Thursday 26 December 2019

26 December 2019: X-mas down south

And so this is christmas. Always a weird time for us. For weeks you hear nothing else on the radio as christmas songs, talking about christmas, planning of holidays and copious dinners. The radio presenters usually start by saying 'so many days to christmas'. Yet for us, even after 13 years, christmas has a whole other meaning. It's the day we lost our beautiful son Tristan. The memories are still so fresh and the wounds deep, but we manage and continue with life, because we won't get our children back whether we weep or laugh. But they will be part of our lives forever.
And that's why I will let you know what happened around here the last few days. My car was a bit rusty when we got it back from our 'car-sitters'. My friend from the local garage was shocked he said. Time to do something about it. Got a few spray cans of rust converter and the good old fashioned tectyl and got to work. Drove my car onto some wooden blocks, covered the floor with cardboard and dressed up for this toxic job.
Then I remembered we had all these planks in our garage.You don't think that is a pit to work under a car.... So I got the planks out and discovered some long deceased mice under a decades old layer of cob webs. There were even 3 old crates (empty unfortunately) enabling a man to climb in. I got rid of all the rubbish and managed to squeeze the car between the garage doors. They had smaller cars in 1970. Had to leave the car via the rear door, but it worked. Spent about a hundred dollars on chemicals, but it looks OK again. Postponed the mercy kill Nienke suggested. Being the climate change manager she is still struggling with the fact that we drive two 1996 diesel powered monsters. She's eyeing a PHEV, plugin hybrid electrical vehicle. Birthday is coming up and I know a great dinky toy store!
December is the month of parties. After a year of absence we picked up the Sinterklaas tradition with our Kiwi friends.
Everybody a bit nervous in anticipation.
Some struggled with the poems, but all but one managed to produce some sentences on paper, good enough to make people laugh.

We even had the help of Derene's grand daughter who like Dutch kids quickly enough displayed the Sinterklaas excitement.
And then there was dinner. Topping up your glass won't work this way Cam!
Nienke with Jane and Janet.
What a lovely couple...
Weird month weather-wise as well. We had some beautiful days mixed with horrible weather. Not the best period to be a painter. In weather like this you're stuck at home doing chores. Working the list my 'other' boss left on the kitchen bench. A long one since we've had two cleaning ladies here who both left after the first day on the job.
How a bit of bad luck can turn into a happy occasion. First the scope of my rifle died. So I ordered a new one online. Next day the rifle died. I figured the repair was going to be as much as a complete new one and I was right. With so many rabbits laughing their heads of (I wish) I had to drive to 'Hunting and fishing' to get myself a christmas present.
Meanwhile we finished our painting job on the beach for this year. We'll finish the rest in 2020.
How's this for recycling, or maybe 'upcycling' is a better word. We saved some milk bottle caps for a vague art project. That never got of the ground. In order to keep the flies out of our garage I designed a fly screen made of bottle caps. Since we drink 'lite' milk, most of our caps were blue. I only found out after finishing the thing that flies actually like blue. And they hate yellow. So if you want to do something similar, drink calci + milk.
One of our older chickens died and now her remaining friend is alone. So I looked for a soul mate for her on TradeMe. Found one, but with 6 chicks. Some great questions some people ask, one person asked the seller if that chicken still lays eggs. I would have answered that the chicks were made out of her ribs. Heaps of people believe that anyway! Ah well, we'll solve the chick problem later, so I just bought them. Got 12 chickens running around our property now. Only one is producing a daily egg...
Yvo dropped in again as he does every now and then when he is in NZ. My old tennis team mate. Still thinks he can beat me. Gave him another chance but he will have to wait another few years. Was great to catch up.
He got the hang of shooting pretty quickly.
Our neighbourhood organised an open air cinema to collect money for a CPR course. After a couple of years they finally realise that have a AED in the village is quite useless if you can't perform CPR. I told them so about 8 years ago. Nice evening though, although maybe we should start a bit later when it is darker...
Some stormy days as well. Caused some damage to the trees and the neighbours fence. Dick helping me out cleaning up and getting some more fire wood. Eh....., yes, this is perfectly safe as it is Dick in the tree and not me....
The wind was so strong it knocked a brand new chair over against the table breaking one of the spokes. I complained to the seller about the quality of the wood, but he said he can't control nature.... I think he means the wind and not the wood. Anyway, some clamps and wood glue and it looks as ..... repaired!
BBQ master at work at the Friday Drinks Club. Not sure if Lloyd is full of confidence though.
Noor and Livia visiting us, the daughter of my sister Murielle. Livia has been travelling Australia and New Zealand with her friend Noor. Exhausted from the hard life of a back-packer they were welcomed by us with fine wine, heaps of food and a good bed.
And of course, an evening around the fire with some good music.
We did a short walk over Makara beach where Noor and Livia could see how Kiwi's celebrate christmas. You put on a red christmas head, throw the barbie in the truck and head for the beach.
After that we had a very nice christmas lunch at Liesbeth and Guy.
That's where the ladies were introduced to shooting practise.
They liked it and were actually pretty good at it. Maybe I'll let Livia do some rabbit killing....
Mah Yong, what else.
Noor was unfamiliar with the game, but I think she has the virus now.
Nienke, feeling pretty guilty about this months calorie collecting activities got up early, dropping the girls of at the railway station for a visit to Welly and then heading up the mountain herself in order to feel better. A nice view from the top.
And this is her current view. From the hammock with a new book.
OK guys, you're up to date again. I'm going to mow the lawns (has to look perfect for the New Years eve party. We'll keep you posted. Best wishes for the new year.

Sunday 1 December 2019

December 1st 2019: Work hard play hard :-)

While Spring was springing here in Kapiti I started in my new role at the local Council on 21 October. Putting together and managing a new team in the Infrastructure Group, called the Sustainability and Resilience Team. Those two words are probably together with Climate Change the most used words in Councils, Central Government and any type of new media at the moment. In my case three works streams have been put together in one team which is solid waste and waste minimisation (very familiar to me!), energy and carbon management (climate change) and part of emergency management. So the work streams in the team are definitely interconnected with waste being one of the larger contributors to methane emissions, but the day to day is another matter. It will be interesting to see how I can make a team out of 6 people that do different 'things'.
I have already managed to secure two new people for the team, one internal who has already started (knows everything about energy management so that's a good start, the rest we'll learn as we go) and a new admin/support person who starts in the new year. Next week I am interviewing for a new waste minimisation advisor/educator, hopefully we have a full team around February. I will plan a nice day away at our beach retreat to do some fun team building stuff, even just to get to know each other - it always makes a massive difference if you can laugh together and support each other.
Nienke scored some jellyfish at the Kapiti arts trail.
My first two days were filled with hugs and lots of people that were very happy to see me back, including the mayor and councillors, which was a very nice welcome. After that it felt like I have never been away - funny thing that not much happens in the overall scheme of what Council delivers when you are away for 15 months.
As you may have seen in the news, NZ had adopted a change to the already existing Climate Change Act, called the Zero Carbon Act that now sets two goals for NZ; to be 'net zero' in 2050 for all greenhouse gasses except methane (too many cows in NZ..) and methane emissions to be 24-47 % lower than 2017 levels by 2050. Our biggest methane producers are pissing and burping cows but it's also our largest export market so to make sure the elections in 2020 go again in favour of Labour there had to be some compromise to get National (read: every NZ farmer) to actually support this Act.
We shoot so many rabbits, we just burn them. A real plague.
But it's clear that waste, the carbon footprint of everything we do and sea level rise and flooding as a result of climate change are very HOT topics around the world and also have been declared hot topics in our Council. With 6 new Councillors around the table (and the youngest one in New Zealand, 18 year old organiser of the school climate strikes here in Wellington), there is definitely momentum to do some good stuff. During my years in Infrastructure we've had to manage quite a few big recovery operations after big rainfalls and flooding which basically happen every or every other winter. The expected sea level rise in 2050, now that everyone is supporting the science (except for a few Trumpian loonies) is now again a main focus for Kapiti with a long coast line and many houses and roads that are also already noticing changes due to more intense and more frequent storms.
I am running from one meeting and workshop to another as everything is happening really fast now, driven by the 3 yearly government cycle here in NZ. End year two finally some delivery starts happening and than it's a race against the clock to get decisions made before the 'moratorium' on policy making which comes into force I think from July, 3 months before the elections. It's just crazy that short time frame for trying to actually govern. Councils are now dragged into a number of legislation proposals that we have to write submissions for to provide our feedback and workshops to have our say on behalf of local government, like in the National Climate Change Risk Assessment that is now underway. Days like that are interesting and frustrating at the same time because there is such a big gap between the people that work at ministries and develop proposals that are just so disconnected from 'reality', which is where we come in as local councils who need to manage these risks and pay for it - the ivory tower people just talk about it. After that day I was glad I didn't push further to start working at the Ministry for the Environment, I would have been so frustrated already even after a few weeks! Never say never but for now I am happy in Council again with enough to challenge me.
I was not really involved in emergency management earlier, other than being involved in the development of some recovery and disposal plans after the 'big one' (earthquake) that is still overdue in Wellington (now by 60 years). But now this is part of my own job description and I work with our Council Emergency controller. I immediately attended the annual Emergency exercise in our Kapiti Emergency Center where I was on the Operations Desks. That was 'easy' for me as after many years in Infrastructure I do know what is critical and who to call. So after that I was promoted to desk manager right away haha. The exercise was about a volcanic eruption of Mount Taranaki and a giant ash cloud coming our way in three hours time. Quite a good thing to work on and prepare for and interesting as it threw a few people off pace that were used to flooding or earthquake scenarios. It's my tak to make sure we have 2 full shifts of staff trained up to man the emergency centre when things go wrong, which means in total 78 staff. We have about 59 on the list now so will need a few more that will also actually attend the monthly training. Often that is where it goes wrong if people are busy. So I will be exploring that with their managers and motivate people to join in. Being the Kapiti representative in the Regional Life Lines group is another of my tasks, this is the group that manages the critical assets in the Districts. For example the water treatment plant, roads to the airport, fire brigade and medical centres. It's a priority to get these sites working again as as possible.
In NZ a lot of education is rolled out on a continuous bases that you need to have emergency supplies, water for at least 3 days etc etc. However, we also know that our most vulnerable communities basically have no money to have these supplies as they struggle from day to day. That's also part of our Welfare planning and discussions we have. 

Poverty really adds a extra layer to all that I am working on now. Those are the people than cannot prepare for emergencies, not move house when their house if flooded or damaged, pay for insurance or have the energy to worry about their carbon footprint.
When we were travelling in South America and were writing on the blog about all the rubbish dumped everywhere alongside roads and around villages by the locals it did become clear that when you struggle to put food on the table every day your world is small because you are in survival mode. And you don't care about rubbish polluting the environment or burning the Amazon.
This emphasizes the age old political question again on what do we do first? Battle poverty by driving economic growth and than deal with the results of economic growth like climate change? Or are we too late by the time everyone has food on the table because the world will be no longer livable..
In the meantime we are enjoying some beautiful weather here on the Coast, it's been on average 20 degrees here now for weeks, so had to get all the summer shorts and shoes out already.
Last weekend on Friday we heard the stories of Rog and Maya's trip to Egypt, Jerusalem and Jordan - definitely bucket list items, experiencing world history. Maya probably won't visit a museum for the next 10 years haha!
We attended the annual local music event at our local brewery Tuatara - from 4 pm to 11pm so we did well. Lots of pretty good local rock band, especially the band with 4 12-year old lads was a nice surprise, we've got some real talent on the coast. Bring on summer and lots of live music gigs!
The advantage of getting up early with me is that Hans can watch Dutch football over his mums account!
Now that summer has started Hans finally had to find something for the loudspeakers and amplifier in our bedroom. I just did not want to see them anymore. As we could not find anything suitable in the shops Hans decided to make it himself. A bit of left over paint from when our house was build and you'd never guess it has not always been here.
Leading by example as always. My waste free lunch. And my fashionable cooling box.
Hans clearly is affected by the painting bug. Granted, our flagpoles did not look very flash anymore and the southerlies and westerlies had chipped quite some paint away. I was not allowed to park in the car port for a few days as the flag poles were being renovated there. Red painted hockey balls on top and two new flags. Looks like a 5 star hotel ay? OK, not with the wash hanging on the line.
Saturday was a stunner as well so we had a nice lunch in the garden with Guy and Lies and Guy's mum who was visiting New Zealand for the first time.
On the Sunday the weather was a bit patchy so our annual Sims Road drinks with all the neighbours had to move inside, but it was lovely to have everyone catching up over some good old home made nacho's and wine. We will remain the 'Sims Road motor' as nothing happened in the year that we were away - somehow that is what we do apparently :-)
The sky colours orange, the smoke from the fires in Australia.
Hans has been painting away in Otaki Beach and likes the handyman work with good music and company from Dick - working right on the beach with amazing views, pretty good office! I hear is is a hard task master as Dick complains of the lack of a lunch break. No idea why they should be overdoing it, they work harder and deliver much better work than most professional painters will ever do...
He has also done a few days at the Medical Centre to help out with covering holidays and a few more days coming up in December and January. In combination with starting the job of painting our own house after 10 years of occupation, he won't be bored this summer! At the moment he is pimping his 23 year old car by removing rust, prepping it and painting it black. I have to say it starting to look rather flash!
A big car and only a small jack.......
O yes, last week we were in Otaki to pick up some groceries and while Hans was waiting in the car one of the tyres decided to go completely flat within minutes. Because Hans had had so much training in South America, of course changing the tyre was no problem at all. What was interesting though is that even though you are in a car park at a supermarket, no-one comes up to you and offers to help........in South America people would stop always to ask if you needed help. No points for Kiwi's on this front :-(
Tomorrow it's December already and everyone is fully focused on getting the Christmas shopping done, lots of Christmas drinks and lunches on top of a lot that has to be done before the 20th as than nothing happens until end of January. I will have a 2 days off around Christmas which will be nice with our niece Livia and her friend staying our our place for a couple of weeks. And than we'll have our good old new year's party again - the group is getting smaller with kids no longer attending, all grown up and not up for a boring night around the fire anymore :-)