During today's outing I called in at Marsden Bay, which looked rather lovely in spite of the rain that kept me in the car.

I used the new AI-driven removal tool in Nitro to get rid of some inconvenient fence posts.

Marsden Bay with milky blue water, distant cloudy hills, white boats on the water, a gull on green grass in the foreground.

These white cylinders at Northport are almost certainly components for the Kaiwaikawe Wind Farm near Dargaville:

The wind farm will have 12 turbines; seven in the northern cluster of the development and five turbines in the southern cluster. The turbines will be the largest and tallest in New Zealand.

Huge white cylinders lying on the ground at the port.

This series goes from strength to strength. I enjoy hanging out with this group of decent people (apart from the baddies, of course). The Mystery of the Stolen Snuffbox (The Antique Shop Mysteries Book 4) by Judith Cutler. 📚

when [Lina] absent-mindedly slips the box in her pocket for safe keeping, she has no idea she’s just made herself a target.

Because someone wants that snuffbox. Badly. And they’ll stop at nothing to keep its secrets hidden — even if it means silencing Lina for good.

Book cover: The Mystery of the Stolen Snuffbox.

Today's gym workout had an extra reward. Apparently, according to Hevy, since I started using the app, over 50 sessions I've put in :

31 hours of effort and 214,395 kg lifted.

50 workouts screenshot.

See, little bits add up!

Today's plans were quickly rearranged when I was reminded I had to drop my car in for a service.

It was a pleasant 30 minute walk home, interrupted by mediocre scrambled eggs on toast and some kind of flavoured water, supposedly green tea.

Most of the walk was along the riverbank — very pleasant.

River with plenty of green bushes and trees along the banks.

Best story this week! 🤣 ‘Crime-Fighting’ Llamas Catch Thief by Surrounding Him in a Field Until Cops Arrive:

The crook was fleeing the scene after stealing from a woman in Derbyshire, England, and he decided to squeeze through a fence onto farmland …

But his escape … did not go according to plan …

“Our llamas galloped over to him and surrounded him. They literally made a circle around him, and then started releasing their warning cry, which sounds like an old man laughing.

“He didn’t know what to do next and looked absolutely terrified”

For several years I've used an action on my iPhone so when I start a Cycling or Other workout Siri tells me the date, time and weather conditions. This has usually worked well.

This morning though, 09 February 2026, Siri cheerfully informed me it was the 2nd of September. What!?

Oh, I see, crazy American date system where 09/02/2026 puts the month first.

Why did Siri suddenly go all weirdly American on me? Unknown.

However, setting the voice to UK English, instead of US 'fixed' this new problem.

Siri action.

It took me a few uncertain chapters before this book had me completely gripped. It's an excellent space adventure. Forgotten Suns by Judith Tarr. 📚

Aisha, the daughter of the chief archaeologists, tries to save the expedition by opening a sealed tomb or treasury—and manages instead to destroy it. But one treasure survives, which may be the key to the planet’s mystery.

Book cover: Forgotten Suns.

One of the tracks to the river mouth takes you through a sea of golden rushes.

A narrow track through rushes, with the river mouth in the background.

I visited at low tide, just after dawn, and the area was a vast mudflat where birds were feeding. 🐦

NZ dotterel.
NZ dotterel.
Shag.
Shag.
White-faced heron.
White-faced heron.

I visited the estuary south of the river today. Midday, blazing sun, no hat, loads of people at the beach, high tide — conditions were far from ideal so no photos.

Then I saw clouds of birds whirling away from some disturbance. Thousands of Godwits and White-fronted Terns. What a sight! 🐦

We watched The Friend, a film about a writer who inherits her friend's Great Dane when the friend dies.

The Friend 2024 poster.

The movie was a bit odd, but the dog acted beautifully. Mainly I felt rather sad about the dog's loss of its owner.

The other day there was a fatal accident at a dangerous nearby intersection I often drive through. Today I signed a petition asking for a roundabout.

Here's some good news — Green Party celebrates decision to decline Taranaki seabed mining | RNZ News:

In a draft decision on Thursday, the fast-track approvals panel declined Trans-Tasman Resources' (TTR) bid to mine 50 million tonnes of seabed a year for 30 years in the South Taranaki Bight.

The panel found there would be a credible risk of harm to Māui dolphins, kororā/little penguin and fairy prion.

Now let's hope they decline the

proposal to use a suction dredge to remove up to 150,000 cubic metres of sand a year [in Bream Bay] for an initial three years and up to 250,000 cubic metres a year for the next 32 years.

Via: Sand-mining company McCallum Bros probed for alleged wildlife breaches at Pākiri | RNZ News.

I'm catching up on books that were part of a sci-fi bundle sometime.

I'd read part and then left it for some reason. On coming back to it I enjoyed the ways the characters approached different dilemmas, and the creative ideas about the aliens. Crossfire (Cosmic Crossfire Book 1) by Nancy Kress. 📚

A human colony settles on a distant planet … But as this diverse group of thousands comes to terms with their new lives on a new world, they make a startling discovery: primitive humanoid aliens.

Book cover: Crossfire.

We really enjoyed episodes 1 and 2 of Riot Women 📺 :

The themes of the series include the power of friendship, music, and the resilience of women who refuse to be silenced by age or expectation.

But episode 3 must count as one of the most outstanding episodes of TV I've ever seen.

No spoilers, but the lead actors are superb in this series.

If you can get to watch it, do. (Kiwis, it's on TV1.)

Billionaires are taking over Low Earth Orbit without any real constraints, control or accountability.

And there are real dangers to human life and culture — both from satellites crashing to earth or burning up in the atmosphere, and from the possibility of a catastrophic collision that could endanger all satellites, including scientific instruments we rely on.

Last night I listened to Prof. Sam Lawler, @[email protected] talk about Astronomy and the Billionaire Space Race.

She's speaking all over NZ. I highly recommend you go to learn about this for yourself: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand Lecture Trust (BHT).

Dr Samantha Lawler in front of a title slide for her talk.

These drawers for the garage came as a kitset. Yesterday, on an extremely hot and sticky day, I sweated over the shell. I only had to undo and redo two things. 😆

Today it's much cooler and the drawers were assembled in a flash.

Very pleased with my handiwork.

A set of 4 drawers, white, tucked into a small space in the garage.

Occasionally the herons come back to visit. 🐦

White-faced heron on a fence with trees in the background.

Not riveting; trash; rampant heterosexuality; creepy - reasons I abandoned books last year

While checking my Kindle for what fiction to start on next I see a load of books I've read only part of. Luckily these days I add a note when stopping a book. Hence I declare the following 9 books abandoned, with reasons. 📚

There, I think that cleans up all my Kindle purchases for 2025.

Proto: A New History of Our Ancient Past by Laura Spinney is rich in information but easy to read. 📚

Proto is a revelatory portrait of world history in its own words.

Thousands of years ago our ancestors were speaking to one another on the steppes, using the languages that were to eventually meld and merge and evolve into the English (and other descendant languages) we speak today.

Book cover: Proto.

It's amazing what researchers have been able to elucidate through bones, bits of pottery and DNA.

Sparked by: Finished reading: Proto by @jeremybaker.nz.