Tuesday 28 May 2013

Sugarloaf Pass

This is a pass that I have always wanted to do but had never had the opportunity. We skipped it on the way to the Olivine Ice plateau many years ago as the weather was atrocious and we wanted to avoid some river crossings. Having now done it in the rain we probably would have been alright but going up the rockburn instead that time we managed to see some blue ducks and that is the only time I have been lucky enough to see them so it was a good decision in the end. None the less it meant that it was something that was certainly outstanding on my list of things to do and since I had a day to myself even though the weather was bad it was well worth it. The DOC website has some more information on it if you want to do the walk although I would caution that there are a lot of beach roots to scramble over on the walk. Also I would like to thank the two lovely ladies from DOC who gave me a lift up the road from the lake sylvan carpark to the routeburn carpark when I was throughly drenched after walking in the rain for 8 hours.

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South Island Robin (Petroica australis australis)

The wildlife is a lot better than I remember it and certainly there were plenty of traps about to kill off any mustelids that might be about, which was great to see.

Nothofagus
I'd missed my mossy nothofagus.

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There was not a lot to see on top of the pass unless you have a fascination for wet tussock.

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Pretty waterfall.

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More moss and lichen.

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Lake sylvan

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You could just about see some mountains.



Saturday 25 May 2013

Pesky critter

Along with magpies, noisy miners, kookaburras and the odd pied butcher bird these are the most common visitors to our garden. This one wanted a few grapes that I was eating.

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Rainbow Lorikeet (Trichoglossus haematodus)
Rainbow Lorikeet (Trichoglossus haematodus)

A little home maintenence

Have been very slowly getting the garden into shape. There is a little bit of bush at the back with a few nice blackbutt trees and a few manky wattles, which was infested with camphor laurel, loquat, privet, cassia, cotoneaster, Ochna serrulata and oleander and many other weeds particularly small groundcovers, grasses and vines. I have mostly got on top of the weeds now but it was a spectacular collection. I have also finally put in a few garden beds and a compost heap that took an embarrassingly long time to build.

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There was also a hideous large gymnosperm outside the front of the house which while it provided a nice screen of the neighbours house was very large and for some reason I had always hated it. Mostly because it was not native and did not provide overly good habitat for the local fauna. Anyway after 4 days of sawing with my little handsaw I have finally managed to reduce it to a rather large stump.

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The hard part was getting it to fall in the right direction as I did not want to squish the neighbours house. The top was easy enough as you could cut sections of the many trunks down and push them in the right direction as long as they were small enough. However it got considerably harder closer to the ground.
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Finally mostly gone.
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Tuesday 21 May 2013

Mail

This horrid creature had set up shop in our letter box. Nothing half a can of fly spray couldn't take care of.

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Monday 20 May 2013

Citizenship

It only took just over 5 years from the submitting my PR application to getting citizenship. Admittedly 2 years of that was a standard waiting period from getting PR till when you can apply for citizenship. The rest was government incompetence and the complete sham that is university education being sold as PR.

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A small terror at the ceremony.

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Phillip Ruddock (white hair) trying to scab some votes before the next election.