Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Our First Christmas

On Christmas morning we went to church where I sang with the worship team and Dave did a reading with a few other people. He did a great job. After church we stopped at Dave's work because he needed to check the fridge temperatures.When we got home we grabbed some L&P and Sprite, and headed off to our pastor's house for a Christmas dinner. His three youngest kids were home; Vanessa, Ronda and Dave. His wife Heather was busy cooking and another older lady came, but I forget her name. We sat around and talked to Paul's kids for a while. Dinner was great! We had turkey, potatoes, beans, salad, ham and some other yummy food. After dinner we played a game called Kiwi Trivia. It was kind of like Trivial Pursuit but instead of different categories there was different levels of Kiwi trivia. Dave and I were asked the easiest questions, so we almost won. We knew quite a few of them, but the ones about the Maori were pretty hard. We left around 4pm. When we got home I took a nap while Dave talked to his family. At 5 we played a game of tennis with Paul and Ronda. Tennis on Christmas...I know, not your typical Christmas event. We were quite equally matched which made it a nice challenging game. Once we got home we started cooking our own Christmas dinner. The dinner was delicious. Once the dishes were finished, we sat down by the tree and opened our gifts. We received gifts from Dave's brother and sister-in-law, my parents, my friend Sarah Matherly, our landlords, and a few from each other. We'd like to thank everyone for the wonderful presents! We love them all and can't wait to us and eat them all. After opening all our presents we plopped on the couch and watched the best Christmas movie ever, Home Alone!
Ok, so this isn't a Christmas picture, but of our broken camera. It cartwheeled into a lake and decided to die due to water and sand inside it. We disassembled it to dry it and get the sand out, but it didn't work. We'll have to buy ourselves a new one as a late Christmas present.


Standing by our pastor's Christmas tree. Look at all their Christmas cards!

Christmas dinner.

Christmas dinner with just the two of us.

Snuggling in front of our Christmas tree and exciting presents.

Don't you like the book, Dave?

At least I liked my book.

Best Christmas present ever! All my favorite foods. Thanks Sarah!!!

Dave posing with new socks from my mom and a few other presents.

We had a great Christmas together!
Merry Christmas everyone!

Monday, December 24, 2007

Sewing Sensation

After making our Christmas tree I had a lot of the purple silk material left. I didn't want to just throw it away so I decided to make something else out of it. A shirt seemed like a good idea, seeing as how I've never made something from scratch before, didn't have any type of pattern to follow, and am without a sewing machine. Sounds great. I started cutting away and hoped for the best. It started out nicely. I had sewn a few hems on the top of the shirt and moved on to the straps. I didn't know exactly how they would turn out. My first one looked terrible. I had taken about a day (or two) to sew three long strips of material to braid into one of the straps. The edges were frayed and would not do at all. I started all over and came up with a much better solution. The shirt took about 5 days. I'm happy how it turned out, especially for my first major project.
The freshly cut pieces of material.
The finished product.

The back view. There is an invisible zipper on the side which allows me to put the shirt on.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Ho Ho Ho

Dave and his coworker Matt...and their sweet hats.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

The Breaking Point

Guess what? IT happened. Back in October, during a rousing game of tennis, I was a little over-aggresive and stubbed my toe in the process. Since then I've been eagerly watching for the day of toenail removal. Tonight while watching "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" I suddenly hit my toe against the coffee table. As pain surged through my toe I took a closer look to discover that the impact had caused the toenail to loosen. I could now lift the top toenail layer and see the new nail underneath. I didn't even think there was a whole new toenail underneath yet. I waited until Dave came home from work and gave him the honor of ripping off the dead tissue. After a few hard tugs the nail was free. A new and very disgusting toenail is now visible. It has this weird ridge in the middle and a few crusties of dried blood. The tip of the nail is really soft and it's a lot smaller than my normal big toenail. I've been told it will grow back to it's normal size eventually. I'm hoping that's the case.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

O Christmas Tree

O Christmas tree! O Christmas tree!
I wish you were real and 3-D.
O Christmas tree! O Christmas tree!
I wish you were real and 3-D.
A twinkle from your star would help me.
That would give me so much glee.
O Christmas tree! O Christmas tree!
I wish you were real and 3-D.

The ornaments are purple, but you can't really tell in the picture.


This year instead of a real tree we have opted for the flat tree made out of fabric. The obvious second choice for a Christmas tree. We figured it would be a waste of money to buy a real tree, a tree stand, lights, ornaments, etc. Then we'd have to try and sell all the accessories or just give them away. I intend to buy candy canes and tape them on as well, as long as New Zealand has them. Next year we'll have a better tree, hopefully. At least this way we won't start the house on fire because we left the lights on.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Little i Commercial

Here's a silly commercial that was made for the UK. Enjoy.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Bay City Cinemas


Well, I started my new job at the movie theater. I've worked a total of three days so far. I've worked at a theater before, so I know all the basic stuff. Although this theater is much cleaner and nicer. The picture above is the theater. One nice thing about the layout of the theater is that it has a tall "shelf" above the concession stand for all the promotional cardboard stand-ups. This way they stay out of the way and customers don't wreck them.
Day 1
Justin (one of the managers) showed me what to do when working "the floor," which includes turning on the lights, tearing tickets, theater checks, cleaning the theaters, opening & closing the doors, etc. I had never seen all the different cinemas, so he gave me a tour of those. We have a total of 8 screens; 6 main ones and two downstairs. The two downstairs are super small. And when I say small, I mean small. One only seats 25 people, the other seats 18. And they have tiny screens. After that, Sam (one of the workers) showed me what to do for the rest of the day. When trailers start showing in a theater, we usually want to close the doors then. That's my favorite part. All the doors are on this magnetic system. So I just go to the closet, flip a switch for the right door, and it automatically closes. It sounds really cool too. So the floor isn't too hard. In the mornings it's usually one floor person and one candy person. When the candy person goes on break, I have to go work the concession stand/bar. The computer system was quite similar to what I had worked with before, so I knew the basics. One weird thing here, they sell the tickets at the concession stand, I guess so people don't have to get their money out twice. Cass was working the bar my first day and showed me what to do before she went on her break. She didn't bother to teach me about vouchers because she figured no one would actually come in and buy one while she was gone. I knew how to sell tickets and candy, so I figured I was good to go. Wrong! Right after she left a woman came in and asked to buy a voucher! Luckily...or unfortunately, my boss Paul was standing right there and he was able to help me figure it out, but he wasn't too happy with Cass. Once that lady left a man came in wanted to redeem a movie voucher he received to see a movie that would be playing later that night. I had absolutely no clue how to find the movie on the computer. Sam came to my rescue and showed me that you have to scroll through a whole bunch of pages to get to movies that night. What a great way to start off. But other than that, the day went really well.
Day 2
I worked the floor again, this time all by myself. Everything started off good. I turned on all the right lights. Closed the doors at the right times. Cleaned the theaters thoroughly. Then came the delivery. Today was stock day. In came four huge pallets of candy. Since it was just me working the floor and Amanda at the bar, I was the lucky person to move everything upstairs. In our theater all the candy and soda is stored upstairs. We have a lift that we can send things upstairs to the projectionist or use for transporting the stock. So first I had to move all the boxes from the pallets and count to make sure we got everything we ordered. I started with the Skittles. I came up with 7 boxes extra?! I asked Amanada if that was normal and she said they always get the right amount. Great! I moved on to the M&Ms. Well, what do you know, 2 boxes too many. This is not looking good. Plus I didn't have a calculator, so I was multiplying and dividing on this little sheet of paper, hoping I'm doing my math right. Eventually I counted all the boxed and the plain M&M's and the peanut M&M's cancelled eachother out, but we still had too many Skittles. Now that everyting was counted I started filling the lift. The lift can only hold 300kg worth of weight. Like I have any clue how much that is. I put what looked like a good amount and started my many trips up and down the stairs. Oh yeah, one thing I forgot to mention earlier. Almost every door that staff members have to use have a key pad on them to keep nosy customers out. Which wouldn't be so bad except they all have different combinations. And I have a lot of different doors to go through. There is the door to get in the bar, the door to upstairs, the door in each theater for the cleaning supplies, the door to the garbage, and the door to the staff room. On my first day I had to stay in the staff room during my whole break because I was too afraid to go out and then forgot the combination to get back in.
Day 3
Floor again, which is fine by me. I like working the floor. Nothing too special today. Today I got to dip ice cream. New Zealanders love their ice cream. I guess it's a staple to have ice cream cones at the movies. I bet about 80% of the people I saw in my first three days bought an ice cream cone. We have two kinds, vanilla dipped in chocolate or vanilla dipped in chocolate with nuts. I went in the back and Abbie showed me how to do the nut ones today. Take a cone, dip it in the chocolate, let it dry for just a little bit, then roll it in nuts before it completely dries. Pretty simple.