Thursday, July 31, 2008

Job Interview

I had a job interview today at the BHBCC and I was a little nervous. S from Poly-Emp took me in my van and we arrived on time which was good.

I meet the two Co-Manager's and they seemed very nice. They talked to me about what they are looking for and what I'd be doing and asked me what I had to offer, skill wise. I handed them my CV which they had a look over and were impressed with. I told them I had good computer skills with both Mac and Windows software, front desk skills and more. One of the Co-Managers showed me there booking system and some other things that I'd be doing.

One thing that S didn't overlook and I noticed was that the office is very small and there is a window where they greet people and discuss bookings, yet I can't get near the window and the desk is to low as I can't get under it. There is enough room for me to do a 360 turn in my wheelchair. This was kinda off putting to me a little and the other thing I was concerned about is they want me to be at the front desk while they are out of the office in meetings and such. I want to work with people, not on my own.

They do have a disabled bathroom with a left handed rail which was perfect so that was one less worry for me. I could in fact have drinks at work without worrying about where the nearest disabled toilet is or not having a drink and waiting till I get home.

Overall the job sounded good.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Two Weather Bombs!

The weather has been crap over the last few weeks!!! The North Island was hit with a bad weather bomb, the worst storm in a decade with winds gusting to hurricane force at 167km/h. There was lots of flooding, powerline's down and trees up rooted. There was power cuts in different area's but I was lucky not to get a single power cut, just lights flickering. I stayed inside and kept warm with the gas heater on.

Check out the wild storm photos from the NZ Hearld here

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Meeting with Poly-Emp and WINZ

I just had a meeting with S from Poly-Emp and T from WINZ, T is an Employment Coordinator and is really nice. We had this meeting as I had quite a few questions regarding pay and my benefit and how much would my benefit be knocked down. I also wanted to know if working 6 hrs with so much was worth it etc.

Basically working 10hrs at $15 an hour is worth working. If I was working 6hrs then I would have to see how it affect my benefit with the amount of pay I get, sometimes it may not be worth the 6hr work.

When I used to work and I got a pay rise, it was basically removed from me as my rent would go up and my benefit would go down, this happened at every pay rise, leaving me with no achievement in the end. T suggested that instead of a pay rise I could ask for a day off with pay or something similar and this would be a pay rise for me.

I got a lot of questions answered and felt good at the end of the meeting.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Sports in Hamilton this Weekend

Our Auckland team were invited to compete against the Waikato wheelchair sports group in Hamilton this weekend. Yesterday only four of us, out of the eight players in the Auckland team went to Hamilton. Dad arrived to pick me up at 9.30am and off we went to Hamilton in the lovely wet weather!! It rained most of the way, some heavy spells of rain too. We got there early enough to have some lunch. I was glad to find two disabled toilets there, each had a rail on either the left or right side.

Playing Hockey
We played hockey first and it was a lot of fun even though the gym was tiny. Auckland team took the win of 2-0. The Waikato players did pretty well and it was good to meet up with them. They are a younger group of players than our group.


Playing Balloon Soccer
We them had a quick game of balloon soccer and that was a crazy game as the Waikato team kept taking the balloon down our end and scoring for us heheh. We did score a couple of our own goals though XD

It was great to finally be able to compete as an Auckland team instead of splitting up the team to practice against each other.

After playing some sports we headed off to an Foocie opening and to welcome the new Muscular Dystrophy Northern Waikato Field Worker, as well as afternoon tea for everyone. I had a nice hot cup of tea and some choco cake. I took more photos and talked to people. Dad and I left about 3.10pm and headed back to Auckland. We stopped at Bombay rest area and had some food and a drink at AUTOBAHM Cafe then home. I enjoyed the day out.

Friday, July 11, 2008

iPod Nana 4GB Arrived

I pulled my curtains open this morning and found a big brown box at my door *knows exactly what it was* :) Opened the box to find my iPod Nano in there in it's small box.

Inside box I got: iPod nano, earphones and USB 2.0 cable, dock adapter and Quick Start guide.
Goes to open it all up and try add some music and photos.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

RSS FeedBurner Added


I decided to add a RSS FeedBurner to my blog so vistors can subscribe to my blog and recieve emails on new blog posts.

To subscribe: Look for this icon on the side bar on the right hand side and click it. Then click on 'Get ~*Smiles Magical Land*~ delivered by email :)

Monday, July 07, 2008

Lost orca needs public's help

Aucklanders can help to save a healthy but confused killer whale today by keeping an eye out for the lost orca.

Washed up on the city's west coast on Friday and relaunched on the east coast's Takapuna Beach on Saturday, the orca was spotted high up the inner Waitemata Harbour's Henderson Creek yesterday by a pair of kayakers. Orca Research staff responded, with police, coastguard and boaties, to try to shepherd the juvenile 4-year-old female to the Hauraki Gulf. But boat traffic, especially from ferries, further confused the whale, Orca Research Trust founder Dr Ingrid Visser told the Herald. Time and again people lining Tank Farm's Wynyard Pt watched the orca head out towards the Hauraki Gulf, shepherded by the small flotilla, only to double back towards the Harbour Bridge when a ferry came near. "Every time we get her lined up, another ferry comes past. And they are very acoustic animals. So every time [a ferry] goes past it has a huge effect." The whale was lost, but not unhealthy, Dr Visser said, and its behaviour indicated it had every chance of survival if it could make it to the city's nearest orca pod - thought to be just off Waiheke Island last night.
The juvenile orca is believed to be healthy, despite its recent adventures. Photo / Richard Robinson
The juvenile orca is believed to be healthy, despite its recent adventures. Photo / Richard Robinson

The orca's harbour excursion did not prove the decision to launch it from the east coast was wrong, despite stranding on the west, Dr Visser said. "The thing that we were really concerned about was that she was very traumatised about getting caught up in the surf. She is very young, and very disoriented. The Manukau Bar is a pretty gnarly bar, and the weather yesterday was atrocious." Trying to launch the whale on the west coast would almost certainly have left it stricken again, she said.

The orca's beaching did not prove it was unwell, Dr Visser said. New Zealand had the highest rate of orca strandings in the world, about one a year, mostly from hunting errors. Orca hunted stingray, often into very shallow water, and juveniles sometimes came in too far, she said. "But we've spent about five hours with her and she's still swimming very strongly. She's just a bit disoriented as to how to get out. And that's understandable. She doesn't have a map in her head of the harbour. Normally she has her family to tell her where to go."

Taken from NZ Hearld

Sunday, July 06, 2008

Icy Blast

Talk about cold!!! It's been very cold this month with icy blasts of wind, hail, lot's of thunder n lightening and rain, oh and snow in some areas. Some areas have had hail as big as marbles cover there lawns and the roads creating bad conditions.

There was lots of thunder and lightening, in fact there was more than 3000 lightning strikes that hit New Zealand. The icy blast is meant to clear over the next week. I hope it does.

The coldest spell this year are: temperatures in Auckland fell to just 6 degrees at lunchtime, 10 degrees in Wellington, and Dunedin had a high of 4 degrees. So you can see how cold it's been. Over night temperatures in Auckland fell to a low of 8 degrees and over the next week they could fall as low as 5 degrees. I think I will add more blankets on my bed as I can't sleep when I get cold. Saturday was Auckland's coldest day of 2008.

Snow clouds, yes snow clouds were seen over Auckland city on Saturday!!! I read in the NZ Hearld that 'If Sky Tower was 3 times its height it would be snowing on the top', imginae that happening hehe.

2008 Philips Tri Nations

Thought I'd keep a score table here for the 2008 Philips Tri Nations. Last night New Zealand All Blacks played against South Africa and it was a pretty tight game for awhile but the All Blacks took the win.

05 July | New Zealand vs South Africa | Wellington | Result: 19-8
12 July | New Zealand vs South Africa | Dunedin | Result: 28-30
19 July | Australia vs South Africa | Perth | Result: 16-9
26 July | Australia vs New Zealand | Sydney | Result: 34-19
02 August | New Zealand vs Australia | Auckland | Result: 39-10
17 August | South Africa vs New Zealand | Cape Town | Result: 0-19
24 August | South Africa vs Australia | Durban, SA | Result: 15-27
31 August | South Africa vs Australia | Johannesburg | Result: 53-8
13 September | Australia vs New Zealand | Brisbane | Result: 24-28

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Whale rescue mission at Takapuna beach

I was off to Albany shopping mall this morning with Mum and Dad and I can't believe what I saw, as we were driving onto the Western motorway, an Orca Whale on a trailer alive!! I have never seen this before and it made me think of the movie 'Free Willy' which is about freeing an Orca whale, a movie I really enjoyed too. Here is the story below...

Whale rescue mission at Takapuna beach
The latte-drinking cafe set along Takapuna Rd had probably never seen anything like it. Moving along the road at a gentle pace towards Takapuna Beach was a 3.4-metre Orca whale on the back of a trailer. And no less than the son and grandson of the late ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau were among onlookers who got a close-up view of the dramatic whale rescue at the North Shore Beach today.
An unusual sight at the Takapuna boat ramp this morning. Photo / Herald on Sunday
An unusual sight at the Takapuna boat ramp this morning. Photo / Herald on Sunday

The whale first became stranded yesterday at Huia beach, west of Auckland. In an unusual move, the whale was transported today by road to be released off the North Shore beach. The whale was described as a 3.4 metre juvenile female of about three years old and had seen beached since 3pm yesterday. It was looked after overnight by Project Jonah and Department of Conservation staff.

Department spokesman Bill Trusewich said the whale was small enough to be handled and a decision was made this morning to move it by trailer to Takapuna, on Auckland's North Shore. The reason was that the waters would be calmer at Takapuna than at Huia. The 43km journey took about 90 minutes. Department spokesman Bill Trusewich said the whale appeared to be in good health during the whole episode.

Jean-Michel Cousteau and son Fabien, who are guests of New Zealand orca researcher Ingrid Visser, are in New Zealand shooting footage for a television programme.

Taken from NZ Hearld

My day at Albany was great and did some shopping and looked around the shops. We had a yummy lunch with some wine..of course :)