
Just call me Daisy. (Better that than Foreskin)
from Hull to The Hutt

Just call me Daisy. (Better that than Foreskin)
I suspect Dad choreographed one of the dances on this week’s Strictly Come Dancing…


I have been at my new workplace for 3 weeks now and made good progress in getting up to speed in every way but one – their coffee machine.
They have a manual coffee maker that I haven’t used since my Fronde days in 2012, and it has been a struggle to make a half decent coffee. The milk frother screams at me – and the open plan office – whenever I try to heat up some milk like a demon escaping from Hell.
It doesn’t help that my teammates are experts and make barista grade flat whites every time.
Thankfully today I managed to get it about right, enough to take it to my colleague for inspection, who rated it a decent 4/10. I will take that!

You wouldn’t believe from this pose that she’d just finished off a chew then been served up her dinner would you?

My 3 month mini-retirement is now at an end, with Monday seeing the start of (hopefully) a long term permy role.
I was all set to sign on with a law firm, accepting that I would have to return to a 5-days-a-week commute into Wellington, when a company I had previously interviewed for – and missed out on – came back to see if I was still interested. Heck yeah!
They are closer to home (20 min drive and within the limited range of my elderly EV) and offer 2 days a week from home.
Work wise I will have a lot of learning to do for the next few months – not least getting to grips with DevOps theory – but the team I’ve met are all cool and it should be interesting to see what I can offer.
I must admit though I am fully retirement-ready, apart from financially. The lack of alarm clocks, the leisurely dog walks, guilt-free daytime naps, all great! Just another 12 years to go…
We are finally committed to getting a pergola built after years of procrastination and false starts. Reliable tradies are hard to find in NZ and we have thankfully found a unicorn to do our build.
He seems to follow Dad’s DIY ethos of “build it solid”, with several tree’s worth of wood.
There is still a polycarb roof to be added and some decisions to be made around flooring but The Duchess has the styling all planned out so I look forward to seeing that in time.






The last few weeks has been a grind of self-study, regularly disappearing off to the library or a cafe with the laptop when I needed a change of scene from the home office, prepping for a tough Microsoft exam to get formal certification for the years of Azure admin experience. (For The Oldies’ benefit Azure is Microsoft’s cloud service so it’s all about how to set up and secure things “stuff” in the cloud instead of on a company’s own computers).
I sat the exam on Friday morning (from home) and was surprised and relieved to see the “Congratulations!” page at the end, scraping over the bar with a pass of 744.

In other news on Tuesday I had a face-to-face interview for a role at a law firm – and actually enjoyed it! I thought I presented well, the interviewers were friendly and the role matches my skillset well so I’m keeping my fingers crossed for feedback next week. It was refreshing to be asked real questions by engaged human beings, rather than be peppered with tough behavioral questions from a script.
If I’m lucky enough to secure the role it would mean digging out the suits and ties and returning to the office most days, however providing The Duchess can manage most of the weekday dog walks (or we can find a good doggy day care again) I’m fine with that – getting back on the train will do wonders for my books read count! (Currently on 7, about 100 short of my friend Holly’s current tally).
If that role doesn’t come off it’ll be back to the study, this time for the Solution Architect exam, which is even tougher.
Went back to the World of Wearable Art show again this year, this time taking The Duchess with me to enjoy the music, dance and crazy, creative outfits. She loved it (as I suspected) so this might become an annual tradition now.











Here are some highlights from last year’s show to give a flavour, though it’s much more eyecatching being there!
Interviewing for IT roles has always been a bit painful, however at the moment — between AI filtering of CVs, the high number of quality candidates you’re competing with and the ever-lengthening list of skills and experience listed on job descriptions — it is starting to feel like an ordeal trying to get ahead of the rest and nail a role.
The technical part of the interview :

The STAR behavioral part of the interview :

Thankfully the Wellington job market is starting to bounce back from the massive Government layoffs so new job postings are starting to pick up. In the meantime it’s just a case of getting some more certification onto the CV to prove I know my Azure and obsessively check Seek every half an hour to be an early applicant on anything suitable.