Esther walked home from the new house one afternoon a few weeks ago, with her camera. I love some of these pictures she took!
This little guy accompanied his sister on her walk home. He got to carry the snack!
The railroad tracks are about half a mile from our house. This is taken from a road bridge over them.
Naptime for the toddler!
The new part of the kitchen is progressing!
Cheviot
Rain
One afternoon, the end of December, we had a furious rainstorm blow in suddenly. It only poured for half an hour or an hour, but we got quite a lot of rain in that time. One of the boys was out in it for half a minute, and you can see from the picture how soaked he got! The wind was from a direction that pushed the rain up under part of the porch roof, and we had a waterfall on the porch!
More of the New House
If you’re interested, here are more pictures from our new house.
“Rabbit Hill”–this is what we see when we look out the north living room window.
Panoramic view from the top of “Rabbit Hill”. Our house is down at the extreme left of the picture.
That’s me, in the van, coming with lunch for those who went earlier.
Looking from the top of the hill, past our house, to the hills beyond.
The progress in the kitchen so far.
I’m working up a bed along the front of the house to plant tomatoes and basil in.
The house, our van, and the container. The container will be moving; the permanent site is not ready yet.
We can see the train from our new house! This passenger train goes from Christchurch to Picton and back every day.
The story goes that he was pretending to be asleep!
The owner came while we were there yesterday, to start taking out the trees in the paddock we’ll use for a garden. I liked seeing the boys all lined up on the water tank to watch!
He pushed the trees over, then pulled them out and around to a burn pile.
Catch-Up Time
Just some random pictures from the past month around here.
The youngest participant in the library’s summer reading program!
We removed all the books from our shelves and packed them. He thought it made a nice place to hide!
Not sure what this was all about!
The books I weeded out of our collection–I think he lost his balance as he brought them in for me to sort and list!
The youngest (Nathan) loves to play with toy animals. When I told him it was time for bed, he was holding all three of these ducks, and very carefully set them down. I had to laugh when I saw how they were arranged in order of size, and in a straight line!
We have a cute visitor this week–a California quail!
Our harvest from the garden a few days ago. I have a hard time believing that this is the equivalent of the middle of June in Michigan!
Work Begins at the New House
I knew I’ve been neglecting this, but didn’t realize it’s already been nearly a month! Can you tell we’ve been working at the house? That’s where we go when we can spare some time at home (which isn’t often, as it turns out). We’ve been over there two days a week, so far. It’s a good thing we can’t move in for a few weeks yet–it will take that long to get the place cleaned up! Here are a few pictures of what’s happening so far.
The cattle stop has a big plum tree growing through it!
Our shipping container/sleepout.
The audience watching the container being unloaded included these curious girls.
The overgrown house, from the north.
Looking toward the house from the gate at the road–south side.
Some trees have been taken out.
Now we can actually see the back of the house!
The path from back of the house to the road. The footpath is totally over grown, so we’re working on uncovering it.
My favorite feature in the kitchen–a wood cook stove!
View from the kitchen window. This is the only countertop space so far.
Gayle is remodeling this area to make more countertop space. There was a space here for a frig and chest freezer, but it was too short for modern fridges.
Budding Photographer!
Our eight-year-old borrowed a camera yesterday from his sister and went around the place taking pictures of anything and everything. He wants to make a book of these pictures so he can remember this place! I asked if he would let me post some of his pictures, and he was happy to grant permission. So, enjoy his first set of pictures!
A raised-bed garden
Inside the museum
My Rosemary plant–I’m hoping I can move it to the new house.
Ginger likes to sleep in the strawberry bed.
The shell and fossil collection
The photographer!
A geranium by the porch.
In other news, we’re working towards moving. I’ve packed a grand total of five boxes this week (up to 32 altogether), and did a lot of sorting and pitching. That feels good! We’re still working on sleeping quarters; we have a bid in on a sleepout. The auction closes in 44 minutes. I’ll report on the results another time!
Update: I had a phone call, so didn’t get this finished, and now the auction has closed. We got the sleepout! Someone else wanted it, too, but weren’t willing to go as high as we had decided on. It is a 20-foot shipping container that has been insulated and lined, with a glass sliding door in one end. Just a plain shipping container is more than we’re paying for this, and then we’d have to convert it yet.
November
Here I am again–no new posts for awhile! So, you can enjoy a random sampling of photos from the past couple of weeks.
How do you like this for a place to do your math lesson?
Look at that tail wagging!
We are enjoying salad every day.
New Zealand road block–these two people sat here talking on the road by us for at least 15 minutes! Not much traffic on our road.
First you empty the cupboard…then you climb in!
Starting the moving process by sorting books–baby wants in on it, too.
Building a birthday gift: a model cathedral.
Ah hah! Now I can get Esther’s door open!
See the trail of rose petals he left behind? He loves picking huge roses and bringing them in for us to smell.
Camelia–the rest are just a sampling of the roses around our house.

Milking Time
Every morning and evening, I go out and milk the cow. It’s a great time to be outside (most of the time), and very peaceful. Most of the time, I get to be by myself out there! Right now, I’m milking along the roadside, because we have her grazing there. Here are a few little glimpses of milking time.
I get to enjoy these roses along the house as I walk out to milk.
Here she comes! My obedient cow comes when I call her.
I often get to see this duck and her 12 ducklings when I’m out to milk.
I get to watch these sheep and lambs across the road.
I can see these hills just past Cheviot from where I milk; the one with the road up it is the Camel’s Hump.
This beggar practically always joins me, rubbing around and asking for attention, waiting for his milk.
These two came out to see me, too.
And the news of the week? We have to move. Our landlord’s son wants this house, so within 2-3 months we have to find somewhere else to live.
Disconnected
We’ve had quite an interesting week! Monday and Tuesday were normal days, but Tuesday night when we went to bed there was a strong wind blowing and I saw online that a violent storm was making its way north up the island towards us. Soon after we went to bed, apparently about 11:00, the power went out–and didn’t come back on for over 42 hours! Towards morning, we started having thunder and lightning, and when it was light enough to see we saw a number of branches down around the place. There was no power where Gayle works, either, so after he went in to see if there was anything he could do with the power out, he came home again to start cleaning up the mess around here. The boys really enjoyed working with their daddy on that kind of job! I spent the day working on the mending pile. Of course, without electricity, I couldn’t use the sewing machine, so I just pinned on patches and did some hand sewing. The entire mending pile is now waiting for me to sit down at the sewing machine–I should be able to whip right through once I get there. Esther spent the day reading and writing, but it was rather frustrating because the day was so dark and cloudy. We don’t realize how reliant we are on electricity till we don’t have it anymore. We were very thankful for the gas grill we had been given, enabling us to at least cook, and for the fact that we have chest freezers rather than upright ones. I moved all the things from the fridge freezers to the chest freezers, and we opened them as little as possible. I also fed the fresh milk to the calves, since we had no way to chill it. The milk that was already in the one fridge stayed fresh, since I had turned the temperature way down a couple of days earlier and forgot to turn it back up–the milk froze in it! That was a blessing in disguise! We used up the food that would go bad in the other fridge, but mostly we had milk products in there which are all right even if they warm up.
That evening we had a very interesting experience. About an hour before dark, a car pulled up at the driveway. There were four people in it, three men and one woman, French tourists in the country for nine months. They are trying to see the country in the least expensive way, and were asking for a place to set up their tents for the night! We gave them permission to camp in our yard, and invited them in for supper. I put together a stew for supper, using potatoes and cooked beef from the fridge, a couple of jars of tomatoes and one of carrots, and a leek that Simon brought in. Soon after I put it on the grill to cook, I realized that the flame was lower than it had been. Sure enough, the flame went out after awhile, but the stew was hot enough to eat. The leeks were just a bit crunchy, still! We had a fun evening chatting with our surprise guests by the light from headlamps placed strategically around the top of the room, and candles on the table. They said several times how good the meal was (stew, cabbage salad, bread and butter, and homemade cheese). I didn’t think it was that extraordinary, but then Gayle asked them what they’ve been eating: Ramen noodles! No wonder they enjoyed what we offered!
That night the wind came up again, and by morning was blowing at gale force again. We still had no power, but at 6:30 Gayle called in to work and learned that they had a generator, so he went in. I went to town as soon as the shop opened to get a new cylinder of gas so we could cook breakfast! Our French visitors left about the same time Gayle left for work–I was relieved, as they had pitched their tents close to a big gum tree, which was swaying their way in the strong wind. It didn’t fall, but if it had it would have crushed them.
The second day, the sun shone and it was bright–what a nice change. We still had no power all day, and I was preparing myself mentally for another dark evening of cooking over the grill outside, and planning a breakfast and lunch for the next day that would not require cooking or washing dishes. Then, praise God, the power came back on at 5:35! What a wonderful sight. Life is now back to normal for us, and we didn’t lose any more than a cup or two of food. The boys were quite disappointed; they like playing with candles. One of them was saving all the extra wax that ran off the candles, and melted it down, making another candle from it.
We were also glad be be back in touch with the rest of the world, although it was very peaceful and quiet during the power cut! We had no internet, of course, and the cell service was also out. Our landline worked the first day, but the second day it didn’t.
Aftermath of the storm; Gayle and the boys piled up the branches that were too small for firewood.
Another storm rolling in over the hills to the west of us.
We had an interesting experience the week before, also. We had helped to organize a meeting here in Cheviot with a speaker from Creation Ministries International. We had a barbeque before the meeting; about 50 people came for that, and there were probably about 75 at the meeting itself. That was very good, but we also really enjoyed having the speaker, Tas Walker, and his driver in our home for the night. Friday morning before they took off for Christchurch, we took them, and a single lady from our church, who also slept here overnight in her van, to Gore Bay. We really enjoyed our chance to get to know Tas.
Our dear friend Pete helped with the cooking.
The men cooking sausages for the BBQ. Tas Walker is the second from the left.
Cathedral Gully above Gore Bay–beautiful erosion!
The boys enjoyed this little cave.
We admired the rock layers in Port Robinson, just around the point from Gore Bay.
Fine rock layers. The geology of Gore Bay is amazing.
Sea tulips–a type of sea squirt.
Beach Clean Up
We were given a trip on Whale Watch this week. They asked that, in return, we spend some time doing a beach clean up. Last week, we had a day that was so lovely and warm that we decided we would do it then, at Gore Bay. We split up into two groups; three of the boys went one way and the rest of us went the other way. I told them to start back after half an hour and we would meet up near the start. It is amazing, and disgusting, what you find on the beach! Why don’t people pick up after themselves? Most of what we found had been thrown under the bushes at the edge; there were a lot of beer bottles. Yuck! We also found an old tire and some lumber, but the most unusual find was the huge wad of frayed rope that the boys found!
He said he wouldn’t help, since he couldn’t go on Whale Watch, but when we got started he couldn’t resist!
After our time cleaning up (and deciding we should do it again in a few weeks), I let the boys play on their “raft” again for awhile. They sure are having fun poling that around the lagoon!
While we waited for the rafters to come back, these two built a bridge.
I found this mermaid’s purse.
Mussel shell with coral on it.
The biggest find of the day!
And then, the camera got dipped into the water, so we had to buy a new one in order to take pictures when we went on Whale Watch!





























