Capture: Two Tales of a City
1699 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 … 25 26 27 28 29 … 68 Newer→ Last
-
-
-
-
-
-
Lilith __, in reply to
The original Eunice Brenda and the masterpiece named after her.
Lovely, Gudrun, thank you. :-)
-
Gudrun Gisela, in reply to
Thanks Lilith, I hope this is still within the guidelines of the tales of this city.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
still within the guidelines of the tales of this city.
Absolutely! IMHO. :-)
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
I hope this is still within the guidelines of the tales of this city.
And within the "Spring" thread ! IMHO :)
I love seeing joint ventures that are not all about the money. Thanks Gudren. -
JacksonP, in reply to
Great story Gudrun. Thanks for sharing it here. Also, what guidelines? ;-)
I'm off on my newly restored 1965 Vespa today, after two years of toil, by mostly other people admittedly. Still, saved it from the scrap heap.
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Will we get anorak shots? If not the Vespa will do nicely thanks ;)
-
Thanks Jackson. As someone who travels mostly on the scooter i love the freedom it gives us. Had a Solex Velo once until it got stolen .That you restored your Vespa is brilliant, looking forward to future postings about the two of you.
-
Gudrun Gisela, in reply to
Yes Sofie i am looking at such happenings more so as economies the world world struggle and fail its good to see there are people out there quietly working away and pooling resources as we all used to in the early days. Kiwis can do attitude. Richard Lowen at age 81, is not stopping yet. He has intentions of taking it down to Doubtful Sound for a bit of an experience.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Yes Sofie i am looking at such happenings more so as economies the world world struggle and fail its good to see there are people out there quietly working away and pooling resources
There was a good piece on recycling in Chch on TV3 Campbell live last night.Recover Earth sounds like a wonderful recycling idea thought up by frustration of what was going to landfill. Volunteers are recycling many materials out ofall the buildings being pulled so it is well worth a watch. Plus if you want anything just get in touch with Recover Earth. Nice.
-
Islander, in reply to
Gudrun - that was a brillant set of shots about man & travel & boat - kia kaha koe, kia kaha Richard me kia kaha the "Eunice Brenda"!
-
Gudrun Gisela, in reply to
Thank you so much for your comment it has given me insight into those men and sheds and they just pop away for a bit and that is what they are doing. Eunice is so delighted that her husband has finally done what he had wanted to for quite a while.
How is life in your nook of the woods? Filled with daffodils and spring lambs i bet . Good to see the sun at long last. -
Islander, in reply to
Kia ora Gudrun - raining VERY heavily now, and - aue! the last sheep went from the village about a decade ago BUT yep, daffodils everywhere! Will post Okarito daffodil photographs (we have have very old varieties here folks) when I figure out how to connect my old Olympus to (mutter mutter) new macinery...Gudrun - would love to catch up with you this coming weekend?
-
Will be delighted to finally meet up .Daffies in the Botanical Garden are just about as good as they can get. Let me know via e-mail what your plans are and we will arrange a time and place to celebrate spring.
-
Oi, Christchurchian types... I came across this a bit late, but some of you may be interested and care to offer a bit of support. I can't do much from where I sit, just thought I'd let you know.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
The release yesterday of the blueprint for the rebuild of Christchurch's central business district is great news for Christchurch, it's going to be a world class city to live and work in. However personally and professionally this writer (Antony Ellis, co-owner of NZ Fine Prints) is bitterly disappointed that our perfectly ok to rebuild on CBD land that has been the home of New Zealand Fine Prints for nearly fifty years is going to be taken from my family by the council to be part of the green frame to the east of the new smaller CBD. Our plans to rebuild the largest specialist art print gallery in NZ are now replaced instead by, wait for it, a lawn.
That is shitty. I wouldn't say it's a done deal, though.
Property lawyer Hamish Grant, of Anthony Harper, said there was "big uncertainty" about the processes, and owners should not take Cera's word "as gospel".
"Case law says the Government has to act responsibly, and if there's doubt the law will come down in favour of the property owner. In my view, they [Cera] should have to play by those rules."
[ article ]
-
Chris Waugh, in reply to
So there is hope, but I note in your article:
Emergency laws covering the buy-up allow owners to negotiate, after which the land can be taken and compensation set by Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee.
If I had property in the affected area, that would not inspire confidence.
And:
Case law says the Government has to act responsibly
Uh, yeah, this government? Responsible?
-
Lilith __, in reply to
If I had property in the affected area, that would not inspire confidence.
Well quite. But Gerry already got pulled up by the Courts.
His powers are not actually boundless.
-
Hebe, in reply to
If I had property in the affected area, that would not inspire confidence
The Cera laws were rushed through and Cera's powers will be repeatedly tested before the courts; only an option if your pockets are deep. Otherwise it's take it or have it taken.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
Otherwise it’s take it or have it taken.
There is always the option of making a big fuss and hoping the media supports you. Would CERA back down if faced with enough public outrage? They might.
Post your response…
This topic is closed.