Capture: Labour Weekend: Town or Country?
154 Responses
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Hebe, in reply to
Luxcity
Cool.
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Lilith __, in reply to
sea flowers
Sea tulips , I think. Despite their appearance, not plants at all but a type of sea squirt .
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Leigh Russell, in reply to
Far out - thanks Lilith!
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Islander, in reply to
They're edible (not in their entirety tho'!)
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JacksonP, in reply to
Wow! Great shots Kebabette. Glad this has continued, and we got some of the Luxcity photos. ;-)
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Kebabette, in reply to
Thanks Jackson, I put a few other Luxcity photos up on Flickr but I didn't get much good due to squishing crowds & my amateurish fiddling with camera! Quite an odd - and oddly beautiful - event.
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Did your child make the long traverse to the Hastings Olympics the year before?
No - he wasn't a Steiner boy all his life, transferred there at intermediate school after a bad experience at the school we started him at.
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Sacha, in reply to
wow, that's close.
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Julian Melville, in reply to
Yep, they were occupying the tree right by the cafe we were in. Teasing patrons dogs and everything.
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Lilith __, in reply to
the view back to Auckland was not all bad.
Auckland looks pretty spesh with that light! :-)
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Islander, in reply to
Sea squirts!? Who names these things?
Probably kids who grow up on beaches.
If you squash 'em a bit, the 3 things called seasquirts commonly found on/around ANZbeaches, will produce fluid, some quite liquid, some gluey-NB: seasquirts of one kind or another are found in very many coastal environs...
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
seasquirts of one kind or another are found in very many coastal environs…
Learning more every day!! I'll have to go on a sea squire hunt.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Sea squirts!? Who names these things?
The big Australian squirt common around Sydney is known as cunjevoi, a word supposedly of 'indigenous origin'. Talk of using 'scungy boys' for bait piqued my curiosity, so I had to ask.
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Hebe, in reply to
He will have been there when my twins visited . Thanks, to him, to the others, and to the teacher, and school, and the lovely Linda. We needed a safe and beautiful place to regroup, and you all provided it (and I came to know and love brandysnap icecream from a little factory by the port.) That time away meant when the February 22 earthquake happened (epicentre 3km from our house) the boys were so settled that they voted to stay here rather than run. And that decision has led to many good things.
I fell in love with Dunedin, having never spent much time there in my adult life, and Evening Ravensbourne caught the magic.
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Hebe, in reply to
Sea squirt: what an apt name. Them being an animal makes the little horrors even creepier. That pink bald-cat look, yukyukyuk.
Talk of using ‘scungy boys’ for bait piqued my curiosity, so I had to ask
It would. They look gross too. I am beginning to imagine forests of creepiness beneath the sea.
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
big Australian squirt
This could be a euphemism for something?
But I'd expect it to be big in Australia. Even the cats are the size of medium dogs over there....
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
I am beginning to imagine forests of creepiness beneath the sea.
Probably not far wrong! At least you can generally see to the bottom of a rock pool : )
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Hebe, in reply to
You're ontui it.
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Leigh Russell, in reply to
Julian, I have tui envy! What a special pic, and that one of Auckland silhouetted across the twilit landscape too!
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