A side of country

Today we left the lovely farm and homestead and drove back through the parched landscape to Wellington, New Zealand. abc123wedding-451

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This (above) has to be my favourite image of the New Zealand I saw this time..

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New Zealand country. We were driving through  the Wairarapa. They have not had rain in a while and it  shows.  Many of the dairy farmers are irrigating. I am in two minds about irrigation of fields to feed overstocked farms  and Dairy is even bigger business in New Zealand now. It is a bit hard on the land and the rivers. Living WITH the land and the rivers is a very different thing from feeding OFF  the lands and emptying the rivers.

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Having said that, we all had an excellent swim in the river, yesterday!

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River slime and all…

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My friends are crazy! I love that.

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The New Zealand landscape has the rolls and angles of a beautiful robust woman.

I very seldom manipulate images. My promise being that you will see what I see. But this image demanded black  and white.
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And so the journey continues.

I hope you all have a lovely day.

Your friend,

celi

 

40 responses to “A side of country”

  1. Lovely! Although had a giggle as in one photo the hills look like they have a hair net on!! Sounds like you are having a great time – enjoy my friend, the weather is shite back here and getting worse!!

  2. So nice to see again what New Zealand looks like in the summer! Get ready for cold weather back here, with big storms on the northeast coast!!! Just loved the river shots!!! And crazy friends are wonderful!!! xo

  3. The photos remind me of the eastern side of my own state here in the USA. The livestock photos make me anxious for your return and some updated pictures of the farmy animals. It seems you are returning to blizzard conditions near home so put away all those summer frocks and pull out the boots, mittens and layers.

  4. Lovely photos! Do you know what kind of orchard is in the picture of the hills with the hairnet? I love that. Looks a bit like apple orchards I saw in WA State. Rainy and cold here in Northern VA, the snow has missed us so far.

  5. This area of rolling grassland and what looks like oak forest is so much like Southern California – particularly Orange And San Diego County, it could be twins. I like that in one picture it looks like they have planted trees! This is the BEST way to bring water back to an area. Using Permaculture Design principles it would be a good idea to terrace with swales and berms (shallow ditches and low lying long mounds perpendicular to the ‘fall line’ of the land) throughout the hilly landscape to capture dew and rainwater so the water, when it does fall, stays on the land. I have seen this work as it also makes the top soil stay on the land rather than wash away in heavy precipitation. There are many ways in Permaculture Design to bring water back to an area. Geoff Lawton, famous permaculturist, has some really good videos where he has done that in extremely arid landscapes as well as normal pasture land: http://www.permies.com/t/3922/organic/Restoring-agricultural-land and one on keyline swales: http://permaculturenews.org/2009/11/30/keyline-swales-a-geoff-lawtondarren-doherty-hybrid/ You might share these with your farmer friends. Geoff is from Australia and is familiar with the aridity of your land.
    Love how open the landscape is!
    Enjoy your trip.
    Diann Dirks – thegardenladyofga.wordpress.com Certified Permaculture Designer

  6. Dearest C,
    I feel I have missed out on so very much since being on holiday while Pete was home. It was fantastic having him home for the extended period but it seems an impossibility to try and go through every ones posts from the last month.
    Have a wonderful and happy day friend.
    🙂 Mandy xo

  7. Great pictures of a country that I know little about save for tourism images and Eden Park!. Your belief that a jpeg represents what you actually see is, to my mind, flawed. it works as a principle but the jpegs that I see on my screen after I’ve shot some pictures don’t represent the colours and feeling that I remember…and so it goes on. I love the pictures any way, so I don’t know why I started that;)

  8. Hey, I got really excited at that photo of some wonderful silviculture going on. At least I hope that that is what it is. But it sure does stick out like a weird hair net over your beautifully voluptuous girl, but so very important to the Earth. 😀 It’s lovely there. So reminds me of the Okanagan, which is the middle of BC, past the coastal mountains and before the Rockies begin, and where my daughter lives. Rolling hills, meadows, lakes and rivers, vineyards and orchards. Love the country. (and, secretly, am greedy for even more photos!)

  9. Beautiful. I love all the rolling hills of New Zealand —my favorite photos from our visit there were of a “sheep jam” on the road we were traveling. They did not move very quickly but it was all good—we weren’t in a hurry. Enjoy your time.

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