Saturday, February 25, 2023

Wellington, 2023: Weta Cave Tour

We have done the Weta Cave thing every visit since 2008, but never the actual tour. Our interest was always limited to LOTR stuff and not all the films Weta has done since or before, nor the roles of props and miniatures in movie-making. We always tarried in the gift shoppe, where all the LOTR stuff is, and remains, still more pricey than one would imagine. But this year we resolved to do the gift shoppe and the tour.

Entrance pretty much unchanged in all these years

Trolls Tom and Dick; Harry is around the corner; I still maintain
that they clothed the trolls after I posted pix of troll genitals in 2014

Assorted costumes from LOTR

They keep moving Lurtz around the shoppe; must be
 disconcerting

Sir Richard Taylor, co-founder of Weta, gives us
an introduction to the wonderful work they do;
in the free intro video

Still in the gift shoppe

Uruk-hai costume for your next Orthanc party

Quantities of miniatures

Not cheap



Actual COVID-19 mask Frodo would have worn had there been
a plague in Middle Earth; 100% New Zealand wool

Assorted hand-painted figurines

Elven bling

Vicki had a somewhat cheaper version bought back
when gold was less dear; I threw it into Mt. Ngaurahoe
in 2014 at her request

Finally, it is our time to go on the tour

Photos are not allowed on most of the tour, since
the various studios own visual rights (whatever that
means) to the assorted items, displays

Until you get to this point

  I was furiously snapping away...

Presided over by one Warren Beaton, possibly Weta's
last remaining employee associated with LOTR who is
not a tour guide nor gift shoppe clerk

He works now mostly in aluminum foil with a spoon

Thus

We were taken then to a different warehouse, a couple
blocks away, containing miniatures for the revival
TV show Thunderbirds Are Go, the original of which,
apparently, was very formative in Sir Richard Taylor's
interest in going into props and miniatures (the original 
Thunderbirds series, we were told, was done entirely
with puppets)(on TV, in the UK); neither Vicki nor I had
ever heard of the Thunderbirds series; we thought it was
a car, like an Edsel

At this point, it might be useful to note that the only creative work
still done by Weta (I have read) is done by Weta FX, the CG spin-off
which has no connection with the old Weta; sic transit, Gloria

Be that as it may, here are some of the miniatures...Hobbiton...
done for an anniversary commemoration, not a movie


Some made entirely of household items


At this point, I am definitely go

But fond memories will remain...


Friday, February 24, 2023

Wellington, 2023: Evans Bay And Environs

We did a couple walks on Evans Bay while staying at the Evans Bay Marina...
Looking across the bay toward Miramar and famous windy Welly
sign










Never very far from art deco


One of the city's many private funiculars

Another

Built right into the hill

Remains of the Evans Bay Patent Slip; whereby
a ship could be pulled out of the water on a rail
to undergo repairs




The Evans Bay Marina campground was right under the Zephrometer,
one of several public mobile wind-related sculptures in the area; I've
posted pix of the Zephrometer in 2018 and possibly before

Other such sculptures

Wind is very big here

Looking back from Miramar to the marina


Us, there

It was February 12th, and the traffic coming into Wellington's
airport had already increased markedly...flights cancelled...getting
planes out of Auckland and other northern parts of the North
Island in advance of cyclone Gabrielle's hitting...

We also took our customary drive around the peninsula, especially
to see the Cook Strait coast in advance of the storm...and whether
the ferries were still running...(ominous foreshadowing music)


Thursday, February 23, 2023

Wellington, 2023: Te Papa Tongarewa

Te Papa Tongaewa is the national museum. In the five years since our last visit a good bit had changed or been updated. As usual, we spent most of our day there in natural history and then the human presence on the islands. Great museum, lots of high-tech and hands-on, no holds-barred on even the controversial subjects. Do click to enlarge and read the interesting descriptions and comments.

Extinct creatures, including the moa, a flightless
bird that stood as high as 3.5 meters; wiped out
centuries before Europeans arrived

Assorted varieties of kiwi

Half of New Zealand's wildlife is found nowhere else

Examples...

Must read..."easy clean-up" is the best part

De-forestation...pre-Maori, pre-European, now...obviously the
Maori were pretty good at it too

Only in New Zealand...

Original and current Maori land holdings

Big exhibit on the Waitangi Treaty


Among its disputed issues

Moving right along, Vicki examines a waka, a war canoe, this
one from the earlier 19th century

Beautiful carving and inlay all over

From a gathering of war canoes and replicas
assembled in Wellington a few years back

Among the things that fascinate me are explorations
of Polynesians over the millennia, their craft, and, above,
their navigational methods on this greatest of oceans 

Models of sea-going craft



Model of auxiliary building...no pix of the marae 

Storage


Concerning the representation of a meeting house


Land of the long white cloud

Polynesian explorations

































Still hoping to find one of these ceremonial jade axes, whether in
New Zealand or Brittany...