Our BetterMost Community > Chez Tremblay
A small yee haw
Shuggy:
I have to boast about this to somebody.
A couple of years ago I sent this email:
From: Hugh Young <[email protected]>
To: [email protected],[email protected]
Subject: Street sculpture
Date sent: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 21:55:46 +1200
(please forward this to the right person if I have remembered his
hame wrong.)
Dear Hugh
...
Many of the signs around the city advising the quarters have
sculpture on top, such as the ones at Cable Car Lane and outside the
railway station. One that does not is the one outside Parliament. It would
be fun and relevant if that were adorned with a Buzzy Bee1. (Following the
transport theme, I thought of a hot-air balloon, but that might not be
appreciated.)
With best wishes,
Hugh Young
--------------------------------------------
Notes:
1. A buzzy bee is a pull-toy that has become a NZ icon (first pic) Parliament's executive wing is known as the Beehive from its shape.
Nicolson replied:
Dear Hugh
Thank you for your e-mail - Kerry has already rung me this morning to pass
on your message - and thank you also for your excellent ideas.
...
Interestingly the idea of a Buzzy Bee on top of the sign outside the
Beehive is one that I have been working on quietly for some time. I have
gone as far as discussing the possiblity with the Buzzy Bee company who
own the copyright, and who have indicated that they would support the
idea. I had intended to approach Parliament and the RSA who both have an
interest in the site to check that they would be comfortable with the
idea.
However events have subsequently overtaken this proposal, and in
particular the Council has approved funding for a joint sculptural
project, Waititi Park, on this site in conjunction with the Tenths Trust.
Any sculpture on this site would need to be sympathetic to this project
which is as yet undefined. We may end up relocating the sign in order
facilitate the development of the park.
In the meantime I have put the addition of a buzzy bee or other sculpture
on hold until the future plans for the site are clearer. I am currently
working on a proposed sculpture for the sign in Courtenay Place which is
similarly unadorned.
Thanks again for your comments
Kind regards
Hugh Nicholson
Urban Designer
Wellington City Council
------------------------------------------
And now:
(There's controversy over its cost, nearly $NZ 14,000 ($US 9,450), but my complaint is that someone seems to be living in Flatland.)
Ray:
Well I'll bee! Well done Shuggy. Now you need to lobby cowboy sculptures on top of all other sign posts!
Shuggy:
--- Quote from: Ray on April 30, 2006, 10:06:35 pm ---Well I'll bee! Well done Shuggy. Now you need to lobby cowboy sculptures on top of all other sign posts!
--- End quote ---
Thank you.
But we have our own icons such as the kiwi, the tuatara, the silver fern, the weta: http://www.cafepress.com/ahua/1068643
and the Jandal (thong, flipflop) and our emblems of rural life are black singlets and rubber gumboots: http://www.cafepress.com/ahua/992280
Jeff Wrangler:
Hey, Shug?
"Our emblems of rural life are black singlets and rubber gumboots."
Um, this Yank gets the "rubber gumboots," but what do you folks mean by a "singlet"?
I'm most familiar with the term here as designating that sexy little one-piece thing that wrestlers wear!
(On the other hand, if that's what rural guys wear in New Zealand, when does the next flight leave for Wellington?) ;)
Shuggy:
--- Quote ---what do you folks mean by a "singlet"?
I'm most familiar with the term here as designating that sexy little one-piece thing that wrestlers wear!
--- End quote ---
No, a singlet stops at the waist (Sorry, and the farmers usually wear long khaki shorts). I've seen it defined in terms of a "tank" whatever that is. It's neckless and sleeveless, in fact it leaves the outer shoulders uncovered. the material tapers away to little more than straps over the shoulders.
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