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Kanazawa can be a place that encourages you to philosophise. It is indeed a place where there are places dedicated to modern zen philosophers. With modern architectural gems that are places for learning and contemplation.

Some may say that we are guilty of the following crime.

“We put something between ourselves and the world – literally a camera; figuratively; the project of capturing – instead of ‘just being in the moment’, and so alienate ourselves from experience. We bypass direct encounter with the world altogether, converting it into the shareable memory tokens without having experienced it at all.”

It is not hard to see this at play. It could be the Geisha evening where the fake camera sounds were overbearing, not only disconnecting the photographer from the experience, but all of those around them. Perhaps, it could be the continuous video recording of a stunning internal garden at a samurai house.

We do take a lot of photos, but trust me some of our best experiences are the ones that aren’t recorded. Such as the beautiful dinner we had last night where the immediacy of the experience is important. Lifting the lid to be overwhelmed by delicate and gentle smells can be destroyed by taking a photo. The engagement with the chef and learning about the depth and richness of food. I won’t remember each course and I won’t have a photo – but I will remember the feeling of generosity and richness of the sharing of Japan’s rare seasonal foods.

When we see our video of photos it servers to remind us not only what the camera has seen but what is also unseen by the camera. I am happy to say the the camera, can be direct experience itself – it allows a study of the parts and encourages the operator to consider different perspectives.

The article from which the first quote comes from, suggests that our concerns about the camera “tend to dissipate as the technology becomes commonplace and everyday, and part of that involves the technology becoming transparent”.

I am not sure that I want the technology to become transparent, recording my life like an all-seeing eye. But I do encourage our friends in the front row, and in fact all around us, when watching a show how about not taking a photo – or if that is impossible learn to turn off the fake camera sounds. When the time is right, the camera is a part of the direct experience enriching what we see and perhaps even our perspective.

West coast whitebait frenzy

  
The west coast of New Zealand and their love affair with whitebait is pretty amazing. Where else would the lateness of their run would make front page news? Where else would a town dedicate an entire festival to these tiny fish – with shops showing kids paintings of white bait. Where else would every restaurant have a white bait speciality? Where else would a hotel lift have whitebait artwork? Where else would you be able to get a glass of wine with the name whitebait (p.s. It goes well with whitebait).

Luckily we love a bit of whitebait. So far we’ve tested..

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Whitebait pancakes

West Coast NZ

Whitebait fritters on toast

West Coast pizza NZ

Whitebait pizza

Sad demise of trolley buses in Wellington

I was excited by seeing trolley bus infrastructure in Wellington. This was only to be met by sadness on finding the news that Wellington Council plans to shutdown the entire network by 2017. I can tell you that diesel buses impose negatively both in terms of noise and particulate pollution on downtown Wllington. Here is to hoping that the proposed diesel electric buses are run in electric mode in the downturn area. Perhaps, they are better, only time will tell.

Trolley bus infrastructure