Some things obliquely referred to across a variety of conversations make sense now. That's a hell of a thing to go through, alright. I'm very glad Python NZ is still here. And I hope you and the rest of the committee are being as kind to yourselves as you can be right now.
Hey now, that's not fair. To the reef, I mean. That coral is full of living organisms!
That would certainly explain the over-the-top phrasing.
That is always vexing. I hope it comes right soon, regardless.
Thank you, now struck by the sudden urge to learn more about making kelp bags! :-D teara.govt.nz/en/photograp...
Blades of bull kelp were used by southern Māori to make pōhā – bags which held preserved muttonbirds. The thick honeycombed blade was opened up by hand, then inflated and dried. In this photograph, ta...
While not especially well formatted, here at least is a not-on-Facebook list: www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK24...
We will be exercising out rights to protest under the Bill of Rights Act and expect the police to take appropriate action to protect those rights.
She will be on _so_ many true crime podcasts!
"You say that _you_ have this ancestor's famous axe, but the next village over? They _also_ have one. So which one is the real one that he used?" "Nah mate, you don't get it. They are _both_ the one. And that's why we all have it, and keep it safe."
One thing I was thinking about recently is how sometimes there's more than one "official" version of the Item of Legend, where each tribe in the region might hold their own Sacred Axe That Was Used By The Ancestor-Hero That One Time. I really like the idea that, magically speaking, they all are.