Tag Archive for 'New Zealand'

SuperForester Peter Presents: South Island, New Zealand

Our lovely and fantastic videographer friend, Peter Harding put together this happy and inspiring video for us all to enjoy!

The South Island from Peter Harding on Vimeo.

We Need Your Vote!

Lovely SuperForesters around the world… we need your help!
We (twins) have just submitted our short film script (and video pitch) to a film contest and need your votes!  The New Zealand Tourism Board along with Peter Jackson are hosting a film contest entitled “Your Big Break”!  5 winners will be chosen to fly to NZ for 3 weeks and given facilities, crew and up to $100k (NZ) to direct a 3 min short film.
Click this link to go to our submission and vote! http://www.your-big-break.com/entry/13346
The competition closes IN AN HOUR! (10 AM Pacific/12 C/ 3 ET) and every vote counts.  So please GO THERE NOW AND VOTE!, then view, post comments to our video full of your superforestry praise, and pass this on to all your family, friends, and acquaintances so they might vote too.  And if your love of us (or our idea) is not enough motivation, consider the fact that by voting you enter yourself into a sweepstakes to win a 2 person trip to New Zealand!
Winners will be announced early next week.  We love you all!
-Jordan and Aaron (note: only one of us could submit to adhere to contest rules, but we plan on making it together if we win).

Impression Sessions: New Zealand

Kia Ora SuperForest! If you’ve been wondering why my Thursday Inspiration Information posts have gone MIA, it’s because last Tuesday I went MIA to New Zealand. For a 6 week roadtrip through Middle Earth. The first month of which is a Camper Van expedition across both North and South Islands with my Best-Buddy Beau and his friend Pete. Below is a rather lengthy update of the trip thus far.

Anytime I travel somewhere new, I have a certain predetermined vision of that place, pieced together from the fragments of research, scraps of advice and the idealized imagery of my overly romantic imagination. In New Zealand’s case, this vision had reached almost mythic status prior to departure. I was expecting sprawling vistas, sweeping mountain plains. The wild untouched beauty of a country unmarked by man.

I was wrong.

The reality of New Zealand defies the myth I’d built up in my own brain. It is much more grandiose and magical and mythic then I could have ever envisioned. Nature exists here on a macro level – The air is crisp and clean. The grass a texture and hue so green it almost demands to be eaten (never before have I had such cow envy). The ocean a sparkling crystal extension of forever.

And then there are the beaches. And the coves. And the sinewy, cliff-hugging gravel roads that carry you somewhere further beyond those forgotten scenic lookout points, or the abandoned black sand dunes; deeper into that indescribable point where an individual is reduced from wide-eyed, awe-struck spectator into a single exhalation… a sigh of joy.

The trip began in Auckland, where flying in low over the lush terraced hills, the Persian mother sitting next to me (who spent the flight describing to me her story of revolution and escape from war torn Iran in the 80’s), leaned over and remarked: “the country is so green, it looks like a giant, endless golf course!” Indeed, even Auckland, the largest city in New Zealand (which holds over 1/3 of the entire 4 million country population), was built around the green-tipped cones of extinct volcanoes, straddling the Tasman sea and Pacific ocean on either side. And though I found little of interest in my brief 2 day stay, I can not deny the simply charm and beauty of Mt Eden’s Victorian houses, or Western Springs lakeside walkway.

But New Zealand is not about the cities. If fact, any town or city through which we’ve passed, has seemed an unfortunate, albeit small hiccup, in an otherwise unblemished expanse of beauty. And this Camper Van is a blessing. We have the self-sufficiency to wander free, exploring the coasts. Cooking dinner along a remote forest road. Waking up anywhere — next to glittering rivers that yawn, open-mouthed into distant island-lined harbors. Life is good.

We quickly escaped the urban familiarity of Auckland, and set out along the Pacific Coast Highway for Coromandel Peninsula. Within 10 minutes of leaving the city, the countryside unraveled like a Tuscan dream, with quaint country homes, roadside signs advertising farm-fresh eggs, avocados and strawberries. We hooked high over mountain passes, wet with all the tropical flaura of Kauai, before dropping down the coast to the gob-smacking glory of Coromandel.

And here, California’s PCH and Maui’s Hana Road got together and made a genetically perfect love child of a drive. For 2 days, we cruised the curvy road winding around this hand-shaped peninsula, stopping at one mind-blowing bay after another. We woke in the morning to watch a pod of 50 dolphins leap and play no more than 30 feet offshore. We forded frigid rivers to an ancient Kauri grove (New Zealand’s version of a Redwood). In Coromandel Town, we tested the “world famous” Mussel chowder. In the far northern tip, we hiked the coastal walkway through sheep dotted hills, down to a hidden cove where Beau and I bodysurfed, naked in the freezing turquoise water. And that’s just the West Coast.

On the Eastern shores of the Peninsula, there is a beach where for 2 hours either side of lowtide, you can dig a trench in the sand, and hot water springs bubble from underground, forming natural hot pools. The water was so boiling hot, that the friendly Maori couple we shared a pool with, buried the fresh mussels they had picked off the rocks that morning, and cooked them right there in the steaming water.

A two hour hike carried us past Gem and Stingray coves, to the gorgeous white sand of Cathedral Cove, where a high arched cave separates one dramatic beach from the next. And the ocean here reflects sun like a single uncut mirror of blue glass. Heading south, we stumbled upon the secret hideaway of Opito beach, where I walked the shore alone at sunset collecting seashells, not another person in sight.

We spent the night and a relaxing 24 hours in Tauranga town, with the lovely Laura Brooks. Who, if it’s even possible, has become more sweet and wonderful over the years (I think Kiwi hospitality has rubbed off on her). Laura put us up, made us pancake breakfast and tolerated our loud, crass jokes. She even washed and folded our laundry. What a woman!

And now we are in Raglan, on the West Coast, having spent yesterday driving the coast, surfing, and exploring an untamed and empty black sand beach. No one but us and the wild-haired waves. We woke up early this morning, to catch a glassy and un-crowded swell at Manu Point (one of NZ’s best waves), with the locals all talking about how this was one of the best swells yet.

And now we are headed South, to the Glow-worm caves of Waitomo, the Alpine peaks of Tongariro, and the cold waters of Lake Taupo. We have 4 more days on the North Island, before we cross the channel into the supposedly more beautiful South. Though after what we’ve seen and done so far, I can’t imagine how that’s even possible.

I’ll send more updates soon (probably one like this every week or so)

–Always Merry and Bright!
Aaron

Vodafone New Zealand: 1000 Cell Phone Orchestra

In December of 2008, it was estimated that there were 4,100,000,000 cell phones in the world. For the peeps over at Vodafone New Zealand, this was (literally) music to their ears. Here is what they did with 1,000 of them.

Oh yes, it is indeed Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture. And this is how they made it:

Yowza. 1000 cell phones, ringtones for single instruments, and a built system to send text messages to them in the correct order, to get them to perform a portion. That’s insane! I can only imagine the hours of work that went into creating that one minute video.

The Vodafone ad (and those menacing cell phone stats) got me thinking: I am 21 years old and I’ve had 4 cell phones (maybe five, I can’t even really remember)…where are they? My most recent one is in a pair of pants, but as far as the rest, I can honestly say I have no idea. I can assume this is a dilemma one might find themselves in quite often: “What do we do with old cell phones?”

The Guardian came up with a clever list that answers just that!

1. Get creative: Donate your phone to Rob Pettit, who creates his art work with recycled phones, or Joe McKay who makes high-tech sculptural pieces with old and damaged mobiles

2. Hold on to it. Keep it and share your retention joy with others at Kept

3. Donate your phone to charity via Greensource or the Woodland Trust who’ll turn your phone into forest

4. Give it to someone who’ll make use of it – see Lifeline for Africa

So there you have it. To the folks at Vodafone New Zealand: I’m not sure if your ad’s intentions were for us to reflect on our crazy cellular phone consumption…or to reflect on consumption in general. But I thank you for the reminder, nevertheless.

Love to all.

(via!)

3 Maori Men Perform the Haka for the BBC

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(click either image to view video)

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This is great. 3 fierce cats performing the Haka, a traditional Maori dance.

Go, New Zealand!

The Trons!!!

Finally, a robot band the whole family can enjoy.

The Trons!

Love robot bands! Love! Love! Love!

Here’s the Trons Myspace

First saw this on wired. Beautiful, sweet, wonderful wired!

RepRap: Self-Replicating 3-D Printer! $500.00!


Wonderful news for creative types around the world!

A New Zealand team of thinkers has put together an instructions list and pdf for a self-replicating 3-D printer.

What does this mean? What’s a 3-D printer?

Okay, think of a normal printer. It sits on a desk and puts ink onto paper… Not bad, kind of a single-use item.

Now, a 3-D printer lays down plastic instead of ink, in multiple layers, and the end result is a 3-D object. A shot glass, a rear-view mirror, a motorcycle helmet; any object you can conceive of can be yours.

The RepRap team are offering a D.I.Y. kit for making a 3-D printer (or Fabber, for fabricator) that, once assembled, can instantly begin making a copy of itself.
You are then encouraged to give the copy away to someone that needs it.

You’re asking: “Uh, but what about my patent rights? My DRM? My licensing fees?”

That time is over.

So, you go to RepRap.org, order the kit, make your fabber. Your fabber makes another fabber and you give it away. The recipient of your gift-fabber then makes another fabber and gives that away. Meanwhile, you’ve gone and made a third fabber and given it away, or you’ve held onto it and now are using both of your fabbers to refine and improve the design of the first fabber.

Your First Fabber has gone on to replicate an entire fabber family, and all who own fabbers are now free of the cycle of consume/throw out.

You see where this is going?

You will never have to buy anything again.

And yet anything your heart desires, anything that you could own that would improve the quality of your life will be available to you. All made of a non-toxic, biodegradable plastic.

I need a set of cutlery for a dinner party= I put some plastic into the fabber, turn it on, and in an hour or two, I have my cutlery.

The frame of my glasses broke!= My optometrist emails the specs and my fabber prints out the new frame.

I need elbow pads= Print ‘em. Strap ‘em on.

I am in a remote location and desperately need a syringe bulb to get a bug out of my ear!: Print one out, and squirt the little critter out of there!

I am in Africa and would like to build a wind turbine to produce power for my village= Fabber prints the parts, you assemble them. Everyone gets light to read by, energy to cook with, chill food with, and filter water with.

The possibilities are endless.

Anything you can conceive of, you can have. Nearly free. The only costs are the plastic and the power to run the fabber.

The above picture may not look like much, but the home fabber represents an enormous shift in human socio-culture.

It is the difference between being a consumer, and being a producer.

And you can have your very own right now.

Go to RepRap.org.

Free your wallet.

And an especially huge Thank You to the RepRap team.
Your generosity and forward thinking ways have improved life for us all.

Thank you.

Love and fabbers to all,

Team SF

RepRap project @ wikipedia