Friday, 10 December 2010

Sunset in the Wairarapa - simply stunning!



Neil Calvert
Explorer Graphics
neil@egl.co.nz
+64 27 552 9702

Saturday, 9 October 2010

New photos of Max

I'm getting behind a bit on posts but whilst I catch up I thought you might like to see some new pictures of Max that have been taken over the past months - 1 from the Rugby Club and the others from Nursery.

Max has completed his first season of Rugby at Paremata Plimmerton. He is in dolphins and had a great time with the team learning the very early basics of the game which at this age simply mean running after the person who happens to have the ball at the time! He is the youngest player on the team but did really well against some bigger and faster boys and girls. The whole team sat very nicely for the official team photo!

Mana ELC had a professional photographer spend 3 days with them snapping photos as terrors played. The results are far more successful than the other 'forced' nursery photos we have had in the past.

We hope you like them...


Paremata Plimmerton RFC - Dolphins and Orcas


Mana Early Learning Centre - Room 3 Terrors


Best friends - Max & Devante


A typical Max pose

Getting close to a catalogue pose!

Just Max!

Carpenter Max

Super Max


Thoughtful Max

Thursday, 30 September 2010

The start of a fantastic weekend...

The rain has stopped, the clouds have gone and the sun is out! We have 5 days of this fantastic spring weather so it's shorts and sunnies all the way to Monday. This is why we live here!

Friday, 3 September 2010

Christchurch Earthquake

Just a quick update to let everyone know that we are all OK after the 7.2 Earthquake that hit Christchurch this morning. The Plimmerton siren did go off in the night - it may have been as a result of the quake but we felt nothing here in Papakowhai.

This is the quake drum for Christchurch showing the primary quake and then the multiple aftershocks some of which were bigger that 5.0 themselves.



Our thoughts are with the residents of Christchurch and the local Canterbury area as a State of Emergency is declared. We will be following the news closely today.


Love to all.

Monday, 30 August 2010

More Red Rocks sleepy Seals. What a life!



Neil Calvert
Explorer Graphics
neil@egl.co.nz
+64 27 552 9702

Checking out the Seals at Red Rocks



Neil Calvert
Explorer Graphics
neil@egl.co.nz
+64 27 552 9702

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Quick trip to the Middle East

I know this is the New Zealand blog...but one of the advantages of living and working on the other side of the world is having the opportunity to try new things. This is especially true with work - new company, new customers, new customer locations. This is how I managed to jet off to the Middle East for a week, to follow up on a 12 month old proposal to the Supreme Committee for Town Planning in the Sultanate of Oman.

As I was in the area, I also popped in to see potential customer Environment Agency Abu Dhabi and meet the UAE ESRI Distributor GISTEC who are in Sharjah - just North of Dubai.

Like many people I have been through Dubai airport but that doesn't count as having visited the area so this was a first time visit to this part of the world for me and I hope it won't be the last.

I flew from Wellington to Muscat via Sydney and Abu Dhabi. The total travel time is close to 26 hours, 3 1/2 hour flight to Sydney, in Sydney transit for 4 hours, 14 1/2 hour flight to Abu Dhabi, in Abu Dhabi transit for 3 hours, 1 hour flight to Muscat.

Oman is an amazing country - very new as most development has been done by the current Sultan over the past 30 years. Before he started the redevelopment programme there were only 6 miles of surfaced road in the country - now it looks like anywhere else. One key difference is that Oman has done this without the money from oil - instead the Omani's have worked very hard to get where they are today...a thriving, developing country whose people are some of the friendliest I have ever had the pleasure of meeting.

Planning is tightly controlled and the result is low level, traditional buildings which are very unassuming in comparison to the ostentatiousness found in Dubai - quite refreshingly so!

The temperature is in stark contrast to New Zealand - nearly 40 degrees with 100% humidity. It is like living in a sauna. At every phase of existence you look for the next air conditioning unit whether that is the next taxi, your hotel lobby or a shopping centre that you don't really want to buy anything from - anything to get out of the sun and moisture. One downside is of course every time you exit the world of the friendly AC you gasp lungfuls of hot air and any glassware steams up, which in my case was my camera lens. It was quite amusing watching the glasses wearers of the group I was with deal with the consequence of a too rapid exit from a cold building.

Time was all too short in Muscat as is often the case with work trips. I did however manage to snap a few photos before heading to Abu Dhabi.


The ceiling at the ESRI Muscat office


The ESRI Muscat office with the evidence of some lens steaming


A local mosque minaret

Bougainvillea over the wall of a local house

The Ramada Qurum Beach Hotel


Spices at the Carefore supermarket. I was told off for taking this photo...

The lobby of the posh evening dinner Hotel!

The team sat waiting for the drinks order to arrive. Gin & tonic...mmmm....


The remainder of the Oman project team

I am already looking forward to my next trip to Oman so fingers crossed we win the work!

My next step was back to Abu Dhabi for 2 meetings over 2 days, the first with Environment Agency Abu Dhabi and the second with the United Arab Emirates ESRI Distributor, GISTEC.

I managed to get some time to look around Abu Dhabi and Dubai, but summer in the UAE means temperatures approaching 50 degrees and of course I managed to arrive in Abu Dhabi just as Ramadan started which means that there is little or no food available between sunrise and sunset. Eating or drinking in a public place during Ramadan will get you arrested - even a non-Muslim so it is commonly agreed that this is a very bad time to visit the region! I wish I had ready the Lonely Planet before I left!

Abu Dhabi is a very vertical city. Don't come here if you have a neck condition - looking up into the sky would only aggravate it. As well as the sky scrapers there are an equal number of cranes. Of course, in order to build a very tall building you need an ever taller crane. That is what I will remember of the Abu Dhabi experience.

I took a stroll early evening when the temperature wasn't quite so oppressive to Abu Dhabi mall - quite an impressive collection of shops which reminded me of just how much money is in the area. I'm not sure that I have missed having access to shops like that in New Zealand. Maybe I miss NEXT just a little bit...

Arab states awake once the sun goes down and over the course of my visit the Mall filled up and began to buzz with some Ramadan atmosphere...which was nice...

Skyscrapers

Skyscrapers

Skyscrapers reflecting other skyscrapers

Really tall posh skyscrapers

Skyscrapers

There aren't quite enough skyscrapers so they are building some more

The Abu Dhabi Mall set up for Ramadan celebrations

Ramadan in Abu Dhabi Mall

Nice jugs...traditional coffee jugs that is - as a gate to a park


Skyscrapers

Today is my final full day in the UAE. I fly home tomorrow morning.
I spent it travelling to Sharjah to meet GISTEC, the UAE distributor for ESRI software.
It was a very positive meeting - I feel like I have just found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. I am sure that the EGL GISTEC relationship will be a very good one.

The majority of my time was spent in a car being driven in excess of 160kmph up and down the road between Abu Dhabi and Dubai - a journey which takes a little under 2 hours.

Dubai is something else. Any of you who have spent time will know how difficult it is to describe what you are looking at. It is the biggest of the biggest, the best of the best, the most unnecessary of the unnecessary! After my meeting the driver drove me around to see some of the must see Dubai sites. This of course included the Dubai Mall - the largest (of course!) shopping experience on the planet. It is indescribable and in my short time there I hardly scratched the surface. I had heard about the Dubai Mall Aquarium, but nothing really prepared for for it - it is huge - huger than huge and right there, in the middle of a shopping centre! For around 800 Diram you can dive in the tank - next time.

The aquarium's collection is impressive, Hammerhead Sharks, , Sandy Tiger Sharks, Grey Reef Sharks, Guitar Sharks, Giant Grouper (the largest bony fish in the sea) Napoleon Wrasse, Trevally, Sting Ray, Leopard Sting Wray, Giant Sting Wray and many many more. The tunnel only costs 25 Diram so I spent almost an hour wandering through that. Quite breathtaking.

By 3pm I was utterly starving...having not eaten or drunk anything due to unavailability rather than anything else. On wandering around the Mall I found Waitrose Dubai Mall! I haven't been in a Waitrose since leaving the UK so popped in to buy some food and drink. I bought Marmite and Jaffa Cakes to bring home plus a sausage roll and a litre of powerade to try and make myself feel a little better. Of course - you can't just eat out in public so I did the only thing I could - popped to the Gents, sat in a cubicle and ate my sausage roll and drank my drink! When I opened the bin to put my rubbish in it was full of rubbish from other people who had done the same! I imagine that all through Ramadan the weak non-Muslims are regular visitors to the loos for a quick feed!

Of course the Burg Khalifa (the tallest building in the world) and the Burg Al Arab Hotel (the most opulent Hotel in the world) are must sees - but the Mall Aquarium did it for me! By the way, who does own the very top office in the Khalifa? The tours to the top were fully booked but don't go to the top - they go 2/3 of the way to the top - but there is an external viewing gallery which would be incredible. It is disappointing that without a reservation you cannot get access to the Al Arab Hotel...I would have enjoyed a cold beer in that restaurant! For my next trip I will be very much more planned than I was for this trip and I now have a list of things to do...although a significant amount of cash will be required for that beer!


The Burj Khalifa tower - the tallest in the world

A Dubai skyscraper - taller and shinier than the ones in Abu Dhabi

Another huge skyscraper

The Khalifa closer up - it's huge

More construction

Sandy Tiger Shark

The tunnel

A herd of sharks

Teeth and lots of 'em

Giant Grouper

An Aquarium - in a mall...who'd have thought

Yup - it's real

Right there - amongst the shops...

A model of the Khalifa

You just can't take your eyes off it - it's everywhere

Dubai's most famous icon - the Burj Al Arab Hotel

The Al Arab from the beach


If you don't have a ticket, you can't come in

So there we have it - a whistle stop tour of Muscat, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. Fingers crossed that the opportunities that I was here developing come off so that I can come back...

I am settling in for a good nights sleep before the long journey home - see you soon New Zealand.