Friday, 20 August 2021

And here we are again - in lockdown!

It's now Friday 20 August, and we have been in lockdown at Alert Level 4 since Tuesday night at 11.59pm. The dreaded Delta variant escaped somehow from MIQ and as is its wont, has spread rapidly. The first case was notified on Tuesday and we were in lockdown that night, with just one known case. However, the first case tested for, a man aged 58, was not the index case. It turns out that his employee also has it, as do the employee's flatmates, 

  • one of whom is a teacher, so the pupils (3000 strong) and teachers at Avondale College are all in isolation, and testing has been set up for them
  • one is a nurse/healthcare worker at a hospital
  • one is a uni student

Since then the places of interest strike fear into the heart: bars, pubs, the casino, a lecture theatre at the AUT, cafes, supermarkets, malls, playgrounds ...

And this morning it was announced that two pupils, each at different colleges, have also tested positive. So that is two more large school communities going in to isolation.

And at lunchtime we heard that there are now three cases down here in Wellington. So it is likely (my surmising) that any students at AUT or others who had been close to any of the cases while they were infectious and then came back to Wellington - either returning home from business or holiday or coming back from uni to see out lockdown at home with the parentals - has brought it with them. AAARRRGGGHHH!!!

The good news includes:

  • David and I are wearing our masks EVERYWHERE when we go outside the house
  • David had his penultimate and last radiation sessions without any impact of the lockdown - that was a stroke of luck really, as there had been a slip that blocked the railway line and the state highway below it on Tuesday. Because we knew that getting home again after his Tuesday session would be problematic, we booked him a room at a hotel across the road from the hospital. So in the morning, he stayed in his room having been granted a late checkout, then went over for his treatment and his appointment with the radiation oncologist, and I picked him up to bring him home. I brought a Bounty Bar for him as a treat - bloody hell, they are excessively sweet!
  • even though it wasn't medically indicated, for his peace of mind, David arranged and paid for a post treatment PSA test. As we expected and hoped for, the reading showed as undetectable, i.e. <0.03, which is what we had been wanting to see, but didn't, after the operation last year! He also had his testosterone level tested - that was also very low because of the Androgen Deprivation Therapy (hormone suppressant). The one piece of bad news is that he STILL ISN'T DUSTING!!! 
  • the pantry is full and we can exist happily on current supplies for some weeks if necessary
  • mostly, people are being sensible and kind and thoughtful. Mostly we are being good members of the team of 5 million. We have a few virulent anti-vaxxers and anti-maskers - I think they have been learning from the dumpster's faux noise idiots in the US how to think their rights to be stupid are more important than the health and wellbeing of the communities they live in.


  • we have plenty to do 
    • baking sourdough - I've got it sussed now apart from the hiccup of earlier this week where I kneaded all of the air out of the loaves before putting them into the fridge to prove overnight. Not a good idea to deflate them at that point, Marilyn. But the sparrows and blackbirds have been happy to eat the pancake loaves. The loaves did have to be chopped up so the birds didn't get beak strain trying to fight their way into the solidity ...
    • collecting driftwood off the beach for the garden and walking on the beach avoiding the Portuguese men of war that have washed up on the tide.
    • reading
    • listening to podcasts
    • teaching David some recipes
      • mexican tomato soup - really just a question of emptying lots of cans into a large saucepan...
      • a vegetarian Tom Kha soup: assemble the broth ingredients and put them on to simmer, then assemble and chop a variety of suitable vegetable chunks, remove the broth bits that are not appetising (lemongrass stalks, coriander roots, chunks of galangal, kaffir lime leaves, ...), add the veg chunks and fish sauce, taste, adjust seasonings and serve.
    • watching Netflix and Acorn
    • preparing nice food to eat, in particular a graduation dinner for David as he had completed his radiation sessions



      Vegetarian fresh spring rolls that I made - tasted yum with a mix of sweet chilli and soy sauce, but I need to learn to fill them more and roll them tighter!

      David ready for fizzy wine and food.
      We had planned a graduation dinner out with friends, but lockdown prevented that so it was a tete a tete dinner chez nous instead!

      Fresh spring rolls, vegetarian Tom Kha soup and lemon cheesecakes.

      Drinking fizzy wine, not chardonnay ...

    • walking virtually with my friend Ann who is in Nelson - our arrangement is wonderful in lockdown because we are over 100 miles apart and talk on WhatsApp as we walk. Lots of laughs and interest.
Soon we will find out what is to happen about lockdown levels - now that there are cases in Wellington, my hunch is we will be all staying at Level 4. Just have to wait till after the Cabinet meeting for that info.

 I will keep you posted!

 


Saturday, 7 August 2021

Some new stats

75% of radiation sessions completed

8 sessions to go; last day is Wednesday 18 August.

50% of David's and my COVID 19 vaccinations undertaken - Wednesday was the day, and the second dose is scheduled for Wednesday 25 August. Excellent planning as that leaves us plenty of time to get up to Auckland for Lynne's birthday and to visit friends on the way!

50% of our son Tim's vaccinations done (he had his first one on Friday morning, UK time)

We are a Pfizer family:

  • Kirsty in Sydney has had both of her Pfizer vaccinations 
  • David and I have had Pfizer here in NZ, and 
  • Tim has had his first dose of Pfizer in London.

4.6 on the Richter scale: the earthquake that shook Wellington and the Kapiti Coast at 3.51am on Thursday while we were in bed in a motel across the road from Wellington Hospital - stayed overnight on Wednesday in case David felt a bit poorly after the vaccination for the train/bus trip in on Thursday. But no, we were fine apart from a sore left arm each.


Saturday, 31 July 2021

Comments thing is misbehaving so here is the comment I wanted to leave for Tony

The lovely Tony Porter left a comment on my last post asking why we were so far behind in vaccinations here in NZ - possibly tongue in cheek, because, if you know Tony, you know he is a cheeky bugger...

 But anyway, in case he wasn't being cheeky or ironic, here is what I replied to him but Blogger comments wouldn't load it for some obscure reason.**

Hi Tony,
NZ stood back and waited for other more needy countries to get the vaccines first.
From about May last year (2020) we had no community transmission apart from a very small outbreak in August which was contained rapidly through effective lockdown and effective contact tracing.
We've had our border closed since March 2020, with only NZers (residents and citizens) allowed in and MIQ (government managed isolation and quarantine) in place for every arriving person for an obligatory two weeks.

So far, we have had 2870 cases, of which 2514 are confirmed, the remainder are identified as probables. Over 1000 of those cases have been returnees. There have been 26 deaths.  

That's why we are behind other countries in our vaccination rollout - because we could safely wait...
Mxx

** Is anyone else having problems with loading Comments? A couple of times I've had the message asking do I want to Stay on the page or Leave the page because if I leave my changes will be lost. Weird. It has happened when I've been commenting/responding to comments on my blog and when I've made comments on Lisa's What a Lark blog. Very frustrating, so any assistance would be much appreciated, please.

Friday, 30 July 2021

David is perkier

Now that he has had 19 out of 33 treatments with only 14 to go (and he is off on the train now for #20 and only 13 to go) he is feeling so much chirpier about being well on the way to completing them.

Apparently he is likely to start getting more tired about now, so I may start driving him all the way in, or driving him to and from Waikanae Station, and he may taxi from Wellington Station to close to the hospital - a walk being required to get his insides ready to remain still and unbubbly during the treatment. Now wasn't that discreet? 

20 out of 33 is approximately 60% - yay!!

Now we have to hope that our second vaccination doesn't slow up our travel plans - we want to be heading away a few days after David's radiation sessions are done as we have people we dearly want to see on our way north before our friend Lynne's 70th birthday party in Takapuna early in September.

Mmm, maybe we should have gone for an earlier first dose, in that case...

Wednesday, 28 July 2021

Past the halfway mark!

 Yesterday David had had ˜51% of his radiation sessions - 17 out of 33, and today he was up to 54%. He now feels like he is just coming around the last bend on the track heading for the home straight!

Yay!!

I drove him in today as it was the day for seeing the radiation oncologist - a good report and nothing of note really for David to ask about. He did ask about the possibility of skipping the session next Thursday as we have our first COVID-19 vaccination shots on Wed 4th - he was worried about not being in good shape for travelling in the following day. However the oncologist was not keen on his missing a session (even if it gets tacked on the end) so I suggested we come in to stay in the motel across the road on the Wednesday night after our jabs, have an early appointment the following day so we can then go home and blob for the rest of the day. Suggestion accepted, motel unit booked, all good!



Wednesday, 21 July 2021

If you have any vaccination hesitant people in your orbit ...

... listen to James O'Brien's Full Disclosure podcast with Prof Sarah Gilbert and Doctor Catherine Green. And then listen to it with them, and share it and/or the information you glean from it far and wide.

Informative, interesting and inspiring. 

The women describe what they did that made it possible to get the vaccine to completion so quickly.

They also bust the antivaxxer myths about mercury and embryonic tissue/cells.

You can find the podcast (and all the rest of his body of interviews with some really interesting people) wherever you get your podcasts. If you don't get podcasts usually, just go to whatever version of App Store you have on your phone. Or ask a young person to help you ... 

They have written a book, which I am going to get on my kindle - I warn you though: listening to his interviews has had me buy about 10 books so far. 

During the interviews, I find myself looking up the interviewee on my kindle and purchasing. So if, like me, you are a kindle owner who shops on it at any time of the day or night, put your kindle out of reach while listening.

By the above paragraph, I hereby absolve myself of any or all responsibility for your future book purchases while listening to Full Disclosure interviews, now and in the future. 

Get it? Got it? Good! 😊👏👍

Now find the podcast and start listening!

By the way, David and I have our first vaccine dose booked for 4 August, second one will be booked at that time. Yay!!! 👏👏👍👍😁😁



Monday, 19 July 2021

And now for something completely different

 There are a few reasons to post something completely different today. 

The first is that David is now one third of the way through his radiation sessions and that means he is only 6 treatments away from being past halfway - yay!!!

The second is that today is the very poorly named Freedom Day in the UK and I am thinking that there is a distinct need for some levity in what is surely destined to be a horrendous outcome of such rank amoral political shenanigans - and that is the politest I can be, sorry.

The third is that I read friends' boating blogs and feel rather jealous, and as David is in the midst of treatment (see first point above) and as travelling to the UK, while permissible for us is definitely not advisable given we haven't been vaccinated and given the second point above, it'll be some time before we are back on board nb Waka Huia. So I need a bit of cheering up about that every now and again - only briefly as being here in NZ in Waikanae is fine in spite of it being winter. It hasn't been that good a weekend in the north and west of the South Island though, so anyone reading this from those parts, this post is also for you.

So here are a few things to make you smile or laugh out loud or, at the very least/worst, doubt my sanity ...





Sorry, a bit nortee...


This made me think of 6 January in DC and also Wembley Way and Stadium last weekend, sadly.

One for every grandmother who reads this ...

My fave ...



If I was destined for a non-existent heaven and sitting on a cloud forever, I'd want much more than a magazine - Netflix, Acorn, my Kindle with unlimited books available ( esp new ones published since I'd karked it) and lots and lots of chocolate given gaining weight would not be a problem!

 


 
This one was for David


4 out of 4 Egyptians does Wheel of Fortune... (thanks, Adam xx)

This one took me a wee while to figure out ...

OK, that's it for today. Enjoy. 😂😇😍😇😂