Archive for August, 2006

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10 Years of…

Here’s what I’ve been busy with over the past week. Pretty tight deadline on this one, just over a week to produce a show identity and all animations, show bugs etc. Pulled a 30 hour straight stretch on it, I’m really pleased with the final outcome. Show airs tonight at 9:30pm.

Another Sunset?

New Zealand may get it’s fair share of sunsets, but took this shot in Leicester almost a year ago…

Crazy Legs

Bird Life pt2

Chilled

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wild animals more like…

Cooking with Bobby

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Piedmontese Peppers with Polenta

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Japanese Shiitake Omelette with grilled vine tomatoes and Guacamole

American style pancakes with mixed berry and crème fraîche

Also made some Quesadillas, very tasty but not that photogenic. Might make some Gazpacho this week.

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Now these are called Tamarillos. I can never remember seeing one back in the UK, but here in NZ they are only second to the Kiwi fruit as a national icon. In fact New Zealand is the only country in the world to grow these for international export. Native to South America, and long forgotten, the Kiwi’s embraced and re-named it. You scoope out the fleshy inside, and can either eat it raw (with a pinch of sugar) or use in loads of sweet and savoury dishes. Would be interesting to see if you can track it down in the UK, probably not fresh but it is made into chutney.

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DAMN STRAIGHT

R.I.P

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You may have heard back home about the passing of the Maori Queen – Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu. She died on Tuesday last week, 75 years of age, just 2 weeks after her birthday. She was crowned in 1966, at just 34. The 40th anniversary of her coronation took place in May.

Today her eldest son, Te Arikinui Tuheitia Paki, was confirmed as her successor.

There have been now 7 Maori monarchs, the first being crowned in 1853. A head Maori was introduced as a way of combating the loss of land and unity due to the British settlers, who in turn tried to destory the monachy as it was deemed a threat to the British crown.

The Maori are the indigenous people of New Zealand. They are not natives however, having settled here between 800AD and 1130AD, from as far as the Easter Islands. In fact New Zealand is one of the last places on Earth to have been settled by Man.

The island was “discovered” by a dutch man named Abel Tasman 1642 and named it “New Zeeland” after a province in the Netherlands. (The Tasman sea between NZ and OZ is named afer him), although settlements in large numbers only took place with the coming of the British in the late 1800s. This lead to the landwars around the time of the first Maori King.

Someone of White British descent in New Zealand is known as a “Pakeha”, although the term is now used for anyone of non-maori descent but it is deemed as derogative by some.

Before the Europeans settlers, they had been no written form of the Maori language. European Christian missionaries developed Maori as a written language, and the first printed material in the Maori language was published in 1815. It’s actually a pretty difficult language for a Brit to get his head around, especially pronunciations, as although the characters are recognisible, the way in which they are pronounced is not.

The language consists of five vowels:

A – pronounced “ah” as in lava
E – pronounced as in the word pet
I – pronounced “ee” as in the ie in families
O – pronounced “or”
U – pronounced “oo” as in boo!

There are just 8 single consonants – H,K,M,N,P,R,T,W, and two digraphs:

NG – pronounced as in the word song.
WH – generally pronounced roughly as `f’ or “ph”

You’ll notice there is no “S” in the Maori language, and is deemed offensive if you pluralise Maori words by adding an “s”. For example, never say “Maoris”, always “Maori”

Bird Life

This guy just landed opposite my balcony:

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Gecko Love pt2

Those feet are more sophisticated in design than anything man has managed to produce. Geckos can pretty much walk up, or upside down on any surface. On each of the toes are microscopic hairs, which in turn split into hundreds of smaller hairs or “setae” which are about 200 nanometres in diameter. Each of these setae produce a strong intermolecular force called “Van der Waals” force, attracting the molecules of the setae to the molcules of the surface. Basically that Gecko is sticking to the glass through electricity. They also have transparent eyelids which are fused over their eyes and can live for 20 years…

These guys are Northland green geckos, are currently protected and are only found here in New Zealand.

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