• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Lots of Helpers

Our family's life in New Zealand

  • Home
  • Our Library
  • Math Freebie
  • Contact Us
  • Legal Policies
    • Disclosure and Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
You are here: Home / Archives for Away From Home

Away From Home

Tasman Glacier Walk

February 10, 2021 by NZ Filbruns 1 Comment

Day four of our trip dawned bright and sunny! We got around rather slowly that morning; it was nearly noon before we left our friends’ house in Twizel. We stopped at their shop in town and bought a number of things, including straw hats for a couple of us who didn’t want to add to the brilliant sunburns we were already sporting from our day at Cave Stream and Castle Hill! Then, we headed up along Lake Pukaki toward Mount Cook. We were delighted that the high cloud allowed us to see the beautiful mountain in the distance.

58-078a-IMG_4719I always enjoy the mountains along the way, too. They line both sides of the valley.

078g-IMG_0949

59-078b-IMG_4722

The lavender farm was in full bloom. This photo doesn’t anywhere near do justice to the vivid color.60-078c-IMG_4723

Mr. Imagination loved riding with Miss Joy. One of their favorite games was to play with wet wipes. They would scrub their faces and necks for a long time—cheap entertainment!078h-IMG_0090

We pulled off to get some pictures of Mount Cook on our way up Lake Pukaki. Esther and I, in the lead van, decided not to stop, but the other van wanted to. They pulled off at the official viewing place, which was crowded with tourists. We told them we would look for a place to turn around, but couldn’t find anywhere for a couple of kilometers. Then, we found an old pull-off, with no one there and a great view! We called the other van on the radio and told them to join us. Then, while we were waiting, Esther and I got the idea that this would be a good place to take a family photo. We wanted to do that sometime on our trip. We checked out the lighting in several places, and found a spot that worked, so she got out her tripod. 61-078d-IMG_4725

62-078e-IMG_4726

This was the view from the official pulloff. Gayle snapped it with his phone.

078f-IMG_20201231_120142

I got individual pictures of the children, too, and grabbed this shot in the process. This is Mr. Sweetie, Miss Joy, Simon, and Elijah.

080-IMG_7201

Esther took this one while we were figuring out lighting and backgrounds.

086a-IMG_4728

Everyone wandered around under the big tree for awhile as we got things figured out.

086b-IMG_4734

Lots of helpful advice about the perfect location for a photo!

086c-IMG_4736

One of the final results! I don’t think this is the one we ended up printing, though.

086d-IMG_4742

As we kept driving, the mountain showed up more and more clearly.

087-IMG_7209088-IMG_7210

078-IMG_7197089a-IMG_4745089b-IMG_4746089c-IMG_4747090-IMG_7214

The other mountains are gorgeous, too!092-IMG_7216093-IMG_7217094-IMG_7218095a-IMG_0954095b-IMG_0955

When we reached the carpark for the Tasman Glacier walk, we decided to eat lunch first. We found a little meadow where we could spread out our picnic.095c-IMG_0972095d-IMG_0974095e-IMG_0975

The walk to the viewing spot for the glacier is up a steep hill—a moraine. You find out just how physically fit you are—or not!095f-IMG_0978

See the glacier at the head of the lake? It has a thick layer of dirt and rocks on top. Mount Cook is in the distance to the left.095g-IMG_0984

While we were standing there, I heard a man, who looked like he was about 40 years old, tell his child that when he was born, the glacier was just below where we were standing—you could step onto it from the top of the hill. That’s hard to believe!095-IMG_7220

A close-up of the glacier.096b-IMG_4750096c-IMG_4751096dIMG_4752096e-IMG_4753

See the Paradise Duck at the edge of the lake?098-IMG_7223

Looking down the valley. You can see a sliver of Lake Pukaki in the distance.099-IMG_7224100a-IMG_4755100-IMG_7225

One of the Blue Lakes—which are actually green!101-IMG_7226

Another view down the valley.102a-IMG_4756

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Holiday Trip, Mount Cook, Tasman Glacier

On to Twizel!

February 7, 2021 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

After we visited the Aviation Museum in Ashburton, on the third day of our trip, we headed southwest to Twizel. We have friends who live there, and though we’ve been to the area a couple of times already, we always enjoy the walks near Mount Cook, so we decided to spend a day there. The drive is always interesting, too. I forget, in between, how dry inland South Canterbury is! It almost feels like a desert.

This is what we saw from the front seat, soon after leaving Ashburton. I think we had some tired people! The white cord, by the way, is a curtain-hanging cord. We strung it around the van, and hung pieces of fabric on it with clothespins at night when we slept in the van, for privacy. It worked well—but if we weren’t careful, like this day, it would fall down when we put down the sun visor.

35-066b-IMG_4670

As we traveled farther inland, the landscape got drier. 08-066c1-IMG_0913(Toes are a great entertainment when you’re bored!)

52-066c2-IMG_0920

36-066c-IMG_4672

This is the Burke’s Pass area.37-066d-IMG_467338-066e-IMG_467439-066f-IMG_4675

53-066g1-IMG_0922

We decided to stop for a few minutes at beautiful Lake Tekapo. The water is so blue! That is from glacial melt; there are tiny bits of sediment suspended in the water, and they make it reflect the blue of the sky.

40-066h-IMG_4679

14-066-IMG_7190This church, on the shore of Lake Tekapo, is one of the most-photographed sites in New Zealand.

04-067-IMG_719117-068-IMG_7192

My beautiful girls! Esther was quite sunburned, still, from the day before.41-069a-IMG_4688

Mr. Diligence took a picture of us trying to get the picture above.

11-069b1-IMG_093542-069b-IMG_4689

Little Miss loves to pick flowers, anywhere and everywhere.

18-069-IMG_719343-070a-IMG_469344-070b-IMG_4695

Miss Joy just wanted to play in the water.45-070c-IMG_469646-070d-IMG_4697

Mr. Diligence

19-070-IMG_7196

This is one of the several canals we crossed. They carry water for hydroelectricity.47-071-IMG_4706

Nearing Twizel—flat and dry!48-072-IMG_470949-073-IMG_4711

Here is Lake Pukaki! Mount Cook is usually visible at the far end; this day, it was cloudy, so we couldn’t see the peaks.50-074-IMG_471351-075-IMG_4716

Our friends have a pet bird, and our little ones loved it.54-076-IMG_20201230_19542755-077-IMG_20201230_195510

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Holiday Trip

Ashburton Aviation Museum

January 31, 2021 by NZ Filbruns 1 Comment

When we were planning our trip, Esther and I decided that we wanted to go to The Book Barn, a huge used book store. We knew that the men and boys in our family, for the most part, would not be interested, and would be bored waiting for us, so she looked online for other attractions in the area. She discovered that Ashburton has an Aviation Museum, and the website made it look and sound very interesting—and it didn’t cost too much, either. So, on the third day of our trip, we split up. Esther and I and Miss Joy went in one van to the book shop, and everyone else went in the other van to Ashburton. We met them there for lunch, after they had been at the museum for a couple of hours, and then we took a quick tour through, as well.

Before we got on the road, we had a look at a project our host family’s grandfather is working on. This is the empty tomb, built into a hillside, and on a hilltop nearby, he plans to erect three crosses. Inside the tomb, facing the empty place representing where Jesus’ body would have lain, will be a bench to sit on, and Christian literature.01-053a-IMG_0800

Miss Joy fell asleep immediately after we left.20-053-IMG_4625The father of the man of the family with we had spent the night owns this church, the Church of the Open Door. It is not used for services anymore, but he maintains it as a place for people to come in and pray or meditate any time they want to. He comes every Sunday to clean it.

06-054-IMG_7174

A close-up of the prickly pear around the front.13-055-IMG_7175

Inside the church.16-056-IMG_7176It’s always fun to see this giant fish when we got through Rakaia.

10-057-IMG_7178

The museum! It is at the Ashburton airport. The museum occupies three hangers. This photo was taken from the top of the restored control tower.21-058a1-IMG_0853

Little Miss wanted to show me the hospital plane. It was what she was most fascinated with.22-058a-IMG_4632

Inside was a stretcher and a place for an attendant to sit.23-058b-IMG_4635

02-058-IMG_717909-059-IMG_718112-060-IMG_7182

Little Miss under the DC-3.

07-062-IMG_7184

Going inside the DC-3. This plane is fully operational, but it would cost a million dollars a day to pay for insurance to fly it.

24-063a-IMG_464025-063b-IMG_4641

The DC-3 was probably the one Elijah was most fascinated with.

15-063-IMG_7185

Someone was amused at this sign. They didn’t think they wanted to have to be rescued!26-064a-IMG_4643

This helicopter was used during the Korean War to transport wounded soldiers away from the front. A stretcher was strapped on to each side, on the outside, with a hood to protect the wounded man from the blast of air while flying. The helicopter’s tail is in another part of the room; it was too big to leave on.27-064b-IMG_4645

A jet engine.28-064c-IMG_4649

A sprayer plane, used to spread fertilizer on hilly farms.29-064d-IMG_465330-064e-IMG_465531-064f-IMG_465832-064g-IMG_4661This may have been the first plane ever flown. It was built at the same time as the Wright Brothers’ plane, and possibly flown first, but didn’t get the publicity theirs did.

05-064-IMG_7186

The restored 1940s control tower. There was an airforce base near here during World War II.33-065a-IMG_4663

Mr. Imagination’s favorite thing at the museum was this manual typewriter! He was fascinated by it.03-065-IMG_718734-066a-IMG_4664

We really enjoyed our visit to this museum. It was definitely worth spending time at! Two days a week, one of which happened to be the day we were there, volunteers come in to work on restoring the planes, and you can talk to them. The founder of the museum was there when we were, and Gayle and some of the boys spent a lot of time talking to him.
Here are a few seconds of video footage that Mr. Diligence got inside the larger hanger.

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Holiday Trip, Video

Castle Hill and Beyond

January 20, 2021 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

After we left Cave Stream, on the second day of our trip, we went to Castle Hill. We have been there two other times, but the boys have never been able to spend as much time exploring the rocks as they want to, so they wanted to go back.

Mr. Diligence took a few pictures while we drove between Cave Stream and Castle Hill.

33-034d-IMG_0740

There is our van ahead of the one he was in.34-034e-IMG_074235-034f-IMG_074936-034g-IMG_0752We quickly separated into groups to walk out to the rocks. Lest you think this photo has been artificially colored, that is the way the sky looked that day! It was so blue I couldn’t stop looking at it!

37-034h-IMG_460438-034i-IMG_0756

29-034-IMG_7149We almost didn’t stop when we saw how full the carpark was, but then we found space in a second park, to the right here.

40-035a-IMG_0757

39-035-IMG_715041-036-IMG_715142-037-IMG_7152

The boys, of course, hustled out to the rocks quickly and started climbing.

43-037a-IMG_460744-038-IMG_715345-039-IMG_715446-039a-IMG_460847-041-IMG_715648-042-IMG_7157

Mr. Diligence, Simon, and Mr. Sweetie49-042a-IMG_461250-043-IMG_7158

This is a tired baby! Esther and I soon decided to take her back to the van and give her a nap on the bed. Though it was quite a hot day, it was very pleasant in that van with all the windows and the side door open. There was a nice breeze, and it has a high roof, which means the heat isn’t trapped down where we sat. She got to sleep for an hour before we left.51-044-IMG_715952-045-IMG_716053-046-IMG_716154-047-IMG_7163

Gayle and Little Miss did some exploring on their own, and had fun experimenting with the camera on his new phone.55-048a-IMG_20201229_14133856-048b-IMG_20201229_14250357-048c-IMG_20201229_14384958-048d-IMG_20201229_144220

Mr. Diligence had his camera with him, too, so here are perspectives from high up on the rocks. This is Mr. Imagination and Mr. Sweetie.

59-048e-IMG_0758Simon and Elijah had to help each other up this section. It was nearly perpendicular to the ground.

60-048f-IMG_076361-048g-IMG_076862-048h-IMG_077263-048i-IMG_077464-048j-IMG_077665-048k-IMG_077866-048l-IMG_077967-048m-IMG_078068-048n-IMG_078169-048o-IMG_0782

Mr. Sweetie pondering life from the top of a rock.70-048p-IMG_078371-048q-IMG_078572-048r-IMG_078973-048s-IMG_0790

Wild roses74-048t-IMG_079575-048u-IMG_079776-048v-IMG_0798The adventurers are coming back! Esther zoomed her camera in to take this from the van. Left to right are Mr. Imagination, Simon, Elijah, Mr. Diligence, and Mr. Sweetie.78-049a-IMG_461879-049b-IMG_0799

Soon after we left Castle Hill, we went over Porter’s Pass, leaving the high basin. 77-049-IMG_716780-050-IMG_716881-050a-IMG_462182-050b-IMG_462383-051-IMG_7169

Then, we were suddenly down on the plains! The road drops fast as you come down from the summit of Porter’s.84-052-IMG_7172

We spent this night with friends. Their house was too small for any extras, so we happily slept in the vans in their driveway. After a day in the sun, everyone slept soundly, though our faces felt hot!

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Holiday Trip, Mountains

Cave Stream

January 17, 2021 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

On the second day of our holiday, we packed up the vans in Arthur’s Pass and headed out about mid-morning. Our first destination for the day was Cave Stream. Gayle and Simon had gone through it four years ago, and now all the boys, as well as Little Miss, wanted to go through. Esther and I did not! We don’t think it’s that fun to wade through waist-deep, cold water, in the dark!

Here is some of the scenery we enjoyed on our way down from the pass, through the high basin. It was such a gorgeous day!

01-016-IMG_712602-016a-IMG_456403-016b-IMG_456804-016c-IMG_456905-016d-IMG_457106-016e-IMG_457207-016f-IMG_457508-017-IMG_712909-019-IMG_7132There were a lot of cars at the carpark when we arrived.

10-020a-IMG_0739

It was incredibly beautiful there! Pictures can’t do it justice—you have to actually be there to really get a feel for the beauty. This is only a tiny glimpse. You could turn around in a complete circle and see amazing scenery all the way around. Also, in a photo you can’t capture the feel of the warm breeze, the fresh mountain air and the scent of the flowers, and the sounds of sheep and lambs baaing off in the distance. Such a wonderful experience!11-020b-IMG_4578

Mr. Imagination12-020c-IMG_458513-020d-IMG_458614-021-IMG_713615-022-IMG_7137

I saw this wild rose bush beside the track.16-023-IMG_7138

The entrance to the cave is that hole down at the base of the cliff.17-024-IMG_713918-024a-IMG_4587

The boys ran on ahead, leaving Gayle and Little Miss to catch up with them at the cave entrance.19-024b-IMG_459220-025-IMG_714021-026-IMG_714122-027-IMG_7142

After seeing them off, Esther and I walked on up the trail to the exit of the cave, where the stream goes in. She carried Miss Joy; I carried the security blanket.23-029-IMG_714424-029a-IMG_4597

The stream used to flow here, but when it eroded back enough that it found a way underground, this streambed dried out.25-030-IMG_714526-031-IMG_7146

The stream goes underground here, and this is the exit when you go through the cave. 27-032-IMG_714728-033-IMG_7148

After our crew came out of the cave and put on dry clothing, we laid out our picnic. We cooked the last of the hamburgers we had for supper the night before. 30-034a-IMG_460131-034b-IMG_4602

Miss Joy put on her big sister’s gumboots and walked around the carpark.32-034c-IMG_4603

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Holiday Trip, Mountains

Devil’s Punchbowl

January 10, 2021 by NZ Filbruns 4 Comments

We arrived home a few days ago from a family road trip. Warning: There will be many posts over the next few weeks with pictures from our trip! I took over 400 pictures on my camera, and am borrowing pictures from three or four other cameras! I just spent a couple of hours sorting and organizing pictures, and have only finished the first day. This may take awhile.

Anyway, on with the story! We left here around 3:00 in the afternoon on Monday, the 28th of December. We had decided to only drive an hour and a half the first day, to allow time to pack and get everything wrapped up here. It’s a massive undertaking to get ten people ready for a 12-day trip, and organize care for all the animals, as well. Everyone worked together well, though, and we were ready earlier than I had originally hoped. We traveled in two vans, ours and Simon’s. Elijah had spent a few days taking the back seats out of both vans and building beds in them. That left four seats in our gray van, and six in Simon’s red van. We packed our luggage and food under the beds, and figured out how to fit the entire family into the two vehicles to sleep at night.

Off we go toward the mountains!

02-001b-IMG_4511

The pohutukawa was in bloom in the mountains. This tree is often called the New Zealand Christmas tree. It is beautiful!03-001c-IMG_4517

The road up the Otira Gorge to Arthur’s Pass is always stunning. 04-001d1-DSCF0087

I don’t necessarily like driving up the 16% grade, but the Otira Viaduct is an incredible feat of engineering.05-001d-IMG_4519

The old road is up there. Can  you see why they built the viaduct?06-001e-IMG_0687

Since we had extra time, we decided to walk up to the Devil’s Punchbowl. We’ve been wanting to do that for several years. Mom, we thought of you when we went up this track!07-001f-IMG_7123This is the view from the carpark. See the train? It was the TranzAlpine passenger train, just coming out of the tunnel that goes under the pass. The tunnel is 8.5 kilometers long, with a steep grade.

01-001-IMG_7108

We soon set off on our tramp. Most of the children ended up way ahead of us. Here they were regrouping in a meadow.09-002a1-IMG_069310-002a1-IMG_452411-002a2-IMG_0694

This is the view downriver from the bridge.12-002a-IMG_452313-002c-IMG_0696The waterfall comes through the “V” between the mountains.

08-002-IMG_710914-004a-IMG_0697

16-006-IMG_7115

Here are some of the 401 steps that make the track a little easier!15-005-IMG_711417-007-IMG_7116I had not done very much physically for a month, because of a health problem, and the climb up those 401 steps was quite challenging!

19-008a-IMG_069920-008c-IMG_0705

18-008-IMG_7117

The children went past the viewing platform on a track that took them to the base of the falls. I didn’t go there!21-009b-IMG_453122-009e-IMG_0712

Mr. Diligence got this view looking downstream from the base of the falls.23-009f-IMG_0714

Esther took a video of the falls. It can’t compare to actually being there, but maybe it will help give an idea of what we saw.

I like this one! Elijah is to the left, and Simon is holding Miss Joy. She was not happy up there—she didn’t like the cold, wet spray, and was calling for “Mama, Mama!”

25-010a-IMG_4534

Miss Joy was quite happy to be reunited with her daddy and I.26-010b-IMG_4537

She wanted to walk down the steps by herself. They let her walk a little, but a 16-month-old is rather slow! Little Miss enjoyed jumping down several steps at once for a short ways.27-010c1-IMG_072328-010c-IMG_454429-010d2-IMG_071730-010d2-IMG_0727

See Arthur’s Pass Village at the base of the mountain?31-010d-IMG_454732-010e-1IMG_0728

Everyone stopped in the little meadow again when they reached it, and waited for us slow ones to arrive. We all rested in the warm sunshine for awhile, and just enjoyed being together.33-010e-IMG_454834-010e-IMG_455035-010f-IMG_4551

24-010-IMG_7119

Little Miss wanted her picture taken as we were walking back to the vans.36-011-IMG_7122

We parked for the night in the driveway of some friends who live in the village. They weren’t home, but had kindly allowed us to use their driveway and the needed facilities in the house. This is the view we saw from the van, across their yard, as the sun was getting low.37-013-IMG_7125

We cooked hamburgers on a campstove in the driveway. It was getting rather chilly!39-014a-IMG_4556

After supper, and getting set up for sleeping for the night, some of us played a game of Ricochet Robots on the bed in the gray van.That was a fun, novel experience!38-014-IMG_4560

Gayle and Little Miss walked to a small waterfall behind the house. Mom, this is the one we walked to from the visitor’s center several years ago.40-015-IMG_20201228_191328Then, as it got dark, we settled in to sleep for the night. One or two people slept under the queen bed on the platform in each van, Miss Joy slept on her cot mattress on the floor in ours, and Mr. Sweetie and Mr. Imagination slept on a mattress on a plywood platform set over the front bench seat in the red van. Everyone was comfortable, and everyone slept well that night.

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Arthur's Pass, Holiday Trip, Video

Quick Trip to Blenheim

December 21, 2020 by NZ Filbruns 3 Comments

A dear friend of ours died the end of November, so a few days later we went to Blenheim for his funeral. It’s a four-hour trip, but because of work and cows, we decided to make it there and back in one day. It meant leaving early in the morning, eating breakfast on the road, and getting home late in the evening, but we did it. It was well worth going. The man who died was the first person we met when we moved to New Zealand 11 years ago (almost to the day of the funeral!), and he and his wife had virtually adopted us. We spent a lot of time with them the first five years we lived in Cheviot, until they moved to be nearer their family. He loved the Lord, and was ready to go, so although we’ll miss him greatly, the day carried an undertone of rejoicing that was wonderful to experience.

I was intrigued by the huge vineyards around Blenheim. While I wish the fruit orchards they replaced were still there, because I like fruit much more than wine, it was fascinating to see the long rows of vines and the enormous wineries.

01-IMG_700002-IMG_7001

This view up a riverbed was gorgeous, too.03-IMG_7002

On our way home, going through the Buller Gorge, we had to stop because someone was carsick. These flowers were beside the road there.04-IMG_7004

Gayle took a few of the children on a very short walk to the edge of the cliff going down to the river, and when they got back, Mr. Diligence, who was stuck in the van because of his injured knee, took a few pictures. Miss Joy had found a few little rocks, which she clutched in her fist, saying, “Ock! Ock! Ock!”05-IMG_700506-IMG_7007

Mr. Sweetie07-IMG_7008

Simon took his knee brace off, after having been driving for a couple of hours, when he moved to the back of the van.

08-IMG_7009

Filed Under: Away From Home

This Week

November 22, 2020 by NZ Filbruns 4 Comments

Some weeks are uneventful and everything happens as normal. Other weeks—we kind of wish we could hit a “redo” button.

Wednesday afternoon Esther, Elijah and Mr. Diligence went up the hill across the road to move the goats’ fence. An hour later, I went into the house for a minute to grab a couple of tools to transplant seedlings. I stopped for a moment to grab a drink before going back out, and the phone rang. It was Esther. She asked me to grab her car and come up the hill to pick Mr. Diligence up because he had cut his leg with a machete. I got up there, took one look at the size of the cut, and made the decision to take him in. It was much too big for us to patch, and right over the center of his knee. I expected to get stitches and bring him back home. However, the cut had gone all the way to the kneecap, and when they did an xray they saw air in the joint, which meant that there was a big risk of infection in the joint—not a good thing. There is no orthopedic surgeon over here, so he had to go to Christchurch. 19-IMG_0272He spent the night in the Greymouth hospital, and then went to Christchurch in the morning in the ambulance that goes over every day. Esther followed him in her car. 20-IMG_0273

He arrived in Christchurch around 2:00 in the afternoon, and waited until midnight to go into surgery to patch his knee up! Esther got this picture of his wound soon after arrival, while they were waiting to go to his ward to wait for surgery.  The blessing in this injury is that he missed both tendons and all the major blood vessels around the knee cap.10-IMG_4379

11-IMG_438012-IMG_4381

Esther spent the night with a friend, and then came back to the hospital in the morning. This was the view from his window. The river in the third picture is the Avon.13-IMG_438214-IMG_438315-IMG_438416-IMG_4385

They played Phase 10 a couple of times.17-IMG_4386

Mr. Diligence was able to come home Saturday afternoon. He was happy to be out of the hospital, although he has to take it easy for a few weeks. Here he is showing pictures to Mr. Sweetie and Little Miss.18-IMG_4388

Sunday afternoon: 02-IMG_6961The next act? Soon after some of us came home from church, Elijah called, asking Esther to pick him and the younger boys up. She asked why. “Simon just dislocated his knee!” Gayle was on his way to the hospital with Simon. It turned out to be his kneecap, and it was easily replaced, but he’s wearing a brace for a couple of weeks, and supposed to take two weeks off work—when they are overwhelmed with vehicles to fix! He’s in a lot of pain tonight, though, so I think it’s wise to take time off. Ironically, it was the same knee that Mr. Diligence injured. And how did he do it? Jumping over a low fence that he has jumped over dozens, if not hundreds of times before.

This was when Simon had just gotten home  and was on his way into the house. Can you imagine—two boys on crutches at the same time!2-IMG_02893-IMG_0290

Once both boys were settled on the couches again (we now have a shortage of seating in our living room!) their brothers tried out the crutches.

1-IMG_4392

Filed Under: Activities at Home, Away From Home

October 2020 Photos

November 9, 2020 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

Here are the last of the October photos! The first two are actually from the end of September; I’m not sure how I missed including them somewhere. They were taken the day before Mr. Sweetie’s birthday, when we had a cookout down at the river with friends. The boys took their boats down and had a lot of fun with them. Here is Mr. Sweetie in a boat Elijah built for Mr. Imagination, and then Simon and Mr. Diligence with a friend in Elijah’s other boat.

3-IMG_42434-IMG_4254We got the smallest chicken egg I have ever seen! There it is between two normal eggs.

06-IMG_6886

One day, I was able to grab quick pictures of all three of our working men! Here is Elijah, formerly known as Mr. Intellectual. Now that he has turned 17 I’ll use his real name. He was working on the new veranda in front of the workshop Simon works in.07-IMG_0296

This is Simon walking through the workshop.17-IMG_0298

This is the mill where Gayle works. He is in about the center of the photo, second from left or third from right. He was writing down what was in a bunk of wood he had just pushed out from under the roof. The boards come off the saw and out a chain through this open-air building. They are marked as to what size and grade they are, and the men who are “working the table” sort them out into bunks.19-IMG_0303

Mr. Diligence got some pictures of the bridge construction as we crossed the river one day. Here is one of the massive 52-ton beams being put in place.

25-IMG_028426-IMG_0287

This shows the inside of a pipe being dug out so they can drive a pile deep down under the river bed. The place we often picnic is beyond the crane in that green area.27-IMG_0289

I don’t know what kind of flowers these are, but I noticed them one evening when I was going to milk the cow. Very unique!30-IMG_0325

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Bridge, Random Photos

Field Trip! Echo Coal Mine

October 26, 2020 by NZ Filbruns 2 Comments

We rarely take a field trip, but a local woman who recently began homeschooling her son organized a trip to the Echo Coal Mine, just north of Reefton, this month. The mine manager (her brother) gave us a fascinating peek into the running of an open-cast coal mine. We all very much enjoyed it, and learned a lot!

Because there were so many in our group, we were divided into two tours. Our family waited in Reefton with some friends while the first tour happened. We spent some time in the museum part of the local I-site (information center), and then walked out of town a little way to the swing bridge over the Inangahua River before eating our lunch. You can see from these photos that we had a beautiful, sunny day. a18-IMG_6893a31-IMG_4300a33-IMG_4303

After we ate lunch, we drove up to the road that goes into the mine. We found this shed, and parked beside it to wait for the first tour to return. A truck went past, hauling coal down from the mine to the railroad, and someone who was near the shed heard the driver inform the manager, via radio, that there were people at the red shed. He replied that he knew about it; they were waiting for a tour.b34-IMG_4304

Soon, the first group came back down, and it was our turn. We reorganized a bit so we didn’t have to take so many vehicles up; two of our boys rode with the manager in his ute, and we followed him up the road into the mine.c01-IMG_6894c27-IMG_6926

We noticed these signs along the way, along with several others: c14-IMG_6908c15-IMG_6897c52-IMG_4325c62-IMG_4335

Soon, we reached the top of the road and saw evidence of mining.c35-IMG_4305

When we came to a stop in front of the office, we looked out over the processing area. The coal is brought in here. After it is dumped out of the trucks, it goes through the sorter. The large pieces are used for heating buildings, mainly, or processing milk powder. The dust, which, if I remember right, comprises about 80% of the end product, mainly goes to Japan, where it is made into such items as silicon chips for cell phones and computers, or turned into carbon fibre for bicycles and dialysis machines, among many other uses. He rattled off so many things I couldn’t remember them all!

d36-IMG_4306

d03-IMG_6903d07-IMG_6902

We went into the office next, for a slideshow of the history of the mine, and photos of scenes from the past 12 years or so. The rock layers they have uncovered are amazing! So is the view from his office…rough life, to have to work in a place with a view like this, isn’t it!e23-IMG_6904

Our next stop was to see what the mine is doing to rehabilitate the area after mining it. All the tailings are dumped in mountains, and reshaped similarly to the natural mountains. Then, the mine has a local helicopter company seed the slopes with lotus grass (actually a legume) that grows in the rocks and fixes nitrogen in what little soil there is. A year later, they plant native trees among the grass. Our guide also pointed out the smoke from a mine that caught fire in the 1960s and has been burning ever since. DOC (the Department of Conservation) now owns it, but won’t do anything about putting out the fire. It burns 20-30,000 tons of coal a year, if we understood correctly.f26-IMG_6912f38-IMG_4309

The area just below Mr. Imagination was seeded this year; the very green area next back was seeded a year ago, and we saw people, just around the hill from there, planting trees.f39-IMG_4310f40-IMG_4311

If you look very closely at this next photo, just below the left of the center, you can make out an orange digger and a yellow bulldozer. We visited those several minutes later, as you’ll see below.f49-IMG_4322f50-IMG_4323

Finally, we got to see the mine itself! These photos don’t come anywhere near showing the magnitude of this pit. It is huge! Can you pick out the digger and dump truck just left of center? The red dot over the middle of the pond at the bottom is a ute (pickup truck), and down a little from that, right of it, is a smaller, blue digger sitting on a coal seam. And look at those layers! We discussed later how they must have formed during the Flood, as sediment washed in on tidal waves, covering mats of trees and other plant material, followed by more layers… and then, while it was still soft and wet, seismic activity folded the layers. So amazing!

g29-IMG_6914

Our guide told us why the water in the pond has such a beautiful color. It has a pH of about 3.2. Iron sulfites leach into the water from the mine, creating sulferic acid. They have to neutralize that before letting the water go back into the environment. At first, they treated it with lime, but then discovered that mussel shells work even better, for much less cost! In fact, when Esther took the video below, she caught part of that discussion!g43-IMG_4315We went from the mine to the dumping spot, to watch a load of dirt and rocks be dumped. Little Miss found this quartz rock and wanted me to take a picture of it. In the video you can see the truck being loaded, and then the same truck dumping. The bulldozer is there all day, smoothing off the area, building the “wall” around the edge to keep trucks from going over, and being there in case a truck would back up too far, to pull it out. It didn’t sound like that has happened much, if at all, though.g04-IMG_6917

Here are a few of the big machines we saw around the mine area:h02-IMG_6905

This machine is used for drilling holes to place explosives.h08-IMG_6922h12-IMG_6906h25-IMG_6925

Our last stop was down at the bottom of the area they are rehabilitating right now. This is a close-up of some of the lotus grass. This area has been growing for a number of years, and there are several inches of rich-looking soil there now on top of what used to be bare rocks.i06-IMG_6930

The run-off from the mine is piped into this pond, through a filter of mussel shells. That cleans it so it can go down the river.i10-IMG_6931

A view from the bottom of some of the areas they have replanted. i30-IMG_6928i53-IMG_4326

The middle level in the left part of the picture is where we saw the load of dirt being dumped.i61-IMG_4334

Here, the children got to climb on a digger and a bulldozer. They enjoyed that opportunity! This is a 75-ton dozer; we didn’t catch the size of the digger. It’s enormous, though!j56-IMG_4329j05-IMG_6932j11-IMG_6933j20-IMG_6934j58-IMG_4331After we followed our guide out of the mine, we asked about these fords we noticed beside the bridges. They are for the heaviest machinery to go through—anything over 40 tons or so.k22-IMG_6936

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Field Trip, Reefton

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 40
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • RSS Feed
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Goodreads

Recent Posts

  • Franz Josef
  • Book Review–God Storys
  • Church Picnic and Coal Mine
  • Napoleon Hill
  • New in the Library! March 2026

Archives

Disclosure

Some links on this site are affiliate links.

Subscribe to the Blog

/* real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups */

Intuit Mailchimp

The Family:


Dad and Mom (Gayle and Emma)

Girl #1, Esther, my right hand

Boy #1, Seth (Mr. Handyman)

Boy #2, Simon (Mr. Inventor)

Boy #3, Mr. Intellectual

Boy #4, Mr. Diligence

Boy #5, Mr. Sweetie

Boy #6, Mr. Imagination

Girl #2, Little Miss

Girl #3, Miss Joy

Book Reviews Website

IgniteLit

COPYRIGHT © 2026 · TWENTY SEVEN PRO ON GENESIS FRAMEWORK · DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER · PRIVACY POLICY