This morning I enjoyed a thoroughly restorative walk in Waiopehu Scenic Reserve:

The remnant native podocarp forest has some large old Rimu trees. This land was proclaimed as a scenic reserve in 1913-15 after previously being set aside as a waterworks reserve. In earlier times, this land was a refuge for the Muaupoko tribe with the Koputaroa stream providing water and an abundance of eels and kakahi shellfish.

What it has in abundance is fungi. Here are two of my favourites.

White fungi climbing up a tree trunk.
A textured dark brown fungus with fallen moss on top.

This will be literally just down the road from us — about a 5 minute bike ride — after we move in a few months.

Construction of Meridian Energy’s 130MW Ruakākā Solar Farm south of Whangārei is set to begin in August 2025 … With 250,000 solar panels and covering an area the size of 170 rugby fields, Ruakākā Solar Farm will be capable of producing up to 230GWh of electricity per year – enough to power around half the homes in Northland. It is located next to Meridian’s 100MW Ruakākā Battery Energy Storage System (BESS)

Via: Meridian to proceed with $227m Ruakākā Solar Farm.

Hooray! Whangārei to fluoridate water after court dismisses district council’s challenge - NZ Herald:

  • Whangārei District Council’s legal bid to stop water fluoridation was rejected by the High Court.
  • Justice Karen Grau stated that the council’s refusal demonstrated a disregard for legal obligations.
  • Full fluoridation of Whangārei’s drinking water will proceed from March 28.

That's my rates (and others) the Council have wasted on this foolishness.

For the Pacific Wave Appreciation Society. The video was cut a little short as I was standing too close to the incoming waves. 🌊

I went out just before dawn for a beach walk. First I walked past Lake Puna o te Ora which was reflecting a still greyish sky.

Lake reflections before dawn.

By the time I stepped onto the sand a few minutes later the sky was starting to gain its reds, as reflected in the lagoon where the north track exits onto the beach.

Beach reflections before dawn.

When the Chinese warships were doing live fire drills not far away recently Deb reminded me no-one needs to invade Aotearoa if they want to take us over — they could just cut our cables. Now this:

A new Chinese tool capable of cutting the most fortified undersea data cable …

Via: The new threat to the undersea cables keeping our internet going | RNZ News.

Another good read in a series I enjoy. Straw in the Wind (The DI Callum MacLean mysteries Book 2) by Carol Cole. 📚

I had my suspicions about one character but things weren't as they seemed. A nice surprise.

Book cover: Straw in the Wind.

Based on the sample, I bought The Complete Rain Morgan Mysteries Books 1–5 by Lesley Grant-Adamson. 📚

Book One was OK. Book Two was really boring and annoying. I dipped into Books 3 and 4 and found them unlikeable, so I didn't even try Book 5.

Book cover: The Complete Rain Morgan Mysteries Books 1–5.

Today Deb and I went to the gym at Paraparaumu instead of Levin. They have HOIST Fitness CPL ROC-IT Selectorized machines which are really cool and easy to use. I liked them better than the machines at Levin.

Just like last Sunday afternoon at Levin, there were very few people using the gym.

Unexpected Chaffinch and Greenfinch

Chaffinch.
Greenfinch.

I uploaded these two photos and asked Claude to identify both birds above, like this: identify this bird seen eating flax seeds in Waikawa Beach, Horowhenua, New Zealand. 🐦

I had my suspicions and they were confirmed when Claude replied:

This appears to be a chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs), specifically a male chaffinch based on its coloration. The bird has:

  • A pinkish-orange/buff breast and face
  • A bluish-gray head cap
  • A distinctive perched posture on what looks like a dried flax seed pod or similar plant

Chaffinches are common in New Zealand, though they're not native - they were introduced from Europe in the 1860s. They're known to feed on seeds, including flax seeds, which aligns with your observation at Waikawa Beach in the Horowhenua region.

The setting of dried seed heads against the blurred green background is typical of New Zealand coastal and wetland areas where flax plants (harakeke) are common.

And for the second:

This appears to be a greenfinch (Chloris chloris), another introduced species in New Zealand. You can identify it by:

  • Its predominantly yellow-green plumage
  • Compact, finch-like body structure
  • The positioning on the dried flax seed head (harakeke)

Greenfinches were introduced to New Zealand from Europe in the 1860s and have become well-established throughout the country. They particularly favor seeds, including those from flax plants, which explains why you've observed it feeding at Waikawa Beach.

Like the chaffinch in your previous image, this bird is taking advantage of the abundant seed resources provided by native New Zealand flax plants, despite being a non-native species itself. Greenfinches have strong beaks well-adapted for cracking open seeds.

I wasn't entirely sure at first, but by the later part of the book I was gripped. Murder on the Farm (The Malvern Mysteries Book 1) by Kate Wells. 📚

Things definitely didn't turn out as I thought they might.

Book cover: Murder on the Farm.

Cat lovers: this is a very fun 5 minute video. Extreme Cat Hide and Seek with Ralph and Bella | The Kid Should See This. 🐈

Two small shakes in a row to keep us on our toes this morning. Both were shallow and only about 15 Km away. 〜

Screenshot: two light earthquakes within a few minutes, both about 8 Km deep; one magnitude 3.7, the other 4.1.

It's the pheasants that alert us before we even feel the shake. They have a special earthquake squawk.

Every Friday our builder gives us a report on the new house. Now the roof is on, the next payment milestone is watertight, except for the garage. Our builder, Steve, says:

First the guys will wrap, then do soffits, install window joinery, fit cavity battens and have a cavity inspection with Council, install cladding, scribers and flashings. Once this part is complete then the Brickwork will start, half high brick inspection with Council and once passed then the brickwork can be completed.

I don't know exactly what some of that means, but it's good to know. 🏡

Invoice time: Trusses & Roof Stood milestone on our new build achieved. 🏡

This builder's photo shows the north side of the house, where the kitchen and living room areas will be.

Scaffolding around the long side of a house being built.

Today's sunny start …

A dull day with lots of cloud above paddocks. A few rays of sun come through the clouds.

Less than 2 hours after emailing BBEdit Support I have a helpful response which has solved my problem:

The OS will generally quarantine files that have been downloaded, but may do so for other reasons; there are various tools for correcting this, but the most straightforward is probably the `xattr` command line tool.

The following Terminal command will remove quarantine from any given file (use the actual File path rather than "/path/to/file"):

xattr -d com.apple.quarantine /path/to/file

and once you have done so, this issue should not recur.

Screenshot of the emailed instructions.

Something I very rarely need to do: I contacted BBEdit for support. For years and years I've successfully run all kinds of Applescripts from the Scripts menu within BBEdit to perform all kinds of operations on my texts.

In the last few days though all I get is an error message:

This script file has been quarantined by macOS (application error code: 13312).

Gah!

I hope Support can help me get my scripts running again — I rely on them.

Error message screenshot.

Woke to the unusual but welcome sound of rain on the roof this morning. Real, proper rain. 💦

Graph shows nearly 8 mm rain since midnight.

Our new house now has a roof, as the photos from the builder show. 🏡

Across the longrun Colorsteel monopitch roof from the northwest corner.
Across the longrun Colorsteel monopitch roof from the northwest corner.
Across the longrun Colorsteel monopitch roof from the southwest corner.
Across the longrun Colorsteel monopitch roof from the southwest corner.