Capture: Roamin' Holiday
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Julie Cross, in reply to
It was a mere trifle after all. ;-)
Definitely not meh!. Drenched in Cointreau and smothered in chocolate flakes, cause for great merri-ment. Gracias.
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Or could be, actually, that you are a fantastic dad, allowing them to develop healthy risk-assessment skills, which in my teacherly opinion, are sadly on the wane.
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JacksonP, in reply to
Drenched in Cointreau and smothered in chocolate flakes
Yum! Sounds dangerously good.
Thanks Jackie. Time will tell.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
We had a swimming pool area that was roofed over, and my brothers used to jump from that into the pool.
As did my brothers from a large Pine tree into ours.My Mum would freak, Dad ,not so much. No broken backs. No smashed teeth. Interesting that I see parallels with their behaviour now. The one wanting to jump from the highest branch is more financially driven. The other driven but creative with it. I never climbed the tree.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
I see another one right of centre, kind of like the Wizard of Oz lion.
Oh yes, 3 wise men ;)
The one you spotted could be the beginnings of Mt Rushmore. Are we stretching it now? -
JacksonP, in reply to
I never climbed the tree.
We had a 'baby' Kauri tree in our front lawn. The trick was touching the very top. It was probably only 12 - 15 metres, but that seemed high enough at 11 or 12.
This house was on top of a cliff too, which was indicative of a fault line. Doesn't seem so sensible now.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
This pic is for the holiday we intended to have this year beneath the pohutukawa in Northland…
Well here is a glimpse from where I write. Internet in the bush in the middle of nowhere in particular in the Far North. Well it is particular but I wont tell you from where or I might have to kill you. ;) Technology eh? gotta love it.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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Oliver Thompson, in reply to
Very Escher.
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Classic Kareponia holiday homes
House of the late Steve Herewini.
Most photographed house in Northland, apparently and as such MacDonalds decided it was a great place for a sign. The sign was torn down and stuck aside by a cousin who mowed the lawns and had a bit of a tidy up.
The house is still habitable with a stove and furniture all clean and dusted and the bed made.
Northland eh? -
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Gack... if there's only one downside to summer, it's hay fever. Especially when you're deep inland, away from the coast. I never sneeze quite this uncontrollably back in the capital.
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Lilith __, in reply to
I went swimming tonight at Scarborough beach. It was teh awesome, but I have only mental images, sorry. :-)
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James Francis, in reply to
This is like my great-grandfather's house at Oruru, a wee bit inland from Mangonui. It's gone now but I remember going to see it with my Dad; a tiny three room cottage (although cottage is rather a twee word for something made from pit-sawn totara with hand-made nails) that was once home to five people but now housed a few dusty hay bales. It's where we kids learned the family story. My great-grandfather was Portuguese and had jumped ship from an American whaler with three other Portuguese lads in Mangonui. They all settled in and around Oruru and Fern Flat and Peria. The names and the families are still there; the Jecenthos and the Da Silvas. My great-grandfather is buried there, somewhere. My holiday this year is going to see if I can find his grave. I've decided to have a miniature mid-life crisis at the same time by doing the journey around Northland in my Mum's (and now my) 1963 Fiat Bambina. I'm going to travel putteringly slowly and see the place I call home with grown-up eyes. My plan is to write about it but I haven't told anybody that.
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JacksonP, in reply to
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JacksonP, in reply to
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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Geoff Lealand, in reply to
Oruru. Of course, also the home of the now defunct Swamp Palace. No more films but there is a bloke selling bric-a-brac. Bought an ancient film splicer off him. People probably still venture down the road as it is still on AA road maps.
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JacksonP, in reply to
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Steve Barnes, in reply to
This is like my great-grandfather’s house at Oruru,
My dog loves that place, she talks about it constantly.
And..The names and the families are still there; the Jecenthos and the Da Silvas.
Here is an actual Jecentho, Phil, the guy to go to with trucks and quarries and diggers an' stuff. He did my driveway.
And...there is a bloke selling bric-a-brac. Bought an ancient film splicer off him.
That would be Ian, he has some interesting stuff, well worth a visit Wednesday to Saturday. He has a cheap nail gun for sale at the moment, jeeze, this is better than Trademe
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