Matt found this in the paper road next door. It is a massive puff ball :)
Neat huh!
This went up and down the street with photography happening so I took one of it with our house. (really should paint that veranda roof to match the new roof we put up several years back now).
viv
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Monday, March 4, 2013
Elderberries and Walter Peak
We picked elderberries this morning as the wind was gusting hard and I figured there would be none left if we didn't get out there pronto. These are for friends who were to come later in the week as we already have ours half way to made into cordial. It's definitely getting into blustery autumn weather now.
Matt sorted all the hedge/tree branches into a better pile and has decided to try a hugel permaculture thing with them on the rough bank that has been a trial for forever. Hopefully this will give us a few veges next year.
And back to the holiday things.....
We decided to do a trip to Walter Peak on the Earnslaw for the day. James didn't want to come (the boys had been last holiday with grandma) but William did so we packed a lunch (being too poor to buy one after paying for the tickets) and set off on the boat. It was a lovely day and not too hot for once. There was a wind on the lake and Matt is now minus one hat. An errant gust sent it flying over the side.
There was a guided tour of the farm stuff with sheep and all but we mostly ignored that (we come from this area so it was nothing new) and took photos of this and that instead. There was a morning tea included in the ticket price and we made good use of that - very nice too with creamed fresh pikelets, cake and scones with tea or coffee.
Then we decided to explore a bit. We visited the shop but didn't buy anything and then walked around the shore line until we got to a gate. We then retraced ourselves a bit and ate our lunch on the beach. I got out my sketch book and made several sketches, one of which I think is rather good. Then we walked back and investigated the gardens and bought iceblocks as it was rather hot.
We watched the boat come in again for the last trip and caught it back to Queenstown in time for tea (we stayed through the second sailing in order to explore). It was a very nice trip and well worth the cost.
enjoy
viv
Matt sorted all the hedge/tree branches into a better pile and has decided to try a hugel permaculture thing with them on the rough bank that has been a trial for forever. Hopefully this will give us a few veges next year.
And back to the holiday things.....
We decided to do a trip to Walter Peak on the Earnslaw for the day. James didn't want to come (the boys had been last holiday with grandma) but William did so we packed a lunch (being too poor to buy one after paying for the tickets) and set off on the boat. It was a lovely day and not too hot for once. There was a wind on the lake and Matt is now minus one hat. An errant gust sent it flying over the side.
There was a guided tour of the farm stuff with sheep and all but we mostly ignored that (we come from this area so it was nothing new) and took photos of this and that instead. There was a morning tea included in the ticket price and we made good use of that - very nice too with creamed fresh pikelets, cake and scones with tea or coffee.
Then we decided to explore a bit. We visited the shop but didn't buy anything and then walked around the shore line until we got to a gate. We then retraced ourselves a bit and ate our lunch on the beach. I got out my sketch book and made several sketches, one of which I think is rather good. Then we walked back and investigated the gardens and bought iceblocks as it was rather hot.
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| The Earnslaw |
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| Setting off |
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| You could go visit the engine |
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| as you can see - stuffy and hot! |
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| Looking towards Walter peak |
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| The wharf at Walter Peak |
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| Looking up the valley |
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| the mountain ridge behind |
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| rather impressive! |
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| the farmhouse (massive as these always are) |
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| stone skipping, lunch bay |
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| more stone skipping |
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| view from the wharf |
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| coming to get us! |
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| towards Queenstown |
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| almost back |
enjoy
viv
Thursday, February 21, 2013
bee
Its been an interesting week round here and I seem to have reached perpetual motion territory. The weekend was full of patchwork mostly with a dash of Farmers Market (of which there will be more coming up) and a lot of heat.
It has now cooled off a lot and I have resorted to a woolly jersey. We were supposed to be taking a boat trip this afternoon but the sea was too rough so it has been slated for next week instead. I cleared up the kitchen and fancied up the potatoes for dinner instead. Not much of a replacement activity really but it needed doing.
I am down to the last 11 rows on my quilt which is good. Only about 460 pieces to go. It looks good - well I think so. I promise to post a photo when its a bit more complete.
Sprocket chased a bee and the result was...
As you can see...
This is the beach at Wakaouaiti.
We had tea on the beach (hot chips) on the way back from holiday. I have a special other holiday post for later too.
viv
It has now cooled off a lot and I have resorted to a woolly jersey. We were supposed to be taking a boat trip this afternoon but the sea was too rough so it has been slated for next week instead. I cleared up the kitchen and fancied up the potatoes for dinner instead. Not much of a replacement activity really but it needed doing.
I am down to the last 11 rows on my quilt which is good. Only about 460 pieces to go. It looks good - well I think so. I promise to post a photo when its a bit more complete.
Sprocket chased a bee and the result was...
![]() |
| He is fine now |
As you can see...
This is the beach at Wakaouaiti.
We had tea on the beach (hot chips) on the way back from holiday. I have a special other holiday post for later too.
viv
Friday, February 1, 2013
holiday/new stuff
I am still keeping my art school options open but it doesn't look financially possible at present. I have picked up a bit of work though and been made redundant from my old job unfortunately (on my birthday no less!) so I've kinda lost what I gained. Oh well...
The Arrow river is only a very short distance from where we were staying with Grandma. There is a very beautiful walk/bike track on both sides of the river here with a footbridge at each end of the part we use.
We did this walk almost every evening and sometimes in the morning too - although the boys mostly took Poppy at this hour. William also did a lot of bike riding on these paths. Swimming is not an option really as the water is absolutely freezing cold.
viv
Anyhow, here are a few more pictures from holiday,
The Arrow river is only a very short distance from where we were staying with Grandma. There is a very beautiful walk/bike track on both sides of the river here with a footbridge at each end of the part we use.
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| This makes it a great place to walk grandma's dog Poppy. |
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| Who likes water... |
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| and running... |
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| And looking at other dogs. |
viv
Thursday, January 31, 2013
holiday
Finally got some holiday snaps up so you get to see some of the really great trip we took.
I'll do this in stages as they occurred :)
This is the view from the top of the back road we took from Oturehua to Alexandra. It is all gravel but well used and I got William to use some map skills to get us to the right place. (I have been here before but I let him get it wrong a bit too :) There is lots of wild thyme and a rather good waterfall where an irrigation channel takes a walk on the wild side.
Some of the rocky tors were pretty spectacular too...
Then there was the obligatory family photo shot outside Cromwell before getting to Arrowtown for tea with Grandma.
And that's stage one :)
Enjoy
viv
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
I'm still sitting on that mission statement but at least I now have the photos to go with it. However, in the meantime, the school holidays got in the road along with a long overdue renovation of the bathroom and the kitchen. We decided that since we couldn't afford to move the toilet out of the kitchen, we would have to transform the kitchen into the bathroom and move the kitchen into what was supposed to be the new bathroom. (still following???? :)
So stage one was to remove as much of the kitchen furniture as possible into the entirely unstarted bathroom (which James was using as a bedroom) and shift James into Matts office where there is a loft bed (which he inhabits anyway as that is where his computer and the music keyboard hangs out. Still with me :)
Then we had to remove a wall and a door (unfinished because the bathroom never got any further) carefully so that they can be reused in the old kitchen which will be divided in half - one end becoming the bathroom and the other retaining the kitchen bench for laundry and dyeing purposes. (It's a long narrow lean to that was probably the original outside laundry/toilet). Then we replaced the (way too small) bathroom window with a recycled one from a demolition yard - larger by far and lets in lots of light. It came with a type of frosted glass which we could have replaced with clear but we rather like it and the view is straight into the bank so why would we bother. This is now installed and I spent a couple of days cleaning up the dust bunnies and their families and finding places for all the stuff which now has nowhere to go (Question - how much stuff can you fit under a double bed? Answer - lots if you move it up to its highest notch :).
We now have the job of moving the electrics for the hob and getting the plumbing put in. Fortunately the shower hangs out in the new hallway so will be operational at all times (if a little public) and the toilet will remain where it is although it will get a much needed facelift (new pan etc). There will finally be a handbasin and I get to crazy tile another shower :)
The present job is to remove the very rotten window in the new bathroom and replace it with the fancy one from the might have been bathroom. This is creating some headaches as rather a lot of the wall (inside and out) is also very rotten and we have no idea where the leak is coming from. We will have to live with black building paper for the moment as the budget is non existent but at least the rot will be gone.
The whole thing is turning into rather a marathon effort but the result should be a wonderful bathroom and an adequate kitchen which will turn into something much better if we can ever afford it. And no more washing of hands from the toilet in the kitchen sink!!!!! And no more washing machine in the middle of the back door to sidle around to get to the kitchen and toilet. And no more washing machine blocking up the floor where you want to get dried from the shower. I even get to rip up the horrible lino in various places and give our house a proper 100 year old birthday with some nice new clothes :)
viv
And I washed the socks......
So stage one was to remove as much of the kitchen furniture as possible into the entirely unstarted bathroom (which James was using as a bedroom) and shift James into Matts office where there is a loft bed (which he inhabits anyway as that is where his computer and the music keyboard hangs out. Still with me :)
Then we had to remove a wall and a door (unfinished because the bathroom never got any further) carefully so that they can be reused in the old kitchen which will be divided in half - one end becoming the bathroom and the other retaining the kitchen bench for laundry and dyeing purposes. (It's a long narrow lean to that was probably the original outside laundry/toilet). Then we replaced the (way too small) bathroom window with a recycled one from a demolition yard - larger by far and lets in lots of light. It came with a type of frosted glass which we could have replaced with clear but we rather like it and the view is straight into the bank so why would we bother. This is now installed and I spent a couple of days cleaning up the dust bunnies and their families and finding places for all the stuff which now has nowhere to go (Question - how much stuff can you fit under a double bed? Answer - lots if you move it up to its highest notch :).
We now have the job of moving the electrics for the hob and getting the plumbing put in. Fortunately the shower hangs out in the new hallway so will be operational at all times (if a little public) and the toilet will remain where it is although it will get a much needed facelift (new pan etc). There will finally be a handbasin and I get to crazy tile another shower :)
The present job is to remove the very rotten window in the new bathroom and replace it with the fancy one from the might have been bathroom. This is creating some headaches as rather a lot of the wall (inside and out) is also very rotten and we have no idea where the leak is coming from. We will have to live with black building paper for the moment as the budget is non existent but at least the rot will be gone.
The whole thing is turning into rather a marathon effort but the result should be a wonderful bathroom and an adequate kitchen which will turn into something much better if we can ever afford it. And no more washing of hands from the toilet in the kitchen sink!!!!! And no more washing machine in the middle of the back door to sidle around to get to the kitchen and toilet. And no more washing machine blocking up the floor where you want to get dried from the shower. I even get to rip up the horrible lino in various places and give our house a proper 100 year old birthday with some nice new clothes :)
viv
And I washed the socks......
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Mission statement
Objective - to build a body of work extending my love of landscape and the bones that lie beneath. By this I mean the rocks and soils as well as the real archaeological evidence that exists throughout the planet we call home. I find rock formations of any sort fascinating and am trying to draw out the essence of my experience and make it accessible to others in an emotional/spiritual way as well as a geological way.
Materials - I have an affinity for textiles and all that pertains to the various crafts that come under that heading so it is natural for me to use these as the medium for my explorations. I like to experiment with whatever is available including things that lie outside of textiles. I have looked into more three dimensional media but am much more at home with minimal input from this as I prefer surface detail and raised surface detail.
What I would like to gain from the proposed course is input from others as I find I don't really like to work solely in splendid isolation. I need to refine what I am aiming for. I have the beginnings of what I am after but need more to achieve whatever conclusion is out there to be found.
I have been working with the art fibre group for about 4 years now and think I am ready for a new and bigger challenge. This is something I have been aiming at for years and the time seems right to continue what I have started.
Vivien Dwyer
2012
In case any of you are wondering how this ended up on the blog - it is part of my entry attempt for art school next year. I did art school several decades ago before fibre art etc was even on the horizon so now I want to continue what I did then with stuff more appropriate to where I am now. The rest will mostly be photos of recent work.
Speaking of which, these are some experiments with marbling and a lino cut ginko leaf which I made a while back.
viv
Materials - I have an affinity for textiles and all that pertains to the various crafts that come under that heading so it is natural for me to use these as the medium for my explorations. I like to experiment with whatever is available including things that lie outside of textiles. I have looked into more three dimensional media but am much more at home with minimal input from this as I prefer surface detail and raised surface detail.
What I would like to gain from the proposed course is input from others as I find I don't really like to work solely in splendid isolation. I need to refine what I am aiming for. I have the beginnings of what I am after but need more to achieve whatever conclusion is out there to be found.
I have been working with the art fibre group for about 4 years now and think I am ready for a new and bigger challenge. This is something I have been aiming at for years and the time seems right to continue what I have started.
Vivien Dwyer
2012
In case any of you are wondering how this ended up on the blog - it is part of my entry attempt for art school next year. I did art school several decades ago before fibre art etc was even on the horizon so now I want to continue what I did then with stuff more appropriate to where I am now. The rest will mostly be photos of recent work.
Speaking of which, these are some experiments with marbling and a lino cut ginko leaf which I made a while back.
viv
Friday, September 7, 2012
Spring blossom
Well, Spring has sprung and here are some photos to prove it. The early blossoms are almost finished already and my bulbs are flowering madly too.
And a random photo of Sprocket:)
viv in nz
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Wow! I didn't realize it was a whole month since I posted. Not that an awful lot has happened apart from William's birthday (can't believe he is 14!) and the olympics of course.
William did get to do a small part for 'Cinderella' as a page boy with a cart with a fancy orange tree on it for about 5 minutes max :) He is getting a bit large for those parts with the Royal NZ Ballet though so this will most probably be the last page boy he plays. However, I have been wrong before :) I got the odd photo so here he is -
I should add that we had to use a heap of hair jell on him to get his hair into shape as it isn't long enough yet to tie all of it back.
Apart from that James is facing his first serious school exams with his usual style - no work to speak of because he thinks he knows it all! These are practice exams for now so I'm making no comments until the results are out.
viv in nz
William did get to do a small part for 'Cinderella' as a page boy with a cart with a fancy orange tree on it for about 5 minutes max :) He is getting a bit large for those parts with the Royal NZ Ballet though so this will most probably be the last page boy he plays. However, I have been wrong before :) I got the odd photo so here he is -
I should add that we had to use a heap of hair jell on him to get his hair into shape as it isn't long enough yet to tie all of it back.
Apart from that James is facing his first serious school exams with his usual style - no work to speak of because he thinks he knows it all! These are practice exams for now so I'm making no comments until the results are out.
viv in nz
Saturday, July 21, 2012
My room
I was answering a post at Frugal Kiwi and decided to actually do a proper inventory of the stuff in my room along with its history if I think it is interesting enough. I'm not going to do this all at once though - that would be epic!!
I'll start with the front wall. There is a large double sash window looking out onto Baldwin Street and the small garden (weed and bulb bed) with a picket fence in need of a touch more white paint. The curtains came with the house and are the only ones I actually kept. I use them to pin up larger pieces of work in the evening. They spend all the cold parts of winter closed as these are not double glazed and they take up half the wall.
On one side is an upright oak desk gifted to my Dad by an elderly client who I used to talk to a lot on my way home from school. (She was often out in her garden) I was sad to lose her. This contains oddments and photographs mostly. At present the top is home to a couple of moth eaten maiden hair ferns which got forgotten and which I am now nursing back to life. There is a shell and a set of cups and saucers, a fire alarm that needs a new battery and some elderly and retired hand knitted socks that have been washed (I will felt them a bit more and cut them up for flowers) and a small being made from an orange pom pom. There is my nice new apron I got from the apron swap over at 'Down-to-Earth' and the handbag I use when I think I might get a sketch done (its got my art notebook and aquarelle pencils in it) hanging off the side.
Next to that and mostly hidden by the dining room round table that used to be my sisters is an old book press that my grandfather got from somewhere. There are three chairs with the table. One came from Dad's office (oak upright) one came from my sister with the table and the third was recycled from the local rubbish dump for $2. The fourth person uses my computer chair.
Then there is the old two seater couch which is in the process of falling apart and has been used by three generations of cats as a scratching post. There are two dragon cushions on that which were originally given to my mum by a Chinese friend from Hong Kong. Above that is a lovely pen and ink tree sketch by a very good friend from art school (about 30 years back!) and one of those small wooden things that hold tiny bits and pieces. They are;
A wooden animal from a stall
A miniature car that used to be in my handbag for wriggly kids to play with
An ancient tiny cocoa tin
A row of ducks my Aunt gave me
A pottery chinese pagoda thingy belonging to my grandmother - she used it as a pot plant decoration along with a bridge.
A porcelain house
A clay duck and boat made by James when a lot younger
A wax dragon - also James's work
Two chinese pottery boys
A brass tea set (eastern style)
A wooden boat - William this time
A wooden duck from the Steiner fair
A porcelain lady - I made this one.
A wax question mark! William never could decide exactly what it was he made
Another small car - more recent and one of a set
And a knitted chick by my Mum which had fallen onto the floor when I took the photo!
All this in about a foot square!
Hidden in the corner is a Kauri chest containing mostly knitting needles and embroidery cloth and on top of that is a basket of ufos and another fern - this one is in good order despite being 36 years old. All the ferns are in pots I made during my years as a potter.
All this along just one wall!!!
Enjoy,
viv
I'll start with the front wall. There is a large double sash window looking out onto Baldwin Street and the small garden (weed and bulb bed) with a picket fence in need of a touch more white paint. The curtains came with the house and are the only ones I actually kept. I use them to pin up larger pieces of work in the evening. They spend all the cold parts of winter closed as these are not double glazed and they take up half the wall.
On one side is an upright oak desk gifted to my Dad by an elderly client who I used to talk to a lot on my way home from school. (She was often out in her garden) I was sad to lose her. This contains oddments and photographs mostly. At present the top is home to a couple of moth eaten maiden hair ferns which got forgotten and which I am now nursing back to life. There is a shell and a set of cups and saucers, a fire alarm that needs a new battery and some elderly and retired hand knitted socks that have been washed (I will felt them a bit more and cut them up for flowers) and a small being made from an orange pom pom. There is my nice new apron I got from the apron swap over at 'Down-to-Earth' and the handbag I use when I think I might get a sketch done (its got my art notebook and aquarelle pencils in it) hanging off the side.
Next to that and mostly hidden by the dining room round table that used to be my sisters is an old book press that my grandfather got from somewhere. There are three chairs with the table. One came from Dad's office (oak upright) one came from my sister with the table and the third was recycled from the local rubbish dump for $2. The fourth person uses my computer chair.
Then there is the old two seater couch which is in the process of falling apart and has been used by three generations of cats as a scratching post. There are two dragon cushions on that which were originally given to my mum by a Chinese friend from Hong Kong. Above that is a lovely pen and ink tree sketch by a very good friend from art school (about 30 years back!) and one of those small wooden things that hold tiny bits and pieces. They are;
A wooden animal from a stall
A miniature car that used to be in my handbag for wriggly kids to play with
An ancient tiny cocoa tin
A row of ducks my Aunt gave me
A pottery chinese pagoda thingy belonging to my grandmother - she used it as a pot plant decoration along with a bridge.
A porcelain house
A clay duck and boat made by James when a lot younger
A wax dragon - also James's work
Two chinese pottery boys
A brass tea set (eastern style)
A wooden boat - William this time
A wooden duck from the Steiner fair
A porcelain lady - I made this one.
A wax question mark! William never could decide exactly what it was he made
Another small car - more recent and one of a set
And a knitted chick by my Mum which had fallen onto the floor when I took the photo!
All this in about a foot square!
Hidden in the corner is a Kauri chest containing mostly knitting needles and embroidery cloth and on top of that is a basket of ufos and another fern - this one is in good order despite being 36 years old. All the ferns are in pots I made during my years as a potter.
All this along just one wall!!!
Enjoy,
viv
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