Saturday 15 April 2017

NZ14:Day 28~Dec 17th: The Republic of Whangamomona etc.

Day 28. Whangamomona revisited
Well, I say revisited, but I merely passed through on September 3rd 2011 on my way from Ohakune to Stratford. I remember seeing the sign saying I was entering the Republic of Whangamomona, & decided then that I would return one day.
Today was the day.
I'd organised the car from AGL Rental Cars to arrive at 0930 at Ariki, & I was ready to roll when Greame arrived. He showed me where I could leave it without a time limit or paying, not far out as it happened, so I was sorted for my return from the mountain.
The green wheelie in the boot, II took the SH3 out of town at 1015, & my Gmap print shows I was scheduled to go from Inglewood to Stratford, & then left onto the SH43 ~ the Forgotten World Highway.
However, the road map showed there was a 'brown' road going east from the SH3 close to Inglewood, so I planned to use that instead & see some country.
My notes say I turned off the SH3 after about 25k, & I remember pulling over to ask some workmen on the road side whether or not the road I was planning to take connected with the road to Whangamomona. They said it did, & that I should take the Tarata Rd
TBH, I shouldn't've been surprised I ended up on gravel!
The day was overcast, & Taranaki was in cloud as I turned away from him in a meandering line east.
There was virtually no traffic, but the scenery was stunning.
Folded valleys & quiet roads


My notes are a total mess, as I was writing on the go, but they do record that there was about 1K of tarmac as I passed through settlements, & the rest on gravel.
This shows the spot where I took the 1st pic
You can just about make out the road through the bush















The notes also say I saw some brown ducks as I went over the Waitara river, & Googling the route now, Gmaps shows I was Way into the hinterland.
Another pic of where I'd been


This tractor was the only vehicle I saw for miles!
I think he was on hedge trimming duties?
Another view of folded hills & valleys
I regained the main road (the SH43) just short of Pohokura at 1220 & having done 75K ~ more than a 1/4 of which was on gravel. 
My notes say that, apart from the tractor, I'd seen 2 cars & one bike going in the opposite direction, & one camper van going my way (it had pulled over, as they kindly do in NZ).
I went left onto the SH43, eventually driving over the Whangamomona Saddle where I stopped for a couple of pics.
The Whangamomona Saddle info board
at 225m on theSH43


Looking towards the north
I took a photo of the Info-board so I could use the info in this blog, but I can't read it ~ even when I make it as big as poss :-( 
So, I sent an E to Stratford District Council, & asked if they knew what it said. The very helpful Melanie replied, & this is what she told me:
I can confirm the Whangamomona Saddle Heritage sign says the following:
The altitude of this saddle is 270 metres above sea level, similar to those of Strathmore (275m), Pohokura (270m) and Tahora (275m) Saddles.
Whangamomona Saddle was a major challenge in getting roading further eastwards in the early 1880’s.
The original road from Stratford commenced in the 80’s with thick bush being cut along survey lines.
Up to 250 bushfellers were employed at one time, living in primitive tent accommodation and supplied by pack horses, which at times could not get to them because of the difficult conditions.
The packhorse was the key to the opening up of the east.  At times five or six horses under the control of one man forged their way along the track, laden with goods for the bush camps of settlers.
The older horses seemed to get to know every deep hole in the road, but even so many were killed through getting bogged, falling into gorges or eating poisonous Wharanga (paper leaf).
The dray road finally crossed this saddle to reach Whangamomona and in 1897 Messer’s. Hewer and Thacker commenced a coach service between Whangamomona and Stratford twice a week both ways.  This was an 8 hour 15 minute journey, with lunch at Strathmore.
Despite gradual roading improvements and some spreading of ‘Shell-rock’ and ‘Burnt Papa’, poor roading hampered development of the eastern districts.
In 1903 settlers near Strathmore even tipped visiting Prime Minister Dick Seddon into a deep muddy bog hole after a day-time banquet in his honour, to emphasise their disgruntlement.
The Courtland buggy he was in was allegedly driven by a person bribed to do this.  Seddon, who knew some of the settlers, former gold-miners from his home town of Kumara in the Westland apparently took the point and funding for half a mile came the next summer.
The saddles on this trail eventually had permanent metal surfaces completed during 1920’s and 1930’s after the advent of the motor car.
A further major improvement was the upgrading and sealing of the Whangamomona Saddle commencing in 1981.
The adjacent walk through the Awahou Scenic Reserve features a variety of the natural bush cover of the district, including the distinctive black beech on the sandstone-topped ridges and spurs.
I hope this helps you and all the best with your blog  J
Isn't that lovely :-D  
And interesting to see what trials peeps went through in those days. Cheers, Melanie
The Saddle was about 1/2 way between Pohokura & Whangamomona, & I think it was the 2nd highest point of my drive that day. 
Back in the car, it wasn't long before I saw I was entering the little Republic.
Apparently, Whangamomona means the Valley of Plenty
Well, I had plenty of food & the hotel ~ see below
There were funny tufts of grass in parallel lines on the
hillside around this farm building. I wondered why.
On my way there, I'd noticed a rail line which the road had crossed a few times. Later I read an old poster in the hotel saying it had last been used in 2009, the year of my 1st NZ odyssey.
I reached the village at 1300 & was ready for lunch at the Whangamomona Hotel.
Having had a small brekkers & a fairly stressful drive on gravel in the middle of nowhere (!), I was ready for the Whanga Burger I ordered. Despite its size, & only managing 2/3 of it, I couldn't resist an ice cream sundae to finish me off ;-q
The Whanga burger & long black.
My notes say it consisted of beef, bacon,
egg, cheese, lettuce, tomato, carrot,
onion & beetroot. I left the beetroot &
doggie-bagged a 1/3 of it for later.

My notes say it was the caramel &
chocolate option!
There was an old bloke sat near me, getting waited on by various members of staff. It turned out he was the great-granddad of Evan. My notes don't say who Evan was, but it was possibly the young bloke my notes say gave me a map to Damper Falls?






I had a wander about the ground floor & found a photo record of the Whangamomona rugby teams across the years. Even in this little village, they have enough guys to chuck a ball about :-)
My original Gmap print had me going east along the SH43 for a bit, before cutting NE via Ohura to connect with the SH4, & then circling back SW to New Plymouth along the SH3. Having got a local map (from Evan?), I now decided to take the Damper Falls road as it would cut out a Lot of driving.
Before I left I took a photo of the retro general store.
Great name!















Back on the road it became sheep country with a capital S, & it was ages before I could stop hearing 'Click, click, click' in my head.
After I took this I was singing the Rolf Harris
Shearing Song in my head
I blame my brother. 
He'd had a Rolf Harris LP (remember vinyl?!), & I used to like playing it.
That was a long time ago: long before he got put away for being a naughty boy!
It's a good song, tho!

Australian Shearers - Song "Click Go The Shears" - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag8Yqvs8h54

2 Nov 2007 - Uploaded by mrtibbs6912
Australian Shearers the song "Click Go The Shears" is sung by Rolf Harris.
Wiggly hills by a wiggly road











Driving NE-ish along the wiggly SH43, I was reminded again how the land in central SI looked a bit like a green concertina.
Or green egg-boxes?

I have to admit that the SH43 remains one of my favourite ever roads to drive.


I came upon another saddle: this time the Tahora at 283m.
There was a blue car taking pics as well.
Well, its occupants were ;-p, & like the grey car on the Lindis Pass Rd., we kept leap frogging each other when we stopped for photos.
As previously, I read the Info-Board & took a pic, with the idea I'd be able to read it back home & months later when I wrote the blog.
It was a cunning plan, Baldrick, but as I'm on a tiny screen & my eyes are over 60 yrs old, it turned out to be a bit duff.
Fortunately, the very kind Melanie at Stratford sent me this info all about it:
TAHORA SADDLE
This point is almost equidistant (70 kms in direct line) from the Central North Island Mountains of Tongariro (1968m altitude), Ngaruahoe (2290m), Ruapehu (2796m) and the symmetrical Mount Egmont (also named Taranaki – 2518m). 
The mountains are a dominant feature of the heritage trail, and the subject of Maori legend. 
Ngaruahoe and Ruapehu are regarded as active volcanoes, and steam can sometimes be seen whispering from Ngaruahoe.
Tongariro and Egmont (Taranaki) are dormant, Egmont's last recorded major activity was in the 18th Century.
The Electricity transmission lines in view are the smaller Stratford – Arapuni 110 kv. (built around 1930) and larger 220 kv. Stratford – Huntly line completed in 1987.
Dense virgin forest was felled and burnt for farmland mainly between 1895 and 1910.  Government and private special settlements balloted blocks of land, most of which have been merging into larger units for viability ever since.
Many farms in East Taranaki had small dairy herds supplying cream until after World War II, when the advent of aerial topdressing and the Korean War Wool price boom of 1950 – 1951 led to the switch to dry stock.
Farming in this area today is almost exclusively sheep and beef cattle, with the more extensively farmed properties carrying up 15 stock units (sheep equivalent) per hectare throughout the year.
Because of the appalling mud roads in winter, the formation of papa beneath the topsoil were burnt in kilns into hard red blocks measuring 300mm x 150mm (see photo).
These unique kilns provided the burnt papa for spreading on the roads in the district up until around 1920.  Some fragments still remain on the sides of the road. 
The process of burning the papa in kilns fired with wood for two days was costly, however, and metal spreading gradually became an easier and cheaper option to improve roads.
The Tahora Saddle Road was sealed in 1989.
A view from the Tahora Saddle

The railway had been still along the roadside as far as Tahora, but went west at the junction where Raekohua Rd went right & east, & Ohura Rd continued as the SH43.

Shortly afterwards I drove through the Moki Tunnel, & pulled over at the far end for a couple of pics.

The cunning plan was to be able to read the info on these boards back home - as I did with the Moeraki Boulders ones back in 2011.
But this is a little screen & my eyes are several years older ! ! !
Happily, Melanie came up trumps yet again, & provided this info:
MOKI TUNNEL
The Moki Tunnel was the only one constructed of five that were originally proposed for the route to Stratford by Surveyor, Joshua Morgan, in the early 1890s prior to his death in the Tangarakau Gorge in 1893.
 The road over the Moki Saddle in winter proved to be almost impassable – “It used to be a swine, as soon as it rained you got bogged in a car – everybody carried chains”.
The tunnel was constructed in 1935-1936 by the Public Works Department based in Stratford at the time, with Mr. Townley, the Engineer, and Mr. Birss, the Overseer.
A coal-fired, steam-driven compressor with two power jack-hammers was on site at the Western Tahora end.  Coal was supplied from the mine in the Tangarakau Gorge and carted by Mr. Ron McCartie of Tahora.  Later a diesel-powered air compressor was brought to the site.
The spoil from the tunnel was used to fill where the road presently runs, and was brought out by a horse and skip on rails from the tunnel to the tip face.
The tunnel was originally built to about 5 meters height, but to allow modern stock trucks and trailers to pass through was lowered a further two meters in 1985 by Colin Boyd of Inglewood Metal Supplies.
The old road over the saddle through the Tahora Scenic Reserve is readily accessible from the Western (Tahora) portal of the tunnel and provides a pleasant walk through the mainly Tawa – Kamahi dominant Forest, there are also areas of regenerating hardwoods beneath mature Manuka.
Thanks again Melanie. I hope you enjoy the finished article! 
Shortly after the tunnel I left the Republic of Whangamomona, & the back of the sign said "Thank you and be happy".
Isn't that nice? :-)
Shortly after that was the turn onto Moki Rd & the way to the Damper Falls, so I went left.
I remember being surprised at the qualify of the tarmac & the condition of the road & verges: it reminded me of a road into a stately home, it was so pristine. 
However, I've just googled & street-viewed the beginning, & it's not so neat. Maybe they'd just had a tidy that day, or it was further down than I went with street-view.
Moki Rd led onto Mangapapa Rd & eventually the car park for the falls. I parked, & considered whether or not to go for a shufti. The info board said it was a 20 min walk, so even if I had walked really fast & stayed for less than 5 minutes at the falls, it would have eaten into my 'driving home time', so I decided to keep Damper Falls for another day.
I left the blue car in the car park (its occupants had got out and walked Falls-wise), and carried on.  At the corner where the car park was, Mangapapa Rd became Okau Rd, & I followed this for about 26K to Ahititi & SH3.
Once through Okau village a river appeared: it was the Tongaporutu, & meandered left & right across the road ~ which wiggled a bit through its valley, almost all the way to the main road.
I was to see the Tongaporutu again on my way back from Waitomo in March 2016.
Turning left onto the main road south at 1555, & ~ having done 155K so far, I followed the SH3 all the way back to the SH3/SH3A junction just north of New Plymouth.
On the way, I stopped for a coffee at a cafe just north of Urenui (It was 1620 & I'd done 183K), but they'd run out. How bizarre is that? I had an ice cream instead.
On the way south I passed a sign for horse trekking & took a note of the number, & passed a wood carving place & planned to visit before the car went back. 
I like wood :-)
Awesome NZ humour :-D

I also passed this sign. 
I stopped & did a uey to get a photo!

Turning left onto the SH3A, I arrived back in Inglewood at 1705, & went into the supermarket for some grub for tea at the camp house. I had about 16K to go, & there was still no sign of Taranaki through the cloud cover.
When I got to the gate it was all locked up. As was the camp house.
The DOC info centre was closed as well, so I used the phone to find out what was going on.
It turned out Gary'd lost the DOC remit to let the camp house & forgotten to tell me, but he offered me a place in the EcoLodge hostel in New Plymouth instead.
I wasn't chuffed.
Not only did it mean I had another 30K to drive before tea & feet up, but also that I couldn't stay on the mountain again :-(
Boo hiss.
Gary said he'd call ahead to let them know I was coming, & to make sure I got a good room.
He also gave me reasonable directions, & I eventually arrived at 1845, having driven nearly 280K, a fair bit of which was on gravel roads, & most of it at less than 50kph.
Phew!
At the EcoLodge, I was welcomed by Christina from Exeter, & Peanut the ginger cat. Christina took me downstairs where I had a double bed & a room to myself.
Back in the communal area, I met Julian from Hannover, Daniel from Turin, Koichi from Sendai, someone else from near Brussels, & a male/female couple from Bavaria.
Julian was teaching Koichi English. 
Granted, Julian's English was very good, but I'm afraid I put a spanner in the works by talking of the similar sounds & different meanings of lead, led & lead, the similar spellings & different sounds of rough, bough & tough, & showed them all the GHOTI conundrum.
Ask me if you've not heard of it.
I also said English was stupidly difficult with irregular verbs all over the place, weird pronunciation rules, & 6 past tenses.
All the Germans started asking questions about English, & I asked Ko about 'chotto matte'. He said it was a way to say 'Just a minute' or 'wait a moment'.
Thanks, Ko :-)
I read some more of another book I'd borrowed from Ariki, & stayed up stroking Peanuts & reading until gone 0100. Even when I eventually went to bed, I lay there doing sudoku for ages. I had no idea why I wasn't sleepy. I think it was nearly 3 before I put the light out?
OAO

Friday 14 April 2017

NZ14:Days 26 & 27~Dec 15th &16th: Methven to New Plymouth via Christchurch, & a car-less day

Day 26. Methven to New Plymouth 
I woke naturally before 8, so got up, showered, & had a kiwi & a coffee for breakfast.
As I needed less than 7Kg in the green wheelie for the carry on, I jiggered about with the packing, & decided to leave some of the stones I'd been carrying around since Paraparaumu in the garden at Big Tree.
I'm sure they'll be happy there: Lee's a nice bloke ;-p
The previous night I'd received instructions about a mall on the outskirts of Christchurch where I might find a charger, so turned right at the Blue Pub towards Lauriston.
Just outside Lauriston village I turned left onto Thompson's Track. I didn't know at the time that I'd be driving the whole length of it in Feb 2016. It's a great shortcut between the SH1 at Rakaia and the SH72 at Mayfield. It saves about 14K by not going via Ashburton.
Anyway, I'm ahead of myself!  .  .  .  .  .
I filled up at Rakaia ~ thinking it would be dearer than $197/l nearer the airport. Then I went left & north onto the SH1 towards Hornby & The Hub shopping mall I was looking for.
On the way up, I drove over that bridge across the Rakaia, & noticed how straight the SH1 was. I also noticed that it had a railway running alongside most of the way. I'd been in too much of a rush when driving north from Oamaru in 2011 to be rubbernecking as I drove, & it had been misty most of the way up.
The Hub is just south of Christchurch on the main road, & has free parking. As I was pretty early, I spent more than an hour there. My flight wasn't until 5 to 6, & it was barely half ten, so I meandered round the shops, bought food for a "2nd Breakfast" & the journey to New Plymouth, plus a charger for the camera battery, a new usb & a NZ adapter for the laptop plug.
I ate the 2nd breakfast in the sun & had a long black in one of the coffee shops offering seats outside.
Unlike in the UK, sitting outside to eat/drink in NZ doesn't necessarily mean you sit in other people's smoke, so no wafting was required while I drank my coffee & ate an absolutely yummylicious, dark chocolate, florentine.
From The Hub, it was fairly straightforward to get to Ace, so I filled up completely with $5 worth (it was $195/l at Hornby, so I'd been wrong), & went & lay in a grassy area across the road from the Ace depot for 40 min. of sudoku & sleep in the sun.
All was OK with car car, so I said goodbye to it. We'd done a lot of miles together since Greymouth ~ about 1,700K!
Ace gave me a lift to the airport at 1445, & when I weighed the green wheelie on the AirNZ scales, it was 7.7Kg. 
Bum :-/
That meant another re-pack was in order, so I had a brew, ate a load of the fruit I was carrying in my 2 bumbags, & transferred what I could from the wheelie into the bumbags! As you're not supposed to take several bags onboard, I hid the bumbags under the hoodie I was wearing round my waist.
It was a cunning plan I was to employ in NZ 2016 as well! Watch this space for details, but not too closely, as I'm still exceedingly behind, blogging-wise.
The previous evening I had decanted the pinot noir into yesterday's ginger beer bottle, so ~ to anyone watching, I appeared to be swigging Bundaberg, not a nice red ;-p
My flight was at 1755, so I wandered around the airport shops for a bit & eventually went aboard to a seat at the port-side window.
I really enjoyed the flight because the sun was westering & throwing the mountains below in great relief, & I had an awesome view from my seat :-)
Sadly, with no juice at all in the Lumix, there are no photos, so I just have memories of my 1st glimpse of Taranaki from the air.
A bloke in the seat in front was clicking away, so I gave him my card & asked him to E me some photos, but he didn't :-(
Because NP airport is quite a way north of town, & there was no public transport, I was being picked up by someone from the digs - Ariki Backpackers, & Sean introduced himself promptly. He said the shuttle-bus was outside & went to wait with it while I waited for my ruckie which had gone in the hold. While waiting, I went to Ladies where I stoopidly managed to dip the hood of the hoodie round my waist into the loo. Yuk!
Fortunately, a kind Security guy got me a big plastic bag for it. Cheers, mate :-)
It's only about 15 min. between the airport & Ariki Backpackers, but on the way I established that Sean hated soccer. 
A man after my own heart ;-p
You can't stop outside Ariki for long, so Sean dropped me off & I checked in. With it being so late, there was only a top bunk left :-(, but I dumped my bags, & took my loo-y hoodie & the pants I would be travelling home in down to the laundry.
While walking around the hostel I noticed a distinct smell of the sea. Lovely :-)
I asked the Ariki Manager, Dave, if I could swap to a bottom bunk & he said I could the next day as most in my dorm would be leaving. The next crew were arriving on Wednesday, but by that time I should be sleeping on the mountain again.
It had been another fairly long day, so I hit the sack at just after 9pm. The sun had mostly set by that time, & I couldn't see the mountain from my bed.
Ah well, to quote Scarlett ~ tomorrow is another day.

Day 27. New Plymouth on foot 
I can't find any notes about the 16th, but the photos should jog my memory!
I had no car, but saw from a map at Ariki that there was a coastal walkway, so I dressed in bikini & shorts, packed a bumbag, grabbed a towel & a bit of food, & headed to the prom ~ barely 100m from Ariki's front door. The 1st pic looks north, but I had plans to walk south & find
somewhere to lie in the sun & read the book I'd borrowed from Ariki's library.
There was a long thing sticking up on the prom which I discovered was the New Plymouth Wind Wand, & as with the Fir in Queenstown Gardens, it was quite tricky to get it all in shot.
This is what Wiki has to say about it:
The Wind Wand is a 48-metre kinetic sculpture located in New PlymouthNew Zealand. The sculpture includes a 45-metre tube of red fibreglass, and was made to designs by artist Len Lye. To residents, it is one of the main icons of New Plymouth. During the night, the Wind Wand lights up.
Costing in excess of $300,000 it was originally installed in December 1999 along with the Coastal Walkway, it had to be taken down within weeks. After repairs it was reinstalled in June 2001. The red fibreglass tube stands vertical in still air, but bends in the wind.
The Wind Wand is constructed out of fibreglass and carbon fibre. It weighs around 900 kg and has a diameter of 200 mm. The Wind Wand can bend at least 20 m. The red sphere on the top contains 1,296 light-emitting diodes.

This one was taken with Ariki
Backpackers just behind me



Turning south I detoured slightly into a small mall to get some more scran, then set off down the walkway along the sea front.
My first view that morning of
Taranaki through the trees
It was a lovely walk, but the tide was in so I couldn't get down to sea level for about 1/2 an hour.
I contented myself with pics of the colourful plants I found by the path.


























Eventually, after walking for about 2K, I came to a semi-circular beach within the breakwater.
The rock was flat enough to lay a towel down

Walking down it I found a suitable flattish rock & set out my sunbathing platform.

It was warm enough to sunbathe, so I did, keeping myself occupied with sudoku & the Ariki book for about an hour before turning over to see Taranaki towering above the pohutakawa & the rata.
Awesome :-D
The orange thing's a kayak
The tide had gone out quite a bit, but it was still deep where I was on the breakwater, so I dived off the rocks & went for a swim.
The water was gorgeous & I spent quite a while splashing around before swimming beach-wise & walking back along the breakwater to dry off a bit.
There'd been quite a few kayakers moseying about in the harbour which had added a bit of colour to the scene.
After finishing the book (I'm a fast reader), I set of to find Chaddy's Charters who do boat trips out around the little islands just off shore.
I had wanted to book in advance, but they said it would be better to book closer to the day as they would have a better idea of the weather then. They didn't take punters out if the sea was going to be too rough.
As I was due to spend a couple of days on Taranaki at the DOC hostel I'd used in 2011, and hoped to drive out to Whangamomona while I was at that side of the mountain, I got myself pencilled-in for the 20th, & set off back into town.
I must've had something for tea, & I think I bought it (& some more wine) from the little mall I'd passed that morning, but with no notes, I have no idea what I ate.
Knowing me it was local fish or steak :-q
However, I do remember being told about a light show at the local park/botanical garden, Pukekura Park, so I walked up there after tea.
The entrance to the Festival of Lights, Pukekura Park
There were lights in the trees & over the walkways, & a surprising number of people wandering about.
I think of this as the "Singing Ringing Tree"
It didn't sing or ring, but was very fairy-like
It was still light when I got there, but the trees overhead shut out most of the evening sun, & I had a lovely wander in the darkening wood.
Spooky-looking jellyfish lights
It was pretty late, but there were loads of families with small kids enjoying the fairy glens, & the sound of birdsong coming from speakers dotted around.
The kids in this boat were singing in Maori.
It went perfectly with the atmosphere that evening
I heard singing & went to look for it to find it was a group of teenagers in a rowing boat on the lake. One of the girls had a lovely voice, & her song really evoked the woodland experience. She was singing in Maori, but it could've been Elvish, the woodland scene was so perfect :-)
A light/waterfall
On  the return leg of my circular walk round the lake I came across a huge tree. I didn't know what it was until I E'd the Friends Of Pukekura about it in March 2017, but it is spectacular.
The Moreton Bay Fig
You can tell how huge this tree is by the
steps running up past it on the left
A helpful member of the Friends called Elise told me it was a Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla), & apparently it is the only Moreton Bay Fig in Pukekura Park, & this link https://goo.gl/S4dOMp shows Francis Arden may have been given it after he requested donations of plants for the park. It is believed to have been planted in May 1895!
Check out page 73 (pf 116) of this link as well:~ https://goo.gl/icJSq7  If you find the para, you'll see that ~ even in 1925, when the report was written, the Fig was said to be "a massive tree". I'm so glad I saw it, & will go & say hello in the daylight if I'm ever back in New Plymouth. 
The final pic of the day. You can't tell from
this snapshot, but the colours of the
lights changed every few seconds
By the time I started walking back to Ariki, it was dark, so I took a different route back & did a bit of window shopping.
I was due to have my car delivered at 0900, & I needed to be ready to roll, so I put the clothes & stuff I didn't need for 2 days in my ruckie, & Dave put it in the bag-store until my return on the 19th. The green wheelie was coming with me.
Then it was bed.

Considering this blog has been written without any notes, and 28 months afterwards, I don't think I did too bad!
OAO