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<title>My RSS Feed</title><link>http://kerusan.org/index.html</link><description>Hot News&#x21;</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><dc:rights>Copyright 2006 Kjell Nilsson</dc:rights><dc:date>2007-06-17T09:43:00+02:00</dc:date><admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/" />
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<lastBuildDate>Sun, 17 Jun 2007 10:13:40 +0200</lastBuildDate><item><title>&#xf8ff;TV</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Apple</category><dc:date>2007-06-17T09:43:00+02:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/030e469096833df2efeb384362f8bb4e-31.html#unique-entry-id-31</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/030e469096833df2efeb384362f8bb4e-31.html#unique-entry-id-31</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[My father (soon 84 years of age) just bougth an TV to complement the big Samsung flat screen TV he has had for some months now. He has said that to make the flat screen usable he must be able to move his pictures from his computer to the TV wireless. At first I did not think this would be such a hit, but now after installing it for him I have changed my mind a bit. Well to see his photos of all the stuff he does in the workshop/garage in the daytime at the big 42 inc flat screen was nice, also the screen saving feature where the pictures floats around in 3d is quit impressing.<br /> <br /><img class="imageStyle" alt="Picture 1" src="http://kerusan.org/blog/files//page0_blog_entry31_1.png" width="296" height="252"/><br /><br />Also the fact that here in Sweden we don't have that much content to buy from iTunes Music Store made me doubt that the TV would be any hit. But I have change  my mind. Even if we cant buy TV shows and movies here like in the States there is something called Podcasts that lights our screens. After been downloading and subscribing content from the swedish broadcasting company SVT both me and my father was happy to see that this little flat box is certainly making itself useful. ow my father can work in his workshop and still be able to watch new, weather and nature programs even if he is not in front of the tube when they go live.<br /><br />The setup was easier than even most Apple stuff and way ahead of anything coming from the shops that sells TV,video, phones. Choose language and airport and you are running. Nice.<br /><br />I think that when there is an TV with DVD/BlueRay disc burner I will buy one.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>New version of RapidWeaver</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Apple</category><dc:date>2007-05-27T21:41:48+02:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/da7bda6693a6a1fc9502f05d950e944c-30.html#unique-entry-id-30</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/da7bda6693a6a1fc9502f05d950e944c-30.html#unique-entry-id-30</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Some days ago I tried to show a friend <a href="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/" rel="external">RapidWeaver</a> by visiting <a href="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/" rel="external">Realmacs homepage</a>. But it was down for maintenance so I came back the day after to see what was happening. RapidWeaver came in a new version 3.6. Wow, since I like the program I instantly wanted to upgrade. Since my son was interested in building a website for our new company <a href="http://www.digimotion.se" rel="external">Digimotion</a>, I bought an upgrade from a single user version to a family pack for 4 machines. I had trouble to get a serialnumber since <a href="http://www.esellerate.net/" rel="external">eSellerate</a> didn't know about my first version, I bought it in the <a href="http://macheist.com/" rel="external">MacHeist</a> bundle. So it took some mails before I got a new working serialnumber. I dont really like how Realmac has handled this but its working now anyway.<br />The upgrade was not a big thing for my simple site but maybe I can use some of the new features later. It was a cheap upgrade anyway. I'm still in love with this program so you who read this and have not tried it out please do. <a href="http://www.apple.com/ilife/iweb/" rel="external">iWeb Apples</a> try to do something alike is way behind.]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>OMG I bought one</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Apple</category><dc:date>2007-04-06T19:34:16+02:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/fa579c1b8ae4bd9c96141e1d9920f45d-29.html#unique-entry-id-29</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/fa579c1b8ae4bd9c96141e1d9920f45d-29.html#unique-entry-id-29</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Well it isn't 64000 processors, but I couldn't resist to buy the new Mac Pro with 8 cores. I don't think it will be that much faster than the one with 4 cores but what the heck, Im a processor freak. I'll have to try out some code that I have that uses a lots of threads and clock it. I hope that MacOSX handles multiprocessors nice.<br /><br />Update: As I thought the difference is not twice the performance of a 4 core machine. I found a <a href="http://www.barefeats.com/octopro1.html" rel="self">good test at Barefeets.</a>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Music section on kerusan.org</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Personal</category><dc:date>2007-03-29T12:46:02+02:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f82f2544e65f7029be53420f8aea3ba8-28.html#unique-entry-id-28</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f82f2544e65f7029be53420f8aea3ba8-28.html#unique-entry-id-28</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I have updated my site kerusan.org with a little <a href="../music/music.html" rel="self" title="Music">music section</a>. I will there publish my own songs that I create and talk a little about my view on music and related areas.<br /><br />Update: I just updated it again with another tune.]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>I have a dream</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Apple</category><dc:date>2007-03-13T16:39:59+08:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/07722c497523e0d4391f2e90b824e1a1-27.html#unique-entry-id-27</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/07722c497523e0d4391f2e90b824e1a1-27.html#unique-entry-id-27</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Since a long time ago I have been having a dream to operate/own a Mac with 64000 processors. I cant see any solutions to many problems without one. I now only hope that I will see this in my lifetime. Mac Pro had 1 processor at first then 2, now it has 4, and the <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2007/03/12/apple-store-error-reveals-8-core-mac-pro/" rel="self">latest rumors</a> says that 8 is not far away, well after that comes 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, 32768, and then 65536. That counts to approximately 13 update to Mac Pro. If Apple releases 1 major upgrade to Mac Pro every 1,5 years (I guess that processors in computers follows Moore's law) then it could be true in 20+ years. I may be able to see that if I have health and luck. I think I'll have to start now to build those apps I was thinking about.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>What about storage</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Apple</category><dc:date>2007-03-07T17:37:45+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/627d7ca6c13d1669ac686b86bf7daa3c-26.html#unique-entry-id-26</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/627d7ca6c13d1669ac686b86bf7daa3c-26.html#unique-entry-id-26</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Since Steve started to talk about "the digital hub" all media files has been centered around iTunes. iTunes keeps, plays, organize, syncs more and more types of media like music, pod-casts, video, films, photos and games. Ok it is wonderful to know that I have only one place/app to look/learn to manage it all. But since my main computer is an MacBook Pro all the storage I have to put all this is on is the internal hard-drive that keeps 92.84 GB. That is not much if you have put in your music-library some pod-casts and your photos, don't even think about movies. So what is the strategy. Even Steve must have more media-files than that. <br /><br />iTunes is becoming more and more complex, soon we don't need to use Finder we can do all things in iTunes. Kidding. But is it only me that lack some strategy to save things. I have long waited for some extra slot on my MacBook Pro to put in another hard-drive but I have not found any that fits into the pc-express slot. So what to do? Anybody have solved this?<br /><br />All I can think of is to store all my media on a fileserver, but I don't think iTunes like that. And if it had done that it would surely been a loot more like Finder. Hey Apple please think on something before you release Leopard.<br /><br /><em>Update:<br /></em>It doesn't seems like I'm the only guy in town with this problem.. Her is an article from MacSlash named '<span style="font:11px Verdana, serif; color:#000000;"><a href="http://macslash.org/article.pl?sid=07/03/26/1651203&mode=thread" rel="self">Managing iTunes Movies Apart From Music?</a></span><span style="font:11px Verdana, serif; color:#000000;">'.</span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Home again</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-03-03T23:29:14+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/ce6c70991326e066623dfb709639da1a-25.html#unique-entry-id-25</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/ce6c70991326e066623dfb709639da1a-25.html#unique-entry-id-25</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[It took us 49 hours to get home from NZ. It shouldn't but our plane to Sweden from London was defunct so they had to fly another one from Stockholm to take us home, and that took about 5 hours more than planed. The trip was wonderful.   -  NOT   -   Just kidding. Trying to sleep sitting up is not my thing and I hate long flights, so I'm not going to bore you with details. Just wanna tell you that we are home now safe and sound.<br /><br />Our house was a bit cold though, I had turned down the heat so we have to sleep with hot water Coca Cola bottles in our beds the this night. I hope that the jet-lag wont keep us awake too much tonight.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Last day</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-03-01T20:36:37+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/bf39239aaa25fbbf89115c473cd86ce0-24.html#unique-entry-id-24</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/bf39239aaa25fbbf89115c473cd86ce0-24.html#unique-entry-id-24</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Last whole day in NZ. Sad and wistful. Today </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1095-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Swedes in Christchurch">we went down to Christchurch city</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> center to do some shopping and enjoy the lovely weather. Going down to Cathedral-square we where having a tremendous day. As I said earlier NZ people (and the tourists ofcouse) where also having a nice late summer day with no stress like they seems to be spared from. We looked at jugglers, </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1097-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Street chess">street chess</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">, listened to </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1098-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Los Incas playing in the street">Los Incas</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> playing the street, went up in the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1096-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Christchurch cathedral">church tower</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">, ate some falafel and some lovely ice-cream made from fresh frozen berries and enjoyed. <br /><br />We met a Swedish girl that had lived and married in NZ, now working on a Christchurch newspaper as photographer. She confirmed our feelings about NZ and did not seemed any longing for leaving this country.<br /><br />Maybe I sound overly positive about this country because our holiday is soon ending. But even if I take off half of my admire for this country I still find myself over the level I have ever felt about a country, its culture and pace. We have only met 2 frustrated people in 18 days, and we have met so many people loving what they do and having time with each-other and strangers. It is not only the landscape that is breathtaking it is also its people.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Return of The Maui</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-28T21:19:16+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/49565b64da2f0d13e01104393d5be71b-23.html#unique-entry-id-23</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/49565b64da2f0d13e01104393d5be71b-23.html#unique-entry-id-23</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Today we had to unpack the camper-van, (it was mine and Rickard's doings), clean it and return it. It went smoother than I thought. Robin and I then went to </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="http://www.maui.co.nz/" rel="self" title="Maui-rentals">Maui</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> to return it and that went extremely smooth too. Since we had a swap of cars in the beginning, Maui didn't know much of the car we returned and so we didn't have to pay more than the distance from Auckland to Christchurch in diesel tax. No hassle, pragmatic thinking of the Maui-employee, as most of the NZ persons act, even government seems to have a more forgiving than punishing way of handling things. Not at all like Swedish government and culture. We had to fill in a evaluation-form what we thought about Maui and the treatment and car we had. My answers was mainly very positive.<br /><br />When we came came back the apartment looked exactly like all apartments that we is using, stuff all over. Susan was still resting after yesterdays boat-ride/seasickness and the rest was having a swim in the pool or making food. A typically resting day, we have not had many of these.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Swimming with Dolphins</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-27T21:02:52+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/bff26b9526464935c3c25271886a6c86-22.html#unique-entry-id-22</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/bff26b9526464935c3c25271886a6c86-22.html#unique-entry-id-22</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Actually we was supposed to do a tour with dolphins when we was in Kaikura, but it was full booked at that time. So we tried to get on a list to get it later. But we had no luck with tat so Susanne found another place that offered the same thing in Akaroa. Well almost the same thing, here there was not the big dolphins that had surrounding the boat at the whale watching excursion, but a smaller type, called the Hector Dolphins. They where threaten to die out and this was almost the last spot they lived on now. Well they where on other places too around NZ but there is only about 7000 of them left.<br /><br />The road out to </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1091-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Akaroa">Akaroa</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> was a little bit curvy the last 10 km before we came there. This peninsula 70 km outside Christchurch was an old volcano too so we had to pass a summit. On the way down to the sea again we where amazed with the looks. It was totally astonishing. <br /><br />To </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../videonz/videolib1/video.html" rel="self" title="Video:Swimming with dolphins">swim</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> with the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1093-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Smal Hectors near the boat">dolphins</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> we had to go by boat out almost to open sea. The waves got bigger as we approached the sea but there they where. Hector Dolphins is about 1.20-1.40 m long full grown. There calfs just about half the size. We had wet-suites on so the water 15-16 degrees was OK to swim in. The water was rather murky though so we didn't see that much under water but we had about 10 of them Hectors around us so we got a good look on them when they passed us just half a meter away. Curiosity made them come so close cause they wanted to look what it was that clicked. We had stones that we clapped together under the water and they heard that and wanted to have a look at it. They don't see any further under the water than us so thats why they came so close. Otherwise thy use sonar to navigate.<br /><br />All went terrific until we where to enter the boats again. The big waves and the rolling boat was too much for Susanne and she got really seasick, as did some other persons on our boat. We had to go back to the harbor. On the way back I put my eyes on some birds that I first thought was seagull childs, but it was Blue Penguins. Now I realized how close to Antarctic we where.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Going to Christchurch</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-26T21:47:21+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/13ae97b350b67d91f01ee783d9b27fec-21.html#unique-entry-id-21</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/13ae97b350b67d91f01ee783d9b27fec-21.html#unique-entry-id-21</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Today was the day we drove down to Christchurch, the city we is supposed to stay in for the rest of the journey and fly home from. Even if the flight home was some days away it still felt a little like the holiday was ending. A very sad feeling. On the way down we stopped at a beach just outside Christchurch called </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1090-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Beach romance">Waikuku Beach</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">. We had now learned that the Wai in all names was the Maouri name for water. It was a lovely beach like the Baylys Beach we had visited the first day in NZ.<br /><br />In Christchurch later we entered the biggest camping site we had seen in NZ. It was a Top 10 and had very high standard. We rented a Tourist Unit and to our surprise it had 2 sleeping rooms and a kitchen/living room. We started to get organized, did the laundry and made this our home for the rest of the stay.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Quads</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-25T19:37:30+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/c652883a759532010edb0c31e8c7ab4f-20.html#unique-entry-id-20</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/c652883a759532010edb0c31e8c7ab4f-20.html#unique-entry-id-20</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Rickard has been eager to go </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1085-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Us on quads">quad-biking</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> since we came to NZ. This was the day we had the opportunity to do that, so we boys went to a place where there was a center for adventuring like bungy-jump, jet-boating, quad-biking and cart-driving. <br /><br /></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><em>Update</em></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">:<br />We took an trip to the Hanmer Spring adventure place, a river canyon with the road going over on a very narrow </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1083-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Adventure land">bridge</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">. After registration at the desk we waited half an hour before our guide came, he told us that we where not allowed to drive faster than him, but that was not a problem he went very fast and the track was dusty, so dusty so I who didn't have any sunglasses had to top once in awhile to rub out the dust from my eyes. <br /><br />We drove at first down to the river Waiau, as all the rivers this time of year it was just a wide stream of rocks, and passed some small river branches. The water was just half a meter deep so with some speed we made cascades of water when crossing. It was </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1089-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:One more dirty look">dirty</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> and fun and we learned how to get up in speed so the return went a lot faster.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Whale watching</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-24T20:26:51+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/724baf47ba458a82214ec189f466e047-19.html#unique-entry-id-19</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/724baf47ba458a82214ec189f466e047-19.html#unique-entry-id-19</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This day I wanted to rest a bit with my book but the others went whale watching early in the morning, which meant that I had to go up early to. The start of the tour was at 6.45 and they went away with the bus. The time went quick and soon (10.00) they where back. They had seen 2 </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1076-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Whale diving">whales</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> and lots of dolphins, albatrosses and a seal. I was majestic to watch the whales, at first lying still for 20 minutes catching its breath and preparing the next dive, and then dive with its tail hovering a second in the air before vanishing in to the dark sea down in the grave 1200-1300 meters down. <br /><br />The </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1081-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Dolphin swimming under boat">dolphins</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> where playing around the boat and jumping and rolling in the air. I regret a bit I didn't follow them on this trip, but hopefully I'll get to so see the dolphins at another time. The rest of the time we spent going up to Hanmer Springs for a mountain trip. <br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Rafting in Clarence river</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-23T20:44:19+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/d9eb13333c1bf1e2ca30d6fcc64e7e92-18.html#unique-entry-id-18</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/d9eb13333c1bf1e2ca30d6fcc64e7e92-18.html#unique-entry-id-18</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">When we woke up this morning the rain-clouds was hanging heavy in the sky. It was perfect for the activity we had booked for this day, rafting in a RIB (Rubber inflated boat) along the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1071-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Others passing us in kayaks">Clarence river</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">. We where supposed to be picked up at 9 o'clock at the tourist office. And just a few minutes late a old Mitsubishi van with a nice lady came and we drove half an hour to her farm. She told us her husband Ben was the guide and she would only do the driving. She also said that she had been to Sweden (Karlstad) once but she didn't remember so much about the country cause se was mostly partying at that time. I felt that she was different then the women on the north island, more basic with her feet more steady on the ground. This was a feeling I felt from more than once here on this island.<br /><br /></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1067-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Ben with wife">Ben</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> was also of the same sort, really friendly and with the with an intense love for what he was doing, both as a rafting guide and as a furniture carpenter. He took us up together with his wife 15 km up the stream and we put in the RIB in the water. He gave us some lessens how to behave in the boat and we where off. After only 5 to 10 minutes we stopped at a cliff and he told us to get of and jump from the cliff down in the stream, The </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1069-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Jumping from a cliff...">jump</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> was at its highest 5 m but we could choose to jump from other heights as well. We all jumped. <br /><br />Rafting was fun and we went down the stream rotating the waves when there was white crest on the waves. Susanne was enjoying this to sitting in the back talking to Ben all the time. At one place we stopped and took a swim in the streaming water, they carried us fast down-stream and we floated along the river with tickling joy.<br /><br />Ben told us that he also had a tour for 4-5 days from Hanmer Springs down to the ocean, a trip going on for 220 km. If we get here once more in life I'd really like to take that tour. <br /><br />It rained all the time but that bothered us not at all, on the contrary the air became cold so the water felt warmer. What a day!<br /><br /> </span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>The South Island</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-22T20:19:58+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/0927193cf7275d250cc729b328c5621a-17.html#unique-entry-id-17</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/0927193cf7275d250cc729b328c5621a-17.html#unique-entry-id-17</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This day was also a traveling day, this time buy boat the first part. It was a rather big </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1063-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:The ferry...">ferry</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> that took cars and trucks. Almost like the ferryboat to Denmark, but it did not have any stores onboard. The sea-journey took 3 hours and we landed in Picton. The first you could see was that tis island had higher mountains. I drove a bit, but since we had to go up about 5 o'clock this morning I wanted to rest a bit and Robin and Lotta drove down the coast to Kiakura where we had decided to stay. Kiakura is a small village with beach feeling, and from here you could go on many tours of different kind, like Whale watching, Dolphin and Seal swimming, White water rafting and so on.<br /><br />We got information about the weather, tomorrow rain, it said and we decided to go rafting the following day. If your getting wet it doesn't matter if there was water coming from the sky also. Swimming with Dolphins where sold out until the first of mars so rafting was the best alternative. Anna took a bath in a swimming-pool and I dived deeper into a book that Susanne handled to me. I liked it, it was a book by Liam Hearn about samurais and feudal wars.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Wellington by day</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-21T22:12:59+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/ff6a21e960ddb92f76d004f8b69e7394-16.html#unique-entry-id-16</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/ff6a21e960ddb92f76d004f8b69e7394-16.html#unique-entry-id-16</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">I was really curious about </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1060-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Wellington">Wellington</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">, a capital with not more than 200.000 persons. I could see why, there was no space for more buildings, with the mountain on one side and the bay on the other they had to build the city on the shores. We took the bus down from Lower Hut and visited the city, it's information center and a big NZ museum. We also took the cable-car up the mountain to the Botanic garden. <br /><br />I thing this city would be nicer to explore with a motorcycle or a small car. We could only see the downtown area this day and I was not so impressed as I had been in Auckland. But I hopefully didn't find the city secret places this day.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Movin&#x27; along</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-20T20:56:49+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/95ce0c6cb7f53c4124860b14f90e5b36-15.html#unique-entry-id-15</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/95ce0c6cb7f53c4124860b14f90e5b36-15.html#unique-entry-id-15</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">After climbing the mountain we drove not to the camping site we where before but maybe 50 kilometers south to a village named Okanuna. I was a bit tired so that distance was long enough. We came to another Top 10 Park, but to our surprise we did not get that friendly welcome as we had on the other places. It was a young girl that just did here duty as she probably thought herself. But with no service mind at all. The camper-van got its place though and Susanne got her room to sleep in, it was big and had a eating alcove. <br /><br />We decided to move from this village, a ski-resort, early in the morning. I went to buy some breakfast in the local grocery-store. The early customers in the store was mostly Maori and boy are they tall and strong. Some of the mans where longer than Rickard and four times his width. I could understand that they see themselves as warriors. <br /><br />Well the rest of the day we spent driving down to Wellington via Masterton. Masterton is a little town where Peter Jackson is supposed to have his other house, the first one is in Wellington. We had been driving down a completely flat landscape before and a bit after Masterton and we did only have about 30 km left to Wellington when suddenly a green jungle mountain appeared in front of us, we had to go really slow up the dwindling roads up to 555 m above the sealevel. They probably don't have the knowledge to build tunnels in this country.<br /><br />In the avning we came to Lower Hutt where we should stay for the next 2 nights. Lower Hutt is a little city just outside Wellington.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>&#x22;There and back again&#x22; by Kerusan</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-19T22:12:46+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/98fee6db62ab5a49700539262513226f-14.html#unique-entry-id-14</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/98fee6db62ab5a49700539262513226f-14.html#unique-entry-id-14</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">We had to go up very early this morning cause the people at the reception told us that the walk up on </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1054-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Mt. Ngauruhoe (Doom)">Mt. Ngauruhoe (aka. Mt. Doom in LOTR)</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> would take 6.5 hours, for an ordinary trained trekker and they had seen 70 year old persons go up but they had to struggle, they said. Well with my stamina I probably would be in that category. <br /><br />After having a sturdy breakfast we drove the car to the base-camp Mangatepopo. Susanne and Anna wanted to stay at base-camp and chill this day, maybe drawing or painting the surroundings. It was astonishing to see how the nature changed so quickly from ordinary Irish sheep-hills to Kebnekaise nature. We started at 10 o'clock and we hoped to be back for a nice ready dinner at 17.<br /><br />Robin took the lead with a backpack filled with video-equipment, Rickard carried the water and Lotta the food. Since I carried the the most heavy burden I had no backpack. I was carrying the Ring. A Ring of fat round my stomach and the higher we came the more this burden felt. After a light walk up the first hour we started to climb up to the saddle between Mt. Doom and Mt. Tongariro, the walk up was hard for me but I rested now and then so when we came up to our first food stop I was filled with confidence that I would make it. <br /><br />The last part of the climbing looked hard, the mountain was made of lava gravel and quit steep. That meant 2 step up and 1 step back and was supposed to take 2 hours. I was, not surprisingly, the one that took most breaks and the others had to wait for me all the time, the Ring really felt enormously heavy now and I was crying for "Samwise" to carry me the last part. Well as always when it feels totally impossible to take another step more, the path became lighter and we saw the top and understood that we would make it. At the top of the volcano we saw that smoke came out of the side of the crater. We had done it! We had beaten the Mountain just like Frodo and Sam did, and that only in just 4 and a half hour from base camp. We where now at the top 2287 meters above the sea-level.<br /><br />We stayed for half an hours before gliding down the step side of the mountain, now and then gliding on our backs down the gravel. On the way down I heard Robin shout something and he was pointing up where I had been a minute ago. I looked up and there came big stones tumbling down right at me. I rolled to the side and saw them passing me 2 meters away, thank God for caring children.<br /><br />The last part of the walk I was trying to run to Rickard who had gone in advance, but he was also running so I did not come any closer until I stepped into the caravan again and saw the pasta dinner Susanne had prepared to us. I was back and looked up on the dark mountain we had conquered. Hmmm, I think I forgot to drop the ring up there, but it does not feel so heavy anymore. Strange.<br /><br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>A day in between</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-18T21:28:16+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/6dead34fcade03555692ac3d795b6b94-13.html#unique-entry-id-13</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/6dead34fcade03555692ac3d795b6b94-13.html#unique-entry-id-13</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">The caravan park we slept at this night was a Top 10 (teeeen) again same company as the first day in Auckland. They are a little bit more expensive but usually they have a little higher standard then the others. This one in Waitomo was no exception from that. It had both jacuzzi and a big pool and also wireless networking over the whole park. It was a joy to wake up and see the nature and the surroundings. <br /><br />Today was a transportation day and the only thing we looked at was a place called the Shearing Shed, a little house with a shop where they </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1050-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Anna and the rabbit soon to be sheared">sheared rabbits</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> and sold the wool and knitted clothes from these gigantic angora rabbits. Anna was in heave and she was standing next to a big one, patting its fur. I hope we got a good picture of one of them. <br /><br />After that we traveled to the center of the north island. I wanted to see the mountains and wow did my dreams come through when suddenly, after driving a couple of hours, we saw the mother of all mountains, </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1054-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Mt. Ngauruhoe (Doom)">Mt. Doom</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">.  A horrible black shape in the distant with the bigger and snow-coated </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1055-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Mt. Ruapehu">Mt. Ruapehu</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> at its side. What a sight. After a stopping in a little wild west village on the way, making and eating a nice indian korma curry we drove close to the two mountains, to a camping site called Whakapapa. It was sited near a river and as usual Susanne wanted a cabin to sleep in. The site had more of a ski-resort feeling and the cabin was big and nice. Our plans for the next day was to climb Mt. Doom, who actually was called Mt Ngauruhoe, so we warmed up this evening with the third movie in the Lord of the Rings trilogy.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Birds and caves</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-17T19:44:13+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/010478dbebc6f8e73ede52fe8b7779cb-12.html#unique-entry-id-12</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/010478dbebc6f8e73ede52fe8b7779cb-12.html#unique-entry-id-12</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Otorohanga was our next stop. New Zealand has been Maori for a 1000 year and that has infuenced the names on places alot. Its rather hard to remember all the names when Maori language inst your first language. Most places starts eith W ot K, like Waikiki, Wangarei, Kiakia etc. <br /><br />This town was called </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1040-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Anna at the Kiwi house">Otorohanga</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> anyway, it had a little bird zoo that displayed som of the rare NZ birds, especially the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1041-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:An actual live Kiwi">Kiwi</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> which is a national symbol. Actualy all New Zealanders are called kiwis. The Kiwis (the birds I mean) is a night working bird so they where kept in a house with only a weak lamp. We had to use nightshot on the camera to get it on the picture. Actually I thought I saw 2 of them the second day we where in Orewa. We drow by a big field in the evening and there was two live once at maybe 50-100 meters distance.<br /><br />The other attraction we visit this day was the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1043-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Aranui caves">glowworm caves</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> just south of where we had slept. We visited two caves, Aranui and te Waitomo, the first where up in a mountain and the other was down in the mountain with a river floating in it. Because of the river the glowworms where hunting insects that cam with the river and where lost in the dark. The worms pulld out some strings that the insects where traped in. They used the light they emitted to attracts the lost insects. What a cruel world.<br /><br />After the caves we took a stroll into the jungle and up a hill. When we came out of the wood there was a typically english farm landscape. Strange. NZ har a nature that is so tight, you see ordinary trees, pines an such, just next to some palmtrees and all these parasite veggies is growing around the other trees. But you also see fields with grass like it was at home in Sweden, its rather confusing for me.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Hot spring and hobbits</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-16T20:35:53+13:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/74e754f60946952c80acf465477436ca-11.html#unique-entry-id-11</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/74e754f60946952c80acf465477436ca-11.html#unique-entry-id-11</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This day we started to take a bath at the hot spring in Miranda, it was a sulfur smelling experience. But it was pleasent in the water with 37 degrees in the water. After that we drove down ti </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1034-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Yes right its Hobbiton, a long time after">Matamata</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> where the hobbits where supposed to be.Well there was no hobbits at the Alexander farm today the only hobbits we did see was very sheep alike. So after filming the landscape a little we continued to our next camping site.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Hitting the road again</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-15T22:20:14+13:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/2aad21d6dacd2d3b6e835c4a59f1d594-10.html#unique-entry-id-10</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/2aad21d6dacd2d3b6e835c4a59f1d594-10.html#unique-entry-id-10</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Today we will hit the road again, first going to the Wangarei waterfall. It is supposed to be one of the north islands most scenic one. So now we  will have to unpack the big camera. <br /><br />Well it was a nice waterfall and we took a lot of nice pictures. I'll put them on the photo site.  The kids took a swim down under the falls but the water was really cold. After that we went to a really nice japanese restaurant, even Susanne thought it was delicious and she is starting to enjoy japanese food.<br /><br />The rest of the day we spent in the caravan heading towards Miranda Hot Springs. A camping site with some sort of warm spring pool. We arrived late and was met by a strict woman popping out commands about what to do and what not to.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Baylys Beach</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-14T20:04:04+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/eedd76827beb48c8d00b4b535b31de0d-9.html#unique-entry-id-9</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/eedd76827beb48c8d00b4b535b31de0d-9.html#unique-entry-id-9</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This will be our first one-day stop here in NZ. The friendliness from yesterday stays. The guy that owns this camper site at Baylys Beach is so sweet. The weather is fantastic and we are having a good time. The ocean has lots of big waves and we took a swim when we woke up. Lotta and Robin went to the beach first and the tide was little tricky so Lotta had some trouble swimming into land. But I thought it was fantastic, 19-20 degrees and full with wave-crests.<br /><br />There is a little shop-bar-restaurant here called </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1026-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Sharky's">Sharkey's</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> I hope that points out the fishes that lives in the water. Susanne wanted to sleep in a hut this day so we rented one and slept inside this night. Our comuter was showing an old film "Rules of Engagement" with Samuel L. Jackson. <br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>A new campervan</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-13T14:21:15+13:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f1e3ea2fbd396f6365e549766a2d4293-8.html#unique-entry-id-8</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f1e3ea2fbd396f6365e549766a2d4293-8.html#unique-entry-id-8</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This day we spent waiting on a new </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1025-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:The Old campervan">camper van</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> at the camping site. The new car arrived at 18.00 so there is not much to write about this day. Well I went u the bus to downtown in the afternoon an bought a new power adapter to my dear Powerbook. On the way to the Apple Center and from it I realized that this city was just beautiful and muck like San Francisco, with lots of hills and the same architecture on the houses. The feeling was that this city was lust a little bit more slow-downed and friendlirer.<br /><br />Well after I came back we drove as fast as we could out from Auckland heading for Bayleys Beach. When it still was light we where astonished by the nice-looking nature but the roads where a little bit bumpy for the people in the back seat. We arrived at 23.00 at Bayleys Beach camping site and all was closed. There was a little bell at the reception and I used it. A nice man came up in his nightdress and said that we could take any place we wanted and come back and pay tomorrow. So we did and fell asleep without knowing how it looked here at Bayleys Beach.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>At last we are there/here</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-12T02:02:50+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/1fdc55bb810bd28e3e74c40dfc80d01a-7.html#unique-entry-id-7</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/1fdc55bb810bd28e3e74c40dfc80d01a-7.html#unique-entry-id-7</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">We arrived in Auckland, New Zealand after a short stop in Sidney, at 12.30. Lotta was there and Robin did run in advance to see her. We where meet by a friendly passport police but had to stop for a while in the bio-control to get our tent disinfected. New Zealand have very hard regulations so they don't get any new deceases. We then took a shuttle to the Maui caravan renting company. And after some waiting we where on our way to Auckland city to buy a new power adapter to the computer. We where not to stay there cause we wanted to go north as soon as possible and it was only a city anyway.<br /><br />Well when we arrived in downtown when every store that may have the power adapter was closed. So we decided to stay at the nearest camping site. Just outside the site there was a Pizza Hut so we ate dinner there. After the dinner we wanted to drive in to the camping site but the caravan did not start, something with the electronics in the car was wrong and the dashboard only flashed Error. So we had to call the Maui company. Unfortunately the company had closed for the day so an AA guy showed up after 15 minuted instead to fix the car, but he couldn't. So He called another guy that came and toed us in to the camping site. And all fell asleep the first night in New Zealand.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Traveling to New Zealand</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-11T01:57:27+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/7597778d111095f3becf304c1c84b662-6.html#unique-entry-id-6</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/7597778d111095f3becf304c1c84b662-6.html#unique-entry-id-6</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">This day we woke up early to go to the airport, on our way there we stopped to pick up Robins Chinese jacket. It was really nice made, they must have worked all night to get it ready. The rest of the day we was traveling and not much happened. Air flight was ok but we did not sleep that much.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Second day in Thailand</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-10T19:43:12+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f8a6590b6b06fd865c30879599705657-5.html#unique-entry-id-5</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/f8a6590b6b06fd865c30879599705657-5.html#unique-entry-id-5</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Yea, my power adapter was still back at home so I'm writing this a couple of day after it happened. <br /><br /></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><em>Update</em></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">: <br />(Rickard later found my adapter when we came to the Wellington in his bag.)<br /><br />Our first day in Thailand was a lazy one we did not go outside the hotel area, we where a little bit jet lagged and the hotel was so nice we just wanted to stay there. Drinking, eating and we also went to the archery park and shoot some arrows. <br /><br />Next day we took a bus into the city of Hua Hin.  We went to the market and looked at all the junk and the stinking fishes. Anna bought a skirt and Robin went to a tailor to get a chinese jacket. He decided the fabric and they measured him. The jacket would be ready by next morning so we could pick it up on our way to the airport. Anna did her hair and nails look nice at some Thai women at the beach. Robin and Rickard spent the evening at the </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1008-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:At the swimingpool">pool bar </a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">drinking Pina-colada and swimming.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Woke up this morning...</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-09T21:54:34+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/57f17e7c0b03758a185503e3305519cb-4.html#unique-entry-id-4</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/57f17e7c0b03758a185503e3305519cb-4.html#unique-entry-id-4</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">...in a little hut in Thailand. But the hut is in a luxury hotel i Hua Hin, or rather outside Hua Hin near a pineapple farm. Everything here looks like all the fantastic pictures from Thailand that you see in the travel-agency catalogs. Can't really believe its true. 25 degrees in the air and there is 3 pools in the huts garden that is just for me and my wife. One </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1002-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Bathtub with lotus flowers ">bathtub</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">, one jacuzzi and a small </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1001-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Private swimming-pool">swimming-pool</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">. Coconuts in the trees, Robin's and Rickard's hut has a banana tree in the entrance with small bananas in it. <br /><br />We where greeted by 4 people that took our bags yesterday and we have one butler, to each house, that are eager to please our needs. Our butler is a woman that is named </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "><a href="../photolib1/files/page2-1009-full.html" rel="self" title="Photo:Our butlers Am and Tammy">Am</a></span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; "> and she helps us all she can, trying to explain how everything works here. She was impressed that our whole family was vegetarians and she said she will tell that every hour to new staff.<br /><br />Well after a quick swim in our private pool its off to breakfast now. CU.<br /><br />Oh nooo, it seems like I forgot my power-suply to my computer at home.<br /><br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>On our way </title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-08T17:53:10+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/10dc75cf09f720674611725b6e483fd5-3.html#unique-entry-id-3</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/10dc75cf09f720674611725b6e483fd5-3.html#unique-entry-id-3</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font-size:13px; ">We have just arrived i Thailand for our first stop. The air-flight was just like any other 19 hour flight, rather boring and not that pleasant. But to our surprise it went smooth on both Landvetter, Heathrow and </span><span style="font:12px Verdana, serif; ">Suvarnabhumi Airport. Not that much people in the lines and friendly airport staff, especially here in Thailand. All our bags has also arrived safe, even Rickards floorball clubs, they are traveling in a special luggage package.<br /><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Today we pack our bags so we will be ready for tomorrow</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-06T19:49:43+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/86f1e963109c6e7387f40ffec03f5bab-2.html#unique-entry-id-2</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/86f1e963109c6e7387f40ffec03f5bab-2.html#unique-entry-id-2</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[My wife borrowed 2 more suitcases from her sister so now we have some more space to fill. But we also realized that packing is not all that is left, we have to clean the house, buy more stuff and fix all papers and bills for the next coming month. My daughter also nearly broke here thumb last saturday, so now we have to go to the hospital to change plaster on her arm just a few hours before we go. Stressed? No not at all its only the excitement that drives my heartbeat up a few strokes per minute.<br /><br />Yesterday I talked to two of my old friends that had spent their vacation on New Zealand last year, they where totally in love with the country and went talking about the places they had visited and where we must go. It was fantastic to hear but I almost wanted them to stop because with all the stories I heard, it was almost like I had been there already. But I'm glad they went on. <br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>3 days to go</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Travel</category><dc:date>2007-02-05T00:16:07+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/74c40a7ddd082181b2f4c0d11c57ddbe-1.html#unique-entry-id-1</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/74c40a7ddd082181b2f4c0d11c57ddbe-1.html#unique-entry-id-1</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[... before we go and we feel it. We have borrowed suitcases and such from our friends. I packed all the camcorder stuff today. We will have 2 Sony's and one Panasonic to shoot some nice movies from that fantastic country.  I tried to convince the people at Quantas that I had to take it in the cabin, but they said that only 7 kilo hand-luggage is allowed, so I put the harddisks and the tripod in my suitcase. So my case is already filled. I think I can put some socks in there too, but thats probably all that the case will fit now.<br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>A new begining</title><dc:creator>kerusan@mac.com</dc:creator><category>Personal</category><dc:date>2006-12-21T10:13:51+01:00</dc:date><link>http://kerusan.org/blog/files/72ff12f5b6d0841178c7ecb5a1f302e6-0.html#unique-entry-id-0</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://kerusan.org/blog/files/72ff12f5b6d0841178c7ecb5a1f302e6-0.html#unique-entry-id-0</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Hi <br />I have just started to blog again. The reason why I stopped some years ago was that I thought it was too hard to maintain a blog at that time. I started to write an app that could edit and generate my blog and used it for some time. The catch was that I relied on a back-end tool my friend wrote in Ruby. Since he stopped updating that tool and I didn't know Ruby I was stucked. Until now. I just bought the fantastic <a href="http://macheist.com/" rel="external" title="Macheist">MacHeist</a> package and got <a href="http://realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/" rel="external" title="RapidWeaer">RapidWeaver</a>. This app does the trick for me. I have tested Apple's iWeb before but I did not like it.<br /><br />Blogging should be easy, if it takes more than 1 minute extra, besides writing the text, then it takes too much of my daily doings. After setting up this blog in <a href="http://realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/" rel="external" title="RapidWeaer">RapidWeaver</a> it's faster than that and I am hopefully on track again. <br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item></channel>
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