Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | August 4, 2008

Master Chef – age eight

Unlike her mother, my eight-year-old Sarah has decided she likes to cook.

Our household differs from most others in the country, particularly in rural NZ, in that the man does all the cooking. Now I’m not talking once a week so I can have a night off – Thomas really does do all the cooking. I might have to throw together an omelet or a spaghetti cheese toastie when required, but Thomas is in charge of the kitchen. He’s rummaging around in the freezer for something for tea almost before he’s swallowed his breakfast.

Admittedly, I do enjoy cooking when there’s a glass of wine involved (bit of chardonnay while stirring a stirfry or cab sav with mince for a spag bol). And I am very good at dishes. And I can cook (even if my potatoes are ready an hour before the meat). I know this because I flatted for 10 years before finding my husband/cook/business manager. I would just rather not.

I blame my mother (with a smile), my three older sisters and my love of reading. Apparently Mum says as a youngster if there was work to be done then I was no where to be found and with my listening skills firmly tucked in the back of whatever book my nose was poked into at the time. She already had three daughters who’d been taught to cook and clean, so I got left to my own devices.

Sarah loves it. She comes to me before Dad gets home to ask if she can peel the potatoes. She washes them, cuts them up and puts them in the pot ready for cooking. She peels the carrots, gets the frozen beans out of the freezer, stirs the gravy…. and Thomas supervises the placing of the meat on the barbecue.

The BBQ is something else that makes us unique. We (by that I mean Thomas) cook outside five nights out of seven. The best $200 I ever spent was sending Thomas on a gourmet BBQ course with Raymond van Rijk in Havelock North  (plus $600 for the new BBQ!) Now instead of a good roast pork in the oven he cooks a fantastically delicious roast pork on the barbie. Mmmmmm.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | August 4, 2008

Tall Poppies (and short people)

Standing at 162cm (5’3″) I am not one of the world’s smallest people. Nor am I breaking any records for being the tallest. Just in the middle. That’s me. Average. And loving it.

We’re all good at some things and not at others. Some people break records while other people write about it. Some people make records while other people write about it. I like writing. I like doing what I do. So I thought I would take the plunge and talk about myself, after Freelance Market (www.freelancemarket.co.nz) asked me if I would be Miss July – the profile in the latest edition.

I wrote about myself for an hour (not a hard chore) and then got in such a state about whether or not it was any good that I had to send it to another journalist friend to critique. Which she did (thank you). And today it is published. I can no longer go through it, refining it, making myself sound good, which quite frankly, wouldn’t do me any favours because I think that’s as good as I get.

(Thank goodness I don’t get this worried about all of the other people I write about.)

I am a freelancer for the freedom. Freedom to work when and how I want to not doing anything that interferes with spending out-of-school time with my children, makes me miss something important to them, or goes against any personal principles I may have lurking in the background.

My tall poppies headline comes in here. Usually I’m quite happy taking the photos and writing the stories because that means I’m behind the scenes, as opposed to being the centre of attention. Today, I’m out there for all to see.

The annoying thing is that I will probably be gutted if I don’t get any hits on my blog in the next few days.

I can’t win with me, can 1?

Speaking of tall poppies – yay the All Blacks, yay Jodie Tod in the Silver Ferns (Central Hawke’s Bay girl) and let’s cross our fingers for the rest of the world getting sick of hearing God Defend NZ from the Olympic podiums of Beijing.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 31, 2008

Passwords, Paddington and pollution..

“Omigod Aunty Kate’s on Bebo!” cackle my teenage nieces.

And Face Book. And My Space. And Old Friends. I’m tired out from all this social networking.

Social networking is great for keeping in touch with people you don’t see often – like old school friends or people who live in towns where you used to live. But as for meeting new people this way – no thanks. I see new faces at squash, netball, golf, tennis, school, community functions… face to face. Not facebook, face to face. Talking using your vocal chords. Smiling using your mouth and crinkling your eyes – not simply adding a smiley face :). And let’s save the discussion on text language and grammar for another day!

By the time you add sites such as internet banking, favourite shops, Ezibuy, Flybuys, AA… I have officially run out of cats and children’s names for password ideas. I actually have a plan but I’m not going to tell you for obvious reasons 🙂 .

And then you have to remember which photos you have downloaded where, download the latest Active X Control (?!) so you can upload, and meanwhile, I’m not getting any work done!

One thing that has been handy on the Internet this week though has been Sarah googling for answers for her homework (as opposed to me just telling her the answers). Her Year 3-4 class has just started a new set of weekly homework tasks. They have a sheet with 30 questions and the answers all start with the same letter (A last week, B this week etc).  Some of this week’s questions were world’s most famous band (The Beatles – she knew), short-tail monkey (baboon – she didn’t), Yogi, Paddington and Rupert are… bears! 

One of the questions was what takes oxygen around the body? We got out our My First Body Book and it said blood takes air around the body. When I asked Sarah what was in air, she replied “pollution”. Can you tell they’ve been studying China before the Olympics?

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 30, 2008

As the storm moves south…

The rain has been and gone for Hawke’s Bay but there are some sizeable puddles left in the wake of the storm. Like the floods that hit Manawatu/Wanganui a few years ago, Hawke’s Bay appears to have missed the brunt of the storm (although again, there have been pockets of extensive damage).

Or once again, was it because of our wonderful flood control protection schemes and drainage systems?  Very likely. 

We didn’t have the PTA meeting after school yesterday because of the number of rural parents concerned about getting home again. The kids and I spent some time giving the lambs, chooks and two new piglets some more straw to keep their bottoms warm then when the rain eased off, we went rubber necking. Just down the paddock. Lachlan was very impressed with our very own waterfall (the water overflowed the floodgates and took a shorter route from the neighbours). Sarah liked the noise of the water (she likes metaphors so that kept her busy for quite a while).  Meanwhile, I was just nervous about keeping them away from the edge.

Lachlan and Sarah with our "little" creek

Lachlan and Sarah with our "little" creek

So today has continued as normal albeit a little wetter than earlier in the week. My thoughts are with the ones up north still mopping up and the ones down south who can do nothing but wait. Batten down the hatches Mum.

Floods down south bring back a couple of memories for me. There’s a photo from the Otago Daily Times in the late 1970s featuring the Rivett girls and a washed-away Heriot Bridge. That was the storm that saw the farewell of the township of Kelso. We also had to get the motorboat out to save some of the neighbour’s sheep from “Lake Dunrobin” as one low-lying paddock used to be called every time it flooded.

The other memory isn’t a first hand one. We had a crib (bach or holiday home to those outside of the South Island) on the shore of Lake Wakatipu at Kinloch. It had six foot of water through it, which was survivable (for the building, not so much for the mattresses and carpet etc) , but it was the southerly that brought waves crashing into it that did the damage. 

The insurance assessor told Mum and Dad he had entered the crib through the door facing the lake. What door facing the lake?! The whole front of the building had gone and he had gone through an internal door. Bits and pieces of our Kinloch home were strewn along the bank and throughout the lake frontage. Repeated versions of “omigod” and “strewth” was all that Mum could say on the video they took to record this disastrous event. 

It was the end of an era for the Rivett family at Kinloch – but the start of the new one, as we now have a wonderful new little crib up on the hill far out of the reach of floodwaters.

That’s enough from me. Suffice to say that Kinloch is my favourite place in the whole wide world (said without having visited the Greek Islands and the Caribbean).

looking towards the head of Lake Wakatipu, NZ

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 29, 2008

Rain, rain, go away….

You know it’s wet when you have to drive your kids 50m to catch the school bus. The wind had blown one of the gates closed and I got soaked just sneaking out to push it open, not to mention the small river running down the driveway.

The news is full of stories this morning about the damage this second storm is doing around the country. Northland isn’t too happy and it’s moving it’s way down the Island. Big explanation needed this morning about the train system being down in Wellington because of a slip near Waterloo – the kids have been on the trains down there a couple of times, which of course makes them experts on where everything is.

The heater’s on in the office, I have a hot cup of coffee in hand and lots of work will be done this morning, unexpectedly, as I should be at golf. Not only do I not have the appropriate wet weather gear yet (just started playing earlier this year) I’m just simply not going outside today!

I feel sorry for the people who have to work out in this weather – particularly Civil Defence, power and council staff, farmers… journalists (hehe).  I interviewed some farmers north of Napier yesterday who had between 95mm and 125mm in the first storm but we only had 30mm here and we’re well on the way to that again already. But it’s good rain for this area, farmer hubby says, as it’s not cold and will be filling up the dams. But even he admits it could be followed with substantial sunshine now. Now. Any time soon. Please. Can solar panels rust through lack of sun shine?

I’m supposed to be running a PTA meeting after school today while many of the kids are at rugby practice or playing on the playground. Now they won’t be. Nothing’s here to make life easier is it? It will give some parents an excuse to ditch having to take responsibility for fundraising while the same handful do all the work. I’m not bitter (honestly).

We have a big quiz night and auction coming up in Term 4 to raise money for a new senior playground. Now the good thing here is that most of the parents currently involved in the PTA have children in the junior school so at least we’ll get the benefit! We’re looking for all sorts of donations of goods and services to give away as spot prizes, team prizes or to be auctioned off to the highest bidder. The last time I did one of these it was for Playcentre in 2006 and we raised about $5000 in one night. It was awesome. Here’s to the same success again. Any ideas greatly appreciated.

Our Scholastic Book Fair sold over $1000 worth of books which meant we got 30% to spend on books for our school library. The librarian was thrilled – as were the kids!

I was going to launch into a spiel about how much schools are expected to fundraise over and above their operating budget. But the weather’s bad enough without adding that kind of negativity to the morning.

Stay dry.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 28, 2008

Boy George, Pat Benatar and Inxs

My first ever cassette was Culture Club’s Waking Up With The House On Fire back in about 1984. A Christmas present from one of my big sisters. I listened to it yesterday for the first time in about 20 years!

I kept a box of tapes, I’m not sure why, but I have rescued them from oblivion with the demise this week of the radio in my car (mental note to remember to put aerial down in car wash).  Boy George, Pat Benatar, Inxs, Tiffany… what memories these bring back for a little teenager of the 80s. I used to love John Cougar Mellancamp. Still do. We did many a trip to his sounds and I still know the words to Jack and Diane off by heart. So do my kids now. They even do the double clap at the start of J&D.  Now just plain old  John Mellancamp, he came in for a bit of a resurgence around here last year after being named as the Mission Concert artist, although he pulled out in favour of being named into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame. Honestly where are his priorities.

The issue of 80s music reminds me, sadly, that I will be missing my sister and brother in law’s 40th birthday party in a couple of weeks – theme 1980s – because we can’t justify spending at least a couple of hundred dollars each to fly from the North Island to the South Island for a couple of nights. I have been lucky enough to have two trips home in the past year once to scatter my grandparents ashes and the other thanks to a work trip. But my kids haven’t seen their cousins for a couple of years and that’s a real shame. I know, my choice to live at the opposite end of the country to the rest of my family, but still, I wish airfares were cheaper. There is grab-a-seat but in the two years of checking it even before the news pages or Trade Me in the morning I am still yet to purchase a ticket through there (although I do know of others who have, obviously). I feverishly text (texted?) my sisters the other day when Napier/Hastings finally featured again but none of us could get on the website. Next time. But no 80s themed party in a Southland woolshed for me.

Well time for me to get ready for the daily chat with the neighbour at the school bus stop. Maybe we’ll sob about the lack of shoulder pads, tube skirts and leg warmers in today’s wardrobe. Not.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 27, 2008

The price of milk

I’m glad I’m too busy to actually do this exercise, but I wonder how better off I am driving an hour to a main centre supermarket to beat grocery prices. I try to fit it in with another journey but it’s still a lot of petrol.

But after a chat with my neighbour over the school bus stop this morning, I think I’m doing the right thing. She was paying about $1 more for her milk than me, not to mention the bread, cheese, butter etc etc. How the purse strings are hurting at the moment. Living on our little farm we don’t have to buy meat either, except for the 5kg monster bag of chicken nibbles for $25) and my kidneys have convinced me to not pour a glass or three of wine every night so there’s a few more dollars off the weekly budget.

I love my morning chats. We solve the problems of the world out there between 8.25am when the bus pulls away until whatever time we realise we should be getting on with more pressing matters (like the lambs bleating pitifully even though the kids only fed them half an hour before).  Helen Clark should have an ear to our conversations – she would sure get a handle on what issues normal New Zealanders are facing every day. Like the price of milk or petrol, the lack of funding for our school, the speed the vehicles are travelling past us on the road or the way the media blast the weather forecasters if they don’t predict a “weather bomb” and blast them if they put out warnings but get it wrong. I’d rather be prepared for something that doesn’t really arrive in full force than not be prepared and get wasted. Civil defence is all about being prepared, as the TV ad campaign goes, and so we should be. Thank goodness I live in Hawke’s Bay where we are governed by a Regional Council intent on maintaining an awesome flood protection scheme (okay so I do some work for them, but I really do personally believe we are lucky to have so many stop banks and drainage systems).

Speaking of work, time to head to the other side of the ranges and see what the weather has done to the western side of the country. I’m off to Marton to do a followup on the young shepherd who won the the Beef Ambassador title at this year’s Beef Expo and then to Feilding to photograph the Young Farmer of the Year. And not leaning on a fence. His wife tells me that’s par for the course so far so I’ll make sure I’m unique. Leaning on the cattle yards maybe. Or his new Ford ute or new Honda four wheeler (is it obvious I do work for the Young Farmer Contest too?)

I had to fill out a profile recently on myself. It included a portion about why I am a freelancer. Freedom. That’s why. I love the writing I do for the likes of the regional council and NZ Young Farmers, even though it’s not hard nosed, cutting-edge journalism. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 26, 2008

Solar panels don’t work in the rain

There are definitely down points of being environmentally friendly – waiting for the water to heat up for my shower after getting absolutely soaked and chilled to the bone playing netball in a storm. Raining and cold. I guess we can be lucky it wasn’t windy too. 

We had the solar panel installed a few Septembers ago and while we don’t pay for any power for hot water in those sunny summer months, it is a different story in the winter months. Like now. But at least the fire was stoked up tight before netball beckoned and the house is warm (along with the coffee and cheese toasties we’ve been munching down on since getting home.

I guess waiting for a shower is a small price to pay for the overall benefits of sustainability. I interviewed a lady yesterday about sustainability and strategic thinking. Before you yawn, she got me thinking about how we make strategic decisions every day. It’s just that the ones she helps to make as a regional councillor are a lot more important! Deciding to have a go and the Norsewood/Takapau fun walk is a strategic decision. Deciding to get some training under the belt and physically putting on your shoes on the day all come down the track from the strategic decision.   

That was a great day – people of all ages could walk, run or cycle between the Central Hawke’s Bay townships of Norsewood and Takapau. My daughter, 8, cycled the 21km with her Dad in just over an hour while my son, 6, and I took half an hour longer but still finished. What a thrill for a parent to see their children decide to do something as major as that, then prepare and complete! Lachlan wasn’t even tempted when we passed the comfort of our home just 3km from the end.

And we even won a spot prize (mental note to water it).

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