Showing posts with label Waikanae Tyre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waikanae Tyre. Show all posts

Friday, 7 March 2014

Second Time Lucky

A little more than a fortnight ago, I blogged about my experience at the local auto service station, Waikanae Tyre and Lube. You can refer back it here, I called it “Come See Me.”

Aotea

This morning I popped down to the Aotea Pathology in Waikanae to have some blood drawn for the routine data-base at the doctor’s. Jeanette accompanied me, as we would do a little Friday morning shopping with the same stone. After dropping the kids at the Mangaone Road bus-stop at 8:00, I arrived at Aotea around after 8:10.

Jeanette waited in the car, entertained by Kapiti Radio, 90-something FM, while I waited in the waiting room. Which is the purpose for which a waiting room is designed.  And I waited and waited. Because of staff considerations, the wait extended to just past 9, as there were 10 other patients in the queue ahead of me. All had come early to avoid the morning rush. Instead of avoiding it, they caused it for me! Well, I wasn’t in a hurry, and the service is free, so no complaints from my side.

The friendly nursing sister took the three vials of red liquor from my hard-to-locate veins and I was back in the car at 9:15.

battery

Drat! The engine turned slowly, but it refuse to develop its customary “oomph!” I tried a number of times, but, alas, to no avail. Drat!

We sauntered back to the level crossing in the main Road, and met the fellow at Waikanae Tyre and Lube, who’d fixed our trailer tyre last time. Ten minutes later, the Toyota was back at their garage after a jump-start help from the technician. The battery seemed to have recovered, and was once more working fine. Who, knows? Faced with the alternative of replacing it with a new one at $170, I opted for the “let’s wait and see” choice. 

That’s that. At the till, “No problem, mate.” Second time ‘No Charge Service’ I’m starting to like the New Zealand pricing system. For the motor trade, at least.

Monday, 17 February 2014

Come See Me

A question that people ask: “What is the cost of living in New Zealand like?

Naturally, this will depend on the base country from which the questioner hails from, generally the UK and South Africa. And the answer given to each of such enquirers is radically different.

Quite likely, the UK costs are quite similar to NZ, but the South African costs and drastically lower. Naturally, the comparison is made without equating the relative salaries that one might earn for a similar job. That factor is not known for certain, until someone has worked in the respective countries at the particular job.

However, the question is not very valid, unless someone goes on holiday in the other country, then he has earned his holiday spend in his home currency and will foot his holiday bills in the “foreign” currency.

For the record, $1 is roughly £0.50 and $1 weighs in at R9.20-ish. Adding bank charges and the other extortion-fees, I simply work on R10 to the Dollar: My ten-times table is fairly accurate these days.

Anyway, back to the story:

Clayton has a garden trailer for carting this and that of a heavy nature around the property behind the ride-on mower-tractor, but the one wheel is a bit flat. Especially at the bottom, as Brynn would explain. So, we eventually removed the wheel yesterday, on the understanding that I would get it fixed during the week, in preparation for possible use next week-end.

This morning, I loaded the wheel and set off to 1 Elizabeth Street which is the building at the railway crossing at SH1 in Waikanae town:  Waikanae Tyre.

tyreshop  

Yep, we can fix that,” the fellow with the neat black tyre T-shirt, assured me, “Call back in, say, an hour or so.”

I had 60 minutes to kill: I drove down to Waikanae Beach, strolled along the wet sand looking for interesting bits of driftwood, and then spent about half an hour watching four old geezers at a game of petanque (some people call it “boule”) on a public court on Tutere Street, next to the Tennis court and Volley Ball court. How cool is that? Even a court-side telephone booth in case a geezers has a heart-attack!

boule

So, what has all this to do with a high cost of living? Nothing really, except that it illustrates that taxpayers get some value for the taxes the pay.

When buying stuff in New Zealand, I try to estimate how much they will charge me – and I’m slowly becoming better at it. “How much would Mastertreads charge for this job?” I wonder. I’ve never owned a trailer, so I really don’t know.

Perhaps R60? That’s $6 – estimate $18, let’s call it $20?

60 minutes gone: I head back to Waikanae Tyre. The wheel is fixed, waiting for me. Fist class!

There you go, mate.”

The South-African in me is a bit puzzled.

How much do I owe?

No worries, mate. Next time you want to buy tyres, you come see us.

My estimation of the New Zealand economy has gone up a number of notches.