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Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Cerebral palsy not stopping Thomas
T
homas Currie always had a passion for food, and as a teenager yearned to oneday become a chef. But he knew that would not be an easy journey, due to having been affected by cerebral palsy since birth. Cerebral palsy is a non-progressive group of disorders affecting a person’s ability to move, caused by damage to the developing brain either during pregnancy or shortly after birth. For Thomas, it has affected nerves to his muscles on his right side, compromising his fine motor skills. Because some tasks are more challenging for him than they would be for others, he remembers many adults in his life advising him that the best future path would be an office-based career. “I basically wanted to prove them wrong,” Currie said. “I’m glad they said that, because it did give me more drive to go out and do something they thought I couldn’t do.” From the age of 15 he liked to dabble in the kitchen at home, and extended his interest in home economics classes at his school of Mount Hutt College. After graduating from school he went off to Ara Institute of Canterbury in Timaru, to study espresso café and bar in 2011, and did a bakery course at the institute the following year. He then returned to his hometown to work in the Methven Bakery at The Mall, prior to taking up a position at Mount Hutt Lodge. He enjoyed 18 months there in the scenic Rakaia Gorge location, under the tutelage of local well-known chef Butch Stern, before getting his big break in the cheffing world when he landed a position at the internationally renowned Hermitage Hotel at Mt Cook. At the starting point of a very big learning curve he began as a kitchen hand, and loved being immersed in the “organised chaos” of the commercial kitchen. “The atmosphere was great, there was so many people in the kitchen.” Along with 25 fellow staff he was keeping the buffet well stocked, catering for up to 400
Methven’s Thomas Currie wanted to prove everyone wrong when they suggested he would be confined to a sit-down job for the rest of his life. The cerebral palsy sufferer thought he could do so much more than that, and it turns out he was right. Susan Sandys reports.
Thomas Currie is the chef de partie at Methven Resort. people per meal. Soon enough, he became one of the team of chefs at the resort, enjoying the small community feel while being part of a bigger picture, catering for hundreds of tourists at the iconic mountain location. He was there for three-anda-half years, before deciding to broaden his horizons even further, and went to Canada. “I wanted to snowboard,” he said. After growing up enjoying the sport at nearby Mt Hutt, landing himself a job at Lake Louise ski resort was a dream come true. He was there for about two years,
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and in winter would take the nearby gondola and snowboard to work, at Whitehorn Bistro. “It was really enjoyable, the biggest thing was the cold, it would get to minus 30 degrees.” Thankfully the summers were warmer, when the restaurant catered for hikers instead of skiers. Thomas’s exciting career journey has now led him back to his hometown, where he is one of a team of three chefs at Methven Resort. He is the chef de partie in the resort’s busy restaurant, catering for locals and tourists in the ski town. Recently Currie was involved
PHOTO SUSAN SANDYS 171019-SS-0056
in Methven Resort’s participation in the fund-raising campaign of Steptember, where in New Zealand alone as of yesterday there had been $698,279.55 raised, to support children and adults with cerebral palsy. There are many different degrees of severity for the disorder, ranging up to full disability and being wheelchair bound. This is the reality for his twin sister Jasmine, and it just makes Thomas feel all the more privileged to be able to participate in such initiatives. Aged 26 today, he has no regrets and enjoys the demanding
career of being a chef – a profession renowned for its high stress and time pressures. But he admits it has not always been easy. Due to his lack of fine motor skills in his right hand, he has had to work out unique ways of doing things, relying on muscle memory. “When I first started cooking, I couldn’t chop vegetables without cutting myself every time. It was difficult, but over time I have learned to do things differently,” he said. “It definitely is a struggle, but I have learned to cope with a lot more than I thought I could.”
News www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian
3
Celebration day at Village Green By Sue Newman
sue.n@theguardian.co.nz
More than a decade of dreaming, planning and sheer hard work came together on Thursday for John Skevington and Joanne Ruane when they officially launched their Lake Hood subdivision, Village Green. Invited guests walked the new streets and market ready sections before hearing Skevington talk about the long and often tortuous journey he and Ruane had been on to reach section sale point. “This has been in the making a long time, Jo and I had a vision. We wanted to create something nice for the district and we’re really proud of Village Green. Today is a real high for us,” he said. The project had been far from plain sailing, however, and there were many low points, many times when they were tempted to walk away, but seeing the development at a point where section sales could start was absolute confirmation of their belief in the project, Skevington said. While the first steps in the development were taken in 2006 when a plan change application was discussed, the dream had started several years earlier. The project did not go public, however, until February 2008. “We were living in Allenton at the time and we’d talked to the
Developers John Skevington and Joanne Ruane take invited guests on a tour of the first stage of Ashburton’s newest subdivision, Village Green. PHOTO SUE NEWMAN 171019-SN-0133 Guardian the day before. I went down to the dairy to pick up the paper, looked at the front page and thought Oh My God. It’s all official. If we don’t make it happen, we won’t just have egg on our faces, we’ll have the whole fowl house.” Over the following years there
were many hurdles to overcome but the one that came close to sinking the project was the public notification of the plan change in 2010. The wait to find out if there were objectors to a commissioner’s consent was the longest of their lives. “If it had gone to the
Environment Court we would have been stuffed,” Skevington said. While the project had been their dream, there were many people, organisations and businesses that had been part of the journey, he said.
Main contractor for the development Ashburton Contracting had put in 6000 man hours and 2000 machinery hours of under grounding, roading and section development work to open stage one. Mayor elect Neil Brown congratulated Skevington and Ruane for their vision, determination and absolute belief in the project. It had challenged councillors with its low pressure sewage system, but the argument had been convincing, he said. “But best of all for the council is that you sell sections and we get more rates,” Brown said. Today the first five sections in Village Green are on the market, a show home is planned for a site and the development of stage two in what will be a 35 home development over 20 hectares, is waiting in the wings. The subdivision concept is for the 35 houses to be built on clusters of four or five sections across the site to ensure a park-like, semi-rural environment and that views towards the Southern Alps are retained. Sections range in size from 1500 square metres to over 1900 square metres. The surrounding farm land will be maintained and grazed to provide property owners with a lifestyle block – without the work.
Battle lines drawn on freshwater reforms as deadline looms By Susan Sandys
susan.s@theguardian.co.nz
Farmers are environmentalists too, they work with the environment every day, says Federated Farmers’ national water spokesman Chris Allen. He was responding yesterday to lobby groups uniting on freshwater goals, as the deadline approaches for submissions on the Government’s Action for Healthy Waterways document. Nine environment, health, recreation, and water infrastructure groups have released a joint statement outlining four essential policies. The Public Health Association, Forest and Bird, Fish and Game
New Zealand, Environmental Defence Society, Recreation Aotearoa, Greenpeace, Water New Zealand, Whitewater NZ, and Choose Clean Water agree fresh water is in crisis in New Zealand. The first policy supports the stronger pollution limits proposed by Government. They especially support the measure of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) with a bottom line of 1mg/L, as well as other measures relating to sediment and wetlands. “The proposed measures for freshwater health will allow for much better monitoring for ecological health in waterways, providing better information on the presence of fish, and whether
waterways are healthy for swimming,” they said in the statement. Secondly, they are calling for the Government to take a different approach on setting pollution limits. “The current proposed policy would allow high polluters to lock-in their current level of pollution, essentially rewarding those with a high pollution starting point.” Thirdly, they reject the option in the Government’s proposed freshwater policy to make farm plans regulatory instruments. “Farm plans are a useful tool to support decision-making for farmers and land managers. However, clear and effective rules
must be prioritised as the best way to achieve the Government’s stated goal of measurable improvements within five years.” Fourthly, government needed to hold hydro-schemes, forestry, agriculture and stormwater management to account, and make sure that future policies are made consistent with the proposed freshwater reforms. Allen responded that farmers, environmentalists and everyone else wanted to get to the same place. “It’s the method by how we get there, it’s how we get to where we want to go that becomes the issue of tension,” Allen said. “We are farmers, we are envi-
ronmentalists too, because we have to work with the environment every day.” There had to be acknowledgement that some waterways needed to be looked at in different ways, as the proposed DIN bottom line would be too prescriptive in some areas, and meeting it would not be possible without severely curtailing farming production in these areas. He urged Mid Canterbury farmers to make individual submissions on the proposals by the deadline of October 31, and this was particularly important because this would be the only say farmers would get, as there would not be a hearing process.
News 4
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
CharRees pinot gris in the medals
Waste education Waste educator Kate Meads will present her popular waste-free living workshops in Ashburton and Methven next month. Supported by the Ashburton District Council, the Ashburton Waste Free Living Workshop will be November 5 at 6.30pm, at the Ashburton Resource Recovery Park, while the Methven Waste Free Living Workshop will be November 6 at 6.30pm, at the Mt Hutt Memorial Hall Methven. Tickets are $25, and attendees get a free gift pack worth $100 with items such as food pouches and wraps, produce bags, stainless steel straws and more.
By Linda Clarke
linda.c@theguardian.co.nz
Mid Canterbury vineyard CharRees has won a prestigious bronze medal in the New Zealand aromatic wine competition for its 2018 pinot gris. Over 260 wines were judged over two days with a Spy Valley riesling taking home the supreme champion wine in show. The CharRees pinot gris also picked up another bronze medal in a competition only for Canterbury wines. Judges were impressed with the high quality of wines on offer in both competitions, awarding 22 golds, 62 silvers and 104 bronzes. “The blind judging process ensures quality wins out and the results list truly deserving acclamations,” said head judge Jim Harre. It has been a few years between drinks for CharRees owners Charlie and Esma Hill, who last won a medal in 2014. Since then, the pair have retired from their milk run business and are now full-time grape growers. Charlie said the medal-winning pinot gris was showing the results of increased time and effort in the vineyard and he hoped it was the start of more regular success. The pinot gris grapes were harvested last May and taken to Waipara wine-maker Kirk Bray, who fermented and produced the winning drop. Charlie said a riesling wine from the 2018 year was also good drinking. The small vineyard that fronts State Highway 1 at Tinwald has a steady stream of tourists turning off to taste their wine at the cellar door. They also make pinot noir and a sparkling white, and have plans to expand to other varietals. Charlie said he and Esma had spent extra time in 2018 cutting off second-set fruit so the vines
In brief
Highland games Tartan is the theme of the Hororata Highland Games this year, as organisers celebrate the area’s Scottish heritage. To be held at the Hororata Domain on November 9, the games are considered New Zealand’s biggest Scottish festival, where visitors are encouraged to join in the fun and dress in their Scottish regalia. 2019 Chieftain is Peri Drysdale MBE. Having grown up on a farm in Windwhistle, the Untouched World fashion company founder has strong connections to the area.
Win a last minute deal Esma and Charlie Hill check out the early beginnings of a new season in their CharRees vineyard at Tinwald. PHOTO LINDA CLARKE 181019-LC-0145 put more energy into the fruit that would be picked. He said the winemaker had commented after the first press of grapes that it should make a nice drop. The pinot gris vines are 20 years old while the riesling vines are younger and part of the couple’s development of the vineyard over the years. They say that after a decade in the business, they are constantly looking at ways to tweak and improve the business.
They spend many weekends on the road at food and wine shows and enjoy engaging with customers, who are often surprised to hear the grapes were grown in Mid Canterbury. “We are more known for our sheep and cows and people are surprised we can grow grapes that make good wine.” Charlie said to celebrate the bronze medals, CharRees would be holding a special event over the three days of Labour weekend. The vineyard will be open
from 11am to 5pm those days and people can buy wine by the glass, along with food, so they can try the different varieties. CharRees will also be at the Ashburton A&P Show on November 1 and 2, as well as the Canterbury Show, the Methven fete, the Christchurch food and wine festival and several other festivals this summer. “We are hoping this year will be a boomer. The vines are looking good at the moment, the best I’ve ever seen them.”
A South Auckland family who scooped $19 million in Wednesday’s Powerball jackpot only bought the winning ticket online minutes before the big draw. “My husband turned to me at 7.22pm and said ‘we didn’t get a Lotto ticket! You better race down to the dairy and pick one up’, but I knew there wouldn’t be enough time – so I logged onto MyLotto instead,” said the winner. “I ended up clicking ‘buy’ with two minutes to spare.” But it wasn’t until the following day after the woman heard two MyLotto players had split the $38m jackpot that she remembered to check her ticket. - NZME
Local gunsmith approved to modify banned firearms By Jaime Pitt-MacKay Jaime.p@theguardian.co.nz
A local gunsmith will play a big role in the modification of prohibited firearms to bring them in line with new laws. Earlier this week police encouraged those who may have firearms that have become prohibited by law reforms which they wish to keep, to get them modified by the end of the amnesty period, December 20 this year. Thirty-two gunsmiths nationwide were listed as being approved to carry out modification work to bring firearms in line with the new laws, including one in the Ashburton District – Staveley Alternative Technologies, which is operated by gunsmith Hamish Bruce. Bruce has been a gunsmith and theatrical armourer for 20 years, and opted to become an approved gunsmith for two reasons. “I have a lifelong interest in antique firearms and their restoration and preservation and most of those arms covered by this
option are either cheap everyday farm workhorses or antique cowboy type rifles over 120 years old,” he said. “Many use ammunition that has been long obsolete and has
to be hand-made by enthusiasts who shoot these vintage items, I wanted to be able to save these historic items from the senseless destruction.” Bruce said the second reason
for becoming an approved gunsmith was for an economical reason. The law changes which prohibited some self-loading firearms effectively stopped his gunsmithing business as by nature those firearms require more maintenance. “With them gone so was 60 per cent of my work,” he said. “Also as I work in the movie world, the law change made most of the movie guns we use prohibited, this has caused a climate where no one is getting work done and police took six months to even get around to sorting any P endorsements to continue work. “Firearms users are so scared to even go out to shoot now that most usual gunsmithing work has reduced to a trickle, maybe one job a month.” Bruce only had his approval accepted two weeks ago, but has already had around 30 enquiries from people looking to have modifications done on a mixture of sentimental/old rifles and
farm workhorses, which he will begin later this month. “The process is rather long winded with the police insisting on checking that firearms licence holders have their guns checked to prove that they are not stolen first before I’m allowed to work on them and then police insisting on inspecting every job done,” he said. “I also am of the opinion that if police haven’t given enough time to allow the modification process to occur, they took six months to approve us as gunsmiths and that left us with just three months to do all the work. “Many firearms owners have been waiting for clarity in the buyback process before approaching the process and I think they may have to consider extending the amnesty as just cutting off the amnesty isn’t going to make these things disappear.” Further information on what firearms are eligible for modifications and how to contact Bruce can be found on www.police. govt.nz.
News www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian
Learning the skills to restart a heart A large group of Methven locals left the Methven Park with newly found CPR skills and confidence earlier this week. A training afternoon was held next to the Methven Medical Centre, organised by the Local St John volunteers as part of World Restart a Heart Day. The numbers around heart attacks are damning and there’s a lot of work going into educating people, St John volunteer Sara Davis said. “Over 10,000 people in New Zealand have a heart attack each year and only one in ten survive,” she said. Five fully decked out St John officers, along with Dame Lynda Topp posing as her popular character Ken, created a fun, entertaining environment for people to test their skills. Methven Volunteer Fire Brigade members stepped up to a three minute CPR challenge set down by the St John team. The winners, as voted by the crowd, were St John, however challenge commentator Topp asked the audience to give both sides a round of applause. “Because these guys save lots of lives,” she said. Well known songs with strong regular beat are a handy way to remember a CPR rhythm. Baby Shark was a hit with the younger set and Staying Alive was chosen as an example for the older crowd members. Whilst the afternoon was full of fun, a BBQ, spot prizes and music, there was also a serious message to get across.
For every minute that passes when someone has a cardiac arrest, chances of survival fall by 10 to 15 per cent. “Doing something is better than doing nothing,” Methven St John chairman David Molly also pointed out. Dr Sophie Febrey popped out briefly to check out the action. The Methven doctor said the knowledge of how to help someone who was found in a situation where they were having a heart attack was vital, especially in a town like Methven. “In a rural community like ours every minute counts,” she said. “I live 12 minutes out of Methven, plus I would have to go to the medical centre to get my bag. This all adds up to valuable time lost. If someone I knew had a heart attack I would like to think someone near them had the confidence to carry out CPR.” “In those valuable first minutes the public performing CPR would be no different to anything a doctor would do.” Call Push Shock Call 111 Push (CPR) Shock. If an AED is available, the AED app on your phone will show you the nearest location of a defibrillator in the area. Right – Dame Lynda Topp as one of her many aliases, Ken, has a go at performing CPR during Start a Heart Day on Wednesday in Methven. PHOTO HEATHER MACKENZIE 161019-HM-0016
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celebrates 140 years of service T
Guardian Holds An Enduring Place In Jill Watson’s Life
he Ashburton Guardian has been part of Jill Watson’s life for more than 40 years. Jill first encountered the Guardian when, as a junior at Canterbury Public Library, she had to display all the local newspapers in the reading room daily. When she moved to Ashburton three years later the newspaper became her regular fix. “There was a sense of an�cipa�on, always something interes�ng in local news and views,” Jill recalls. “It’s very sa�sfying being able to keep up with local events and take a full part in the concerns of the day. “The council o�en features in the news and this makes it even more relevant to me.” In the early 1980s Jill began a newspaper index of the Guardian. The library engaged six PEP workers to index over 100 years of the Ashburton Guardian for local names, places and events which has been con�nued to this day. “It has been invaluable to family members and local history researchers,” she says. The stories that s�ck in Jill’s mind are the drama�c moments in the life of the Mid Canterbury community. She refers to the big snows, the windstorm of 1975, earthquakes and tragic events like local murders. On a lighter side she loved the series wri�en about local historic houses. She found them valuable when their new owners came in to look for the background to their homes. Jill emphasises the wri�en word enables more background to be covered than “soundbites” available online or in recorded media. Newspaper reports are more reliable and though�ul and invite informed comment and response through le�ers to the editor. She reflects on the role of Ashburton Library as an important current resource for keeping the public informed and the primary source of historic informa�on about the district. These are “pre�y important roles”, she says. “I’d like to see the Guardian con�nue its focus on local affairs. I think it’s vital to local heritage and culture to have an enduring record of trusted news and views in a local context,” Jill comments. As a keen local observer, Jill sees the most significant change as being the inclusion of many photographs of Mid Canterbury people and ac�vi�es since 1975, first in black and white, then colour. “This provides a wonderful record of everyday life in each succeeding era. Also no�ceable is that there is less interna�onal news and more indepth local coverage,” she says. Jill accentuates the role the Ashburton Guardian plays in the life of the district, reliably and impar�ally informing residents of local events, trends and controversies. It promotes a sense of community, o�en highligh�ng health and social issues that Ashburton people are struggling with. “That’s important because others may not be aware of them,” she points out. “The Guardian celebrates our achievements and shares in our sense of loss when tragedies occur. I believe the Ashburton District is a far be�er place for having the Guardian and I hope it con�nues on for the next 100 years.”
What a Newspaper, What a Glue!
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he state of the house was appalling and unfit to live in. Ashburton’s mayor moved quickly and had the occupant removed to hospital and her children taken into care. The police were instructed to cordon off the building, fumigate the house and burn the bedding and furniture. The Borough Inspector of Nuisances spoke candidly to councillors and they supported the move. It could have been 2019, but it wasn’t. It was October, 1900, the year Robert Bell purchased a partnership interest in the Ashburton Guardian. Council news was a core part of the newspaper’s coverage of Mid Canterbury, then and now. Local authority elec�ons, such as last weekend, received huge publicity. Nothing has changed. If you wanted to know who won, who lost, who received the most votes and what they promised Mid Canterbury, then the local newspaper was where you looked. In 1900 plans were under way to extend the municipal building in Baring Square West. It would add a new council chamber and town clerk’s office to a building already housing the public library. Is history repea�ng itself? In addi�on to the borough council, the Guardian covered race mee�ngs, sports days, musical performances, schools and school ou�ngs and hospital and roads board mee�ngs. Farming topics were popular, and work and transport accidents were frequent and o�en fatal. The notables graced the pages and appearances in court of Ashburton’s less respectable were fully and faithfully reported. Kate Sheppard’s influence extended from Christchurch to Ashburton. The Women’s Chris�an Temperance Union (WCTU) was alive and kicking. Prohibi�on was a hot topic. The women claimed a lavish new hotel was being built at Fairton. In fact it was a boarding house for single men employed at the freezing works. The Guardian was the centre of Ashburton’s daily life in 1900 and today it remains the glue that holds the community together. What a paper and what a glue! However, it’s good to know in 2019, nearly 120 years a�er the October council mee�ng, there are no nuisances in Ashburton and the office of the borough inspector has quietly closed. Bruce Bell reflects on the 1900 South African War Memorial, the same year his family bought into the Ashburton Guardian.
Librarian Jill Watson.
Motoring Friday,July5,2019
Jenny’s XK8 Jaguar is her dream car.
FULL STORY P21
“Tomorrow’s another day, another issue, another milestone on our journey. It’s also one where we want to take you with us” – BRUCE BELL
News www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian
7
Burnham shocker – girl, 3, killed in raid NZME The head of the Defence Force has accepted that a 3-year-old girl appears to have been killed during a New Zealand-led raid in Afghanistan. The bombshell admission is believed to be the first time New Zealand’s military officials have acknowledged the likelihood of the girl’s death. Top military brass are this week
facing questions about a “cover-up” and why the Defence Force until 2014 said allegations of civilian deaths during Operation Burnham were false, despite a report by coalition forces in 2010 concluding they were possible. The Government inquest was spurred by the 2017 book Hit & Run, in which journalists Nicky Hager and Jon Stephenson alleged six civilians – including a young girl name Fatima - were killed and
Bridges bows to Speaker’s ruling, pulls videos NZME
National Party leader Simon Bridges has changed his tune and decided to comply with the Speaker’s ruling by taking down all National’s attack videos that feature Parliament TV footage. This will mean that Speaker Trevor Mallard’s restrictions on the number of questions Bridges can ask during Question Time will be lifted. Bridges’ compliance appears to be in contrast with his statements on Tuesday, when he said it was doubtful the videos would be removed from social media. “The feedback has been overwhelming. People want to see, from us, important issues,” Bridges said on Tuesday. Singing a different tune yesterday, Bridges said that removing the videos will mean the current review of Standing Orders – including the rules around the use of Parliament TV footage – will progress more quickly. “We have agreed to that action and are encouraged by the timeline for resolution of these matters, which should be concluded by early November,” Bridges said. “National will remove the videos by 5pm today.” Bridges faced further restrictions if he had continued to defy Mallard’s ruling, with 5pm yesterday being the first deadline. Mallard welcomed Bridges’ announcement. He had told the House that he had wanted a rapid resolution of the issue three weeks ago, when the complaint was first laid, and that defiance of his ruling was an impediment to that. “I am pleased Mr Bridges has agreed with me,” Mallard said. The issue came to a head following a Labour complaint to Mallard three weeks ago over a National Party video that showed Labour MP Deborah Russell’s speech in the House about wellbeing that included remarks about Greek philosophy. Text accompanying the video read: “Still not sure what Labour’s Wellbeing Budget means?” Mallard ruled that the video violated Standing Orders about the use of Parliament’s official television coverage of the House. Standing Orders require the permission of all MPs shown for footage used for political advertising. Reports that use extracts of official coverage must also be “fair and accurate”. Mallard ordered all political parties to take down any videos made this year featuring MPs in the House who had not given their consent – which only really affects National.
15 others wounded during the NZSAS-led raid against insurgents in August 2010. In the closing minutes of the inquiry’s final public hearing yesterday, the current Chief of Defence Air Marshal Kevin Short, was asked whether he accepted it appeared Fatima had been killed in the operation. “Appears to, yes.” Short replied. While the NZDF has since 2014 accepted civilian deaths may have
been possible, Short’s comment is believed to be the first public acknowledgement of the particular claim. Until as recently as a few months ago, the Herald understands there were senior personnel in the NZDF that were still denying Fatima’s death occurred. Moments earlier, Short told the inquiry that not all civilian deaths were war crimes, evoking a gasp from the public gallery, and
that the NZDF had only targeted armed fighters. “I am saying that because if you are a member of an organised armed group and you behave as such then you actually forfeit the protections you have as a civilian,” he said. “I say that because this was an armed group … There is enough information to say they were armed. They were organised and we had to destroy their weapons.”
News 8
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
‘Depraved’ killing worst cop has seen NZME The Wellington man who fatally bludgeoned a woman to death so he could sexually assault her daughter is “evil”, the woman’s husband says. Joseph William Borton was yesterday given an indefinite prison sentence for the brutal attack, which dragged out for 18 hours and left the 12-year-old daughter needing skull reconstruction surgery. The 31-year-old had earlier pleaded guilty to the attack, which happened in the affluent suburb of Karori on April 4. He admitted attacking the girl and her 52-year-old mother with a steel mallet and sexually violating the child as her mother lay dying nearby. Outside the High Court at Wellington yesterday, Detective Constable Hayley Adams read a statement from the woman’s husband. In the statement, the husband said the death of his wife was “numbingly awful”. He described the victim as a “very special person” who was “outstanding” at her job, and a charismatic and compassionate member of her community. “Her death was a great loss to society,” he said. His daughter is “miraculously” expected to recover well. Support from police and medical professionals as well as the wider community helped them manage their grief. He said one stranger who had shown up to his house to pick up an item gave him a hug when she heard what had happened. “A small act of compassion means a lot, and we have had so many kind acts.” “We live in a wonderful society and the crimes that were committed on my wife and daughter were the exception. “The perpetrator is evil. It’s not how we
see our society.” Detective Senior Sergeant Warwick McKee said in his 30 years of policing and leading homicide investigations, this was the worst case he had dealt with. “The offending committed here can only be described as abhorrent, cruel and utterly disgraceful behaviour.” He said Borton had been sentenced appropriately. Justice Simon France gave Borton a life sentence with a minimum non-parole period of 19 years for the murder, but also imposed preventive detention for the sexual offending. Preventive detention is an indeterminate sentence which allows Corrections to have control over the offender and, if released on parole, recall them to prison at any time. Borton pleaded guilty in August to all charges, including murder, sexual violation, indecent assault, wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and several theft charges. The offending was labelled by Crown prosecutor Grant Burston as being at a high level of “cruelty, brutality, depravity and callousness”. An autopsy revealed the woman suffered at least eight separate head injuries. They were so significant that fragments of her skull were pressed into her brain. The 12-year-old needed surgery to reconstruct her skull and now has a plate in her head and has damaged sight and hearing. Borton told police he intended to “incapacitate” the mother so he could sexually offend against the daughter. The victims have name suppression to protect the child’s identity. Psychologist reports provided to the court offer “no ready explanation” for the attack, Justice France said. Borton has no previous convictions.
High country garden tour preparations under way Getting out their green fingers are five-year-old Laura Scott and threeyear-old Annabelle Carr. Mayfield Playcentre children are potting up Mt Peel lilies in preparation for the playcentre’s fourth biennial Homegrown Garden Tour and Fete, to be held on November 3. Four beautiful properties in the area will feature – Sara and Blair Gallagher’s Rangiatea, Penny and Mark Greenslade’s Somerset, Mike and Nicky Salvesen’s Wakare, and Sara and Paul Grigg’s Surrey Hills Station. PHOTO SUPPLIED
Some districts trialling new Armed Response Teams Police have announced a trial of Armed Response Teams in three districts across the country to complement their initial response to critical or high risk incidents by being on duty at peak demand times, seven days a week. Police Commissioner Mike Bush this week announced a trial of Armed Response Teams (ARTs). The trials will be run in Canterbury, Waikato and Counties Manukau over a six-month period. A Police spokesperson said the ARTs will primarily operate in the greater Christchurch area but there will be the ability to respond across the wider district as needed. The districts were chosen to host the trials as they have the highest number of firearms seized, located and surrendered, and have the largest Armed Offenders Squad groups to support the trial. “ARTs will complement our initial response to critical or high risk incidents by being on duty at peak demand times, seven days a week,” he said. “ARTs are specialist police personnel who are part of our Armed Offenders Squad (AOS). “Our AOS is normally on call 24/7, but for the trial they will be routinely armed, equipped,
The new Armed Response Teams operate out of these vehicles in Canterbury, Counties Manukau and the Waikato. PHOTO SUPPLIED mobile and ready to support our frontline with any events or incidents that require enhanced tactical capabilities. They are a standard feature across policing jurisdictions internationally. “The Police’s mission is that New Zealand is the safest country. Following the events of March
15 in Christchurch, our operating environment has changed.” Bush said the national threat level remains at medium, and that they are continuously reviewing their tools, training, and capabilities that are used to provide policing services to ensure they remain fit for purpose.
ARTs will have access to a range of tactical options and on average they will consist of a minimum of three specialist AOS personnel. At times they may be supported by additional staff such as specialist dog units. “Police must ensure our people are equipped and enabled to
perform their roles safely and to ensure our communities are, and feel, safe. This means having the right people with the right tools, skills and knowledge ready to respond at all times,” he said. “The introduction of ARTs improves our ability to respond to rapidly evolving events and incidents with highly-trained specialist skills and expertise, minimising risks to our people and the public. “During the trial, ARTs will be focused on responding to events where a significant risk is posed to the public or staff. “They will also support the execution of pre-planned and highrisk search warrants, high-profile public events and prevention activities.” The trial will be evaluated to see what impact, ARTs have on staff and public safety. The evaluation will be undertaken by the Evidence Based Policing Centre (EBPC). The EBPC uses practitioner-based research, information, crime-science, theory, and problem-solving methods to inform practice, implement measures to prevent crime and improve the allocation of Police resources to better protect our staff and the public.
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
8
Ashburton Guardian
99 kg
Fresh Chicken Breast Fillets Skinless
GS N I V A S VE IDE M A S STIO W E R S
Coca Cola, Sprite or L&P
17
330ml 24 Pack Cans
99 ea
NestlĂŠ Reduced Cream 250ml
2
49 ea
Bananas
Loose, Product of The Philippines or Ecuador
1
99 kg
Just Juice 1L
Much Moore Ice Cream 2L
3 for
4
00
Maggi Soup Mix
99 29-45g
c
ea
Heineken
19
330ml 12 Pack Bottles
99 ea
3
99 ea
Castello Creamy Blue or Double Cream Brie 150g,
excludes Chilli, Mellow, Marquis & Truffle
5
99 ea
Wither Hills
750ml, excludes Pinot Noir & Single Estate
10
99 ea
Specials available South Island only, price valid Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th October only. Trade not supplied. Due to current Licensing Trust laws, liquor not available at Elles Road, Windsor & Gore. Specials may not be available at all stores. Club Deals are only available to Clubcard Members at New World South Island stores when they scan their Clubcard at the time of purchase.
ON NOW
9
METHVEN
L
ongevity of any event in rural New Zealand has to been seen as a positive for the community it is held in. Fifty years of rodeo in Methven is an example of what a rural event can do for its community and the national sport. The Methven Rodeo has been beneficial to all that enter the events, host the town’s visitors and the many organisations that have benefited from the donations received from the profits raised at the event held Labour weekend every year. Without the cowboys and cowgirls the event could not run, the cowboys would not have an event if it were not for the tireless committed committee, the generosity of sponsors and local bucking horse graziers, also the suppliers of the livestock to be used in the many events on offer again this year. Rodeo in the Mid Canterbury town was started as an offshoot from the A&P show as a way of raising money and to give the locals another event to be entertained at as the interest grew in the events rodeo had to offer. The rite of passage to the chairman’s role of the A&P show was via the chair of the rodeo for many years. Local cowboys that felt rodeo was a good fit for their community after having competed nationally and some internationally knew a good event would be well supported and undertook the mammoth task of building an arena. The foresight those early members had has proved to be successful with over 6000 people attending the event in the past years. The Methven Rodeo is now seen as the largest in the country, both in crowd size and numbers of competitors in the arena. Every year the Methven Rodeo shares this success with the likes of the Lions club, schools, sporting organisations and many community projects, such as Methven House – the proposed aged-care facility benefiting financially.
The Methven Rodeo, this year having reached that milestone of 50, is recognising the hard work of many celebrating the success and strength that the club finds itself in. Life members will be honoured, event winners will receive trophy jackets or trophy buckles on top of the large prizemoney pool on offer. The club will supply the best bucking and time event stock on offer in the South Island, and this year will feature a big screen to feature replays and recaps of the rides. The usual food and beverage outlets are all available, as well as the many stall owners, some who have been a part of the rodeo for many years. The hot dog and chip stand owners, who are like a family, have been attending the rodeo for over 40 years. I guess rodeo gets in your blood no matter what side of the arena fence you’re on. The local club was awarded a national title for one of its bucking horses last year and will feature her in this year’s open bareback ride. Black Betty is her name and bucking has been her game, winning the best bareback bucking horse of the year. There will be a large number of local competitors entering the events on offer and a past announcer, Neville Clarke, will return to also be a part of the action. To top off the day an evening function is to be held where old cowboys and committee members can enjoy memories and those that feel the urge can dance the night away to a band and make more memories about a town called Methven and its amazing event that will again be the place to be for many a year to come. Craig Wiggins Rodeo commentator and rural advocate Advertising feature
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Opinion 12 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
OUR VIEW
Competition keeps media honest O
ne, two, three; that used to be the countdown to choosing which television channel to watch, but it may not be for much longer. MediaWorks owned TV3 is no longer on shaky ground, it’s on borrowed time and that time is about to run out with suggestions it could be sold or closed by the end of the year. Its owner is blaming government owned TVNZ for the axe that’s hanging over its head, saying independent commercial media can’t foot it in the uneven commercial media playing field where the opposition has the benefit of being government owned.
And there’s a lot of truth in that, but also in play is the changed and constantly changing environment that all media operate in today. Gone are the days when loyal readers, watchers, listeners waited until a scheduled time to collect their paper, to turn on the telly to watch the news. Gone are the days when
advertisers carefully planned their spend, allocating money to newspapers if they were provincial, to the telly if they were the big national guns. Radio has always stood to the side in that it has been the ‘instant’ media in the traditional trio and it is continuing, in most cases, to hold its head above water. Newspapers however, like television, are facing their own challenges. The media as we knew it is under threat on many fronts. The three cornerstones – print, radio and television – are still there but they’ve been joined by the world of instant online news. At the click of a mouse or a but-
ton the latest news, advertising and infomercial is in your hand. Why wouldn’t you use it? It’s great for consumers, but what does it do to the multiple media organisations battling to make an advertising dollar? They need those dollars to keep staff employed and to keep up the hallmarks of New Zealand’s media industry – honest, unbiased reporting. Telling a story without any fear of commercial – or state – intervention. The world of instant news is here to stay and you can’t blame advertisers for lapping it up, or consumers for logging on. We live in a world of citizen journalists, where the “I saw it
on Facebook, so it must be true” mentality is alive and well. But how do you know what the real facts are? That’s where grassroots media comes in, media staffed by people working for organisations that are locally-owned and locally-run. That’s called grassroots accountability. There’s a lot to mourn if we lose TV. No longer will we have on the ground television media competition. The news we’re delivered will be what the state owned company delivers. State-owned, it has an uncomfortable ring to it. Competition and privately-owned media keeps things honest.
operations on the ground in Afghanistan, opening a significant new phase of the assault against the Taliban and al-Qaida. In 2005, a defiant Saddam Hussein pleaded innocent to charges of premeditated murder and torture as his trial opened under heavy security in Baghdad. In 2008, retired Gen Colin Powell, who was President George W Bush’s first secretary of state, broke with the party and endorsed Democrat Barack Obama for president, calling him a “transformational figure” during an appearance on Meet
the Press. Ten years ago: The Justice Department issued a new policy memo, telling prosecutors that pot-smoking patients or their sanctioned suppliers should not be targeted for federal prosecution in states that allowed medical marijuana. Five years ago: An Associated Press investigation found that dozens of Nazi war criminals and SS guards had collected millions in US Social Security pension payments after being forced out of the United States. One year ago: A speeding train ran over a crowd watching fireworks during a religious
festival in northern India, killing at least 60 people. Today’s birthdays: Author John le Carre is 88. Actor Tony Lo Bianco is 83. Artist Peter Max is 82. Author and critic Renata Adler is 82. Actor Michael Gambon is 79. Actor John Lithgow is 74. Feminist activist Patricia Ireland is 74. Singer Jeannie C Riley is 74. Rock singer-musician Patrick Simmons is 71. Actress Annie Golden is 68. Rock singermusician Karl Wallinger (is 62. Singer Jennifer Holliday is 59. Retired boxer Evander Holyfield is 57. Host Ty Pennington is 55. Rock singer-musician Todd Park
Mohr is 54. Actor Jon Favreau is 53. Amy Carter is 52. South Park co-creator Trey Parker is 50. Comedian Chris Kattan is 49. Rock singer Pras Michel is 47. Actor Omar Gooding is 43. Country singer Cyndi Thomson is 43. Writer-director Jason Reitman is 42. Actor Benjamin Salisbury is 39. Actress Gillian Jacobs is 37. Actress Rebecca Ferguson is 36. Rock singer Zac Barnett is 33. Singer-actress Ciara Renee is 29. Actress Hunter King is 26. Thought for today: “Dream in a pragmatic way.” – Aldous Huxley, English author (18941963). – AP
Sue Newman
SENIOR REPORTER
TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Saturday, October 19, the 292nd day of 2019. There are 73 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On October 19, 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 per cent in value (its biggest daily percentage loss), to close at 138.74 in what came to be known as Black Monday. On this date: In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in New York, adopted a declaration of rights and liberties which the British Parliament ignored. In 1781, British troops under Gen. Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, as the American Revolution neared its end. In 1814, the first documented public performance of The StarSpangled Banner took place at the Holliday Street Theatre in Baltimore. In 1944, the US Navy began accepting black women into WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service). In 1960, the United States began a limited embargo against Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies and certain food products. In 1966, US President Lyndon Johnson arrived at Ōhakea air base at the start of a whirlwind 24-hour visit to New Zealand. In 1977, the supersonic Concorde made its first landing in New York City. In 1982, automaker John Z DeLorean was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles, accused of conspiring to sell $24 million of cocaine to salvage his business. In 1192, the Fred Hollows Foundation was launched in New Zealand. In 1994, 22 people were killed as a terrorist bomb shattered a bus in the heart of Tel Aviv’s shopping district. In 2001, US special forces began
Opinion www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian 13
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When you’re not out H
ow many times does it take an Australian teacher to be caught drunk, before they are fired? Well, it’s got be more than three times according to the authorities in Queensland. So our sun-drenched, thong loving cousins on the West Island have a taste for a cold one on a hot day, and to be fair, you couldn’t blame them seeing as they have more hot days than we have opinion polls on who is our preferred prime minister. But a Queensland teacher has taken the phrase of ‘being in high spirits’ one step further, and only now has this passion for the nectar of the Gods been revealed. In 2016 an unnamed teacher swigged valium and vodka (sounds like an Amy Winehouse song) after a break-up, and then passed out in her Year 2 class. She was taken by ambulance to hospital, such was the state of her. Did this get her fired? No way my little Kiwi battler, not here, not in the land of drive through bottle stores! Then, to show the first time was not a fluke, she repeated this one month later.
Peter Livingstone OUT OF SCHOOL
This time her principal found her asleep in her chair in front of her class. Very wisely (let’s face it, principals are wise) he woke her up and suggested she go home, but not to drive. See, a very wise man, he didn’t even raise the idea of firing her, it’s every Aussie’s unearned right to drink on the job. So of course our emboldened, loose as a goose, sozzled educator ignored this wise advice and drove home. Much to her surprise she was pulled over and arrested for drunk-driving. Now surely this was the end of her career? Nope, not in the land of crocs the size of Godzilla and spiders so poisonous, they only have to think about you and you kark it. You see, life in ’Straya is tough. There are more men in budg-
ie smugglers than lies told by Trump. Women need to drink to blot out the image of a pale, stale, male wrapped in nothing more than a lime coloured loincloth. And so, in 2018, our Gold Coast pedagogical practitioner tried it once more, this time making sure she went public and collapsed outside the school library. Her blood alcohol levels put her in the category of ‘drunken stupor’, similar to the state of the average Aussie trying to work out who their prime minister is. Now surely she was for the chopping block. Three strikes and you’re out. Nope, not even close. This time, in a show of authoritative decision making, the Queensland’s Civil and Administrative Tribunal, (that’s a very impressive title) slapped a ban on her from teaching. Now, once that ban is over, she can resume teaching as long as she takes monthly blood tests. You see, teaching in Oz Trail Leigha is so demanding that no one wants the job. Over there, if you can’t tell the difference between a kangaroo and a wallaby, they make you eat
a witchetty grub. If you are unwilling to teach your fledgling bowlers how to use sandpaper or an underarm action, they will put you in a pool with a blue-ringed octopus. If you ask why they have a beer called XXXX, they will remove your air conditioner and donate it to starving children in Ethiopia. So, unlike here, when an Australian teacher misbehaves they let them keep their jobs, because teachers are rarer than rain on the Nullabor. So why should I be so concerned about the actions of an Australian teacher? Because right now I’m reading through some CVs and there is one from a Queensland teacher with a wine stain on the second page. Worth a crack? She says she enjoys social drinking! Peter Livingstone is the principal of Tinwald School. The views expressed in this column are his and do not represent the views of his school, the Ashburton Guardian or the Mid Canterbury Principals’ Association.
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Business www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian 15
MediaWorks gives up on television By Paul McBeth
“Our focus now is to accelerate the opportunities that exist for those platforms,” Matthews said. Broadcasters around the world are facing a landgrab for content with online streaming services such as Netflix bidding up the cost of content. Entertainment giant Disney will launch a streaming service in the coming weeks and Apple TV Plus is also on the way. That’s made it hard for free-toair broadcasters at a time when linear TV advertising is shrinking, and MediaWorks chief executive Michael Anderson has previously signalled that the firm would quit TV if the government didn’t change its policy settings. He has been an ardent critic of rival Television New Zealand’s commercial mandate, which sees it compete for advertising dollars. “The role Three plays in New Zealand society is significant, from Newshub through to investment in local comedy and drama. “We believe MediaWorks TV is now in a place where it can be separated from the radio and outdoor business to be operated under a new owner in a more sustainable fashion – and, ultimately, for profit,” he said yesterday.
NZME
lion on revenue of $43.3 million in calendar 2018. “We are in the fortunate position of having two very strong growth platforms in radio and outdoor that deliver both revenue and margin growth.
NZME
Enough Kathmandu shareholders backed the $368 million acquisition of surf brand Rip Curl to approve the deal just on the number of proxy votes held by the board. The special meeting in Sydney was to ratify the deal, which will turn Kathmandu into a billion-dollar-revenue business and add at least 10 percent to per-share earnings. The resolution attracted 163.1 million votes – 60 per cent – in favour on proxies alone.
It was almost unanimously supported with 99.96 per cent support at the meeting. The outdoor goods retailer is raising $145 million in a one-for-four accelerated entitlement offer to help pay for the surf brand. The institutional component of the offer cleared the shares at $3.06 per share, a 51 cent premium to the $2.55 offer price which retail shareholders will pay. “Reflecting our commitment to the company and to this acquisition, I am also pleased to confirm that all
Kathmandu directors who are current shareholders of Kathmandu intend to participate in the accelerated entitlement offer to partly fund the acquisition,” chair David Kirk said in speech notes lodged with the stock exchange before the meeting. The shares fell 1.6 per cent to $3.13 in relatively light trading of 37,000 shares. A separate resolution to amend the company’s constitution and bring it in line with NZX listing rules was also passed with 99.99 per cent support.
Eroad reports strong sales growth By Rebecca Howard NZME
Eroad reported strong third-quarter sales growth but didn’t pick up as many small to medium business customers as expected. It is also looking at a possible secondary listing on the ASX. The Auckland-based firm installs electronic distance recorders and tracking devices in road transport fleets across Australia, the US and New Zealand. Total contracted units rose 28 per cent to 109,380 in the three months to September 30, it said. Of that, the number of vehicle logging units in New Zealand lifted 15 per cent to 75,674 and were up 62 per cent in North America at 32,193. In Australia, they lifted 39 per cent to 1513. In the nine-month period, total contracted units were up 27 per cent versus the same period a year earlier with the North American market lifting 54 percent. Eroad said there were strong deployments in the US for its largest
enterprise customer. The signing of another large enterprise customer in June saw it install about 1650 contracted units for that customer within eight weeks. However, the company noted the run rate for small and medium business customers was below expectations. It also said it has not seen the increase in its sales pipeline expected ahead of the December 16 deadline
the US government set to replace legacy devices with electronic logging devices, or ELDs. Eroad said it continues to build a brand presence in Australia, although sales to small and medium businesses were also below its expectations. “However, the pipeline of enterprise customers – with longer sales lead times – remains encouraging and above original expectations,” it said. It said that following the relaunch of its Australian business and growing interest from Australian and other international investors, the board was considering an ASX foreign exempt listing. That would provide more alignment between the company’s business operations and its investor base. A decision is expected in early 2020 and it remains “committed to maintaining an NZX listing,” it said. The stock rose 2.3 per cent to $3.10.
NEW ZEALAND SHARE MARKET
Source: NZX and Standard & Poors
S&P/NZX 50 Index Gross constituents Company CODE
a2 Milk Company ATM Air NZ AIR ANZ Banking Gr ANZ Argosy Prop ARG Arvida Gr ARV Auckland Intl Airpt AIA Chorus CNU Contact Energy CEN Ebos Gr EBO F&P Healthcare FPH Fletcher Building FBU Fonterra Share Fund FSF Freightways FRE Genesis Energy GNE Gentrak Gr GTK Goodman Prop Tr GMT Heartland Gr Hldgs HGH Infratil IFT Investore Property IPL Kathmandu Hldgs KMD Kiwi Property Gr KPG Mainfreight MFT Mercury NZ MCY Meridian Energy MEL Metlifecare MET NZ Refining NZR NZX NZX Oceania Healthcare OCA Port of Tauranga POT Precinct Properties PCT Prop for Industry PFI Pushpay Holdings PPH Restaurant Brands RBD Ryman Healthcare RYM Sanford SAN Scales Corp SCL Skellerup SKL Sky Network TV SKT Skycity Ent Gr SKC Spark SPK Stride Prop & Inv SPG Summerset Gr Hldgs SUM Synlait Milk SML Tourism Holdings THL TrustPower TPW Vector VCT Vista Gr Intl VGL Vital Hlth Prop Tr VHP Westpac Banking WBC Z Energy ZEL
Buy price
1307 286 2966 145.5 152 910 536 843 2482 1875 479 401 795 334 529 223 162 490 192 313 165 4030 544 527 465 205 128 103 660 186 247.5 314 1180 1326 710 506 229 107 394 447.5 237 667 970 410 855 356 375 270 3050 551
Sell price
1332 289.5 2990 146 153 915.5 546 863 2496 1900 483 402 800 335 530 223.5 163 492 193 314 167 4037 549 535 470 209 129 104 670 188 249 320 1185 1348 715 514 230 108 398 450 240 675 972 414 857 360 378 271.5 3148 553
Last sale
1307 288 2962 146 152 911 538 845 2496 1875 482 402 800 335 530 223.5 162 492 193 314 165 4037 548 528 467 207 129 104 670 188 247.5 317 1185 1330 715 511 228 107 394 449 240 667 970 414 857 360 377 270 3068 553
At close of trading on Friday, October 18, 2019
Daily Volume move ’000s
–28 +3 –59 +0.5 –1 –9 –8 –10 –4 –25 –2 –1 – –5 –5 – –3 –2.5 –1 –4 –1.5 +7 +2 –12 +2 – – +1 –3 +1 +1.5 +2 +15 –24 +19 –9 +2 – +1 +5 +2 –9 +27 +3 +9 +2 –2 –1 –54 –
597.7 293.4 9.40 622.0 155.2 450.7 244.8 2.8m 31.22 438.1 2.4m 226.3 58.80 404.0 24.46 784.6 230.7 2.2m 65.84 92.45 754.3 21.95 1.0m 2.9m 216.6 89.73 2.58 745.7 53.71 891.6 314.1 418.2 7.48 267.0 190.0 25.19 60.65 3.7m 565.7 2.4m 129.9 226.7 66.50 87.89 29.13 114.0 54.36 166.1 6.99 947.2
S&P/NZX 50 Index Gross 11200 11116 11032 10948 10864 10780
18/10
By Paul McBeth
Compiled by
11/10
Kathmandu buys surf brand Rip Curl
Guardian Shares & Investments
4/10
radio business and the QMS outdoor advertising business, which it bought from ASX-listed QMS Media for $A35 million plus a 40 per cent stake in MediaWorks. The New Zealand QMS operation reported a profit of $4.3 mil-
27/9
nue inched up to $305.3 million. Its TV revenue increased 3.4 per cent to $133.7 million and, while radio revenue dipped, it was still the main contributor at $153.8 million. MediaWorks said it will keep the
20/9
MediaWorks Investments has given up on television, putting the free-to-air broadcaster and its Auckland head office and studios on the block. The media group has relied on the profitability of its radio business to offset ailing fortunes from the TV arm, and finally waved the white flag and hired an advisor to try to sell the firm. It will work to find a list of potential buyers and start initial discussions, followed by a due diligence process. “We are in a commercial environment and have to face commercial realities. The market that free-to-air television operates in is tough and has been exacerbated this year,” chair Jack Matthews said in a statement. “This is reflected in the performance of all free-to-air television operators in New Zealand, not just us. Clearly the market – alongside the structural hindrances we operate under – has a larger impact on Three, given its genuine commercial imperative.” The company’s 2018 accounts showed a marginal improvement on the year-earlier with an annual loss of $5.5 million as reve-
q S&P/NZX 50 Gross
11,067.12 –74.74 –0.67%
q S&P/NZX 20 index
7,282.23 –58.01 –0.79%
q S&P/NZX All Gross
11,952.04 –74.29 –0.62%
p Rises 60 q Falls 66 Top 5 NZX gainers Company
EROAD CDL Investments Allied Farmers Synlait Milk AMP
daily % rise
+4.62% +3.66% +2.90% +2.86% +2.73%
Top 5 NZX decliners Company
Metro Perf Glass Plexure Gr TIL Logistics Gr Meridian Energy a2 Milk Company
daily % fall
–2.78% –2.56% –2.46% –2.22% –2.10%
METAL PRICES
Source: interest.co.nz
p Gold
1,492.65
London – $US/ounce
+7.55
+0.51%
p Silver London – $US/ounce
17.45
+0.2
+1.13%
p Copper London – $US/tonne
5,726.50
+42.5
+0.75%
NZ DOLLAR
Source: BNZ
Country
As at 4pm Oct 18, 2019
Australia Canada China Euro Fiji Great Britain Japan Samoa South Africa Thailand United States
TT buy
0.9488 0.8527 4.7954 0.5865 1.4351 0.505 70.79 1.7951 9.5874 19.56 0.6502
TT sell
0.9161 0.8207 4.2062 0.5607 1.347 0.4869 67.77 1.5611 9.2335 18.59 0.6265
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Your Place 16 Ashburton Guardian
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Saturday, October 19, 2019
TEST YOURSELF
Write to us! Editor, PO Box 77
Test yourself with the Guardian’s weekday quiz
Email us!
1 - How long is the world’s largest playable guitar? a. 7.44 metres b. 10.18 metres c. 13.25 metres 2 - Which of these was a member of the pop group The Monkees? a. Peter Tosh b. Peter Tork c. Peter Monk 3 - The equator passes through which of these countries? a. Kenya b. Portugal c. Saudi Arabia 4 - Which of these Russell Crowe films was released first? a. Gladiator b. A Beautiful Mind c. The Quick and the Dead 5 - What is the first name of the father of the Australian cricketers Shaun and Mitchell Marsh? a. Bruce b. Geoff c. Craig 6 - In which year was Barack Obama first inaugurated as US President? a. 2006 b. 2009 c. 2012 7 - Who was the first man to walk to both the North and South Poles? a. Robert Swan b. Karl Baer c. William Parry 8 - In 1971, Qatar gained its independence from which country? a. France b. United Kingdom c. United Arab Emirates
editor@ theguardian. co.nz Call us! 03 307-7929
GOT GREAT PHOTOS? Your Place is the place to display the photos of your sports team, your pets, your school events, or just something ordinary from the present or days gone by. Please send your 3 photos 2 to subs@theguardian. 4 7 co.nz with the words 8 PLACE in the4 YOUR subject line and 9 we will 7 run it in the Guardian or 8 4 5 our website Guardianonline.co.nz 3 7 1
7 2 6 2 9 1 YESTERDAY’S 1ANSWERS 3 8
Big Red framed Velma Langdon captured the beauty of her geranium Big Red in an old window frame.
7 4 6 5 2 9 3 8 1
9 1 8 4 6 3 7 2 5
5 3 2 1 8 7 9 6 4
8 6 1 9 7 5 2 4 3
3 7 5 6 4 2 1 9 8
2 9 4 8 3 1 5 7 6
1 8 9 7 5 6 4 3 2
4 2 7 3 1 8 6 5 9
6 5 3 2 9 4 8 1 7
EASY SUDOKU
Answers: 1. 13.25 metres 2. Peter Tork 3. Kenya 4. The Quick and the Dead 5. Geoff 6. 2009 7. Robert Swan 8. United Kingdom.
QUICK RECIPE
Asparagus slice
6
6 eggs 2/3 C plain yoghurt (or milk) 1/4 C grated cheese 2 spring onions, sliced 1/2 C chopped fresh herbs 2 bunches asparagus spears (or 2 cups peas or 400g green beans) 2 slices wholemeal bread, shredded ■■ Preheat oven to 180°C. ■■ Lightly oil a baking dish. ■■ Mix eggs, yoghurt, cheese, spring onions and herbs in a large bowl. ■■ Remove tough ends from asparagus. Slice ¾ of asparagus into small pieces and mix with shredded bread. ■■ Place asparagus and bread mixture into the baking dish. Lay remaining asparagus spears over the top. ■■ Pour over egg mixture and let it stand for 10 minutes to soak into the bread. ■■ Bake in preheated oven for 30
2 7 3
6
minutes or until egg has set and top is golden. ■■ Serve warm or cold, accompanied by a green salad.
Recipe courtesy of www.vegetables.co.nz
8
5 7 1 2 6 8 9 2 7 1 9 9 7 6 5 3 1 2 8 9 1 4 6 3 5 7 Solutions for today in Monday’s Your Place page.
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Saturday, October 19, 2019
Sport
17 Ashburton Guardian
Massive game for ABs
Kylie eyes the big prizes
P18
P22
GROWING THE GAME
By Erin Tasker
erin.t@theguardian.co.nz
When it comes to growing the game of women’s rugby sevens in Mid Canterbury, it’s a case of taking it one step at a time. But Mid Canterbury Rugby’s women’s and schools’ development officer Nicole Purdom said the steps are all leading in the right direction, with a Mid Canterbury women’s team entering the South Island tournament for the first time ever next month still a very real possibility. Mid Canterbury sent a women’s team to the first round of Canter-
bury Rugby’s summer sevens series earlier this month and while they didn’t win a game, they improved with every game, Purdom said. Injuries meant the team – which is being coached by Nick McKain – didn’t make it to the second leg of the series, but they hope to be at the third leg on November 2, and all going well they will then turn their attention to the South Island tournament being held in Timaru on November 30. While they’re at the third leg of the summer series in
Brie Rudolph was among those testing her skills during a sevens training session on Wednesday night. PHOTO ERIN TASKER Christchurch, the future of the women’s game in Mid Canterbury will also be on show in Timaru. For the second year running, Mid Canterbury is sending an under-15 girls’ team to the South Island tournament in Timaru, and Purdom said numbers for that team are looking good. The senior women train on a Wednesday night and this week they put out the call to any under-15 and under-18 players to come and join them.
They only gave three or four days’ notice, but the young players turned out in good numbers. “They definitely have a team already, they have got a solid amount of players,” Purdom said. They’re a mix of past players and those new to the sport, and Purdom said they’re already showing promise. “They have got great talent, they were definitely giving us old ones a run for our money,” Purdom said.
So Mid Canterbury will definitely have a girls’ team at the South Island under-15 tournament on November 2, although they haven’t got enough numbers to make up an under-18 team. But whether they’ll be followed by a Mid Canterbury senior team a few weeks later, remains to be seen. “It’s still an option, we’ll just have to see how it goes,” Purdom said.
Sport 18 Ashburton Guardian
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Saturday, October 19, 2019
■■RUGBY
We might win; we might lose All Blacks coach Steve Hansen was typically philosophical on the eve of their Rugby World Cup quarter-final. How had they picked their side? Make the obvious selections and the rest comes down to team balance and the opposition. While much of the focus was always on the starting 15, Hansen said it’s the reserves that stand out when he looks at his team sheet. “Those extra fresh legs could be the difference maker. “We’re very fortunate that our bench is strong, has been for a long time and when you look at the experience that’s on that bench, it does give you a bit of confidence.” The selections of real interest have come in midfield and at hooker. Jack Goodhue has beaten out Ryan Crotty to partner Anton Leinert Brown in midfield, with Sonny Bill Williams on the bench. Codie Taylor also got the nod ahead of Dane Coles in the number two jersey. Hansen said either could’ve started, but Taylor had taken his chance with Coles injured for a large chunk of last season. The same went for lock Brodie Retallick, who Hansen had no doubt could deliver despite having just 30 minutes of game time since returning from injury. Hansen was also confident in his inexperienced backs, with four Crusaders holding less than 15 test caps expected to cop a high ball barrage. One of those players, wing George Bridge, said the numbers don’t tell the full story. “You look at the caps and it says inexperienced but we probably don’t feel very inexperienced and we’re really comfortable with how we want to play as individuals and as a backline. “That’s probably where some of the experience that we’re thinking of comes from. “It’s that we’ve been in some pretty high pressure games.” None, however, anywhere near as big as this. After two recent losses to Ireland, including last time the teams met in Dublin almost a year ago, the All Blacks knew full well the magnitude of the challenge.
The All Blacks in a place they would rather not be again - experiencing a loss to Ireland. But captain Kieran Read said it’s important they put things in context. “We certainly respect what the Irish team has done over those couple of games but it’s a totally different ball game. “It’s a [quarter] final of a World Cup, two teams ranked very highly and it’s about turning up on the day. “Do we take lessons from those games? “Yes, definitely. “But [we also] know what this game brings, it’s going to be slightly different to those.” Neverthless, that hasn’t dinted Ireland’s belief. Captain, hooker Rory Best, says a squad full of strong players is what gives them that optimistic feeling.
“Everyone pushes hard to be in the squad. “You no longer kind of know what the 15 is going to be and the rest are just sort of there to make up the numbers. “Every one of those 33 players believe that they’re good enough to start and whenever you get competitive players that are not used to winning things, it’s a good mix.” A mix that’s proven it has the capability to get the measure of the All Blacks Ireland coach Joe Schmidt said there’s only downside to those two wins. “We’re certainly not going to sneak up on them anymore, we’re not going to surprise them. “They’re well aware of how we play the game, what they’re go-
ing to do to combat that and what they’re going to put into their own armoury to make sure that we’re we’re chasing them about the padock.” Schmidt knew if that happened, the All Blacks lethal counterattacks could be the end of his side’s hopes. For Hansen, ensuring that happened was about changing one key aspect from recent history. “They’re not a team that gives you a lot of opportunities through mistakes. “They’re pretty good at keeping the ball when they keep it and when they kick it they kick it to put pressure on you rather than to give you a free shot. “You’ve just got to adapt and adjust to what’s happening in the game and we’ve made a lot of
changes since we last played them so it’ll be interesting to see if those changes work or not.” If they do, the All Blacks could well find themselves in the semi-finals. And although they knew nothing was guaranteed, Sonny Bill Williams said they also knew exactly what they were capable of. “They were number one in the world just before the tournament started so we’re under no illusions about the threat that they pose. “But for us it’s about bringing that All Blacks A game. “That’s what we’re about. “If we get our mental prep right, come with that attitude and that intent, then we’re going to be hard to stop.” Confident talk, ahead of a crunch quarter-final.
Fear of the All Blacks’ aura is always there, says Schmidt NZME Joe Schmidt has admitted that as much as his Ireland team will draw confidence from recent victories over the All Blacks they still “fear” the world champions. Ireland’s head coach added that even if they played their best in tonight’s World Cup quarter-final clash in Tokyo they might still lose. As rallying cries go, it felt a little subdued two days out from arguably the biggest match in Ireland’s history. But Schmidt’s respectful rhetoric was obviously strategic.
The Kiwi, who named a triedand-trusted team for the game at Ajinomoto Stadium, clearly decided it was wiser not to poke the bear ahead of such a big game. “I think most coaches would say transition,” Schmidt replied when asked what it was about the All Blacks that made them so dangerous. “If you turn ball over to them they’re ferociously dangerous. “Their speed to transition from defence to attack is something that everybody fears about the All Blacks. They are so quick to make
the most of it. They have athletes who have skills, who have speed and they have an innate attacking mentality. They are almost wired for it.” Schmidt added: “The unfortunate thing about any 23 that comes up against the All Blacks is that they can play very well and still not get the result. That’s the quality that the All Blacks have, that’s the athletes that they possess.” Schmidt has named his most experienced possible line-up for the match, resisting the urge
to spring any Henry Slade-style last-minute surprises. The forwards are as expected with Peter O’Mahony retaining the No. 6 despite, by his standards, some pretty indifferent form. Bundee Aki’s suspension means Schmidt has had to make a backline change, although Robbie Henshaw and Garry Ringrose might well have been his firstchoice pairing anyway. Schmidt conceded that his selection would not pose many surprises for New Zealand. But he said that the players’ familiar-
ity with one another would stand them in good stead. “We’re certainly not going to sneak up on them any more,” Schmidt said. “I think they are well aware of how we play and what they are going to do to combat that. But [this group] have had some pretty successful experiences together. You can’t go out against an All Blacks side and accept that you’re second fiddle. You’ve got to go out and put your best foot forward and we hope that this 23 will be committed to doing that.”
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Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian 19
■■ RUGBY LEAGUE
Top team named for last game By Erin Tasker
erin.t@theguardian.co.nz
When a combination Mid Canterbury rugby league team takes to the field for the final time this season today, a few players might have an added spring in their step. That’s because when Aoraki Rugby League named its tournament team from the 2019 season during the week, more than half the team was made up from players from the two Mid Canterbury teams in the competition. The Aoraki Rugby League competition is between four teams – the Ashburton Barbarians and the Chertsey Oilers, along with the Timaru Outlaws and Country Cowboys – and it wrapped up last weekend with the Cowboys taking out a resounding win over the Oilers, who were making their first appearance on finals day. This season was just the Oilers’ third and it was a big one which started off with their first ever win, and ended with a bunch of their players being named in the Aoraki tournament team, and one of them being named club player of the year. Seamus Smyth – who played for the Barbarians in the Canterbury Rugby League division one competition, and the Oilers in the Aoraki competition – was named Aoraki’s club player of the year, and named as the wearer of the number nine jersey in the tournament team. He was joined in that tournament team by fellow Oilers Leli Masiwini, George Hufunga, Leps
Seamus Smyth from the Chertsey Oilers has been named Aoraki Rugby League’s 2019 club player of the season. PHOTO HEATHER MACKENZIE 051019-HM-0132
Seitava and Randy Browne, while the Barbarians had two players in the team – Kipione Manumua and Matt Stone.
Some of those are names that are likely to feature again today, when a combined Barbarians and Oilers team takes to the field for
the first time ever, for one final game to round out the 2019 season. The combined Oilers and Barbarians side will take on the
Canterbury Maori team at Robilliard Park, on Chalmers Avenue in Ashburton, today, with the game set to kick off at 2.30pm.
■■OPINION
Goodhue reflects the history of great All Blacks centres By Phil Gifford
E
very All Blacks World Cup-winning team has had a rock at centre. Jack Goodhue continues a line that has a tradition of clear thinking and accurate execution, started by Joe Stanley in 1987, and carried on in 2011 and 2015 by Conrad Smith. The three men have very different backstories, in both life and sport. Stanley was a city kid, born in Auckland to immigrant parents from Samoa. The first national selector to pay any attention to him was Kiwis coach Ron Ackland. In 1978, when Stanley was playing league in Northland, Ackland called him into a training camp in Hunua. A brutal road run and a wicked set of blisters led to a mutual lack of interest in Stanley progressing further in league. Smith was born and raised in Taranaki with an All Black uncle, 1960s lock Alan. Playing halfback at Francis Douglas Memorial College in New Plymouth, Smith was a champion runner, but not a good enough halfback to ever make a Taranaki
age group or school side. Wellington was the first representative team Smith ever played for, making the senior provincial team when he was a 21-year-old law student in the city. Goodhue grew up on a dairy farm near Kawakawa in a rugby-mad family of four boys and one girl. “Dad’s been the club captain at United Kawakawa for at least 20 years now,” Goodhue says, “mowing the grass, organising the registrations, taking the rubbish to the dump. And he’s coached all of us.” What the trio of centres have in common is a sharp intelligence, and an ability to never let a big occasion get the better of them. Stanley didn’t make the All Blacks until he was 29, and remembers standing in the tunnel at Lancaster Park in 1986 waiting to run out against France for his first test thinking: “These guys are the French, so unpredictable, the world’s best, and here we are, a bunch of little ratbags shoved together, trying to do them over. On the other hand, I guess we were also thinking, ‘What have we got to lose?’” To the astonishment of the
sporting world, they beat the then Six Nations champions 18-9. Smith would say before the 2011 World Cup: “We haven’t won many of these tournaments, in case you hadn’t noticed, and we’re determined to change that. “So we have got to face reality. “The best way to deal with it is front on, which we probably didn’t do in the past. We swept it away and said, ‘We’re a different team and it’s not going to affect us’. But it’s something we have to deal with. It’s part of our history.” The 2011 team went on to hold their nerve and win the final 8-7 – the narrowest margin in Cup history. Goodhue presents as someone with a maturity beyond his years. The quarter-final with Ireland will be just the 12th test match for the 24-year-old, but it’s hard to picture him being overwhelmed by the occasion. Before Goodhue’s first Bledisloe Cup test in Sydney last year his Crusaders and All Blacks teammate Ryan Crotty swore that on the field “sometimes I have to check that he’s awake, he’s so calm”. Part of the maturing process for Goodhue is that he had to deal
with an injury so serious it kept him on the sidelines for eight months early in his career. In June of 2015, Goodhue was in the New Zealand under-20 team that won the world title, beating England in the final in Italy. Two months later his stellar season came to a crashing halt. “In the second round of the ITM Cup, we (Canterbury) were playing against Counties, and as a Counties player was making a tackle, as sometimes happens, a leg swung round and caught me on the outside of my knee, which caused it to cave in.” As much as any player I’ve met in the professional era, Goodhue knows he needs balance in his life. “I’m quite a man of faith and go to church when I can, which is good for me to get away from the rugby world. “It’s important to me. “I also help out with Big Brothers and Big Sisters, which is a mentoring charity, which is nice. I don’t have any little brothers, so I see this guy every week or so, and we’ll just hang out. “He’s at intermediate school. “It is important to find the time to take a break from rugby.
You can get caught in the trap of thinking about the game all the time, so it becomes all-consuming and probably unhealthy.” Another trait Goodhue shares with Stanley and Smith is a quiet, but keen, sense of humour. That mullet could only be worn by a man who doesn’t take himself too seriously. Stanley has the ability to verbally skewer pomposity while keeping a perfectly straight face. As for Smith, I once asked him live on Radio Sport if he had a lawyer joke up his sleeve. Not missing a beat he replied, “Sure. Two lawyers are talking and one says, ‘If you’re billing a client, how much should a lawyer charge for time he’s actually spent playing golf?’ “The other replies. ‘That depends. Was the golfer a junior or senior partner?’” As it happens, even in the cauldron of a rugby test, wit is one of the many attributes that makes Welshman Nigel Owens such a good referee. We should be grateful someone so self-possessed as him is in charge of what will be an emotionally electric game against Ireland.
Sport 20 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
■■RUGBY
On top of the world After years of directing teams around rugby fields, Ashburton police officer Fran Clark can now lay claim to being a world champion. Erin Tasker reports. When the New Zealand Police women’s rugby team took to the field in their first ever shot at the Police International Rugby Championship, an Ashburton police officer was there playing a pivotal role. Fran Clark was the side’s first-five and vice-captain for the recent tournament in Hong Kong, where the Kiwi women dominated their counterparts from both Australia and Great Britain. The New Zealand Police women’s team beat Australia in their first game 24-19, with a couple of late tries from the Australians making it sound closer than it was, and a couple of days later they beat Great Britain 21-12. The teams then headed into a 10s tournament, where the New Zealand women again came out on top, playing like a team that had been together for much longer than they had been. The first time the team – which was roughly half and half from the South Island and North Island – even came together as a whole, was at Auckland Airport on the way to Hong Kong. Clark said the opportunity to represent her country came out of the blue. The team was picked from the police winter games tournament in September last year, but Clark said they didn’t know it at the time. “A couple of days later they picked a New Zealand team and they said there’s a tournament in Hong Kong,” Clark said. Vice-captain Clark was the only Ashburton police officer to make one of the teams, while the men’s team was captained by a Timaru police officer, and the teams set off on what turned out to be a great experience, playing rugby which was of a high standard in the middle of the city in Hong Kong in testing temperatures hovering around 33 degrees. “We had a good forward pack and then
Fran Clark lines up a shot at goal.
Fran Clark looks to get the ball to her backs in Hong Kong. we had fast outside backs, which helped too. “I was just the plonker at first-five,” Clark said. She may joke, but in reality Clark was instrumental in the wins. She took on the side’s goal-kicking duties, landing all of her conversions in the Great Britain game, and scored a try in the 10s. It was far from easy going. They played on turf, which led to a few more cuts, grazes and bruises than a game would back home, but the Kiwis came through unscathed to claim the title of the world’s best police women’s rugby team, and they were over the moon. Clark said the two weeks was an incredible experience, both on and off the field. They were in Hong Kong at a time when rioting was rife, due to the proposed legislation of the 2019 Hong Kong extradition bill. They might not have witnessed the riots, but they saw the scars, and due to safety fears didn’t wear their police branded gear other than for games. New Zealand had men’s and women’s teams at the tournament, with the teams selected from the police’s winter games tournament last September – a tournament which saw police competing in an array of sports. Both the men’s and women’s teams went on to win in Hong Kong. Clark competed in rugby at the winter games tournament, but in reality she could have picked one of a few sports. This winter Clark played hockey on a Friday night in the Mid Canterbury first grade competition – the first time she’d tried her hand at hockey – and on Saturday afternoons she turned out for the Celtic women’s rugby team, before taking to the football field playing for Mid Canterbury United on Sunday mornings. “I was pretty sore by the time I got to soccer,” Clark said.
Sport and policing were two things she’d always been passionate about. She only started playing rugby when she left school, and the 36-year-old played in Christchurch before the formation of the Celtic women’s side for the 2019 season allowed her to train and play in the town she called home. She also wanted to join the police when she left school, but bad eyesight meant she required laser eye surgery before she could even think of applying, so she did a few different things in the meantime. Once she got into the police she spent nine years on the frontline before taking over from long-time Ashburton schools’ officer Chris Wiltshire, who did the job for many years with Pup Chamberlain before both left the force. Clark had found working with kids in schools to be right up her alley, and it meant working Monday to Friday, which
PHOTO SUPPLIED
allowed for plenty of time for weekend sport. Next year though, Clark is planning on trimming her winter schedule back a bit. She was keen to give hockey another shot, but wasn’t planning on playing football or club rugby, although she said she would pull her rugby boots on if a planned trans-Tasman police battle between the New Zealand and Australian women’s teams went ahead. She would love the opportunity to represent her country again. Clark said it took a lot of hard work, and a lot of support, to get her to Hong Kong. The players had to fund the trip themselves, which meant running raffles and getting businesses behind them, and Clark said she was fortunate to have the Netherby 4 Square, Braided Rivers, KB Panel and Paint, Skip-2-It, Cairns Groundspreading and Mountain River Processors behind
Fran Clark heads out onto the field during the tournament in Hong Kong. PHOTO SUPPLIED
Sport www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian 21
■■ TENNIS
Youngster the one to beat By Erin Tasker
erin.t@theguardian.co.nz
Diego Quispe Kim arrived on the Mid Canterbury Tennis scene with a bang last weekend. In his first foray into the newlook open grade competition, Quispe Kim – the national under-14 tennis champion – handed multiple time Mid Canterbury Tennis Gala Cup champion Rhys Cromie a big loss. Cromie only managed to get the one game off Quispe Kim, and today, the task of taking on one of the country’s most promising young tennis players is likely to fall to Jason Feutz. Feutz is the number one player for Allenton, and today his side is set to take on Quispe Kim’s Fairton team – a team which heads into the match off the back of a pretty strong win to start the season. The competition’s new-look format combines the old A grade and A reserve competitions, and will see teams of six battle it out in six singles and three doubles matches each Saturday this season. In round one Fairton beat Dorie 8-1, only dropping the one singles match. Even after just the one day, Quispe Kim looks set to be the player to beat this season, despite being one of the youngest on court. As well as being the national under-14 champion, Quispe Kim also took out this year’s Rod Laver Lead-in and Rod Laver 14s tournaments in Australia. He’s a gun young player, but Feutz also produced a strong start to the season last week, pushing Mid Canterbury’s new tennis coach Jack Tiller to the limit, eventually going down 7-5 7-6.
Rhys Cromie will be looking to bounce back from a rare, big loss in round one, when round two of open grade tennis kicks off today. Tiller – who usually plays his tennis in the Christchurch premier grade – was a last-minute replacement for Peter Leonard, who sprained his ankle in the earlier doubles. Leonard is still out today, with Aidan Mitchell set to fill in at
number one for Hampstead. That will set him up for a showdown with Southern’s Sam Bubb today, another player who looks to have found top early season form. Bubb and his Southern team picked up a 7-2 win over Methven
to start the season last weekend, with Bubb’s win over Cameron McCracken at the top of the order one of the big talking points of the day. It was a repeat of last year’s Gala Cup final, which McCracken took out, but this time it was Bubb
who came out on top 6-3 6-4. Meanwhile, McCracken’s Methven team steps out against Dorie today, meaning if both teams field their top teams, he’ll take on another player looking to bounce back from a round one loss, in Cromie.
■■RUGBY LEAGUE
■■ CRICKET
Allenton hunting their first win
Blair joins Kiwis squad
By Erin Tasker
New Zealand Kiwis head coach Michael Maguire has confirmed that veteran forward Adam Blair has been brought into the squad for the World Cup Nines at Bankwest Stadium in Sydney starting today. He arrived from Auckland just yesterday, in time for the team’s final training session at Leichhardt Oval. Blair (33), with 48 tests and 311 NRL appearances to his name, comes in for would-be debutant Braden Hamlin-Uele. The Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks interchange forward will sit out the World Cup Nines to prepare for the important tests to follow against the Kangaroos and the Great Britain Lions. Earlier in the week Sydney Roosters forward Zane Tetevano and Canberra Raiders fullback Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad replaced the unavailable James Fisher-Harris and Jordan Rapana.
erin.t@theguardian.co.nz
Canterbury Country Cricket’s senior grade competition is set to make its first appearance in Ashburton this week, when Allenton hosts the Weedons Cricket Club at the Ashburton Domain. It’s the first home game for either of the two Mid Canterbury teams that have opted to play in the Canterbury Cricket competition this season, and for the town’s newest team, it will be a chance to show what they’re capable of on home soil. The Allenton Cricket Club has returned to senior cricket this season after a season off due to a lack of players, but this year’s team is a very different one from days gone by. The new team is made up entirely of players hailing from India, and their first foray into
competition cricket didn’t go quite as planned last week. The competition is split into a north and south section, and each week there will be a crossover game between the two sections, with games featuring teams from North Canterbury and Mid Canterbury set to be played at a neutral venue in Rolleston. That’s what Allenton faced last week, and they lost by a massive 148 runs at Brookside Park after Swannanoa got through to 214/9 off their 40 overs. In reply Allenton struggled through to 66 all out. Today they’re back in the south section against a team that also lost big on Saturday. Weedons took on Mid Canterbury’s other team – Tech – in round one and the game followed a similar path to Allenton’s, with the Tech boys even-
tually coming out on top by 232 runs. For Tech, it was the perfect start, and they’ll be looking to make it two from two when they head to Tai Tapu to take on Peninsula-Harbour today. The Tech team that took to the park last weekend was also very different to the Tech of days gone by, with the club having acquired the services of a few key players from other clubs. Dwindling numbers resulted in Mid Canterbury Cricket’s Saturday afternoon senior grade falling by the wayside this season, replaced by a mid-week 18 over competition which will start next month, while clubs still keen for some serious Saturday cricket were given the option of joining the Canterbury Country competition. With Lauriston and Coldstream deciding not to travel,
Tech picked up a number of players including Bevan Richan, Nick Gilbert and Liam O’Connor from Lauriston, and Richard Print from Coldstream – all of whom made their Tech debuts last weekend. Dan Thomas, who had been playing in Christchurch, has also returned to play for Tech, adding to what looks to be a Tech side that could be hard to beat this season. Both games will get under way at 1pm today, weather permitting. But unlike round one, where rain threatened to derail plans, the forecast is looking good for today. Although both Allenton and Tech’s games got played last week, the other south section match between Greendale and Peninsula-Harbour was abandoned.
Racing 22 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
■■ASHBURTON
Hoping no-one rains on her parade By Matt Markham
matt.m@theguardian.co.nz
Leading South Island jockey Kylie Williams isn’t going to let a little bit of rain dampen her prospects of a good day at the office at today’s Ashburton Racing Club meeting. Williams, who has long been a permanent part of the South Island riding ranks, holds two very strong hands in the two feature races of today’s meeting and yesterday afternoon she was touching wood that both would still take their place in their respective features. She was confident, her ride in the Barneswood Farm Stakes, Miss Federer would head to the starting gates, but more hopeful that Ashburton Cup ride, Don Carlo would be there. “He’s never really been on a wet track so I’m not sure whether he’ll line up or not,” she said of the latter. “Then again, he does need a run before Cup Week so he might be forced to race.” The Michael Daly trained runner has been off the scene since April of last year due to injury so will likely improve greatly with the run but the six-year-old has impressed his jockey in both trials ahead of today’s resumption. “He’s a really good horse and I’ve
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Kylie Williams should have a strong hand to play in today’s Ashburton Racing Club meeting. PHOTO ASHBURTON GUARDIAN
Ashburton gallops Today at Ashburton Raceway
Ashburton CRC Venue: Ashburton Meeting Date: 19 Oct 2019 NZ Meeting number: 6 Doubles: 2 and 3; 4 and 5; 6 and 7; 8 and 9 Trebles: 1, 2 and 3; 4, 5 and 6; 7, 8 and 9 1 12.05pm COCHRANES OF CANTERBURY MAIDEN 1600 $10,000, MDN, 1600m 1 222 Capodanno b (7) 58.5........................L Innes 2 454x3 Our Boy Ritchie (6) 58.5..... C Campbell (a2) 3 42936 Acre bh (11) 58.5....................J Fawcett (a1) 4 30828 Brother Will (2) 58.5..................... R Hannam 5 3 Red Light District (14) 58.5 6 04 Always (10) 58.5...................M Mudhoo (a4) 7 760x4 El Bee Jack h (4) 58.5.............T Comignaghi 8 00297 Roullette (16) 58.5................ R Mudhoo (a3) 9 5 Hibachi (1) 58.5............................L Callaway 10 0 Giantsbane (9) 58.5..................... C Johnson 11 54636 Miss Oaks (13) 56.5......................K Williams 12 0x937 Rumour Has It (8) 56.5.......S Weatherley (a) 13 36305 Vows You Made h (5) 56.5..............M McNab 14 802 Last Hoorah (15) 54.........................S Collett 15 8x0 Take The Deel (12) 58.5 16 598x Danny Green 58.5......................... Scratched 17 576x6 Monash (3) 58.5 18 0x0x0 Cobblertothestars 58.5.................. Scratched 19 x000x Iwonderwai (17) 56.5 Emergencies: Take The Deel, Danny Green, Monash, Cobblertothestars, Iwonderwai 2 12.40 R D PETROLEUM AND PAUL BRAND 2200 $22,500, Rating 65 Benchmark*, 2200m 1 52367 Chief Sequoyah d (6) 59..................S Collett 2 56405 I’llav Bubbles (9) 58.5....................T Moseley 3 27525 Bridget Town dm (3) 57.5.... C Campbell (a2) 4 6x770 Cinto Bay td (5) 57.5........................J Laking 5 23000 Billabong Billy h (8) 57.5.........J Fawcett (a1) 6 05342 Metasequoia d (4) 57..............T Comignaghi
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“However Ashburton is quite a good track for that because of the bend, it’s long and winding so it shouldn’t make too much difference to her.” A natural born on-speed runner, Miss Federer has shown a liking for being on the speed and Williams will be out to try and get there today and hopefully steal enough of a march on key rivals when they straighten for home. “It’s good to be in front turning in at Ashburton because it’s hard for those ones coming from the back, especially if they’re working coming round that last bend – it can really take it out of them.” Both Miss Federer and Don Carlo are six dollar chances in their respective features today, but Williams rates another of her rides as one of her best chances in Miss Oaks in the opening race of the day. “I think the long run down the back straight will suit her, she hasn’t had much luck lately to be honest. “She’s a big chance.” Williams last night was down to take eight rides on the Ashburton card although a couple had question marks over them due to the potential track conditions, which last night were listed as being Dead6.
been over the moon with both his trials – they were excellent. “He’s a funny horse though – a bit of a character, he only does what he has to do and no more. “He’ll never win races by really big margins because he likes to toy with his rivals a fair bit. “If he wasn’t any good you wouldn’t carry on with him to be fair, but he’s just got so much ability.” In 15 career starts Don Carlo has won seven and placed second on another three occasions with four of those seven wins in races between 1100 and 1300 metres with today’s distance in the $35,000 feature 1200 metres. While there is still some uncertainty around Don Carlo taking his place, Williams is excited about getting back on board the Canterbury Belle Stakes-winning filly Miss Federer for former Ashburton trainer Andrew Carston. A filly who has shown ability on rain-affected tracks in the past, she was in a class of her own last time out at Riccarton, although she steps up today to take on the boys and also steps up in distance to the 1400 metres. “That’s probably the only concern, the 1400 metres,” Williams said.
7 26160 Jildi Jildi td (10) 56.5.................... R Hannam 8 28x00 Red River Rock (1) 56.5......S Weatherley (a) 9 61066 Stop Making Sense (2) 56.5.........K Williams 10 4P558 Epae Road d (7) 55.5.....................L Allpress 3 1.15pm FASTTRACK INSURANCE 2200 $30,000, Rating 82 Benchmark, 2200m 1 64135 Al Haram m (7) 59..........................M McNab 2 33336 Owen Patrick (4) 59............... S Toolooa (a3) 3 52483 Londonderry Air tdm (3) 58.5............J Lowry 4 32249 Pickup (2) 56.................................K Williams 5 x3418 Pamir td (6) 55.5................... R Mudhoo (a3) 6 000x0 Standrews Masonic tmh (1) 54.5Comignaghi 7 165x0 Sulcifera d (5) 54.....................J Fawcett (a1) 4 1.50pm NORM AND LEEANNE STEWART CUP DAY CAR PARK MAIDEN $10,000, MDN, 1200m 1 37x32 Keep The Cash (6) 58.5...............L Callaway 2 3x50x Sligo (18) 58.5..................................S Collett 3 80x44 Bogatyr (3) 58.5................................J Lowry 4 3799x Darci Can (10) 58.5...................... R Hannam 5 0x Grab The Bar h (2) 58.5..........J Fawcett (a1) 6 04080 He’s Irish (17) 58.5................ R Mudhoo (a3) 7 6677 Oceans Away (1) 58.5......................J Laking 8 343x0 Exclaim (7) 56.5............................T Moseley 9 424x I Got A Rock b (12) 56.5................L Allpress 10 268 Kandhu 56.5.................................. Scratched 11 9x505 Miss Dazzler (13) 56.5............ B Murray (a2) 12 Our Girl Gilly (8) 56.5..... K Chowdhoory (a2) 13 4x353 Xplosion (5) 54...............................M McNab 14 47x Clubcard (14) 54 15 Bungay (11) 58.5................S Weatherley (a) 16 0 Romantic Hero (16) 58.5 17 65906 Castlereigh h (15) 56.5 18 008x9 Space Cadet (9) 56.5 19 0x0x0 Cobblertothestars 58.5.................. Scratched
20 00x0 Artic Warrior (4) 58.5 Emergencies: Bungay, Romantic Hero, Castlereigh, Space Cadet, Cobblertothestars, Artic Warrior 5 2.24pm RAINER IRRIGATION FERTIGATION INVITATIONAL 1600 $35,000, OPN HCP, 1600m 1 156x8 Gallant Boy dm (4) 60.5...... C Campbell (a2) 2 011x3 Camino Rocoso d (1) 55.............. C Johnson 3 19x23 Timy Tyler dmb (5) 54.5.................L Allpress 4 21071 Albut Me dm (7) 54................ S Toolooa (a3) 5 6x909 El Bee Darci tdmh (9) 54.........T Comignaghi 6 65104 Ticket To Ride dm (3) 54...............K Williams 7 321x0 Savapak d (8) 54..............................S Collett 8 x6x16 Upperhand tm (6) 54.................... R Hannam 9 11548 Bluey’s Chance dm (2) 54....R Beeharry (a3) 6 2.59pm VALACHI DOWNS 1400 $22,500, Rating 65 Benchmark*, 1400m 1 85x20 Clooney th (9) 59.5.......................T Moseley 2 36x12 I Am A Rock 59.5.......................... Scratched 3 x4x02 Campo (1) 58.5............................ R Hannam 4 54x93 Devious dm (16) 58.5 5 13527 Magnify (12) 58.5...............................L Innes 6 1037x Scooby tm (5) 58.5............................J Lowry 7 51059 Queen Jetsun dm (6) 58..... C Campbell (a2) 8 999x4 Masu d (4) 58.................................M McNab 9 0x390 Dreamtesta td (8) 57.5...................L Allpress 10 2601x Sure Is d (13) 57.5..................T Comignaghi 11 07197 Heat Seeker (17) 57.5.................. C Johnson 12 24081 Iffida tdm (14) 56.5................ R Mudhoo (a3) 13 02x86 Sainted Pearl (2) 56.5......................J Laking 14 31005 Meara Mary m (11) 56........S Weatherley (a) 15 318x0 Lady Davone 55.5......................... Scratched 16 20x78 Sharp ‘N’ Silver d (3) 55.5.............K Williams 17 0670x Parvina (10) 55 18 499x0 El Campeador (7) 57 -
19 70075 Lincoln Zephyr h (18) 56.5 20 00x04 Dangerous Pony (15) 54 -
2 040x1 Nopele m (9) 60.5................. R Mudhoo (a3) 3 05x20 Taponisme dm (1) 59.5....... C Campbell (a2) Emergencies: Lady Davone, Sharp ‘N’ Silver, Parvina, El 4 19339 Jin Lu td (7) 59.................................J Laking Campeador, Lincoln Zephyr, Dangerous Pony 5 56x15 Miss Doherty td (14) 58.5................S Collett 7 3.34pm MCCREA PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 6 3412x Mamma Sans b (17) 58 7 132x6 Abrahams d (4) 57.5.................... C Johnson ASHBURTON CUP $35,000, OPN HCP, 1200m 1 62x31 Prince Oz tdm (1) 60.....................T Moseley 8 41x01 Final Savings d (15) 57.5........T Comignaghi 2 1122x Don Carlo td (6) 59.5....................K Williams 9 059x4 Hee’s Our Secret td (12) 57.5...........J Lowry 3 2130x Sensei d (7) 59.5.................S Weatherley (a) 10 61633 Tryfan dm (11) 57.5........................L Allpress 4 1135x Disturbance td (3) 59.............. B Murray (a2) 11 8x186 Belle Fascino dm (8) 57............... R Hannam 5 377x9 Johnny Jones d (8) 58................. C Johnson 12 16039 Gifted tdm (3) 57...........................K Williams 6 82481 Saber dm (2) 54.5.......... K Chowdhoory (a2) 13 3517x Pinup Coup d (16) 57..........S Weatherley (a) 7 113x1 Morweka tdm (4) 54.......................L Allpress 14 14142 Boundtobehonored d (18) 56.5..........L Innes 8 x97x3 Killarney d (9) 54.....................T Comignaghi 15 17149 Pure Class tm (6) 55............R Beeharry (a3) 9 112x7 Emily Margaret d (5) 54............... R Hannam 16 21x98 Khimar War d (2) 57 8 4.09 BARNESWOOD FARM STAKES 1400 $70,000, 17 71x70 Jessie Janet d (13) 55 18 24081 Iffida tdm (5) 54 3YO SW, 1400m 1 31236 Zelenski b (9) 56.5...........................J Laking Emergencies: Pure Class, Khimar War, Jessie Janet, Iffida 2 1 Okay Pal (7) 56.5................S Weatherley (a) Blinkers on: Grab The Bar, Oceans Away (R4), Savapak 3 1x623 El Gladiador b (13) 56.5..........T Comignaghi (R5), El Campeador (R6), He’s Got Power, Far Site, Hot Tap 4 182x8 He’s Got Power (2) 56.5.................K Kwo (a) (R8) Blinkers off: Exclaim (R4), Magnify (R6), Folk Dress 5 81x21 Miss Federer (3) 54.5....................K Williams (R8) Winkers on: Red Light District (R1), Magnify, Dreamtes 6 114x7 Folk Dress (5) 54.5........................M McNab ta (R6) Winkers off: Oceans Away (R4), Hot Tap (R8) 7 1x17 Kali b (14) 54.5...................................L Innes SELECTIONS 8 1x64 Live Drama (12) 54.5....................T Moseley 9 5431 Karalino d (6) 54.5...........................S Collett Race 1: Capodanno, Last Hoorah, Brother Will, Hibachi, Always Chief Sequoyah, Metasequoia, Jildi Jildi, Red River Rock Race 2: 10 1x36 On Show (11) 54.5.........................L Allpress 11 17x49 Bronte Beach (1) 54.5.................. C Johnson Race 3: Al Haram, Owen Patrick, Pickup, Standrews Masonic 12 159 Far Site tm (8) 54.5......................L Callaway Race 4: Xplosion, Keep The Cash, Our Girl Gilly, I Got A Rock 13 2x180 Hot Tap m (4) 54.5....................... R Hannam Race 5: Camino Rocoso, Savapak, Albut Me, Timy Tyler, Upperhand 14 451x7 Kitty Power m (10) 54.5......... C Campbell (a) Race 6: Magnify, Clooney, Campo, Masu 7: Don Carlo, Killarney, Sensei, Prince Oz, Morweka 9 4.44pm ASHBURTON MSA LIQUOR CENTRE 1400 Race Race 8: Miss Federer, Folk Dress, Kali, Okay Pal, Karalino $25,000, Rating 72 Benchmark, 1400m 1 3009x Veladero dm (10) 61...... K Chowdhoory (a2) Race 9: Abrahams, Boundtobehonored, Belle Fascino, Veladero
Rotorua gallops Today at Rotorua Raceway
Racing Rotorua Venue: Rotorua Meeting Date: 19 Oct 2019 10 19505 One Madison m (1) 56..................... S Spratt NZ Meeting number: 2 Doubles: 1 and 2; 3 and 4; 5 and 6; 7 3 1.33pm NZB INSURANCE PEARL SERIES RACE and 8 Trebles: 2, 3 and 4; 6, 7 and 8 $22,500, R65 Benchmark Fillies and Mares*, 1215m 1 12.23pm LOWE SCHOLLUM JONES 3YO $25,000, 1 91445 Fastellie m (2) 59.5........................J Waddell 2 22002 Chiquitita (10) 59.............................. S Spratt 3YO SW+P, 1215m 3 3324x Cin Cin td (9) 59........................ D Danis (a2) 1 517x2 Equinox b (7) 58.5..........................O Bosson 4 72351 Midnite Invasion tm (8) 59...........M Coleman 2 74x17 Caithness Kid m (5) 57.5..... T Yanagida (a2) 5 231 She’s A Smash Hit (4) 59........C Burdan (a3) 3 1 Green Hero (1) 57.5.....................D Mansour 6 08618 Tutta La Classe m (7) 59...... T Yanagida (a2) 4 45 Robrocks (6) 56.................................R Elliot 7 x42x6 Lady Lira tm (3) 58.5................... L Satherley 5 55 Woodhall Road (2) 56.... A Goindasamy (a2) 8 56x48 Bothered (1) 58............................D Mansour 6 21623 Roc Cha (4) 55.5..........................J Kam (a4) 9 21623 Roc Cha (6) 57.............................J Kam (a4) 7 94x4 Tears Of Jupiter (3) 54................M Coleman 10 9x216 Greyvee m (5) 56.5..........................R Myers 2 12.58 CHRIS FAULKNER DRAINAGE 1950 $22,500, 4 2.08 TW MOORE 1400 $30,000, Rating 82 BenchRating 65 Benchmark*, 1950m mark, 1400m 1 310x0 Gabriel (5) 59.5.......................... R Scott (a3) 1 15600 Admiral tm (8) 61.....................E McCall (a3) 2 04051 Kipling (7) 58.5................................ S McKay 2 4111x Inscription td (3) 58.5..... A Goindasamy (a2) 3 x3761 Lake Superior (9) 58.5.................D Mansour 3 570x0 Pasabahce dm (1) 57............S Johnson (a4) 4 53302 Pierian Spring tdm (4) 58.5................R Elliot 4 9612x Neeson db (5) 57.........................D Mansour 5 41506 Estefania tm (2) 58.................. J Bassett (a4) 5 21324 Secret Squirrel d (9) 56.5.................R Myers 6 01971 Tipperary Mary 58......................... Scratched 6 12x46 Lilly Thunder dm (2) 55.5.................R Smyth 7 60x17 Carnaby tdm (3) 58..........................R Myers 7 313x0 Monaco dm (7) 55........................C Lammas 8 02x36 Wheao b (8) 58...............................V Colgan 8 322x5 Stacey Ann d (4) 54....................M Coleman 9 6x371 Pearlescence tm (6) 57.5............M Cameron 9 13428 Torre Del Greco d (6) 54....................R Elliot
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2.42 STAPHANOS CLASSIC HANDICAP $50,000, OPN HCP, 1950m 1 3x976 Zacada t (9) 60.................................J Riddell 2 55217 Pacorus tm (5) 56....................... D Danis (a) 3 54821 My Gift m (13) 55............................ S McKay 4 12113 Charlie Horse m (11) 54.5..................L Hemi 5 23105 Verry Flash tm (8) 54.5....................R Smyth 6 112x1 Cossack Warrior m (12) 54..........D Mansour 7 23252 Strolling Vagabond m (1) 53........M Coleman 8 5x413 Lady Shabeel tmh (10) 53.A Goindasamy (a) 9 31138 Obsessive mb (2) 53........................R Myers 10 42194 Tweedledee m (6) 53....................... S Spratt 11 25620 Sweet Treat tm (4) 53.....................J Kam (a) 12 41033 Deluxe Edition tm (7) 53.............. R Scott (a) 13 01971 Tipperary Mary m (3) 53............. L Satherley 6 3.15pm CLASSIC BUILDERS 1215 $25,000, Rating 72 Benchmark, 1215m 1 22231 Justacanta m (1) 61.5...........E Leighton (a3) 2 2186x Ritani m (7) 60.5............ A Goindasamy (a2) 3 10x46 Princess Rihanna (3) 59...... T Yanagida (a2) 4 218x3 Mr Universe (6) 59......................M Cameron 5 23206 Ottavio tm (13) 58.5.....................J Kam (a4) 6 71531 Saint Croix tm (14) 58......................J Riddell 7 32145 Wisdom Patch b (4) 58...................J Waddell
8 1169x Salt Bay t (10) 57.5......................C Lammas 9 73157 Irish Mist tdm (11) 57.5....................R Myers 10 918x5 Autumn Wild t (8) 55.5.................... R Kozaki 11 653x1 It’s Doable t (12) 55.5...................D Mansour 12 64x0x Sacred Charm t (9) 55.5.................. S Spratt 13 62402 Tiny Terror (5) 55.5 14 1138x Misstumut (2) 55................................R Elliot 15 64626 Scarfi 57.5..................................... Scratched
2 43123 New York Jazz m (13) 60........... R Scott (a3) 3 50x98 Batabullet dm (8) 59.5........................L Hemi 4 6x31x Alaskan Gold tm (3) 59................C Lammas 5 140x3 Autumn Flash d (10) 59.................J Waddell 6 2271 Parisian (7) 59....................................R Elliot 7 390x6 Pullyoursocksup d (14) 58.5............ S Spratt 8 x4314 Billy Mav (9) 58.5...........................O Bosson 9 107x5 Galway Bro d (12) 58.5....................R Myers Emergency: Scarfi 10 x2881 Tinder Hit d (5) 58.5.................... L Satherley 7 3.50pm SWEYNESSE STAKES $70,000, WFA, 11 6167x Ocean Billy tdh (11) 58...........C Burdan (a3) 12 1940x Initiative t (6) 56.5.......... A Goindasamy (a2) 1215m 1 511x2 Midnight Runner mb (8) 59............O Bosson 13 7x963 Touch Of Silver tm (4) 56.................R Smyth 2 8x217 Dawn Patrol b (4) 58.5.....................J Riddell 14 45864 Bewitched (2) 54..........................D Mansour 3 7121x Princess Kereru td (6) 57.............C Lammas Winkers on: Woodhall Road (R1) 4 x9749 Santa Monica td (3) 57.................D Mansour SELECTIONS 5 44181 Lucyinrio (5) 57...........................M Cameron Race 1: Green Hero, Equinox, Roc Cha, Caithness Kid 6 43162 Malambo tmb (9) 57...........................R Elliot Race 2: Pearlescence, Wheao, Pierian Spring, Carnaby 7 0636x Donna Anne Billy tmh (2) 57Goindasamy (a) 8 29x61 Pop Star Princess td (1) 57......... L Satherley Race 3: She’s A Smash Hit, Chiquitita, Cin Cin, Lady Lira 9 64626 Scarfi td (7) 57.................................R Myers Race 4: Torre Del Greco, Inscription, Stacey Ann, Neeson 10 12371 London Express m (10) 56.5.......M Coleman Race 5: Verry Flash, Cossack Warrior, Obsessive, Charlie Horse 6: Justacanta, Mr Universe, Autumn Wild, Ritani 8 4.25pm LANCE LAWSON 1400 $22,500, Rating 65 Race Race 7: Dawn Patrol, Midnight Runner, Pop Star Princess Benchmark*, 1400m 1 59242 Gobuyit dm (1) 60.................. H Andrew (a1) Race 8: Gobuyit, New York Jazz, Pullyoursocksup, Autumn Flash
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Ashburton Guardian 23
Riverton harness Tomorrow at Ascot Park Raceway
Riverton Trotting Club Venue: Ascot Park Raceway Meeting Date: 20 Oct 2019 NZ Meeting number: 7 Doubles: 1 and 2; 3 and 4; 5 and 6; 7 and 8; 9 and 10 Trebles: 1, 2 and 3; 4, 5 and 6; 8, 9 and 10 1 12.24pm CARRIERS ARMS HOTEL FILLIES MARES MOBILE PACE $10,000, r45-r63 f&m., mobile, 2200m 1 17 Tact Eze (1) fr.............................E Barron (J) 2 208x2 Bridesdale Robyn (2) fr...............C Ferguson 3 87253 Maidonthebeach (3) fr.............. M Williamson 4 21943 Betterthanbrie (4) fr........................ K Barclay 5 4400x Anamajor (5) fr...................................J Dunn 6 1320x Major Sass (6) fr..................... J Morrison (J) 7 4920x Rockabilly Blues (7) fr.............. N Williamson 2 12.52pm MACCA LODGE FILLIES & MARES MOBILE PACE $10,000, non-winners 3yo+ f&m., 2200m 1 Churrasco (1) fr........................ M Williamson 2 8 Pretty Azz (2) fr................................. A Milne 3 Princess Danica (3) fr.......................... J Hay 4 22908 Shezdawon (4) fr.......................B Williamson 5 705 Mila Kunis (5) fr..........................M Hurrell (J) 6 xP049 Razcal Alley (6) fr.................... J Morrison (J) 7 0 Flame Trees (7) fr........................... B Barclay 8 Princess Jessie (8) fr.....................B Orange 9 338x3 Allaboutjoy (21) fr..................... N Williamson 10 255 Kickupyaheels (22) fr.......................R Swain 11 500x0 Aurelia Cotta (23) fr................B Laughton (J) 3 1.27 RYDER PLUMBING & ROOFING MOBILE PACE $8000, non-winners mr40 to mr46., 2200m 1 96x99 Schnitzel Von Krumm (1) fr...... M Williamson 2 463x6 Ideal Glacier (2) fr......................E Barron (J) 3 50703 Bub’s VC (3) fr.......................... N Williamson
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Saturday, October 19, 2019
4 55780 Kennedy (4) fr................................... A Milne 5 300x0 The Mighty Cullen (5) fr.................. P Hunter 6 7x023 Kramer (6) fr......................................S Ottley 7 22056 Hans Ideal (7) fr....................S Tomlinson (J) 8 780x9 Wee Ring The Changes (8) fr.....C Ferguson 9 00x06 Touche (21) fr............................B Williamson 10 7x867 Southin Excuse (22) fr...................B Orange 11 07947 Phoebe’s Delight (23) fr...............B McLellan 12 8x898 Magnetic Chime (24) fr.................. B Barclay 13 0x004 Tact Miesha (25) fr.....................M Hurrell (J) 14 60x90 Vintage Beach (26) fr.............. J Morrison (J) 4 2.02pm TODD & CO REALTY MOBILE PACE $9000, r47-r53., mobile, 2200m 1 35361 Dismara (1) fr........................S Tomlinson (J) 2 25075 Elva Jaccka (2) fr........................... B Barclay 3 00x41 Stingray Tara (3) fr.................... M Williamson 4 x8059 Whata Razzle Dazzle (4) fr............B Orange 5 010x0 Maahes (5) fr.................................. K Barclay 6 00404 Woodlea Shawn (6) fr...............B Williamson 7 160x0 Thro Me The Buoy (7) fr........... N Williamson 8 56032 Franco Huntington (8) fr.......... J Morrison (J) 9 x9805 Vin Scully (21) fr.....................B Laughton (J) 10 07816 Dalness Arizona (22) fr......................J Dunn 11 08950 Bound To Be Bettor (23) fr...... S Walkinshaw 12 585Px Prince Abbey (24) fr........................ P Hunter 13 47242 Paduka (25) fr............................E Barron (J) 14 54477 American Mac (U1) fr.................M Hurrell (J) 5 2.37 DT KINGS TRANSPORT LTD RIVERTON CUP HCP PACE $15,000, r60-r100 spechcp, stand, 2700m 1 5660x Kilowatt Kid (1) fr.......................B Williamson 2 1449x Mach’s Back (2) fr.............................S Ottley
3 271x0 I’mallaboutthebase (3) fr.......... M Williamson 4 11x33 Norman Richards (4) fr........................ J Hay 5 2333x Nota Bene Denario (5) fr................ B Barclay 6 35443 Hayden’s Meddle (1) 10M..................J Dunn 7 051x4 Mongolian Cavalry (2) 10M............B Orange 8 51114 Unloaded (U1) 10M......................... P Hunter 9 2151x Paddyproudfoot (1) 20M................ K Barclay 10 3x271 Robyns Playboy (2) 20M.............C Ferguson 11 23116 Franco Santino (3) 20M........... N Williamson 6 3.12pm NEVILLE CLEAVER FISHING APARIMA HANDICAP TROT $12,000, r48-r100 spechcp, stand, 2700m 1 210x6 Somethings Burning (1) fr.............. K Barclay 2 50x77 Rydgemont Milly (1) 10M............... M Shirley 3 14685 Nottingham K Two (1) 30M.........E Barron (J) 4 00276 Wee Man Trouble (U1) 30M...........B Orange 5 67113 Robbie Royale (U2) 30M................ B Barclay 6 x6024 Monty Python (1) 50M.............. M Williamson 7 334x2 Majestic Man (2) 50M...............B Williamson 8 1340x Dark Horse (U1) 50M............... N Williamson 7 3.47pm G B ROBERTSON MOBILE PACE $10,000, 3yo+ r54-r59., mobile, 2200m 1 15346 Duke Of Dundee (1) fr.....................K Larsen 2 324x9 Hampton (2) fr................................B Orange 3 45086 Tartan Robyn (3) fr................... M Williamson 4 44x1 Pembrook Playboy (4) fr........... N Williamson 5 135 Tyron’s Bit Of Lemon (5) fr.................J Dunn 6 5x2x2 Lawrence (6) fr..........................B Williamson 7 27x35 My Georgie Boy (7) fr...................... P Hunter 8 371x8 Cast A Shadow (8) fr..................M Hurrell (J) 9 5615x Just Wondering (21) fr.......................... J Hay
10 315x3 Triple VC (22) fr.............................. B Barclay 8 4.22pm BILL KEAST MEMORIAL GOLD CHIP FINAL HCP TROT $15,000, non-winners w/c spechcp, stand, 2700m 1 409x9 Mr Olympus fr............................... Scratched 2 80x72 Orlando Magic (1) fr..........................S Ottley 3 6x923 South Park (2) fr.............................. P Hunter 4 325x9 Robo Trouble (3) fr.................. J Morrison (J) 5 6 Tweedledee (4) fr..................... N Williamson 6 82208 Kiwi Heir (U1) fr...........................R McIlwrick 7 02158 The Night Sweats (1) 30M............ B Norman 8 21352 Justan’s Sister (2) 30M.........S Tomlinson (J) 9 30471 Helluva Way (3) 30M......................B Orange 10 1x625 Spur To Action (4) 30M............ M Williamson 11 x5610 Alpine Retreat (5) 30M...............E Barron (J) 12 78336 Cuddly Trouble (6) 30M......................J Dunn 13 00383 Rydgemont Son (U1) 30M........B Williamson 9 4.57pm INVERCARGILL LICENSING TRUST MOBILE PACE $10,000, non-winners 3yo+ mr47 to mr50., mobile, 2200m 1 460x Cab Calloway (1) fr......................... C Hanna 2 Forsure (2) fr...................................K Larsen 3 Leconte (3) fr.........................S Tomlinson (J) 4 47 Glenledi Captain (4) fr..................... P Hunter 5 6 Fireforefiddle (5) fr................... M Williamson 6 09 Racing Minister (6) fr............... J Morrison (J) 7 79540 Vergeofgreatness (7) fr..............E Barron (J) 8 346x Cassius Bromac fr......................... Scratched 9 5x See Ya Write (21) fr........................B Orange 10 Major Watson (22) fr................ N Williamson 11 8x3 Undercover Mac (23) fr.................. K Barclay
10 5.27pm DRAKE PLUMBING & DRAINLAYING MO-
2 9283x Ferrando tdm (5) 61.5........................R Elliot 3 12440 Miss Lizzie tdm (4) 54...............B Ansell (a3) 4 5x419 Stradivarius dm (3) 54...................... M Singh 5 424x9 Sweepstake d (9) 54........................R Myers 6 32010 Deerfield dm (2) 54...................... R Hannam 7 12371 London Express dm (1) 54......C Burdan (a3) 8 7x345 Cavallo Veloce d (10) 54................. S McKay 9 75685 Salamanca tdm (11) 54............E McCall (a3) 10 54x86 Perfect Harmonee dm (8) 54........ C Johnson 11 x965x Rock ‘N’ Affair d (7) 54...................L Allpress 12 91930 Brother One dm (6) 54.............. R Goldsbury 7 4.40pm RIVERSTONE CAFE 1400 $22,500, Rating 65 Benchmark*, 1400m 1 18247 Armaguard dm (7) 59.................. Z Moki (a2) 2 x210x Hocico Blanco (1) 58.5.......................R Elliot 3 5x10x Proletariat d (9) 58.5...............C Burdan (a3) 4 18x6 Times Ticking (5) 58........................ J Parkes 5 070x3 Cover Drive (3) 57.5.........................R Myers 6 x60x6 Kotahi m (12) 57 7 868x8 Stormy Habit tm (13) 57............B Ansell (a3) 8 7190 World Tour m (8) 56......................... M Singh 9 57492 Sky Hi Rahtwo dm (4) 55.5................L Hemi 10 87782 Zappeur (11) 55......................... D Hirini (a1) 11 37879 Empress Tzu Hsi dm (2) 54.5...... C Johnson 12 10839 Miss Freelove m (10) 54.5.............L Allpress 13 56680 Destiny One dm (6) 54.............. R Goldsbury 14 26593 Smooth Cognac 54....................... Scratched
8
BILE PACE $8000, r40-r46., mobile, 2200m 1 05432 Black Ops (1) fr..........................E Barron (J) 2 80x79 Magnetic Watch (2) fr.............. J Morrison (J) 3 76269 Ellnbac (3) fr.................................B McLellan 4 45605 Star Ruler (4) fr........................ M Williamson 5 84946 Dreaminsover (5) fr...................B Williamson 6 56900 Tetrick (6) fr 7 68353 Swift Robyn (7) fr........................C Ferguson 8 060x0 Vintage Rose (8) fr......................... K Barclay 9 20056 Running On Empty (21) fr 10 63470 Tact Denzel (22) fr.......................R McIlwrick 11 46624 Rosinupthebow (23) fr................M Hurrell (J) 12 36898 Depend On Washie (24) fr.............B Orange 13 50x26 Tairlaw Toll (U1) fr.................... N Williamson SELECTIONS
Race 1: Anamajor, Rockabilly Blues, Bridesdale Robyn Race 2: Kickupyaheels, Princess Jessie, Allaboutjoy, Mila Kunis Race 3: Kramer, Vintage Beach, Southin Excuse, Ideal Glacier Race 4: Prince Abbey, Paduka, American Mac, Elva Jaccka Race 5: Franco Santino, Hayden’s Meddle, Mongolian Cavalry Race 6: Majestic Man, Robbie Royale, Monty Python Race 7: Lawrence, Tyron’s Bit Of Lemon, Pembrook Playboy Race 8: Rydgemont Son, Spur To Action, Justan’s Sister Race 9: Major Watson, Vergeofgreatness, Undercover Mac Race 10: Tairlaw Toll, Swift Robyn, Black Ops, Ellnbac LEGEND: X - Spell from racing of at least 3 months P - Retired (or pulled up) from race L - Driver unseated U1 - Unruly beginner {C} - Concession driver {C.cl} - Claiming concession driver which allows horse to start one class down
Otaki Maori gallops Tomorrow at Otaki Raceway
Otaki Maori RC Venue: Otaki Meeting Date: 20 Oct 2019 NZ Meeting number: 4 Doubles: 1 and 2; 3 and 4; 5 and 6; 7 and 8 Trebles: 2, 3 and 4; 6, 7 and 8 1.10pm (NZT) AQUASHIELD ROOFING 1600 $30,000, Rating 82 Benchmark, 1600m 1 454x7 Sergeant Blast dm (7) 60.5 C Burdan (a3) 2 53711 Hartley tdm (2) 59.5 R Myers 3 411x7 Toms tm (10) 59 L Allpress 4 211x1 Collinstreet dm (5) 58.5 H Schofer (a3) 5 1121x Beyond The Fort td (11) 58 D Turner 6 660x0 Balham d (8) 58 J Waddell 7 74x59 Awatane (6) 57 J Parkes 8 06031 Father Lenihan d (1) 56.5 R Hannam 9 1116x Trending (3) 54.5 R Elliot 10 20x31 Shezathinka 54 Scratched 11 6x00x Portland Jimmy (9) 54 C Johnson 12 871x0 Bruno Stars tdmh (4) 54 S McKay 2 1.45 NZB INSURANCE PEARL SERIES RACE 1600 $22,500, R65 Benchmark Fillies and Mares*, 1600m 1 x122x Craftyeva db (12) 59.5 2 10x22 Very Appealing dm (2) 59.5.............R Myers 3 78431 Girl Of Steel (9) 59..................C Burdan (a3) 4 1 Miss Woburn d (4) 59.....................L Allpress 5 341 Simona (8) 59....................................R Elliot 6 54415 Zena Belle td (5) 59............... H Andrew (a1) 7 9583x Akela Belle (1) 58.5...................... R Hannam 8 42421 Shebringsmerubies 58.5............... Scratched
9 924x8 Vickezzmoet (3) 58.5...................... J Parkes 10 0000x Wonderful Barbie dm (10) 58.. T Taiaroa (a4) 11 0x586 Tuigirl d (7) 57................................J Waddell 12 37879 Empress Tzu Hsi m (6) 56.5........ C Johnson 13 8709P Madam Makfi (13) 55................B Ansell (a3) 14 007x0 Suffign th (11) 55 3 2.20 EL CHEAPO CARS RAUKAWA CUP $40,000, Rating 82 Benchmark, 2100m 1 0x060 Jacksstar dm (1) 62.5...................... S McKay 2 61626 Sylvester dm (7) 61...................... C Johnson 3 0x580 Duplicity d (8) 58.5..................C Burdan (a3) 4 33555 High Quality tdm (5) 55.5...................R Elliot 5 12744 Nitro Ted dm (11) 55.5........... H Schofer (a3) 6 95913 Blackmagicwoman dm (2) 54.5.E McCall (a3) 7 32x90 Obrigado dm (4) 54............................L Hemi 8 28763 Whatsup m (6) 54..........................L Allpress 9 364L6 Centre Attention tdm (10) 54............ M Singh 10 71147 Ripcord d (9) 54...............................R Myers 11 515x6 Savannah Gem (3) 54.................. R Hannam 4 2.55pm OTAKI MAIL 2100 $22,500, R65 Benchmark*, 2100m 1 23440 Ruffy Rahtwo m (15) 60......... H Andrew (a1) 2 x2212 Classclown dm (13) 59.5................ J Parkes 3 74820 Lovetokeephim tdm (10) 59.5...... C Johnson 4 190x0 Don’t Know Jakk d (14) 58.5..........L Allpress 5 74615 Keepin Harmonee (2) 58.5............... M Singh 6 0x046 Almo Costa t (6) 58..........................D Turner
7 17658 Da Jin Shan m (9) 58............. H Schofer (a3) 8 90339 Keep It Savvy m (8) 58................. R Hannam 9 9x224 Cead Mile Failte tdbh (4) 57.5........J Waddell 10 0x761 Miss Gidget 57.............................. Scratched 11 97031 Deuce Coupe m (11) 56.5................R Myers 12 14x36 Jazamour (3) 56.............................. S McKay 13 06009 Itellyouonething td (1) 55.5.....C Burdan (a3) 14 32083 Mizzena m (12) 55.5..........................R Elliot 15 69450 Veracious tm (5) 55 16 03739 Cornerstone dm (7) 56.5 17 27880 Em Kay Pops m (16) 54 5 3.30 SUNRANS SPA 1200 $22,500, R65 Benchmark*, 1200m 1 27717 Mehrtens d (11) 59..........................R Myers 2 221x5 Somewhere Man t (5) 59................ J Parkes 3 8300x All In Mana d (3) 58.5................... C Johnson 4 128x7 Desert Magic d (2) 58.5............. D Hirini (a1) 5 32484 Straight Sets dm (10) 58....................R Elliot 6 126x8 Willpower d (6) 58 7 8339x Du’blues m (7) 57.5 8 160x0 Dauphine dm (9) 56........................ S McKay 9 88548 Floral Belt (4) 56..................... T Taiaroa (a4) 10 2688x Lady Blue (8) 56.............................L Allpress 11 9x90x Dana’s Prophecy (1) 54.5................ M Singh 6 4.05 CAVALLO FARM & CHRIS RUTTEN BLOODSTOCK 1200 $35,000, OPN HCP, 1200m 1 5163x Overtheriver dm (12) 62............. D Hirini (a1)
Daily Events SATURDAY 7.30am (sharp) RUN AND WALK ASHBURTON. Rise and Shine Saturday. Runners and Walkers, all welcome. Meet at Frontrunner, 28 Moore Street. Visit our facebook page for more details. 9am - 12pm ASHBURTON FARMERS MARKET. Local fresh produce, hot drinks and more. North end West Street carpark. 9am - 12pm CRAFT MARKET.
SUNDAY 8am ST STEPHEN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH. Holy Communion, Park Street. 8.30am HOLY SPIRIT CHURCH. Mass, Holy Spirit Church, Thomson Street, Tinwald. 9.30am ST DAVID’S UNION CHURCH. Worship service led by Rev Henry Mbambo. 48 Allens Road, Allenton. 9.30am ASHBURTON METHODIST CHURCH. Morning worship with Rev Heather
MONDAY 6am ST DAVID’S UNION CHURCH. Sweaty Bettys circuit training in hall. 48 Allens Road. 9.30am (10am start) ASHBURTON VETERANS GOLF. Mayfield Golf Club. Facebook - Ashburton County Veterans Golf Association. 9.30am - 10.30am DAYTIME NETBALL. $5 a game, first game free. EA Networks Centre, River Terrace. (not school holidays).
5.15pm VETS ON RIVERBANK 1400 $25,000, Rating 72 Benchmark, 1400m 1 41765 Yin Dragon dm (1) 62............. H Schofer (a3) 2 10222 Tavis Court dmb (18) 60.................. J Parkes 3 0119x Skyphyta m (11) 59.5.........................R Elliot 4 x049x Master Pat dm (7) 59................... R Hannam 5 48018 Red Forest dm (9) 58.5.......... H Andrew (a1) 6 546x9 Langkawi d (8) 58.5........................ S McKay 7 1x573 One Prize One Goal dm (15) 58.5... M Singh 8 44533 Platinum Volos tm (13) 58.5 9 x3456 Bring To The Block dm (19) 58...........L Hemi 10 29x70 Prosecco tdm (12) 58.......................D Turner 11 16x85 Awesome Al tdh (14) 57.5..............J Waddell 12 1216x Gerda t (17) 56.5.....................C Burdan (a3) 13 7112x Marietta Lane (20) 56................... C Johnson 14 x1x20 Trifolium t (2) 54.............................L Allpress 15 15x1 Coventina Bay tm (4) 55.5...............R Myers 16 53751 Tia Celeste d (5) 55.5 17 431x0 Harlem ‘N’ Co td (6) 57.5 18 65320 Rippin dm (3) 55.5 19 104x0 Roll The Dice dh (16) 57 20 871x0 Bruno Stars tdmh (10) 57.5 Emergencies: Coventina Bay, Tia Celeste, Harlem ‘N’ Co, Rippin, Roll The Dice, Bruno Stars Blinkers on: Proletariat, Miss Freelove (R7) Blinkers off: Almo Costa (R4), Zappeur (R7) Winkers on: Centre Attention (R3) Winkers off: Portland Jimmy (R1), Skyphyta (R8)
Oct 19, 20 & 21, 2019 Woodwork, jewellery, Rawleighs products etc. West Street car park. 9.30am - 12.30pm ASHBURTON TOY LIBRARY. Open Thursday and Saturday mornings for toy hire. Victoria Street, The Triangle. 9.45am - 3pm WAIREKA CROQUET CLUB. Association singles morning and doubles afternoon. Waireka Croquet Club, the Domain, Philip Street. 10am
MT HUTT MEMORIAL HALL. NZ Alpine and Agriculture Encounter, Art Gallery and hall of memories. 160 Main Street, Methven. 10am - 12pm VINTAGE CAR CLUB MUSEUM AND PARTS SHED. Open. Ashburton Vintage Car Club, Maronan Road, Tinwald. 10am - 12pm ASHBURTON DISTRICT FAMILY HISTORY GROUP. Open for research, visitors welcome. Heritage Centre, West Street. Closed
most public holidays. 10am - 4pm ASHBURTON COUNTY LIONS. Accessory sale, preloved homeware and fashion items. Supporting “Lives worth Living”(Youth Suicide Prevention) and other youth groups. 200 East Street. 10.30am - 3pm ASHBURTON AVIATION MUSEUM. A great selection of over 30 aircraft from the past to the future on display. Open daily with extended hours on a Saturday and Wednesday. Ashburton airport, Seafield Road.
1.15pm WAIREKA CROQUET CLUB. Golf croquet doubles, new members welcome. Waireka Croquet Club, Philip Street. 1.15pm ALLENTON CROQUET CLUB. Golf and Association Croquet. Allenton Sports Club, Cavendish Street. 1.30pm RUN AND WALK ASHBURTON. Runners and Walkers, afternoon meet hosted from 9 Waterton Point, Lake Hood.
Kennedy. Paterson’s Chapel, corner East and Cox Streets. 10am ST STEPHEN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH. Holy Communion. Park Street. 10am ST ANDREW’S ANGLICAN CHURCH. Holy Communion, Thomson Street. 10am ST ANDREW’S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Morning worship service led by Rev Eric Mattock, all welcome, Sinclair Centre, Park Street. 10am
MT HUTT MEMORIAL HALL. NZ Alpine and Agriculture Encounter, Art Gallery and Hall of Memories. 160 Main Street, Methven. 10am HAKATERE PRESBYTERIAN PARISH. Morning worship led by Rev Helen Wallis, all welcome.65 Oxford Street, Hampstead. 10am ASHBURTON BAPTIST CHURCH. Morning service, all welcome. 67 Cass Street. 10.30am VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH. Worship God and study his word. 131
Thomson Street, (Tinwald School hall). 10.30am GRACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Worshipping God and transforming lives. 63 Princes Street, Netherby. 10.30am - 3.30pm ASHBURTON FIRE MUSEUM. Stunning exhibition of firefighting history at the Plains Historic Village in the Tinwald Domain, Maronan Road. 11am - 2pm ASHBURTON VOLUNTEER FIRE BRIGADE. Find out about volunteering with your local fire brigade. Ashburton Fire Station, 332 Burnett Street.
1pm - 3pm ASHBURTON AVIATION MUSEUM. A great selection of over 30 aircraft from the past to the future on display. Open daily with extended hours on a Saturday and Wednesday. Ashburton airport, Seafield Road. 1.15pm WAIREKA CROQUET CLUB. Golf Croquet doubles, new players welcome. Waireka Croquet Club, Philip Street. 7pm VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH. Worship God and study his word. 131 Thomson Street, (Tinwald School hall).
9.30am - 4pm ST JOHN SHOP. Opportunity shop open daily, donations welcome. 129 Tancred Street. 9.45am PLAINS LADIES FRIENDSHIP CLUB. Monthly meeting, please note change of date. Doris Linton lounge, R S A Cox Street. 10am MT HUTT MEMORIAL HALL. NZ Alpine and Agriculture Encounter, Art Gallery and hall of memories. 160 Main Street, Methven. 10am - 3pm
206 CLUB AGE CONCERN. Join us for a fun day filled with activities for the over 60 years. For more information ring Age Concern 308-6817. Seniors Centre, Cameron Street. 10am - 4pm HOSPICE MID CANTERBURY OP SHOP. Quality clothing and homewares. Donations welcome. 71 Tancred Street. 12pm BAPTIST CHURCH FREE LUNCH. Weekly lunch, available at Baptist Church, Cass Street. 1pm - 3pm
ASHBURTON AVIATION MUSEUM. A great selection of over 30 aircraft from the past to the future on display. Open daily with extended hours on a Saturday and Wednesday. Ashburton airport, Seafield Road. 1pm - 4pm ASHBURTON DISTRICT FAMILY HISTORY GROUP. Open for research, visitors welcome. Heritage Centre, West Street. Closed most public holidays. 1.15pm ALLENTON CROQUET CLUB. Golf and Association Croquet. Allenton
Sports Club, Cavendish Street. 2pm GREY POWER ASHBURTON. Speaker Susan Darque from Arthritis Canterbury. Seniors Centre, Cameron Street. 6pm ST DAVID’S UNION CHURCH. Sweaty Bettys circuit training in hall. 48 Allens Road. 7.30pm ASHBURTON ELECTRONIC ORGAN AND KEYBOARD CLUB. Club night concert, all visitors welcome. Seniors Centre, Cameron Street.
Classifieds 24 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
SITUATIONS VACANT
SITUATIONS VACANT
Administration Manager
We are seeking applications from someone special to our staff. Ideally, we would like to hear from you if you enjoy working as part of a friendly busy team environment and: • Have previous experience which would be an asset to our office • Are versatile, and have a sense of loyalty and commitment • Microsoft Office is quite familiar to you and your skills with spelling and data entry are excellent • You have some knowledge of health and medical terminology • Can work rostered weekends and Public Holidays and occasional evenings • Have a can-do attitude with a great sense of humour. All applicants must be legally entitled to work in New Zealand. Please send your CV with a covering letter in your own handwriting to: The Manager Tinwald Medical Centre 33 Archibald Street, Ashburton 7700 manager@tinwaldmed.co.nz Applications close at noon Tuesday, October 29, 2019.
Over the last 30 years Bradford Precast has established itself as the leading architectural precast company in the South Island, and first choice nominated supplier for many of New Zealand’s leading architects, engineers and building contractors. Having recently become part of Busck Prestressed Concrete Ltd has only served to enhance this reputation in the New Zealand building industry, and we are currently looking for a skilled, motivated individual to join our Management Team in a multi-faceted role:
Requirements:
• Human Resources – Staff Recruiting, Inductions, Records, Immigration applications and Training. • Accounts – Code, Authorise and Record. • Purchasing and control of small plant, consumables and staff PPE. • General Administration duties working with the General Manager and Management Team. • Manufacturing or Construction background would be advantageous. • Self-motivated, a team player, able to develop relationships across a broad spectrum of people, and enjoys a challenge.
Benefits:
• Opportunity to develop this role and grow in a progressive organisation. • Competitive remuneration based on skills and performance. • Stability, and job satisfaction from working for one of the most respected companies in the industry. • Standard hours 7.30am to 5.00pm.
Bradford Precast (a Division of Busck Prestressed Concrete Ltd) has a strict Drug & Alcohol Policy, and all applicants must be able to pass a pre-employment test, as well as being subject to ongoing random testing. www.experiencemidcanterbury.co.nz
Greg Fleming Bradford Precast General Manager
307 7900
gregf@bradfordprecast.co.nz
Wanted a sporting all rounder who wants to be a star…. The Ashburton Guardian has an opportunity for a passionate reporter to make their mark in the world of sport. We’re looking for someone who lives for sport – all codes, who is keen to get to know the triers, the grinders the good teams and the sporting stars of the Ashburton District. You’ll be a one-person sports team, among an editorial team of experienced journalists, covering everything from representative rugby and netball, right down to primary school’s football and hockey. The Guardian is a progressive, six-day a week newspaper in the heart of a sporting strong hold. Our sports coverage is one of the cornerstones of the business. Our readers are passionate players, watchers and arm-chair critics who love nothing more than reading a good yarn about local sporting stars or teams. Sport takes place at any time on any given day, so you’ll be flexible with your working hours and willing to go above and beyond the call of duty to provide the sports coverage that the paper requires. You’ll also get the opportunity to swing one of our cameras around from time to time too. Weekend work in this role is a given, but that does mean that you’ll get time off during the week to enjoy everything our district has to offer. That could mean that in Winter you are on the slopes within an hour of raising your head from the pillow or in summer out on the lake after just a 10-minute drive. If you think you could be the sporting star we are looking for, then we would love to hear from you. Send us an application letter along with your CV, telling us about your passion for sport and what you could bring to the Guardian team. Please send your application, along with CV to Matt Markham by e-mail: matt.m@theguardian.co.nz or post to Box 77, Ashburton 7740. Applications close, November 1.
We are looking for a fit Sales Rep to visit our customers around Canterbury and to back-load feed. One or two days per week. A class 2 licence is needed to drive our truck. Knowledge of harness racing a big asset. Some shop work is required on harness race meetings days at the Ashburton racecourse. To apply send CV or contact Chris before Wednesday, October 23. PO Box 559, Ashburton 7740
MORRISONS SADDLERY & FEED
Guardian Job Vacancies
Written applications (CV and cover letter) to be emailed to:
Sports Reporter
Sales Rep
Receptionist/Administrator
• Human Resources, Purchasing and Accounts Role. • Ashburton Based.
For more on Ashburton and Mid Canterbury:
SITUATIONS VACANT
TINWALD MEDICAL CENTRE
Web Administrator Wanted KiwiCorp Products Ltd is a company that believes in the unique factor of “Kiwi ingenuity” that provides the best quality New Zealand made products in skincare, health, confectionery and wool bedding. Our products are proudly made in New Zealand and are now sold worldwide. We are now looking for an experienced Web Administrator to technically develop, maintain and support our external website and internal portal. The ideal candidate will need to meet the following requirements: 1. Relevant qualification or at least 3 years’ relevant work experience. 2. Proficiency in PHP, ASPX, HTML 5, JavaScript, CSS and Database design. 3. Proven knowledge in e-commerce including Google Ads, Facebook Ads and Twitter Ads etc. 4. Proficiency in Google Analytics tracking code, Yotpo, SEO and EDM. 5. Good Experience in managing Shopify, Joomla framework. 6. Bilingual in English and Mandarin in order to manage dual language system. 7. Effective communication skills.
Recreation Assistants Fixed-term December School Holidays Working in our purpose built facility, we have a number of roles available for fixed-term work during the summer school holidays. We’re looking for outgoing people who are creative and motivating and able to ensure participants on our school holiday programmes are safe at all times. To find out more about these vacancies and what the Ashburton District Council has to offer you - visit our website. Applications close Wednesday, 23 October 2019.
www.ashburtondc.govt.nz/careers
Please send your CV to: PO Box 52, Ashburton Or email: info@kiwicorp.co.nz
Field Rep Part Time Agstaff is looking for a Part Time Field Rep on an as required basis. The role would include being a client and staff liaison, and involves staff training, health and safety, and quality control.
Property Officer
If you have a proven track record in the agricultural industry, enjoy networking, and ability to deal with people?
This is not another real estate role, but a rare opportunity. We’re looking for an experienced property professional or graduate to join our Commercial team.
This job may be for you.
You’ll gain practical experience with a diverse property portfolio worth over $120m ranging from public reserves to industrial business estates in an environment which expects and rewards results.
May suit someone semi-retired, or wanting to step back from a full-time industry environment. Phone Andrew on 021 502 484 or email andrew@agstaff.co.nz
To find out more about these vacancies and what the Ashburton District Council has to offer you - visit our website. Applications close Wednesday, 23 October 2019.
www.ashburtondc.govt.nz/careers 73St, Burnett Ashburton Members I.B.A.N.Z & & Brokernet Ltd. NZ Ltd. LevelSt, 2, 73 St,|Ashburton Members of NZBrokers I.B.A.N.Z & NZ Brokernet 2, 73 Level Burnett Ashburton | Members of|of I.B.A.N.Z Level Level 2, 73 Burnett St,2, Ashburton |Burnett Members of I.B.A.N.Z & Brokernet NZ Ltd.
www.visioninsurance.co.nz
Level 2, 73 Burnett St, Ashburton | Members of I.B.A.N.Z & Brokernet NZ Ltd.
Guardian Classifieds
307 7900
Classifieds www.guardianonline.co.nz PUBLIC NOTICES
Saturday, October 19, 2019
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES
Ashburton District Council 2019 Triennial Elections DECLARATION OF RESULT
ENTRY ON THE NEW ZEALAND HERITAGE LIST NOTICE is hereby given under Section 73 of the Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Act 2014 of the entry on the New Zealand Heritage List/Rārangi Kōrero of:
The final result for the Ashburton District Council elections held on Saturday 12th October is as follows. Mayoralty
Mount Hutt Road Board Office (Former), METHVEN, List No. 9616
TOOL COLLECTOR Cash buyer wanting woodworking tools, saws, brass and wooden braces and planes, levels, metal and wooden vices, tac hammers, scribes, hand drills, screw drivers, plumb bobs, clamps, tool chests, oil tins. Also old garden tools - spades, shovels, pitch forks, wooden wheel barrow. Phone 021 051 7307. WANTED to hire a small caravan for two adults Thursday, November 14 to Sunday, November 17, Christchurch show weekend. Phone 027 307 8589 or text.
TRADES, SERVICES
4,446
TODD, Tony FAVEL, Donna BRAAM, Leen
3,753 2,400 1,435 15 67
Western Ward (2 vacancies)
Votes Received
MCMILLAN, Liz LETHAM, Rodger
1,453 1,072
CHISNALL, Evan
1,057
INFORMAL BLANK VOTING PAPERS
0 46
Rodger LETHAM and Liz MCMILLAN are declared elected.
LIVESTOCK, PETS
PROGRESSIVE LIVESTOCK LTD FOR SALE Hereford/Frsn X Mixed Sex Calves 100kg+ minimum Delivery October Onwards
WANTED 100kg Frsn Bulls Delivery November/December 2019 Contracts Available
AVAILABLE Grazing available 500 ewe hoggets From now until December 2019 Contact
Leighton Nicol – 027 203 3686 www.progressivelivestock.co.nz
RURAL TRADING POST LIVESTOCK, PETS CHAIN harrows (never been used), four large traction engine wagon wheels, two single axle trailers, grain auger. Clearing sale, Racecourse Road, Saturday, October 19, 10am.
BUYER of unwanted animals. Cattle, bobby calves, horses and all farm animals. We also sell pet food. Call Nick’s Pet Food 0272 101 621, A/H 03 348 9439.
DUNCAN 10ft rotocrumbler, good, $1,200. Duncan 15 tyne grubber, good, $1,000. Duncan 701 seed drill, good, eclipse box, $1,500. Harrows three set, $400. Cambridge roller, good, 10ft 6”, $1,400. Dog kennell with cage, $80. Clough five furrow plough, $800. Dutch harrows/leveller, $300. Generator 8K as new, $500. All plus GST. Phone 302 1727 or 027 419 6464.
ACCESSORY sale today Pre-loved homeware and fashion items. October 17, 18 and 19, 10am-4pm at 200 East Street. Ashburton County Lions supporting “Lives Worth Living” (youth suicide prevention) and other youth groups.
COMPUTER PROBLEMS?? For professional computer servicing and laser engraving, see Kelvin at KJB Systems, 4 Ascot Place. Phone 308 8989. Locally owned and serving Ashburton for 30 years. Same day service MOTORING alignments at if possible. Supergold WHEEL discount card welcomed. great prices. Maximise the life of your tyres with an alignment from Neumanns Tyre Services Ltd, 197 Wills Street. Phone 308 6737.
73 Burnett St, Ashburton
BROWN, Neil
Neil BROWN is declared elected.
Contact Heritage New Zealand for a copy of the report or go to www.heritage.org.nz.
WANTED
Votes Received
INFORMAL BLANK VOTING PAPERS
as a Category 2 historic place. This entry will take effect from 16/10/2019.
Sheila Watson Director Southern
Ashburton Guardian 25
Needing a new staff member?
GARAGE SALES
MOVING sale. Everything must go. Mini oven new, jigsaws, books, TV trolley, DVDs, kids clothing, blind new, knitting wool, knitting patterns, dishes and much more. Saturday, October 19, 62 Harland Street, 9am.
Call the Guardian today for your situation vacant advertising requirements.
307 7900
Southern Black-Backed Gull Control Operation in Upper Rakaia November - January 2019 - 2020 From November to January 2020, the Department of Conservation, Geraldine District, intend to apply Alpha-chloralose Powder (Technical Grade) mixed with margarine and applied to a bread bait and hand laid directly within gull colonies within the following areas of public land to control Blackbacked gulls.
Raukapuka/Geraldine Office Aerial & Ground Herbicide Spraying Programme Description of Area
Black-backed gull control will take place on Department Conservation, publicThe land known asofthe Upper Rakaia River Raukapuka/Geraldine Office advises valley area. Location is approx 24km NW of the start of its aerial and ground Methven township, in the Upper Rakaia River herbicide spraying for 200ha above the gorge bridgeprogramme - being approx the purposes of weed control as per in size. Resource Consent CRC110419.
Method of Control Location is the only poison currently Alpha-chloralose
Spraying take place land registered forwillcontrol of onSouthern blackadministered the Department and backed gulls. Thebyaction of Alpha chloralose, LINZ within the Ashburton Lakes and which is a narcotic, is to make gulls drowsy, Upper Rangitata and Upper Rakaia which in turn makes them susceptible to death Rivers between 21 September 2015 by hypothermia. It has previously been used and 30 June 2017 as required. This with success in the Mackenzie Basin and other notice also covers weed control on areas of New Zealand to rapidly reduce colony conservation land managed by the size. Raukapuka/Geraldine Office outside The the pesticide used in this operation can be areas mentioned above. harmful to humans and domestic animals.
Method Always remember: Aerialtouch spraying DO NOT any will baitbe only of proprietary formulations containing WATCH CHILDREN at all times the herbicides Glyphosate or Triclopyr DO NOT BRINGamine DOGS intoas this triethylene (TEA) thearea active ingredient. The only additives to DO NOT EAT animals from this area these herbicide formulations will DO NOT touch sandwich baits. be surfactants and dyes added in Observe thesewith rules whenever you see accordance the manufacturer’s warning signs for pesticides. instructions. For more information contact: For further information regarding this Department of Conservation, programme please contact: Geraldine District Office Liz Gunning Telephone: 03 693 1010 Department of the Conservation A detailed map of treatment area may be Raukapuka/Geraldine Office viewed on the DOC website www.doc.govt. Geraldine nz under the Canterbury Pesticide Summary Phone 03 693 1010 section, and is available from the Geraldine District Office, North Terrace, Geraldine.
Eastern Ward (2 vacancies)
Votes Received
LOVETT, Lynette WILSON, Stuart
1,322 1,226
MALCOLM, Mark RUSHTON, Philip Arthur
819 518
INFORMAL BLANK VOTING PAPERS
0 73
Lynette LOVETT and Stuart WILSON are declared elected. Ashburton Ward (5 vacancies)
Votes Received
BRAAM, Leen FALLOON, John CAMERON, Carolyn RAWLINSON, Diane MCKAY, Angus
4,690 4,567 3,819 3,695 3,478
PRICE, Selwyn BELL, Thelma SHAH, Ash CASTLE-WILSON, Rochelle
3,386 3,377 1,849 1,664
INFORMAL BLANK VOTING PAPERS
44 144
Leen BRAAM, Carolyn CAMERON, John FALLOON, Angus MCKAY and Diane RAWLINSON are declared elected. Ashburton Licensing Trust (6 vacancies) PATERSON, Roger QUINN, Chantelle BREAKWELL, Kieran SILVA, Tim HARNETT, Robert Anthony ROBERTSON, Chris CLOUGH, Kerry MALCOLM, Mark SHAH, Ash
Independent
Independent
INFORMAL BLANK VOTING PAPERS
Votes Received 6,553 5,764 5,433 5,277 4,884 4,643 4,074 3,787 2,486 9 524
Kieran BREAKWELL, Robert Anthony HARNETT, Roger PATERSON, Chantelle QUINN, Chris ROBERTSON and Tim SILVA are declared elected. The voter return was 55.06%, being 12,038 votes, excluding special votes. Anthony Morton Electoral Officer Ashburton District Council 16 October 2019
FOR SALE SCOOTERS - new and secondhand three and four wheel-electric scooters and wheel-chairs. Call Fred Reddecliffe at Electric Mobility Ashburton today. Phone 308 3602.
Call the Guardian for all your motoring advertising requirements. 307 7900
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT AMAZING Asian. Sexy body, busty 38DD, curly, naughty. Exciting time. Good massage. Phone 022 470 1840. BACK in town, 100 per cent Kiwi, size 12, adventurous, back door. Phone 021 205 5145. NEW Asian. Gorgeous, sexy, size 8, busty 40DD. Playful. Good massage. Phone 021 0248 8519. NEW to town, Asian ladies, size 8, sexy body, 34DD, busty. Chinese prostrate massage. Two girls available. In/out calls. Phone 021 046 4314.
For all subscriber enquiries, missed deliveries, new subscriptions, temporary stops – text, call or email:
Text 021 271 3399 Phone 0800 274 287 Email circulation@ theguardian.co.nz
Classifieds 26 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
BUSINESS WANTED/SELL
Great Opportunity to Buy Kitchen Express
$175,000
Today’s construction is tomorrow’s legacy Housing Commercial Farm Renovations
Link Business Christchurch Ltd - Licensed REAA08
Ashburton No need to be a joiner to buy this business. More important is marketing and sales skills with a passion to help people when they are making an important choice as kitchens are generally the center piece of their home. • Easy to manage franchised business • Purchaser will receive vendor/franchisor training • Centrally based and well known in Ashburton • The business operates 5.5 days a week • All staff, tradesmen, systems and procedures are in place for the purchaser Don’t miss out on this opportunity – vendor only works about 25 hours per week. linkbusiness.co.nz/CS00478 Anika Gamba 022 560 3241 anika.gamba@linkbusiness.co.nz
Contact Des anytime for an obligation free quote on 03 308 9936 or 027 432 3258
Lifestyle New Season Men’s and Women’s instore now
CONNECTIONS
From
$25 We service and repair all makes and models of sewing machines and overlockers RRP: $2,599
Weekdays 9 – 5.30 • Saturday 10 – 2 • Sunday by appointment East Street, Ashburton - Phone 308 5771 - www.sparrows.co.nz
Open 7 Days | P 03 307 6277 | Main South Road, Tinwald | www.anniesquilts.co.nz
To advertise here contact Neil on 021 272 2399 or 03 307 7907 Moore Street Medical Centre, Moore Street, Ashburton, will be the duty practice for Saturday until 8am Sunday. Consultations will be by appointment only. To make a booking please phone 0800 700 155.
Weekend Services
MEDICAL SERVICES
IN EVENT OF AN EMERGENCY PHONE 111. For all other medical assistance outside of normal hours, please phone your General Practice team, 24/7, to speak with a health professional who will give you free health advice on what to do or where to go if you need urgent care If you don’t have a regular General Practice, call any GP team 24/7 for free telephone health advice.
DUTY DOCTORS
Pharmacies
Art Gallery
COLDSTREAM HOUSE, CAMERON COURTS and PRINCES COURT all have DAILY, unrestricted visiting.
327 West Street, Ashburton, phone 308 1133. Open daily: 10am – 4pm, Wednesday: 10am – 7pm
Emergency Dentist
Ashburton Museum
Dog, Stock & Noise Control
327 West Street, Ashburton, phone 307 7890. Open daily: 10am – 4pm
If you do not have or cannot contact your regular dentist, please phone 027 683 0679 for the name of the rostered weekend dentist in Christchurch. Hours 9am - 5pm, Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays.
S
Mental Health - Call free on 0800 222 955.
For weekend and emergency services please phone Methven Medical Centre on 302 8105 or Rakaia Medical Centre on 303 5002 for details on how to access the after-hours service each weekend.
Support. Phone 03 364 8791
Healthline is a free health advice service. It operates
Victims Support Group
Ask for the Crisis Team.
Safe Care - 24hr Rape and Sexual Assault Crisis 24hr - Freephone 0800 VICTIM (0800 842 846). Direct dials to a volunteer. Ashburton Office - 307 8409 week-days, 9am - 2pm, outside of these hours leave a message.
Alcohol Drug Help Line
Call us free on (0800 787 797). Lines open 10am - 10pm seven days.
Toll-free: 0800 353 353.
Bus Departures
Ashburton Rest Homes
H
24 hours a day, seven days a week. The toll-free number to call is 0800 611 116. Healthline is staffed by registered nurses who are trained to assess health problems and offer advice over the phone. The service is free and confidential.
Lifeline
Reservations & timetables, 24-hour service. Freephone for reservations: 0800 802 802. BUSES - Southbound: 9.30am, 3.20pm. Northbound: 12.30pm, 5.10pm.
Wises Pharmacy, Countdown Complex, East Street, will be open from 9am - 1pm Saturday, from 10am - 1pm Sunday and from 5pm - 7pm both evenings.
Three Rivers Health, Allens Road, Ashburton, will be the duty practice for Saturday and Sunday until 8am Monday. Please call ahead for an appointment. ELPLINE ERVICES Please bring your Community Services Card. All non Alcoholics Anonymous New Zealanders should bring their passport with them, Call 0800 AA WORKS (0800 229 6757) New Zealanders should bring some form of ID. or visit www.aa.org.nz for more information.
Methven & Rakaia Area
DIAL 111 in the event of a Medical or Accident Emergency
COMMUNITY SERVICES
Ashburton Public Library
ANIMAL SERVICES Ashburton District Council 03 307 7700 - 24hr service.
Animal Welfare Centre
All enquiries - phone 308 4432 or 027 3329286.
Havelock Street. Ph 308 7192. Saturday: 10am - 1pm. Sunday: 1pm - 4pm.
Mid Canterbury Animal Shelter
EA Networks Centre - Pools
Veterinarians
Contact - President 021 1356 969.
20 River Terrace - phone 03 308 4020. WEEKEND HOURS: ASHBURTON VETS - Ph 0276 838 000, Sat and Sun 7am - 7pm. Public holidays 10am - 5pm. 149 Cameron Street, Ashburton: Duty vet: Ben Hallenstein. Full emergency service all weekend. Mail Closing Times ASHBURTON MAIL CENTRE VET ENT RIVERSIDE - Ph 03 308 2321, STANDARD POST: Mon - Fri 6pm 1 Smallbone Drive, Ashburton. Saturday clinic: 9am - 12 noon. Weekend 24-hour emergencies. POST DELIVERY CENTRES Allenton & Tinwald: Mon - Fri 5pm VETLIFE ASHBURTON - Ph 03 307 5195, Methven & Rakaia: Mon - Fri 4.30pm Cnr East Street and Seafield Road, Ashburton. Saturday clinic: 9am - 12 noon. Weekend 24-hour emergencies. ASHBURTON’S STREET RECEIVERS Business Area: Mon - Fri 5pm CANTERBURY VETS - Ph 03 307 0686, Residential Area: Mon - Fri 1pm West Street Clinic, West Street, Ashburton. Saturday clinic: 9am - 12 noon. Weekend emergencies: Steve Williams. Information Centre Vet Ent and Vet Life operate a joint after-hours SMALL Methven - Saturday, Sunday and public holidays 10am until 3pm. Phone 302-8955 or isite@midcanterburynz.com animal emergency service. To use this service please phone your vet as usual.
Trades & Services To place a Trades & Services ad, call 307-7900 or email classifieds@theguardian.co.nz
TALBOT SECURITY GROUP
TALBOT SECURITY GROUP Home and Business Solutions • • • •
OCAL
100% L
Alarm Installation Alarm Servicing Alarm Monitoring Alarm Response
Book your high windows in today
E - operations@talbotsecurity.co.nz phone 03 307 2409 anytime 24/7
“we clean to a standard, not a price”
• regular full house cleans • one off spring cleans • farm houses • builders cleans • floor buffing • All staff are police vetted •Able to travel out of town
03 307 2656 | www.ashburtoncleaning.co.nz
Mobile Mower servicing • Rotary Mowers • Ride-on Mowers • Water Blasters • Small Motor Repairs
• Reel Mowers • Chainsaws • Rotary Hoes • Generators
Stan Keeley, Owner
Ph 307 0002 - Mobile 021 88 34 36 Keeping your property protected with a security camera system from Masterguard Protect your biggest asset with a home security camera package from Masterguard Call me today for a free, no obligation quote
CALL GROUTPRO (MARK OR BRETT) FOR AN HONEST DISCUSSION ABOUT YOUR GROUT AND TILE AFTERCARE
To deal with Dirty Tiles and Grout CALL GROUTPRO WE HELP YOU KEEP ON TOP OF YOUR SHOWER AND TILE MAINTENANCE
• Tile shower makeovers • Professional tile and grout cleaning • Re-colouring existing grout
• Sealing and repairing/replacing tiles/grout • Replacing mouldy and tired silicon
WE TRANSFORM TILES/GROUT IN BATHROOMS, KITCHENS, SHOWERS, BALCONIES, CONSERVATORIES AND ANY TILED AREA
Hartley Curd phone 0800 788 393 or 021 328 301 57 Dobson Street, Ashburton.
Ashburton SOMETIMES IT CAN FEEL A BIT CRAMPED IN YOUR CURRENT SURROUNDINGS. NOW MAY BE THE PERFECT TIME TO LOOK AT SOMETHING NEW!
THERESA HISLOP
Salesperson Licensed by the REA 2008 027 514 1330 | 03 307 4222 | EMAIL THERESA@FNASH.CO.NZ
Contact GroutPro Brett Muir or Mark Butler for a quote and an upfront honest discussion.
0508 422 532
www.groutpro.co.nz
TALBOT SECURITY GROUP Key Cutting Solutions • • • • •
Key Reprogramming House Keys Transponder Car Keys Car Remotes Car Keys
E - operations@talbotsecurity.co.nz P - 03 307 2409 anytime 24/7
SBW developments ltd trading as First National Ashburton licensed (REA) act 2008
HEAT PUMPS KEEP YOUR HOME THE PERFECT TEMPERATURE ALL YEAR ROUND
Your Specialist CARPET CLEANERS
HEAT PUMPS
electriCOOL Ltd Phone Paul Crequer, your local authorised Daikin dealer for a free quote on all domestic and commercial systems phone 0274 362 362 or 308 4573.
* Offer expires end of November 2019
Television 28 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Saturday, October 19, 2019 TVNZ 1
TVNZ 2
©TVNZ 2019
6am Te Karere 3 News and current affairs from a Maori perspective. 2 0 6:30 Country Calendar 3 Daring to Dream. 0 7am Pound Pups To Dog Stars 3 0 7:30 Infomercials 9am Whanau Living 3 0 9:30 Tagata Pasifika 10am Tipping Point 3 11:05 Restaurant SOS 3 0 12:05 Call The Midwife PGR 3 0 1:20 Coast v Country 0 2:25 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It PGR 3 0 3:30 Fantasy Homes By The Sea 0 4:30 Fishing And Adventure Scott and Mig head out from Auckland in their centre console. 0 5pm The Chase 0 6pm 1 News At 6pm 0 7pm MasterChef Australia 0 8:10 Dinner Date 0 9:10 M In The Heart Of The Sea AO 2015 Action Adventure. In 1820, after a whaling ship is attacked by a huge whale, and destroyed, the crew resorts to drastic measures to survive. Chris Hemsworth, Brendan Gleeson, Cillian Murphy. 0 11:30 Rugby – World Cup (DLY) Quarter-final – All Blacks v Ireland. From Tokyo Stadium in Tokyo, Japan. 0 3:30 Infomercials
Casper
3:30pm on Three
BRAVO 10am How To Look Good Naked – USA PGR 3 10:30 Million Dollar Listing NY 3 11:30 Million Dollar Listing NY 3 12:30 Masters Of Flip 3 1:30 Masters Of Flip 3 2:35 Catfish 3 3:30 Catfish 3 4:30 The People’s Court 3 5:30 The People’s Court 3 6:30 Million Dollar Listing NY 7:30 Botched PGR 3 8:30 Keeping Up With The Kardashians AO Khloe receives news about her relationship just before her due date; Kim worries Khloe’s delivery will be on the day of her high-school reunion; Scott and Kendall team up for some extreme sports. 9:30 Killer Couples AO 3 10:30 Cults And Extreme Belief AO 3 11:30 Catfish 3
Sunday
12:15 Infomercials 3 5am Masters Of Flip 3
©TVNZ 2019
THREE
PRIME
6am The Wot Wots 3 0 6:20 The Wiggles, Emma! 0 6:30 PJ Masks 3 0 6:55 The Insectibles 3 0 7:05 Be Cool Scooby Doo! 0 7:50 Transformers Cyberverse 0 8:15 Star Wars Rebels 0 8:40 Justice League 0 9am We Bare Bears 0 9:10 Dragon Ball Super PGR 0 9:35 The Simpsons 3 0 10am F Fresh 10:30 AP Bio PGR 3 0 11am Suburgatory PGR 3 0 11:30 8 Simple Rules 3 0 Noon God Friended Me PGR 3 0 12:55 American Housewife 1:25 Car Crash TV 1:55 Renters PGR 3 0 2:25 America’s Funniest Home Videos 3 0 3pm My Restaurant Rules 3 0 5pm The Crystal Maze 0 6pm The 100k Drop 0 7pm M A Knight’s Tale PGR 2001 Action Comedy. A peasant squire takes on the identity of his master when the knight dies. 0 8pm L Lotto 8:05 A Knight’s Tale PGR Continued. 0 9:20 M The November Man AO 2014 Action. 0
6am Charles Stanley 6:30 The Project 3 7:25 Infomercials 9:30 NewsHub Nation 0 10:30 Slice Of Paradise 3 0 11:30 9JKL PGR (Starting Today) 3 11:55 Married At First Sight NZ PGR 3 0 1:25 F Married At First Sight NZ PGR 3 2:30 Carnage 3:30 M Casper PGR 3 1995 Fantasy. A parapsychologist’s lonely daughter is befriended by Casper the friendly ghost, but his brothers are not so friendly. Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman. 0 5:30 HelloWorld Weekly journeys across the globe. 6pm NewsHub Live At 6pm
11:25 M 3 Days To Kill AO 2014 Action. A dying CIA agent is enticed to go on one last mission with the promise of an experimental drug that could prolong his life. 0 1:30 M Final Vision AO 2017 Crime. 3am The Bachelorette PGR 3 0 4:35 Home Improvement 3 0 5:05 Fresh 3 5:30 Masterstroke
11:35 M Hush Little Baby AO 3 2017 Thriller. A working mother needs someone to look after her new baby, and hires her neighbour as nanny. At first he seems ideal, but his obsession with them soon becomes threatening. Bradley Smith, Erin Cahill, Jake Manley. 0 1:35 Infomercials 5am Hillsong TV 5:30 Charles Stanley
Looper
8:30pm on Prime
SKY 5 6am 9JKL PG 6:25 Modern Family PG 6:50 The Simpsons Super Saturday PG 9:35 Modern Family PG 10:05 9JKL PG 10:30 Salvation MV 11:20 72 Dangerous Places To Live MVC 12:10 The Flash MVS 1pm SmackDown Live MVC 3:05 Main Event MV 3:50 Highway Thru Hell PG 4:40 The Simpsons Super Saturday PG 7:30 Modern Family PG 8pm 9JKL PG 8:30 Counting Cars PG 9pm Highway Thru Hell PG 10pm Mountain Men PG 10:50 Classic Pawn Stars PG 11:20 The Simpsons PG 11:50 The Simpsons PG Sunday 12:15 The Simpsons Super Sunday PG 2:15 Counting Cars PG 2:40 The Flash MVS 3:30 Main Event MV 4:20 Mountain Men PG 5:10 Chicago PD 16V
7pm America’s Got Talent 0 8:30 America’s Got Talent 9:30 M 8 Mile AO 3 2002 Drama. Semiautobiographical story of a white rapper trying to escape his roots and make it in the hip-hop scene of Detroit. Eminem, Kim Basinger, Brittany Murphy, Mekhi Phifer. 0
CHOICE
6:30 Te Ao – Maori News 3 7am Tamariki Haka 3 7:10 Pukoro 2 7:40 Kainga Whakapaipai 3 7:50 Polyfest Kapa Haka 3 8:20 Huritua 3 8:30 Pukana 3 2 10am Hip Hop – NZ Nationals 3 10:30 Celebrity Playlist 11am School Of Hard Knocks PGR 11:30 School Of Training 3 Noon Waka Ama Sprints 3 1pm Haati Grassroots Rugby 3 2pm Basketball – College Nationals (RPL) 3pm The Pits TV 4pm Marae PGR 3 2 4:30 He Kakano 3 5pm Fresh 5:30 Nga Pari Karangaranga O Te Motu 3 6:30 Te Ao – Maori News
7pm M The Pebble And The 7pm Shipping Wars PGR 0 Penguin 1995 Animated 7:30 Mayday Air Disaster – The Adventure. A lovable but Accident Files PGR 0 introverted penguin plans to 8:30 M Looper AO 2012 Sci-fi. present his betrothal pebble In 2044, a man works for the to the bird of his dreams. Mafia as a ‘looper’, who kills 8:30 M Whiplash AO 2014 victims sent back in time but, Musical Drama. when he is retired, his future self is sent back as a target for 10:30 Te Ao – Maori News 3 his younger self. 0 10:55 The Halcyon AO 3 0 11:55 SAS – Who Dares Wins AO 3 11pm Hunting Aotearoa AO 3 The remaining recruits must undergo 11:30 Closedown the most psychologically demanding phase of the course – resistance to interrogation. 0 12:55 Closedown
MOVIES PREMIERE
MOVIES GREATS
7:25 Breathe MC 2017 Drama. Andrew Garfield. 9:20 Gemini MVL 2018 Thriller. Lola Kirke, Zoe Kravitz. 10:55 Friedkin Uncut 16LC 2018 Documentary. 12:45 Hostiles 16VLC 2018 Drama. Christian Bale, Rosamund Pike. 2:55 How To Break Up With Your Douchebag MSC 2017 Comedy. Mariana Trevino, Camila Sodi. 4:35 Stronger 16VLSC 2017 Drama. Jake Gyllenhaal, Tatiana Maslany. 6:35 Another Kind Of Wedding MLSC 2018 Comedy. Kathleen Turner, Kevin Zegers. 8pm Greta 16VC 2019 Drama. Having recently lost her mother, a woman grows close to a lonely woman, but soon discovers nothing in the woman’s life is what it seems. Chloe Grace Moretz, Isabelle Huppert. 9:40 Ladies In Black PGL 2018 Drama. Julia Ormond, Angourie Rice. 11:30 Ghostland 18VLSC 2018 Horror. Mylene Farmer, Crystal Reed. Sunday 1am Hopeless Romantic MLC 2016 Romantic Comedy. Christa B Allen, Brandon W Jones. 2:25 How To Break Up With Your Douchebag MSC 2017 Comedy. 4:05 Another Kind Of Wedding MLSC 2018 Comedy. 5:30 Greta 16VC 2019 Drama.
7:40 White House Down MVL 2013 Action. Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx. 9:50 8MM 18VLS 1999 Thriller. Nicolas Cage, Joaquin Phoenix. 11:50 SemiPro MLS 2008 Comedy. Will Ferrell, Woody Harrelson. 1:20 The Fifth Estate MVL 2013 Drama. Benedict Cumberbatch. 3:25 The Duchess MS 2008 Drama. Keira Knightley, Ralph Fiennes, Dominic Cooper. 5:15 The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button MLS 2008 Drama. Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett. 8pm The Hangover 16LSC 2009 Comedy. When three friends meet for a weekendlong bachelor party in Las Vegas, they think they had a good time, but cannot remember, and realise they have lost the groom. Bradley Cooper. 9:40 Django Unchained 16VL 2012 Western. Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio.
Sunday
MAORI
6am The Powerpuff Girls 3 0 6:25 Kung Fu Panda – Legends Of Awesomeness 3 0 6:50 Max Steel 3 0 7:15 Hank Zipzer, The World’s Greatest Underachiever 3 0 7:40 Danny Phantom 3 8:05 Teen Titans 0 8:30 Batman – The Animated Series 0 9am Justice League Unlimited PGR 10am SmackDown AO 3 11am Raw AO 3 Noon The Crowd Goes Wild 3 1pm Celebrity Antiques Road Trip 2pm Pawn Stars 3 2:30 Rugby – Mitre 10 Cup (DLY) 4:30 Hot Bench 3 5pm Fishing Classics 0 5:30 Prime News 6pm Antiques Roadshow 0
12:25 Superbad 16LSC 2007 Comedy. Jonah Hill, Seth Rogan, Emma Stone. 2:20 Darkness Falls MVL 2003 Horror. Chaney Kley, Emma Caulfield. 3:45 The Duchess MS 2008 Drama. Keira Knightley, Ralph Fiennes, Dominic Cooper. 5:35 The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button MLS 2008 Drama. Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett.
SKY SPORT 1 7:40 L Premiership Cup Bristol Bears v Bath Rugby. From Ashton Gate. 10am Mainfreight Rugby 11am Kick-Off 11:30 Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Bay of Plenty v Manawatu. Noon L Farah Palmer Cup Semi-final – Auckland v Wellington. From Eden Park in Auckland. 2pm L Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Tasman v Auckland. From Lansdowne Park, Blenheim. 4:15 L Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Hawke’s Bay v Otago. From McLean Park, Napier. 6:30 L Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Wellington v Canterbury. From Westpac Stadium, Wellington. 9pm Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Bay of Plenty v Manawatu. 9:30 Mitre 10 Cup Semi-final – Tasman v Auckland. 10:30 Big In Japan Matchday 11:10 Mitre 10 Cup Flashback 11:30 Big In Japan Matchday Sunday 12:10 Mitre 10 Cup 1am Big In Japan Matchday 1:35 Mitre 10 Cup Flashback 2am Big In Japan Matchday 2:35 Mitre 10 Cup Flashback 2:55 L Premiership Cup Saracens v Northampton Saints. From Allianz Park. 5am L Top 14 Brive v Bordeaux. From Stade Amedee-Domenech.
0 Closed captions; 3 Repeat; 2 Maori Language; HLS Highlights; RPL Replay; DLY Delayed. CLASSIFICATIONS: 16/18 Approved for persons 16/18 years or over; AO Adults only; C Content may offend; L Language may offend; M Suitable for mature audiences; PG/PGR Parental guidance recommended for young viewers; S Sexual content may offend; V Contains violence. Local Radio: NewsTalk ZB 873AM/98.1FM FM Classic Hits ZEFM 92.5; Port FM Local 94.9, 98.9 and 106.1
6am Tiny House Hunting 6:30 Restoration Man 7:30 Antarctica Ice Station Rescue 8:30 Big Dreams, Small Spaces 9:30 Mysteries At The Museum 10:30 James Martin’s American Adventure 11:30 American Pickers 12:30 Restoration Man 1:30 Escape To The Chateau – DIY 2:30 Big Dreams, Small Spaces 3:30 Ocean Parks 4:30 French Food Safari A celebration of French cuisine, filmed around Australia and France. 5pm Food Safari – Water Scallop diver Paulie Polacco harvests queen scallops off Kangaroo Island. 5:30 Best Cake Wins 6pm Cesar Millan’s Dog Nation
7pm Storage Wars – New York The buyers go to Harlem, where Joe P drops a pretty penny on a furniture unit. 7:30 American Pickers 8:30 Antiques Roadshow 9:30 Guy Martin’s Spitfire
11pm Discovering… The Police 11:30 Breaking The Magician’s Code – Magic’s Biggest Secrets Finally Revealed AO 12:30 Best Cake Wins 1am French Food Safari 1:30 Food Safari – Water 2am Make My Body Better 3am Ocean Parks 4am Cesar Millan’s Dog Nation 5am Antiques Roadshow
SKY SPORT 2 7:40 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Thunder. 8:10 Sri Lanka v Blackcaps (HLS) Second Test, Day Five. 9:05 Blackcaps v England 2018 (HLS) First ODI. 9:30 Blackcaps v England 2018 (HLS) Fourth ODI. 9:55 Women’s Big Bash (RPL) Sixers v Thunder. 12:50 England v Blackcaps 2015 (HLS) Second Test, Day One. 1:20 England v Blackcaps 2015 (HLS) Second Test, Day Two. 1:50 England v Blackcaps 2015 (HLS) Second Test, Day Three. 2:20 England v Blackcaps 2015 (HLS) Second Test, Day Four. 2:50 England v Blackcaps 2015 (HLS) Second Test, Day Five. 3:20 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Thunder. 3:50 India v South Africa (HLS) Second Test, Day Five. 4:50 L India v South Africa Third Test, Day One. From JSCA International Stadium, Ranchi. Sunday 12:30 Sri Lanka v Blackcaps (HLS) First Test, Day Five. 1:30 Sri Lanka v Blackcaps (HLS) Second Test, Day Five. 2:20 The Ashes – England v Australia (HLS) Third Test, Day Four. 3:20 T20 World Cup Qualifiers (HLS) Hong Kong v Ireland. 3:50 T20 World Cup Qualifiers (HLS) Oman v UAE. 4:20 L T20 World Cup Qualifiers Ireland v UAE. From Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi. 19Oct19
DISCOVERY 6:35 How It’s Made PG 7:05 How Do They Do It? PG 7:30 Gold Rush PG 9:10 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 10am Aussie Gold Hunters PG 10:50 Aussie Gold Hunters PG Episode 13. 11:40 Aussie Salvage Squad PG Christopher the Winch Beast. 12:30 Expedition Unknown PG Deciphering the Last Nazi Code. 1:20 Aussie Lobster Men PG 2:10 Fast N’ Loud PG Beyond Reasonable Scout. 3pm Outback Opal Hunters PG 3:50 Weather Gone Viral PG 4:45 Weather Gone Viral PG 5:40 Weather Gone Viral PG 6:35 BattleBots PG A Bull in a Bot Shop. 7:30 Nasa’s Unexplained Files PG Earth’s Secret Aliens. 8:30 Houdini’s Last Secrets PG Siberian Prison Conspiracy. 9:25 Deadliest Catch PG Devil’s Cut. 10:15 The Day I Ran China PG 11:05 BattleBots PG A Bull in a Bot Shop. 11:55 How It’s Made PG
Sunday
12:20 How Do They Do It? PG 12:45 Strange Evidence PG 1:35 Weather Gone Viral M 2:25 Evil Lives Here M 3:15 Murder Chose Me M 4:05 American Monster M 4:55 Murder Calls M 5:45 Killer Instinct With Chris Hansen M
metservice.com | Compiled by
Television www.guardianonline.co.nz
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Ashburton Guardian 29
Sunday, October 20, 2019 TVNZ 1
©TVNZ 2019
TVNZ 2
©TVNZ 2019
THREE
PRIME
MAORI
6am Life TV 6:30 Brian Houston 7am Charles Stanley 8am Life TV Repeat 8:30 Turning Point 9am Andy And Ben Eat The World PGR 3 9:25 Tasty Conversations 3 9:30 The Hui 0 10am NewsHub Nation 3 0 11:05 Around The World With Manu Feildel 3 0 Noon Entertainment Tonight Weekend PGR 1pm Motorsport – Muscle Garage 1:30 Motorsport – Enzed Superstock Teams Championships (HLS) 2:30 Motorsport – Red Bull Air Race World Championship (HLS) 3pm Motorsport – Titans RX 9 (HLS) 4pm Motorsport – Monster Jam (HLS) 5pm Ocean Bounty 0 6pm NewsHub Live At 6pm
6am Religious Programme 7am Nella The Princess Knight 3 0 7:30 Religious Programme 10:30 Sport Box The best of the past week’s sports from New Zealand and around the world. Noon 100 Day Renovation 3 Alex and Rachel look inside the renovation of their 1930s Hibiscus Coast home with interior designer Hamish Dodd. 0 1pm Mainfreight Rugby 2pm Athletics – Great North Run (RPL) 4:30 Rugby Nation 5:30 Prime News 6pm Netball – Constellation Cup (DLY) Game Three – Australia v Silver Ferns. 0
7pm M Star Wars – Rogue 7pm Australian Ninja Warrior 0 One PGR 2016 Sci-fi Action. 8:45 M Tower Heist AO 3 The daughter of an Imperial 2011 Comedy. A group of scientist joins the Rebel blue-collar workers, victims of Alliance in a risky move to a Ponzi scheme, seek revenge steal the Death Star plans. 0 on a Wall Street swindler. 9:30 M Jack Ryan – Shadow Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy. 0 Recruit AO 2014 Action. A CIA 10:50 The Hui 3 0 recruit is caught in a web of intrigue and espionage as he fights to stop a plot against America. 0
7:30 Cruising With Jane McDonald PGR Jane goes on her smallest cruise to date, taking a trip with six passengers aboard a converted trawler around the Isle of Mull in Scotland. 0 8:30 M The Cult Of The Family AO 2019 Documentary. 0 9:45 Basketball – NBL
6am Heavy Rescue 3 0 6:50 Tiny House Nation 3 7:35 Tagata Pasifika 3 0 8am Praise Be 3 8:30 The Big Ward 3 0 9:05 The Curious Mind 3 0 10am Marae PGR 2 0 10:30 Waka Huia 11am Attitude 0 11:30 Fair Go 3 0 11:55 Sunday 3 0 12:55 Coast v Country 0 2pm Outback Truckers PGR 3 0 3pm Rugby – World Cup (RPL) Quarter-final – All Blacks v Ireland. 0 5pm The Family Chase Family teams of four must answer quick-fire questions, with each correct answer earning them $2,000 as they seek to stay one step ahead of the chaser. 0 6pm 1 News At 6pm 0 7pm Country Calendar Thirst for Innovation. 0 7:30 Sunday 0 8:30 The War Of The Worlds PGR 0 10:25 Deep State AO 0
6am Paw Patrol 3 0 6:25 Thomas And Friends 0 6:35 Puppy Dog Pals 3 0 7am Alvinnn!!! And The Chipmunks 3 0 7:10 Chuggington – Little Trainees 3 0 7:15 Powerpuff Girls 0 7:35 N Elena Of Avalor Elena meets a Maruvian ghost named Amaláy who stands watch over the powerful Jewel of Maru. 0 8am What Now? 10am Shortland Street PGR 3 Harper fights her demons; Blue must forgive; Dawn follows her heart. 0 Noon The Bachelorette PGR 0 2pm F The Real O’Neals PGR 0 2:30 Home And Away 3 0 5pm Friends 3 0 6pm The 100k Drop 0
12:35 Attitude 3 0 1:05 Coronation Street Catchup PGR 3 0 3:05 Infomercials
11:40 The Walking Dead 3 0 12:35 M The Exorcist 2 – The Heretic AO 1977 Horror. Richard Burton, Linda Blair, Louise Fletcher. 2:35 America’s Funniest Home Videos 3 2:55 Infomercials 3:30 Quantico AO 3 0 4:15 Masterstroke 4:45 Mike And Molly PGR 3 0 5:30 Infomercials
11:25 NewsHub Nation 3 An in-depth weekly current-affairs show hosted by Simon Shepherd and Emma Jolliff. 0 12:35 Chicago PD AO Olinsky’s daughter is in critical condition after a major warehouse fire, and the team must find out how it began. 1:30 Infomercials
MOVIES PREMIERE 7:10 Ladies In Black PGL 2018 Drama. Julia Ormond, Angourie Rice. 9am Stronger 16VLSC 2017 Drama. Jake Gyllenhaal, Tatiana Maslany. 11am Hopeless Romantic MLC 2016 Romantic The Family Chase Star Wars – Rogue One Comedy. Christa B Allen, 5pm on TVNZ 1 7pm on TVNZ 2 Brandon W Jones. 12:30 Another Kind Of BRAVO SKY 5 Wedding MLSC 2018 Comedy. 6am Counting Cars PG 6am Masters Of 1:55 Nothing But Trailers 6:25 Mountain Men PG Flip 3 6:50 Masters Of M 2:10 Chasing Gold 16VLC 2016 Drama. 3:40 Behold 7:15 NCIS – New Orleans Flip 3 7:40 Masters Of My Heart MV 2018 Drama. MV 8am Main Event MV Flip 3 8:30 Masters Of 5pm Solis PGV 2018 Sci8:45 The Amazing Race Flip 3 9:25 Catfish 3 fi. 6:30 Johnny English PG 9:35 The Flash MVS 10:10 Catfish 3 10:25 Classic Pawn Stars PG Strikes Again PGVL 2018 10:50 Botched PGR 3 Comedy. Rowan Atkinson, 10:55 NCIS – New Orleans 11:40 Love It Or List Ben Miller. 8pm Second MV (Part 2) 11:50 Highway It – Vancouver 3 Act MLSC 2018 Comedy. A Thru Hell PG 12:40 Mountain frustrated 40-year-old woman 12:30 Million Dollar Men PG 1:30 Counting gets the chance to prove to Listing NY 3 1:25 Million Cars PG 2pm The Amazing Madison Avenue that street Dollar Listing NY 3 Race PG 3pm Raw MVC smarts are just as valuable as 2:20 Million Dollar Listing 5:45 SmackDown MVC book smarts. Jennifer Lopez, NY 3 3:10 The People’s 7:30 NCIS – New Orleans MV Vanessa Hudgens. Court 3 4:05 The People’s 9:45 Brothers In Arms MVC The team must foil a plot Court 3 5:05 Dance 2018 Documentary. during the New Orleans Moms 3 6pm Love It 11:15 The Leisure Tricentennial Fleet Week Or List It – Vancouver 3 Seeker MVLSC 2018 celebration. Adventure. Helen Mirren, 7pm M The Mummy AO 3 8:30 NCIS MV Donald Sutherland. 1999 Action. Brendan Fraser, 9:30 NCIS MV Monday 1:05 The Rachel Weisz. 0 10:30 Chicago PD 16V 9:35 M Blue Lagoon 11:25 The Amazing Race PG Joneses Unplugged MC 2017 Romance. 2:30 Chasing – The Awakening AO 3 Monday Gold 16VLC 2016 Drama. 2012 Adventure Romance. 12:15 SmackDown 4am With Great Power – 11:30 Internet Ruined My MVC 1:55 Chicago PD 16V The Stan Lee Story PGV 2010 Life AO 3 11:55 Pregnant 2:45 NCIS – New Orleans MV Documentary. 5:20 The In Heels PGR 3 3:35 The Amazing Race PG Leisure Seeker MVLSC 2018 12:45 Infomercials 3 Adventure. 4:25 NCIS MV 5:10 NCIS MV
CHOICE
6:30 Te Ao – Maori News 3 7am Tamariki Haka 3 7:10 Pukoro 2 7:40 Kainga Whakapaipai 3 7:50 Polyfest Kapa Haka 3 8:20 Huritua 3 8:30 Waka Ama Sprints 3 9am Haka At Home 10am Sidewalk Karaoke PGR 3 10:30 Tangaroa With Pio 3 11am Game Of Bros PGR 3 11:30 Piri’s Tiki Tour PGR 3 Noon Toa – Toa O Aotearoa PGR 3 12:30 IVF World Sprints 3 1pm Touch Rugby – Junior National Championships 3 2pm M The Pebble And The Penguin 1995 Animated Adventure. 3:30 Grid 3 4pm F The Puna 3 4:30 F Waka Man 3 5pm Tagata Pasifika 5:30 Matangi Rau 3 6:30 Te Ao – Maori News 7pm Te Ao With Moana 3 7:30 Occupation Native PGR 8:30 M Tangerines AO 2017 War Drama. 10:10 Te Ao – Maori News 3 10:40 Nanakia PGR 3
11:45 SmackDown AO 11:40 Closedown Programme with a blend of athleticism and entertainment, featuring the WWE SmackDown Live superstars. 12:45 60 Minutes PGR Current affairs from New Zealand and around the world. 1:45 Closedown
MOVIES GREATS
SKY SPORT 1
7am Mitre 10 Cup (HLS) Semifinal – Tasman v Auckland. 7:35 L Top 14 La Rochelle v Racing 92. From Stade Marcel-Deflandre. 9:45 Top 14 (DLY) RC Toulon v Bayonne. Noon Farah Palmer Cup (RPL) Semifinal Two – Hawke’s Bay v Northland. 2pm L Farah Palmer Cup Semifinal – Canterbury v Counties Manukau. 4pm Mainfreight Rugby 4:55 L NRC Semi-final Two – Canberra Vikings v Fijian Drua. From Viking Park, Canberra. 7pm Mitre 10 Cup (HLS) Semi-final – Bay of Plenty v Manawatu. 7:30 Mitre 10 Cup (HLS) Semifinal – Tasman v Auckland. 8pm Farah Palmer Cup (HLS) Semi-final – Auckland v Wellington. 8:30 Rugby Nation 9:30 Top 14 (RPL) Montpellier v Toulouse. 11:30 Farah Palmer Cup (RPL) Semi-final – Canterbury v Monday Counties Manukau. Midnight Charlie’s Monday 1:30 Rugby Angels MV 2000 Action. Nation 2:25 Mitre 10 Cup Drew Barrymore, (HLS) Tasman v Auckland. Cameron Diaz, Lucy Liu. 2:55 L Premiership Cup 1:40 Side Effects MVLS 2013 Wasps v London Irish. Thriller. 3:25 Anchorman From Ricoh Arena. 5am Farah – The Legend Of Ron Palmer Cup (HLS) SemiBurgundy MVLS 2004 Comedy. final – Canterbury v Counties 5am Anchorman 2 – The Manukau. 5:30 Farah Palmer Legend Continues MLS 2014 Cup (HLS) Semi-final – Hawke’s Bay v Northland. Comedy. 8:20 The Hangover 16LSC 2009 Comedy. Bradley Cooper. 10am Django Unchained 16VL 2012 Western. Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio. 12:45 Superbad 16LSC 2007 Comedy. Jonah Hill, Seth Rogan, Emma Stone. 2:40 Side Effects MVLS 2013 Thriller. Rooney Mara, Channing Tatum, Jude Law, Catherine Zeta-Jones. 4:25 Anchorman – The Legend Of Ron Burgundy MVLS 2004 Comedy. Will Ferrell, Christina Applegate. 6pm Anchorman 2 – The Legend Continues MLS 2014 Comedy. Will Ferrell, Paul Rudd. 8pm Batman Begins MV 2005 Adventure. The story of how Bruce Wayne became a crime-fighting superhero, from his privileged childhood to his clash with evil. Christian Bale, Michael Caine. 10:20 Mama MVLC 2013 Horror. Jessica Chastain, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Megan Charpentier.
0 Closed captions; 3 Repeat; 2 Maori Language; HLS Highlights; RPL Replay; DLY Delayed. CLASSIFICATIONS: 16/18 Approved for persons 16/18 years or over; AO Adults only; C Content may offend; L Language may offend; M Suitable for mature audiences; PG/PGR Parental guidance recommended for young viewers; S Sexual content may offend; V Contains violence. Local Radio: NewsTalk ZB 873AM/98.1FM FM Classic Hits ZEFM 92.5; Port FM Local 94.9, 98.9 and 106.1
6am Can I Catch It? 6:30 Through The Bible With Les Feldick 7am Leading The Way 7:30 Ocean Parks 8:30 American Pickers 9:30 Antiques Roadshow 10:30 Better Homes And Gardens Noon Can I Catch It? 12:30 Guy Martin’s Spitfire 2pm Storage Wars – New York 2:30 Where The Wild Men Are With Ben Fogle 3:30 Arctic Secrets 4:30 Heston’s Feast Heston goes back to the 1970s for a feast of Spam fritters, Pot Noodles, and flying saucers as 1970s cuisine, often considered dull, is brought to vivid life. 5:30 Kai Safari 6pm Freedom Riders 6:30 Buying And Selling With The Property Brothers 7:30 American Pickers 8:30 M Brooklyn’s Finest AO 2009 Action. Three unconnected Brooklyn police officers end up at the same dangerous location after very different career paths. Richard Gere, Don Cheadle, Ethan Hawke.
11pm M Jackie AO 2016 Drama. After her husband’s assassination, Jackie Kennedy works to protect her husband’s legacy and carve her place in US history. Natalie Portman, Peter Sarsgaard. 1:30 Heston’s Feast 2:30 Make My Body Better 3:30 Arctic Secrets 4:30 Can I Catch It? 5am Buying And Selling With The Property Brothers
SKY SPORT 2
DISCOVERY
6:35 How It’s Made PG 7:05 How Do They Do It? PG 7:30 Weather Top Tens PG Top Ten Record Setters. 8:20 Expedition Unknown PG 9:10 BattleBots PG A Bull in a Bot Shop. 10am Aussie Lobster Men PG 10:50 Outback Opal Hunters PG 11:40 Gold Rush PG 1:20 Deadliest Catch PG Devil’s Cut. 2:10 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 3pm Aussie Gold Hunters PG 3:50 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 4:45 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 5:40 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 6:35 Aussie Gold Hunters PG 7:30 Blowing Up History PG New discoveries might lead investigators to the legendary group of 300 Spartan warriors who died fighting off a million Monday invading Persians. 12:30 L T20 World Cup Qualifiers Hong Kong v Oman. 8:30 Why We Hate 16 From Sheikh Zayed Cricket 9:25 Outback Opal Hunters Stadium, Abu Dhabi. PG 2:25 T20 World Cup 10:15 Aussie Lobster Men PG Qualifiers (HLS) Ireland v UAE. 11:05 Expedition Unknown 2:55 T20 World Cup PG Deciphering the Last Nazi Qualifiers (HLS) Oman v UAE. Code. 3:30 Women’s Big Bash (RPL) 11:55 How It’s Made PG Thunder v Heat. Monday 12:20 How Do From North Sydney Oval. They Do It? PG 12:45 Naked 4am Women’s Big Bash (HLS) And Afraid M 1:35 Weather Sixers v Heat. Gone Viral M 2:25 Naked 4:30 India v South Africa And Afraid M 3:15 Naked (HLS) Second T20. And Afraid M 4:05 Naked 5am India v South Africa And Afraid M 4:55 Naked (HLS) Third ODI. 5:30 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) And Afraid M 5:45 Naked Sixers v Heat. And Afraid M 7:55 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Heat. 8:25 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Thunder. 8:55 India v South Africa (HLS) Third Test, Day One. 9:55 Women’s Big Bash (RPL) Sixers v Thunder. From North Sydney Oval. 12:50 India v South Africa (RPL) Third Test, Day One. From JSCA International Stadium, Ranchi. 2:50 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Thunder. 3:20 Women’s Big Bash (HLS) Sixers v Heat. 3:50 India v South Africa (HLS) Third Test, Day One. 4:50 L India v South Africa Third Test, Day Two. From JSCA International Stadium Complex, Ranchi.
20Oct19
metservice.com | Compiled by
Guardian
Family Notices
19
18
RANGIORA
LAKE COLERIDGE
Weather
18
18
30 Ashburton Guardian
BIRTHS
IN MEMORIAM DOLBEY, Ngaive Rose – In loving memory of a loved wife, mother and grandmother. Sadly missed by her loving husband Keith, and all her family and her many friends. May the winds of love blow softly, and whisper for you to hear. We will always love and miss you and wish you were here. In the arms of angels.
DEATHS
DEATHS BEBBINGTON, Murray Frank – On October 14, 2019, peacefully at Tuarangi Home, Ashburton. After a long battle with Alzheimer’s. Aged 73 years. Dearly loved husband of Moira and loved Dad of Errol and Nadine, Joe and Karen, Matt and Monica, and Aidan and Kelly. Loved grandad to Dylan, Charlotte, Lucy; and Rosalind. Messages to 9 Greenlaw Street, Lincoln 7608. Special thanks to the staff at Tuarangi Home for their loving care of Murray. At Murray’s request a private funeral service has been held.
Canterbury owned, locally operated
Patersons Funeral Services and Ashburton Crematorium Ltd Office and Chapel Corner East & Cox Streets, Ashburton
Ph 307 7433 Please note all late death notices or notices sent outside ordinary office hours must be emailed to: deathnotices@theguardian.co.nz
to ensure publication. To place a notice during office hours please contact us on 03 307 7900 for more information. Any queries please contact 0800 ASHBURTON (0800-274-287)
19
Ash
Geraldine
Ra n BUTTERICK, Gilbert Warren – Darryl and Lyn, Fiona, Michael and Rachel, Shane and Anna, Aaron and Jane along with Jenette Storrier, and their families would like to give a massive thank you to everyone for all their amazing support to us and our very special Dad, Grandad, brother and friend. The phone calls, cards, flowers, food and company will always be remembered and treasured. To all who attended Gilby’s funeral he would have been filled with pride to see so many friends and family join together for his final farewell. Special thanks to the district nursing team for their unwavering commitment which ultimately gave Dad the opportunity to stay at home until his passing. Please accept this as a personal acknowledgement and heartfelt thanks to you all.
FUNERAL FURNISHERS MASTER MONUMENTAL MASON
E.B. CARTER LTD For all your memorial requirements New headstones and designs Renovations, Additional inscriptions, Cleaning and Concrete work Carried out by qualified tradesmen.
620 East Street Ashburton Ph/Fax 308 5369 or 0274 357 974 ebcarter@xtra.co.nz NZMMMA Member
15
ka
MAX
bur to
17
OVERNIGHT MIN
16
OVERNIGHT MIN
3 3
Midnight Tonight
n
gitata
TIMARU
19
SUN PROTECTION ALERT
10:10 – 4:15 AM
PM
PROTECTION REQUIRED Wear a hat and sunglasses Data provided by NIWA
Waimate
NZ Situation
Wind km/h less than 30 fine
fog
mainly isolated cloudy drizzle drizzle few showers fine showers clearing showers
isolated snow thunder flurries
sleet thunder
Canterbury Plains
snow
hail
TODAY
TODAY
Fine for most of the day. Increasing cloud and a chance spot of rain in the evening. Northeasterlies.
FZL: Rising to 2200m everywhere
TOMORROW FZL: 2200m, 1700m in the south later
MONDAY A few showers with a southwest change, becoming fine later as winds tend northerly again.
TUESDAY Showers developing with a southwest change.
WEDNESDAY
Frankfurt Geneva Hobart Hong Kong Honolulu Islamabad Jakarta Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur London Los Angeles Madrid Melbourne Moscow Nadi
11 8 25 10 17 20 22 25 6 24 25 20 27 6 8
Saturday 6
9 noon 3
Napier
fine
rain clearing rain clearing
Greymouth
few showers
Christchurch
early fog
Timaru
early fog
MONDAY
Queenstown
mainly fine
Dunedin
mainly fine
Invercargill
few showers
drizzle showers showers fine showers rain fine fine thunder showers fine rain showers showers showers
16 14 14 29 31 31 33 34 34 16 26 19 15 16 30
10 12 5 24 23 14 26 16 25 11 14 10 9 8 21
New York Paris Perth Rarotonga Rome San Francisco Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tel Aviv Tokyo Washington Zurich
fine rain fine fine cloudy fine fine thunder cloudy fine drizzle fine rain fine showers
9 pm am 3
6
9 noon 3
Rise 6:35 am Set 8:01 pm
Good fishing Rise 12:19 am Set 9:41 am
9 pm am 3
6
Last quarter 22 Oct 1:41 am ©Copyright OceanFun Publishing Ltd.
Rise 6:34 am Set 8:03 pm Good
Good fishing Rise 1:21 am Set 10:29 am
New moon 28 Oct 4:40 pm www.ofu.co.nz
9 noon 3
6
9 pm
Rise 6:32 am Set 8:04 pm Good
Good fishing Rise 2:19 am Set 11:26 am
First quarter 4 Nov 11:24 pm
Maori Fishing Guide by Bill Hohepa
For the very latest weather information, including Weather Warnings, visit metservice.com
7 11 11 23 15 12 12 24 8 14 20 21 16 3 12
River Levels
cumecs
3.65
Selwyn Whitecliffs (NIWA) at 2:00 pm, yesterday
Rakaia Fighting Hill (NIWA) at 2:00 pm, yesterday 169.3 Nth Ashburton at 2:05 pm, yesterday
9.03
Sth Ashburton at 2:00 pm, yesterday
9.77
Rangitata Klondyke at 2:00 pm, yesterday
70.1
Waitaki Kurow at 3:03 pm, yesterday
283.9
Source: Environment Canterbury
Canterbury Readings
Monday 6
16 15 32 24 24 20 22 34 13 28 23 28 25 18 16
18 12 18 9 23 10 17 10 17 9 20 9 21 6 16 8 19 4 19 4 18 5 18 9 16 6
Palmerston North rain clearing
Blenheim
8:24 2:39 8:47 3:01 9:19 3:34 9:48 3:56 10:17 4:34 10:47 The times shown are for the Ashburton River mouth. For the Rangitata river mouth subtract 16 minutes and for the Rakaia river mouth subtract 4 minutes.
Good
few showers
Nelson
1
2:09
Hamilton
rain
2
0
few showers
Wellington
Sunday 6
Auckland
Forecasts for today
17 14 32 17 29 32 32 34 19 30 35 32 37 12 11
overnight max low
Rain about the divide, snow lowering to 1700m, easing to a few showers in the evening. Fine with high cloud elsewhere. Wind at 1000m: NW 50 km/h, rising to gale 65 km/h in exposed places from midday, and to severe gale 90 km/h for a time in the afternoon. Wind at 2000m: W 25 km/h, rising to gale 70 km/h, and to severe gale 90 km/h for a time in the afternoon. Rain easing to showers about the divide, with snow to 1200 metres. A few showers further east. NW, gales about higher ground.
Showers clearing. Southwesterlies turning northwest.
fine rain showers cloudy fine fine fine thunder windy thunder fine fine fine rain drizzle
NZ Today
Early low cloud or possible fog, clearing to fine. Wind at 1000m: W 25 km/h, increasing to 50 km/h in the afternoon. Wind at 2000m: W 40 km/h.
TOMORROW
World Weather
60 plus
Canterbury High Country
Possible early morning fog, otherwise becoming fine. Light winds.
Adelaide Amsterdam Bangkok Berlin Brisbane Cairns Cairo Calcutta Canberra Colombo Darwin Delhi Dubai Dublin Edinburgh
rain
Saturday, 19 October 2019
A complex trough and associated fronts lies over the country. The trough is expected to moves east this afternoon and evening followed by a weak ridge. A cold front moves onto the southwest of the South Island at night. The front moves northwards over the country on Sunday and Monday, followed by an unsettled southwesterly flow.
30 to 59
m am 3 3
We help save lives every day through the research and development of improved diagnosis, better prediction and treatment of heart disease in our hospital and community.
MAX
TUESDAY: Showers developing with a southwest change.
ia
Tides, Sun, Moon and Fishing
We Help Save Lives
MONDAY: A few showers with SW change, fine later as winds tend N.
AKAROA
Ra
ASHBURTON
4
OVERNIGHT MIN
www.guardianonline.co.nz MAX 21 OVERNIGHT MIN 6
17
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
19
TOMORROW: Fine, then increasing cloud and a chance of rain evening. NE.
LYTTELTON
LINCOLN Rakaia
COPLAND – Duncan and Jo (nee Morris) are proud to announce the arrival of Polly Joan Copland born at Ashburton Hospital on October 3, 2019 at 4.50am weighing 7pd 11. A little sister for Gus and Georgia. Thanks to everyone at Ashburton Maternity and extra special thanks to midwife Hannah Bowden and Anna Campbell. Also special thanks to the staff at Christchurch NICU and Maternity.
MAX
CHRISTCHURCH
18
METHVEN
TODAY: Possible early fog, otherwise fine. Light winds.
19
DARFIELD
Map for today
Ashburton Forecast
Wa i m a ka r i r i
Ashburton Airport Temperature °C At 4pm 9.0 9.3 Max to 4pm 7.0 Minimum 8.1 Grass minimum Rainfall mm 11.8 16hr to 4pm October to date 37.6 Avg Oct to date 34 2019 to date 593.6 547 Avg year to date Wind km/h E9 At 4pm Strongest gust S 19 Time of gust 12:17am
© Copyright Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited 2019
to 4pm yesterday
Methven
Christchurch Airport
Timaru Airport
7.3 7.5 5.0 –
9.8 10.4 7.3 7.9
8.7 9.1 6.6 –
– – – – –
13.2 38.2 28 470.6 516
11.0 26.8 31 352.8 401
E7 – –
E 20 E 30 3:11pm
NE 6 E 19 2:00pm
Compiled by
Family owned, locally owned.
Find out how you can help by visiting: www.otago.ac.nz/chchheart A University of Otago Centre of Research Excellence
18-22 Moore Street, Ashburton Free Phone 0800 263 6679 Mobile 027 637 1229 www.memoryfunerals.nz
Jo Metcalf
Puzzles www.guardianonline.co.nz Puzzles and horoscopes
Cryptic crossword
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Simon Shuker’s Code Cracker
Your Stars ARIES (Mar 21-Apr 19): Words are almost as great a disguise as the old glasses, nose and moustache in their ability to conceal main features and obscure intent and identity. Of course, the voice always gives it away. TAURUS (Apr 20-May 20): The only difference between repeating a series of actions in exchange for money and repeating the same actions for free is that money provides an external motivation and free cultivates an internal one. GEMINI (May 21-Jun 21): The best way to gain a skill is to jump in and figure it out, expecting to mess up a fair amount and learn as you go. So save your money. Don’t buy the class, just begin the task. CANCER (Jun 22-Jul 22): Adulthood is rife with lies, liars, fictional constructs, unnecessary rules, imaginary power and much more falling under the catchall category of “nuance.” Expect it, deal with it, prevail, then reward your maturity. LEO (Jul 23-Aug 22): This is no time to lose heart! Don’t give into thought processes that spiral downward. There’s nothing wrong with you, life is inherently messy, and all humans are flawed. Choose optimism and march on. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sep 22): As much as you’d like to keep certain information to yourself, there are people you feel so comfortable around that you will inevitably let down your guard and spill the beans. To keep a secret, keep away. LIBRA (Sep 23-Oct 23): The ability to remain very cool is difficult to cultivate, involving years of practice in high-intensity, adrenaline-surging situations. You should be proud of your emotional control. You came by it honestly. SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 21): In one podcast, your signmate Henry Winkler recently claimed the qualities of tenacity and gratitude as his guiding values. Should you do the same, fortune will favour you this evening. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec 21): The difference between freedom and servitude is a margin. If you can spend two-thirds of your day doing what you please, you’re among the truly free. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19): Right now, you don’t necessarily need people around you who want what you have. Your dream team will be made of those with complementary talents and skills and a well-matched sense of humour. AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18): You respect that others in your circle have their own responsibilities, stressors and stimuli to process. That’s why you’re careful not to take up more than your share of time. If only all were so conscientious. PISCES (Feb 19-Mar 20): You’re exposed to many kinds of people, some of whom are so much like you that interacting with them will give you the clarity of a rare vantage into your own life.
ACROSS 1. 25’s sweetheart is dovelike (9) 5. Spare a bone for the wife (3) 7. May be wary of changing what’s untrue (4) 8. She is known to count, in Italy (8) 10. Wrongly let in the hair for the supports (8) 11. Stuff is left behind, this being taken at the bar (4) 13. Be sorry to see a king get the bird (6) 15. Old boy got clan to prepare stuff for whitening (6) 18. One method to be played on opponents’ ground (4) 19. Credit can be eaten, as is believable (8) 22. Save diet and use it to calm one (8) 23. One container that’s partly been opened (4) 24. An unknown quantity was numbered by the Romans (3) 25. He was 1’s sweetheart in pantomime (9) DOWN 1. Noise caught the last-mentioned (7) 2. Size of a beer that’s been spilt (5) 3. De-creased in no dire way (6) 4. Takes in topless chairs (4) 5. This sort of roulette runs as one spins it (7) 6. It is uselessly drawn round at start of race (5) 9. Metal oneself with preparation of nerve (5) 12. To do so one must be powerless to fly (5) 14. A happy retreat will make one more cheerful (7) 16. Infest one for too many performances, perhaps (7) 17. One with plenty of push for the club (6) 18. Tea’s served out around the South, and it’s worth having (5) 20. There was a jewel in the tomb I jousted for (5) 21. Not to know the kitchen will be irritating (4)
Quick crossword 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
WordWheel Insert the missing letter to complete an eight-letter word reading clockwise or anti-clockwise.
WordWheel 509
O M N O
I S I
9
10
?
Insert the missing letter to complete an or anticlockwise. Previous solution: CHEMICAL
eight-letter word reading clockwise Previous solution: CHEMICAL
11
14
19
12
15
13
16
20
18
21
22
23
24
25
ACROSS 1. Full of enthusiasm (4,2) 5. Sour (6) 9. Wrestle (6) 10. Quick look (6) 11. Untainted (4) 12. Limping (8) 14. Shuts (6) 16. Rises up (6) 19. Traditional (3,5) 21. Muslim religious leader (4) 22. Frugality (6) 23. Purpose (6) 24. First-born (6) 25. Aristocracy (6)
17
DOWN 2. Strange (7) 3. New Testament books (7) 4. Imprudent (9) 6. Improvise (2,3) 7. Entrust (7) 8. Digs up, discovers (7) 13. Encumbering (9) 14. Chuckle (7) 15. Instructed (7) 17. Integral (5-2) 18. Novice (7) 20. Arguments (5)
Ashburton Guardian 31
WordBuilder R D I E V WordBuilder R D I E V
613
613
How many words of three or more letters, including plurals, can you make from the five letters, using each letter only once? No foreign words or words beginning with a capital are allowed. There’s at least one five-letter word. Good Very Good How 7many words 10 of Excellent three or 14 more letters, including plurals, can you make from the five letters, using each letter only once? No foreign words or words beginning with a capital are allowed. There’s atsolution: least one five-letter word.bide, Previous bed, bet, bid, bidet, bite, Good deb, debit, debt, dib, Goodbit, 7 Very 10 Excellent 14 die, diet, dit, edit, ide, ted, tide, tie, tied
Previous cryptic solution
Across: 1. Humour 4. Maniac 9. Mortise 10. Green 11. Noah 12. Calm 13. Too 15. Epic 16. Snap 19. Dip 21. Tent 22. Solo 24. Extra 25. Rossini 26. Sprite 27. Recent Down: 1. Human kindness 2. Margate 3. Unit 5. Argument 3 2 6. Inert 7. Contortionist 8. Repay 3 14. 8 Distract 7 17. Promise 5 18. Snore 20. Pater 23. Isle
5 4 3 1 3 7 4 Across: 1. Maim 3. Identify 9. Needled 10. Given 11. Eat humble pie 14. Lap 16. Input 17. Eye 18. 6 All and sundry 4 21. Quasi 22. Doleful 23. Assigned 24. 4 Grid 1 9 Previous solution: bed, bet, bid, bide, Down: 1. Mannerly 2. Inert 4. Dud 5. Neglectfully www.thepuzzlecompany.co.nz 6 Recycled 7 bidet, bit, bite, deb, debit, debt, dib, die, 6. Invoice 7. Yank 8. Illuminating 12. 5 Biped 13. diet, dit, edit, ide, ted, tide, tie, tied 15. Pillars 19. Defer 20. Aqua 22. Due3 19/10 5 9 6 2 PREVIOUS 1 SOLUTIONS 6 3 Sudoku Fill the grid so that every column, every row and 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. 8 5 5 4 7 1 9 3 6 2 1 8 3 8 1 7 2 69 5 9 4 1 5 3 9 5 6 8 2 8 99 6 55 4 8 3 1 27 1 5 9 3 7 2 4 8 6 6 1 8 8 32 2 6 5 48 1 7 9 5 7 4 78 1 9 2 25 3 6 4 8 1 5 3 6 2 8 5 6 75 8 3 6 2 4 1 5 9 1 7 2 3 4 8 5 9 6 1 8 4 6 3 1 1 9 6 8 2 3 1 7 4 5
1 8
2 1 6
5 3 7 7 4
3
6 2
8 2
5
8 7 7
5
8 1
Previous quick solution
4
6 5 9 7 2 9 4 HARD
EASY
3 5 1 2 9 6 8 4 7 4 7 9 6 3 8 4 2 1 5 5 4 8 2 7 1 5 9 3 6 3 6 7 3 8 2 1 5 9 4 2 5 1 8 9 4 7 6 2 3 1 2 4 9 6 5 3 1 7 8 8 1 6 4 5 3 9 7 8 2 7 8 3 5 1 7 2 4 6 9 Level 2, 73 Ashburton Members I.B.A.N.Z & Brokernet Ltd. LevelSt, 2, 73 St,|Ashburton |ofMembers of I.B.A.N.Z & NZ Brokernet NZ Ltd.9 73 Burnett St,Burnett Ashburton | Members of I.B.A.N.Z & NZBrokers Level 2, 73 Burnett St, Ashburton |Burnett Members of I.B.A.N.Z & Brokernet NZ Ltd. 9 2 7 4 6 8 3 5 1 6 Level 2, 73 Burnett St, Ashburton | Members of I.B.A.N.Z & Brokernet NZ Ltd.
1 6 9 5 3 7 2 4 8
8 7 2 6 9 4 3 5 1
7 1 8 9 5 3 4 6 2
5 3 4 7 6 2 1 8 9
2 9 6 8 4 1 5 7 3
8
3 2 7 4 8 6 9 1 5
9 8 1 3 7 5 6 2 4
6 4 5 1 2 9 8 3 7
4 2 6 7 8 1 5 3 9
5 7 8 3 9 2 6 4 1
9 1 3 6 5 4 7 8 2
8 4 5 2 3 7 9 1 6
7 6 2 9 1 8 4 5 3
1 3 9 5 4 6 2 7 8
3 5 1 4 2 9 8 6 7
2 8 7 1 6 5 3 9 4
6 9 4 8 7 3 1 2 5
3 6 1 2 4 1 6 7 3
Top
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SUE NEWMAN Retired Ashbur.co.nz 100719-S definitely N-0040 ton retailer will join were manynot a one-track the Tony Todd pony. There ing to becomline-up of candid about, he other issues he ates hopAs an organis e Ashbur felt strongl said. at Octobe y “I’ve had ation, the r’s local body ton’s next mayor a good time to reflect council had team, Todd made elections. I have someth Hamish Riach, led by chief and I still his annou terday and feel executive ncement Although ing to offer.” The mayor he said. yesafter long said that decisio councillor, he has not served and the CEO n had come consideration a good relation many people need years on 72-year-old Todd time as a and talking do this becaus ship and I believeto have the in the said his 30 feedback to with several Ashburton Licensi e I’ve I can he’d receive community. The with trust ng Trust, months of those CEOs over built relationships had given had been d over the past as its He will not time.” few aging him helpful in local governhim a good insightchairman, to put his also standin be covering encourinto how ance worked said. his bases name forwar g “I’m effectiv by . “The democas a council candid d, he “I’m taking been party ely a clean skin; ate. ratic proces whether the opport I have not my hand s will decide I I’ve obviou to any prior decisio unity to declare earlier and hand up get in or not. You sly followe I hope it and put your ing on. d what’s ns, but may encourby declaring early have its say.” it’s up to the commu been gotheir name nity to “I don’t forward forage others to put Todd will see it as While he counci join counci having been a disadv in the mayora antage not llor Leen ing delega had been outspo l.” on counci there are l race. He Braam ken tions tention l, in but a leadlot declared to counci al commu to stand up to speed of things I’ll need I know his inl over severnity issues, It is unclea in May. with.” to come town parkin includi r, howeve With 54 cumbent Ashburton g and the closureng inner Donna Favel r, whether inhe’d learnedyears as a retailer second i-SITE, Todd of the , will be term to the public,how to deal with Todd said said he earlier saying in the mayora seeking a and listen was qualitie l chair. After important other term, she would be in a mayor.s he believed were seeking she is now decide whethe saying she anwill nominations r or not to stand when open on July 16. ian
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