03 December 2018

News from Nelson - November 2018

Hi everyone,
Planning for Europe is now almost complete. We fly into Munich, get a rental car, and drive to Ulm to see Uta, Eberhard & Monika, Oli & Katrin, the accountant; then go on to Stuttgart to visit Nane; to Eppingen to see Katrin & Andreas and for Jan's work; to Langen to see Simone & Andreas; to Pohlheim to see Holger, Katalin, Achim and Katrin; maybe to Treysa (not sure yet) to see Dieter & Gudrun, Anne & Herbert; to Celle to see Gerhard and Claudia, then to Amsterdam via train at Hanover.

We had been going to meet Justine in Berlin, but Jan felt that Berlin in winter would be horrible. Instead, we will meet Justine in Amsterdam. There is lots to see and do... and there is a Fluevog shop in Amsterdam, and Justine is a fellow vogger. There will be shoe shopping :-D

This month I got all my outstanding NMIT work complete, got my marks into the system, verified everything, attended the last meeting for the year, and signed off. I also got some really nice feedback from my students and supervisees, which makes the hard work all worthwhile. It is a pity that I will miss graduation (will be in Europe). Despite the uncertain skill level of the research students, my supervisory team got nearly all the students up to standard, on the students' own merits, through intensive coaching. In the end we had only a few fails. The effort that the team put in was significant - and I took them all out to lunch to thank them all - but I want to spend some time over summer simplifying systems, reporting and administration as much as possible so that this additional effort is less likely to be required again. The institution cannot run on goodwill: people get exhausted.

It is a good time to review as next year I will be supervising and lecturing for all the undergraduate research projects: management, accounting and marketing. Until now I have only supervised the management students. Now all three majors are combined, which will mean that at last all the projects are consistent in approach, effort and results. All the other supervisors will follow my systems and marking regime. I have been discussing the changes that are coming with the head of accounting for three years, so we know we are on the same page, and the head of marketing has just retired, so the new appointment will only know the new way of doing things, hopefully without resistance.

Because of Jan's change in work status, this month we got stuck into doing some jobs around the place. Warren came to visit and really drove us onwards. The old stairs that Jan got from Nelson Pine two and a half years ago were literally manhandled into position by a load of friends and neighbours, well rewarded by a barbecue and some beers. The stairs had been stored by the end of our four bay farm shed, got carried across by loads of strong blokes, then roped up and lowered down to be bolted onto the concrete pad that Jan had put in. This makes getting down to the orchard a whole heap easier.




Then Warren & Jan used the remainder of the roll of dog run wire to fence off the western garden. A colleague of mine who has a husky is coming to house sit for us while we are away, and the fenced back garden gives her a bit of security as her dog can take herself off for walks. We did a few trial walks this month with all three of them to check that they get on OK - and they do. Finn is in love with a husky. And BIG, as you can see by this photo of Finn and Boo on the deck. In fact he is so big that for the first time I have had to buy a dog seat-belt. When he sits on the back seat in my little nana car, his head is between the front seats.


Boo had a trip to the vet this month to have some epulis removed from her gums, and the vet found a breast lump. I had no idea that dogs could get breast cancer too. The lump got whipped out along with the gum problems, got sent to the lab, and was benign. That was very good news.

This month at long last we found time to go out for a coffee at the Jester's cafe: I had forgotten how lovely the gardens were. I saw Katie Gold while I was there, and she asked me about my shoes (she is also a Fluevog fluesie). This is the first time that Jan and I have gone out together, and not with other people, for ages. We have been far, far too busy!



We caught up with Sharon & Ian, which was lovely.



Tracey, H & Erica had their housewarming out at Hira, which was a good night, and started with a karakia and spot of planting. Everyone had been asked to bring plants to donate to their new lives together - a great idea - and there was a real mix of things. Lots and lots of natives. As well as bringing natives from our wee tree nursery, we also brought some fruit tree saplings.





Still doing the wardrobe challenge, though it is getting harder to find things to wear as it is getting quite warm now. In some ways I am looking forward to the cool of Europe! By the way, the coral coloured jacket was made by the lovely Jenny Ladley.


This month I also found time to do a couple of webinars for my directorship training log: one on organisational culture and one on data safety. The webinars are great ways of getting access to international training - and are often funded by IOD (Institute of Directors) as part of the membership fee, which is good.

I realised that my passport only has four months to run once we get back from Germany, so sent off to get a new passport done. It was staggeringly quick. I loaded my data online on Sunday, got a message back on Sunday night that my passport was being processed, then it arrived on Tuesday! I couldn't believe the speed of it. The form still says that it might take six to eight weeks, but three days is one heck of a lot faster than that.

Jan has played in the last NSO concert that he will play in for a while, Romance Mystery, where we had a guest pianist, local man Louis Lucas-Perry. He played Rachmaninov's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. Louis has been studying at the NZSM and it really shows in his technique, showmanship and polish: he has come a very long way. I went with my mother and Wendy to the new School of Music which is all finished and very nice indeed. We got a tour out the back from Jan after the concert.

Jan also finished work at the end of this month, and appears hugely more relaxed: long may that continue. Now we are waiting until we get to Germany to find out what his start date will be with Dieffenbacher. Hopefully it will be later in January - or even February - but we will have to wait and see.


Sam (& Jan)

05 November 2018

News from Nelson - October 2018

Hi everyone,
The beginning of October brought the study break with it, and some warmer weather. Unfortunately Jan has had to work, but I have been at home writing and catching up on marking; and on writing up some research I did last year to present at a CDANZ conference at the end of the month.

Barb was up in Nelson briefly with some of the Trust beneficiaries on a camp. My brother had organised a fishing charter for them to go on, which was great, and I got to catch up with them all at the Anchor Bar & Grill for lunch.

Magda arrived back in NZ for a brief visit, before she starts her new nursing job. We caught up with Jules and the twins, which was really nice: and reminds you that life goes very fast, so we need to make the most of it while we are here!

We picked up some kiln dried wood through Kevin - and used his truck to deliver it to Tracey, H & Erica now that they are out at their new place in Hira. On the way back to drop the truck off, we stopped at the Mudcastle and had a bottle and a half of bubbly with Glenys & Kevin. Boy, they do the host thing well. It was nice to see them.

Jan finished his assignment (essay), which completes this course for him. Now he gets a break until sometime next year... and he resigned from the Port Company. As he has to give two months notice, his last day will be the 30th of November.

The conference I presented at went well, and I had a good audience. Despite a very full programme, I caught up briefly with Tina; Brigitte and John; Jeremy, Otto and Lara. I even got to see Otto playing hockey (AstroTurf) although I was too under-dressed to watch outside!


The Faulkners had a 'mid-winter' shindig at their place, in the middle of spring (these things can slide a bit!). It was a good night of catching up with all the Rose Road peeps, including Zig & Lib who were just back from 6 months in Europe.


Finn is continuing to grow. He is turning into a monster...


We got the fence line on the wetland between us and the Le Gros's place cleaned up by Xaver's remote control machine. It cut through the gorse, blackberry and old man's beard in no time. This will help us to be better neighbours, by not having noxious plants right against their lovely native planting.


I got a new phone this month as my old one was continually running out of space, and I kept running out of battery charge (all the apps I use are battery hogs). I went for a Galaxy Note 9, having heard good things about it. It was a nice upgrade: a Note 4 to a Note 9 all in one go. Nice phone though!


We will go to Germany in the first week of December, and that will allow Jan to go to visit his new - potential - employer to get the detailed hammered out about the new job. We are thinking of starting in Ulm, then working up through the country. I am keen to go to Berlin, and to stay in Germany for Christmas, but Jan is not keen on either of those ideas. We will see as the planning progresses.

In July next year several of Jan's buddies are going to Fiji for a cheap, mass birthday celebration in the sun (or as sunny as it gets in Fiji in July). The planning for this event has been going since August, but we are now getting more of an idea about costs: ouch. Not very cheap, but will be very enjoyable, I am sure. We will be spending a week on Plantation Island. Flights are paid, room deposits are paid. Done.

That should all keep us out of trouble for a while.


Sam (& Jan)

01 October 2018

News from Nelson - September 2018

Hi everyone,
Sorry for the long hiatus since updating you all: but I will go through and post the news month by month, despite the fact that the date is now January 2019.

At the beginning of September we got the terrible news that Jan's cousin Simone had been widowed. Her husband had been unwell for some time, but the news that Michael was gone was a terrible shock. Andreas and Simone are raw, but coping. We hope to see them in December when we are thinking we will go to Germany.

My work continued to be busy with this semester's students getting their projects underway: thought I would have to say that I had higher numbers of students at risk this semester than ever before. The supervisory team has been working really well, however, and are all doing a great job to lift the student game in double-quick time. We had one supervisor pull out, and the rest of us redistributed that supervisor's workload, but that seemed to work out OK.

Jan is still not enjoying his work, so has started firming up a commissioning job for German company, Dieffenbacher (which builds particle board, MDF and LVL plants and equipment). We don't know much yet about how long he is going to be away for, but he is thinking that he is likely to be away for two months at a time in the Americas, nor do we know a start date yet. Sometime in the New Year. I am not at all happy about it, but Jan is keen.

Argentina - the Pumas - played the All Blacks at Trafalgar Park here in Nelson. The Port Company had tickets which staff went into the draw for: Jan got two tickets. It was a great game. The weather was cold, but we were all dressed for it, and the crowd was partisan, but fair. We had left my little nana car over at the Port offices, so we walked to the park, then were able to simply walk back and drive home without the traffic over over 21,000 people all heading home at the same time affecting us too much. I almost lost my voice from shouting :-)


I am still working on the one year wardrobe challenge, and have rediscovered the outfit I wore to Lara's naming ceremony, which must be nearly sixteen years ago!


 Finn is growing like a weed, but still remains full of the joys of the world. He is a very happy dog to own (mind you, he has yet to hit those canine teenager times). Aunty Boo is keeping an eye on him, and keeping him in line. She runs a very good line in distraction tactics when he is misbehaving.

Jan & I had to clear out the ford closest to us a couple of times from the winter storms. Of course, all the working photos are of Jan, as someone had to take the photos...! From water level quite high with crap all over the fence...


To unblocking the drain under the ford...

To unblocking the drain on the uphill side...

To the ford going back to normal level and tidying up the last of the clumps of debris.

We got invited to a dinner at Shelley & Kevin's place, which was total foodie heaven. Shelley took on my dietary restrictions with gusto, and cooked things which I could eat, which was just bliss. A great night, with ex-Sealord colleagues Dawn (and Neil), Shelley (and Kevin), Karen & Tom, with much wine drunk! Even better, my old canteen of silver cutlery got a new home, as I realised that Shelley had the same service. My cutlery has been sitting in a carton in the back of the laundry for ages, and seeing the joy she got from using hers, it was an easy donation to make :-)


Jan went to Australia this month to attend a seminar run by his safety guru, Sidney Dekker. He said that the seminar was great, and he learned a lot. Interestingly enough he had a burst blood vessel in his eye while he was in a lecture session, seated between two paramedics who then checked him for all sorts before saying it was just one of those things. Couldn't have been in a better place for that kind of thing to have happened! He stayed with Tanja while he was there, which was nice for them both. He is currently working on his final essay for his Health & Safety course.


I have started a Maori cultural familiarisation course through CDANZ, which has been good, and have done a couple of Institute of Directors courses as well. I have been too busy at work to finalise my AJCD article changes, and realistically won't get to that until January now.

This month Jan also had an NSO concert, Opera Mania, which was be the last concert that the NSO will have at Old St John's. At long, long last the Nelson School of Music will be reopening next month. Opera Mania went well, with the Anvil chorus being repeated as an encore at the end. It was very, very good, despite a small dollop of Wagner!

My wee nana car crapped out this month: the first time it has ever broken down. The alternator died on us, on the way home (right outside the Richmond branch of the garage I use). Jan got in touch with a former colleague and he rescued us, gave us a loaner car, and we were off. However, this is making me think that it is time to start thinking about a replacement: it was first registered in 2006, now being a venerable 12 years old. I would really like an electric car, but I don't think they have the range yet for our driving requirements of up to 130km a day without a recharge. I will have to buy a second-hand electric car, which will have already lost some of its range. Also, Nelson has very few charging places - all of which you have to pay for. While I may be able to recharge, it will require an extension cord and a 'willing' power socket. Something to think about, anyway.

Plans are firming up for our German trip. It looks like it will be December. We will update everyone as we know.


Sam (& Jan)

03 September 2018

News from Nelson - August 2018

Hello again everyone,
And welcome to our family news update.

I don't think anything has calmed down for us since our last update. We are both still too busy. Jan is currently actively looking for another engineering job, which will probably end up being either overseas or outside Nelson. This will mean either an international commute' or a weekly commute: neither of which I am that happy about, but he is not happy where he is, so something has to change.W

Hopefully there will be an update about his next professional move soon... and with luck, it won't take him too far away.

And there is change for me too. After a lot of discussion I have made the difficult decision to withdraw from my PhD. On the last day of the month, I wrote my resignation letter to Griffith. This is a soft-close, however. I will keep working on my confirmation document quietly on my own, then, either in February or in July next year, I will reapply. 

In the meantime I have two other research projects to complete. I will finish both of those, and will not take anything else on. If I have only teaching and my PhD to do, I will re-enrol. If not, I will postpone until that is the case. Well: that's the theory, anyhow!

Jan is heading to Brisbane next month for a few days at a Safety workshop with Worksafe Australia, hosted by Sidney Dekker from Griffith. He is looking forward to catching up with Tania - and possibly Tina, too. I am still trying to decide whether I can go along as well, but I don't know yet if we can get someone to dog-sit... I have an Australia flight that I have cancelled from my PhD confirmation defense which I have to use before February. 

Jan's old school mates from Naenae are all heading off to Fiji for a joint 50th birthday party in July next year. Planning has already started, and Jan is really looking forward to it. I am more conflicted: not because of going with the Hutties (which will be great!) but because we will be putting money into a dictatorship ...which I am unhappy about. However, as Jan points out, at least we can find out from Tina the best places to go!!

Our next-door neighbour, Simon, has nearly got a completed house. It will now be a matter of weeks before his place is finished. 

And further down the valley, the land and house formerly belonging to Suzie and Kevin has been bought by a couple from Murchison - Alan and Adina - who used to run a boarding kennel. They seem very nice, and have horses. It is lovely to walk down the road and have an equine chat over the fence. Finn was freaked out the first time, but is thoroughly enjoying having nose to nose sniffs now.

Jan got part-way through getting his experimental speakers installed... and stalled. If he gets more time by having more leave in a new job, it will be good to get these finished off.


The days are getting noticably longer, with the sun still being up as we are heading home. It has got a lot warmer now, and we have stopped having a fire at night.


We are both in good health, and our immediate families here are in good health.

Hope to catch up with you all soon!


Sam (& Jan)

02 September 2018

The One Year Wardrobe Challenge

I am doing a "wear everything in your wardrobe challenge", where you have one year to wear everything in your wardrobe, dresser drawers etc. The idea is that anything that I don't wear, I get rid of. After a year, often if I am not wearing things, I probably won't go back and wear them. Clothes get out of date, out of shape, fade, or get holes, so this regime is helping me find out what is dated, and helping me to take action about them. It also helped me understand what it is that I really wear most often. 

I have given things away, sold items, and donated things to charity. I have made a few small bag drops to the Sallies as I have found things that don't fit, that I don't like wearing, or that I can't mend or repurpose. It has made more room in my wardrobe for more Fluevogs ;-D 

And because we are doing this at the office, it has become really fun. We have had some really cool and off-piste outfits that have really entertained both lecturers and students alike. 

As the year has gone on, I have found it more challenging to wear particular pieces. Most stuff is mix and match, but there are a few things that need a whole outfit designed around them. I had one burgundy shirt in my drawers that I hadn't worn, so worked up a green and burgundy ensemble from all sorts of bits and pieces I have lurking in the wardrobe, and tied that to a pair Fluevog Hopefuls Esperanzas: the grape colour (photo above).

I was wracking my brains for what to wear with a silver lame T-shirt and a gorgeous grey, multi-coloured flower-embroidered jacket (they won't go with each other, and I have no grey vogs), but I found that some Fluevog Hopefuls Rosys, a black velvet bolero jacket and a black patchwork skirt that I have only just realised actually had silvery stripes in it to at long last co-ordinate with the silver t-shirt (photo above too). I like the creativity in having to use everything.

... but that doesn't stop me shopping for vogs, scarves, gloves, tights and earrings :-)


Sam

06 August 2018

News from Nelson - July 2018

Hi everyone,

Well: we pick up from where we left off last time: we are still busy.

The funeral home who arranged my Father and Uncle's donation to Otago Medical School arranged a tree planting, so we all turned up at Saxton's Field one cold July day to plant some natives. We planted a Rimu for my Uncle, and a Tawai Whero (Red Beech) for my father. Well, Mike and Jan did the planting, and Donna, Mother and myself offered moral support. And paid for coffee across the road at Zinc afterwards :-)




Finn is growing up quickly, and is now larger and taller than Boo:



We had a lovely time with Lara and Otto during the school holidays when they came down to visit us for a week. My bedside tables turned up, so they put them together, which was great, along with Lexi from further down the road:
 

We went out for breakfast a couple of times:

 Walked up to visit Simon's new house on the ridge:



 And Lara went Op Shopping at the Sallies:


And we went to visit Dawnie, the cats, and her boarders from Germany & France:



Lambretta's opened again after earthquake strengthening. They have been closed for about six months, so it has been wonderful to go back there for wonderful coffee again! Hui-Ping and Mae came down for a weekend, and we caught up at Lambretta's, then went up to see Bill and Cornish:



Semester 2 has double the workload expected (we had 25 enrollments on my capstone paper one week out: then in the first week of the new semester I suddenly had 50 students). We have no ability to predict these numbers, and in the school itself have no idea how many enrolments are in progress. The unpredictability of the workflow is very, very frustrating. I have heard though that Deakin Uni in Oz are working with IBM's Watson AI programme to create a student management system. It would be great if the Ministry of Education here could licence that... it would certainly reduce of a whole load of planning and scheduling headaches.

I am struggling to get any work done on my PhD, and am having a bit of a panic about it. I think I might have to make some difficult decisions as my PhD defense is looming in October, and my workload at NMIT is significant. A colleague has been diagnosed with a brain tumour - picked up during a routine eye exam - so was suddenly whisked away for radiation therapy, and I and two of my other colleages have picked up her teaching load. We have absolutely no fat in the system, so any further crises, like people having a cold, become serious HR problems very quickly.

Jan is still finding his workload is not decreasing, nor is he managing to get rid of the collosal pile of admin that it generates. The job is not what it was advertised, and he is not happy about it. I think there is likely to be another job change earlier than expected. He has started the next paper for his Post-Grad Cert, having passed the first one for the year (which is great). However, he is also not enjoying the new paper, which is on Safety Ethics.

However, at least we have had some lovely sunrises and sunsets:



And we hope to catch up with you all again soon


Sam (& Jan)

16 July 2018

Making tape laces

I recently wanted to get a pair of unusually coloured tape laces as a bit of a fashion statement for a funky pair of boots, and went looking for laces to buy. After a fairly exhaustive trawl through the net, I ran across a great post by Devon Iott (August 2015) on how to make our own shoelaces.

It was a surprisingly easy project, just using a little bias binding machine, fabric of choice, thread and clear nail polish, a good, sharp pair of scissors, iron, ironing board, and sewing machine. If we have a quilting ruler, that will make getting the 45 degree angle bang on as well, to cut the fabric on the bias for the laces, as well as a rotary cutter.

Devon's post clearly laid out exactly how to make our own tape laces, which I have repeated here, using snips of some of Devon's images:
  1. Use a diagonal ruler (or a quilting ruler) to line up fabric to a 45 degree angle for making the tapes. Get the fabric as square as possible (it makes lining up your cut strips easier later)
  2. Use scissors (or a rotary cutter) to cut the fabric into strips 5cm apart (that provides just under 1cm wide tape laces). Depending on your fabric width, cut either two or four strips (you need laces bout 1.2m for ankle boots).
  3. If using two fabric strips per lace, cross the ends, right-sides inwards, and pin.
  4. Stitch together at 2.0.
  5. Press seam open, trim waste.
  6. With the wrong side facing up (NB: may need to trim the strip to a point), run each strip evenly through the bias binding machine, ironing the resulting binding flat as we go.
  7. Fold the wrong sides together, then press firmly. 
  8. Sew down the length of the binding at about 2.5
  9. Mark each lace at 5mm from either end and 12mm: this is where we are going to sew the lace off into an 'aglet'.
  10. Fold the fabric into another two or three thicknesses.
  11. Select zigzag at 0.75 and a width of 5 (or 5.5) and sew evenly across the width of the folded lace ('satin stitch'), between 5 and 12mm from each lace end.
  12. Trim waste.
  13. Squeeze the aglet to make it tubular, paint it with a thick coat of nail varnish.
  14. Dry. Trim excess thread.
  15. Paint again. Leave to dry (or we can replace the nail varnish steps by using Plasti Dip).
A reader also posted in the comment that "for aglets, I use 3/16 heat shrink tubing, available at any home DIY store in the electrical dept. Slip them on the ends and hit with a hair dryer or craft heat gun. Tah dah, perfect aglets!".


Sam