It's spring, and Mr and Mrs Tui are in the mood.
Sunday, 24 August 2014
Friday, 22 August 2014
My brother Marty, in the mid ‘70s, purchased an aircraft to
enable him (he hoped) to more cheaply accumulate flying hours towards his
commercial pilots licence. He eventually went on to gain his CPL and flew for a number of years for Mount Cook Airlines at Mt Cook, landing tourists on the glaciers in ski-equipped Pilatus Porters, and also for a Swiss
company, ZIMEX, in Algeria and northern China. A splendid description of one of
his adventures can be found here.
Dad was tickled pink that Marty soloed 50 years to the day after he did.
The aircraft Marty bought was an Auster J/1 Autocrat ZK-AUX,
which, sadly, is now in bits in someone’s shed.
ZK-AUX had an interesting past, having landed on two
aircraft carriers - HMS Illustrious in 1946, and then aboard HMCS Magnificent
in 1948, which is really something for a civilian plane. More on the aircraft here and here.
ZK-AUX was the aircraft in which three of our children
sampled the delights of heavier than air transport. Although I can’t remember, I suspect that my first flight was also in an Auster – probably ZK-APO.
I was fortunate to have been aboard for the kids’ first
flight and was able to get a few photos.
Here is the pilot. Youngest brother, Marty.
Here is the view over the bow. The Boulder Bank and Port
Nelson.
And here are the first-timers trying not to show any
nervousness. L-R: Susan 5½, Nathan 3½
and Paulette 7 years old. Ca. Oct 1977
Saturday, 16 August 2014
Granddaughter Meaghan showing how it's done.
What a player! She really works.
Megs lining up for the shot.
And in it goes - again! Nayland College 35 - Nelson Girls 3. Well done, Meaghan!
Meaghan's younger sister Bailey ready to pass...
... and identical twin Caitlin scheming about the next set, at the break.
The girls won. Broadgreen Intermediate 11 - Waimea Intermediate 8. Well done!
Friday, 15 August 2014
Our weather this morning.
"Mostly cloudy and cooler. Windy". Not a cloud in the sky. No wind. But it is definitely cooler!
"Mostly cloudy and cooler. Windy". Not a cloud in the sky. No wind. But it is definitely cooler!
This graph starts at 00:05 13 August. Data are recorded every 5 minutes. Note the precipitous drop in temperature at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon when a squall with hail came through.
Thursday, 14 August 2014
Wednesday, 13 August 2014
Bridge Widening
Work is due to start on transforming our nearby bridge from a single lane to a two-laned one. The bridge is about 4.5 kilometres from the north end of the Motueka River West Bank Road, which is increasingly used by heavy traffic such as milk tankers transitting from Golden Bay to Timaru and livestock trucks wishing to avoid the streets of Motueka.
The approach from the south is quite dangerous as the bridge is only visible to a driver from about 50 metres.
There isn't much warning of traffic approaching from the south.
Unfortunately, some of our neighbour's >100 year-old walnut trees have to make way for the widened road.
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
One of my winter projects has been to copy my father’s
Pilots Logbook into Excel. Along with the first entry of an aircraft’s
callsign/registration I hoped to hyper-link to a photograph of the aircraft
referred to, and so I turned to the internet to find them. (This was before I’d
scanned my mother’s albums).
In this case, I had started entering the first page of Dad’s
log that referred to ZK-APO, and noted that this was the first flight he had
made since 20 November 1944 when he flew a slightly larger aircraft, Lancaster
KI3834 from Dorval (Canada) to Gander to Prestwick (Scotland).
I remember the Austers with fondness. We used to get the odd
flight with Dad around the hinterlands of South Island and occasionally visited
Dad’s brothers and their families.
Here I am protecting my cousin Elizabeth from some baddies
that have taken one over. In this case ZK-AWY, c. early
1952.
When I googled for more info on ZK-APO, I found the Civil
Aviation Authority’s site, which provided an accident
report in PDF form.
The first page of the report showed I was on the right
track.
Now, colour me surprised when I came across this on page six
of this Official accident report:
“1.6 Aircraft information
1.6.1 Auster J1B serial
number 2212 was manufactured in January 1947, and was first registered in New Zealand on 18 August 1959. A total restoration was completed in January 1998, and the
aeroplane had accrued a total of 255.8 hours since. It had remained in the possession of the same owner since first being
registered in New Zealand.”
Dad had accrued 1,568 hours and 40 minutes in an aircraft registered
as ZK-APO in the 12 years before it was ‘first’ registered. I had done a few hours in it, too!
No.
|
ZK-APO
|
Year
|
Sum of Single engine day Pilot
|
1947
|
97:25
|
1948
|
310:20
|
1949
|
472:10
|
1950
|
300:25
|
1951
|
153:05
|
1952
|
16:30
|
1953
|
54:45
|
1954
|
45:05
|
1955
|
12:35
|
1956
|
81:45
|
1957
|
02:05
|
1958
|
14:05
|
1959
|
08:25
|
Grand Total
|
1568:40
|
Just shows, don’t believe everything you read. Or hear. Or
see.
Monday, 11 August 2014
I had considered posting the occasional photos from the my mother's albums in chronological order, but on reflection decided to just post the odd photos ad hoc, as the mood dictates. Please post in the comments any corrections. (Click on the pics to enlarge)
My father (with stick) at the Kaka Point beach, south of the Clutha River mouth near Balclutha, with his brothers. L-R: Jim, Alan, Fred, Dick and Clem. c1926.
And here he is about 17 years later at the controls of New Zealand's first DC3, NZ3501. April 1943 at Wigram.
Squadron Leader Frederick J. "Popeye" Lucas DFC. 1943.
Sunday, 10 August 2014
Last Saturday, being grandson Joshua's 13th birthday, made an ideal excuse for a gathering of the clans - our three daughters and their families - here at the farm. The only ones missing being the clan living in Fiji, and granddaughter, Meaghan.
Even though it was cold, and later, wet, the farm provided an ideal playground for town kids to get out and about - making huts and finding creepy-crawlies under rotten tree branches and rocks - topped off later by a rabbit hunt with their Uncle Daniel.
Whilst your scribe prefers a good roast for dinner a fairly high percentage of the gathered tribe love their lasagne and salad - besides, it was birthday boy's choice as well. Two competing cooks provided equally delicious examples.
Lasagne time. My homebrew Dark Ale wasn't bad, either
Identical twins Bailey and Caitlin with cousin Joshua and brother Cameron tucking in to their favourite nosh.
Wet but happy. The hunters return. (Daniel reports that when it began to rain, the girls wouldn't hear of coming back to the house.)
Happy teenager, Joshua, cutting his high calorie birthday special.
Saturday, 9 August 2014
I've been very slack in keeping up some kind of narrative with this blog. Until one attempts it, one doesn't realise the discipline required to regularly update the page to maintain a reader's interest. My (rather pathetic) excuse is that I have been occupied by scanning and transferring all of the photos from my mother's photograph albums on to my computer.
In a book (The Exiles of Asbestos Cottage) by Jim Henderson about the couple who lived for 40 years in the bush up near the Cobb Dam, 22 kilometres as the crow flies from here, he laments that New Zealanders are the world experts at "burning their bloody history". As I'm not keen on being one of that kind of 'expert', I thought it would be a useful winter project to digitise the photos to, in the first instance, preserve the images, and secondly to make them available to other members of the family who may wish to have a copy.
It is still very much a work in progress. I have so far copied eight albums of black & white photos, and have made a start on the first of a similar number of albums of colour photos. Some of the albums contained up to 450 photos, which all needed to be annotated, for, without them, the photos become meaningless to later generations.
My first photo is of my mother, taken in October 1944, who spent hours and hours maintaining the albums, and instilled in us an appreciation of our history.
Loraine Jean Lucas (née Flansburgh-Washbourne) 1920-1999
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