Wednesday 30 April 2008

Bunch of big girls

Football training was cancelled tonight. It was raining. A bit of rain and everyone stays indoors. Pfff.

Monday 28 April 2008

False sense of achievement?

I've been checking the league table for my footy team following the weekend's results. It's a little out because our result from last week and the result of one game from this weekend just gone haven't been entered yet, but even with that taken into account it shows something that is perhaps a little worrying. We should be either 1st or 2nd (depending on whether the unentered result from Saturday was a draw or not), which is good, but of the four teams we've played, we lost to the team actually in 2nd or 3rd and the three teams we beat are all in the bottom four. We're playing the other team in the bottom four this Saturday so hopefully we can continue our run, but after that I guess we have to play the other teams that have been winning a bit. Then we'll really see how good we are.

Sunday 27 April 2008

Fructose-loaded

Fruit here is so much tasty than back in the UK. It's weird but the difference is amazing. We had a pineapple last night and it was just the best pineapple ever. Maybe it's because here fruit can be harvested when it's ripe, rather than being harvested before it's ripe somewhere else in the world and then being shipped to the UK. No time for the fructose to fully develop, I guess.

Saturday 26 April 2008

On a roll

My football team won again today. The final result was 5-0. I scored one, breaking from the halfway line and passing it past the keeper stood firmly on his line, so that's four in three matches for the season now for me. That's three wins out of four now and we only lost that game (the one I missed, incidentally) 4-3. The other three matches have ended 4-0, 9-0 and now 5-0. It's going well, it's fair to say. I was told today that last year the team scored 22 goals in the whole season. We've scored 21 in four matches so far.

It's good to get to know the guys in the team a bit better too. I think, when Joanne was out with a few of her colleagues on Thursday night, I realised that one of the things I'm missing a bit about life back in London is just having mates at work to go out for a drink with or dinner sometimes or stuff. The people in my team at work are all nice enough, don't get me wrong, but it's not the same. Something's different. Maybe it's just a time thing, and will get better. Maybe it's a male friend thing. True, I have friends at church, some great guys, but I guess I am missing have guys around me at work. Although it's not purely a bloke thing, because Kirsty and Debs back in London kind of filled that role too. Either way, maybe, given time, the guys in the footy team will fill a gap. I don't know. We'll see.

On Friday night Joanne and I went to the rugby with Si and Bek. The Crusaders were playing the Blues. They're from Auckland and historically the rivalry would be equated to maybe Man Utd v Liverpool or something. That's where the similarity ends though. It was a Super 14 game, so we're talking one level down from international rugby. Both teams are littered with All Blacks. The stadium was full to the brim (albeit with one side stand non-existent while the ground is being developed) so there were maybe 20,000 people there. Yet you could hear the players talking on the pitch. At Blundell Park watching Grimsby play with a crowd of 4 1/2 thousand there was regularly more noise. I really couldn't get over how quiet it was. Watching rugby over here is such a different experience to footy back home.

Monday 21 April 2008

A different sport altogether

So what have we been up to since Friday then? Well, Saturday saw my second football match of the season and it went rather well. We were playing an away match down in Ashburton which is about an hour south of Chch. 4-0 up at half-time the match finished with us winning 9-0. Not too shabby. I scored two, which was pleasing, including a diving header I was rather proud of. For the second I played a one-two just inside their half and broke away from the defence before rounding the keeper. That's 3 in 2 matches for me now. It could be worse, for sure. Checking the fixtures today the big match is 17th May. That day we play the team that contains four of my work-mates. That's a must-win game if I am to show my face on the Monday following.

Saturday evening we went over to Joan and John's for dinner. They're a lovely retired couple we first met on the church weekend away back in November. They were part of our quiz team. It was a fascinating evening. They have just got so many interesting stories. We could have stayed all night. There were another couple there from church too, Ronnie and Nigel, an English couple, and their friends visiting from Hampshire.

This evening we've been out. And the experience was quite a first for me. Joanne and met for a quick dinner after work, but that's not the new experience. What came after was though. Just recently a new trans-Tasman (semi-professional?) netball league has started up which has five Nuzziland teams and five Aussies teams. One of the teams is based in Christchurch. And with Joanne just getting into playing netball again I thought it would be an idea to go along to watch a game. Dan & Fizz fancied it too so joined us. It certainly was an experience. Unfortunately the Tactix, the Canterbury team, lost and to be honest were never really in the game, always chasing both the scoreline and the Southern Steel players. What really stood out for me though (as well as the agility and ball-handling skills of the players) was the attendance. The Westpac Arena (where we saw Jack Johnson as well as where the Food Show was held and the Home Design show thing we went to ages back), in the laid out as it was tonight could probably hold 7 or 8,000. And it was full. A sell-out. For a netball match. True, it's the school holidays and the average age of the spectators was perhaps 12, but it is still an impressive turnout. My ear-drums are still recovering though. Do you know how much noise an arena full of teenage girls can make? The dogs in the neighbourhood are still howling.

Friday 18 April 2008

Nice start to the weekend


There was a great sunset on view as I arrived home tonight. It was so lovely I just had to share it.

Thursday 17 April 2008

Driving, kayaking and marine mammals

5 days, 962 kilometres driven, 25 kilometres paddled, countryside, food, company and marine life. A short summary of the weekend away Joanne and I enjoyed. I would have written more sooner but we only got back Tuesday teatime and then had our bible study group and then last night we had the final week of the Christianity Explored course.

On Friday when we set off it was grey and drizzly. Given we had about 450km to drive we were a bit worried that the weather would ruin it. But we needn't have worried. Just north of Christchurch the clouds broke and we were treated to blue skies for the rest of the day.

We drove up north via Lewis Pass, via the centre of the country, rather the coastal road. Again I was blown away by the stunning views and scenery changes, how one minute you're surrounded by mountains or forests and the next farmed plains or rolling hills and scrubland. It was a lovely time of year for driving, with the sunshine but also the odd golden tree scattered among the green, the odd tree that's decided autumn's here already. And then as the afternoons get shorter and the shadows longer the mountains and hills create extra layers of atmosphere.

We stopped for lunch at Maruia Springs Thermal 'Resort'. It's a strange little place, stuck pretty much in the middle of nowhere. But after driving mile after mile of farm, sheep station and scenery, it was just about perfect.

The motel in Motueka was beyond expectations, well above what their website lead us to expect. Although we almost didn't make it. Just driving into town, passing the small field that passed for an airport a plane suddenly appeared overhead. And when I say overhead, I mean that if we had a sunroof in the car we could have reached out and adjusted the plane's flaps. It was that close. And it was fair to say it startled us a wee bit.

If you ever find yourself in Motueka around a meal time you have to try the Gothic Gourmet, what once was a church is not a restaurant. It is a shame that the old church is no longer a church and could be turned into a restaurant but it was tastefully done, even with paint splatters added to make the pristine plasterwork of the walls looked cracked and chipped. Very authentic-effect. And the food was great. Steak served raw on a hot volcanic stone so that you cook it how you like it yourself was the specialty. It was a lovely steak but there was definitely garlic hhiden somewhere in the meal. It meant a fitful, overheated night's sleep for me. I swear this garlic intolerance is getting worse.

Over Saturday and Sunday we kayaked probably 25km in total, which meant maybe four hours of paddling each day. The first day we had really smooth conditions but there was more of a swell on day two. The sun shone both days throughout though, which was a definite bonus. Joanne, sat in the front, made a good navigator. We missed all the rocks, unlike Howard and Dorothy, an American couple kayaking with us, who managed to get themselves balanced perfectly on top of a lone rock in the middle of the water. It took some pretty fancy navigation, I reckon, to get it so perfectly spot on.

We saw seals while paddling around, lazing about on the rocks in the sun. That's all they seem to do. The guide we had, Bruce, was great, filling us in on the history of the National Park and some of the more colourful characters of it's past. Kayaking is such a peaceful thing to do. Just moving and drifting with the waves, or paddling gently disturbed only by the occasional drone of a taxi boat.

The only downside of the National Park were the sandflies. Cheeky little bitey things. They look totally inocuous but their bites itch like crazy and come up in big welts. I missed my legs the first day with the insect repellant and they liked the taste of me. I also got bitten on my finger and half my hand swelled up. Supposedly sandflies are a big problem on the west coast. I'm not sure I want to go there in warm weather now.

Sunday evening, once we were returned to Kaiteriteri, was spent 40 minutes down the coast in Nelson. It seems a nice little town, a combination of a seaside town just off the hills and a port. Trying to find somewhere for dinner on Sunday evening proved difficult though. The place we ended up was just about to close and only just let us in. It was only 7:30. The food was lovely though. I had roast duck followed by an awesome chilli chocolate creme brulee.

On Monday we spent a few hours wandering around Nelson and having a bit of brunch. As I say, it's a nice little town, but a downside is that we got bitten some more. I'm not sure how the sandflies got through jeans but they managed somehow. After that we drove down through Blenheim and on to Kaikoura (well, just outside really, at Hapuku Lodge. On the way along the coast we stopped and saw some more seals but the main point to take away from the trip for me was the miles and miles of vineyards. I knew the Marlborough region was big on wine production, just I didn't expect it to that extent for some reason. The coastline north of Kaikoura is simply stunning. Rugged like the west coast but with added seals. We made the moast of it by stopping for afternoon tea at a lovely little place called The Store at Kekerengu. I recommend it.

We arrived at the hotel (a pretty special place, surrounded by snow-capped mountains and the raw ocean) about four-ish and decided to go for a walk along the beach. A storm was coming and the wind was getting up but it all added to the atmosphere. It did make us worry about whether we'd get out on the boat for the whale-watching the next day though. An exquisite dinner in the hotel (Joanne had to have crayfish, given we were in Kaikoura (translation - kai = 'food', or 'to eat', koura = 'crayfish') took our mind off the weather.

We needn't have worried though as when we woke up the sky was sapphire blue, the air was still and the sea, after we went and saw some more seals, was a little calmer than the night before. There was still a decent swell out on the water but nothing unbearable. Joanne still managed a kip while we were 'between whales'. I can't believe Joanne had never seen a whale before. I though it was something all Kiwis did as a rite of passage or something. We ended up seeing three, and as a bonus we saw plenty of birds (including wandering albatrosses) and Dusky dolphins and Hector's dolphins. I love wild dolphins, me. They just seem to have so much fun.

And then, that's it. We drove home. It was great to have time away with Joanne, just the two of us. It was great just to chat, to catch up with one another, to enjoy each other's company. Life can get so busy sometimes that it's nice to stop and say hello, y'know.

As expected I took loads of photos while we were way. A selection of them can be seen here and here. You shouldn't need a Facebook account or anything, if you haven't got one.


Oh, and while I was away, the 5-a-side team had the final to play. It didn't turn out so good. 5-4 up at half-time, 8-5 down at full-time. Ah well, at least we made it to the final, eh?

Thursday 10 April 2008

Great comeback

So, we made Sunday 5-a-side final. The semi was tonight. We went 2-0 down and then pulled one back. Then went 4-1 down. It was all looking a bit bleak with about 5 minutes to play in the second half. And then suddenly it all clicked together and before we knew it there were two minutes to play and we were 6-4 up. It was a bit harsh on the other team as they all played well but I guess we probably deserved it in the end. Fingers crossed that the boys all do me proud on Sunday then and we play to the best of our ability. I'm gutted I won't be able to make it but I'm sure a weekend away with Joanne will more than make up for it, eh?

Wednesday 9 April 2008

Coming to the end

Tonight we had the penultimate week of the Christianity Explored course we've been helping with at church. The numbers are definitely thinner on the ground than at the start but there's still a decent number who've perservered to the end. If you've been praying for the guys attending (and us helping lead) over the past eight weeks thank you for your support and encouragement. If you wanted to continue praying over the next week can I ask that you pray that those people who are coming along would be challenged by what they're hearing about Jesus and would recognise the truth evident in it about his identity as God's promised King who died so that we might be reconciled to God. If they've not yet made a commitment to accept Jesus as their saviour and Lord please pray that God would open their eyes and hearts and they would make that commitment, and if they have made that commitment and are just attending to learn more and remind themselves of the gospel please pray that their passion and love for Jesus and desire to live for him would be refreshed and renewed. Thank you.

If praying is not what you, you can ignore that whole stuff.

Joanne and I have got our long weekend holiday thing up north (of the south island, at least) this weekend. We're so hanging out for a break. We've both been pretty full-on at work recently (at least I've not had to work weekends though) but one good thing has come out of that. My boss called me into her office the other day to say that she and her boss (who I do most of my work for) are really pleased with the work I've been doing lately and they recognise the effort I've been putting in and so I should take Joanne out for dinner this weekend while I'm away and recharge it to the company. Nice, eh? It's very pleasant to get positive feedback and feel appreciated for your efforts, I guess.

Joanne had her first netball training session last night. Actually I don't think I've mentioned that before have I? Just as I've decided to start playing competitive (social) football this season, Joanne's decided to start playing for a netball team. It's been 15 or so years since I've played for a team on a regular basis. It's been more like 20 years since Jo has. She really enjoyed it though and at least has a month before her games start so she can refresh her knowledge of the rules of netball. Time has definitely left gaps.

Saturday 5 April 2008

Not a bad debut

That was fun. I enjoyed the run-out and the rest of the guys on the team seem like good lads. And it wasn't a bad start to the season either. We won 4-0. By the sounds of the reactions from the rest of the team though, that isn't as typical performance. I think they're used to finishing nearer the bottom of the league than the top. I thought we did ok though, for the first game of the season, and considering that there were three or four new players.

I was quite pleased with how I did too. I'm definitely not the most unfit on the team (far from it actually - think stereotypical pub team in many cases) and I scored as well as setting one up. I scored the first actually, after ten or fifteen minutes (a little chipped flick from a cross that I hit on the half volley ten yards out or so in front of the near post that looped up and curved over the diving keeper, if you're bothered.) Good way to make an impression on my new team mates, eh?

After today's match I'm a lot more confident about coping with playing footy again this season. It's gonna be ok. Also, it's amazing but my goal was captured on Google Earth...

Friday 4 April 2008

On the go

Tuesday - the gym and then Bible study group; Wednesday - the gym followed by week seven of the Christianity Explored course; Thursday - 5-a-side football followed a Young Adults group evening on Fleeing Sexual Immorality. It's been a long week at work as well and so I certainly think I've earned a quiet night in. Just a shame I'm all alone - Joanne's still at work. She's got so much on at the moment :(

Football was a little disappointing yesterday. A few guys were away helping on a kids camp thing and a few didn't turn up so we ended up with four players. It was our semi too. We had to borrow a keeper from another team but we still got battered. We have another chance next week though. The way they arranged the semis is that we, who finished second, played the first place team. The winner went straight to the final but the loser, which is us, gets to play the winner of the third v fourth match next week. Hopefully we'll have more players there next week and be able to get revenge in the final. Even if we do make the final, I won't be there unfortunately. It's on Sunday 13th, the weekend Joanne and I are up in Abel Tasman.

In a way I'm glad I won't be around for the final. That way I won't have decide, should the final be on in the morning, whether to play or to go to church. It's a tricky decision. On one hand, it's important for the non-Christians in the team to know where our priorities lie regarding church stuff. On the other hand, what kind of witness is it to let down our team-mates by not playing with them in the final after playing with them all season?

ooh, Joanne's home...