August 22, 2005

Team Rothwell and the Sticky Fingers

Now that I know how to put pictures on my blog, be prepared for a gallery of ghastly grimaces ...

This is me (the girl in front), a sausage (the brown thing), Justine (far left) and Lucy (middle) at a sausage sizzle at the Warehouse in Cambridge a few Fridays ago. We're wearing Waikato shirts because it was the first game of the NPC that night, between Waikato and some other team. We raised an astoundingly bad $95 that night, which was pants.

Anyhoo, I am close to my final goal - $2,500 - so I have changed it to $3,000 just to keep myself going. I have another month of fundraising, so am going to go for gold.

As I have become a little famous (or is that infamous) around the Waikato Times for my fundraising, I feature in some of the messages bandied between workmates. One described me and my helpers as Team Rothwell, another called me Sticky Fingers Rothwell, so I have named our team Team Rothwell and the Sticky Fingers. Sounds like a band of rebels or something. Could also rename it Team Rothwell and the Sizzled Sausages, but that's quite hard to say. And nobody wants to be called a sausage.

Pommers, pinching and pools


(Left to right: Janna and Kimberley plaiting Chris' hair; Kimberley, Janna, Chris and Tane)




At the end of the skiing season in 1997, I went snowboarding with my friends Paul and Kirsten to Mt Lyford in North Canterbury. I had been snowboarding with them at Rainbow already that season and had a great time, building on what I had learnt as a beginner at Cardrona the year before. However, the Mt Lyford experience would brand me for the next eight years as ... The Worst Snowboarder in the World.
At Mt Lyford, they don't have chairlifts - they have torture devices called pommers. I don't even know if that word pommer is spelt correctly - just typing it kind of hurts. A pommer is a kind of winch that you grab onto and it pulls you to the top of the mountain. Skiiers can shove the end of the pommer between their legs and let it carry them, while snoboarders have to hold on and sled along. I spent most of the weekend wishing I had never been born as I stubbornly attempted to get on the pommer, up a steep incline, and to the top of the slope I wanted to conquer. Most attempts, I would get almost to the top of that first incline before the pommer would kick me off and send me rolling head first down the slope back into the queue of skiiers and boarders. I could hear them gasping as I landed at their feet upside down with my jacket pulled up, snow in my trousers and my legs skewiff. Like an old woman in a post office queue the other skiiers and boarders would let me to the front of the queue, just to have me attempt the pommer, fall off and roll completely humiliated to the bottom of the slope again. The few times I did manage to get up, I snowboarded down in record time, making neat trails behind me and having a ball. But it would be hours before I could control the pommer again.
At the end of the weekend, I had to endure the pity of my friends, who had had a great time on the mountain in sunny, perfect conditions. They didn't have snow shoved where the sun don't shine by repeatedly falling at high speed.
This weekend, eight years later, I got on a chairlift at Whakapapa with Tane, clutching a snowboard to my chest and gazing down at the rocks as I wondered 'what am I doing here?' I'm not only the worst snowboarder in the world, but also scared of heights, and there I was dangling over deep crevices (to me they were deep) on a tiny bit of metal. But at the top, I donned my snowboard and surprisingly spent a happy half day getting jiggy with the other boarders, meeting nice people on the slopes, actually getting my turns connected nicely, and pushing myself by taking the off piste routes to the bottom of the run. Evidently, snowboarding is like riding a bike. And although I managed to collect about half a dozen other boarders and skiiers on my last run of the day when the slope was packed with people, I had a magic day remembering how freakin' satisfying snowboarding can be. At one stage, I even called out to Chris "this is cool!" as I whizzed past her.
The day didn't finish with the mountain though, as we drove back to Taupo, the sun set on the mountain and we gazed out the window as Breaks Co-op sang us lullabys. It was so beautiful I almost had to pinch myself. Everything was tinted orangey-brown like a cigarette filter, and the sky seemed endless.
After burgers in Turangi we went to De Bretts for soaking in the hotpools. I donned my bikini and made goo-goo noises to a wee boy called Max who had the cutest little cheeks since Derek Cheng.
Then home to Chris's house, a cup of tea, a few rounds of 500, a well made fire and good conversation.
So now I am planning to get myself a snowboard next year. And a roof rack to carry it on. And all the gears. And a house on the side of the mountain. And one in France too, near Mont Blanc.
But I'll steer clear of Mt Lyford. At least for the next lifetime.

August 18, 2005

Even after washing 1497 cars, Kimberley still looked fresh and lovely

Last night, in a feat extraordinary mental ability, eight teams of adrenalin-charged super intellects challenged each other to take out the title of Quiz Night Supremo at Hamilton's Loaded Hog, and raised nearly $600 for Cure Kids in the process. Second place getters "Rank Outsiders" even gave back their prize - a bottle of Jim Beam - to include in the raffles doing the rounds of the city as we speak. Today I will be donning my super spunky tracky bottoms and washing cars at the Waikato Times, making sure those reporters and advertising people have sparkly cars to come home to.
And what is all this for? I'm heading toward the finish line on my fundraising target of $2,500 required to get to the start line of the $10 Auckland to Queenstown race. So far I've washed cars, run a quiz night, am holding a raffle, walked the streets begging, and had a sausage sizzle last Friday night at the ultra glamorous The Warehouse in Cambridge. I have even cleaned my work mates' desks for cash, and written a couple of CD reviews for a bit of ping. If you have an interesting suggestion for how to raise even more money, feel free to let me know... I stop short of having myself branded or walking the wharves (Hamilton is inland, you see).