I’m a lukewarm Lord of the Rings Fan at best, but Hobbiton - the Shire - was absolutely beautiful! Just like the feeling of the Shire in the LOTR movies, visiting the movie set brought a tranquil escape from reality, a blissful world without worry or stress. We were there about four hours and when it was over, I wished I could stay, wished it was a real world.
The day were were there was sunny, calm and bright. Three days earlier, February 16, Cyclone Gabrielle lashed the North Island, dumping heavy rain with hammering winds. We saw very little damage today, with just a few mud puddles here and there, otherwise not much evidence of the cyclone.
The pictures say it all, my words can’t add anything . . .
Most of this is a movie set, but that is a real Monarch Butterfly. |
You’re not in Utah anymore! The tour ended with a mug of cider at the Hobbit Pub, The Green Dragon, courtesy of the tour. I’m still chuckling thinking of the eight-year-olds on the tour getting buzzed on that 5% cider. It was delicious! And I didn’t get buzzed from the cider, I did from the scenery. Back in Bountiful, Davis County School District is banning books such as Catcher in the Rye, To Kill a Mocking Bird and Huckleberry Finn, yet in New Zealand they don’t worry a bit about kids drinking cider with a bit of a kick. Even with that, the kids in New Zealand still have much lower rates of drug abuse and violent crimes than do the youth in Bountiful Utah. I can only conclude that Utah is totally F**ked! Relax, respect and trust will help kids succeed much more than creating a world of paranoia and hiding from the truth of history, as told in great books. I truly fear for my Grandkids, much, much, much more due to the local politics than any other influences in their lives.
That looked like such a neat place! I really like the LOTR movies, but not any of the sequels, prequels or streaming-service series garbage. And I also really like Huck Finn. I don't know why some people think it's a racist book. If they think that, then they don't understand the book. The deeper meaning of that book is found when Huck says that he doesn't care about the consequences; he's going to help his friend anyway. I need to read that book again.
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