Sunday, August 24, 2014

25 August, last post from Wellington

I listened to my favorite pair of tui birds this morning who serenade us every morning while enjoying the berries in the tree outside our dining room.  And I walked with fresh eyes as I traipsed down my favorite "187" - the 187 steps across the street that connect us with the central downtown area and that have made me stronger over the past eight months. It was a lovely clear, crisp day. I went into the office one last time to give a report to senior officials at the Ministry and to say goodbye to my colleagues at Immigration NZ, never an easy thing for me.

The afternoon was filled with packing completion and giving away yet more that I simply can't bring home. We sent two small boxes of my research and our books for a ridiculous price. Soon we will head back into downtown to enjoy the Wellington Light Festival and one more dinner at our favorite Indian restaurant.

Eight months. It all seemed so relaxed and long in those first months. And now, in a flash of time, it will be behind us. Of course, I will enjoy seeing our US friends, relatives, and my cat and horse! But I would stay here in a heartbeat. And part of my heart will remain here. I have learned a great deal about living in a social democracy (I love it) and a proper work/life balance. I will do what I can to bring it with me.

Aroha ana ahau ki a koe Aotearoa.




Monday, July 28, 2014

Last South Island Holiday, 26-28 July

Dick and I decided to give each other a birthday present of one last trip to the South Island. He never got to Lake Tekapo, and when I was there with Mom and Bren, the "dark sky" was lit with a full moon. Beautiful, but not brilliant with the stars of the dark sky the area is known for. I found a weekend with a new moon and we decided to spend a couple nights there. We arrived on Saturday and were told the tour would be an "inside the astronomy lab" one because the sky had clouded up. We decided to place our bets on Sunday.

 Entering Christchurch, from Jetstar


Tekapo sunset


Dick, first view of Lake Tekapo


 Southern Alps, en route to Tekapo


A deer farm

Sunday morning, I got out before the sun to try to get some good photos with my new used camera at the Church of the Good Shepherd, probably the most photographed place at Lake Tekapo. I had hoped that it would be relatively free of tourists at that point. It just happened that there was a whole class of photographers there on a winter course! I had fun talking with them, but it was challenging to find a spot to take of the lake without getting at least 10 photographers and their tripods in the picture.


Church of the Good Shepherd at dawn


Sunrise over Lake Tekapo


Reflection in the church window

As I decided to return to our hotel, I could not find the car keys. (Here comes a "stupid Jody!" story). I checked my coat pockets. No keys. I went back and recovered my steps. No keys. Checked the pockets again. Looked around the car. Damn! no keys.

I walked to the nearest gas station. The woman at the convenience store gave me the card of an auto repair guy. I called and he said he could be out in 10 minutes. I tried to call Dick to let him know what was going on, but got one of the numbers wrong (the major problem with auto dial is that I don't memorise the numbers). So, I walked back down, waited around the car for a while, went and took more photos, and waited.

The man arrived and got into my car for me in no time. The cost was $50; I only had $40 cash, but he said that was ok (typical Kiwi). We opened the boot. No keys. I dumped the contents of my purse in the boot and dug through the camera case. No keys. Looked in the car. Same.

Now I was really concerned. The auto guy kindly suggested he would help me scrounge the area around the church to find them. We did that for about 10 minutes. Then he suggested that we think of it in a grid and do a more methodical search. At this point, I was thinking that I would cause us to waste an entire day as I was going to have to figure out how to get a key made for this car on a Sunday.

Then I got smart. I thought, Jody ALWAYS does something REALLY STUPID. What stupid thing am I overlooking? That was exactly what I needed to think! I had the keys all along. They were in my jeans pocket. I never put things in my jeans pockets. But this time I did.

So, I lost $40 and about an hour or so of time. But, at least we had not lost the entire day. And good thing it was, because this was a gorgeous day, and we planned to go to Tekapo Springs, for which we bought day passes and I made an appointment for a massage and facial.


Tekapo Monument for Shepherd Dogs


Lake Tekapo in daylight

We started at the snow tubing area - a short, but steep, icy track you fly down on a sort of inner tube, ending by going up two or three ice banks that help you slow down when you reach the end. We started once with the slower tube with fabric on the bottom, but once was enough for me, and I convinced Dick that we needed the faster model. So, we went down in the fast tube, first on our butts, then on our stomachs, and then hanging on to each other's tube (the combined weight made it really fast!).





After about 45 minutes of that, we traded in the tubes and our warm coats for our swim suits and a 38 C hot pool where we enjoyed the beautiful views of Lake Tekapo while we heated up our muscles. I finished off with a wonderful deep tissue back massage and facial.

After a break in our hotel room at Peppers Bluewater Resort, we tried dinner at their restaurant. It was excellent, with delicious steak (me) and salmon (Dick) and fresh veggies. Then we struck off for the Earth and Sky night tour of a dark sky reserve at Mount John observatory. We struck gold with a beautiful clear sky with no moon. The Milky Way was a thick white streak across the night sky, and we could see planets and nebulae with the naked eye. All the stats about their size and their distances were hard to comprehend - thousands of light years away, billions of years old. To see these images whose light was reaching us from their appearance hundreds of years ago, to be told that astronomers thought that what we were seeing in some places had already blown up into a super nova, but that would not be seen for hundreds of years -- well, it made me feel so very small. The song "Dust in the Wind" came to mind. How tiny, how insignificant we are in the grand scheme of things. And yet, I still believe what we do is somehow important. Not because there is some god watching what we do. But simply because we ARE, and some of us are so much more comfortable than most. And that is enough.


The Milky Way, widest part 


Milky Way - Southern Cross in bottom centre


Magellan Nebulae



Dick had the great idea of going back to the summit in the morning for breakfast and to see where we were before heading back to Christchurch for our afternoon flight. What a great idea that was. By daylight, the place was equally stunning with snow-capped Southern Alps surrounding us.


Mount John Observatory telescopes


Lake Alexandrina in the background




View from Mount John


Dick on Mount John


Me on from Mount John



The trek home to Wellington was uneventful and we were back to the very cold flat by 6pm. The next four weeks are going to fly by.

Friday, July 18, 2014

National Refugee Forum, Wellington

We arrived back in Wellington around midnight from Melbourne. I had to be at the National Refugee Forum the next morning at Te Papa, and I gave the keynote speech the next day (Friday, 11 July) on the importance of language support. It was received well, and the forum was quite good overall, giving me some last minute impressions for my final touches to my policy analysis. It was also a wonderful opportunity to see people I met during my travels throughout the country to conduct research.


Adel Salmanzadeh, Auckland Regional Refugee Education Coordinator


Far right, Zhiyan, amazing Kurdish grad student from Christchurch (CC)



Yuki and Shannon, INZ team members


Thomas Banda, CE of Changemakers; and Patrick O'Connor, CE of PEETO, CC


Parvathi Raghunathan, Regional Refugee Education Coordinator in Auckland; and Maria Hayward, Director of Education at Mangere Refugee Resettlement Centre


Judi Altinkaya, my mentor at MBIE


My keynote at the National Refugee Forum, Wellington, July 2014


Me and Judi for Q & A



One week later, I have submitted my final draft on my policy analysis, the culmination of six months of study. By the day, I hear and learn new things, but I do feel that I have sufficient research to make the suggestions that I do. From this point I will make edits, then create a presentation to give both at the MBIE that has so generously housed me through my adventure (Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment) and to the greater community in August.

The MBIE is moving to new offices on my birthday, 1 August. Because I can only imagine how much work that will be, I have told them they do not need to provide for me, as I can work at home during August to prepare for my return to Florida. I can't say how much I will miss these people who have become friends.

Three Days in Melbourne

From warm, sunny Sydney we flew to colder, cloudy/rainy Melbourne. After settling into our hotel in the afternoon (fine, but nothing like the cool 1888 Hotel we had near Darling Harbour), we walked to the river for dinner. We found a nice Italian place on a second story with a river view and I enjoyed duck while Dick had clams and pasta. The next day we drove northeast in the rain to visit Healesville Wildlife Sanctuary. We walked for at least two hours in the rain because it was the only day we had to explore outside of Melbourne. We were not disappointed, as we got to watch kangaroos, wallabies, duck-billed platypus, cockatoos, cockatiels, parrots and parakeets, spoonbills, snakes, and so many more native Australian animals.


Emu


Parrots


Friendly (human-raised) parrot




Royal Spoonbills






Rare red-tailed cockatoo


Who knows? But god! Isn't it cute?!



A lyre bird

Then were the mammals and marsupials:


A Wallaby


A Dingo


A Kangaroo

My favorite were the koalas. I could have watched them all day, even though they don't move fast or often. They just looked incredibly cuddly! I wanted to bring one home!




Dick kindly bought me a stuffed animal koala when I was at my conference the next day, who I have named Healey after the park.



My conference, the International Society for Arts Education, was excellent, and my presentation went well. The conference was at the famous Melbourne Cricket Club, most beloved by cricket fans. I noted a number of ideas I plan to bring back to my College of Education.


MCC (Melbourne Cricket Club)



There is a major fine for any fan daring to touch foot on the blessed grass...

Outside the conference, we had a chance to see some of the city highlights, including Chinatown.


Dick's fav


Street scene


LOVE this sculpture!


LOVE this banner!



Chinatown




Our last night we had the pleasure of attending the latest production of Les Miserables at Her Majesty's Theatre. It was "the event" in the city. We ate at a Chinese restaurant right next to the theatre and had great seats for the production. I did not like the original production, but this one was wonderful. Dick had never been and seemed to enjoy it as well.



Looking out from Her Majesty's Theatre


Concessions