In both wars, New Zealand lost more soldiers per capita than any other country. Almost every town has a World War I monument. My own father fought in World War II, so I'm used to hearing about that war. Here it goes even deeper than anything I experienced. They lost two generations of leaders, and the people who came home from both wars were, in many cases, deeply scarred. We learned all this after we started asking why there were World War I monuments everywhere.
Now, for the photos. The first photo shows the monument, the path you walk on to get to it, and then in the background you can see the mouth of Otago Harbour to the east.
All the rest of the pictures are taken from the monument itself. This next one looks in the same direction as the previous photo, east toward the mouth of the harbour.
In the next shot, Dave turned a little to the left and is looking to the north. The harbour is very shallow, and you can see the channel that is dredged for boats to use as they come toward Dunedin, which is off to the left. Notice the sun glinting off the water. This photo was taken in the early afternoon, and the sun is to the north. One of the hardest things for me to get used to here has been the noonday sun in the northern sky.
The next photo is yet further left, to the northwest, and you can see part of Dunedin. Our house would be off to the right, outside the picture, behind a hill. And the university, where I teach, is straight ahead on the flat part of town, with downtown Dunedin to the left of the university.
The next photo is a little bit further to the left, looking west to Dunedin. That pointed hill in the background is Saddle Hill. We used to be able to see it from our rental house, which is on the top of that ridge in the foreground in front of Saddle Hill.
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