Monday, 31 December 2007

A beautiful sunny day






Today it got up to -10 degrees. In the sun I felt heat hitting my legs through my black track pants.
We went into town and saw some ice sculptures. We also saw the coolest kids slide. Kids were flying down it, smashing into each other. Because they were all dressed like sumo wrestlers they did not hurt themselves.

A Neat Sunday

Today was a lovely day. It is very warm at only -7 degrees. We went to church and meet up with many of our old friends. I was remise is not taking my camera. Katya was the only baby at church. It seems it is odd to take young children out. However in her warm backpack she is very snug.
Because of the warm temperature, it snowed today. About a centimetre of snow.
This afternoon we went walking and went to the new shopping centre in our suburb. It is called New City and is enormous. People find Katya being carried on a backpack very funny.
Today we also went to a different supermarket and got some good ingredients. We are having a New Years eve party. In Russian culture New Years is big.
All of us (Claire, Katya and I) are now pretty much adjusted in terms of jet lag, time and temperature. One interesting adjustment is to the very warm apartments. We are having to drink a lot of water. Katya has taken to sculling water to a point where she has a look on her face like she is drowning.

We have been reflecting on our flights over. Katya was wonderful. The direct flight to Shanghai made the trip very fast. The service on Air NZ was not up to Singapore Air standard. Not even close. It seems Air NZ has slipped down the rankings. We did get a bassinet. This was very nice and we even got an extra seat. We also got to board first (although they then let everyone file in before we had got things sorted.
The flights on Air China and S7 were as expected. S7 had their old TU-154Ms running because it is winter. Boeings and Airbus' can't handle the winter.
We stopped in Beijing for a while. We continued our trend of being ripped off by taxis. We paid 350RMB to get from the Airport to a hotel in downtown Beijing. The taxi back was only 200RMB and was much nicer. The hotel was Jade International Youth Hostel and was very basic but very good. Good but basic facilities and very cheap (NZ$35 per night). This is ridiculously good value given it is 2min walk from the main street and 5min from Tianaman Square. Very much recommended.
In the Chinese airports Katya was a star. All the airline ladies flocked around her. We got a special bus to our plane. Groups of people would walk past and start making funny faces and smiling and laughing. Katya plays to the audience and does her head to the side, stare and smile routine. I think that blond kids and especially very young kids traveling intrigue them. She also meant we had no issues with customs. They just smile at Katya and wave us through.

Saturday, 29 December 2007

In Siberia

Here are a couple of pics from our trip.

This first photo is out the window of our apartment. it was -28 degrees last night when we landed.

This second photo is Katya posing in our Beijing Hostel. She was a bit upset about all the changes going one with feed times and locations... but she is starting to settle well.

This last photo is us settled down for lunch.

We are now in a process of registering. We have done a big shop (which included the legendary peach juice!!!).

Monday, 10 December 2007

Some new looks

Katya wearing a hat we got in Atlanta many years ago.


What a mess!!!


Katya had been putting the ball in the toy, picking it up and repeating heaps of times before I got this. It was quite funny.

Saturday, 1 December 2007

Some fun pics


We have had to put Katya's cot down a level as she can now escape over the edge. It tok a few nights for her to get use to it.

This is Katya crashing!!!

Since Katya has been born we have worried about the cat. Well today the cat learned that it needs to be worried about Katya. Katya crawled herself ontop of the cat, worked her way to the tail (occasionally biting on the way) and wrestled the cat by the tail (while still lying on it). Needless to say the cat was not to happy but she is blind and deaf and had no idea what was happening. When I pulled Katya off she had a mouthful of cat hair!!!

Some new toys from the Toy Library.

Saturday, 24 November 2007

Hmmm...




Someone got caught and was trying to extricate herself ASAP.

Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Hypocrisy defined

This morning I walked past parliament to have a catch up with someone from church. As I went past the main gate a new Crown car rolled up and drove in.

In New Zealand we seem to be on a big ting about "being green" and "zero emissions" and "carbon footprints". This has been spouted by our various ministers and this current government is making this issue a key platform for the next election.

So what do you think this new Crown car was...


A Prius??? No. Too small.


Maybe an LPG powered Falcon??? No. Obviously too Australian.


Well at least it wasn't a Hummer.

BUT it wasn't far short of it...

It was a new Chrysler 300..


That's anything up to 6.1L of V8 fuel sucking, environment bashing grunt.


Now personally, apart from them being butt ugly, I have no probs with such a vehicle. However if you are running an "everyone should be reducing their emissions" message... it is a bit rich buying these.

Friday, 16 November 2007

All set for Siberia

We are all set for Siberia. The Chinese visas came through. The tickets are waiting for us at the travel agents. All systems go.

Sunday, 11 November 2007

Crawling and Laughing



Katya is now a very movable hazard. She can get herself most places although it is a struggle.

This is the insanely happy laugh.

Thursday, 8 November 2007

Siberia Update

All our travel seems to be coming together well. The tickets are a bit more expensive than in previous years but still not too bad. The visas came through the other day for Russia. Now all we need is the Chinese transit visas and we will be sweet. The Chinese visa applications go in tomorrow.

We also have had news that we may be joined by another couple from church for part of the trip. This will be great because it will help with looking after Katya. It will also make the trip more of a team thing. These people have already been to Irkutsk so will not need minding.

One piece of not so good news is about our baby back pack. It is 124cm in W+H+D. AirNZ only allow carry on of 115cm. We are going to try and wing it. Once we are past AirNZ the other airlines allow 150cm. The back pack is very important as this will be Katya's primary transport. We are not taking a pram as we do not think this will work in the ice environment.

The Logical Song

This is an old song done new. Pretty cool.



And this is the same song put to some awesome rally action

Tuesday, 6 November 2007

Smoking increases

This morning there was an interesting article in the Herald. It is included below.

Basically it says a study is showing smoking is on the rise. But people are surprised.

I am not surprised. If you have walked in Wellington CBD recently you will have noticed the increase in walking chimneys. In the last three years smoking has increased significantly. I tried to see if there were any long term studies or data sets to prove this. I could not find anything. I would have thought the Ministry of Health and Stats would have such information as tabacco sales. But no.

I put it down to the "cool"/rebel thing and ALSO an increase in workplace stress. People are working a lot more recently and in more corrosive work and societal conditions.

Anyway... watch this space. I think we are in for a lot more issues in this smoking area.


>>>>>

Young rebel over tobacco health alerts
5:00AM Tuesday November 06, 2007
By Simon Collins

Young New Zealanders are reversing smoking trends by smoking more. Photo / Brett Phibbs
Smoking has become more popular among younger New Zealanders, possibly reversing a 30-year decline in an apparent backlash against a Government drive to stamp out the habit.

A Massey University survey for the Ministry of Health has found the number of people aged 15 to 45 who have smoked at least once in the previous year has increased from 31.1 per cent in 2003 to 35.8 per cent.

"There seem to be social negative connotations with tobacco use and that is contributing to less lifetime use, but there may have been some backlash since 2003," said researcher Chris Wilkins.

"It may be there was a general decline in lifetime use for tobacco, but the groups that were picking up smoking were doing it because it was seen as 'cool' and somehow anti-establishment. That included some young people, particularly young women, who were reacting to the Government regulation and the social intolerance that was developing for smoking."

Hospitality Association chief executive Bruce Robertson said the findings were surprising.

"I think there is a possibility of a sort of backlash against the welter of public health information that New Zealanders as a population are being bombarded with,' he said.

"As a sector we are certainly seeing that amongst our patrons - that they are expressing around the bars a view that they're getting a bit sick of the constant barrage of public health messages, whether it's gaming, alcohol, eating, drinking or smoking."

The Ministry of Health and Dr Wilkins warned that the survey might be a statistical "rogue" result that would need to be confirmed or disproved by future data.

Other sources, including last year's Census and annual surveys by AC Nielsen, continue to show a declining trend in tobacco use since at least 1976.

Censuses show a consistent reduction from 36 per cent of the total adult population in 1976 to 24 per cent in 1996 and 21 per cent last year.

They show a continued fall even in the 20 to 29 age group, where smoking remains most popular, from 32 per cent in 1996 to 30 per cent last year.

The ministry's chief adviser on public health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield, noted that the Massey figure of 35.8 per cent of 15- to 45-year-olds was virtually the same as in Massey's first two surveys in 1998 and 2001, suggesting the low 2003 rate of 31.1 per cent was a statistical quirk in the sample for that year.

"There is still a concern there from a policy perspective that it's not coming down, apparently, but our particular interest is in regular smokers because that's where we get the long-term harm."

Smokefree Coalition director Mark Peck said the survey showed the need to raise taxes on roll-your-owns.

Tax is based on the weight of tobacco. Roll-your-own cigarettes average only half the weight of tobacco in ready-made cigarettes.

Mr Peck said roll-your-owns' share of the tobacco market had risen as a result from 30 per cent to 48-49 per cent, while ready-made cigarettes had dropped to 43-44 per cent, with pipe smoking accounting for the balance.

Associate Health Minister Damien O'Connor acknowledged that there was an "anomaly" in the current tax regime, which makes the effective tax on a ready-made cigarette about twice the tax on a roll-your-own one.

Saturday, 27 October 2007

GMAIL goes iMAP

Ok. So this sounds a bit geeky but from a practical point of view, GMAIL's launch of a free iMAP service is wonderful news.
iMAP is a protocol for hooking up your e-mail software (like Entourage or Outlook) to a e-mail server or service (like GMAIL). Previously GMAIL used a protocol called POP. This POP way downloaded a copy of the e-mail to your e-mail software and that was about it.
iMAP is cool because it basically keeps whatever you have on GMAIL synced with what you have on your e-mail software. AND it does it with multiple computers or PDAs or iPHONES or whatever.
What this means is that you can have a laptop and a desktop and have exactly the same e-mail on both. If you read an e-mail on the laptop it will mark the e-mail as read on both the laptop and the desktop. If you send from the desktop, a copy of the sent e-mail will be on the laptop. Completely synchronized.

This all makes GMAIL vastly superior than what our local ISPs like paradise provide in NZ and very useful for the way I have our computers set up.

Instructions are under help on www.gmail.com

Zaoui


This image from the NZ Herald is very important for New Zealand. It represents the closure of one of the most embarassing chapters of New Zealand history. At last Ahmed Zaoui and his family are reunited.
One can but hope that a picture like this... of a family reunited after so many years... so many years that New Zealand tax payer funded officials have contributed to... might just make some of these tax payer funded officials realise that the cost of "security" can be too high.
In many respects the terrorist movements have won in countries like New Zealand... even though we have not seen the carnage of a 9/11 event... by the very fact that we have turned paranoid and surrendered some of the stuff that makes us who we are as a nation. Perhaps the only way to beat the terrorist is to ignore or forgive them.

Friday, 26 October 2007

Siberia

So we are heading back to Siberia. After three years of visiting during the lovely hot 30-40 degree Siberian summer, we are going during the Siberian winter. This may seem a little bit crazy but I am very excited about the idea of having a white Christmas.

Actually this year we will get two Christmas'. One will be on the 25th Dec in New Zealand in Northland. The other will be on the 7th Jan (the Russian Christmas is on the 7th) in Irkutsk. It will be wonderful to be able to celebrate Christmas with all our Russian friends.

We will also get to introduce Katya to all our friends. Last time we were in Irkutsk Katya was inside Claire.

This year we will be taking a different route. We have a 12.5 hour flight to Shanghai. A short hop up to Beijing. Then the flight into Russia. Because it is winter we will be on a Russian Tupolev. The Boeings and Airbus' don't fly in winter because they can not handle the winter.

The specific timetable is:

Leave WLG 21st Dec
Leave AKL 27th Dec
Arrive Irkutsk 29th Dec
Leave Irkutsk 25th Jan
Back in NZ 27th Jan

One of the most crazy things I have seen...

Tuesday, 23 October 2007

A new swing

We have bought Katya her first swing. After some slick handy man work, it was all installed and works very well.



Wednesday, 10 October 2007

Simpsonizing


Check out http://www.simpsonizeme.com/
It is quite a lot of fun. This is a Simpsonized version of me.

Sunday, 23 September 2007

New skills


During the weekend Katya has perfected rolling in all directions.

A weekend away at the Grandparents







This weekend we spent at my parents in Hawkes Bay. Here are a few pics.
The flowers are on a farm in Central Hawkes Bay,
The rocking horse is from my childhood.

Saturday, 15 September 2007

25 Skills every man should know

Popular Mechanics has published a list of "25 skills every man should know". They are:

1. Patch a radiator hose;
2. Protect your computer;
3. Rescue a boater who has capsized;
4. Frame a wall;
5. Retouch digital photos;
6. Back up a trailer;
7. Build a campfire;
8. Fix a dead outlet;
9. Navigate with a map and compass;
10. Use a torque wrench;
11. Sharpen a knife;
12. Perform CPR;
13. Fillet a fish;
14. Manoeuvre a car out of a skid;
15. Get a car unstuck;
16. Back up data;
17. Paint a room;
18. Mix concrete;
19. Clean a bolt-action rifle;
20. Change oil and filter;
21. Hook up an HDTV;
22. Bleed brakes;
23. Paddle a canoe;
24. Fix a bike flat;
25. Extend your wireless network.

For me, I would say I could confidently do 21/25. How about you?

Saturday, 18 August 2007

Katya meets her cousins

A few weeks ago Claire and Katya went up north to stay with her family. This involved a direct flight to the big smoke of Whangarei.

Sunday, 5 August 2007

Tuesday, 10 July 2007

Lone Star









So a whole pile of us went to Lone Star on Sunday night. It was only the second time we left Katya in the care of someone else (thanks Elizabeth).

Thursday, 5 July 2007

IT'S ANOTHER KATYA!!!


Home group dinner


At homegroup we had a fantastic pot-luck dinner together.