Author Archives: stephanieosmond

Stu stu studio!

Here are some shots of my friend Nathalie’s studio. She makes some beautiful pieces of wearable art and this is where it all takes place. I have about 20 of her pieces at the moment, and will be photographing and posting them up soon for you to see.

Adam’s place

Hi again! Here is a shot I took for the resto Adam works at, called the Brix. They serve a really beautiful and tasty degustation menu. This was a monkfish dish I shot for an invite they sent out.

Food pic

Hi guys! It’s been awhile since i’ve posted anything… We’re starting to settle into Melbourne living…  Here is a photo I took for a resto called Muttis, yummy posh Austrian food.

sucking pig special

Dizzy in the city

So we left New Zealand last week… it was sad to wave goodbye from the plane, but who knows we might be back.. We are now in Melbourne Australia, food capital of Oz! I have to admit, it’s hard settling into the city life… Job searching and flat finding and all the rest… I long for the farm life, without the stress and hustle and bustle. However the city offers the moola… and at the moment it is needed as we’ve depleted the funds being farmers. Anyways, we are settling in, and today i spent a bit of my day wandering around with my ‘lens baby’ doing some Street Photography – something you can’t do in the country-side!

super cool building

lovely light on the wall
my favorite shot of the day - no photoshop whatsoever!

 

I can cook too…

Hello, hello! So Adam has been playing around with woodworking lately, building mini surfboards and ipod cases and things.. I knew it was going to happen someday soon, but today was the day he injured himself with the tools… He cut a pretty deep hole into into his palm.. We rushed to the hospital, but only got steri-strip put on it, because it’s in an awkward spot to get stitches… This means he can’t get his hand wet for the next 5 days. Which of course means I’m in charge of the cooking! Even though no one thinks I can cook because mister Chef Adam does all the cooking, well you’re mistaken. I can cook, and started my cooking at a very young age actually…baking cookies when I was 6 for my ‘Brownie’ friends… Anyways.. here is my post of food, that I made all by myself, zucchini chocolate cake! (with zucchini’s from the garden of course)

Cinnamon buns

Today my husband Adam made some super delicious, fattening, bad for you, cinnamon buns.. Oh man they are yummm.. Here is a sneak peek; for the recipe go to his blog

Scurfing!

Hola amigos y amigas! Adam and I have stopped our south island road trip and have been house sitting for an awesome family in a place called Staveley, in South Canterbury.  It’s beautiful around these parts, and especially beautiful on the farm we are staying at. However we are about an hour away from any good surf… But… a few days ago before the family left, the kids took us scurfing! The next best thing if you’re not near the ocean!!! Here are a few photos from the session:

warming up on the street!

planking!

Moeraki Boulders

The Moeraki Boulders are a group of very large spherical “stones” on Koekohe Beach near Moeraki on New Zealand’s Otago coast. These boulders are actually concretions that have been exposed through shoreline erosion from coastal cliffs that back the beach.They originally formed in ancient sea floor sediments around 60 million years ago. Pretty cool!!…

The steepest street in the world

Baldwin Street in a suburban part of New Zealand’s southern city of Dunedin, is considered the world’s steepest residential street. A short straight street a little under 350 metres, an average slope of slightly more than 1:5. Its lower reaches are only moderately steep, and the surface is asphalt, but the upper reaches of this cul-de-sac are far steeper, and surfaced in concrete (200 m (660 ft) long), for ease of maintenance (bitumen—in either chip seal or asphalt—would flow down the slope on a warm day) and for safety in Dunedin’s frosty winters. At its maximum, the slope of Baldwin Street is about 1:2.86 (19° or 35%). That is, for every 2.86 metres travelled horizontally, the elevation changes by 1 metre.

 

Mt Cook

Hello! We’ve been pretty busy road-tripping around the south island, and ended up camping right near Mount Cook a few days ago.. Mt Cook is the highest in NZ at 3,754 metres. We did a really amazing tramp through the Hooker Valley to get a better view of Mt Cook. It was sooooooo beautiful.

glacier ice

On the road again

Hello! It’s been ages since I’ve posted anything… we left our favorite Kiwi family in Upper Hutt (it was really sad saying goodbye to Jo, Ian and Emare, as well as all the animals on the farm…) and have been exploring the South Island. The landscape down here is truly amazing and extremely photogenic!  After visiting Nelson and the Abel Tasman we surfed some awesome waves on the West Coast in Greymouth and then made our way to Wanaka, Queenstown and Central Otago. We spent 5 days in a town called Roxburgh earning a bit of fast cash picking cherries on a cherry farm. It was really hard work but so yummy!  We are now in Dunedin. I haven’t edited all my photos yet, but here is a preview of a few places we’ve seen. More to come.

Greymouth
our camping spot in Queenstown
Lake Wanaka, clearest lake I've ever swam in
Adam fishing in Queenstown (he didn't catch anything...
ducks!

I love back to back summers

So after a stormy Sunday, today was an amazing sunny summer day!!! We spent the day in the garden and tending to the animals. Adam found more baby chickens hidden away! They are adorable. The duckings are growing bigger, the plums are growing faster and the garden is out of control! We’re really hooked to this lifestyle and so excited for the day we can have our own farm…  A few random shots of the summer farm.

We've been picking a basket like this every day!!!! Time for some jam i think!
the mother and chooks Adam found
cutest thing ever

the duckings are getting so big!
kohl rabi
flowering garlic

A dark and stormy Sunday

My friend Nathalie sent me a really great quote the other day that I just love:  ”It’s more interesting to have just a picture of a small detail- then you can dream all the rest around it. Because when you see the whole thing, what is there to imagine? ” Dries van noten – Here are a few photos of today.