Internet and Scully off

I had an interrupted sleep because Scully woke up about 3am and wanted to go out for a toilet. I had to get dressed and take her out. This is very unusual – normally she sleeps right through the night. She did a poop, and then multiple more throughout today, again unusual. The last couple looked like they had blood in them, so we contacted the vet and took her in for an examination. Apart from that, she’s been energetic and lively as usual, no change in behaviour. So the vet was not terribly concerned and took some blood for a test, but suggested it might resolve without treatment. So hopefully it’s nothing serious.

Also today my Internet service went out just before 9am, and didn’t come back until 4pm. I had two ethics classes in the middle of the day. I cancelled one and then tried the second one using my iPad and a 4G connection. It worked okay, but was considerably more fiddly, and not something I’d want to do again unless I really have to.

So my day has been pretty disrupted, and I still can’t relax because Scully is still at the vet getting the blood test done, and we are waiting to be notified to go pick her up.

I’d planned to cook a special dinner tonight of satay vegetables and tofu with rice, and even specially bought tofu today to go into it. But we had to just quickly make some toast and eat quickly in between getting back from the vet and my evening ethics class starting. So overall not a great day.

Introing to machine learning

Today I was back at the University of Technology Sydney for the ongoing Data Engineering course which I’m helping to teach. Today’s lecture was an introduction to machine learning, which is a fairly advanced topic for an introductory first year course. But there are tools which let people code up machine learning examples and projects without too much difficulty and we want to make sure the students understand the basic principles behind them. Some will probably elect to use this in their assessment project, which they should start working on after next week’s final lecture.

Then we have a two-week mid-semester break. It’s normally one week, but Easter Monday eats up the next week’s lecture slot as well. Then four weeks of tutorial time to help the students as they work on their projects.

On the way home I stoped at my wife’s work and we had a pleasant walk home together with Scully. We were a bit concerned about the weather, as heavy rain was heading our way on the radar, but luckily it never arrived and we made it home dry.

I made pizza for dinner, topping it with very thin slices of one of those gourmet potatoes we bought at the farmer’s market on Saturday.

And we did some planning for our next trip, which is to Europe in June for the ISO Photography Standards meeting in Berlin. It’s a five-day meeting, so we’ll be there for that long, and then we’re planning to visit some of the central European countries and cities we haven’t been to before. A couple of days in Prague, then we plan to spend a week in Vienna, renting an apartment for the week instead of using a hotel. We’ll do side trips from there to Bratislava and Budapest, before heading to Salzburg to finish up before flying home. We have the itinerary sorted now after deciding on various options this evening. Now to book some accommodation!

A split birthday lunch

Sunday morning, I got I another 5k run. 🏃🏻‍♂️ The weather was a bit showery, but not as wet as yesterday. 🌧️

After showering and changing into dry clothes, we headed off to meet with my wife’s family for a birthday lunch for her sister, at a cafe near her place. They booked an indoor table. But because we couldn’t take Scully inside we also grabbed an outdoor table and my wife and I took it in turns to mind Scully or head inside to chat with the family. We ordered some lunch and it was pretty good. 🍝 The rain held off. We were under shelter anyway so that wouldn’t have been a big problem, but unfortunately it was pretty windy, which made things a bit uncomfortable outside. 💨

Back home in the afternoon I did some Darths & Droids writing while my wife worked on her watercolour artwork. She’s only been doing it for less than a year, but has decided to enter an amateur art show which will be selling paintings anonymously to raise money for… I forget what exactly. 👩‍🎨

For dinner I used the leftover roasted vegetables from last night to make a sort of bubble & squeak pasta topper, adding some fried onions and cherry tomatoes and feta. It turned out pretty delicious! 😋

I added emojis to the paragraphs here because we’ve been discussing in my online ethics classes this evening about whether emojis count as a form of writing or not, and in which circumstances they are acceptable or not. I’ve been using the following “sentence” to discuss how well they convey meaning: 😋🍕😋🍍😲🤮

Finding a new Path, and Working Carriages

Friday was online games night, and one of my friends was again running a Pathfinder roleplaying game for us. The previous session was a one-shot to test out the virtual tabletop and playing online, but last night was the beginning of an ongoing campaign. I had a fresh first level character, a halfling druid named Osric “Stormy” Mossfoot.

The general setup was that the PCs all came from separate areas around a village and were there for their own purposes. I was investigating a vague feeling that something wasn’t right with the forest. We met our fellow PCs by taking a common interest in assisting a distraught young woman who was lamenting breaking up with her boyfriend, after a night-time tryst in the forest, where they witnessed some mysterious motes of light rising from the forest floor. This seemed to have affected the young man, changing his personality and causing him to ignore the woman.

We investigated his house, which turned out to be the home of his parents, wealthy jewellers, who were almost alarmingly welcoming. They said he’d got up that morning and headed off east. The only building to the east was an abandoned church, which we poked around in enough to determine that the ground floor and cellar were both so dust choked that clearly nobody had been in either for years.

We convinced the young woman to accompany us into the forest and show us their trysting spot, ominously named “Nana’s Grave”. As we approached, we had to fight a few shambling zombie-like creatures, overgrown with vines. And as I used one of my druid spells, we witnessed motes of light rising from the ground! With the zombies defeated we approached nana’s grave itself, only to find a six-foot deep hole in front of the headstone. There were also a couple of other similar combats. The woman mentioned there was an abandoned cottage that belonged to Nana nearby, and we took a look there. There was nothing on the ground floor, but we found a trap door leading down to a dark cellar… And there we paused play for the evening until next session!

Early on Friday I picked up the groceries from the supermarket. Fresh figs were cheap, so I got a pack of those, and when I had some later they were really delicious. And I had four ethics classes during the day before the gaming.

Today the weather forecast was dismal, up to 90 mm of rain, with very heavy falls. I went for a 5k run anyway, in the steady rain around 9am, since I hadn’t done a run for two weeks because we were in New Zealand last weekend. It was cooler than other recent runs, so actually not that bad. Just very wet.

After a shower and changing into dry clothes, my wife and I drove over to Carriageworks Farmers Market, braving the rain with Scully. This market is fairly fancy, with a lot of stalls selling “gourmet” produce and foods. I got a trout and horseradish pie to eat for lunch, and a strawberry cheesecake babka as a sweet treat afterwards. We also bought some vegetables, including some special “Queen May” potatoes for roasting up for dinner tonight.

Along with the potatoes we roasted sweet potato, pumpkin, and some spiced chick peas. And just steamed some broccolini to go with it and provide some greens.

The rain eased off after lunch too, rather than intensifying as we expected. So we managed to take Scully for an evening walk without getting too wet – it was a very light sprinkle by then.

And in other news, the Prime Minister called the next Australian federal election yesterday. We go to the polling stations on 3 May.

Very quick Thursday update

It’s late after my 9-10pm ethics class, so I don’t want to spend too long typing this tonight. THere’s not much to report about today anyway. A bunch of online classes, I ordered groceries online, I made a new Darths & Droids comic, and it rained heavily late morning. I actually had to interrupt a class I was teaching on Zoom to go close windows to avoid the rain coming in. We’re expecting a lot more rain in the next two days too.

Scully’s 7th birthday

Today was a big day. Scully’s 7th birthday!

Scully's 7th birthday

My wife took her to work with her, because today we also had an electrician in to install our new light fittings. He arrived early at 07:30, and was occupied with working and making clutter with all of the boxes and packaging the light fittings came in. A couple of the lights needed some tricky reconfiguring of screw placements, due to overly large holes cut through the ceiling plasterboard. But he managed to successfully install everything within a couple of hours. And the new fittings look great!

But I had to go out and buy some new light bulbs, because the old fittings were all bayonet style, and three of the new ones are now Edison screw fittings, so the old bulbs don’t fit in the new sockets. So I went to the hardware store to buy some new bulbs, before returning to fit them in place.

My wife worked half a day and had the afternoon off to celebrate Scully’s birthday. I picked her up in the car and we drove over to Lil’ Mix bakery to get some food. My wife really likes it there, but it’s not open on weekends, so we don’t have much chance to go there during the week.

Back home I cleaned up the packing material and took it out to the bins. And kept some of the spare parts in case we need them later. I made fried rice for dinner, and then had three ethics classes in a row. And now I have a yummy cookie form Lil’ Mix for dessert.

NZ trip recovery day

I got a good night’s sleep last night – my first one since leaving home last Friday. I got up just before my wife left for work and took Scully out for a walk to the local grocery store to buy some fresh fruit and vegetables so we have cooking supplies for the next few days until our regular grocery shop.

Today I finished off my critical thinking/ethics lesson plan for this week, on the topic of “Written Text”, which is talking about writing and writing systems. The questions for the kids touch on the invention of writing, the effects of writing on civilisation, writing in different languages, and modern developments such as the fact we all type way more than we handwrite these days, and what effects abbreviations and emojis have on writing.

I also made a new Darths & Droids comic. And I copied all my New Zealand photos off my SLR camera and phone onto my computer. I processed some of the SLR bird photos.

Here is a New Zealand fantail:

New Zealand fantail

Variable oystercatchers (which vary from all black to black-and-white pied):

Variable oystercatcher

Australasian gannets:

Australasian gannet

And a house sparrow, which is not that exciting as it’s an introduced species and very common, but at least I got close to it:

House sparrow

For lunch I took Scully for a walk to the pie shop, since I didn’t have any bread at home to make sandwiches. I’m baking a new sourdough loaf and will have fresh bread tomorrow. It was drizzling gently as we walked up. The weather forecast for the next few days is wet, with heavy rain of up to 70 mm predicted for Saturday.

New Zealand, day 4

I had another poor night’s sleep in our hotel room in Auckland, meaning I hadn’t had a good night’s sleep since we left home on Friday. So I was very tried this morning. We slept in a little and crawled down to the hotel breakfast buffet where I just had a bowl of muesli with yoghurt.

We packed our luggage and checked out of the hotel, placing our bags in the car until we left later. Then we met up with my in-laws and they showed us around the centre of Auckland a bit, since they’d been here once before and knew the area. While they and my wife grabbed a coffee from one of the good coffee shops, I explored Albert Park and tried to see if I could spot any more interesting birds for the trip. But all I saw were blackbirds, gulls, sparrows, and pigeons.

Rejoining the others, we walked down to the waterfront area to see what it looked like during the day (after last night’s dinner at the restaurant there). My wife checked out a large souvenir shop while I looked for nearby light lunch options. We needed to eat something before leaving for the airport, but it wasn’t really time for a full lunch. I found a place that does focaccia style pizzas by the slice and grabbed a pepperoni slice, while my wife got a toasted bagel with cream cheese from the shop next door.

Then we headed back to the car park to take the car back to the airport and drop it off at the rental place. We navigated first to a petrol station near the airport to fill up the tank before dropping it off. Once dropped off, we used the shuttle bus to get to the terminal.

We went in through security and passport control and then had some time to kill, extended a bit as our flight was delayed by 20 minutes. Boarding was long and slow because the flight was very full, and it was a single aisle Boeing 737. They also took some passengers’ larger carry-on bags and forced them to check them into the cargo hold. Fortunately they didn’t target us, and we managed to find space in the overhead lockers neat our seats for our bags.

The flight was again fairly short. They provided a dinner meal and I watched two more episode of House of the Dragon. I’m enjoying the series, but I won’t have any easy way to watch any more of it, unfortunately.

We landed at 18:01 Sydney time. Luckily there were no queues at customs and immigration, so we were out of the airport and on a train home very quickly, and walked in the front door just after 19:00. We decided to have a light meal before heading off to pick up Scully from our friends’ place, so I fried some eggs to have on toast. Then we drove over to pick up Scully, who was super excited to see us as usual.

Now we’re back home, and I’ve had a shower to freshen up before bed. Hopefully to sleep well tonight!

New Zealand, day 3

We got up at 07:30 and went out to seek breakfast. We tried Third Wheel Coffee, a place which had the best online reviews and which my wife wanted to try. They didn’t have a full cafe service on the weekend, only take-away coffee and a selection of baked goods. They have some slices, sweet and savoury muffins, banana bread, and an “almond croissant white chocolate blondie”. I tried this last one, which seemed to be a blondie inspired by the marzipan and almond flakes on a croissant. It was dense and sweet with almond paste and chunks of white chocolate. My wife had a slice of the banana bread, which was also very dense and cake-like, with choc chips and walnuts in it.

Paihia sunrise

She also bought a piece of the coffee caramel slice to give to her mother and sister to try. We returned to our room at the motel, where we saw them emerging, and she gave them the slice to try. Then we packed our bags and checked out. We had to wait a little bit for the other two to be ready and check out too, and then loaded up the car.

For our first port of call we drove over to Kerikeri, a town about 20 minutes away, where there was a farmer’s market on in the morning. We got a parking spot very close and explored the market, which was not very big at all, having maybe 20 stalls. One of them was a woman in a caravan selling toasted sandwiches, and one listed in the menu was a Reuben toasty, which sounded good to me as a savoury second breakfast after the almond blondie. So I got one of those while the others explored. my mother-in-law had been craving a banana since yesterday and found a stall selling fresh bananas by the bunch. She asked if she could just buy one, and the man gave her one free of charge!

Having exhausted the market faster than expected, we went looking for a cafe so they could all get coffee. We found Cafe Zest & The Waffle Room, where my sister-in-law also got a blueberry muffin since she hadn’t eaten anything yet except half the caramel slice. As we were leaving, my wife’s younger nephew and his partner arrived. They took our table since they wanted to get spree breakfast too. And as we walked back to the car we passed the older nephew and partner coming towards the cafe too.

Back in the car, we backtracked out of Kerikeri the way we’d come to check out an arts and crafts market that I’d spotted on the way in. It was also right across the road from the Makana Chocolate Factory, which my sister-in-law had wanted to visit as well, so we went for a look in there too. The market was in a large old industrial building of some sort, with internal divisions into workshops, store rooms, and one large cooler room, but now mostly converted into spaces for market stalls. There were a few dozen stalls, as well as a bustling cafe and a butcher and cheesemonger. My wife got an orange and date scone from he cafe and I picked up their “famous Kerikeri cheese scone” for a later snack.

Across the road at the Makana Chocolate Factory we walked into a pleasantly air conditioned display room, which looked into a production room where a couple of workers were hand-finishing chocolate truffles. Another woman gave us free samples of their macadamia butter toffee crunch and an orange fruit jelly. The macadamia crunch was amazingly good, and she said it was their biggest seller by far. My wife bought a box of it as a gift for our friends back home for looking after Scully for us while we are on this trip.

Makana Chocolate Factory

Next we drove out to the old Stone Store, a historic building begun in 1832 and now the oldest stone building in New Zealand. Originally a storehouse, it now houses an antiques and knick-knacks shop. We parked across the river and had to walk across a bridge to reach it. It was a pleasant and scenic walk, with beautiful views up and down the river, flanked by lawns and gardens. On the way back across the river we saw some pūkeko (a.k.a. Australasian swamphens) with young, feeding them. And as we left the car park, we saw our nephews and their partners arriving to go see the Stone Store too.

Stone Store

Next stop for us was Rainbow Falls, another five minutes’ drive away. Here there was a short walk to a series of three lookout spots above the falls. There was also a path down to the river below, but we didn’t bother walking down there as we had another sight to see and were running out of time.

Rainbow Falls

We drove another 20 minutes north-west, down narrower roads ending with a length of dirt road in a heavily forested steep-sided valley. Here was the Puketi Forest Kauri Walk, a short boardwalk track through a stand of enormous kauri trees. As we followed the narrow dirt road down the hillside into the valley, we came across a tour bus ahead of us, and it had to pass another one coming the other way! We’d hoped to have the forest walk to ourselves, but it looked like we might have to share it with a whole bus full of tourists.

Puketi Kauri Forest Walk

Fortunately the bus group took some time to get organised and we took off down the boardwalk ahead of them. We were never among the group, but we could hear the tour leader talking to them all over an amplified loudspeaker the whole time, even when we couldn’t see them through the dense trees. We could also here many birds high in the canopy above us, but never saw any. The forest was dense with ferns and trees, and after walking some way we came across the kauri trees, which were enormous. Huge thick trunks several metres across, towering high into the sky above. They were incredibly impressive, with only the giant Californian redwoods which we’d seen before on a trip to the USA able to compete with them.

Puketi Kauri Forest Walk

Finished with the walk, we returned to the car to set off on the drive back to Auckland. We only backtracked a short way to the nearest intersection and then continued along the dirt road past the paved road we’d come in on. This road continued for several kilometres before eventually becoming paved again. We were headed south on Highway 15, rather than 1 which we had come north most of the way to Paihia on. This route led west around Whangerai instead of through it. It was a slightly longer route, but much more scenic and winding.

We stopped at the first town we came to for lunch, Kaikohe. This was not a big town, and being a Sunday nearly all the shops along the main street were closed. The only place we saw open for food was the Kaikohe Bakehouse, which was doing a roaring trade with people entering and leaving almost non-stop. It boasted an eclectic menu, offering American hot dogs, nachos, butter chicken and another type of Indian curry with rice, Japanese chicken katsu, a range of Chinese stir-fried dishes and fried rice and noodles, and steak, lamb chops, pork roast, and other European style dishes. Oh, and French toast! They also had a range of meat pies, including a butter chicken one which I selected for my lunch. And rows of cabinets full of delicious-looking cakes and slices! My pie was excellent, and I was very tempted by many of the sweets, but decided I’d had plenty of sugar on this trip already so I stayed strong and didn’t get anything.

Hitting the road again, we continued driving on the scenic Highway 15 south until we reached the junction with Highway 1. We stopped near here to fill the car with petrol, at a cost of NZ$82 for about 28 litres. Further along we stopped at the Dome Forest Lookout Walkway, which I thought would have a scenic lookout spot near the car park. But when we looked at the information sign, it said the lookout spot was a 40 minute walk away! We didn’t have time to spare, so we only stay long enough to stretch our legs. But my mother-in-law spotted a New Zealand pigeon in a tree and I spent a few minutes getting a photo.

We arrived back in Auckland just after 18:00. We grabbed a car parking spot in the Wilson car park next door to the hotel we had booked and then checked in. This gave us just enough time to freshen up and change before heading to for dinner, which was booked for 19:00 at Soul Bar & Bistro, on the Auckland Harbour waterfront.

Auckland Harbour

We walked down as a group and found the restaurant facing the picturesque harbour and yacht moorings. The place was decorated all in pink for a special pink theme, with rosé wines featuring on the menu and also some special pink desserts. All the staff were wearing pink as well. We had a very friendly and helpful waitress who cheerfully took our orders. I had the John Dory fillet with Pernod romesco, cherry tomatoes, olives, and almonds, while my wife chose the corn and ricotta tortelli with jalapeño and zucchini. And for dessert I had a Snickers sundae with peanut whipped cream and chewy caramel. The meals were excellent, although honestly I slightly preferred last night’s meal.

After this we returned to our hotel for the night, walking along the beautifully lit main streets of Auckland, to spend our last night of the trip.

New Zealand, day 2

We got up just before our alarm at 07:30. I had a very poor sleep, as I often do on the first night of a trip, but my wife slept soundly all night. We wandered down the street to the centre of Paihia to find a cafe for breakfast. We grabbed an outside table at Letz Cafe, which had muesli bowls and also smoothie bowls, which was essentially a muesli bowl with the yoghurt replaced with one of their range of smoothies. I chose that and got a smoothie with blueberry and some other fruits in it as my choice, while my wife had the plain muesli. As we were finishing off, my wife’s mother and sister walked past and we said the food was good, so they joined us and ordered some breakfast too.

After eating we returned to our room to prepare for the day out. Our first meeting point was at the Waitangi Treaty Grounds, a historical site just a couple of kilometres north up the coastal road. This is where the Treaty of Waitangi, the founding document of New Zealand’s history as a modern country, was signed between the native Maori people and the colonial British. We wanted to walk there, but some others took one of the hire cars and we planned to meet there for our guided tour which was booked at 10:00.

On the walk I got a little distracted by spotting several interesting birds, including variable oystercatchers which I tried to get some photos of. We also might have underestimated the walking time, so we ended up arriving with only a couple of minutes to spare. My wife’s eldest nephew checked us in and we joined a large tour group of about fifty or sixty people. The staff gave us earpieces to listen to the tour guide’s commentary, which was good because we ended up a long way from the guide at many points on the tour.

It began with a walk through the gift shop, which I thought was very strange. Then we proceeded outside and down the hill to two large wooden canoes, built in the style of the old Maori canoes, out of kauri wood, and sheltered under a long wooden roof. These canoes seat upwards of a hundred people, and are floated and used for celebrations annually on Waitangi Day, 6 February, the anniversary of the signing of the Treaty. The guide explained these are not original historical canoes; because the wood eventually rots they build new ones every few decades.

Waitangi Treaty Grounds

From here we walked uphill to a grassy area with an expansive view of the Bay of Islands. Here was the Treaty House, the original house occupied by the British Resident minister, James Busby, from 1834. In this in 1840 the Treaty of Waitangi was drafted and translated into Maori, before it was signed in a nearby tent on 6 February. I went inside the house to see some of the rooms, including the one in which the Treaty was drafted. The house had magnificent gardens with many flowers in bloom.

Treaty House, Waitangi Treaty Grounds

Nearby is the Te Whara Runanga, a traditional Maori meeting house, built in 1940 facing the Treaty House to symbolise the Maori side of the Treaty. Here the tour group assembled for a Maori cultural display. We removed our shoes before entering the meeting house. Seated inside we were treated to various traditional songs, dances, chants, and weapon displays by a group of five Maori in traditional costume. The performances were really good, and sprinkled with lively and humorous commentary, really making everyone feel welcome. Following this performance we were left to explore the Treaty Grounds at our leisure.

Maori cultural display

We parted from the rest of the family, and my wife and I took a walk through a densely grown valley, where there were the two oldest camellia trees in New Zealand, planted in 1833. This led us back to the museum, where we browsed briefly to review the history of Waitangi and see various artefacts, Maori and British, and replicas of several of the original copies of the Treaty itself. (The originals are now kept in the National Library of New Zealand, in Wellington.)

After this we walked back into Paihia to get some lunch. After stopping briefly at our motel room, we found the Cafe 10, where my wife chose a vegetable frittata and I had the pumpkin salad.

After eating, we went to the wharf to get tickets on the ferry to Russell, a village on a long peninsula across the Bay of Islands. We had twenty minutes until the ferry left, and my wife spotted a small arts and crafts market across the street so we went there for a very quick look before retiring to the wharf to catch our ferry. The boat was a lot smaller than I expected, with bench seating for about 50 passengers. On the way across the bay we spotted an Australasian gannet flying alongside us about 50 metres up for a few seconds before turning to plummet straight down into the water, presumably to catch a fish. It surfaced and skimmed along just above the waves for a few seconds before veering off. Unfortunately I didn’t have my long lens on my camera and there wasn’t enough time to switch it to capture this bird.

Crossing the Bay of Islands

We arrived in Russell after about 20 minutes crossing the Bay. There were several restaurants and bars along the waterfront and a parallel street with a few shops to explore. After looking around we headed on a walk up Flagstaff Hill to the lookout point and historic flagstaff there. This flagstaff has a long and complex history beginning with the Treaty of Waitangi, and was symbolic of subsequent friction between the British and Maori people. Besides the history of the site, the view from here on the hill was magnificent, with 360° views around the Bay and the surrounding lands.

Russell, Bay of Islands

While I was taking this in and changing camera lenses, my wife spotted a large bird walking up the path and yelled out to me to come look. But but the time I had my camera safely reassembled and dashed over, the bird had vanished into the brush down the hillside. She described it and I figured out it was a weka. I was extremely disappointed not to have seen it myself!

We walked back down the hill via the road rather than the foot track we’d walked up on. There was no footpath between the road and the steep hillside so we had to walk on the road and avoid cars coming up the hill towards us. Once back in Russell we walked along the shore back to the centre of the village. We passed my wife’s older nephew and partner who were sitting at the Duke of Marlborough Hotel having a drink on the beautiful verandah. We waved hi and continued on to look at the last few shops that we hadn’t seen. Then we decided to backtrack to the Duke of Marlborough to get a drink ourselves. The others had gone to walk up Flagstaff Hill. I had a local Kororareka Cream ale, while my wife had a glass of local Pinot gris. Later in the evening, the nephew told us that the Duke of Marlborough was the oldest hotel in New Zealand (established in 1827).

Duke of Marlborough Hotel verandah

It was good to rest our feet after so much walking around. I spotted a tiny black and white bird flitting in a tree nearby and identified it as a tomtit, but it was too hard to get a photo of. After our drinks, we went to a small ice cream shop where I had scoops of hokey pokey; and fig & manuka honey ice cream. Here we met my wife’s mother and sister, who had also just bought cups of ice cream. We ate them as we walked back to catch the next ferry back to Paihia together. The ice cream was really good. On the trip back I had my long lens ready in case I spotted any more gannets, and I did, although they were much further away. I did manage to get a couple of shots at extreme range but the birds were pretty small in the photos.

Back in Paihia, we went back to the motel. I changed and went for a swim in the pool while my wife did some sketching in her sketchbook of scenes from today. After the swim I had a shower and changed for dinner. Tonight was the special birthday dinner for the eldest nephew and his partner (their birthdays are just 10 days apart).

We met up just before 18:30 and walked the short distance to Terra Restaurant. We had a reserve table on the balcony, looking out over the Bay. The setting was lovely, and the food was really excellent. I had a starter of squid and chorizo with chilli caramel and lemon mayonnaise, followed by a main course of pork kassler with harissa fried cauliflower and white bean puree. And for dessert a Black Forest combination of a chocolate marquise with cherries and cherry sorbet. Everything was delicious.

After this magnificent dinner we walked back to our motel room for the night.