Skip to main content

Day 4; Wellington, the wind, the coziness of hearth


While the days prior may have progessed not at all unlike Jamie has detailed, it must be pointed out that Dakin is not nearly the comic foil that one may be led to believe. Everyone knows that "pies" are made of meaty goodness and not blueberries! Additionally, there was a trip to the Polynesian Spa, where Dakin and Jamie paid an exorbitant $72nzd to soak in thermal pools with Japanese and Korean nationals. A price that seemed all the more exorbitant when compared to the natural (and free!) splendor of Kerosene Creek the following day.

Wellington has been compared, in climate, to the American city of Chicago. The surrounding bay acts to replicate Chicago's dreaded "lake effect", the winds pulling the cold from the depths of the ocean and pushing it through the city's streets, chilling to the bone. Upon arrival at Jame's home in Titahi Bay, a suburb of Wellington, the winds are subdued, but the cold forces itself aggressively into every crevice. This is when Dakin discovers that no home in New Zealand features that most American of comforts, central heating. James describes it, somewhat flippantly, as far as Dakin (now a child of the tropics) is concerned, as a "Culture of Cold".

Cold it is, as Dakin and Jamie huddle on Jamie's deck (or "lanai", as Dakin has become accustomed to referring to any outdoor space not covered in grass) smoking Dunhill cigarettes. Dakin is bundled in a jumper, shivering, with teeth chattering. The wind, while, apparently, not as bad as it could be, is certainly no Hawaiian trade wind. Dakin proclaims "I have not packed for this!", as Jamie led him to believe that fall in NZ may be survived with a windbreaker. Dakin also has the privilege of meeting Jamie's talented and charming partner Ami, and chatters at her in the sleep deprived delirium that may only be achieved by one who has abused their body terribly beyond what it's 31 years may withstand, in a matter of days. (It is to Ami's credit that she listens to Dakin's self absorbed nonsense for several days after this initial encounter. As was mentioned, Ami is charming, and with charm comes manners.)

Beer and wine is drunk, cigarettes are smoked, chocolate macadamia nut goodness is consumed, and music is listened to. Fires are made, and Dakin and Jamie recount their travels through the countryside; all of which has already been detailed in prior posts -- to bother with re-recounting would be the height of redundancy.

As was mentioned, NZ homes lack central heat. This is remedied -- a term used loosely; very, very, loosely -- through the use of a fireplace in the lounge (what one would call a "living room" in the states). The intent is that the fire in the lounge heats the rest of the home, making it somewhat less frigid. While this may not entirely be the case, the lounge is cozy, and the smell of woodsmoke awakens in both Dakin and Jamie memories of Kansas falls. Leaves changing and being kicked through College Hill (or perhaps Riverside) Park, birthdays had, school years begun, beginnings, endings, and all that comes with both.

Warmth and wine pull us all into slumber, and we retire early, lulled into dreams of Falls and lives past.

The following day... Cocktails, sushi, new friends, Richard Buckner

Comments

Molly said…
So what happened to Dakin being vegetarian? And I'm going to kill you two for seeing Richard Buckner without me. The letter bomb is on its way as I type.
Jamie said…
Um, yeah. I think you'll have to talk to Dakin about that. He was very much about the bacon and pate. And I've never seen anyone take to a steak and cheese pie like he did. As for RB, you would have loved it.

Popular posts from this blog

Lucero Video for "Darken My Door"

Darken My Door from Lucero on Vimeo . It's good to see that a serious band doesn't have to take itself seriously. Even better when a band's fans don't take them too seriously. "Darken My Door" off of Lucero's latest album, 1372 Overton Park , is a song about losing stuff--girlfriend, money, dignity. In fact, a lot of Lucero's songs are like that, but I'm not getting into that now. I'm talking about the video, which has so much to love. Obviously, I love the fact director Alex Mecum has used a puppet as the protagonist. But it's what the puppet does that makes this video so much fun. Puppet eating chili dogs, puppet drinking whiskey, puppet giving blow jobs . . . Hell, there's even puppet vomit! It's ridiculous, yes, but also tragic. By the end of the video, if you don't feel a little sorry for the scruffy faced whore puppet, then you have no soul. Here's a little more about the videos for Lucero's new album: To promot...

Okkervil River, Wellington, New Zealand :: Live Music Review

There are energetic drummers, and then there is Travis Nelson. Truly, he is 'Animal.' Okkervil River albums have so much personality, the songs themselves become characters: players, people in the guise of animals or gods (and who can tell the difference sometimes?). And like watching a melodrama, we are witness to emotions that heave and plummet with frightening force. The songs can be drunken youth: the rotund boots on their feet knocking wildly on every surface. Or they can be villainous and smart, full of smiles and wishing-you-well up to the second they thrust the dagger into your belly. Pitched, lust-crazed, calculated: that is one half of an Okkervil album. The other emotion is equally intense in its thick, slow agony: the eternity it takes to remove the knife, knowing you have it all to do over. And so it goes: soaring, drunk, angry, knife, stab, agony, pull-it-out-and-let's-do-it-again. At the San Fransisco Bathhouse in Wellington, New Zealand, on a crisp early a...

Best Music of 2008 [Last.FM gobbles our scrobbles]

Internet radio / social network / music discover tool Last.FM has released its Best of 2008 list. There are going to be dozens of "best" lists coming out in the next few weeks, but this one should command your attention. The list is not based on radio play, and it is not based on best selling albums. It is based on the number of times we (that's the royal "we" in all it's regal garb) have played tracks from our iTunes, iPods, Songbirds, or any other player that allows scrobbling. It is based on what we wanted to hear. We pressed play. We made the playlists. The only fault I can find lies in the Top 10 Tracks, which basically MGMT and Colplay. But that's what you get with raw data. To me, the Artists list is the most compelling. You will find no Kanye West on this list; no Britney and no Janet. You will only find the artists played incessantly and obsessively.