Welcome to today’s daily kōrero!
Anyone can make the thread, first in first served. If you are here on a day and there’s no daily thread, feel free to create it!
Anyway, it’s just a chance to talk about your day, what you have planned, what you have done, etc.
So, how’s it going?
Late night for me last night - LandSAR exercise, bringing a stretcher with a mock patient out from up a river. Out in the dark, lots of river crossings - great fun but a bit late for a school night! Zzzzz
That does sound like fun! Hope you got to sleep in!
No such luck 😂
That’s frigging awesome.
I salute guys (and girls) like you who do this kind of stuff.
I hope I’m never one of your customers, but it’s good to know there are people like you.Aww Cheers. It’s a fun group to be part of. I’m part of NZ CaveSAR as well - they are a seriously impressive group of people. I’m always left in awe whenever I’m around them. Fearless.
Back to work, ho hum. I thought I’d catch up, instead I had a 2.5 hour morning workshop and a 2 hour afternoon workshop and an hour meeting after that and now my brain is nope.
This drought on the east coast of the far north is getting quite bad now. I really need to sort more irrigation lines out for next year so we’re not spending an hour hand watering every evening. On the plus side, even the kikuyu has stopped growing so I don’t have to mow as much as I usually do in summer.
Sounds really rough. Would a swale work?
Swales are great! But I have 6ha and just building them would be massively expensive at this scale. I would like to add some to our food forest area though.
Damn really? I’m a bit further down and we’re looking greener than we usually do at this time of year. Next time I see rainclouds I’ll tell them to head up to you.
Yup, have a look at https://niwa.co.nz/static/climate/smd_map.png?1234 which shows the soil moisture levels.
Okay now I’m confused, I’m up in the red part of that map too but our berms are green rather than their usual brown.
To be fair I was away from te Tai Tokerau for most of the summer so maybe I’d have noticed more if I’d been here.
Huh, strange. I haven’t noticed conditions this bad since a drought on waiheke around 2012/13.
Maybe I’m in a rainshadow. Will have to get someone to take me on a drive. Not that many black crickets this year either.
I really hope the drought breaks for you.
My wife hates the crickets with a passion! Luckily our chickens are very adept at eating them.
I love watching chooks chase crickets and grasshoppers.
On my trip to the Tasman the other week, I don’t think I saw a green blade of grass anywhere on the drive from Blenheim along SH63.
Down Wellington way we’ve had heavy rain just often enough to keep things alive, though the veggie garden needs a bit of a water occasionally.
Another productive day, this time a paddle, a walk, and a snorkel, still in the far north.
One more day on the water, and it’s time to go home.
Awesome, that looks like a great trip!
I just had one of those swims which make you feel young again.
Oh boy, I need to swim more if it does that!
By “swim” I mean float around vaguely in the ocean. I saw an big fish jump straight up into the air quite close to me.
Like, it wasn’t just a silver blur like they usually are. There was a moment at the height of the jump where I could see all the details of the fish (eye, mouth, fins, scale pattern).
That’s awesome! When I was a kid we sometimes used to go to the breakwater in New Plymouth at dusk and watch the fish jump out of the water (I have no idea why they did that, maybe that was a good time for sharks to hunt?).
Or kingfish, hapuka… that sounds cool, regular fish jumping shows!
Have to admit after a few fish jumping yesterday I had a brief moment of thinking hang on why exactly are good-sized fish trying to escape, but then I remembered sharks don’t really want to eat humans.
It doesn’t mean they don’t occasionally eat one anyway 😆
Shhh ha ha.
They’ve only killed like 13 or 14 people since NZ started recording it.