Photographic Evidence

This Photographic Evidence is not particularly representative of my week. When I say that, it means I partied a lot. Wednesday night adventures culminated in going to Burger King for 1AM snacks, while Thursday night saw us get silly on sangria at a very lovely restaurant called Coco’s Cantina – then misbehave at the Wine Cellar:

liss

I get really stressed about taking my DSLR out to parties, particularly after my last one was stolen. So no photos… I need a compact camera to tote around. Suggestions?

However I can share with you the more serene moments of my week:

porch

ponsonby

bird on a wire

leaf

cyclops

oysters in season

chocolate chip cookies

Tess made these cookies, they were delicious.

P.S. What I was up to this time last May!

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I had a crafty, wholesome sorta week: scoping out interiors, using my window as a light-box, driving to my parents’ house for Mother’s Day, reading a pile of my favourite old zines, marvelling at the skies. Y’know, relaxing things.

light

lightbox

on a highway

sky

Though of course, (not so mild) fun times were had of course, like Harry’s hat party…

outlaw

t-j

Hat gang

It’s a great theme, an idea well worth stealing. Everybody owns at least one hat, and failing that they can always make one out of newspaper, ha. Hope you guys have a shiny, brilliant week!

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Book Club Meeting #1

vampire weekend

vampire vs zombie

Bonfire!

Burning up

long hair

Book club, bands, bonfires, beaches, best friends, braids. A brilliant weekend, I hope yours was smashing too!

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walking home

peel

Dead leaves and the dirty ground

Wolfe Street

fallen

no entry

pressed ponies

down town

Hello! My life has been very urban of late. I’ve been busy freelancing in the city, going to Zumba with Alex, doing research at psychic fairs, cooking, indulging in coffee dates and afternoon teas, event organising … which is all really nice. I don’t do so well when I’m bored. There’s also fun things like going out most nights to hang out in dingy little bars or listen to music (new favourites – The Artisan Guns).

spray free

mandarins

That said, I miss the country, where I can go buy organic mandarins on the side of the road. 5 bucks for 2.5 kilograms of juicy fruit. That definitely doesn’t happen in the big smoke.

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A trip to cinema

On Friday night I went to the cinema at the Matakana village. We were early, so we visited The Vintry – a wine bar that exclusively sells local wine. Oh, and they sell bottles of apple cider made ‘just up the road’. Yum!

The Vintry

Vino

The Vintry

Eventually it was time to enter the Paradiso theater, glasses and strawberry ice-creams in hand. Your eyes tell you no lies; there are over 1000 tangerine and orange blooms covering the ceiling. Cheeky tuis and fantails scale the walls, with a few hardy fellows peering out from the floral sky.

Paradiso Cinema

This is paradise
flowers

It’s pretty idyllic, with big lazy boy seats at the front and super wide seats for everyone else. The other two theaters are just as gorgeous.

Sticking with our ‘keep it close’ theme, we saw a New Zealand flick. Boy is written, directed and stars Taika Waititi:

It’s hilarious yet rather poignant movie, punctuated with sweet hand-drawn animations. I spent a lot of my childhood at very similar coastal settlement, in the same era. The garage could be my grandmothers, the rituals ring true and yeah, I even slept under the same orange candlewick bedspread. Boy is definitely a film to see if you can.

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Left column, from top: PAM tee and my favourite scarf. The Christchurch cathedral. A blanket made by my dearest Gran. Woollen skellybone gloves. The swimming pool at my old house. Leaf kicking. An old building on Ponsonby Road.

Right column, from top: The most majestic tree on Ponsonby Road, right by Prego (they make the best pizzas). Stripy socks. An urban rainbow. My small hands and a giant bird mug.

Autumn from the archives. I have gigabytes and gigabytes of photos just hanging around. What to do with them all? I had a few thoughts about making a book of all my travel photographs from last year… but then I blinked and it was March. What do you do with your images? Any ideas?

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Gigs, dancing, vineyard lunches, video shoots, getting out there with nature. I am always exhausted on a Monday. This is a good thing – I believe one should “sleep when you’re dead”. Photographic evidence as follows:

OBVPatterns

Freddie

hair-salon

Cruise

distance

boombox

melissa the spider

The light and landscapes have definitely changed along with the seasons – it’s all dusty greens, bone whites and lord-save-me spider browns now.

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Things I love: watching my little crystal garden grow day by day, revisiting archived notebooks, when my friends exhibit and show off their hard work, super-energetic smiling people, feijoa cider at my favourite bar, making blackberry jelly (jellies are clear, jams have pips) and taking photographs that look black and white.

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breakfast

skatepark

crystals

kashin

panda

dragon

festival

This weekend: Brunch with pocky, seaside walks, a party celebrating the engagement of two very dear friends, crystal growing, money saving (how cute is my Kashin the elephant coin bank?), coffee on a Shakey Isle, Songs, the Lantern festival, summer summer summer.

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Take 7000 revelers of all ages, set them loose over the pristine fields, beaches and bush of Tapapakanga Regional Park; then throw in numerous musical delights, stimulating art and provocative performances. Spread this mix over 3 days of nonstop glorious sunshine and what do you get? Splore 2010, that’s what.

Splore bills itself as a family friendly outdoor music and arts festival, and for the eighth time it went off swimmingly. The joy of the event is to be found in its diversity and sharing the time with your friends and family.

On arrival (there was no queuing because we carpooled like good little greenies) we had our vehicle thoroughly searched for liquor and other naughties, such as glass; and had a forgotten ticket promptly replaced by the friendly crew. Blue armbands for everyone over 18, yellow bands for any one underage, even babies who were just starting to toddle along.

Camp sunset

We camped in the Grasslands Camp – a giant meadow bordered by cicada laden bush and eucalyptus trees. High winds saw us have a hell of a time set up a borrowed gazebo. We settled in and cooked dinner, another hangi, with only a few minor mishaps (getting drunk, a minor grass fire). My friend Bridge also bought homemade Oreo cookies which went down a treat!

oreo

Speaking of food, over the course of the weekend I heard some positively orgasmic reviews of the jerk chicken, run by the same lovely people that were at Rhythm and Vines. Being a garden variety vegetarian I missed out on that BBQ treat, but did end up trying a warm ‘festival’. Festivals are best described as a traditional Jamaican fried dumpling, made out of slightly sweet cornmeal. They’re usually used to mop up gravies, but I found mine pretty tasty simply washed down with some homemade lemonade. There was also the standard hippie fare you’d expect to find – it’s not a real music festival in New Zealand without the One Love caravan and their pakoras.

Friday was musically the biggest day for me. (It’s also the evening where you still haven’t had a bad sleep in a horrifically hot tent, with girls pretending to be horses trotting down the walkway at 4.30am). We ate, got dressed and headed down the goat track to the beach. The Goat Track is notable as it was a narrow and steep pathway suitable only for the nimble. It was not recommended for ‘late night cavorting’ and indeed, I saw one intoxicated young man take a serious tumble through the scrub.

Splore by Hannah

International act Lupe Fiasco was skipped in favour of general wandering around the festival, enjoying the ambience. From what I did catch of his set, I ascertained the singles the crowd knew worked far more successfully than emotional ditties that he wrote ‘during a dark time in his life’. We headed to the Rum Shack for cold beer and energizing Train Wrecks… That’s Red Bull and Jagermeister folks.

Rum Shack

After New Zealand band Miniut performed (with vocalist Ruth Carr’s giant blonde nest of hair dominating the stage), it was time for electronic luminaries Basement Jaxx to bring the party. They did so with panache and booty shaking, care of their 2 of their back up vocalists who elevated the Basement Jaxx time slot from a DJ set to a banging live performance.

hippies

They performed a wide ranging set – from classics like Bohemian Rhapsody, their own hits Rendezvous and Where’s Your Head At, to heaters like Major Lazer’s Pon De Floor. After holding hands with a complete stranger while chanting for an encore, and wearing out the rubber soles of my shoes from all the prancing, it was time to head up the hill and collapse.

A 6.00am sharp sunrise on Saturday morning saw us rise earlier than was humanely acceptable. Within two hours, the heat was scorching and we were all resigned to hiding out under the gazebo. After a lazy breakfast and the best thing money could buy for the time – a trim flat white – we headed down the hill for a swim.

Me at the Lagoon - photo by Bridge

Swimming in the fresh water lagoon is one of the highlights of Splore for me.  The water is icy enough to chill your body right through to your bones, so once we’d finished lounging in the lagoon, we jumped into the sea, which felt like bathwater. I have never felt so refreshed in my life!

Lagoon by Bridge

Saturday night’s headline act was Los Angeles DJ The Gaslamp Killer. I admired Mr. Killer (real name William Benjamin Bensussen) for the energy he was putting into the performance; but in the end found him to be a show-pony more concerned with shaking his head of ringlets at the crowd than spitting good tunes out of the speakers. I left the boys to enjoy the ‘filth’ and headed over to the Living Lounge to see local band An Emerald City.

An Emerald City played wearing masks, surrounded by dancers wielding fire fans. They explored the space time continuum and soothed my by then weary soul with their mixture of east meets west gypsy psychedelia. They achieve this sound by mixing violin, Persian long-necked lute, sitar, flute; and traditional western instruments like guitar, piano, drums with panache.

2050 by Hannah

The Living Lounge was a straw strewn space that hosted workshops during the day (think drumming, permaculture and hula hooping), but at night transformed into a den of frivolity. On Saturday evening the Living Lounge hosted the Midsummer Night’s Dream 2050 party. Fauns, robots, fairies, demons and assorted creatures of the night swarmed in to watch burlesque, rope acts, acrobatic feats and general Shakespearean mayhem.

The art trail is always a highlight of Splore and this year was no exception. Best seen at night, the trail featured delights such as a robot with a disco in its chest, neon poems, a walkable harp, a giant xylophone for hours of collaborative fun, and Ride-In – a mini cinema with the projector powered by viewers cycling on rollers.

Art Trail by Dre

My lover

My favourite installation, the Tree Of Life, overlooked the main stage. It’s a giant Pohutukawa with bright leis wrapped around every bough. At night, a black light illuminated the tree, giving the leis an acid coloured glow.

Tree Of Life

Under The Tree Of Life

Sunday saw us relax, pack down the tents, have a swim and ponder how good the universe was to us. Simply – we came, we saw, we Splored.

Campers by Bridge

Splore Crew - photo by Hannah

Mark February 2012 down in your diary as an excellent time to be in the vicinity of the South Pacific -  then make your way to the Coromandel. It’s such an uplifting, horizon broadening, friendly event – I doubt you would ever regret making the time to go to Splore.

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Photographic Evidence

Another summer, another Waitangi Day. Here in New Zealand we annually celebrate the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. Most of us take a holiday, go to the beach, some people drive to Waitangi. I spent my weekend swimming, snorkeling, walking, visiting friends and drinking coffee.

atlas-salta

beach

architecture

boys

We also celebrated by having a hangi at my flat on Sunday night. We live in the city, so it was non-traditional of course – no pit-digging and playing with stones in the back yard. Rather we used a contraption that steams the food baskets in metal keg, heated by a burner attached to a gas cylinder.

cherrytoms

corn

Still, the warm feelings of sharing with your whanau are present; and all the food is prepared the same way my grandmother does it, carefully wrapping everything in cabbage leaves. We even added manuka chips to get that smoke-on-the-tip-of-your-tongue taste.

feasting

roof

Perfection. I hope you had a lovely weekend too, no matter where in the world you may have been.

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Photographic Evidence

smoke-skull

breakfast-burrito

beehive

SMK

S+L

deluxe

deluxe-coffee

Vessel

Oh Wellington! It was so good to see you again, as well as partake in all your fine establishments have to offer! Ernesto, Fidels, Sweet Mother’s Kitchen, Plum, Deluxe, Matterhorn, San Francisco Bath House. Burritos, Pimms, tacos and the legendary Bling cocktail from the Matterhorn (an adolescent dream achieved). Your stores were welcoming too, like the adorable Swonderful, Rex Royale, Hunters & Collectors, Slowboat Records and Good As Gold. But of course it’s the people make the place. Sweet Wellingtonians, you are so rad! I hope you will invite me back soon.

Babyface

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Photographic Evidence

Looks like I’m still on vacation guys! It’s the extended Long Days & Nights remix.

Juicy melon

Watermelon

Green tomatoes in our garden

Melting skies and melting glass

Glasses

my favourite wench

How nice is beach hair? I kid, I kid. Hope you are all super. I’m off to Wellington tomorrow morning (on a 6am flight, shudder) so expect lots of super-fun-time-fresh-eye photos.

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Photographic Evidence

isn't-it-funny-how-a-bear-likes-hunny

reading

one foot

nicole

vegeburger!

evening roses

This is a good photographic summary of what I’ve been getting up to in the last 2 weeks. Wake up, make a massive breakfast, read a little, go to the beach with friends, paddle, feast in the evening and then watch the sun go down. Repeat, while wearing a minimum of clothes, it’s hot out there! What a lifestyle, wish I could keep it – I’ve only spent one night in the city so far this year. Summer, you have my heart forever.

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