Three weeks today
Before I am on New Zealand time!
Until then things might be a bit quiet around here (as you may have noticed!).
Welcome to Kiwi Log - the musings of a displaced Kiwi experiencing the many delights of London, can't wait for the 'black snot'! I make no apologies to anyone that doesn't get the 'in jokes' - you should have gotten to know me better when you had the chance.
Before I am on New Zealand time!
Yes - that's right, it's that time of year again...
I have just seen this comment from MJD re one of the jnr's:
Hey Frit - guess what mate......yeah nothing Na just kidding - guess what happended in the Hornsberry house yesterday......still nothing!! :) :)Borderline genius he says.
OK - for reading this far - I will tell you that I think your nephew Lucca is borderline genis! We know he's borderline pyshco - OK no borderline about that - but at under 3 years old and putting a 100 piece jig saw together - UPSIDE DOWN is getting a bit freaky - don't ya reckon?
Not much of interest happening at the moment.
Chaff Wong - next time I call you after I have spent the proceeding 10 hours with Boy - please politely remind me that it is not the best time for chat...
A genius from Christchurch has decided that we need to be nice to Australians:
Poking fun at Australians has been something of a national sport for decades, but now New Zealand's tourism bosses want less teasing and more visitors.Oh for the love of Christchurch.... He goes on, and it gets worse.
The plea, which may astonish patriotic Kiwis, is a serious one and comes as New Zealand tourism agencies take the bold step of adopting Australia's national colours as a marketing tactic.
"While one comment is pretty innocuous, if every second Kiwi makes a comment [to Australian visitors] about the cricket or about the rugby, it will start to grate on them," said Christchurch and Canterbury Marketing chief executive Ian Bougen.
"If we want to keep those Aussie dollars rolling in ... maybe we need to learn to be a little bit more hospitable."
"Canterbury's colours are normally red and black, but we've decided that it's time for us to turn green and gold - at least for a few months," Mr Bougen said. "It's a little bit cheeky and a little bit quirky."It's a little bit zany, a little bit out there and I'm not even wearing underwear.... You tit.