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Carers Anonymous Meeting
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Huia | Report | 15 Nov 2009 23:06 |
Hi there Bob, glad to see you and your BH are still in the land of the living. If you want to find the thread when it has disappeared, look at the left under Tools you will see My threads. Click on that and you will find a list of the threads to which you have added, hopefully not too many! |
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Huia | Report | 19 Nov 2009 08:26 |
I went to see Phil this morning. He seems so much better than he was when he first went into the private hospital. He was awake and walking around. I took him out into the small enclosed garden for a walk but the wind was a little cool. The physio apparently takes him for walks out there. When she heard that he used to do a lot of tramping she said she might take him to the nearby park some time. I just hope she can get him back afterwards. |
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Persephone | Report | 19 Nov 2009 09:00 |
I was wondering if you would post today regarding your visit with Phil, |
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GranOfOzRubySlippers | Report | 19 Nov 2009 10:25 |
Hi everyone, my husband is my carer, he has a full time job as well. I can mostly be left on my own without fear of escape. My brain is fine, just have a problem with my right side. Have worked out most ways of doing things on my own, as Sharron has with her dad. If anyone needs any hints how to manage things and keep your cared person busy and being able to help themselves, and have some independence, just ask and I hope will be able to help. |
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Sharron | Report | 19 Nov 2009 10:59 |
I don't let the old man up ladders either.Not that he has the time! |
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Huia | Report | 19 Nov 2009 19:17 |
Hi there. It is nice to see I am not the only one posting! |
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Huia | Report | 19 Nov 2009 19:21 |
I forgot to say, Norma, that if Phil gets out he would want to go for a really long walk, not just round a couple of football fields, and the physio is just a 'slip of a girl', but then some of those can be very strong and hopefully persuasive. If I knew when she was going to take him I could go too, or at least be waiting back at the hospital so she can use me as bait to get him back. |
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Jean (Monmouth) | Report | 19 Nov 2009 19:33 |
Huia, you sound much happier than you were a few months ago. Shows in your posts. Keep up the good work! |
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Persephone | Report | 19 Nov 2009 20:01 |
Hi Huia in a Pohutukawa Tree, |
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Huia | Report | 19 Nov 2009 22:30 |
Norma, I hope it is a really old stump, otherwise you might get gum up where 'the sun dont shine' and that could cause you a few problems. |
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Persephone | Report | 20 Nov 2009 00:45 |
Hee hee don't want to be gummed up - well look for a higher perch and maybe settle on a Kahikatea - but then I might get pine needles. |
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GranOfOzRubySlippers | Report | 20 Nov 2009 00:51 |
Yes, OH holds the ladder and stands under me so if I fall I fall on him first. Now thats devotion. |
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Bob85 | Report | 20 Nov 2009 09:41 |
Hasn't a lot happened since I was last on. Now there are not many in the UK who would know all those NZ trees, Kauri, (and Kauri stumps), Rata, Kowhai, Kahikatea, Pohutukawa, nor would they probably know that the latter has an abundance of red flowers at Christmas and that is why they are sometimes called a Christmas Tree but I like the name Pohutukawa it seems so strong to match its qualities. There were many on the coast where we lived as children. They seem just as much at home shading a coastline or beach as do Manuka or Kanuka along the gullies and streams inland. Both eminently suited for their locations and so typical New Zealand. To be quite honest I do not like seeing a pine poking its head up amongst NZ bush it looks so out of place. |
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Persephone | Report | 20 Nov 2009 12:18 |
Hi Bob, |
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Huia | Report | 20 Nov 2009 18:45 |
I once went on a local walk with a group of people, guided by a couple of the ARC rangers. One of the rangers who knew me called me back as we were going along, asked if I had seen the orchid. He pointed down, and I said it wasnt an orchid, it was a fungus. He told me his boss had said it was an orchid. I carefully moved the leaf litter from around the base to show the typical bulbous base to the stem and another person agreed with me. It was one of the stinkhorn fungi. Very pretty, but definitely not an orchid. |
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Jean (Monmouth) | Report | 20 Nov 2009 18:58 |
Now, Leptospernum I recognise. It is grown in the UK. |
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Huia | Report | 20 Nov 2009 22:48 |
Leptospermum, Manuka, Tea Tree (not to be confused with Ti Tree - the cabbage tree, which is not a cabbage but a lily or agave or whatever family it is now in.) |
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Bob85 | Report | 21 Nov 2009 19:07 |
Huiainapohutukawa |
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Jean (Monmouth) | Report | 21 Nov 2009 19:22 |
Bob, we have a crab apple. It is lovely in flower and also when the coloured apples are on until Dec, if the blackbirds dont have them all before then. Ours is in a tub, and is going into an even bigger tub come Jan, when all the apples are gone. |
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Huia | Report | 21 Nov 2009 23:25 |
Alas, we cant grow fruit trees here. Well we can, but we dont get any fruit from them as the possums and birds and possibly rats usually beat us to them before they are ripe enough. Even the lemon tree gets stripped of leaves and fruit. |
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