Last week, I got the chance to attend a friend Jon's PhD graduation, which was quite an event. Otago makes a big effort for graduations and this particular one had 600 graduands processing down the street led bagpipers and senior University staff finishing with a ceremony in the town hall.
Jon and his family also very kindly invited me to the graduation dinner later and we ended up going to a lovely listed Gothic-style townhouse, converted for use as a small restaurant and B&B. Quite amazingly, it turned out to be called Lisburn House and run by a family from back home! Very impressed and the lady who ran front-of-house was great fun, so if you're looking for a special meal out, I'd highly recommend it.
In fact, "Capping" (that is, graduation) is a big thing here and there are lots of associated events and activities around it, not least the Capping Show, a run of skits, parodies and songs organised by students. It has plenty of offensive bits but also a lot of very funny parts and some remarkably talented performances. Quite a unique experience and amazing that it is largely student organised. In fact, it's been going for 115 years (or something like that) and the Selwyn Ballet has been part of it for 81 of them, so it's got a lot of precedent to live up to each time round!
I should probably mention a bit about the maths - it's progressing, hard work but rewarding when it works out! At present I'm coding up a Navier-Stokes solver; for those of you who this means something to, you'll probably realise this could take me a little while, but it's largely an educational process.
In other news, Tutorials are getting very busy - this particular week the College has scheduled in or around 15 hours worth across all the courses we provide extra tuition for, as mid-year exams are beginning next week. All the best to those involved! Keeping me on my toes with markers, room allocation, student coordination and so on. Organisation isn't exactly something I'm naturally talented at (laugh away), so I'm still climbing the learning curve; we're getting there, just rather slowly.
On the next episode: Christchurch marathon (I finally leave Dunedin after 3 months) and some pretty pictures of the first view of the Southern Alps, once I actually get round to tagging the photos.
A final thank you to those who have been in touch and particularly to Mike (very belatedly) & Helen for their postcards!
PS This post has been written over the course of about a fortnight, in which context it may make a little more sense... maybe...
PPS A random picture of scenery, an autumnal day at Uni:
2 comments:
Of course, last week at the top ACTUALLY means several weeks ago. You get the gist.
the pix are great as usual Phil and I am looking forward to the ones of your trip to Christchurch.
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