Friday, April 25, 2008

Last Stop in NZ, Auckland

Auckland is NZ’s largest city by far with about one third of the country’s 4 million people. It is known as the City of Sails and you can see why looking at the photos on the FLICKR site. Being our last stop in New Zealand we splurged a bit and stayed down at the waterfront in a Hilton apartment. We figured (correctly) that a nice kitchen would pay for itself since you can’t have dinner out downtown for less than a $100. We were on the wharf next to the ferry terminal and only used the car when we ventured out to the zoo.

We did the SkyTower and enjoyed the maritime museum and walked the docks checking out the sailboats every morning and evening. A highlight for Karen and me was sailing on an America’s Cup boat. The boat we sailed on (NZL41) was actually the Japanese entry into the 1993 Cup (the Nippon Challenger). In that series, this boat had a reputation of being one of the faster boats with one of the slower crews. We tried to maintain that tradition. We expected a 2 hour passive tourist sail, but actually it turned out to be a blast flying the genoa downwind and tacking back upwind under the harbor bridge. There were only 4 professional crew, so us tourists (about 20) had to provide power for the winches using the grinding pedestals. I always wondered how these things work and it turns out that it’s a complicated gearing system where each pedestal can be set to provide power to various winches. You could set it up so that all 4 pedestals were powering one winch (e.g. to raise the sail); or they could be split so that 2 were used to winch the mainsheet and 2 were used to control the jib sheet. The crew person at the winch yells commands at the crew that control the winch speed.

Conditions were perfect, the boat would do at least wind speed (e.g. 6 knots of wind = 6 knots of speed). I had the thrill of steering when the boat hit its high speed of the trip of 10.5 knots. Karen and Abby also steered and Karen was one of two folks who volunteered to go down below and help pull the genoa down into the boat. It was a great trip and made us look forward to getting back to our boat.

Our next to last day we had a fun trip to the zoo, bought a last round of Sylvanians for Abby, and I visited a forest economist and talked about some joint research efforts. Our last day was a trip to the maritime museum, a nice lunch next to the America’s Cup yachts and then we loaded our little rental car with all of our stuff and headed to the airport. Other than our folding bike poking its axle through the side of our suitcase and a unexpectedly high penalty for having an extra bag the trip home was wonderfully uneventful. We're in California, Disneyland tomorrow, and then head home Saturday. I’ve added more pictures to the FLICKR site and we’ll still be adding some blogs over the next few days.
Cheers, Bob

Rotorua to Auckland

We left Rotorua on Sunday morning and headed toward Auckland via the Coromandel Peninsula. We had two destinations on the Coromandel we wanted to check out. The first was hot water beach. This is a beach with thermal springs coming up under the sand. At low tide you are supposed to be able to dig a hole in the sand and have an instant spa. Karen carefully planned the day to arrive at low tide. There was a pretty big crowd (maybe 30 people) for a late autumn day at the beach with parking at a premium and lots of hired spades (rented shovels) among the crowd.

We tried the low budget approach and rolled up our jeans and dug through the sand with our toes. Noone we know of found anything remotely warm in the sand. A rogue wave did guarantee that a lot of folks (us included) went home wet and sandy. After a nice lunch we headed to our second destination Cathedral Cove. It turned out to be a great 2.5K walk through native forest and old radiata pine down to a beautiful beach. There was a small group of swimmers but most folks were just enjoying the scenery like us.

After the walk we headed for Auckland. Cheers, Bob

Saturday, April 19, 2008

On the Road to Auckland

We left Christchurch at 6:00AM on April 15th so that we could catch the 1:15PM ferry from Picton to Wellington. It seemed fitting that Marlborough Sound would be our last view of the South Island. We had two great sailing trips there and it's one of our favorite places. The ferry ride was uneventful. We made it off the ferry to our room with a great view by 5PM.


The next day we toured the harborfront including the national museum, took a cable care ride, visited the parliament buildings and enjoyed some great dining all within walking distance. We left early on the 17th headed to Rotorua. Rotorua is known as a center of forestry and forest research in New Zealand, at least to foresters. To normal people it's known as a geo-thermal resort area. I had an appointment with a forest economist here, meanwhile Karen and Abby hit the mudbath. We took a walk through a beautiful redwood forest. More pictures have been posted on our Flickr photo site (see links) and we've put some videos there too which is a new option in Flickr.

Today we took a floatplane trip over volcanos and forests, did some final gift buying and weighed our luggage to see if we would be allowed on the plane to Los Angeles. We told one of the floatplane crew about our 5 months in the South Island and 5 days in the North Island. He admitted that as a South Islander he thought that our ratio was about right. Tomorrow we leave for Auckland our last stop in New Zealand.

Cheers,
Bob

Monday, April 14, 2008

Last Day on Campus



It's Monday, April 14th and tomorrow we leave at 6AM to catch the ferry to the North Island. I had a last Skype meeting with Jin (one of my PhD students who is trying to defend her dissertation when I return). We brought homemade ANZAC cookies (a NZ classic) and all-american (Betty Crocker) brownies for morning tea. It was a small group since it is break, but we had a nice farewell. We made some great professional and personal connections while we were here, and of course the last day is a mixture of sadness about leaving and anticipation of heading home. We'll tour the North Island until the 23rd, spend a few days in California visiting family. What better way to greet the USA than a trip to Disneyland? What better place to remember which side of the road I'm supposed to drive on than LA? On the 26th we leave California and fly to Raleigh. Hopefully you'll see some North Island posts over the coming days. Cheers, Bob

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Bob's Typical Day

Earlier in this trip, my uncle Albert asked that I describe a typical workday. I’m finally getting around to putting it on the blog. The typical day I’m going to describe is a day that I’m lecturing. I’m teaching FORE 151, Introduction to Commercial Forestry (Forest Economics). I’m offering this course at double speed over 6 weeks, since I’m leaving the country before the semester is over. I teach 2 hour lectures on Tuesday and Thursday morning and I have a computer lab on Wednesday afternoons. You can look at the course website by clicking here. On the test page you can test your Forest Economics knowledge by looking at the midterm and final. You’ll note that the website is actually sitting at NC State. It was much easier to use web space I already had access to, rather than figuring out UC’s system.

I’ve made google map of the neighborhood with points of interest. It has more pictures linked to specific locations and you can zoom in to see individual buildings - click here.
I’ll leave for work around 7:30AM if I don’t go to the gym (which opens at 7), or 8:30 if I do. It’s about a 2K walk and takes a little more than 20 minutes. We mainly use the car to go to the grocery store, we can walk everywhere else. The temperature is cooling off and the leaves are starting to change so it’s really a pleasant time to walk. Though we have some dreary days, I haven’t had to use any of the parking permits I bought for rainy days when I teach. We haven’t reset our clocks for autumn here (turns out “fall” is an American term), so it’s pretty dark in these early morning pictures.

As I leave the house I’ve got a pleasant two blocks of walking through the neighborhood. Abby has school friends across the street and I've had nice coversations with the Asian lady next door. Her english isn't very good, but she wanted to apologize for the noise her son made driving his taxi into their driveway late at night. I told her that we never noticed (which is true), but 10 minutes later her son arrived. His mom told hime to come over and personally apologize. It was a little awkward, turns out he's a super clean-cut computer major and I tried to turn the conversation to his career goals rather than the engine noise associated with thenight job that funds his college education. I sheepishly accepted his apology and wished him well in school. The Asian population is the fastest growing minority in NZ and they are often maligned by the conservative political parties that want stronger immigration policy.
After a couple of blocks I get to the College of Education which is at the western edge of campus. It used to be a separate teaching college and has only recently been integrated into the university. A really nice part of the walk is Ilam field which is a huge green space set up for cricket in the spring/summer and rugby/soccer in autumn/winter. It's also popular for outdoor concerts on Friday afternoon. Abby’s school is just off to the right across Ilam Rd. at the end of the field. The main part of campus is directly across the road.
Crossing Ilam Rd., we still have to think about crossing the street, look right first then left. I’m actually pretty close to the Forestry building but I have to go around two huge science buildings (see Google map link above). As you go along this path next to a restored stream you come to an aviary with pigeons. When Karen and I were having trouble with internet access and costs on campus, we concluded that these pigeons must be the bottleneck in the offshore internet link. We’re still not sure, but they may be linked to navigation research as described here.

After the detour around Rutherford and van Haast Halls I’m in the home stretch, one more parking lot next to the Commerce Bldg before crossing Forestry Road to the Forestry Bldg. It is a very nice building with lots of trees on the outside and wood on the inside. Our office is spacious, especially considering that we are seldom both at the office at the same time. Karen's former project leader from Minnesota just arrived for a sabatical and I've had a few colleagues stop by too. It makes a routine meeting seem more important when you happen to have it on the other side of the world.

The forestry bldg. has several nice lecture halls, but mine isn’t one of them. I’m teaching a small class of 18 (17 one dropped just before the final) so I was lucky to get a classroom in the Forestry Bldg.

Since I was teaching first year students, I did some things differently. For one thing I’m grading participation and attendance. Given that New Zealand exports over half of its forest products, I’m doing a lot more on international trade. I’m learning a lot, which of course is what a sabbatical is supposed to be about.

Other than teaching, I spend the morning dealing with email from NC State. Until about 10AM I can correspond in real time (though it's a day later here). I've also used skype to talk to students at State about their work over the internet. While I'm on the teaching payroll I'm technically staff but I get to skip all of the mundane meetings and paperwork. Staff do have morning and afternoon tea, which is a great opportunity to hang around and talk to folks; usually about the U.S. presidential election or the financial crisis. Overall the School of Forestry here is about one-fourth the size of my department at State. This has its advantages and disadvantages. It does make it a great place for a sabbatical.

I leave the office to pick up Abby at Ilam School (which borders the campus) around 3:00 which takes me by Café 101 where Karen and I go for coffee (flat white) or lunch. After picking up Abby we sometimes go by the student union to get a snack before walking home.

I gave my final exam this week. My last assignment is due today (Friday). The car is for sale on TradeMe (you can see it here) , currently the high bid is $1100, we hope to get $1500. Karen and Abby are at Ilam school camp at Pudding Hill hopefully having a great time. Next week is our last week so things are getting a bit hectic. Cheers, Bob