Capture: Roamin' Holiday
1354 Responses
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
Now that kite looks like it's about to zip its flyer off to somewhere he didn't quite expect to be.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Sorry Hebe, despite one of my great-grandfathers having watched his ship sail out of Lyttelton Harbour from atop those hills as a runaway 13-year-old cabin boy in 18-sixty-something, I’ve never learned their names. Thanks for piquing my curiosity.
Thank you Jackson. Kind of interesting that one of the most currently active faults lies parallel with the distant shoreline in the pic in the previous post, with the current culprits only a few Ks offshore.
I do know that the animal kites are by the amazing Peter Lynn of Ashburton. Here’s another pic from Ms Goodie’s haul today (can u spot the black & white dog?), plus a bunch more here.
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Hebe,
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Hebe, in reply to
I’ve never learned their names.
Nor me and I have known those hills most of my life. The peaks and slopes change depending on where you are looking at them from, and on the light. Last night was an amazing blue-grey-pink dusk with luminous golden hills out my back door. I wish my camera battery had been working.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
I have always liked this one from the 2006 kite and buskers day.
That's a deliciously weird one at full size - Pro Patria Pooh Bear.
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Speaking of amazing flying things, has anyone snapped any aurorae? Visible from Tekapo/Mt John a couple of weeks back, evidently!
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Islander, in reply to
Shit, that was SO good! I laughed in several places- thank you!
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Lilith __, in reply to
Glad you liked it. All too believable, I thought!
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Islander, in reply to
Aue, ae!
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Hebe, in reply to
Thank you ;-) I like the colours on the second pic you posted. How to get the sea green and the sky blue and the dark of the marram grass?
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
getting the hump... or the blues?
dolphins, which are a subgroup of the whale family
...like a sub cet...?
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Lilith __, in reply to
Fit for any porpoise
…like a sub cet…?
cet theory ;-)
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Circular que?
cet theory
that's all good Venn...
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
more flowers
Nice :-)
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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Hebe, in reply to
I went around the other side of the house.
Thank you: another one of of my favouritest flowers -- perennial cornflower?
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Rob Stowell, in reply to
do you know the name of the pointy hill under the purple Pooh’s feet?
Growing up in Diamond Harbour, we always called it ‘the Monument’ or sometimes ‘the pinnacle’. I gather from ‘Place-names of Banks Peninsula’ the 19th C pakeha called it Rhodes Monument, or Rhodes Sugarloaf (members of the Rhodes family farmed the Purau area).
It has a Māori name, but I can’t seem to find it at the moment.
Another angle on it :) -
Geoff Lealand, in reply to
Magnolia grandiflora.
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Hi Hebe re: cone shaped mountain in the far distance. It might be Mt Herbert. Usually the first to show snow if we have a cold spell. The children jumping the waves one of my favorites too.
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Rob it might also be The Pinnacle.lol
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Lilith __, in reply to
Magnolia grandiflora.
Have you read Shonagh Koea's novel The grandiflora tree? It has a soulangeana on the cover. Too bad.
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Hebe, in reply to
Thanks Rob. I'm surprised the peak is on that side of the harbour -- it always looks a bit closer. I shall research the name too: have a treasure trove of the Great-Uncle's historic Christchurch and Peninsula books here, and my brother has the Maori ones. I'll get back to you with any more info one year soon :--)
Gudrun: I thought Mt Herbert was the big rounded peak on the Diamond Harbour side. An aside: I spent one snowy afternoon nearly 20 years ago getting warmed sitting at the bar in the Wunderbar and looking across the harbour to the hills on that side covered in snow to sea level. It was magical; and though snowing, the vision across the harbour was clear.
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