Sunday, 30 September 2018

VISIT THE PLAYMOBIL & LEGO FAIR IN EL POBLE ESPANYOL

The Grandma visits Montjuïc
After a 25-hours flight from Auckland with a scale in Dubai, The Grandma is exhausted. The jet lag is killing her and because of this she has decided to leave their English studies during two days, to give enough time to her brain to put it in order and to give enough time to her body to get fit again.

Eli Jones explained her that today was going to there be a great Playmobil and Lego fair in El Poble Espanyol and The Grandma has thought that this visit could be a good way to start to recover herself.

Early, this morning, The Grandma has taken the bus and has arrived to El Poble Espanyol in Montjuïc, one of the most popular Jewish mountains in Barcelona. The Grandma has taken profit of this fair to visit the installations and enjoy with some examples of the Spanish culture in a beautiful place after buying some appreciated figures that she had been searching for a long time.

After remembering Herod lots of times, a cold and necessary beer has been the best Grandma's friend to help her to suffer the unfinished quantity of children who were disturbing, crying, shouting and running, in every one of the activities.

Finally, The Grandma has arrived at home saved, healthy and without any kind of psychological trauma produced by the pack of children.

More information: Barcelona Turisme

The Poble Espanyol, literally Spanish town, is an open-air architectural museum in Barcelona, Catalonia, approximately 400 metres away from the Fountains of Montjuïc.

Built for the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition, the museum consists of 117 full-scale buildings, which recreate Spanish villages. It also contains a theater, restaurants, artisan workshops and a museum of contemporary art.

The Grandma visits El Poble Espanyol
The idea was promoted by the Catalan architect Josep Puig Cadafalch and the project was realized by architects Francesc Folguera and Ramon Reventós, art critic Miquel Utrillo and painter Xavier Nogués. The four professionals visited over 600,000 sites in Spain to collect the architecture to bring together the main characteristics of the peoples of Spain.

The Poble Espanyol has replications of 117 buildings representing Andalusia, Aragon, Asturias,
Baleric Islands, Cantabria, Castilla-La Mancha, Castilla y León, Extremadura, Galicia, Murcia, Navarre, Valencian Country, and the Basque Country.  

La Rioja is not present because it was not a region when the museum was designed and built. The Canary Islands are not represented because the four designers could not travel to them for economic reasons.

More information: Poble Espanyol

Playmobil is a line of toys produced by the Brandstätter Group, headquartered in Zirndorf, Germany.

The signature Playmobil toy is a 7.5 cm tall (1:24 scale) human figure with a particular cherub-like smiling face, known as a klicky. A wide range of accessories, buildings and vehicles, as well as many sorts of animals, are also part of the Playmobil line.

Playmobil toys are produced in themed series of sets as well as individual special figures and playsets. New products and product lines developed by a 50-strong development team are introduced frequently, and older sets are discontinued. Promotional and one-off products are sometimes produced in very limited quantities. These practices have helped give rise to a sizeable community of collectors. Collector activities extend beyond collecting and free-form play and include customization, miniature wargaming, and the creation of photo stories and stop motion films, or simply as decoration.

Playmobil was invented by German inventor Hans Beck (1929–2009), who is often called the Father of Playmobil. Beck received training as a cabinetmaker and was also an avid hobbyist of model airplanes, a product he pitched to the company geobra Brandstätter. The owner of the company, Horst Brandstätter, asked him to develop toy figures for children instead.

Murder of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, WWI begins
Beck spent three years from 1971 to 1974 developing what became Playmobil. Beck conducted research that allowed him to develop a toy that would not be too complex but would nevertheless be flexible. He felt that too much flexibility would get in the way of children's imaginations, and too much rigidity would cause frustration.

The toy he came up with, at 7.5 cm tall, fit in a child's hand and its facial design was based on children's drawings, a large head, a big smile, and no nose. I would put the little figures in their hands without saying anything about what they were, Beck remarked. They accepted them right away... They invented little scenarios for them. They never grew tired of playing with them.

The 1973 oil crisis made it possible for Playmobil to be considered a viable product. The rising oil prices imposed on geobra Brandstätter, for whom Beck worked as head of development, demanded that the company turn to products that required less solid plastic material than the hula hoops and other large plastic items the company had been producing.

In 1974, the company put the first sets of knights, Native Americans, and construction workers on show in its display rooms. Initially, visitors were reluctant to accept the toy. Nevertheless, the toy was shown at the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg, which took place that same year. A Dutch firm agreed to buy a whole year's production. By the end of the year, geobra Brandstätter had achieved sales of 3 million Deutschmarks with Playmobil, one-sixth of the company's total sales. Playmobil began to be sold worldwide in 1975, and has remained a popular toy ever since.

Playmobil has been a successful toy line for more than 40 years and they have been a major competitor to Lego toys. Examples of directly competing toys in both their product line are not hard to find. Within the limitations of the Playmobil toy world, the Playmobil toys are usually realistic, and present accurate representations of arms, armor, costumes, and tools from a recognizable time period. Especially notable for their fine attention to detail are the modern construction and city life toys: cars, cranes, fire-engines, trains or boats.

More information: Playmobil

Lego is a line of plastic construction toys that are manufactured by The Lego Group, a privately held company based in Billund, Denmark. The company's flagship product, Lego, consists of colourful interlocking plastic bricks accompanying an array of gears, figurines called minifigures, and various other parts. Lego pieces can be assembled and connected in many ways to construct objects including vehicles, buildings, and working robots. Anything constructed can then be taken apart again, and the pieces used to make other objects.

The Lego Group began manufacturing the interlocking toy bricks in 1949. Supporting movies, games, competitions, and six Legoland amusement parks have been developed under the brand. 

Romans, Egyptians, Greeks and the Far West
The Lego Group began in the workshop of Ole Kirk Christiansen (1891–1958), a carpenter from Billund, Denmark, who began making wooden toys in 1932. In 1934, his company came to be called Lego, derived from the Danish phrase leg godt, which means play well. In 1947, Lego expanded to begin producing plastic toys.

In 1949 Lego began producing, among other new products, an early version of the now familiar interlocking bricks, calling them Automatic Binding Bricks. These bricks were based on the Kiddicraft Self-Locking Bricks, which had been patented in the United Kingdom in 1939 and released in 1947. Lego had received a sample of the Kiddicraft bricks from the supplier of an injection-molding machine that it purchased. The bricks, originally manufactured from cellulose acetate, were a development of the traditional stackable wooden blocks of the time.

The Lego Group's motto is det bedste er ikke for godt which means roughly only the best is the best. This motto, which is still used today, was created by Christiansen to encourage his employees never to skimp on quality, a value he believed in strongly. By 1951 plastic toys accounted for half of the Lego company's output, even though the Danish trade magazine Legetøjs-Tidende, visiting the Lego factory in Billund in the early 1950s, felt that plastic would never be able to replace traditional wooden toys. Although a common sentiment, Lego toys seem to have become a significant exception to the dislike of plastic in children's toys, due in part to the high standards set by Ole Kirk.

By 1954, Christiansen's son, Godtfred, had become the junior managing director of the Lego Group. It was his conversation with an overseas buyer that led to the idea of a toy system. Godtfred saw the immense potential in Lego bricks to become a system for creative play, but the bricks still had some problems from a technical standpoint: their locking ability was limited and they were not versatile.


In 1958, the modern brick design was developed; it took five years to find the right material for it, ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) polymer. The modern Lego brick design was patented on 28 January 1958.

The Lego Group's Duplo product line was introduced in 1969 and is a range of simple blocks whose lengths measure twice the width, height and depth of standard Lego blocks and are aimed towards younger children.

In 1978, Lego produced the first minifigures, which have since become a staple in most sets.

More information: Lego


We need to give each other the space to grow, to be ourselves, 
to exercise our diversity. We need to give each other space 
so that we may both give and receive such beautiful things as
ideas, openness, dignity, joy, healing, and inclusion.

Max de Pree

Saturday, 29 September 2018

THE PRINCE OF DARKNESS & THE MEDALLION OF ARISSIS

Claudia Jones & the book
The flight between Auckland and Dubai takes 17 hours and 20 minutes. It's a long flight and the best way to survive in it is reading. The Grandma is reading The medallion of Arissis, a fantastic book that Claudia Jones recommended her some days ago.

The book has been written by J.A.Martín and it is the first book of Corazón de Tinieblas (Heart of Darkness), an epic story told around the secrets of the Holy Scriptures of Tarnak and his lost story.

The Grandma is a great fan of J.R.R.Tolkien stories as well as the Arthurian Cycle in Britain. Before her visit to New Zealand she was talking about the figure of King Arthur and his influence in modern literature. During her trip to New Zealand, she discovered Hobbiton, the beautiful place where were filmed The Lord and the Rings and its sequels.

The medallion of Arissis combines these sagas and create an atmosphere of mystery which helps the great narrative giving to it a perfect internal tempo and an amazing external one. The  novel has great influences of the Tolkien's world in its plot and Arthurian Cycle in its writing and if you join the best sources with an excellent narrative, you obtain a wonderful story full of unforgettable moments.

The first edition is in Spanish but we hope we can enjoy Catalan and English ones very soon. It's only the beginning to the world of translations.

Don't hesitate and run to your closer bookshop or Amazon, if you don't like to go out, and get this amazing book. You won't regret. It's a must.


To help you, The Grandma is going to read a little introduction to cheer you to continue reading it...

Twenty years after the bloody battle of Órhadair in which more than one hundred thousand souls lost their lives, Írthimor the Necromancer returns to the gorges of Herdorín with the hope of finding the last of the Einherjar alive.

After that decisive confrontation against the lords of the Underworld in which there were neither winners nor losers, the lands of Gaia are sunk in a long lethargy. The power of the Shadows has decayed and the humans are dedicated to dispute the decay of their kingdoms, while the dwarves take refuge in their mountains and the elves in their forests, oblivious to any problem that is heard beyond their borders.

However, a dark power will be unleashed with the return of the Prince of Darkness...

More information: TedEd


The art of writing is the art of discovering what you believe.

Gustave Flaubert

Friday, 28 September 2018

RUSSELL IRA CROWE: THE ZEALANDER WATER DIVINER

Russell Crowe
Today is the last day in New Zealand. Tonyi Tamaki has been the best guide in the country and now she's going to join to the rest of the group in their flight back to Europe. Everyone has a special moment to be remembered but they have enjoyed every day they have been in this wonderful place.

Now, they are in Auckland's Airport waiting the departure of their flight to Dubai where they are going to take another flight to Barcelona. It's a long 25 hours-flight and every member of the group is trying to have enough leisure to not spend all the flight sleeping.

The Grandma has chosen two activities for the flight. She's going to study a new lesson of her First Certificate Language Practice manual (Grammar 32), and she's going to read the biography of Russell Crowe, the most famous Kiwi actor, most known since he played the role of Gladiator and won an Academy Award for it.

More information: Linking words 2
 
Russell Ira Crowe (born 7 April 1964) is an actor, film producer and musician. Although a New Zealand citizen, he has lived most of his life in Australia. He came to international attention for his role as the Roman General Maximus Decimus Meridius in the 2000 historical epic film Gladiator, directed by Ridley Scott, for which Crowe won an Academy Award for Best Actor, a Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor, an Empire Award for Best Actor and a London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor.

Russell Crowe in Gladiator
Crowe appeared as the tobacco firm whistle blower Jeffrey Wigand in the 1999 film The Insider, for which he received five awards as best actor and seven nominations in the same category.

In 2001, Crowe's portrayal of mathematician and Nobel Prize winner John F. Nash in the biopic A Beautiful Mind brought him numerous awards, including a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role.

Crowe's other films include Romper Stomper (1992), L.A. Confidential (1997), Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003), Cinderella Man (2005), American Gangster (2007), State of Play (2009), Robin Hood (2010), Les Misérables (2012), Man of Steel (2013) and Noah (2014).

More information: Biography

In 2015, Crowe made his directorial debut with The Water Diviner, in which he also starred. Crowe's work has earned him several accolades during his career and including a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, three consecutive Academy Award nominations (1999–2001), one Golden Globe Award for Best Actor, one BAFTA, and an Academy Award.

Crowe has also been the co-owner of the National Rugby League (NRL) team South Sydney Rabbitohs since 2006.

Crowe was born on 7 April 1964 in Strathmore Park,
Wellington. Son of Jocelyn Yvonne and John Alexander Crowe, both of whom were film set caterers; his father also managed a hotel. Crowe's maternal grandfather, Stan Wemyss, was a cinematographer who was named an MBE for filming footage of World War II. Crowe's paternal grandfather, John Doubleday Crowe, was from Wrexham, Wales, and one of Crowe's maternal great-great-grandmothers was Māori.

Russell Crowe in The Water Divine
Crowe also has English, German, Irish, Italian, Norwegian, Scottish, Swedish, and Welsh ancestry.

He is a cousin of former New Zealand cricket captains Martin Crowe and Jeff Crowe, and nephew of cricketer Dave Crowe. Russell has built a cricket field named for his uncle. When Crowe was four years old, his family moved to Sydney, Australia, where his parents pursued a career in set catering.The producer of the Australian TV series Spyforce was his mother's godfather, and Crowe was hired for a line of dialogue in one episode, opposite series star Jack Thompson. Crowe also appeared briefly in the serial The Young Doctors

Crowe was educated at Vaucluse Public School but later moved to Sydney Boys High School. When he was 14, his family moved back to New Zealand where, along with his brother Terry, he attended Auckland Grammar School with cousins Martin Crowe and Jeff Crowe. He then continued his secondary education at Mount Roskill Grammar School, which he left at the age 16 to pursue his ambition of becoming an actor.

More information: ABC News

Crowe began his performing career as a musician in the early 1980s, under guidance from his good friend Tom Sharplin, when he performed under the stage name Russ Le Roq. He released several New Zealand singles including I Just Want To Be Like Marlon Brando, Pier 13, Shattered Glass, none of which charted. He managed an Auckland music venue called The Venue in 1984. When he was 18, he was featured in A Very Special Person..., a promotional video for the theology/ministry course at Avondale College, a Seventh-day Adventist tertiary education provider in New South Wales.

Crowe returned to Australia to apply to the National Institute of Dramatic Art. I was working in a theatre show, and talked to a guy who was then the head of technical support at NIDA, Crowe has recalled. I asked him what he thought about me spending three years at NIDA. He told me it'd be a waste of time. He said, You already do the things you go there to learn, and you've been doing it for most of your life, so there's nothing to teach you but bad habits

Russell Crowe in Master and Commander
From 1986 to 1988, he was given his first professional role by director Daniel Abineri, in a New Zealand production of The Rocky Horror Show. He played the role of Eddie/Dr Scott. He repeated this performance in a further Australian production of the show, which also toured New Zealand.

In 1987, Crowe spent six months busking when he could not find other work. In the 1988 Australian production of Blood Brothers, Crowe played the role of Mickey. He was also cast again by Daniel Abineri in the role of Johnny, in the stage musical Bad Boy Johnny and the Prophets of Doom in 1989. 

After appearing in the TV series Neighbours and Living with the Law, Crowe was cast by Faith Martin in his first film, The Crossing (1990), a small-town love triangle directed by George Ogilvie. Before production started, a film-student protégé of Ogilvie, Steve Wallace, hired Crowe for the film Blood Oath (1990), which was released a month earlier than The Crossing, although actually filmed later.

In 1992, Crowe starred in the first episode of the second series of Police Rescue. Also in 1992, Crowe starred in Romper Stomper, an Australian film which followed the exploits and downfall of a racist skinhead group in blue-collar suburban Melbourne, directed by Geoffrey Wright and co-starring Jacqueline McKenzie. For the role, Crowe won an Australian Film Institute (AFI) award for Best Actor, following up from his Best Supporting Actor award for Proof in 1991.

In 2015 it was reported that Crowe had applied for Australian citizenship in 2006 and again in 2013 but was rejected because he failed to fulfill the residency requirements. However, Australia's Immigration Department said it had no record of any such application by Crowe. 

More information: Random Observations of Life

Crowe says he follows New Zealand's rugby union team, the All Blacks, and Australia in any other sport. Two of his cousins, Martin Crowe and Jeff Crowe, captained the Black Caps New Zealand international cricket team.

Crowe watches and plays cricket, and captained the Australian Team containing Steve Waugh against an English side in the Hollywood Ashes Cricket Match. On 17 July 2009 Crowe took to the commentary box for the British sports channel, Sky Sports, as the third man during the second Test of the 2009 Ashes series, between England and Australia.

Crowe & Sam Burgess, South Sydney Rabbitohs
He is friends with Lloyd Carr, the former coach of the University of Michigan Wolverines American football team, and Carr used Crowe's movie Cinderella Man to motivate his 2006 team following a 7–5 season the previous year. Upon hearing of this, Crowe called Carr and invited him to Australia to address his Rugby league team, the South Sydney Rabbitohs, which Carr did the following summer. In September 2007, after Carr came under fire following the Wolverines' 0–2 start, Crowe travelled to Ann Arbor, Michigan for the Wolverines' 15 September game against Notre Dame to show his support for Carr. He addressed the team before the game and watched from the sidelines as the Wolverines defeated the Irish 38–0.

Crowe is a fan of the National Football League. On 22 October 2007, Crowe appeared in the booth of a Monday night game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Jacksonville Jaguars. Crowe is also a soccer fan supporting Futbol Club Barcelona and Futbol Club Internazionale Milano. 

Crowe has appeared in 43 films and three television series since his career began in 1985. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for Gladiator (2000) and was nominated twice more for The Insider (1999) and A Beautiful Mind (2001), making him the ninth actor to receive three consecutive Academy Award nominations. He has also received five Golden Globe Award nominations (winning one), three BAFTA Award nominations (winning one), and three Screen Actors Guild Award nominations (winning one).

More information: South Sydney Rabbitohs

 

When I read The Water Diviner, I was having the same kind of visceral reaction that I would normally have acting in something.
I believed that I was the only person that could tell this story
the way it needed to be told. That's the real arrogance of a director!

Russell Crowe

Thursday, 27 September 2018

NAPIER/AHURIRI: THE ROAD OF THE GREAT WINES

Visiting Napier in Hawkes Bay
Today, The Grandma and her friends are spending their last day in New Zealand.

It has been a fantastic trip and they have enjoyed a lot visiting the most spectacular and beautiful places of the country and meeting with its inhabitants.  

New Zealand is a fantastic country where different cultures live together and where the ancient ones have started to be well-known and appreciated by the last generations of new comers.

It's sad to leave this country but they are very proud and happy of choosing New Zealand as their last destination. The Grandma likes wine and she has invited her friends to taste some of the best world wines in Napier in Hawke's Bay on the eastern coast of the North Island. They have returned to the North Island to say goodbye to their new Kiwi friends and to celebrate life and friendship.


During the travel from Queenstown to Napier, The Grandma has studied two new lessons of her First Certificate Language Practice manual (Grammar 30 & 31).

More information: Inversion & Question Tags

Napier, in Māori Ahuriri, is a New Zealand city with a seaport, located in Hawke's Bay on the eastern coast of the North Island. About 18 kilometres south of Napier is the inland city of Hastings. These two neighbouring cities are often called The Bay Cities or The Twin Cities of New Zealand.

Napier is about 320 kilometres northeast of the capital city of Wellington. Napier has a smaller population than its neighbouring city of Hastings but is seen as the main centre due to it being closer in distance to both the seaport and the main airport that service Hawke's Bay. The City of Napier has a land area of 106 square kilometres and a population density of 540.0 per square kilometre.


More information: Napier City Council

Napier is the nexus of the largest wool centre in the Southern Hemisphere, and it has the primary export seaport for northeastern New Zealand, which is the largest producer of apples, pears, and stone fruit in New Zealand.

The Grandma visits the vineyards in Napier
Napier has also become an important grape and wine production area, with the grapes grown around Hastings and Napier being sent through the Port of Napier for export.

Large amounts of sheep's wool, frozen meat, wood pulp, and timber also pass through Napier annually for export. Smaller amounts of these materials are shipped via road and railway to the large metropolitan areas of New Zealand itself, such as Auckland, Wellington and Hamilton.

More information: New Zealand

Napier is a popular tourist city, with a unique concentration of 1930s Art Deco architecture, built after much of the city was razed in the 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake. It also has one of the most photographed tourist attractions in the country, a statue on Marine Parade called Pania of the Reef. Thousands of people flock to Napier every February for the Tremains Art Deco Weekend event, a celebration of its Art Deco heritage and history. Other notable tourist events attracting many outsiders to the region annually include F.A.W.C! Food and Wine Classic events, and the Mission Estate Concert at Mission Estate and Winery in the suburb of Taradale.


Napier has well-documented Māori history. When the Ngāti Kahungunu party of Taraia reached the district many centuries ago, the Whatumamoa, Rangitane and the Ngāti Awa and elements of the Ngāti Tara iwi existed in the nearby areas of Petane, Te Whanganui-a-Orotu and Waiohiki. Later, the Ngāti Kahungunu became the dominant force from Poverty Bay to Wellington. They were one of the first Māori tribes to come in contact with European settlers.

Joseph de Ca'th Lon visits the vineyards in Napier
Chief Te Ahuriri cut a channel into the lagoon space at Ahuriri because the Westshore entrance had become blocked, threatening cultivations surrounding the lagoon and the fishing villages on the islands in the lagoon. The rivers were continually feeding freshwater into the area.

Captain James Cook was one of the first Europeans to see the future site of Napier when he sailed down the east coast in October 1769. He commented: On each side of this bluff head is a low, narrow sand or stone beach, between these beaches and the mainland is a pretty large lake of salt water I suppose. He said the harbour entrance was at the Westshore end of the shingle beach. The site was subsequently visited and later settled by European traders, whalers and missionaries. By the 1850s, farmers and hotel-keepers arrived.

The Crown purchased the Ahuriri block, including the site of Napier, in 1851. In 1854 Alfred Domett, a future Prime Minister of New Zealand, was appointed as the Commissioner of Crown Lands and the resident magistrate at the village of Ahuriri.


It was decided to place a planned town here, its streets and avenues were laid out, and the new town named for Sir Charles Napier, a military leader during the Battle of Meeanee fought in the province of Sindh, India. Domett named many streets in Napier to commemorate the colonial era of the British Indian Empire.

More information: Hawke's Bay


Let us celebrate the occasion with wine and sweet words.

Plautus

Wednesday, 26 September 2018

FOX AND FRANZ JOSEF GLACIERS, WESTLAND TAI POUTINI

Joseph de Ca'th Lon contemplates Fox Glacier
Today, Joseph de Ca'th Lon and his friends have visited two of the most beautiful places in New Zealand: Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers. It's not a comfortable trip because you must have a well-fit to resist the rythm of the mountain guides who walk across dangerous snowed paths. Because of this, The Grandma has preferred to rent a helicopter to contemplate the site and to have got an easier visit. The helicopter has chosen the best places to land off and they have walked across the snow in a short trip, in the easiest track.

During the flight from Queenstown to the Westland Tai Poutini National Park, site of the glaciers, The Grandma has studied a new lesson of her First Certificate Language Practice manual (Grammar 29).

More information: Verb/adjective + preposition
 
Fox Glacier/Te Moeka o Tuawe is a 13-kilometre-long temperate maritime glacier located in Westland Tai Poutini National Park on the West Coast of New Zealand's South Island.

It was named in 1872 after a visit by then Prime Minister of New Zealand Sir William Fox. Following the passage of the Ngai Tahu Claims Settlement Act 1998, the name of the glacier was officially altered to Fox Glacier/Te Moeka o Tuawe.


Fed by four alpine glaciers, Fox Glacier falls 2,600 m on its 13 km journey from the Southern Alps down to the coast, with it having the distinction of being one of the few glaciers to end among lush rainforest only 300 metres above sea level. 

Claire Fontaine visits Fox Glacier
The glacier was advancing between 1985 and 2009, although retreating throughout most of the last 100 years. In 2006 the average rate of advance was about a metre a week.

In January 2009, the terminal face of the glacier was still advancing and had vertical or overhanging faces which were continually collapsing. Since then there has been a significant retreat, with the 2009 high level clearly visible as vegetation line on the southern slope above what is left of the lower glacier today.

The outflow of the glacier forms the Fox River. During the last ice age, its ice reached beyond the present coastline, and the glacier left behind many moraines during its retreat. Lake Matheson formed as a kettle lake within one of these.

More information: New Zealand

Franz Josef Glacier/Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere is a 12 km long temperate maritime glacier located in Westland Tai Poutini National Park on the West Coast of New Zealand's South Island. Together with the Fox Glacier 20 km to the south, and a third glacier, it descends from the Southern Alps to less than 300 metres above sea level.

The Grandma & Tonyi visit Franz Josef Glacier
The area surrounding the two glaciers is part of Te Wahipounamu, a World Heritage Site park. The river emerging from the glacier terminal of Franz Josef is known as the Waiho River.

The first European description of one of the west coast glaciers, believed to be Franz Josef, was made in the log of the ship Mary Louisa in 1859. The glacier was later named after Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria by the German explorer, Julius von Haast in 1865.

The Māori name for the glacier is Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere, The tears of Hine Hukatere, arising from a local legend: Hine Hukatere loved climbing in the mountains and persuaded her lover, Wawe, to climb with her. Wawe was a less experienced climber than Hine Hukatere but loved to accompany her until an avalanche swept Wawe from the peaks to his death. Hine Hukatere was broken-hearted and her many, many tears flowed down the mountain and froze to form the glacier. Following the passage of the Ngai Tahu Claims Settlement Act 1998, the name of the glacier was officially altered to Franz Josef Glacier/Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere.


Franz Josef Glacier is currently 12 km long and terminates 19 km from the Tasman Sea. Fed by a 20-square-kilometre large snowfield at high altitude, it exhibits a cyclic pattern of advance and retreat, driven by differences between the volume of meltwater at the foot of the glacier and volume of snowfall feeding the névé.

Tina Picotes walks across Franz Josef Glacier
The glacier advanced rapidly during the Little Ice Age, reaching a maximum in the early eighteenth century. Having retreated several kilometres between the 1940s and 1980s, the glacier entered an advancing phase in 1984 and at times has advanced at the phenomenal, by glacial standards, rate of 70 cm a day.

The flow rate is about 10 times that of typical glaciers. Over the longer term, the glacier has retreated since the last ice age, and it is believed that it extended into the sea some 10,000 to 15,000 years ago.

This cyclic behaviour is well illustrated by a postage stamp issued in 1946, depicting the view from St James Anglican Church. The church was built in 1931, with a panoramic altar window to take advantage of its location. By 1954, the glacier had disappeared from view from the church, but it reappeared in 1997. This is due to the highly variable conditions on the snowfield, which take around 5–6 years before they result in changes in the terminus location.

More information: New Zealand

The glacier was still advancing until 2008, but since then it has entered a very rapid phase of retreat. As of 2018 it is again rapidly advancing. As is the case for most other New Zealand glaciers which are mainly found on the eastern side of the southern alps, the shrinking process is attributed to global warming.

There have been some incidents of jökulhlaups, outbreak floods from water-filled ice tunnels, at the glacier, with one destroying a bridge on the access route in 1989. Based on past variations, scientists expect that Franz Josef Glacier will retreat 5 km and lose 38% of its mass by 2100 in a mid-range scenario of warming.

The Waiho Loop is the terminal moraine of the glacier, and indicates the extent of the Franz Josef Glacier, about 12,000 years ago. Too rugged to be cleared for farming it remains covered in native forest.

More information: Glacier Country


The alpine environment is very delicate. I've been able to see change in the mountains in the 20 years that I've been climbing full-time. 
Glaciers have receded. The tree-line is changing. 
That's very rapid to see nature changing in a 20-year period.

Conrad Anker

Tuesday, 25 September 2018

VISIT ABEL TASMAN NATIONAL PARK AND COAST TRACK

Joseph de Ca'th Lon arrives to the helicopter
Tonyi Tamaki wants to visit Abel Tasman National Park at the north end of the South Island. She wants to kayak. She and her friends are spending the last days in New Zealand and they want to discover some natural places that they haven't visited yet.

They have got only one day to visit this wonderful site and they have decided to rent a helicopter to fly over the Abel Tasman Coast Track, a 60 kilometres long walking track within the Abel Tasman National Park.

Before starting the trip, The Grandma has studied a new lesson of her First Certificate Language Practice manual (Grammar 28).

Abel Tasman National Park is a New Zealand national park located between Golden Bay and Tasman Bay at the north end of the South Island. It is named after Abel Tasman, who in 1642 became the first European explorer to sight New Zealand and who anchored nearby in Golden Bay.

The park was founded in 1942, largely through the efforts of ornithologist and author Pérrine Moncrieff to have land reserved for the purpose. Moncrieff served on the park board from 1943 to 1974.

Walking along Abel Tasman Coast Track
The park was opened on the 18 December 1942 to mark the 300th anniversary of Abel Tasman's visit. Those in attendance at the opening ceremony at Tarakohe included Charles van der Plas, as personal representative of the Netherlands' Queen, Wilhelmina. The Queen was made Patron of the park.

The idea for the park had been under consideration since June 1938. The Crown set aside 15,225 hectares, comprising 8,900 hectares of proposed state forest, 5,809 hectares of Crown land and 554 hectares of other reserve land for the national park. The Golden Bay Cement Company donated the land where the memorial plaque was sited. The area's primary historic interest was the visit of Tasman in 1642, D'Urville in 1827, and the New Zealand Company barques Whitby and Will Watch, and brig Arrow in 1841. The site was also of significant botanical interest.


By 1946 the park had reached 15,534 hectares in area with additional land purchases. A further 844 hectares at Totaranui, formerly owned by William Gibbs, was acquired from J S Campbell in 1949 and added to the park. About 6,100 hectares have been added since. In 2008 an extra 7.9 km2, including the formerly private land known as Hadfields Clearing, were added to the park.

Covering an area of 237 km2, the park is the smallest of New Zealand's national parks. It consists of forested, hilly country to the north of the valleys of the Takaka and Riwaka Rivers, and is bounded to the north by the waters of Golden Bay and Tasman Bay. It contains some of the islands off the coast including the Tata Islands in Golden Bay, and Tonga Island, Adele Island, and Fisherman Island in Tasman Bay.

The Grandma is ready to kayak
The park does not extend beyond Mean High Water Mark on the adjacent coast. Between Mean High Water and Mean Low Water Springs, the beaches are gazetted as a Scenic Reserve, covering 7.74 km2 in total. The Tonga Island Marine Reserve adjoins part of the park.

Some of the birds that frequent the park are petrels, shags, penguins, gulls, terns, and herons. Possums, wild pigs, deer, and goats also frequent the park.

The Abel Tasman Coast Track is a popular tramping track that follows the coastline and is one of the Department of Conservation's Great Walks; the Abel Tasman Inland Track is less frequented. Other walks in the park, such as the Wainui Falls Track are considered short walks.

Access to the park is usually via the small settlement of Marahau. The nearest large town is Motueka, 20 kilometres to the south.


The Abel Tasman Coast Track is a 60 kilometres long walking track within the Abel Tasman National Park in New Zealand. It extends from Marahau in the south to Wainui in the north, with many side tracks. It is one of two main tracks through the park, the other being the Abel Tasman Inland Track, which stretches for 38 km between Tinline Bay and Torrent Bay off the main coastal track. The coastal track is well sheltered, and with mild weather in all seasons, it is accessible and open throughout the year.

The Grandma & Claire contemplate the split rocks
As one of the New Zealand Department of Conservation (DOC) Great Walks, the coastal track is well formed and easy to follow. It is the most popular tramping track in New Zealand, with most of the approximately 200,000 visitors to Abel Tasman National Park walking at least part of the track.

It can be walked independently or with commercial operators with guiding, camping, lodge stay and boat stay options. Following a protected coastline, many people combine walking and sea kayaking in Abel Tasman National Park.

To walk the entire track takes from 3 to 5 days. Single-day walks are popular, as many points are accessible by boat from beaches along the track. The only road access other than the start and end points, is at Totaranui. One of the most popular sections for walkers with limited time is from Bark Bay to Torrent Bay, a distance of 7.8 kilometres, which incorporates some steep paths, beautiful views over the two bays and a crossing of the Falls River by a 47 m swing bridge.

More information: New Zealand

To stay overnight in the National Park, visitors must use officially recognised accommodations. Independent travellers use DOC campsites and huts that must be reserved in advance during the most popular months. A small number of commercial properties occupy parcels of private land within the boundaries of the National Park and provide lodge-style accommodation. Some backpacker accommodation is provided by boats moored off the coast.

With one of the largest tidal ranges in New Zealand, the coastal track includes some tidal crossings that can only be negotiated at low tide. Independent walkers and sea kayakers need to have information on tides in the area to plan their trips.

More information: New Zealand


I always like to look for adventure when I go away. I have gone on several horse adventures with my wife. We also went along the Hurunui River on horseback in the South Island of New Zealand.

Antony Gormley