Look at these beauties, like paintings in the wild.
This otherworldly plant turns out to be a verbena variant from western China.
The scale is difficult to capture. We have a plant like this, given to us 26 years ago by Chris and Lisa as a housewarming gift for Division Street. It's been cut back repeatedly but continues to sprout new growth. If it keeps up, we may have to move somewhere with an open-air roof.
Out of the park and into the city.
The most violent quake, on 22 February 2011, killed 181 people. Thousands more were made homeless, and an area more than four times the size of London's Hyde Park was deemed uninhabitable.
Food courts and retail in boxes
Bookshop tender, lovely guy (aren't they all?). I picked up All The Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr, 2015 Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction.
Selling nicotine liquid for e-cigs is apparently not legal for shop owners in NZ (uh oh). Only chemists are legally permitted to sell it, and they don't. This despite the fact that a good friend of mine purchased some at the hemp shop in Auckland. Hmmm.
Did you know?
More from The Guardian.
Until recently, you could look through the dusty windows of a closed down cafe and still see an untouched 22 February 2011 edition of the local newspaper. And while creative novelties such as a retail mall made entirely out of steel shipping containers draw increasing numbers of visitors, the city's other main attraction is the battered and broken cathedral in the middle of the main square – a monument to what was endured.
In spite of the wreckage (and there is much more, not pictured because it's a vast heartbreak), Christchurch is a graceful city, with walkways of generous proportion as well as tiny side streets to explore.
These homes are right downtown.
I spy an urgent left turn.
The real thing, on a miniature side street.
Yes, please. Sourdough bread, olive oil-based herb spread, and pate. Anyone sensing a return-trip homemade train sandwich?
Apologies for the abbreviated backstory of the Christchurch earthquake, which left so much of this city in ruins (we're having serious internet challenges). It's sobering, especially in the wake of the Nepal quake, to walk in a still-struggling city four years after the fact.
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