Hello!
lover of (in no particular order): goats cheese; corgis; cooking; friends; family; coffee; long walks; being a doctor (the bumbling kind); books
Sunday, 26 June 2011
Welly weekend fun
Hello!
Friday, 24 June 2011
tutti frutti oh sushi
Wednesday, 22 June 2011
mammoth update!
I've not updated for a while have I – bad Roz! Am only just over the jetlag (it hung around for a while without my realising, manifesting in an insanely strong desire to go to bed at 9pm and waking up at 5am; most out of character), plus settling in has been a full time job...
Last Friday, after our coffee & cake, Cat, Tess and I returned to the hostel and slobbed about a bit before having some more nibbles (no room for a full dinner!) Then we went out on a bar crawl of Courtenay Place, as detailed in Catherine's blog; I don't have much to add to her account of the night, apart from TWO trips to Burger King (once for me and Tess, then back again for Cat on the way home!!! oops) and my vicious hangover the next morning, due to heavily mixing drinks. It's not my fault! I was bought a G&T!!
On Saturday we all got up fairly late and I had the restorative egg on toast. Then it was off to explore more of Welly despite the rain – we started off by buying our tickets for the rugby that night, then going up in the cable car (a Wellington institution) to the Botanic Gardens – unfortuntaly it was just too wet to walk around these, so we ended up going to Kelburn (a pretty suburb of Wellington up on the hillside) for....err..... more coffee and cake. Back down in Wellington, we headed to Te Papa to see the colossal squid and experience the earthquake simulator. The earthquake veterans Cat and Tess can vouch for its accuracy!
Then we had just enough time to put on a gazillion layers of warm clothing and gulp down some yummy spag bol before heading off to the rugby. It was rather wet so we came over all English and sat under our flowery Cath Kidston brollies. Not being a sports player or follower of any description, I had difficulty following the match and spent my time asking Cat (the rugby fanatic) annoying questions like, “What's the difference between a scrum and a ruck?”, “Why isn't this more like Quidditch?”, “Which way are we playing?” and “What colour are we?” I believe that by “we” I meant Wellington Hurricanes, having formed a loyal attachment to the city in 7 days!!
Unfortunately they lost so I decided I liked the Crusaders better.
After the match we squelched out and got on the first bus back to the hostel, where we went for hot showers and then retired to the comfy sofas with hot water bottles and laptops, and later mint hot chocolate (thanks Tess!)
On Sunday the girls had to leave early to get their ferry to Picton and bus to Nelson where their new placement is – I failed to wake up in time to see them off (no surprises there!) but we'd said goodbye the night before. After breakfast Paula (an Irish girl who is staying in Wellington for a week before taking up a graphic design job in Queenstown) and I went off to my favourite activity – the Wellington city market! This is a lovely artisan food market held every Sunday in Chaffers Dock, down by the harbour. Next to it is a fruit and veg market with cheaper-than-Grianger prices.... Didn't really go there this Sunday because it was raining good and proper, so being under cover was the main priority! This led us to take shelter in Te Papa again; I went round the rest of the museum, while Paula and her friend Caroline went to a comedy gig upstairs. There are some really good bits: an exhibition about the young refugees coming to New Zealand which had me tearing up like a hormonal fool, and a lot on NZ history of immigration and their part in the world wars. Met up with the Irish again downstairs and toddled off to Ernesto's (which rapidly becoming my second favourite cafe in Wellington, after Meow). There we had some rather delicious food – my bean chilli with chicken and chorizo was exactly what a rather rain-soaked Roz needed :)
I returned to the hostel to bake banana & white choc muffins – a culinary challenge, as the kitchen is mainly used for the heating of pasta and various sauces in jars. I located enough implements though, and within an hour had these:
winning me much admiration from the pasta-eating boys.
Two of these muffins havc been my breakfast on Monday and Tuesday, washed down with a coffee from Brooklyn Bakery (a bakery and coffee shop on my way to work). The others have been distributed among hostel inhabitants! Who says you can't buy friends with cake??
Monday:
Ward round – good now I know who the patients are and why they're in – there's 3 in isoltion because of stem cell transplants (for various things: mainly acute myeloid leukaemia, and one paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria) and marrow meeting which was about as fun as anything involving microscopes can be.
Monday afternoon I was naughty and sacked off – went for some lovely pad Thai at a restaurant round the corner from my hostel, then Paula and I went for a walk around Wellington which unsuprisingly culminated in Ernesto's again, with THIS cake for me....I actually couldn't finish it and had to save some for later!
After waddling back to the hostel I hung out in the common room on my netbook and studying leukaemia...before making dinner with Paula and Caroline (pasta with bacon, courgettes, mushrooms, chilli, anything else we had...), drinking a very nice Carbernet Merlot, and eating more cake!
Tuesday:
Spent the day in 2 clinics – bone marrow transplants in the morning, general haematology again in the afternoon.... upon my return home via Moore Wilsons (NZ equivalent of Waitrose, really rather nice) I decided to remedy all the recent cake with a visit to the swimming pool. I went off to Freiberg Pool (on Oriental Bay) with Paula who had had the same idea! I had a lovely hour's swimming and then treated myself with a sit in the sauna for half an hour. There were loads of Indian men in there who decided to make it as hot as possible and laughed good-naturedly when I cracked and nipped out for a break.... I went back in for another 10 mins though. Cos I is well 'ard, innit.
Lobster-like from the roasting, and with that lovely heavy tired feeling you only get from swimming, I mooched contentedly back home and nommed down a baked kumara (NZ sweet potato, delicious) with hummus, goats cheese and mushrooms. And salad. Pretty healthy compared to all the cake...
Wednesday
Today I was naughty and sacked off the morning to go to the Botanic Gardens in the cable car with Paula; it was beautiful even though this is NZ winter. Lots of ducks on the duckpond, and cheeky little birds too.
In general I'm starting to love Wellington; it's a very cool and quirky city, full of snake-hipped youths in drainpipe jeans and baggy t-shirts, swerving effortlessly around on skateboards (insane number of skateboards here!) Their female counterparts are all rocking the geek chic look with big glasses and cute woolly hats (it's winter over here, remember?) Cuba Street – which I have yet to explore properly – is the coolest street in the city withs loads of vintage and coffee shops. Oh and everyone – EVERYONE – drinks coffee. Most people I see in the mornings are clutching coffee cups; all the doctors in the hospital run around with coffee in one hand and stethoscopes in the other; my supervisor breaks off morning clinic to go and get coffee. I'm in heaven.... squeeliac coffee heaven.
<< I just wish this wasn't happening the day AFTER I LEAVE!!! how annoying!?
The hostel is starting to feel like home as well; I was thinking of moving (I'm a “grass might be greener” girl), but as David pointed out, it would be a waste of the muffin-bought friends to move, and if there wasn't anything wrong with this hostel I might as well stick with it. So I am. Wheee. The only con is the rather slow internet, but at least it's free.... They're a friendly bunch here. Most people are staying for a few months, getting jobs and then leaving to travel some more. My room-mate Andy has just got a job in a cafe after about a week of hunting and CV-sending and is rather pleased :)
Now I am in the car on the way to Palmerston North to this nurses' dinner I'm gatecrashing. Should be a good experience; I hope everyone is nice!
Wondering how to go about exploring the area some more – I really want to do a long weekend to Napier and Taupo, both of which are supposed to be gorgeous. Napier's about 4 hours away – I'm trying to decide whether I should rent a car and drive it (errrrk), or put up with the train/bus. I guess I could always visit them from Auckland but that's a bit of a trek....and I have other plans for Auckland! (including a visit to friends at Tauranga, the Coromandel coast, and surfing at Raglan as recommended by Georgina!)
I also want to work out how to get down to Queenstown (where I'm learning to ski, if there's any snow...) I was going to go via Christchurch, but after Tessa and Cat's grim tales of the town, I'd really rather not.... So my new plan was to head down the west coast instead, overnighting in Blenheim or Nelson (for the WINE darling. It is the Marlborough region after all). Then down maybe to Fran Josef to see the glacier/walk on it! An overnight stay there, and go on down to Milford Sound to peek at the gorgeous fjords before heading inland to Queenstown at last. No idea if that's a reasonable itinerary – it would certainly take me about 3 days....
Any thoughts peeps?
Much love to you all – Mummy – happy birthday for last saturday!
Izzy congrats on finishing exams!!! Michael – hang in there! Tim – say hi to all your Japanese friends for me; I'm really sad I can't meet them, especially the clever little boy who can play the piano!
Congratulations to all my newly-created baby doctor friends! So proud of you all :)
xxx
Friday, 17 June 2011
settling in....?
This placement is shaping up nicely. I finally have a timetable so I know when to go in (and when to skive, heh heh) and I'm starting to remember everyone's names now, and the registrar sends me to buy coffee when there's nothing to do! (Good coffee too, yum.) ALSO finally getting used to the Kiwi accent - they pronounce their vowels very oddly! Given that my understanding of speech is mainly based around the vowels, and lipreading, this has proved difficult to say the least, but it's looking up.
The timetable goes like this:
Monday
8.30 -10.30: Ward round
12.30: marrow meeting (basically looking down a microscope at all the cells, cancerous or otherwise)
Tuesday
8am – 12.00: bone marrow transplant clinic (and the marrow biopsy clinic runs alongside this so I should have an opportunity to stick a needle in someone's back at some point.... :S really not keen on the prospect I have to say!! I saw one today and it made me sweat nervously just watching. Ugh
1.30 – 5 – general haematology clinic (because the whole of NZ is about the size of a regular UK trust, the doctors have to be pretty general, hence Prof Carter does both oncology and bleeding disorders, whereas in the UK the two sections tend to be separate.)
Wednesday
11.30 micro meeting
12.30 – 1.30 journal club (where we discuss any exciting new studies... and free lunch is normally provided. Boom.)
Thursday
8.30 – 10.30 – ward round
10.30 – 11.30 MDT (multidisciplinary team meeting) and case discussion of tricky cases
1.30– 5: clinics again! But I am hoping to just go to the medical student teaching instead and make friends :)
Friday
8.30 – 11 Venous thromboembolism clinic
11.30: x ray review
1 – 2: journal club (more exciting new journals and again free food! huzzah!)
There you go!
To family and other fine, upstanding members of the public: I will be attending everything! Yes!
To everyone else – I will be skiving the afternoons! Yes!
(Not sure which I will be doing yet... The registrars on the ward have pretty much encouraged me to skive by writing me a list of coffee shops and cocktail bars..)
I returned this afternoon to find Cat and Tess in my hostel! While I am not glad that they have had such a terrible time (see Cat's blog for details: http://beta.offexploring.com/cashton/blog), I'm very glad to have some Newcastle medical faces about :) We've just been for some excellent, all g-f cakes at Meow, with a pot of tea for the girls and coffee for me. (Am determined to make the most of being in the caffeine capital of New Zealand.)
We're off out for cocktails later – at Emma's erstwhile workplace – and tomorrow there is a rugby game on so we shall be watching that at the stadium! How exciting! I've not really explored Wellington properly yet (apart from comprehensively mapping the good food shops) so it'll be good to get some official tourist things in. Particularly looking forward to Te Papa (“our place”) Museum of New Zealand, which has an earthquake simulator and a giant squid. (I have already been to see these for an hour on Wednesday night, but there is a LOT to do there so I look forward to returning!)
Other details of Welly life:
This hostel is good but I may still move to a smaller one (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/Worldwide-Backpackers/Wellington/5199/reviews ) after a recommendation from someone here.
I have also finally scored an extra blanket – HURRAH – rendering the hotty botty unnecessary. Starting to sleep fairly well now that I'm settled, though still exhibiting early morning waking... oo- er!!
Totally going back to the farmer's market on Sunday; this time they have a game stall! BOOM. Have decided to sample as much wine as possible here – the Marlborough Pinot Noir that I bought on Wednesday was absolutely spiffing. I had half a bottle without realising because it was so drinkable, and so GOOD....mmmm. Must get some white fish as an excuse to get a Sauvignon Blanc...
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
haematology hospital shizzle
Sunday, 12 June 2011
Welly at last!
I spent the rest of the afternoon exploring some more, buying a phone with sim card (because it turns out you can't put Vodafone sims in locked Orange phones – doh), checking out the library, making plans for travelling down the South Island. This evening, by a massive stroke of luck, I got myself invited to a concert with one of the loveliest families ever (my friend Leila's third cousin Liz and her husband John and their 3 adorable kids, Simon, Micah and Annika – apologies for any misspellings!) Despite all having horrible colds, they took me to a children's concert and back to their house for a cuppa tea, and then Liz took me out for dinner in Wellington! A bit of family time was just what I needed and so I am very grateful indeed :)
Also Liz drove me up Mt Victoria, a look-out point from which you can see the whole of Welly like a glittering sparkly carpet round the bay! It's soooo pretty – and again I forgot to take any photos. I really am going to have to step up my photographic game.
Now am sitting in bed about to Skype home again, then get some zzz's before going to learn about haematology tomorrow. Whoop! Feeling much more settled; big thanks to everyone who's sent me a calming facebook message – much appreciated! xxx
Saturday, 11 June 2011
beautiful Sydney sushi
On Thursday night I wasn't up for much more than takeaway gluten-free tacos, some w
Jonathan - in exemplary host fashion - had left me a map, his keys, and a bus pass! So I got dressed and toddled off to find the bus into Sydney, but not before I'd had some takeaway coffee at a little cafe on Bondi Road. (OH MY GOD. AUSTRALIAN COFFEE IS AWESOME!!!!!!!!! I actually stopped walking to appreciate it the more...)
Got into Sydney and met up with Will and Anna pretty easily - by bumpin
g into them on the harbour! We went to the Sydney Tower Restaurant for lunch which was fantastic - 3 course buffet with revolving view of Sydney..... excellent. (I ate perhaps a little too much and this, combined with the revolving, made me sightly nauseous, but am not complaining; the experience was just too fantastic :) )
After lunch, we waddled our way back down Sydney Tower and went to Chinatown for an amble round Paddy's Market, which is an excellent street market full of basic tourist tat, but great for a look around. Made our way back to Sydney Harbour for some coffee/tea at the Opera Bar - best view EVER (photos to follow once I work out how to upload them). Then alas it was time to bid farewell to Will and Anna as they had their plane to catch (have fun in Samoa guys!!)
Jonathan met me shortly after for a G&T (me) and a beer (him) at the Opera House Bar, before we went to meet Courtney for sushi at Zushi in Surry Hills (halfway between the city and Bondi). Unfortunately I really wasn't on the ball when it came to photographs, so I have no photos of the awesome sushi we had.... :( but you'll have to take my word for its utter awesomeness! I absolutely stuffed myself - and we had some lovely New Zealand wine too :)
After this epic meal we headed back to the flat for a cuppa tea, some chocolates and Masterchef which is huge in Australia! Great fun - kind of a cross between real Masterchef and The Apprentice.
An early bedtime because my flight to Welly was at 8.55.... I still feel bad about waking Jonathan and Courtney up at the ungodly hour of 6am, but they assure me that they're morning people (well Courtney definitely is!) so I don't feel quite as guilty.
Will write about Welly in the next post, but for now I just want to say a massive thanks to my lovely hosts in Sydney - I hope I can pay you back sometime! lots of love to you guys and everyone else xxxxxxxxx
Tuesday, 7 June 2011
Packing
7th of June, 2011
kiwi
Sooooooo. Tomorrow at the ungodly hour of 4.10 am I depart Broadmarsh Bus Station on a Kiwi adventure! I'm starting to wish it were more the "eat 10 kiwi fruits in under a minute" kind than the "travel halfway across the world on elective" kind. Oh well too late to back out now. I have finally managed to pack, and miraculously my bag weighs less than 20kg - 18.2kg to be precise! BOOM.
My itinerary so far goes thus (maybe David should code me a pretty map....)
Notts --> London Heathrow --> Sydney (2 days visiting Jonathan and Courtney)--> Wellington (4 weeks haematology, that's the medicine part) --> South Island and Queenstown (1 week attempting to learn to ski whilst preserving anterior cruciate ligaments) --> Auckland (4 weeks cardiology) --> Singapore (5 days eating - er I mean sightseeing) --> LHR and Devon times! YAY!
I would pretend to be excited but mainly I am trying not to poo myself. I have many fears: of flying (though once take-off is over I'm OK); being LONELY; being homesick; being coerced into a skydive and then turning into a pancake; etc etc etc. tbh the main one is LONELY, I am not good at lonely. Hence the aggressive capitalisation of LONELY.
LONELY!
Arghhhh.
IT WILL BE FINE. I will be fine. I'll make chocolate brownies to buy friends. It worked in first year....I'm looking at you Georgina.....
Note to flatmates - water the peaplant every day! thank you.
Going to obsessively double-check packing. BEEG KEESSES. xxxxx