A very special and hurtful moment for a biologist…

weta
A tree weta (Hemideina thoracica) flipping up his hind legs, desperately trying to impress.
Today we spent our time in the Garden, planting flowers, manukas, and lifting and carrying logs around from a to b. Only some of the logs were already occupied…

The Weta(information taken from Wikipedia):

The weta family comprises around 70 insect species endemic to the New Zealand archipelago. They are large by insect standards, some species among the largest and heaviest in the world. Their physical appearance is that of a cross between a cockroach and a cricket with the addition of large legs.By virtue of their ability to cope with variations in temperature, weta can be found in a variety of environments including alpine, forests, grasslands, caves, shrub lands and urban gardens. They are nocturnal and flightless, with a diet consisting of leaves, other insects, fungi, dead animals and fruit.

New Zealand had no native land mammals apart from native bats prior to the arrival of humans. Ecological niches that were filled by mammals in other parts of the world were filled by native fauna in New Zealand. The weta’s place in the ecosystem is comparable to that held by mice and other rodents elsewhere in the world. Like their foreign mouse equivalents, they are hunted by an owl: in this case the Morepork, New Zealand’s only surviving native owl. Weta also pass seeds of some plant species through their digestive tracts unharmed, thus acting as seed dispersers. It is yet to be seen how decreases in weta populations are affecting native plant species that rely on the weta’s help.“

…and it bit me in the finger.
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Devonport – Meeting Molly, Sally and another silly dog at „the Strand“, worlds worst fish & chips and a magnificent rainbow..

Today we explored Devonport. on the way we stopped at a beach promptly called „the Strand“. Not only does it sound German, but the little village looked like a replica of Grömitz, Westerland or other German seaside resorts. Including ugly buildings from the 50s-60s. At the Strand were a lot of smallish dogs running up and down the beach in an exited way, dragging there owners behind them. What a wonderful place to meet dogs called Molly or Sally. From there we went on to Devonport, filled with coffee shops, touristy stuff, a book shop and fish and chips that can bring the most hardened seagull to barf. We started to feed them with these ill smelling chips, grease dripping from our fingers, until we could not morally justify harming those poor birds with vile transfats any longer. A nice rainbow and flat crabs hiding under rocks made up for the rotten food.

Melli at „the Strand“.
A very flat half crab (Petrolisthes elongatus) perfectly adapted to be flat on a rock,
a polyplacophora, also flattish, and
a variable oystercatcher or Torea (Haematopus unicolor).
Veröffentlicht unter Hikes, Nature | Schreibe einen Kommentar

Leigh and Goat Island

The seashore around the Marine Station of Leigh was the first of New Zealands Marine Protected Areas (or MPAs), being established in 1977. It attracts up to 200 000 visitors each year and is a complete „no take zone“. Biomass, especially of highly valued fishes and rock lobsters has since increased manyfold. One only needs to stand along the edges of the lava rocks to witness snappers and other fish swim in the amazingly clear water below. Cheers for Melli for picking this destination for our trip, and we will be back (with a mask and snorchel) once it gets warmer..

A small colony of pied shags or Karuhiruhi (Phalacrocorax varius) breed at the Leigh reserve.
Marine biologists at work leisure, happy as kids in a candy shop.
Lepsiella scobina
Cushion star (Patiriella regularis)
and blue maomao (Scorpis violaceus).
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Organic food

With little money left to spend after our transport and arrival here in New Zealand, I almost immediately started to look for a job that would suit my qualifications. Because there was none, I tried to apply for diverse jobs; as Greenpeace fundraiser, translator or sculpture-painting-assistant. But didn’t get them, (off curse due to overqualification?). Now I have a job at the shop of New Zealand’s biggest organic foods importer, selling veggies and other goodies to Rudolf Steiner fans. Customers can sometimes be a little odd, but in a very nice way; the daily spinach-mushroom-pie is still tasty; and Melli and I get percentages off from our own shopping. Who could ask for more, I even made it into the newsletter….

Guess where I am..
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July 17th – The container arrives.

What a day. The container has arrived! And it is is the same container that we have packed in Hamburg. Finally, all our stuff is here.

container

We only need to get the clearance form MAF. This means that after the container has arrived at four o’clock PM, the MAF inspector comes around at five, and we have till six to unload everything under his watchful eyes, making sure that no „pests“ are sneaking in with our luggage (and, in case of finding anything strange seeds or pollen, peeling it away with a knife and tossing it onto the sidewalk???). Fortunately for us we have planned ahead and hired 20 people to help carry everything into the house while we sit in our rocking chair and watch. seriously though, there is no one around to help, so we just throw everything into the driveway and just about make it before darkness setts in. It is surprising that nothing has broken during the long trip, and we are glad once the stuff is in the house and the unpacking can begin. At three in the morning it is time for a break. We have way to much stuff…

stuff

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The Waitakeres 1

The Waitakeres are a mountain range close to Auckland city. 20 min by car takes you from our house into a magnificent scenery full of tree ferns, nikau palm trees and exotic (meaning native) birds. Apart from all the hiking trails there are also some wonderful beaches, nice even in winter. The visitor center is nicely made and offers information on geology, nature and the people that tried to make a living in the area.
Waitakere Visitor Center
What a view. With a rainbow and a blonde thrown in for good measure.

Walking into a wall of green, hiking in the Waitakeres.

Breakers at Bethels Beach.

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July 14th and ongoing – Our house – flat mice and the NZ way of casual plumbing.

house

A happy day, finally we more or less got the keys for our newly rented home. More or less because were only given the keys to the back door. After thoroughly locking the doors (we live in a dangerous neighborhood now) the first nights in the house turns out to be rather lacking in warmth. Fortunately, the sleeping bags keep us alive until morning, only the nose has suffered mild frostbite. We have learned another lesson: Old NZ houses don’t come with such fancy thrills as basic insulation. If it is 3° C outside there is no reason why people should not get the full benefit of sub arctic temperature in their living rooms as well. This explains why Kiwis are so hardy and run around barefoot all year, and why local hospitals fill up really quick when the temperature reaches close to zero. Being the sissy’s we are, we do the only reasonable thing and buy electric heaters (heating is another thing that doesn’t come with a rental). Now it could be nice and warm, at least if we could get back into the house, we don’t have a key for the front door and the backdoor is still locked from the inside. So we call the rental guy, who calls the owner, who will come with the front door key in a little while. It is cold, it is already dark, but we do get the front door key and it does warm up.

plumbing

A bad case of NZ plumbing. Note the precision that the silicon has been modeled to cause further leakage.

Also a matter of interest is the state of the electric power sockets, and of course the plumbing. It takes a brave man to hook up a washing machine in NZ. The electrician-plumber-nimrod who did the sink in the first place thought it would be a good idea to fix leaks with silicone, so we in turn thought that we should not trouble the poor man any further and took the matter into our own hands. Et voila, washing machine and dishwasher are running, of curse only after they cut away some of the kickbord so the dishwasher would fit into his designated place. While we were getting settled into the house nicely some ants apparently had the same idea, but they overstayed their welcome when they took a liking to Melli’s Knusperzucker. Apart from ants getting into the cooky-box, a mouse started to run through the house, cute in a way, but it too had some bad manners and after it took a dump in behind of Melli’s nightstand it was decided that it had to go. Martin tries to catch it alive, leading to some very funny scenes (so Miss. H. later testified), but unfortunately the poor thing gets squashed in one of the attempts, as it tries to dart between a doorframe and a woodblock. Felt bad for a while, until I thought of the mouse burgers in the movie never cry wolfe. Mouse gone, ants under control and finally heating, if we can only get the light switch in the kitchen to work..

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At the Auckland Zoo

Today we spent a nice day at the zoo with the folks from the Bioinformatics Student Symposium (July 11 -14th). The seminar has ben going for a day and the catering at uni is exceptional. In the mornings there is a tea break with cookies, muffins or brownies. At night food is decked out at campus, vegetarian, chicken with satay sauce, and lots of desserts. There are some talks about bioinformatics in between, but that is bearable. As part of our program a zoo visit was mercifully scheduled on the second day. In the Auckland zoo we crawled through the „meerkat tunnels“ built for an authentic meerkat feeling for the visitor, getting dirty knees and seeing exactly zero meerkats. They were all out in the open by the exit laughing at us…
Meerkat
A meerkat secretly laughing his tail off.
The zoo is nice and the enclosures are spacious, a lot of effort goes into behavioral enrichment (keeping the animal inmates amused and confused) which is good to see. We also saw our very first Kiwis here, they are kept in a dimly lit Kiwi house, having very much the same day and night rhythm as our friends back home in dimly lit Hamburg. We also watched some tortoises in the process of creating more tortoises, causing alarmed parents to shield the eyes of their children, thereby wasting a great educational opportunity. Melli took some very nice primate pictures. The zoo is also the subject of New Zealand’s only fun to watch TV show, a weekly reality installment, that in a stroke of imagination is called „the zoo“.

monkey
Melli’s portrait character shots of monkeys: from left to right Spidermonkey, Golden Lion Tamarin and Siamang Gibbon

tortoise
Something you don’t get to see every day..
trees
…beautiful eucalyptus trees against a blue sky.
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