Hard News: Merry Christmas, Blossoms
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Sacha, in reply to
I'd never thought of that. May you have a relaxing (and high-contrast) break, sir.
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Julie Cross, in reply to
Won't someone think of the poor South Islanders and inland North Islanders who can't enjoy pohutukawa in full bloom?
Robyn, we expats feel the pain too. This is the best I could find here in small town Oz... a saturnalian celebration for my homesickness.
I'm more Pogues than Rudolf this time of year, but thanks all for the warm welcome to PA. I was '1 post' a month ago and JP and friends on Capture have been downright friendly. That ol' kiwi hospitality doing its magic thing. Have a great Christmas, you talented bunch of writerly folk. tis a good thing you are making here.
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Congratulations, Danielle. I'm so pleased for you. I'm at my parents' place, where they don't have wireless, and the computer is very old, so internetaccess is creaky at best. I spnet all yesterday thinking, I guess Danielle's baby must have arrived by now... And he has! Lovely news for Christmas.
I can report that the pohutakawas are just starting to burst in New Plymouth, with the exception f one that we can see on the foreshore, which is a brilliant crimson. A day or two more of this warm weather, and Christmas Day itself should be gloriously red.
Merry Christmas, everyone.
Also, the internet problem here? Someone has cunningly given Dad an iPad, so we'll be sorting out the wireless later on today or tomorrow.
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3410,
I'm with barnaclebarnes.
Unfortunately, Pohutukawas do nothing for me. -
Yamis, in reply to
will turn into the largest Pohutukawa you've ever seen and your new house will suffer. That or religiously prune it every year and place a caveat on the title to that effect so each new homeowner has to do the same.
Sorry to be grinch like, but trees grow. Big. Very Big.
It's all good. I've planted a few thousand trees and plants already and grew up on a farm/bush block so have located it well away from anything it might bother in coming decades. What's more of a worry is the bloody maple tree that was planted next to the driveway and is now proceeding to rip it up in slow motion!
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
'salright , we got a lovely subdued seasonal Feijoa in flower...
That is lovely and for those who miss the native mistletoe.... ('cept barnaclebarnes who may spot the pine cones), have a glimpse of the Waitemata as well.
Congrats on your new arrival Danielle. All my life I got Merry Xmas and happy birthday gifts. Just the one each year. I've never forgotten that. Probably why I mention it to other half every year now. Not that I think it's important. Jus' sayin' ;)
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Hebe,
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Russell Brown, in reply to
Merry Christmas on Banks Peninsula
Oh wow! So there are a few of those big red trees down your way!
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Yes we poor old South Islanders are on the hind tit again
And although I have spent several Summers up North I don't remember see the Pohutukawa in full flower, Rata,Feijoa yes but not the same
New Year resolution coming on earlyOn the plus side we do have our long twilights and plenty of strawberries
Well done Danielle on your son, my dear wife was born on Christmas day and thanks to her having a significant one this year, it is all on ..cast of hundreds, Havic hams ,BBQ texas style brisket, the list goes on
Have a good one everybody
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A very Merry Christmas to all readers and writers on PAS alike.
I will spend a week on Waiheke after Christmas, doing my best to think of nothing whatsoever beyond my whanau and relaxation.
The giant pohutukawa that now obscures much of their sea view also attracts tuis and wood pigeons, and there is always an appreciative cluster of people in it's shade at the hottest point in the day, so feelings are mixed toward it, but it will certainly not care about any of that, and celebrate the hottest part of the year as it's kind most likely have been doing since before Christmas was invented, most likely before humans had the ability to mess with trees, and the tuis would have been singing the same songs, and the sea also. The beach was probably the same shape, and many of the same pebbles would have been there, although they're probably smaller and rounder now. In another ten thousand years, I expect all of this will still be true, perhaps the beach will be slightly sandier.
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Hebe, in reply to
More and more pohutukawa are being planted along the coast down here, and there has always been a a few big trees in Sumer that flower every year (the one I particularly liked was by a cliff at the bottom of Clifton Hill -- haven't checked its condition lately). They do okay if they are sheltered from the frost; but the southern rata and crosses are more reliable if not as showy.
That tree in the pic was spectacular when I saw it a couple of years ago in the first few days of the year; the really deep red flowers are hard to find this far south - they tend to have an orange tint. I believe that Banks Peninsula is considered the southern limit for pohutukawa, though I would be interested to hear of (and see ) sightings further south.
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Hebe, in reply to
Feijoa's better -- you can eat them as well as look at the flowers.
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Sacha, in reply to
In another ten thousand years, I expect all of this will still be true, perhaps the beach will be slightly sandier.
..and a bit further up the hill
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
glazed ham...
oh oh oh!
or a drunkenly lurching OI OI OI
( in slab serif caps of course!)or if they're a bit angry,
it could be a game of
noughts and cross-eyes... -
JacksonP, in reply to
a game of
noughts and cross-eyes...Take me to your Breeders...
Oh
Last flight
Get lost in the moss
Oh, oh
Fall in the neon mine
Push me down
Push me down
Push me down -
Sacha, in reply to
oh oh oh
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rjal,
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WH,
Merry Christmas. You've made something quite special at Public Address. I like the idea of making the world a better place one person at a time.
I've got tickets for the upcoming Above and Beyond's event at the Brixton Academy - lucky because they are all sold out now. It's going to be great.
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Fooman, in reply to
Won't someone think of the poor South Islanders and inland North Islanders who can't enjoy pohutukawa in full bloom?
But they do get to enjoy the crimson bloom of the rata, both Northen and Southern.
FM
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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