Monday 30 June 2014

Vaulting

For the first time in sporting history a New Zealand Equestrian Vaulting Team has been selected to vault at the world games!

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2014 Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games in Normandy

After thousands of hours of training the Kapiti Equestrian Vaulting Team will be representing New Zealand, promoting both our country and our region. The 2014 World Equestrian Games in France will be watched by a worldwide TV audience of 500 million people. So get excited, everyone, and give our team the support they deserve!

Brynn attends horse-riding classes, as well as vaulting lessons at the Kapiti Equestrian Centre at Waikanae. On Saturday 28 June 2014, we attended a morning show in which Brynn participated. Here are some of the snaps we took, including some of the New Zealand team which will be off to France in August.

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Buildlogue #10

Friday 27th and Monday 30th June, Construction Days 8 and 9 respectively. There was more of the same on Thursday afternoon and through the night. Friday morning and we find that we’ve had another 23mm rain overnight, and Saturday morning a further 10mm to add to the bog-like muddy conditions all round. The overflow water tank has also been overflowing into the ground to the point that there’s more muddy water than watery mud!

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(Above): More rain on Friday and throughout the evening, causing the stagnant puddles all over to remain over the now-waterlogged substrate. What one might call quite damp.

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(Above): The Chartwell daily rainfall for the period 1 to 28 June (in brown) and the cumulative total (in green):  I’m not bellying on about the rainfall because its especially high. On the contrary, the June fall is, in fact, some 15% lower than for the month of May. It is simply a combination of cold temperatures with no wind which means very little evaporation, and most of the June fall happening in the last couple of days of our construction period.

Monday starts off cloudy, but windless and dry. By 9:30, the picture changes and we’re back to Deluge Day. Nevertheless, Builder John and his son arrive followed shortly thereafter by Plumber Happy and his assistant.

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The builders get on with completing the foundation shuttering on the north wall of the bedroom and the vertical extensions downwards where required. The plumbers get to work with the 110mm PVC waste piping in the bathroom. 

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(Above): Nails: Always eager to learn about new stuff, I chatted to Builder John’s son about his nail gun and, in particular the nails themselves. In this photo is a cartridge of 40 90mm nails (I measure them at 88!). The clip is called a ‘belt’ and the red stuff is a friction-heat adhesive glue which, according to him, makes it extremely difficult to remove the nail after 24 hours in the timber. There are 3000 nails in a box.

Whilst the guys worked in the waterproofs during the steady showers all morning, by 12:00 noon the weather becomes completely uncooperative, causing them to be forced to take breaks under shelter from the heavy downpour. I hear the forecast on the radio, which promises more of the same, with a possible respite tomorrow afternoon.

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(Above): The completed waste piping in place in the bathroom labelled 1 (wash-basin), 2 (shower trap), 3 (Bidet), and 4 (Toilet); in the laundry 5 (washing machine).

On a non-construction matter: in fact, a destruction matter.

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Because the plumbing activity was so close to the dogs’ quarters, I thought it a good idea to leave them in the conservatory for the short while that plumbing work was done. As soon as the plumber left, guess what I found in the conservatory? Sophie seems to think that Benny did this, while Benny is convinced that Sophie is the culprit…

Snake Surgery

The size of the grounds of Chartwell fall into an in-between category. They are too small to be sub-divided into paddocks to hold livestock or to plant crops commercially, but are too big to maintain as a single continuous formal garden. Currently, we are busy with efforts to revitalise the long formal flower and shrub bed to the west of the house, which is called ‘The Snake’.

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(Above): Aerial view of the ground, showing GH[in red] (the steep section called ‘Goat hill’), V/C[in blue] (veggie and composting), CC [in yellow] (area earmarked for a chicken coop), PJ[in orange] (area set aside for a BBQ and outdoor dining area, called the potager, a plant nursery and formal vegetable garden) and the formal flower garden areas in yellow marked SN (the ‘snake’) and 1, 2, 3 and 4. The south part (lower block) of the snake in front of the house is being tackled in conjunction with the planting Bianca is busy with in the L-shaped bed (marked ‘1’)

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(Above): The refurbishment of this part of the garden, which I will refer to as ‘Snake Surgery’, started off a couple of weeks ago when Bianca removed all the border rocks from the south bed and placed them in temporary storage for re-location. Some of these specimens are real ‘monster’ boulders! What a job!

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(Above): The yellow line indicates the approximate position of the front lawn edge along the snake. Her next move was to remove all weeds, ‘undesirable’ and overgrown plants and shrubs, with the exception of the few healthy developed shrubs. The trellis on the right separates the north snake from the south snake.

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This weekend I learned a new expletive (swear-word): ‘crocosmia’. I am that sort of gardener who likes all the pretty flowers, and generally don’t take into account the effects a particular plant may have on its neighbours and the environment. I can now see that these masses of ‘pretty’ flowers were, in fact, invading the snake and have become invasive, throttling the performance of other neighbouring plants.

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(Above): Some of the root-webs which we separated from the topsoil layer. There were approximately millions of crocosmia corms (bulbs) and tons of roots of varying thickness and strength, and the haul amount to a number of waste-wagons full of vermin.

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(Above): The double-dig of Operation Crocosmia involves digging out one-spade depth in rows until the full bed-width (excluding existing healthy shrub-clad parts) has been dug out and placed on the treatment sheet on the lawn.

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(Above): The excavated digging is then broken up by hand into clear soil and unwanted root mass and flower bulb components. This refurbished soil is then tipped back into the ‘clean’ area of the bed.

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(Above): The refurbishment effort in the Snake starts taking shape, with the lawn edging to be defined by using these cement pavers seated on a bed of hardfill and possibly a bit of mortar filling. We will only tackle the final accurate edging job when processing of both snake beds has been completed and a well-defined outline can be determined.

Monday, after a relatively dry weekend, sees more rain falling, and consequently no further work is possible under the muddy conditions for the time being.

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Crocosmia: They are commonly known in the United States as Coppertips or Falling Stars, and in the United Kingdom as Montbretia. Other names, for hybrids and cultivars, include antholyza, and curtonus. The genus name is derived from the Greek words krokos, meaning "saffron", and osme, meaning "odour" - from the fact that dried leaves of these plants emit a strong smell like that of saffron (a spice derived from Crocus - another genus belonging to the Iridaceae) - when immersed in hot water.

Friday 27 June 2014

Whacky Hair

While some New Zealand schools and colleges have formal uniforms, especially some long-established institutions, most schools have the freedom to set official policy for the wearing of uniforms. Scholars to many of the primary schools simply wear whatever they please.

The official wording of the Waikanae Primary (where Brynn is enrolled) regarding dress code reads: “…We expect parents to send their children to school in tidy, functional clothing. Parents should help their children avoid 'extremes' in dress; which often reflect extremes in behaviour and which, in turn, are not conducive to co-operative social behaviours…”

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Today, Friday 27 June was “whacky hair day” at Waikanae Primary. The picture above shows Brynn, with an ornate whacky style, before leaving to catch her bus.

Thursday 26 June 2014

Buildlogue #9

Thursday 26 June 2014: Construction Day number 7. Happy Plumbers (I will call him ‘Happy’ with a big ‘H’ for ease of reference) arrive on schedule this morning, with his two black labradors, who are happy to remain inside the ban. After unpacking the pipes, fittings and tools, we had a quick discussion about the sanitary-ware to be fitted. Then the skies opened and we witnessed what, in my opinion, was the heaviest torrential downpour I have witnessed in New Zealand in 2014. I bucketed down, without hint or promise of respite. Overnight until 08:00 this morning, we had 10mm rain, bringing the June month-to-date up to 68mm

Happy was not happy.

PVC glue used in joining pipe fittings, etc is not all that happy with the wet muddy conditions, and neither was Happy. Apparently, the weather outlook for tomorrow Friday is also not all that good, so Happy, after calling Builder John, decides that Monday morning will be a good day to do the couple of hours work he has. This will still be within John’s Wednesday concrete-pour schedule.

John arrived an hour later with a delivery of building materials, but no construction activity ensued.

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(Above): The PlaceMakers truck arrives just after the deluge, and proceeds to offload a dozen 6 metre lengths of timber, reinforcing steel rods and boxes of nails, fittings, etc.

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(Above): Next John guides the polystyrene insulation panels, rolls of polythene damp-proofing, and plywood for foundation boxing.

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(Above): Squish, squish. One needs to tread extremely carefully in the toffee-like muddy underfoot conditions.

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(Above): John helps guide the steel mesh for the foundations to the waiting pallets. From United Steel NZ, they are 5.05m x 2.02m 24.8kg each 500E Ductile Mesh SE62.

At this point, I need to make a decision about how to number the days. A Construction Day will be numbered according to the number of weekdays elapsed since Wednesday 18 June, when Builder John accepted the site. Therefore to-day and to-morrow, even though no work will be done, will be numbered Construction Day 7 and Day 8. The next Buildlogue will relate to progress, weather permitting, on Monday 30 June.

I’ve Got A Chicken

Brazil World Cup  2014 results being predicted on the nightly local TV news channel has been a bit of a disaster, to the point where they decided it might be a good idea to “axe” Prediction Chicken 2.

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(Above): Prediction Chicken 2 unmistakeably pecking, re-pecking and continuously pecking at the red ball to indicate that England would beat Uruguay. Oops.

So, without a TV chicken around any longer, Ma Nature decided, at 7:46 this morning to give us an alternative: Eketahuna (colloquially “I have a Chicken”) at Magnitude 4.9 followed by a series of milder tremors, which we did not feel.

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(Above): Geonet data at 8:00 am this morning.

Mail Online has reported: “…A magnitude 4.9 earthquake has struck near Eketahuna. According to GeoNet figures, the quake was centred 10 kilometres east of Eketahuna at 7.46am on Thursday.

It had a depth of 32km and its intensity has been described as moderate, with more than 1500 people reporting they had felt the quake. Many took to Twitter to say they had been rattled by the morning quake.

Palmerston North resident Michael Gemmell said he experienced a strong tremor. "Sharp solid earthquake felt in palmy #eqnz," he tweeted.

Wairarapa-based coffee roasters Machiatto NZ said Tauweru was also shaken."Wooaah!! sharp jolt here just now in Tauweru! #eqnz".

A magnitude 6.2 quake rattled the area on 20 January 2014, prompting more than 400 claims to the Earthquake Commission after damaging buildings…”

Wednesday 25 June 2014

Buildlogue #8

Wednesday 25 June 2014: Construction Day 6

Yesterday morning, Gary of Bryce O’Sullivan Earthmoving completed his final clean-up of his tyre and track impressions and left for his next contract job. Today Builder John and his men are scheduled to start on the timber shutter-work around the perimeter of the slab. The weather is overcast, cool and breezy and the TV forecast is not promising, but, hey, who believes television these days?

Whilst writing this, I hear this “Chirp Chirp” above me. Strange… I’m indoors, seated at the dining-room table. I look up to be greeted by a friendly chirping Fantail.

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(Above): A male fan-tail. The fantail [or piwakawaka] (Rhipidura fuliginosa) is one of New Zealand’s best known birds, with its distinctive fanned tail and loud song, and particularly because it often approaches within a metre or two of people. This little insect-eater hover helicopter-like to catch the smallest of small gnats and other almost invisible creatures. He is quite at home in doors, and doesn’t seem bothered in the least by furniture, curtains or windows. It’s quite a job persuading him to get out, before the little bird droppings fall on upholstered furniture or curtains!

John, his son and three other workers arrived and set up site under cloudy skies, but the oilskins had to be brought out quite soon as the sky opened and let them have some of her best. Things started getting pretty wet…

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(Above): The carpentry team start with the eastern boundary at the laundry door down to the dressing room corner at the secret garden, where John’s son (with the brown jacket) is standing.

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(Above): The floor plan, showing the work being done in the photo above (marked in red), the remaining boxing of a similar nature to be done (marked in green), and the special work, involving steel ties to be bolted into the existing foundation (marked in purple).

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(Above and below): John and his assistant working on the “green” section of the shuttering, while others get on with trench-trimming chores.

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(Above): Aerial view of progress as seen from Tyler’s upstairs bedroom window.

Sechs Monate

We celebrate the sixth mensiversary and the milestone of half-anniversary, which we call the Sechs Monate to-day on Wednesday 25 June 2014.

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At midnight to-night, we will remember 25/26th December 2013, exactly six months ago, when we climbed off the Air New Zealand flight which had brought us to Wellington on that memorable Christmas Day in the Sky from Sydney.

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(Above): Cape Town, South Africa… six months ago….The last snap of the scene outside our eastern verandah at Dolphin Beach, just before leaving for the airport and the journey to Sydney via Johannesburg. Five minutes later, we closed the door on that chapter of our lives… and….

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(Above): …. Reikorangi, New Zealand today …. six months seems like just yesterday, but also a surreal lifetime ago… Its an entirely different attitude in an entirely different time-zone…

Tuesday 24 June 2014

Buildlogue #7–Dig Done

Tuesday 24th June: Construction Day 5 of the project. One again, we wake up to icy frost on the lawns on Monday23rd (Day 4), but again an absolutely clear summer, with some light showers in the forecast for tomorrow Tuesday (Day 5), probably clearing in the afternoon.

Last on Buildlogue… You will recall that we left the building site almost filled and compacted to target levels and floor slab boundaries by Gary The Elder on Friday afternoon. 

Monday, Gary & Gary get out the pick and shovels and manually dig out the outer foundations for the slab around the southern side in front of the main house dining/ living room to a depth of 300mm. The going is tough in the rocky clay soil, but these two guys appear to approach their task with the same dedication as they do when operating their excavating machines. 

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After consulting with Builder John about the precise positioning of polystyrene foam along the outer 3 metre perimeter band, they go about accurately surfacing the hardfill to the level specified by the architect. This implies that the central part of the extension hardfill is higher than the 3-metre zone by the thickness of the insulation. Then comes a final 20mm bedding layer of builder’s sand, ready for the preparation of the fitting of the steel reinforcement and the of casting the foundation slab by the builder, starting, weather permitting, on Wednesday.

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Gary and Gary neaten up their work and start clearing all traces that earthmovers had been to Chartwell north wing. The work includes the tip-zone on the front lawn, which has suffered somewhat under the very wet saturated “terra infirma”.  

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Tuesday, and the final spit and polish work by way of site housekeeping is done, the earthmoving equipment and tools finally laden before we say farewell to the guys. The dogs will miss the excitement, to which they have almost become accustomed, whenever one of their trucks arrives or leaves.

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(Above): Gary the Elder prepares the tracks to take its load of his Hitachi Zaxis digger on the back of his truck.

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(Above): Up, up, and…..

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(Above): … away. The new machine fits snugly on the back of the truck, with room for the ramps, tools and spare diesel fuel.

Thanks to Bryce and his men for the polite ways and professional approach to their job! Cheers, guys.

Friday 20 June 2014

Buildlogue #6 – Man alone

Friday 20th June: Construction Day 3 of the project. We wake up to icy frost on the lawns and biting crisp air. But, oh, what an absolutely clear and warm summer day barely one day from the winter solstice! Sitting in the conservatory writing this, I even find it necessary to open a couple of windows…

Last on Buildlogue… You will recall that we left the building site flattened with about two and a half cubes of hardfill in position, awaiting the “second layer” and finishing off, which could not be completed because Gary The Younger’s dump-truck developed track trouble.

7:30am Friday and we are patiently waiting from the Gary and Gary team to arrive with a pneumatic-tyred Bobcat to move and spread  the remaining three cubes.

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(Above): This is the target at which Builder John is aiming – placing the formwork to cast the floor slab, which also details three footings for the 100x100 pillars, the slab edge detail and the slab detail at the junction with the existing slab.

The first job on the list for Gary was digging the trenches for the floor slab edge foundations.

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(Above and below): Gary The Elder busy digging the foundations to the specified dimensions using the Hitachi Zaxis. Rather faster, neater and more accurately than a team of guys with spades…
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(Above): Gary the Younger delivered this Bobcat S130 as a replacement for the dump truck with the blown track. The bucket looks considerably smaller than the previous truck he was using.

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(Above): The Bobat being used to cart away the material excavated from the foundation trenches. Hee-Haa! Ride ‘em, Cowboy! Man, this operator certainly enjoys this machine, even spinning it around through 360° on the spot, doing neat wheelies with an empty bucket. Hee-haa! Like an intoxicated teenager in the skate-park.

Gary The Elder gets a call from his boss Bryce that Gary The Younger will be delayed at another contract, and will in all likelihood not get to our site today. Bummer! Gary will have to drive both machines and do all the digging work on his own. Not a nice end to his week, I’m sure. But, on with the work, a job’s a job that needs to be done by someone, and circumstances have determined that it will be done by our Gary!

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(Above) Bryce should be pleased to know that his men work entirely without supervision under all conditions. Gary set about bringing in load after load of hardfill from the front lawn by Bobcat, then spread the heaps using his Zaxis digger, finally compacting with the machine in this phone. He also went off in his truck to collect two more loads of hardfill from the Waikanae quarry.

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(Above): Fridays Gary leaves at 4:00pm to travel back to Wellington to drop off the truck for the weekend and to collect his ute (LDV). He will be going pig hunting with his brother-in-law this weekend. The photo shows the extent of Gary’s work today. On Monday, they will lay the final accurate “adjustment” coat, followed by the specified sand coat, before laying the polythene waterproofing membrane.

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(Above) The Zaxis parked neatly in the bedroom, ready for work on Monday morning.

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(Above): View of the site from the secret garden showing the track cut up by the earthmoving equipment, almost like a muddy farm road. If you look carefully, you will see the TARDIS still parked in the background behind the lemon tree. That’s neat, a lavat-tree behind the lemon tree!