In the town of Gisborne on the east coast of New Zealand’s north island is a very unique “museum.” I had a lot of fun there but I’m a bit strange, I guess. Here are some pictures…
Here are a lot more of our pictures from our defunct Google+ page. Fitting for this place, they are unedited and in no particular order. You have to dig through the pictures for treasures just like we did through the amalgamation at the museum. -Rich
New Zealand makes some great wine and we’ve been doing a lot of tasting. Most wineries here have a dog (and some have cats). We’ve been seeing a wonderful book at a lot of the wineries and we finally bought a copy: Wine Dogs of New Zealand.
I think the best part of the book is the “Naughtiest Deads” entry for the dogs. Here are some…
“Eating the stuffing out of the office chair.”
“Stage diving into a 10 tonne pinot ferment.”
“Quietly leaving the tasting room after dropping gas bombs!”
Hey, that last one sounds like me! Hardly my naughtiest dead though. -Rich
We found something wonderful when we were looking for the rental car dropoff at the Tauranga Airport: An incredible flying museum! See for yourself…
Many, if not most, of the planes are in flying condition and are used regularly.
Cyndi getting ready to take one of the jets up! (On a pretend flight, at least.)Roar goes the engine, pow, pow, pow go the guns on my pretent flight.A faster way to get to Fiji?One of the nice people who showed us around.
I ran across Dan’s really clever idea for a fuse holder while at Steve’s Marine.
Home made fuse holder.
He just took a terminal strip (Euro strip) and a couple of crimp fittings and inserted an automotive type fuse. Brilliant. I bought parts to do this myself.
Crimp fittings become fuse holder.
He used a slightly different crimp connector and cut the plastic insulator off the wire end.
This happened in an expensive, marine, fuse holder and not this improvised one (which may have been better). I think the important take-away from this is to make sure the fuse contacts are completely free of corrosion and oxidation. My fuses had been sitting on the boat for a few years. They didn’t look bad but the subtle oxidation that was there increased the contact resistance to the point that the fuse melted. See this post.
Fred, from our marina, brought us a significantly sized bag of fruit a couple of weeks ago and along with the fruit, imparted us with the knowledge necessary to consume said fruit. The fruit: Feijoes. (Incidentally, I don’t know why I’m writing like this – perhaps feijoes tend to make a person erudite?)
Feijoes
The center is pretty soft. Scoop it out with a spoon and enjoy.
A feijoa cut in half and ready to eat.
He didn’t tell us until after we’d eaten a bunch about the “loosening” effect they tend to have, cautioning us to only eat a couple at a time. Too late Fred!
Today, Cyndi found another interesting fruit at the market: the Kiwi Berry.
Kiwi Berry
Here’s what this soft, kind of grape-like fruits look like inside.
Inside a Kiwi Berry.
They are great. They are in the same family as Kiwi fruit. If a Kiwi fruit and a grape had a baby…