Sea Fever

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I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by;
And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,
And a grey mist on the sea’s face, and a grey dawn breaking.

I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,
And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,
To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife;
And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,
And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.

John Masefield (1878 – 1967)

This poem, a favorite of Sir Peter Blake’s was read at his funeral on December 14, 2001, in Emsworth, England.

Read more about the interesting life and his tragical death here!

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Ohinemutu und sein Maori-Jesus

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Ich fand das Kirchlein im Maori-Dorf Ohinemutu schön. Malerisch am Lake Rotorua gelegen liegt das anglikanische Gotteshaus St. Faith’s. Im Inneren gibt es Maori-Schnitzereien, handgewebte Läufer und bunte Glasfenster zu sehen.

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Beeindruckend ist ein Milchglasfenster mit dem Abbild von Jesus Christus im Maori-Umhang, der über den Rotorua-See wandelt. Ich habe Euch ein Foto mitgebracht. Ich fand dieses Bild sehr bewegend.

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Photo Diary: Penguins at Boulders

img_7828-largeimg_7818-largeimg_7817-largeimg_7798-largeimg_7805-largeKONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERAimg_7871-largePhotos: Enric Boixadós

 

 

Veröffentlicht unter Reise, Sabine’s world: A travel diary, South Africa | Verschlagwortet mit , , , , | 4 Kommentare

Napier – a Snapshot in time

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February 3, 1931, 10.47 am: The lives of the citizen of Napier changed forever. The city was leveled by a catastrophic earthquake with 7,9 on the Richter scale. The town and their surroundings got almost completely destroyed. The inhabitants of Napier did not know that the choices they would make from that day forward, would elevate Napier from an idyllic coastal New Zealand town to a world renowned, architectural, cultural and historical Mecca for Art Deco.

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Art Deco Guide Pamela.

„There have been 4 Napier architects, who chose 4 different styles“, says Art Deco Guide Pamela. Indeed, Louis Hay, E. A. Williams, Natush & Sons, and Finch & Westerman influenced the future of the city. They applied 4 architecture styles on the reconstruction of the city: Prairie Style, Art Deco Style, Spanish Mission Style and Stripped Classical Style.

These days in February Napier will once again be transported back to the Art Deco era of the 1920s and 1930s, celebrating its unique heritage, as well as fashion, music, art, cars and this incredible charm that made the Art Deco era so special.

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There will be a Depression Dinner, a Ruby Room Cabaret, the Gatsby Picnic, a unbelievable Prohibition Party, Vintage dance lessons including 1920s Charleston, a Vintage car parade with pre 1946 criteria applied, the Gatsby Tea Dance, and, and, and … Beautiful people in costumes and coiffure of those times will wandering along the streets. Foxtrott on the footpath, quickstep on the cobbles, ragtime on the road, tango on the tarmac and black bottom in the boulevard, as well as a Deco dog parade.

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Enjoy the journey through time with my pictures of Napiers Art Deco World.

Napier’s Winter Art Deco Weekend: July 14 – 16, 2017

Art Deco Festival 2018: February 14 – 18, 2018

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Veröffentlicht unter New Zealand, Reise, Sabine’s world: A travel diary, sl4lifestyle empfiehlt ... | Verschlagwortet mit , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Hinterlasse einen Kommentar

You Will Miss Me When I Am Gone

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This lovely wall painting I found in Napier. The beautiful nature of New Zealand’s fairy tern is expressed in the hope of enhancing an appreciation of these endangered creatures. The Wording You Will Miss Me When I am Gone is repeated as a reminder to treat nature with care.

More of the fantastic Napier Street Art here!

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Fähre Picton – Wellington

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thumb_p2130021_1024Ich liebe es, unendlich viel Zeit für mich zu haben. Und die hatte ich heute. Auf der dreistündigen Überfahrt von der Südinsel zur Nordinsel, von Picton nach Wellington. Es war ein schöner Tag. Strahlend blauer Himmel und ein ruhiges Meer garantierten eine ruhige Reise. Zuerst diese wunderschönen Bilder des Marlborough Sound und dann die vom offenen Meer der Cook Strait.

Ich ließ mich treiben, zum Song der Wellen und dann zu meiner Musik. Schön war es und so erholsam. Ich habe ein paar Fotos für Euch mitgebracht. Vielleicht könnt Ihr so diese schönen Momente ein wenig mit nachvollziehen. Euch allen einen glücklichen Wochenstart.

Ich grüße Euch vom Ende der Welt (oder ist es der Beginn?)!

Sabine

Mehr Infos zur Fähre hier!

 

Veröffentlicht unter My Sabbatical, New Zealand, Reise, Sabine’s world: A travel diary | Verschlagwortet mit , , , , , , | 2 Kommentare

Into the Sand

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The Sand Dunes at Cape Reinga.

Oh my God! This was real fun! I did it 3 times! Couldn’t get enough … But the hike up is heavy, really heavy. You sink into the soft sand. Till the knees! But once you are on top of these high sand dunes you know, there is only one way down: By Surf Board. Yeah!

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And here it is where the fun starts. And it becomes really fast. Brought to you some pictures of my Sand Dunes escape.

Tours starting from different places on the Bay of Islands. I started mine from the Northern city of Kaitai with Harrisons Cape Runner. Voilà!

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Stepping into the Light

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„I knew that it was time to go, so I opened the door and stepped into the light.“

Cheryl Strayed

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The Tragedy of Golden Bay

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Golden Bay, New Zealand, February 12, 2017.

It was a very sad, a very emotional day. Being a journalist is not a job, it is a passion and it is a lifestyle. You can’t never stop anymore to tell stories.

I got word about 400 stranded whales in a place nearby where I was travelling. At Golden Bay at the far north west of New Zealands South Island. A collective suicide, a longing for death? Who knows? We drove there to see and report about the amazing work of a small New Zealand organization, called Project Jonah.

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The beach was already closed to the public. As journalists we were allowed to enter and a vehicle of the Department of Conservation (DOC) brought us to the site. What I saw was heartbreaking. Wandering through hundreds of dead whale bodies, talking to people, taking pics. No, I won’t show to you the photos with the inflated bodies, the open intestines.

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I remember the whale pup who died beside his mother. And he had a smile on his face as so many others had. I have to document the amazing work of Lydia and Shirley from Project Jonah as well as of Brent from the Department of Conservation (DOC), who made our visit possible, and all the others who give almost everything for rescuing.

I will write about the mammals who got shot yesterday because there were no chances for them to survive. And I will write about those whales who made it back to the open sea, with the help of the activists, their boats and their pontoons. And hopefully, out there the matriarch whale will call the rest, with her sound, a very special one, asking all the others, the survivors, to move back in the right direction for survive. Not sure, if it works out. Hopefully! Only 100 from 400 whales survived. The pictures are in my mind for ever.

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Interview with Lydia Uddstrom from Project Jonah.

Lydia Uddstrom, a veterinary doctor from Auckland and member of Project Jonah since 2010, got the call last Friday (February 10, 2017) at 4.30 am. Within one hour she was ready, asked her boss for a leave and took the next plane down to Nelson on New Zealand’s South Island. Volunteers from all over the country arrived by this time and together they drove another 2 hours to Golden Bay. On the isolated beach of Farewell Spit happened just one night before the worst tragedy ever in New Zealands’s whale stranding history. „It was heartbreaking to see these big and powerful animals in such a weak situation. We tried to keep them cool, calm and comfortable“, Lydia says. Together with other volunteers she worked on the site from morning to late evening, between despair and hope. „We found here the most incredible people. Many volunteers helped. Even tourists and backpackers came and looked after us. They provided us with food and water. A farmer nearby offered us places for sleep.“

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Brent Hartshorne: „It is a real tragedy!“

Brent Hartshorne from the Department of Conservation (DOC) works with the phenomena of whale stranding for the past 15 years. Even after such a long time it is heartbreaking. „Especially when I see the young ones on the beach. It is a real tragedy. We had to euthanize 20 whales today by shooting them in the head. We could not move them back into the sea. Impossible, they were not calm enough.“ Normally there are one or two whale stranding every year at the beach of Golden Bay. But no more. What happened now is unbelievable, there are no explanations for this collective suicide. Maybe the matriarch (female leader) was sick and swam to the beach. In this case all members of the herd were following her.

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Shirley Keith, a volunteer at Project Jonah, came all the way from Christchurch to help. She explained to me that 400 whales in total stranded, 300 died, 100 animals got floatet back into the sea with the help of boats and pontoons, 19 of them came back to the beach where the refloating began again …

„We cover them with wet towels, we try to calm them, yes, some of us are singing to the whales. We make sure that their blowholes are open. That’s all what we can do, beside pushing them ashore, floating them out. They are such gentle animals, they understand and they show us what they like and what they dislike. When somebody of us tries to hard, they push us away.“ Shirley smiles. „And we are happy when we can listen to the female matriarch out there in the open sea. She calls the others and we do everything that the rest can follow.“

More about the work of Project Jonah here! All the volunteers pay the flight or transport to the sites by themselves as well as for meals and accomodation. The work of the organization is financed only by donations.

Photos: Enric Boixados

My article about the Whale stranding in The Huffington Post (in German): Das letzte Lächeln der Wale

Veröffentlicht unter Charity, New Zealand, Reise, Sabine’s world: A travel diary, Tierschutz | Verschlagwortet mit , , , , , , , , | 9 Kommentare

Foto der Woche – Life along the road

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West Coast, South Island, New Zealand, February 2017

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