I read all of Murder in Norfolk (Detective Anna McArthur Book 1) by Sadie Norman, but didn't like the main character and believe the writing could have been very much improved by a good editor. 📚
She went for a walk to clear her head. She found a dead woman carved with a message.
I won't be reading more in this series.

This crash closed our usual route home from visiting our friends. Luckily there was a scenic alternative. Road closed, serious injuries after three vehicle crash in Whangārei | RNZ News:
State Highway 1 near Whangārei, is closed following a serious crash on Saturday afternoon.
Police were notified of a three-vehicle crash, between Oakleigh Rise and Mangapai Rd, at 2.20pm.
Police have said initial indicators are that there are serious injuries.
"The Serious Crash Unit has been advised, and the road is expected to be closed for some time while emergency services work at the scene."
Today we find ourselves watching the Northland Region Novice Powerlifting competition.
I’m at the back with a restricted view. About a dozen competitors and maybe 50 people watching.
On Netflix I watched Boots, which was based on the 2016 memoir The Pink Marine by Greg Cope White:
Cameron Cope, a closeted gay American teenager, impulsively follows his best friend Ray McAffey into the United States Marine Corps.
Set in 1990, when the military excluded gay people from service, the story depicts their boot camp training.
It was very powerful. I guess if they're training kids to fight and kill in a war the process has to be brutal and dehumanising …
Almost worse: it seemed kids whose fathers had been in the military were treated as junior versions of the recruits.

I bought this at a sale price and enjoyed it reasonably well. I found the couple's arguments rather manufactured. Last Chance Chicago by Diana DiGangi. 📚
Attorney and recovering cocaine addict Sam DiCiccio didn’t think she was ever going to see her ex-wife Amy Igarashi again, much less wind up defending her against felony insider trading charges.

The time flies when you're having rum.

I woke in the middle of the night with hiccups. How does that even work, to be fast asleep and get hiccups! They went on for ages too. Now I'm awake again, way too early.
Not one of my most successful nights of sleep …
Over the last few days parts of the country fairly near us — both north and south — have suffered terribly from wind and rain: Person swept away in river, floods close highways, red rain warnings | RNZ News.
We simply had around 80mm rain.
At high tide this morning the Ruakākā River looked full.


Today I learned door lock terminology: bolt and strike.
We were thrilled to get a digital keypad on our front door, so we didn't need to carry keys with us … until sometimes the lock wouldn't actually lock or unlock from the keypad.
Today the guy from Assa Abloy visited. He pointed out the weather can affect the workings of a door. He also enlarged the 'strike' a little so the bolt has more space to operate.
So far so good.
Oh, some areas north of us have suffered severe flooding, but we've just had a bunch of rain — about 32mm. It's damp, but no problems for us. The forecast for tomorrow though is for about 80mm.
Council have declared a precautionary state of emergency.
The most commonly-used emergency powers include evacuating premises and places, entering premises, closing roads and public places, removing aircraft, vessels, vehicles, and requisitioning property, equipment, material or supplies. Of these, enabling evacuations is often the key reason for an emergency declaration.

Not New Year's resolutions, but New Life's resolutions
Rather than making a New Year's resolution I thought about how I want the next 30 or so years to go. At almost 71, with plans / hopes to live to 100, it makes sense to me.
Our finances and housing are already in hand, so I thought about health and wellbeing.
My goals
I want, when I'm 90 or older, to be able to move around in the world with confidence. To walk or bike to the shops and carry the shopping back. To be steady in my walking. To sit down and stand up with ease. To be able to get myself off the floor if I should fall. To be able to reach into cupboards above my head, stand on a step or chair to be able to reach even higher.
I can do all those things now, so with some deliberate attention I should still be able to do them in a few decades. Barring things beyond my control, of course.
What experts agree
All the experts agree that as we age we lose muscle mass and bone density. Apparently that process begins sooner than you might think — at around 30 or 40.
We're also likely to have increasing challenges with balance and mobility. Mobility is both the range of motion of joints (flexibility) and the control we have over that movement, as defined by Will Harlow.
There is also strong agreement that by doing resistance training (specifically) we can maintain or even build muscle and bone. We can also work to maintain both mobility and balance.
Then there's the food choices we make to support our minds and bodies. Consensus is quite simple at a basic level: as far as possible eat unprocessed or only minimally processed foods, such as raw or cooked vegetables, fruits, berries, grains, nuts.
My resistance training
About 18 months ago I started weight training at a gym, but there's a lot you can do with just body weight, items you might have around home, or inexpensive resistance bands.
These days I feel pretty darned good. My posture has improved and I'm feeling stronger, and enjoying my body's ability to move. I feel much more confident that if I were to trip and fall the consequences would be less and I'd be in a better position to pick myself up and recover from any injury.
Recently I've added a Dead Hang and Asian Squat to my regular practise.
Useful resources
I've been watching or reading these folks and finding useful material in their work.
☛ Will Harlow – Over-Fifties Specialist Physio is excellent. For over a year now I've been watching his YouTube channel with its hundreds of free videos with clear explanations and demonstrations of specific exercises. Most of the exercises he demonstrates need no equipment at all.
He's also published books and has a website you can pay to sign up to with even more guidance.
Here's where I'll preach a bit: watch some of his videos and try the exercises.
☛ Clare Johnston is a journalist who interviews interesting people on The Honest Channel. Some videos cover topics such as skincare that I don't personally find so interesting. Of particular interest is her series Rebuilding Mum and Dad where she follows the progress of her elderly parents who took up resistance training and are seeing very positive results.
Having decided to work towards being able to do a comfortable Asian Squat and hold it for some time I've been guided by the free videos on both:
☛ Matt Hsu's Upright Health, whose motto is: Pain Sucks. Life Shouldn't.
☛ Vanja's Movesmethod. She also has a couple of videos about the Dead Hang.
After a few weeks of practice I'm getting on well with the deep squat and I'd say it's almost done away with the lower back stiffness I've worked around for ages now. The stretch in the lower back is amazing.
From not being able to hold a dead hang for even 1 second I've now built up to two sets of 26 seconds each. I feel as though I walk taller.
☛ My latest find is How not to die by Doctor Alex Wibberley, an Emergency Medicine doctor in the UK, who talks about how the body works, food, nutrition and the like. I've never taken so many notes on videos before and am working on changing my eating patterns to support both body and brain health.
Decluttering
It may seem odd to include decluttering in a post about health, but all that stuff we own has a tendency to weigh us down, especially if it makes us feel guilty or as though we're living in a mess we just can't cope with.
After watching many of the videos from the channels linked below I've not only learned about helpful strategies like zoning, but also noticed Cas is also helping us realise we just don't need to buy a lot of what is pushed our way.
In her most recent video at time of writing, she interviewed an expert about sleep. That interview was extremely interesting and useful. Can also linked the sleep discussion to decluttering in the bedroom.
☛ Cas is Clutterbug and also publishes Clutterbug Podcast, both of which I watch every week. One wonderful technique she uses is to urge you (strongly) not to just listen, but to work on an area that needs decluttering while you watch / listen.
I've finally disposed of a number of items that were actually just weighing me down every time I saw them. I didn't know where to put them, and kept thinking I should do something with them. Well, now I have. Just a few stubborn holdouts still need my attention.
So, my goal for the next few decades is to do what I can to stay healthy and well, to be independent and capable, and to live in a home that works for me not against me.
Do you have any (non-work) goals for the next few decades?
Someone needs to learn not to mix oil and other ingredients in a large open bowl with an electric whisk! 😵💫
Not the first time I've done it …
I'm interested in Tiny Homes. This one in the UK is just gorgeous — After a Divorce, She Built This Incredible Tiny House and Reclaimed Her Life (30 minute video):
The design of this tiny house is incredibly clever. The space feels open and expansive, with skylights running through the centre and mirrors that reflect the sky above, making the home feel larger than it is. A bathtub tucked neatly beneath the sofa is one of those ideas that makes you stop and smile. Everywhere you look, there’s thoughtful design and smart use of space.
As this series goes on I'm enjoying it even more. Preordering the next book. The Mystery of the Gold Rings (The Antique Shop Mysteries Book 3) by Judith Cutler. 📚
The characters are very endearing, the plots original.
Driving home from an auction on a wet autumn evening, Lina slams on the brakes. She’s alone on a deserted country road — and just yards away, in the middle of a field, lies a body.
But by the time she finds help and returns with the police, the corpse has vanished without a trace.

It's corn on the cob season, so I located my handcrafted, customised Kindle corn protection cover. 😆

It's essentially a plastic bag. 🤣
Last night Deb and I dined with friends at Whangārei Basin at The Quay Cafe, Restaurant & Bar.
We shared a delicious pizza:
Donkey Kong
Chicken, mozzarella, eggplant, lime, sesame aioli, coriander
and a side of
Market Greens — Lemon vinaigrette

We also shared an extremely delicious
Baked Lemon Cheesecake with Lemon curd, vanilla crumb, confit lemon.

It was very pleasant sitting on the veranda only a couple of metres from boats tied up in the marina.
This was a perfectly good read. May read others by this author. A Lesson in Murder: A DI Kate Medlar novel by Lin Bird 📚:
Who would want to kill Elise Betteridge, the dedicated headteacher of Blaiseforth Manor School for Girls?

Yesterday we 'discovered' Waipu’s River Walk:
an accessible route through heritage-rich areas, providing ample opportunities to enjoy nature, with stunning river views along the way.
It was a pleasing walk though we'd forgotten hats and the sun was hot.
I was puzzled by these ducks, wondering what species they were, but apparently Mallards come in all sorts of colours because they readily interbreed with other species. Rakiraki | Mallard: 🐦
As a consequence of both their gamefarm origin and hybridisation, the plumages of New Zealand’s mallards are highly variable


Why I'm a paid subscriber to Fix The News
This here is why I'm a paid subscriber to Fix The News:
While we started the year slowly, the same is not true of the news. Things feel insane. A reminder - while we’ve been following all that stuff too, you won’t find any coverage of it here, because you’re already drowning in it. Both legacy and social media are explicitly designed to show you what’s breaking, what’s terrifying, what’s going wrong. We’re trying to offer a correction to the distortion.
The stories you’re about to read are just as important, if not more so, than the chaos currently dominating your feed, but they’re invisible because they don’t generate the emotional charge required to break through. Progress doesn’t spike cortisol. Disease elimination doesn’t trigger shares. That doesn’t stop them from happening though.
We tried a new cafe in Waipū: Unit 6.
THREE EGG CHILLI SCRAMBLE
Local Pasture Farmed Eggs, Punch Chilli 0il,
Avo, Organic Sourdough
It was good, though we forgot to ask for no onion for me so that spoiled my breakfast a bit.
They had a great mural. Here's one pane featuring local milking goats against a background of Bream Bay.

Locally produced goat cheese featured on the menu.