Pages

Saturday, February 17, 2024

Alwyn Poole: The Remarkable Achievements and Strategic Value of Waka Konetahi


Star-date: Last Thursday at 8pm.

I left Cambridge with 157k to travel to the North Shore of Auckland. I was aware that I had the use of the 110km Waikato Expressway and the Auckland Motorway. Both my leaving point and destination were close to on/off ramps. I estimated 1hour 40mins for the trip – without troubling the speed cameras.

I was incredibly impressed that Waka Konetahi managed to get this trip to take me 3 hours … and average of just over 50kmph. On the way there were three major detours. There were also three other road-works sets and one 70kmph one that went for 5kms with no sign at all of a pot-hole mission. One of the re-directions had a detour within a detour. The detour through Papakura managed to create complete gridlock with hundreds of truckies looking more frustrated than david tua trying to land an owesome punch on Lennox Lewis. The city detour took traffic right down the water front and then to Victoria Park and to a situation where it was one lane to the top of the Harbour Bridge.

I assume someone is in charge but they are clearly a mercurial genious.

Then there are the CONES.

We have heard the term Cone-ageddon. It is worse as my next trip was to and from the Bay of Islands. I believe it is now right to call New Zealand Orangeatearoa – “the land of the tall orange cone”.

I believe that we have been softened up right back to when Jeremy Coney was involved in NZ cricket.

I understand that Sam Cone is a potential captain for Scott Robertson's first All Black Squad.

There are rumours that the cones are about to organise politically and form an “Orange Party”. This may confuse our Dutch community but we have a Green party already. I understand the the member for Rimutaka is considering defecting and leading the Orange Conies.

With the explosion of the Auckland sewage system and denigration of the city's beaches … with all of the allocated cones in the area do we now have a “Sewer's Conal”?

Could we name another waterway after the great couple … Pamela Stephenson and Billy Connelly and call it the “Pamela Conal”?

Are they breeding or c(l)oning?

If you accidentally sit on a clone do you need to get a “cone-aloscopy”? If the cone has to be surgically removed is that an “cone-o-dectomy”?

Are we planning University qualifications in coning? The geometry of cones? The history of cones? Clone-al spacial awareness? The manufacturing technology of cones? Health and safety distribution of cones including the logistics of transport?

New Zealand used to be the country of 3 million people and 20 million sheep? What is the current ratio of people to cones?

Truck-loads of cones are heading north, south, east and west. I have also seen cones dying in their duty to our nation.

It has taken me a week to realise the genius in this for the military/strategic protection of our nation. Here it is:

Should we be invaded – and let's assume Tauranga as the landing point.

The invaders need to be coned and detoured through – Matamata, Te Awamutu, (it is too cruel to send them through Morrinsville) Otorohanga, Te Kuiti, Taumaranui, National Park, across to Turangi, then Waiouru, Hunterville, Marton, Whanganui and then Palmerston North (to be greeted by John Cleese). This will not only demoralise all soldiers but many will simpy die of boredom. If any invaders are left alive at that point they can be mobbed by cones and Waka Konetahi bureaucrats and sent to the Shannon gulags.

Like many NZers I regret not having invented, manufactured and invested in the ubiquitous cone. But I do appreciate the travel and strategic safety.

Please share your cone stories and safety. In a multi-cultural society we must show kind-ness to our orange brothers from other mothers.

None of us would celebrate the cone-death shown below (viewer discretion needed) in the second picture.





Alwyn Poole, a well-known figure in the New Zealand education system, he founded and was the head of Mt Hobson Middle School in Auckland for 18 years. This article was published HERE

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Take your canoe next time. Maori used them all the time. Up and down rivers and the coast. Over the hills and faraway. Once you have chopped the tree down they are eco brilliant. No traffic jams. And best of all, no cones. Just a conoe.

Robert Arthur said...

Cone shepherd is probably an NZCA subject. I suspect the maori pass rate is moderately high. The cones are so distracting more inmportant things are easily overlooked; example the 1920s hand held lollipop Stop Go signs. Detours which fizzle out have caused me to be hopelssly lost in Hamilton and in South Auckland. Travel on weekdays can be very delayed. Some years ago Auck to Wanganui I counted 20 roadworks, very many with timed lights, super time wasters. Time lost at slow speed or stopped far exceeds gains from an extra 10 kph. I oppose the 110 kph limits as for neglegible make lesser seem so insufferably tedious.

Post a Comment

Thanks for engaging in the debate!

Because this is a public forum, we will only publish comments that are respectful and do NOT contain links to other sites. We appreciate your cooperation.