As Bob Dylan would say, the answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind.
But back to Virginia and Warren Warbrick's questions for me - and you.
I'll start with a super easy one - for me, anyway. How many Palmerston North houses have I lived in? Just one. When I moved from Feilding I had a list of what type of house I wanted to buy and where. The one I bought fits virtually none of those requirements but I love it. Unlike many houses in the city, it has a view and each room feels like it belongs to a different house.
How has Palmerston North changed since I began living here? More houses, more cars, more laundromats, more preschools.
The tree that takes my breath away is one I met recently. It's a 20m tall coastal redwood in Moerangi St. If only trees could talk - and write - Big Red could take part in 150 Pātai.
Speaking of things that could talk, the old building that intrigues me the most is the Sir Geoffrey Peren Building at Massey University. It opened in 1931 and when I came to Manawatū it was called the Old Main Building.
Between 2012 and 2016 the building was earthquake strengthened and restored. The staircase takes my breath away both literally and figuratively. I got to office-sit a room in the SGP for a brief period and I'm sure it helped me get my head around the academic papers I was trying to digest.
A cycling route I recommend is using the cycle-only green light on the corner of Ruahine and Featherston streets. It allows cyclists to turn right while cars, trucks and buses - whatever direction they are travelling, have to wait. I love it and it would be great to see more pop up around town.
Asked to name my favourite quadrant of Te Marae o Hine - The Square is like being asked to name my favourite child. Each quadrant has its charms, but the butterfly lakelet quadrant is the one I've spent the most time in and know the best so I'll choose that.
Like other parts of The Square, it has problems with unwanted droppings but it never fails to calm and delight. And a nod to the tireless Ann Heaphy, who died in 2017. I do call it the butterfly lakelet, rather than the duck pond. Duck ponds are two a penny.
On to Palmerstonians. List all the Palmerston North mayors you can name. Hmm. Smith (and his first cat Thims), Naylor, Tanguay, Bell-Booth, White, Ellwood, Black, Nash, Linton, Snelson. And now to Google. Oh gosh, I missed Rieger. Sorry Paul. Looking at the list of former mayors, I note many have had streets named after them.
Question 76 is three common characteristics of a Palmerstonian. How about intelligent, creative and wind-bent?