Showing posts with label Moving to New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moving to New Zealand. Show all posts

09 February 2014

So You Want To Move To New Zealand...

Frequently I get emails from people, usually American, who are interested in moving to New Zealand. They usually ask similar questions, many of which mirror the questions and concerns I had before we moved. I try to answer the best I can, tailored to their individual email, but recently I thought… why not write more about this? I mean, I'd be naive to think anyone (anyone???) visits my blog for the cool bike pictures. You are mainly expats and future expats, looking for advice and camaraderie. I was there.

So here's one of maybe a few or maybe several posts relating to why you found this blog. You want to move to New Zealand.

Disclaimer: I am not qualified to give legal advice regarding visas or immigration, and any visa topics which may arise are based on my personal experience only.

How far in advance should I start planning my move?
We told ourselves at the beginning of 2012, this is going to be the year we go. And so we started our preparations in January. Because getting a nursing license involves taking the IELTS and then submitting tons of paperwork, 6 months flew by before we even started looking at visas. We started our visa process in October, and we were in New Zealand by December. I would recommend a year, though, for bolstering finances, planning the move, and gathering all of the documents required for visa application.


How long does it take to get a New Zealand visa?
Once the paperwork is submitted, I would recommend you allow a few months for processing. This being said, ours were processed in about 14 days. It's the gathering of required documentation for the visa application that will really take some time.


What is required in applying for a visa?
Regardless of the type of visa you apply for (see next question) you will require police clearance. For Americans, this means at least 6 weeks waiting for a paper from the FBI to come, stating you have no felonies. If you are applying for a 2+ year visa, you'll also need medical clearance, including several blood tests, a physical, and a chest X-ray. This is spendy, and takes a few weeks to process. The X-ray, once done, is only good for 6 months- so you've got to be coordinated in your planning and submission of your application. Other than these things, it's just about carefully filling out the paperwork and ticking all of the boxes. Oh, and sending them a check!



How do I get a New Zealand visa? What are the different types?
There are heaps of different kinds of visas… student visas, working holiday visas, work in skilled shortage areas, work to residence…., and this is where an immigration lawyer comes in handy. I hired one to assist us in our application process while we were still in the States. It's expensive, but it came with peace of mind. If you haven't gotten very far at all, I recommend you check out the NZ Immigration Website. I know, I'm putting this on you instead of answering the question- but this is where the legal stuff lives. Yuck!



Can I get a job in New Zealand? What kind of jobs are on the shortage list? 
Some visas (student, and such) don't require you to work, but most of them do! And many visas are easier to obtain if you have a job on the skills shortage list. Check it out here. If you are married or in a long term relationship, it is possible for one of you to obtain a visa through having a job on the list, and for the other person to get a Partner Visa, which will allow them to work at any job.



How much money should I save for the move? 
Oh boy. I don't even know what to tell you. No matter what you save, it probably won't be enough. And everyone is different.  But there are two sets of expenses here: your moving costs, and your when you get there costs. The only estimate I can provide is from our own (2 person) experience:

Moving Costs
Movers: $2500 if you are not bringing furniture. (And don't even get me started on the movers. I hated ours. They were sneaky fibbers. If you're moving from CA to NZ, email me and we can talk about who I wouldn't recommend…)
2 One Way Tickets to NZ from California: $1600
Food, lodging, etc. during period of inevitable homelessness between moving out of your house at home, and landing in NZ: $1000
When You Land Costs
Temporary accommodation for 1 week (unless you line up a place to live ahead of time): $800
Rental car for 1 week: $350
Buying a cheap but hopefully reliable car: $2500
Cell phones and contracts: $300
First months rent + bond + letting fees, etc. in Christchurch: $1300
Setting up electrical, internet, insurance, etc.: $400
Food, crappy furniture off of Trade Me, other life expenses during the first month before you get a paycheck in New Zealand dollars: $2000
Beer to celebrate your successful move to New Zealand: $10… per pint!!!

So lets do some math… $12,760. I know, ouch! But, you asked!


What should I bring with me when I move?
First and foremost, if you are one of those lucky people being sponsored to move (i.e.: you're not paying for the moving expenses) then bring it all! The furniture, the pets, the motorcycle! Pack 'em up! But if you're one of the rest of us, have a garage sale before you go. Or keep it in storage if you're planning to come back. Moving furniture is astronomical (you get charged by the size of your container space, not weight) so unless it has sentimental value or is of quite a bit of value, leave it behind. And if you bring it, bubble wrap it a lot. So now that you're ready to leave it all behind, don't! Bring all the small stuff. Replacing spatulas and picture frames and kitchen knives will be twice as expensive in New Zealand (think $150 for decent sheets. Go to Target. Go now!). Just shove the pillow cases in the pint glasses (no need for bubble wrap!) and the blankets between picture frames. Look at packing like Tetris. We brought all of our kitchen utensils, plates, etc. All of our clothes. All of our bikes, snowboards, camping gear, bathroom junk, sheets, pillows, etc. It will also be nice to have all the familiarity when you are so far from home. Of note however, your American electronics will not work (they will die) unless they have an input of 240 volts. Computers, camera chargers, and printers should be fine. Blenders, hair dryers, shavers, and toasters will all die a swift and smoky death. Unless you have a voltage converter (not just an adapter!). They are expensive and cumbersome. Don't bother.


What should I bring on the plane?
You'll need the essentials on the plane. Enough clothes to live for 4-8 weeks. We brought 3 bikes with us. Your computer, the sheets and towels, and I'd recommend again, a few familiar things to make it feel like home when you get there.

Where should I live? Where do I stay to begin with?
While the obvious answer here is a hotel, I'd advise against it. If you've come with a job offer, ask that employer if they have accommodation for new employees. A lot of employers do, and this will be a good way to meet people before you even start work. If not, I recommend doing what we did and staying in someone's house. We stayed with a family in Christchurch for the first week we were here, and while we payed basically what it would cost to stay in a hotel, we got a lovely warm welcome, and so much valuable information about the area that we never would have gotten from a concierge. Because of our hosts, we had set up bank accounts and cell phones within 12 hours of landing! We found them through AirBNB.


What is the general cost of things in New Zealand?
(Based on living in Christchurch. Rural areas will be cheaper, Auckland will likely be more expensive.)
Car: $5000 for a decent and reliable one, $10,000+ for one younger than 10 years old.
Rent: Rent is weekly, and varies a lot by neighborhood. But, for a decent 3 bedroom house that is not an apartment, not a duplex, not in a dodgy area, and not severely damaged by the earthquake, you're looking at $350-$500/week (so $1400 if you're lucky, and more likely $2000/month). Its expensive to live in New Zealand, especially Christchurch, so adjust to that now. If you're looking for a room in a flatting situation, think $150-$250/week, depending on your needs.
Buying a House: I advise against doing this until you've been in NZ awhile and really know where you want to be. But think a minimum of $400,000, $500k if you want to live in Auckland. (But why would you?)
Again, I recommend Trade Me for getting a real idea of property value in both buying and renting. Trust me, you'll be using it when you get here.
Groceries: Again, we're all different. I buy a lot of organic, so mine will be higher. I wrote a little post when we first got here about how grocery shopping isn't that expensive, and I kind of still stand by that. Certain things however- alcohol, bacon, quality yogurt, quality chocolate… (the important things in life) are definitely expensive. But as many expats will agree, you get what you pay for in NZ. And in NZ you get quality food. Anyways, our monthly bill is around $800. But it is quality, and we eat a lot.
Internet and Cell Phone: These are grouped together because you will likely pay for them together through the same carrier. Ours is roughly $200. Internet is expensive here, and limited. If I spend too much time blogging (ha! not lately!) we will run out… its like we're back in 1999! Phone minutes and data are limited as well, but texting is unlimited. That's really how Kiwis communicate.
Garbage: FREEEEEEEE!
Water: FREEEEEEEE!
Electricity: FREEE-….yeah right. Electricity is expensive. No one has central heating or air because of this. We have a heat pump (space heater built into the wall) in the living room that we only turn on when we can see our breath inside and have run out of snow parkas to put on. Cost of electricity: $80-250 for 2 people in a small house, depending on the month. I had a friend who left her heater on low for a few hours each day during the first month they moved in to their new house. 800 bucks. On low.
Gasoline: Sit down. $2.22/litre. Now do the math. That's $8.88USD per gallon. Yep. Try to live close to your work, or commute by bike or bus or camel or magic carpet. Gas is freaking expensive. One thing that's cool though- all gas stations sell the gas for the same price. So none of that Oh, we've just pulled in to Valero but look! Across the street at Shell it's 3 cents cheaper! Lets waste $2 in gas revving up this Chevy and going through two stop lights to get over there and save 60 cents!
Insurance: Ahh, finally some good news. It's cheaper here! Car insurance is optional (!) and roughly $15 monthly for 3rd party coverage or $40/month for full coverage. Our contents (home owner's/renters) insurance is $40/month. Health insurance? Psh, whats that? Medicine is beautifully socialized over here! (But not until you're a resident. You can purchase health insurance if you think you need it. Accidents are free for everyone. Go break that arm, no biggie.)
Eating Out: Lets just go back to that, you get what you pay for thing. And what you get is usually really nice, quality food. $15-20 for a burger, $30-40 for a steak, $15-25 for a salad, $25-35 for pasta. $10 for a pint of beer or a glass of wine, $15-20 for a really good cocktail. But hey, its a non-tipping country! So what you see on your check is actually what you pay.
Clothes, Furniture, Sports Equipment, Electronics, etc: Just double it. Whatever it costs in America, times it by two. If it costs less than that (it probably won't) then you'll be pleasantly surprised.

Wow, that last bit wasn't meant to scare you. I'm a huge advocate of moving to New Zealand! Im also a huge advocate of the belief "money isn't everything", obviously. And just like with the food, the whole life you pay for in New Zealand is quality, so think of it as investing in serious quality of life. See interspersed photos (from our first year) for reference.


I think this is a good place to stop for now, but I'll pick up sometime. If you've found this helpful, or have a burning question for me to answer next time, please leave a comment or send me an email.

And one last thing, I'm nominated again (thank you, whoever you are!) for the Lexiophiles Favorite Blog of The Year. So if you've got a spare second I'd love your vote (by Feb. 17)!


04 April 2013

Video Thursday

So, Video Thursday isn't actually going to be a thing. But today I'm sharing two videos, so today is Video Thursday!

Anywho, the first is actually an advertisement for the Canterbury region. As Im sure you've gathered from reading my blog, the region has scared off tourists with earthquakes and rebuilds. It wants them back! So about two months ago we were sitting at Smash Palace, meeting up with some other expats, and this camera crew came up and asked Scott and I to - basically - say nice things about Christchurch. We did the interview, finished our beers, and forgot about it.

Low and behold, a few months later, here is the video! Scott's face made the cut... only my voice made it in. Obviously, they found him to be the prettier one! Ha.

Please click here to view video!

Also, a few weeks back I mentioned having a crazy weekend... and then never wrote another thing about it. I didn't forget! I was waiting for the following video to come out. Once again, I'm barely in it. If you pay close attention, I'm in a few background shots wearing hot pink gloves.

We spent 2 days building trail... ie; this girl swung an axe and shovel thingy for 2 days straight. I know, I was impressed too. We built the "missing link" between two existing mountain bike tracks out in the middle of nowhere. I strongly encourage you to check out the following video. The quality is super impressive, it's not too long so your attention span shouldn't suffer, and my hubby is one of the stars. He's in blue.

Please click here to view this video!

Alright, I'm off to work. Happy Thursday everyone!

02 February 2013

A little something came today...






In case you are confused... our container came!! Its been 9 weeks. We are so excited to have all of the things that make us feel at home. Finally!

31 December 2012

Happy New Years Eve from New Zealand!

While everyone else on our radar is having a normal Sunday evening, Scott & I are gearing up for New Years Eve here in New Zealand. By "gearing up", I mean it's already 8:35pm, and we just got back from doing shuttle runs in Victoria Park, about 10 minutes from our house. We still need to shower and eat dinner, and no champagne corks have been popped. Yet.

Anyways, I feel like trying to sum up the most poignant moments of our 2012 would be just silly. It's pretty obvious, and really, most of it is all chronicled in this journal of mine anyways. But to state the obvious:

We said goodbye (for now) to family and friends, we said farewell to my amazing and inspirational grandfather, we quit our jobs, rented out our house, sold our cars, and moved to Christchurch, New Zealand. Everything that happened before Fall 2012 just seems like a blur, most of which was preparing for the big move.

So, we're here! We're getting ready to enjoy Cassels & Sons Brewery's NYE party, and we're oh so excited about everything to come in 2013. Tomorrow we're starting the year off right with a biking trip to Hanmer Springs! ...I will not leave without my shoes.

Breathtaking moon last night, from our house.


The estuary 2 minutes from our house this morning. So beautiful.

25 December 2012

Exploring Christchurch: Christmas

First and foremost, Merry Christmas from New Zealand!

Our day started out looking a lot like a Northern Hemisphere Christmas:

Brrrrrr. Who authorized this?
But after a few hours (spent completing nursing education modules, ick) things brightened up. We visited the botanical gardens - see picture overload below - and the day has become quite enjoyable:

This is what Im talking about. Merry Christmas!
So after the fog burned off, but prior to pouring rose, we spent some time eating Subway sandwiches (depressing, but the only thing open after a 20 minute drive through a desolate city), feeding very hungry ducks, and enjoying the botanical gardens. We realized that all the people who aren't at the beach or at home are at the gardens having picnics. Why didn't we think of this? And no, Subway sandwiches don't count as a picnic. These people had barbecues going and cheeses and desserts and champagne... I was so jealous.

Picnickers who knew how to do Christmas in Christchurch

Anyways, photos from the rest of our Botanical Garden Visit (part 2 of 3289473298; Holiday Special):

Little ducks eating right out of my hand. Im a sucker for ducks.




Acknowledge the Tree : People ratio. 









Ongoing challenge: Name 5 things cuter than ducklings.
This is definitely the least traditional Christmas we have experienced, (especially with the Subway, which will not be a tradition, although the ducks approved) but we have made the best of being away from family and friends. That being said, we love you all, and hope you have had a great Christmas Eve and Christmas Day tomorrow.

22 December 2012

Home!

As mentioned earlier in my grinch-y post about not having internet access, Scott & I finally moved into our new house! And now it finally has internet.

As it turned out, we weren't able to move in until the day I started work. I worked Thursday & Friday this week, so I wasn't really able to enjoy, unpack, or decorate (ha) until today. Decorating, unfortunately, won't really happen until our boat full of stuff arrives on January 11. But we did receive some festive stockings to hang from Scott's folks, and the view luckily serves as decoration enough for now.

Here's a few pictures of the inside of our humble abode, pre-cleaning.

Living Room

Cluttered Kitchen, pre-paint

Atrium (and front yard down there)

Today Scott & I scrubbed and washed just about every surface, cabinet, baseboard, and appliance in the house. Scott also painted the entire kitchen and bathroom, which honestly made the whole place look new. After our belongings arrive I'll post some "after" apartment pics. I'm excited to get some furniture, decorate the rooms and back yard, and generally make the place ours.

Tonight's our first night out on the town, hopefully we'll meet some interesting people and hear some good music.

14 December 2012

Arrived!

We have been in New Zealand for less than 48 hours, but none the less have had 2 full days of life here. Its truly amazing how much you can get done when you don't really have any other choice in the matter.We flew our of San Francisco on Tuesday evening at 7:30. From checking in our baggage to security, everything went super smoothly. I remembered the excellent service provided by Air NZ last time we travelled, so I wasn't really shocked, but I was really relieved that everything happened as smoothly as I had hoped.

Despite a bumpy ride (for at least 3 of the 12 hours) the flight was pretty painless. Dinner and several glasses of wine were included, and by the time those were enjoyed we settled in to watch our choice of movies and fall asleep. I watched Ted with Mark Wahlberg, which is a great movie for those who watch Family Guy, and probably not for any other single person. Anyways, the flight went great, and amazingly, so did customs in Aukland. From getting our luggage from baggage claim, to finding the domestic terminal, all was a breeze. Auckland also had a ridiculous amount of beautiful New Zealand cultural touches throughout the terminals. I kind of felt like I was in line at Disneyland for a sweet ride.






I mean, live ferns in the airport? Cool!

I guess I do have a slight complaint with the Air NZ domestic flights though: I paid a ridiculous amount of money to fly our luggage from SFO to Christchurch. On the connecting flight from Auckland to Christchurch, the carry on bag size limit is drastically reduced to 7kg and the size of a large briefcase. Being that we were moving and not on a business trip, we had massive carry on bags that were no problem on our main flight. A super rude woman physically grabbed my arm and pulled me out of line while simultaneously reprimanding me for the size of my bag. By the way, there was one sign with these rules posted on it, in the terminal. When we re-checked in our luggage in Auckland, none of the ladies mentioned, "Oh hey, we're the domestic terminal... you can't bring that bag on the airplane... I'll check it for you." $120 and no explanation later, however, we were on our way!


We arrived in Christchurch at 9:10 yesterday morning. We are staying with a super sweet lady named Annette, and her husband, son, and dog, Sally. She was born and raised in Christchurch, left for a decade or so, met her husband who was a Brit living in South America, and eventually they migrated back to New Zealand.



Annette's beautiful house
Yesterday we managed to secure our bank accounts and get cell phones. They're laughable cell phones- so far from iPhones or even the questionably designed HTC Evos that we used to have. We got the severely entry level phones, with a funny plan that only has 100 minutes (yes, 1 hour, 40 minutes) per month of talk time, but has 1000 texts per month, plus 1000 additional texts to your "best mate". So... Scott and I mated, and we have 2000 texts each to use between each other, since we don't know another soul on the island. (Everyone texts here because mobile service is so expensive. It's normal to not use your cellphone at all for talk, as it can cost $0.25/minute, or more.)

After a great night's sleep we woke up this morning to another beautiful day (more on this in another post), and got back to it. The housing market is a challenge in Christchurch due to the earthquake and subsequent rebuild (ie: influx of workers), so we need to be quick and efficient about things. We spent the whole entire day researching neighborhoods and possible rentals, and have a couple of options now that we're super excited about. I'll update about those when one becomes reality. The main conundrum was: close to city center, Kristen's job, small and expensive? or: 15-30 minute drive to Kristen's job and city center, more space, less traffic, more for your money. Kind of the usual debate in most house hunts I think. We may not be 100% yet, but we're both strongly leaning towards having more space. I know many people also wouldn't even consider 20 minutes to be a commute, so I'll count myself lucky now that it's the longest commute I will have ever had.

On tap for tomorrow is hopefully locking down a house that we both feel SUPER good about, and getting closer to getting a car. We are also meeting a friend of a friend in Sumner for dinner, which will be our first particularly social event, so that's exciting. Tomorrow I promise not to forget to bring my camera everywhere. In other words, I'll babble less and post beautiful New Zealand more.

07 December 2012

5

Today's venue: a coffee shop in Fairfax, CA. Wi-fi quality: good. Bonus - no username/password needed.

I just spent a few hours shopping with my mom in Scott's neck 'o the woods. He went off on a bike ride with the guys, and I graciously stayed behind so as to not slow them down wear them out (their nerves, that is, after waiting for me to catch up...)

In any case, it turned out to be a pretty nice day, overcast but pleasant, and I got a little more Christmas shopping out of the way. This may sound productive to you, but our Christmas is in 3 days, which makes today the equivalent of December 22. Which makes me right on target for my usual shopping window. This time though, the stores aren't bare and people's faces aren't so frantic. Weird.

There's really not much to report unless you want to hear me obsess about my packing worries (3 bikes, 4 pieces of luggage, a billion spare bike parts, and a 6 piece luggage limit... this has actually kept me up at night). I haven't taken any cool pictures today, albeit the fall colors in Marin are pretty fantastic. And nothing particularly great or annoying has happened in the world today either, so I feel surprisingly devoid of opinions at the moment. Lucky for you.

5 days though! We're down to one hand!

Count 'em. 5 to go!
Image Via

05 December 2012

7 - An Interview

Im sitting at the kitchen table with Scott and my folks (and there might be a few beers involved). As we sit here and chat, Scott and I reflect on the fact that there are several questions that we get asked a lot... well, constantly. So I figured, why not answer them here... perhaps it will save us from answering the same old questions again, if even just once.

The Players: Kristen (yours truly), Scott (the bike husband), Katie (mom), Del (dad), and Everyone (the general population asking the generic questions we answer every day).

Recent picture of us (Scott unaware he was being photographed?) - thank you Ashley

Everyone: Why are you moving to New Zealand?
Kristen: This is the most common question, of course. We're moving for adventure. We visited New Zealand in 2010 for our belated honeymoon, and we've been scheming on how to get back ever since. We loved the people and the beauty of the country. We always figured we would move out of the country, and originally we were thinking somewhere in Europe. After we visited New Zealand though, we had no doubt that that's where we wanted to be.
Scott: The mountain biking there is bad ass. And the dirt jumps are subsidized by the city. What else do you need?
Katie: They're going so that I have a place to stay when I visit for the 3 months that I'm allowed in the country. Isn't that convenient?

Everyone: Are you going for a job?
Kristen: No. We had to get a job to move to New Zealand- they won't let you into the country if you aren't contributing something (ie: labor or monetary investment). We didn't decide to move to NZ because of some fantastic job offer.

Everyone: So do you have a job?
Kristen: Yes, I have a job with Pegasus 24 Hour Surgery Center in Christchurch, NZ.
Scott: I don't have a job yet, but I will. Unlike Kristen, I can get any job I want. Our work visas are contingent on her staying at her job with Pegasus, but I can work as a geologist, a teacher, or a bike mechanic... or an artisan cheese maker or microbrew master.

Everyone: You must be making more money in New Zealand.
Kristen: Not even close.

Everyone: So the cost of living must be lower then.
Scott: Not even close.
Kristen: We're not going to make money. Money comes and goes. We're going for the experience.

Everyone: You're moving to Christchurch? Did you know there was an earthquake there?
Kristen & Scott: Yeah, we're aware. We were in New Zealand in February 2010 when the earthquake happened. We were lucky to see Christchurch prior to the quake, but we saw it afterwards as well. The city center is still rebuilding, and is still a mess. But contrary to popular belief, there is still a thriving heart to the city. The shops, restaurants, and bars that were downtown and were destroyed have moved and rebuilt in nearby suburbs and are doing great. These nearby suburbs have also become desirable places to live, and are the neighborhoods we plan on exploring for our own future home.

Katie: Are you really going to live in a van?
Scott: No. We're going to get a sweet van with a bed in the back to travel around in and see this beautiful country. But we will have a great 2 bedroom place for all of you to visit.

Image Via

Del: New Zealanders drink Steinlager. Californians drink hoppy organic microbrews. I hear you have been brewing your own beer, do you plan on introducing this to your fellow Kiwis?
Scott: I hope so. We have only experimented with 2 homebrews, but they were successful enough for our tastebuds, and we hope to share that hoppy goodness with our new friends. Hopefully they're open to new beers!

Everyone: How long do you plan to stay?
Kristen: Our plan right now is to stay for 2.5 years. This move was 14 months in the planning, so we have to give it a good run. And just like our move right now, we can't imagine going from one hemisphere's winter to the other, so we'll stay two and a half years to ensure we move back from summer to summer. There is, of course, a chance we'll stay longer!

Del: I've heard there's all kind of poisonous animals there. Are you going to live in bubble wrap?
Kristen: It's a common misconception that there's poisonous plants, snakes, jellyfish, spiders, and other treacherous animals in New Zealand, but those actually all reside in our neighboring continent, Australia. New Zealand has barely (if any) poisonous creatures, and actually has no snakes at all.

Katie: But New Zealand and Australia are so close...
Scott: They're not. They're actually 1,200 miles apart, which is as far apart as California and Missouri. They actually formed in completely different ways: Australia broke off from the mega-continent of Pangea, bringing with it all of the animals and plants from the area from which it came. New Zealand, on the other hand was formed where it currently resides, from subduction of Earth's plates and volcanoes, thus creating land masses without nasty spiders and deadly stinging nettle trees.


Pangea... for those of you who care (anyone?)
Image Via

Everyone: So that's like a 22 hour flight right? I'm never coming to visit.
Kristen: If anyone spent as long researching their next vacation as I do (Scott can't stand looking at all 50 hotels on Trip Advisor for wherever we're going and I can't understand why).... they know that the flight from San Francisco to Auckland is only 12.5 hours. And all the personal movies you can watch and booze you can drink are included in the price... so it's kind of a cramped mini-vacation.

Scott: Can we go to bed yet? I've had several tasty beers, I've been working non-stop on all of this, I'm falling asleep, and I have bikes to ride tomorrow!!
Kristen: I thought we were packing tomorrow and planning our finances.
Katie: Zzzzzzzzzzzz......






28 November 2012

14

14 days until we get aboard our plane to Christchurch.

The shipping company called yesterday and basically said, "You remember that 72 hour window, Wed-Fri? We can't do that. We'll see you tomorrow at 1pm."

Needless to say, my last two days of work turned into one day. We fueled up on wine and pizza, and nearly pulled an all-nighter last night.

It's now almost 3pm Tuesday.

Look at my car for comparison! So tiny!
This monstrosity just took away all of our belongings, save for 2 suitcases, 2 carry-ons, and 2 bikes.

The moving guy also bought our recliner off of us. 40 bucks!

Scott is selling my car as I write.

Due to the surprise schedule change, these little buggers are staying until tomorrow:

Scramble and Hop, sprinting for treats. I'll miss them!!!
I'm mostly feeling fantastic, and fantastically exhausted.

Is it wrong to open another bottle of wine?

27 November 2012

Quick Progress Report

We're in a sort of survival-packing mode. There's no food in the house except Scott's birthday cake, some pickles, and some condiments. Good friends have made us food, offered to have us over for dinner. Anyone who's come by immediately states their concern for our wellbeing...


Oddly, I feel like a photo of my living room looks cleaner than what I'm looking at right now. The stack of boxes on the right (boxes for the cargo ship) has tripled, but somehow the rest of the clutter hasn't diminished. This week, we'll ship all of our cargo to New Zealand, I'll have my last 2 days at work and work party, we clean and move out of our house, and this weekend we'll have our Chico going away party.

Backing up for a minute though, and the thing about the shipping company: they gave us a 3 day window regarding the pick up date. 72 hours. We're supposed to have ALL of our belongings (save the most important things coming on the plane) ready for pick up in a 3 day window. It's a little absurd. It's like, hurry up and wait! We might have to be ready Wednesday morning, we might have to be ready Friday evening. WHO KNOWS!

They'll actually call us 24 hours prior to pick-up, but still. By tomorrow afternoon we have to have all things ship related packed- which actually means we need to have all things plane-related packed. Why? Well, airplane baggage allowances went down in the last year (ie: you only get one free checked bag on international fights) and extra baggage fees went UP. For us to bring 4 extra bags (our original plan) would cost $700! Are you kidding me? So now we need to know exactly how much will fit on the plane, so then, how much to ship. Make sense?

Accomplishments:
Sold the 350 Z!!! (Well, as of tomorrow morning)
Replaced our things that got stolen
Painted walls
Packed a ton

And tomorrow, the chickens move out!

Who, me?

24 November 2012

One Week

We bought our house in August 2009. We had only been in the market to buy a house for about 4 days. On day 3, we walked through a house listed at $300K (we were in a recession then, but $300K will buy you a mansion in Chico now) and Scott and I still laugh about that house. The floors were so uneven one could consider them ramps between rooms. Among ancient looking family heirlooms and dust bunnies, we saw discarded oxygen tanks and cannulas, which honestly just made me feel sad that some elderly folks had to sell their home. A heavy heart isn't exactly what you want to feel when you buy a house. 

Anyhow, the rooms were small, painted dark colors as I recall, and had an odd pattern of all connecting within each other. Like a small maze-house, great for hide-and-seek. As we braved the walk through a treacherous kitchen and out the back door, we faced a jungle. Kind of a cool jungle, but a jungle none-the-less. Gardens grew within old furniture and antique car parts, and small paths braided their way around the back yard with no rhyme or reason. It was several times the size of the house, and had a similar disorganization. There was an awesome greenhouse (where Scott saw multi-bike storage potential), but the dense foliage between the house/gate/greenhouse would have prevented any bike entrance. Conclusion? At least $20K in renovations and months in clean-up, for a house that was about 4 blocks out of the neighborhood we wanted.

And then our realtor called us, not 24 hour hours later, bubbling with excitement about a house that would be put on the market in 2 days. Tomorrow, he told us, was the day all the realtors could come view it to make their listings, but he had already peeked inside and wanted us to see it ASAP. 

We were wary, after the previous day's adventure, wondering if we were up to buying a home. But it was in our price range, smack dab in the middle of our desired neighborhood, and it had a fireplace. We agreed to check it out, and with realtors glaring, we walked in and saw this:


Large, uncluttered living room. No paint needed! No velvet curtains to remove!

No visible lean! 

We walked through all 5 rooms of the house, circled the yard, and ended up out front. We promised our realtor we'd put a bid in the following day. The asking price was below what we had agreed on for our budget of $300K, so I wanted to offer the asking price for the house. I didn't want to lose this turnkey charmer due to a couple thousand dollar squabble. But my father-in-law, who is far wiser than I, talked us though the process of putting in offers and counter-offers, and with his complete guidance assistance, I was able to get over the anxiety of offering less, and we were able to secure the house for $15K below asking price.

4 weeks later, we came home:


I had always wanted a green house with white trim. I don't know if this stemmed from a subconscious desire to be Anne of Green Gables (although I suppose her gables were green, and her house white) or if I truly have a sensible home decorator side that is buried in there somewhere. Regardless, I was so proud when we got our home painted, the lanterns out front replaced, potted plants properly placed, and a beautiful adirondack chair on the porch. 


The last checkbox on my dyslexic Anne of Green Gables homeowner dream wish list was a Christmas tree. I impatiently waited two months, and then a few weeks before Thanksgiving started mercilessly pestering Scott about when we could get a Christmas tree. Lucky for him, Christmas trees aren't actually available until Black Friday (today, incidentally), so I had to practice that patience thing. If you'll recall, I've had struggles with patience.

Anyhow, I finally got my Christmas tree (and a small fortune worth of lights and ornaments), and I finally had a window to place it in front of so all the world could see that I had created the most fabulous of all trees (under 7 feet tall), and that my house was the cheeriest of them all!

Half the reason I buy gifts for other people is so I can enjoy looking at them under the tree
I have enjoyed nearly 3.5 wonderful years in this house. We've had 3 Christmases, including huge holiday dinners. We've had 3 insane Halloween parties. There's been several great cocktail hours, and several hangover inducing nights with friends. We've had perfect date nights at home, in front of the fire place, snuggled up drinking wine. We've enjoyed our 5 chickens, Scramble, Omelet and Quiche (RIP), June and Hop. They're absolutely hilarious, and if any of you think chickens are just stupid birds that can't fly, well you're kind of right. But they're so fun to watch, funny to pester, and eggs from your own back yard really are the best (and make you feel just a tad superior to all other egg eaters.)

We move out one week from today.

I love it here so much, it's such a reflection of who we are (big bike storage, great party house, no room for kiddos, ha!) but I'm calm because I know that even though we'll be on the other side of the world, this little house, this little piece of Chico, is ours. Scott tells me we have great renters, and he is a fantastic judge of character. Our neighbors and friends will keep an eye on the place. We have a great property manager. We can't take it with us, but it's in great hands.

So off to pack more boxes I go. Theres one week left, and so much to do. Those of you that know me, know I'm overly nostalgic, so you can be sure that packing this place up is a wine-assisted process. We'll be extremely hard-pressed to find a spot this nice in NZ (although not hard-pressed to find a spot like this with single-pane windows and imaginary insulation). We don't have plans for chickens at this time, and houses with fireplaces are are rare commodity reserved for rich folks. 

But I do promise here and now, there will be a Christmas tree.