while on our drives to work and say, "Did you hear that story? Can you believe it?" Most likely we were both crying after listening to the same story from StoryCorps. (You would have been crying, too, if you heard some of these stories.)

Diane Rehm, Robert Siegel, Michele Norris (said Mee-shell), Melissa Block, Neal Conan, Terry Gross, Kai Risdall ... they were friends. Very informative and clever friends that informed me about the news of the day. They were people that I felt I knew even though I couldn't place a face to each voice. And I didn't want to. It might ruin my idea of what each of these friends looked like when they were talking to me from the radio. (These were very ordered friendships with obvious boundaries.) Hearing Ira Flatow on Science Friday signaled the end of the work week. The contagious laughter of Click and Clack on the weekends would accompany me on my drive to my Saturday morning yoga class. Wait wait ... don't tell me. Whad'Ya Know? Which one did we "like" the most, Jenny?

Ah, NPR.

Today I wrote to Jim at Cincinnati's local NPR station, WVXU, to help a desperate me try to connect to the station's broadband connection. I was having technical difficulties trying to set it up. Low and behold, Jim's suggestion helped. He is seeking round-trip tickets to New Zealand as compensation.

Anyone have the money to help me thank Jim? (I promise to continue to donate to WVXU while in NZ!)

Thanks, Jim. Hello again, NPR. (ETK)

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Catching salmon!

The salmon are running right now, completing an arduous journey from the ocean, into the harbor and the rivers, before swimming miles and miles upstream into the mountains to spawn at the spot they were born. And then they die. Uplifting, right? But I've seen photos of people holding these huge silver slabs of salmon -- 20-pounders, 30-pounders -- with their arms straining under the weight. They're catching them in the harbor! So, last weekend, I bought a fishing rod, and a couple of exciting-looking lures. On Sunday, Emeline and I got up at 7am and drove out to the peninsula to catch dinner. But this is the only thing I caught.