At last, tomorrow the fencing guy comes to build a secure dog yard to keep these two scallywags from running away. Hooray! 🐶

A benefit of a sudden unexpected trip to Wellington was a few moments with this harbour view. Sick partner now safely home and in bed.

Nearly missed the whole of a gorgeous sunset. Luckily I caught the tail end.

Huka Falls was amazing as always. So much water!


The pipe bands keep coming in the street parade. Wellington Police brought their dog. 50 bands apparently. National comps.
Rotorua seems an unlikely place for a pipe band competition, but there we are.


Ready for a breakfast cruise on the Lake Rotorua paddleboat.


Clear water springs at Hangarua.


Mighty redwoods at Hangarua.



Looking out over Lake Rotorua from Mt Nongotaha.
Single lane stop and go around roadworks on the Desert Road. Which was open today because rain stopped the road closure intended to let them repair this bridge. Lucky for us.

Taihape’s humorous loo signage.


Doing all my Internetting before a 7 hour scheduled power outage.
Middle of the night. There’s a loose pipe banging and the house is shaking a bit in the wind. But the last, long, shake was definitely an earthquake. Only a 4.0, but not helping me get back to sleep. Sigh. 〰️
The latest new house on the block is a Totalspan steel frame build. So glad we can't see this new house from our place, thanks to a hill. We've had so many go up around here lately.

Looks like today will be an indoor day and that the water tank will be full again.

Enjoyed the first session of the Te Reo Māori course I'm doing this year with Te Wananga o Aotearoa. 3 hours in the evening — not my best time of day, but I managed. Tonight we learned the short and long vowels: a e i o u and ā ē ī ō ū.
Cosmic Rays are heading our way
This is … interesting …
… radiation from deep space is not only intensifying, but also doing so faster than previously predicted. …
Galactic cosmic rays come from outside the solar system. They are a mixture of high-energy photons and sub-atomic particles accelerated toward Earth by supernova explosions and other violent events in the cosmos. … The sun’s magnetic field and solar wind combine to create a porous ‘shield’ that fends off cosmic rays attempting to enter the solar system.
… Cosmic rays penetrate commercial airlines, dosing passengers and flight crews …. Some research shows that cosmic rays can seed clouds and trigger lightning, potentially altering weather and climate. …Cosmic rays will intensify even more in the years ahead as the sun plunges toward what may be the deepest Solar Minimum in more than a century.
Via SpaceWeather.com, 05 March 2018.


