Island Life by David Slack

83

Supertooth

When I’m in a disparaging mood, I describe Takapuna as Hamilton-on-Sea. Henderson is Hamilton-on-P. No disrespect to the fine people who live there, but Hamilton's a bit dull for me. Said the boy from Feilding.

Imagine, then, our excitement a year or so ago when we received the gift of two nights' accommodation in The Home of the Mighty V8s. Weeks and months went by. Somehow there never seemed to be a good time. Finally, last weekend, we acted.

Travel hopefully? We packed no expectation in our luggage, and the arrival was upon us all too soon. Karren collected the keys, I carried in the bags, Mary-Margaret saw the spa pool and got out her togs. As the steam swirled, we made plans. Zoo, museum, a walk along the river, somewhere to eat.

I did what any Jafa would do. I got on the Cuisine website. What’s good to eat around here? “Go to Palate” said Cuisine.

We made a booking and presented ourselves at 6.30, first guests of the evening, but lonely for only a minute or two. From the first moment to the last it was splendid. You should go to Hamilton; you should dine at Palate.

Moroccan quail with all manner of fruit. A mushroom soup with truffle-infused oil. The night’s special, hapuku poached in red wine, with macaroni cheese, sounded so improbable I had to try it. Remarkable. Cheese - that great rich delicacy; how I have missed it. This is the kind of menu that the likes of your Steve Braunias will lampoon you for, but mock all you like, lamington boy, I ate like a king.

This is where the Hamilton-on-Sea epithet comes undone. If you compare the Waikato restaurant with the one I have in mind, Takapuna is not worthy. Of course you might also say, with some validity, that Lone Star is not a ‘restaurant’. Nonetheless it has one thing in common with Palate. They both charge the same for the meals.

Lone Star is where Mary Margaret’s friends have lately been having birthday dinners with their friends. This was what Mary Margaret chose for hers.

At Palate they do it the old fashioned way. You ring them up, you ask if they have a table for three at 6.30, they say yes, they take your name and write it in a big book, and when you arrive they open up the big book and voila: there’s your name and here is your table and welcome. At Lone Star you ring to make a reservation and they tell you they don’t take reservations but you can put your name on a 'priority listing'. What does that mean? If you turn up at the specified time, you get a table but if you snooze, you lose.

We take a priority listing for 6.30. Karren will be arriving with the birthday girl and friends in tow once the movie is finished. It’s my job to be there at 6.30 and claim the table.

I am there on the dot. Lone Star does not have a big book. Nor do they have any record of our priority listing. Nor do they have any tables. It is a bizarre sensation to feel frustrated that you cannot get a table at a restaurant you do not want to eat in.

A hovering young woman notices some difficulty and dives in to help. She pulls out the list of names of priority guests which has been carefully compiled on a shopping jotter. She confirms that ours is not there. She assures me that she can sort it out because, she assures me, she does believe me. I have found myself in a suburban collision with the ‘Not a Problem’ culture. “Go upstairs and get a drink and we’ll find something for you,” she says, “It may take a while but you will get one.”

Great. I climb the stairs. The bartender is a study in North Shore cool. His hair is tied back in a bandana. It’s a cold ANZAC weekend night, but he’s still in shorts and T shirt and he affects the moves of every cool guy who’s ever poured the drinks on the big screen, talking like a Sydney dj.

I ask for scotch on the rocks. He says something that I think is intended to mean that they don’t have any. I tell him if he just tips that bottle of Johnny Walker into a glass I’ll drink whatever comes out. This is a novelty. I am never terse when I’m ordering a drink.

I slug my glass while he hustles around the bar shifting items about and swapping vacant banter with the passing staff. He judges it may be the moment to thaw me out. One of those days, huh? he asks. I break the habit of a lifetime of amiable banter over a bar and say, levelly, “no.”

These North Shore kids have boundless self confidence but they’re so preoccupied with broadcasting, there’s no capacity spare to do any receiving. The insincere chumminess and overfamiliarity leaves me cold. I’d rather they were rude.

Karren and the party girls arrive, and I explain the wrinkle in our plans. My well organised wife is nonplussed. At this opportune moment the young woman who is solving our problem happens to pass by. Who’s the manager? asks Karren, “I am,” she says.

Karren doesn’t raise her voice all that much when she gets stirred up, but you know what’s happening when she does it. She'll say that something’s not good enough, and then she’ll tell you why. Our hostess doesn’t let her get to the second part. She sets out to explain to our clearly addled minds what she is doing to remedy the situation. You’re not listening, she says. Oh yes we are, we tell her. We readily grasp, we explain, that she’s telling us about her proposed solution; what we’re complaining about is the ineptitude that brought about the problem.

But she aint listening. We wait. There is, eventually, a table. See, that wasn't so bad, was it? she says, with a rather more righteous and triumphant tone than Dale Carnegie would recommend.

And so to the meal. Mine was an okay steak. The girls got various pale things heaved out of a deep fryer and piled high on fries. They ate a little. Karren's was, she said, pretty mediocre.

I’d pay fifteen bucks for that steak and feel happy. At thirty, I feel like someone's having a laugh. I remember once, years ago, getting a haircut in Whangarei from a guy whose mind was clearly on other things. I walked out looking like Sonic the Hedgehog. Come Saturday I was at a wine festival. In the late afternoon, lined up at the latrines, the fellow reveller to my left looked alongside and said “Mate, I know you don’t I?” He was pissed and happy. I said: Yeah, you gave me this haircut. He began to snicker and it built steadily to mildly hysterical laughter. I use that as something of a yardstick for the way things go in the service culture.

I don’t want to be at a restaurant where the staff are servile.
Nor do I want someone to pretend to be my best buddy.
I just want to enjoy the mutual respect you can have when everyone enjoys the evening. You get that from the staff at Palate. They smile, they are warm, they enjoy that we enjoy their food, they take pride in their work.They are not cogs in a franchise.

There is plenty to like about Hamilton, it’s just a matter of where you look. I ran along the bank of their mighty river. It was tranquil, brooding, and, in the morning light, quite ethereal. The museum has its own distinct identity, with its marae leading visitors to the water. There was an exhibition on Italian immigrants to New Zealand which was precisely what I was in the mood to see. Not an hour earlier I had been reading a short story, in Tessa Duder’s new book, about an Italian widow’s miserable migration to New Zealand where no-one speaks her language and the food is rubbish. I wonder what she would have made of Lone Star.

14

Drinking is easy, comedy is hard.

I have chosen a new drink for the comedy festival. Because I am trying to lose 10 kilos, the beer is off the list. Wine’s okay, but I have a habit of drinking too much of it, falling asleep and being roused awake afterwards by the star of the show and sent home in a cab. I have even once fallen asleep watching the comedian I was about to interview. You can click here to hear what I sound like when I have been woken up in a bar to do such a thing.

It should be apparent that I am only a few days into the 2008 comedy festival and I have already drunk deeply of the spirit of frank, candid, intimate confession.

The drink that goes well with this, I find, is scotch on the rocks. I like a good single malt as much as the next snob, but when I sit down in a bar to watch someone sing the blues or wail in the Hank Williams style or make everyone laugh, any old whisky strained through clinking ice cubes is just fine for me.

Guy walks into a comedy club to see Ben Hurley, asks for a scotch on the rocks. Which one?, the bartender asks. As rough as you like I say. Grants? she asks. Perfect. Ben Hurley is playing all this week upstairs at the Classic Studio. His audience banter is showing the benefit of his recent years in the UK. He hears every fine detail his audience gives him, and before your eyes spins it into a fine golden thread of wit.

The Festival began with the Gala, and Juha may not forgive me for this but I’ll say it anyway: it also began in fine farce traditions when my host for the night left his tickets in the taxi cab and we had to stand outside the Civic as the bells rang, waiting for the driver to return from Herne Bay. It was worth the effort. The theatre was on fire and the acts were almost all, to my taste, terrific. Only one or two left me cold. That still leaves a feast to choose from. I especially liked Arj Barker, and Jason Cook.

I can also recommend the Lady Bunch (Transmission Room until Saturday) where I was slugging my Scotch on the rocks last night. Irene Pink likes to use her ample frame to freak out the snooty women who decide whether you are worthy of trying on their Zambezi range. Justine Smith has some excellent advice on the connection between your choice of footwear and your prospects of being fellated and Michele A’Court is in marvellous form. There once was a time years ago at Kitty O’Briens when I was startled by how angry she seemed. But that was long ago. She has the deft touch of saying how lovely someone is once she’s finished giving them a thorough bagging.

I’m pretty sure she actually means it, too. The comedians I warm to are the ones who have a generosity of spirit. They mock, they prick bubbles, but they don’t hate. They have an affection for our flawed humanity.

This afternoon I will take Mary-Margaret and a friend to get a share of the fun.This year the kids get stand up. I know the girls will love it. Jamie Noone hosts it, and there will be Al Pitcher, Paul Tonkinson and Mike Boon. Next week they will have the marvellous Janey Godley.

I fully expect to remain awake for the whole thing.

10

Suits YOU sir

Let’s consider Chris Trotter’s thesis that the patrons of the National Party are not likely to be digging deep just to see the election of a Labour Lite replacement.

Let’s view it through the prism of yesterday's broadband announcement. The announcement is welcome news to this Internet trader. It might be rather vague on detail and raise unanswered questions about regulation and matching private sector investment but the intent is nonetheless laudable.

Here’s my response to the snide folk who have been saying: faster downloading for your YouTube and your porn and your pirated movies. I spend thousands on hosting in the USA because no-one here can set me up with a fast enough server and a big enough data allowance. That money could be being spent here. Ask Rod Drury what it could mean for the Software As A Service businesses he’s involved in.

It’s becoming trite to say it, but it’s nonetheless true: internet infrastructure is as important to us as roads, railways and refrigerated ships. Why not have it in abundance, rather than relatively scarce and expensive? Let a thousand e-commerce sites bloom!

So what about the Trotter thesis? Ask yourself how thrilled Maurice 'no-hands' Williamson is to see his party putting up all that tyre smoke as John Key throws a handbrake turn on the do-nothing policy the party’s IT spokesperson favours.

This collector’s card goes in the same page of the party photo album as the images of Guyon Espiner stalking Lockwood and Maurice down the corridor, trying to get them to repeat their private declarations of climate change skepticism.

Consider for a moment those audiences in the rooms where the recalcitrant former ministers confided their doubts. Consider whether such people might be a source of the funds which Chris Trotter posits are being pledged in expectation of suitable policy settings for the gentleman who dresses to the right.

The leader might be willing to bolt himself steadfastly to the slightly left of centre ground in order to secure the prestigious job, but the bungy rope must be getting pretty damn taught, if the expression on Maurice's face is any guide.

28

The worst that could happen

I only realised much later that I had been warned, as a child, of Stranger Danger. It was at our cubs group in the Kimbolton Hall.

If a man offers you some sweets to get in his car, tell him no, they said. I was skeptical. This was so completely implausible. Why on earth would a complete stranger want to share his sweets with me?

There was also a cub manual in which the message was reinforced with a picture of a grinning chap in a fedora leaning out of the car, Minties in his beckoning hand. Dib, dib, dib, Akela. We will do our best. We will read maps. We will not get in cars.

We went on a trip to Taupo and I wandered off from the pack. I had no idea where I was. A nice man asked me if I needed help. Yes please, I told him, I’m a cub. We’re on a trip and I’m lost.

Hop in my car and I’ll take you back , he said.

Do the mothers reading this passage flinch in apprehension more than the fathers, I wonder? It’s ridiculous to generalise. I have a sunny optimistic nature; Karren apprehends more hazards for our daughter than I do. They worry her.

When I was five years old, my dad had me steering the tractor as he walked behind feeding out hay. My mother -- the same one who would once, younger, walk across a railway viaduct on a dare -- was aghast when she saw the ridge we were driving along. Dad is a careful and cautious man, but he still took more latitude than people might approve of these days. So did all the farmers. Occasionally one would let their loose clothing get too near the PTO shaft of the tractor and there would be another funeral in the district.

I didn’t get molested that day in Taupo. I got delivered back to the scout hall. The tractor never tipped over.

What’s the worst that can happen? One day you have a healthy eight year old daughter, the next you’re in Starship learning about Ewing’s Sarcoma.

So many of our friends have spent anxious nights at Starship. They have mostly brought home their children safe and well. But some discover Ward 7. This is where the cancer kids go. This is where you discover that everything you took for granted about your child’s life has vapourised. This is where you are inducted into a new world of blinking monitors and wretched days of waiting.

It's not our eight year old daughter with the disease; it’s Finlee, the family friend of our daughter's friend Belle. Last weekend I read the narrative Belle's mother, Michelle Hancock, has compiled and photographed these past six months. It is sobering, it is anguished. A healthy, happy eight year old daughter disappears into a world of bone removal and therapy and a vast collection of beads and no sure promise that any of this will be enough. The screw turns a a little each day.

It wasn't our daughter it happened to; it wasn’t ever, I hope, yours. But it always could be. At Starship’s Oncology Ward -- Ward 7 -- it is cramped. You have four patients to a room, in pain, weak, vomitting. You have families, you have noise, you have anguish, and you find a corner to curl up in and sleep fitfully through the night with your child, attending to their meds and the equipment at half hour intervals.

Being able to wake up and discover it was a bad dream would be the preferable option, but a second best one would to be have more room: some space to retreat into, to cope with your grief; enough room for everyone to move.

Michelle Hancock is a photojournalist. She has taken remarkable pictures to accompany the narrative. It is being staged as an exhibition at Devonport’s Depot Artspace to raise funds towards the rebuilding of the Starship Oncology ward and it opens this weekend. It is a compelling documentary of a mother and daughter finding their way through.

Every bit helps. 28 Clarence St, Devonport, from this Sunday, April 20, for a week or so.

Why not take your daughter along, read the story, count your blessings, squeeze her hand, and leave some money?

UPDATE

If you'd like to support the Oncology Ward rebuild at Starship you can donate here. (Select Cancer Ward Appeal from the dropdown box.)

30

What I've done with Julie Christie is my own business

I have decided to stand for Parliament this election. The calibre of MPs continues to decline, and frankly we need someone of my quality. My experience is long, wide, and deep; my network of contacts is impressive; I have the common touch and I can campaign like a sonofabitch.

I have come this far before and balked; there are certain undisclosed matters that could make things awkward. Today, however, I am cleaning out my Augean stables. You might want to roll up your trousers.

1. I once wrote a favourable review of a John Key speech in exchange for sexual favours from a Young Nat. I have never visited John Key.

2. I am a silent partner in that South Auckland block of flats you read about in the Listener.

3. I have been supplying public relations counsel to seven members of the Hawkes Bay district health board. I have in the last four months conducted 48 workshops for nurses and cleaning staff on the effective use of Powerpoint.

4. Four years ago I was shopping in a Christchurch supermarket when I noticed a pretty young Russian humming discordantly to herself.

5. One night when I was getting fonged with Matthew Hooton and John Ansell I made a joke about Iwi and Kiwi.

6. My billboard design business was paid $83,621 for "Want Longer Lasting Sex?“

7. I get a three cent royalty on every packet of Bluebird chips your kids buy for the rugby cards.

8. I play 18 holes with Mark Bryers on Tuesdays and nine with Rod Petricevic on Thursdays. On Saturdays David Richwhite lets me take the chopper out to dive-bomb sunbathers at Opito Bay. If I don’t bag ten, I have to detail his Hummer.

9. I have two pairs of Crocs.

10. My friend Damian Christie has three.