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  • “Here, catch this”

    June 21st, 2021

    “Here, catch this,” Dave heaved the giant rock at my feet.
    I lept back and swore. Loudly. 
    In the space where I had been standing, moments ago, was a decent sized rock….only it wasnt a rock. 
    “That’s from King Kong,” Dave smiled
    “What?” I said weakly, clearly still startled at why this man was throwing things at me.
    “I made that for the King Kong movie.”
    “Ooooooh,” I said as understanding dawned. “Cool cool cool! Can I play with it?”

    *


    I had been spending the afternoon with Dave Goodin, a sculptor on Stewart Island specialising in nephrite jade. His credits (of which there are many) include working on Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings films and King Kong. What he had just thrown at me was a mock boulder that had featured in the film about the giant ape. 

    A few hours before The Rock Incident, I was bouncing along the Foveaux Strait from Invercargill to Stewart Island. My fellow Brits-Abroad-in-Gisborne Amar and Kat had warned me about this notoriously choppy ferry journey. Unfortunately for all involved parties, it was a warning that I only remembered when I tried to go for a wee on the ferry. Lesson learned. Once the boat landed on the island, I headed to Dave’s studio – a giant corrugated iron structure perched on the waterfront. It was like stepping into another person’s imagination. Every surface available was covered in sculptures, sketches and tools. Wings and horns and talons and feathers hung from the rafters, and I spotted an Alan Lee sketch of Helms Deep tucked away in the corner. Even at first glance, i could tell that this was a place for a master at work. He was mild mannered and softly spoken, tucked away beneath a beanie hat and beard which belied his creative genius.

    What followed were some lovely hours of using various machines and hand-held tools under Dave’s watchful eye. It was great to be doing something practical and creative. The last thing that I can remember making was a piñata for my housemate’s birthday a few months earlier – using a papier mâché method that I’m sure I learnt on Blue Peter. The jagged piece of slightly translucent pale green jade that I was working with, slowly but surely edged towards a Toki (Adze)- a symbol of strength and determination in times of adversity.

    My experience that afternoon was removed from the honour of being gifted a Pounamu (greenstone) talisman, but the process of carving the Toki symbol was a captivating insight into the craft and spiritual significance of jade in Maori culture. The honour here was to be on Stewart Island and to be working with Dave. I hung onto every word that he had to say about his career and he didn’t seem to mind my seemingly endless line of questions about his work on Fangorn Forest. He seemed equally interested in my own line of work which was pretty flattering. 

    I emerged from Dave Goodin’s studio a little before 3pm clutching my new greenstone Toki and beaming. It really was a great afternoon. Part of me couldn’t quite believe that I was there. I’d been talking about visiting Stewart Island for such a long time – to finally be there at the bottom of the world and to get to talk with someone who had worked on one of my favourite film series….it was pretty cool! 

    Buoyed by the success of that afternoon with Dave, I’m definitely more keen for some hand-on creative stuff. I don’t imagine that I’ll have the opportunity to do any carving any time soon, but I wouldn’t be averse to making a papier mâché boulder or two…

  • Two Kiwi’s were walking on the beach one day…

    May 27th, 2021

    Saturday 14th November, 09:35

    Picton, New Zealand

    In the height of Covid Lockdown, two Kiwis were walking on the beach in Gisborne, one day. They came across God who was also on the beach.

    “Hey,” one of the Kiwi’s addressed God. “What are you doing here in Gisborne?”

    “Working from home,” God replied.

    ***

    That was just one of the stories from Tony in seat 17C. I was in seat 17D, also onboard a flight to Auckland – the first of my two leg journey to Dunedin, South Island. Tony was keen for a chinwag as we soared across the North Island. He regaled me with tales about his Whakapapa (Genealogy), his military days and a fantastic story in which, when invited to give an impromptu speech at a wedding on Barry Island, he opted for a Haka instead. I wish I’d heard this story BEFORE I gave a speech at my sister’s wedding. 

    Thrown into daily life on the North Island and all there is to do, it can be quite easy to forget that there’s another island to explore (2 if you include Stewart Island). This trip would take me up the east coast of the South Island – from Dunedin to Christchurch and then Picton where I would board the ferry across the Cook Strait to meet a friend from Medical School in Wellington. 

    Dunedin won me over instantly. Quite clearly a student town, it was full of bars, cafes, and lived up to its alternate name as Edinburgh of the South with tartan and shortbread for days. I’d flown out to New Zealand with chunky knitwear aplenty which I hadn’t been able to use in sunny ol’ Gisborne, so I was glad of the Dunedin chill on this trip. This is probably the best time to mention that I had only realised that Dunedin and Dúnedain (as in Dúnedain Rangers from Lord of the Rings) were pronounced differently, a few weeks earlier…which saved me some embarrassment in front of some of the hospital folk. 

    I regret that I didn’t have time to visit Emerson’s or Speight’s Breweries, but had a wonderful evening stargazing on the Otago Peninsula, diving into star lore including that of Matariki and the six sisters. Matariki is the Maori name for what the Greeks called The Pleiades, or Seven Sisters.

    Story time

    According to traditional Māori knowledge, the Sky Father, Ranginui and the Earth Mother Papatūānuku were separated from their eternal embrace by their sons who were cramped between them and no longer wanted to live in darkness. All the brothers agreed to this, except for Tāwhirimātea, god of Weather. In anguish at the separation of his parents, Tāwhirimātea tore out his eyes and threw the pieces into the heavens from where they have looked down on man ever since. Matiriki and the six sisters rise after winter solstice and use their mana – power – to guide the weakened sun on his journey back south.  

    It was a story that was told much better when I was huddled under a blanket (also clad in chunky knitwear) with a steaming hot chocolate, looking between the stars and the storyteller like a character from a children’s story. The time for Emerson’s and Speight’s pints would come later.

    There was lots to see on the peninsula by day as well, including its wildlife and Lanarch Castle. I’ll admit, that with all my British snobbery, Lanarch Castle felt more like a stately home than a castle, but nevertheless it was a visit worthy of a few snaps that made their way onto my Instagram page. 

    Prancing around this place, low key pretending that its my own home

    I had underestimated how long the journey up the east coast would be. While the coastal drive up through Waitati and Timaru was lovely, I pulled into Christchurch long after the sun had set, tired and ravenous. After a quick google search, I set off in search of Burger King – a large whopper meal being the only thing that could satiate me. To be honest, there was something quite ominous about Christchurch by night. I think it was something to do with the giant murals peeking through the shadows on partially street lit walls. But in the early morning light, the whole place transformed into something else entirely…

    ***

    I’ll leave you with the image of me inhaling my burger by streetlight because my ferry to Wellington has commenced boarding and I should probably get a move on.  

    More on Christchurch and onwards a bit later! Spoiler alert – I did in fact make it from Christchurch to Picton. 

  • The waves are a force of nature

    November 15th, 2020

    There is nothing quite like that feeling of standing up on a surfboard, feeling the power of the waves surging beneath you. Nor is there anything quite like falling off, having seawater rush up your nose, into your sinuses and tickling your childhood memories. As Frank, our surfing instructor and Gissy legend likes so remind us…

    The waves are a force of nature.

    Before this Antipodean adventure, the only surfing I had ever done was the web, but it has been an absolute delight to take to the water. Everyone in Gisborne seems to be a surfer – the house officers seem to know what the waves will be like at any given time and location, and popping down to the beach before or after work to catch some waves happens more often than not. You’ll almost certainly bump into someone you know down at the water’s edge. I wouldn’t be surprised if half of Gisborne has seen me in the sea, emerging from the water like Daniel Craig in Casino Royale.  

    In some ways, it has felt like a completely different culture with its own terms and etiquette. 

    On my first day at the hospital, two of the house officers were having a conversation about whether it was warm enough to use a 3-2 instead of a 4-3. It being my first day, I nodded along politely, assuming that they were talking about duvets. It wasn’t until a week later that I realised they were, in fact, speaking about wetsuits! 

    I am now the proud owner of a 3-2 wetsuit and with A LOT of practise, I hope that one day I’ll be carving up those waves like a turkey at Christmas.The first Saturday I took to the water was a glorious sunny day. After Frank had us practice paddling and standing up on the sand, we were in water, trying to ride the white water – spending more time in it than on it.  

    I regret to say that I did also take a surfboard to the face. The score stands at:

    Pacific Ocean 1 – 0 Yathu

    As I emerged spluttering from the water, blinking sea water out of my eyes and clutching my lip where said surfboard had impacted, I caught Frank’s eye…who had seen the whole episode. 

    “Watch out”, he said and then began to say something else. 

    “I know,” I muttered, reaching out to drag my board back out into the water. “The waves are a force of nature.” 

  • Easy like Sunday Morning

    September 21st, 2020

    Sunday 20th September 2020 | Yathmas Day

    11:39, Spoon & Paddle Cafe, Taupo, New Zealand

    It’s 11:39 on a glorious Sunday morning and I’m sat outside a café in Taupo, sipping a cappuccino. The song Easy by The Commodores is playing, with Lionel Richie’s voice as smooth as the honey on the French toast I’m waiting on. I feel like I’m living what Lionel is singing. 

    Rewind an hour, and I was hurtling towards Earth, fast approaching terminal velocity, having jumped out of a plane attached to nothing but a man called Andy and a yet-to-be-deployed parachute. 

    Funnily enough, the other chap jumping with us was also called Andy. Unlike the mountain range, these Andys were anything but an uphill struggle. They were great company as our little plane climbed to 15000ft – I almost forgot about last night’s steak churning around my stomach. I’d been feeling alright about the skydive, until this morning when the ridiculousness of voluntarily jumping out of a plane finally registered. While I paced around beforehand, my brother-in-law’s words of wisdom from his skydive experience had come back to me.

    “Just get on the plane.” 

    Now that I was actually in the plane, what should I do? There was barely any time to think, between getting strapped up, taking in the views outside the windows and mumbling something about this being my first skydive to the Andys. (There was of course, plenty of time for Andy to mention that the pilot was younger than I was). 

    We were at the front of the plane and therefore the last ones to jump.  I watched as the others edged down the plane and quickly disappeared into the outside. Before I knew it, I was being gently nudged towards the open door. And. Then. We. Just. Fell. 

    “Just get on the plane”

    It was incredible. 

    I can’t think of anything like it. The freedom of just…falling. I had to screw my eyes up against the wind and couldn’t even catch my breath to yell out the four letter words that sprang to mind. I remember the brilliant blue of the sky and the water below. I remember all my facial features being pulled up a few inches and I’m pretty sure I’m still waiting for my face to return to normal. But what a rush! 

    The views were excellent! I was looking out over New Zealand’s biggest lake, Lake Taupo, with Tongariro National Park in the distance. Somewhere in that view was Mount Ngauruhoe which features as Mount Doom in The Lord of the Rings films and also in the great Maori legends of the Tongariro Mountains. 

    Andy let me have a go at steering with the parachute once it was deployed and we enjoyed a chinwag as we floated gently down to Earth –  as if it was the most normal thing in the world.  Once we landed it was a series of adrenaline fuelled high fives with everyone else who had jumped and revelling in the buzz which I hope lasts a while.  

    I had been wanting to skydive for as long as I could remember and I’m so glad that I finally got to do it. I’m sure the photos of my face falling to Earth will be less than flattering – but hey ho. This was a great way to start off my 27th birthday.

    Skydiving definitely works up an appetite – here at the Spoon & Paddle Café I can’t wait for my French toast to arrive. I haven’t fully decided how to spend rest of the day, but after this morning’s activities, I’ll probably do as Lionel would do and take it easy. 

  • I’ll have a strawberry milkshake please.

    September 19th, 2020

    In a matter of weeks there will be two doctors at the hospital called Elliott. In the interest of differentiating the two, I suggested that the existing Elliott stake his claim on the nickname Big Elliott – an idea that has not been entirely dismissed. 

    The conversation moved on to going around the table and giving people nicknames. 

    When it came to my turn, I smugly replied, “Technically Yathu is my nickname”

                To which my colleague said “Nope, that won’t do. We’ll have to call you something else.”

    “What are those milkshakes called?” someone else piped up. “The ones that sound like your name?”

                “Um…I…have no idea,” I mumbled unconvincingly into my lunchtime frittata. 

    There was long pause and I hoped the conversation was over before someone said excitedly, “Yazoo! That’s what they’re called. Yeah, I just remembered because the strawberry milkshake is the same colour as your shirt!”

    I looked down and silently cursed myself for wearing my favourite pink shirt to work that day. 

    It’s now the following day and Yazoo is sat outside a bistro in Napier which is a lovely scenic 3 hour drive away from Gisborne. Yet more time whizzing around the winding NZ roads, feeling like I’m in a Bond movie. Out in sunny Napier, I’ve been having a field day snapping pictures of the beach and the buildings which, much like my shirt yesterday, are lovely pastel colours. I was planning to get a tour in an old Rolls Royce but I arrived too late, so ambling around with my camera will have to do. 

    On February 3rd 1931, Napier was levelled by an earthquake. The city was rebuilt in the popular architectural styles of the time and it is now famed for its collection of art-deco buildings. It’s a lovely place to amble around and on a sunny day and feels like a world of its own – lifted from the pages of The Great Gatsby and dialled down a bit. 

    Think Balamory meets Brighton meets Miami. 

    The museum in town is a must-see – including the exhibit about the 1931 earthquake. Visitors can hear about how many New Zealanders dealt with the disaster with classic Kiwi fortitude – which I’m learning is almost always served with a smile. 

    Also served with a smile was my dinner at Bistronomy – a casual dining spot in town – I cannot recommend the tasting menu enough! 

    Later today, I’m looking forward to climb Te Mata Peak to get some solid views of the Hawke’s Bay area.  Then it’ll be back to Gisborne for another week of work. I should wrap things up now because the waitress is coming to take my order. 

    I think I’ll have a strawberry milkshake. 

  • Where is the Nando’s?

    September 8th, 2020

    So I honestly thought that when I emerged from my mandatory quarantine period, it would be as dramatic as when Andy Dufresne escaped from Shawshank State Prison. In reality, barely an eyelid was batted as I heaved my suitcase out of the Ibis Hotel and into my uber. Within an hour, I was hurtling along State Highway 30 in my rented Toyota Corolla, belting out some classics by Katy Perry and Elton John, gawping at the scenery outside. 

    Everybody was right –  New Zealand is beautiful. Even the relatively short drive from Rotorua to my final destination, Gisborne, was a great introduction to the country. I stopped plenty of times to get some pictures.  Whether it was steam rising from the Rotorua Geysers or the sun shining in the Bay of Plenty, it’s all coming to an Instagram near you!

    I was a bit nervous about getting to Gisborne. In various conversations, the words ‘isolated’, ‘quiet’ and ‘it’s a bit out of the way’ had come up a few times.  At the time I had been quite excited to try something new, having spent the better part of the last decade in major UK cities. As I trundled along the road leading into Gisborne and saw lots of fields and barely any buildings or people, I started to worry that maybe I had underestimated how quiet this place was. Where are all the people? Why is the sky so clear? Where is the Nandos? My honest impression was that this place was so far away from the urban hubbub I was used to. Was this really going to be where all my FY3 dreams came true?

    A few kilometres later and things became a bit more built up…but oddly the buildings were rarely more than 1 storey. Once I was settled at my flat and popped out for a walk in the evening, I realised that my judgement of Gisborne was coloured by my first impression of the place – “This fish and chip shop is so quiet”..etc – I was being dramatic and narrow minded. 

    I got a chance to explore Gisborne the following day and was won over instantly. If sitting in the sun with a cold beer and Captain Corelli’s Mandolin didn’t do it, then it was definitely the Surf and Turf looking over Midway Beach that did. Strolling down the palm tree lined streets in shorts and sunnies, I felt like I was on holiday!

    I have now been in Gisborne (affectionately known as Gizzy) for over a week and I’m settling in. My first impression definitely set me off on a spiral, but the more time I spend here, the more it wins me over with its charm.  Yes it can be a bit quiet….but the laid back atmosphere is great! 

    After speaking to a few people at work, it feels that this first impression of Gisborne is a rite of passage for everyone who moves here – and goes to show that first impressions aren’t always everything. I am forever grateful that my friends didn’t just follow their first impressions of me – but that’s a set of stories for another time! 

  • Have you packed enough pants?

    August 17th, 2020

    Friday 14th August 2020

    15:42, Hong Kong International Airport

    I have always wanted to write a blog. Now that I am hunched over my laptop in the departure lounge of Hong Kong International Airport, in what I hope is a Bill Bryson-ish, exotic-travel-writer-esque way, I find myself in the perfect position to do so. Armed with some photos of winding roads, and an original blog title, I can now take my first tentative steps into the world of blogging.

    I don’t really know what form this blog will take. I imagine it will be stories about the people I meet; embarrassing situations and bit of Medicine thrown in for good measure….but we’ll see how it goes. I suppose I’m also hoping that it will be a good way for friends and family to keep updated on what is happening in my world.

    I said goodbye to my parents at London Heathrow just over 24 hours ago. After multiple assurances to my mum that I had packed enough underwear, a plate of Eggs Royale and just one pint of London Pride, I set off to New Zealand for my F3 Year.

    I have been excited for this year abroad for a long time. I like to think that it will be a year of learning how to look good on a surfboard, becoming a better doctor and occasionally jumping off tall things. I am excited to see a part of the world that I have not yet seen and to get to know some great people whom I have not yet met. Recently there’s also been a dose of fear added to the mix. I think that’s because much like this blog, I don’t really know what is in store. Nobody does. There is a lot of uncertainty in the world at the moment. Even recently, Auckland has gone into lockdown again which means that my expectations have changed – even about what is at the end of the flight that I’m about to board. And then there are the fears that seem trivial compared to everything else that is going on – fears about making friends, liking where I live, whether I’ll enjoy my job. These are the same fears you have when you’re 6 years old and never really grow out of…all of which are really just fears of the unknown and uncertain.

    As the antidote to this fear, friends and family have been really supportive, whether it has been a card, a message or an emoji on Instagram. Their collective mentality has been to just “crack on, you’ll be fine” – a perfect dose of certainty at the perfect time. Right now, I’m hoping that this, and the number of pants I have packed should see me through the next few days at least!

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