Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
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@grb090423 @sundogplanets I guess a pour over would be close? Do you have those in the UK?
@mrowe @grb090423 @sundogplanets
They used to be endemic - the Cona coffee machine. Which was filtered to be just about palatable but a bit weak for my taste and then left to boiled dry on the hot plate until it was burnt and unprintable.
I think most hotels favour this style of coffee in their restaurants.
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets With you on the drip coffee thing. Went through a whole expensive dilettante coffee thing. Found out I lack the early morning patience for pourovers and such. What I like is strong unadorned 10-oz cup of coffee I make for myself at home in a drip aka filter machine that heats the water to the right temperature. (Most machines do not and those that do have ridiculously inflated prices.)
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@DziadekMick @symbology @sundogplanets To be fair to the Americans, this article was from some time in 1943. What passed for "coffee" then was either instant coffee or "coffee essence" (coffee and chicory syrup). Due to international events the coffee situation was very precarious. Coffee culture only really started hitting these shores in the 1950s or later and many of my generation are still used to "long black" and "flat white" coffees (i.e. without milk or with milk).
@Daveosaurus @DziadekMick @symbology @sundogplanets
NZ has s curious history with espresso machines. They began to become popular post WW2 but due to severe government-imposed import restrictions following the Labour Government's "black budget" of 1958 it became very difficult to get parts for espresso machines imported from Italy so they virtually disappeared until returning with vengeance in the late 70s early 80s.
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@rdm@aus.social @sundogplanets@mastodon.social And this one at Kingscliff

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@mrowe @grb090423 @sundogplanets
They used to be endemic - the Cona coffee machine. Which was filtered to be just about palatable but a bit weak for my taste and then left to boiled dry on the hot plate until it was burnt and unprintable.
I think most hotels favour this style of coffee in their restaurants.
@DziadekMick @mrowe @sundogplanets
Oh, I remember those!
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets Here’s a little experiment (for science, you know?): can you sing “Tūtira Mai Ngā Iwi” to them and tell me what their reaction is? Thank you.

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@sundogplanets Here’s a little experiment (for science, you know?): can you sing “Tūtira Mai Ngā Iwi” to them and tell me what their reaction is? Thank you.

@dmian Usually it's just joining in. Though there may be sections of society that don't hold with their kids being taught that foreign language
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@sundogplanets No drip coffee... might be a problem.
@nantucketlit
Just ask for an Americano
Way I was told it got that name was because many of the US soldiers in Italy didn't like espresso, so the helpful locals worked out how to make an approximation of what they were used to with an espresso machine. When I was younger most old fashioned cafes and tearooms had Kona drip machines whilst the trendy cafes had espresso.
There is a place in town that does both, the drip coffee is a bottomless cup, so that's what I go for. -
It's a great sign, but the hand written SNAKES, twice, and the spider, leave no doubt what country you're in...
Just add crocs, cassowaries, and stingers for FNQ. Oh, and gympie-gympie trees.

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@rdm
Most of the people I know (apart from family) who've dealt with a fatal outdoors incident it's being on that track. Almost all of the woefully ill-prepared people or the ones who push on in the wrong weather get away with it. But there are so very many of them. That sign is part of a project to try and reduce the number of times Search and Rescue have to go up and retrieve someone
@falkovdg @sundogplanets -
@rdm@aus.social @sundogplanets@mastodon.social And this one at Kingscliff

@ada @sundogplanets @rdm How about we just go to the movies?
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets New Zealand Road Safety adverts are also in another league and do not play around either (see also Aussie ones too).
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@sundogplanets regarding the road signs - I still vividly remember the road signs saying " the faster you go, the bigger the mess" - are those still around?
@schwestaline @sundogplanets yup, but depends where you are
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets you should see our road safety ads!
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@sundogplanets “I know the difference between margarine and butter,
I can say Saskatchewan without starting to stutter…”@colinburgess "…I thought of something but instead said a mutter."
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets @at I’m impressed every time a European nails my ancestral “Massachusetts” on the first try.
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets Does Cliff have any relatives that can pick him up?
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Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
Really weird that I believe the US invented Roundabouts then abandoned them.
In the UK they also work when people follow the signs and road markings. Which stupid people cannot do.


