Expecting visitors for lunch at the bach, I thought I'd better make an effort and clear the drive of overhanging vegetation, in case they turned up in their flash new limousine.
Thorny protuberances lining my driveway could easily slice through numerous layers of paint, and while that may be acceptable for my old truck, it certainly would not improve the pristine looks of my friend's Bentley.
My bushwhacking efforts were rewarded with an attack by wasps. Until I was stung, I'd been unaware that this pest was back in residence, with a nest buried in the undergrowth.
As owners of a holiday property, we wearily accept that during our absence, a variety of creatures - including bush rats, possums, wild cats, mice, giant cockroaches, mosquitoes and wasps - will take up lodgings. The painful stings reminded me how unlucky, or careless, we were in allowing wasps into New Zealand. The appalling damage to the ecology following the arrival of these airborne bandits doesn't bear thinking about.
Exterminating wasp nests requires a cautious approach. I plan such operations like a bank robbery.