Last week we enjoyed a stunning mini-break catching up with friends down in Canterbury. We had a great time, with plenty of great wine and food. After exploring the international Antarctic centre on Thursday, we mooched around a few antique shops enjoyed a couple of pints at the few pubs which are still standing in Christchurch, and then went home for a dinner of slowly cooked beef chaps with seasonal vegetables and red wine. The next day after a much needed sleep-in we set off on a mystery tour our hosts had arranged.
After some guerilla gardening we were set to go...
We were taken on a lovely scenic tour of southern Canterbury, stopping in historic Oamaru for lunch at a Victorian tea room and visiting the heritage district where all the buildings are of historic importance. Then our journey continued, ending at twilight when we arrived at the small historic vicarage of St Alban's outside Kurow...
It was built in the late 1800s out of hand hewn Oamaru limestone and is situated near the foot hills of the Southern Alps.
"Between 1881 and 1891 the
Anglican community in and around Kurow was served by curates who resided
locally but who were appointed to the vicar of Oamaru. In 1891 this situation
changed, however, when the Waitaki Mission District was established and Hugh Corrie
Frere was appointed as the first curate of the new parish. At the same time
Emily Campbell, wife of the late Robert Campbell who was one of North Otago's
leading landowners, left a large bequest of approximately £5300 to finance the
erection of a church and vicarage in the district.
Emily Campbell's generosity proved to be somewhat
of a mixed blessing, however, as the Anglicans of Duntroon initially disputed
Kurow's suitability as the parish's centre. The New Zealand Church News of
August 1892 records that Mrs Campbell's legacy was causing divisions within the
district's Anglicans although "Kurow (was) really the proper centre of
operations, and ought probably to have both the church and parsonage". [NZ
Church News, Vol XXII, No. 8, p7]. Happily the controversy was eventually
resolved by Bishop Nevill of Dunedin who recommended that a church be erected
at Duntroon whilst a vicarage and adjoining chapel were built at Kurow. £2,500
was subsequently allocated for the construction of the latter, which began
forthwith, although St Martin's Church at Duntroon was not erected until 1901
to a design by Christchurch architect, Thomas Cane.
The large size of the Kurow vicarage may in part
be explained by the fact that the first incumbent at St Alban's had a large
family and a private income with which to pay domestic and stable staff. The
last resident vicar at Kurow vacated the house in 1970."
The vicarage has now been turned into bijoux accommodation, which our hosts had hired for the weekend.
Later the reason for the impromptu holly pruning was revealed, the holly being needed to trim the table for a mid-winter Christmas dinner...
The next day we continued our tour around the lakes of South Canterbury ...
...before returning home by night fall for another lavish spread.
The next day we went to look at a large plot of land they had purchased outside Christchurch, complete with a stream filled with brown trout and wild watercress..
Peter and I are travelling down to Napier for the Annual Art Deco Weekend to relax and unwind after the exam. We are also going down to collect some more pedigree Dorset Horn Ewes to cross over our current Ram (yes, thing are really taking off on the Rare Breeds Farm).
Napier is known as the Art Deco capital of New Zealand.
The 1931 Napier earthquake (10:47 AM on Tuesday 3 February) killed 256 people and devastated the Hawke's Bay region. It is still NZs deadliest natural disaster. It was 7.8 on the Richter scale and lasted for 2.5 minutes. There were then some 525 after shocks over the subsequent fortnight.
When the rubble was cleared, many of the Buildings were redesigned in the voguish art deco style, and some Spanish mission style. Thus, Napier remains the Art Deco Capital of NZ to this day...
Above and Below: The iconic National Tobacco Company building
Above and Below: The Daily Telegraph Building
Above and Below: Views down Marine Parade
Above and Below: It's just not deco without those glamourous deco ladies...
People usually go all out with their dress and there is usually a vintage car parade. And being the Hawke's Bay there is good weather, plenty of fresh produce and wine in abundance.
Thank you to everyone who has expressed sympathy following the earthquake in Christchurch yesterday. The death toll so far is at 75, with many people still missing. The PM has declared a state of national emergency: more than half the city is without power or water; the city's waste system has been extensively damaged; and emergency accommodation has been set up for the many who are homeless. The days ahead will be grim for many, but New Zealand has a history of pulling together as a nation during the tough times and I am sure we will see many acts of generosity and supererogation flow from those lucky enough to be unaffected, like We here at Willowbrook Park.
Fairwell too, to many of our well beloved landmarks...
Christchurch's Anglican Cathedral before and after
Christchurch's Roman Catholic Cathedral before and after
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