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Water-bottling ruling near By Susan Sandys
susan.s@theguardian.co.nz
Environment Canterbury is expecting to make a decision within the next couple of weeks on whether to publicly notify a consent application from The Fairton LP. The company has applied to convert a dairy irrigation consent relating to a bore on a prop-
erty it owns on the outskirts of Ashburton for water bottling purposes. “The consent application is still in process and no notification decision has yet been made,” an Environment Canterbury spokesperson said. “We expect this will occur in the next couple of weeks.” The Fairton LP has an active
consent granted in 2012, to take and use water from the bore for irrigation. It has now applied to ECan to convert the consent to one for water bottling, and has flagged other commercial uses of water at the site, such as craft beer manufacturing. Its application seeks non-notification, claiming the effects of
the operation at the site will be minor. Non-notified consents are significantly cheaper and quicker to process. But if there are likely to be adverse effects on the environment or there are people who may be adversely affected from whom the applicant can not obtain written approval, public notifi-
Mid Canterbury. That’s our Heartland. Earn 1.60% p.a. with Heartland’s Direct Call Account. Find out more at heartland.co.nz Direct Call Account terms and conditions apply.
cation is advised. If successful in getting the consent alteration, the company is then likely to apply to the Ashburton District Council for resource consent for land use as the land is zoned Rural B.
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News 2
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■ASHBURTON SOCIETY OF ARTS
Summer show opening a great success By Susan Sandys
susan.s@theguardian.co.nz
More than 50 people revelled in the talent of local artists at the Ashburton Society of Arts Summer Show opening on Saturday. Held at the Short Street Studio, it was the first time for many years an opening night was held for one of the society’s seasonal shows, and it ended up being a great success. Spokesperson Lynda Scott said as many as 14 of the works were sold. Some of the artists would be replacing their sold works, so there would be new pictures hung over the next week. Guest artist was Christine Lang, who talked to the gathered crowd about her award-winning work. Today based in Christchurch, Lang grew up in Carew where she first began her passion for drawing. She said her parents Audrey and Ron Bush dabbled in painting and were friends of Austin Deans, and she had many people who encouraged her in her work. “Mid Canterbury was and still is a very rich area for people in the arts,” Lang said. She is today best known for her contemporary realism and striking landscapes, mostly of South Island scenery. Her work on display at the Summer Show is a series of acrylic-on-canvas works, which include landscapes and studies of native flora and fauna. Lang is a former nurse and air hostess who today spends most of her time painting in her homebased studio, and sells mainly through Art Box Gallery at Papanui and her Facebook page. She also works two days per week in Christchurch Hospital’s MRI department. “That socialises me for two days per week, otherwise I would spend all my time on my own,” Lang said. Meanwhile, the Summer Show will run for four weeks, through to March 22. It will be open at the Short Street Studio on Saturdays and Sundays 11am to 4pm, and Mondays and Wednesdays when the studio sign is out.
Clive Scott and Bronwyn Hughes were among more than 50 art buffs who turned out to the Summer Show. PHOTOS ROBYN HOOD 220220-RH-307
Christine Lang is best known for her contemporary realism. 220220-RH-310
Judi Christie and Celia Folley take in the colourful art works at the Short Street Studio. 220220-RH-305
Your Local MP I’m available to meet with constituents on Mondays and Fridays and any day that Parliament isn’t sitting. Contact my office in Ashburton to make an appointment to meet or speak with me. Andrew Falloon MP for Rangitata 81 Harrison Street, Ashburton • 03 308 7510 rangitatamp@parliament.govt.nz andrewfalloonforrangitata Funded by the Parliamentary Service. Authorised by Andrew Falloon MP, Parliament Buildings, Wellington.
News www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
3
Ashburton Guardian
Politicians divided on Trump decal By Susan Sandys
susan.s@theguardian.co.nz
Mid Canterbury’s political figures are divided on the return of a Donald Trump decal to the men’s urinal at a Methven licensed premises. The President of the United States was recently reinstated in the restroom facilities at The Dubliner Irish Bar and Restaurant, following a similar decal being secretly and illegally removed in February last year. While Mid Canterbury’s political figures can see the fun side of having the decal in the urinal, some question its appropriateness. Rangitata MP Andrew Falloon and former ACT candidate Tom Corbett do not see anything wrong with it, while New Conservative candidate Lachie Ashton and Labour List MP Jo Luxton are not so supportive. And Greens potential Rangitata candidate Gerrie Ligtenberg would not even comment on the issue. Ashton said he had never been to the Dubliner, but could see the humour in the decal. However, being disrespectful to people could be damaging. “One of the many reasons why thousands of people dislike Donald Trump is that he is often very disrespectful of others. We should remember that we must be respectful to all people whether we like them or not,” Ashton said. “There is no victim here, but we need to be mindful that in everyday life people do this sort of thing to others and the impact can be quite damaging to the victim, especially among our youth,” Ashton added. Luxton said she had also not been to the Dubliner recently. She could see the humour in the decal, but the “prudish side” of her questioned whether it was appropriate to have the politician’s face on the urinal. People often defaced political or public figures. For example, it was a common problem for her and many other politicians around the country with people drawing on political hoardings at election time. “At the end of the day, despite what we might think of Trump or any other political figure, they are just human after all,” Luxton said. Falloon said he had enjoyed “a drink or three” at the Dubliner, and it was a great pub. “Politicians shouldn’t take themselves too seriously, nobody else does,” Falloon said. “Being an MP or even president means opening yourself up to scrutiny and criticism. If Mr Trump or any politician can’t handle that there’s plenty of other things they could be doing.” Former ACT candidate for Rangitata Tom Corbett said he saw it as a fun thing, and not at all offensive. “I might see Trump as being a bit offen-
The Dubliner owner/operator Gary Manning with his latest toilet redesign. sive,” Corbett added. “I can’t understand why the Americans chose him over Hilary, it’s beyond me.” Green Party potential Rangitata candidate Gerrie Ligtenberg said she would refrain from commenting. The Dubliner owner Gary Manning said he could understand where politicians opposing the decal were coming from, as they had to be careful. “These guys have to tow the line in a certain respect, we at the Dubliner don’t, free speech and that kind of thing,” Manning said. He said The Dubliner had conducted a Facebook poll prior to reinstating the decal, asking patrons whether they wanted it back. About 98 per cent of the approximate 700 who responded from around the world called for its return. And Manning added there was no love lost between him and Trump. Manning said he was surrounded by four strong women in his immediate family, his wife and three daughters, and had no time for misogyny. “That guy is a proven misogynist,” he said of Trump.
Water-bottling decision near From P1 The site is close to State Highway One and is within an area of mixed use – farming and the now-closed Silver Fern Farms. It runs alongside the railway line, bounded by Works Road to the north, the Ashburton Business Estate to the east and the Rural Transport Limited yard to the south. Meanwhile, the company behind The Fairton LP has a family association with an expatriate New Zealander allegedly at the heart of a multi-million-dollar tax theft in Europe. Paul Mora of Christchurch has been accused by German authorities of tax theft and is due to stand trial in coming
months, the New York Times reports. Along with his partner Martin Shields, he has been blamed for fleecing the German treasury of $US500 million through a scheme known as cum-ex trading. Mora denies any wrongdoing. The Fairton LP is a vehicle for M Family Holdings Limited, directors of which are Alina Mora and Christopher Goldsbrough. Mora was a director and shareholder of M Family Holdings Limited until 2018, and he is Alina’s brother. Alina has previously told media her brother is not a director of or either of the partners that make up The Fairton LP, and he is not involved in the management of any of the affairs of the partnership.
PHOTO BILL IRWIN
NOTICE OF HELICOPTER USE FOR INSPECTION OF TRANSMISSION LINES IN YOUR AREA.
Kikiwa
St Arnard
Hanmer Spring
7
Transpower, the owner and operator of the National Grid is carrying out a visible inspection of the conductor (wire) on sections of its 220 Kv transmission lines between Roxburgh-Islington, Benmore-Islington and Islington-Kikiwa. This work will involve a low-flying helicopter flying above the line slowly (with brief pauses as required), as highlighted on the accompanying map.
The work is planned to occur between Wednesday 26 February and Monday 2 March 2020.
Culverden
Helicopter will be operating at low levels in around the transmission line in highlighted zone.
7
Waipara 1
77
Islington
72
Ashburton Tekapo
1
Geraldine 8
79
Fairlie
Helicopter operating zone
Timaru
In the event of bad weather the work will take place in the following week. 82
It’s important to us that you are kept informed and updated on our activities. If you require further information, please call Ron MacKenzie on 0274 356 340. 83
Alexandra
1
Mount Somers
Benmore
TPAG2225220
Christchurch
Hororata Methven
Twizel
85
Rangiora
73
Highways
63
News 4
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■ASHBURTON DISTRICT COURT
Forged signatures used to get pills A man who forged two different doctors’ signatures to get erectile dysfunction medicine that had been seized by Customs and MedSafe has pleaded guilty to two charges of forgery (not a cheque) to obtain under $500. Hamish John Sawers appeared before Judge Joanna Maze in the Ashburton District Court on Monday and entered two guilty pleas to the charges. The summary of facts says that on November 22, 2018, Customs intercepted a package addressed to Sawers, and was found to contain 50 Cenforce-100 Senafil 100mg capsules. As a result of this, MedSafe were advised and sent Sawers a letter and form, advising him if they were to release the medication, he would need to have the form filled out by a New Zealand doctor. On December 3, 2018, MedSafe received a completed form in hard copy signed by a local Alexandra doctor, authorising the release of the medication. As a result of this, MedSafe contacted the doctor concerned and found that the doctor had not seen Sawers since January 2018 and then only as a visiting patient. The doctor also advised he had not signed any form and did not prescribe Senafil, and when shown the form, confirmed the signature was not his. As a result of this, further enquiries were carried out and it was found that on June 22, 2017, a similar parcel had been intercepted by Customs. On this occasion it contained 40 Procalis 20 plus Tadalafil 20mg tablets. A form was sent to Sawers’ doctor to authorise the release of this medication and they received that completed form on June 28, 2017.
cannabis utensils. He was remanded in custody to appear on March 30 for sentencing.
This doctor also confirmed they had not completed the form and that the signature was not theirs. Both doctors were local in Alexandra, but worked at different practices. Sawers declined to make any comment to police. He was remanded on bail by Judge Maze to appear in the Ashburton District Court on March 30 for sentencing. A man who stupefied and raped a woman in Rakaia last year has pleaded guilty in the Ashburton District Court. The man, who has name suppression, appeared before Judge Maze and admitted to stupefying or rendering the woman unconscious, before raping her. He was remanded in custody to appear of sentencing on March 30.
A man has pleaded guilty to burgling his former employers when he appeared in court on Monday. The man, who was granted interim name suppression by Judge Maze, was made redundant by his employer. He failed to return a key to work premises, and used the key to open the gate before driving round the side of a building and gaining access to the building. He grabbed a box of disposable gloves and other items until he was disturbed by a worker. He attempted to hide behind a machine, but was discovered. He told police that he had been attempting to steal disposable gloves. The man was remanded on bail for sentencing. Robert William Cropp plead-
ed guilty to assault with intent to injure following an incident where he repeatedly punched and kicked the victim. Police prosecutor Toaiva Hitila read the summary of facts to the court, saying that Cropp punched the victim in the stomach which forced her to hunch over and he continued to punch her, this time in the head. He grabbed her, forcing her to fall to the ground where he stomped on her twice and kicked her. The victim was left with bruises and abrasions on her head and arms. When spoken to by police he denied assaulting the victim. This offending occurred while Cropp was serving a sentence of intensive supervision for a number of charges including burglary and possession of cannabis and
A man who was heavily intoxicated and forced his way in to a former partner’s home before assaulting her has been sentenced to 18 months’ intensive supervision. Francis Micheal Terry appeared for sentencing after pleading guilty to one charge of wounding with intent to injure with reckless disregard last year. The summary of facts said that he arrived at the address heavily intoxicated and forced his way into the home when the victim answered the door before heading to her bedroom where the assault started, including repeated punches to the victim’s head. She was able to free herself by kicking Terry and fled out of the property on to Chalmers Avenue where a member of the public stopped and Terry decamped on his bicycle. The court heard from Terry’s lawyer that he was incredibly remorseful for what he had done and that he had taken it upon himself to seek out clinical help for his alcohol issues and had stopped drinking. Judge Maze said he should view this as an opportunity to make sure he does not repeat his offending and that no woman should feel threatened by his actions again. He was sentenced to 18 months’ intensive supervision and ordered to pay an emotional harm reparation of $1000. Judge Maze also warned him that this was his first strike under the three strikes legislation, and made a protection order involving Terry and the complainant.
■■HIGH COURT CHRISTCHURCH
Jury warned drug debt case ‘like a Tarantino film’ By Kurt Bayer NZME
The case of a Kings Cobra gang member allegedly murdered over a purported $40,000 drug debt will sound like a Tarantino film, a jury was warned yesterday. Alistair Cochrane and Daniel French deny murdering 28-yearold Luke Sears during a roadside confrontation in rural Canterbury on October 13, 2018. The Crown outlined its case against Cochrane, 26, and French, 36, in its opening address of a three-week jury trial starting at the High Court in Christchurch yesterday. It’s alleged that French was behind a large-scale cannabis growing operation at his Telegraph Road property at Charing Cross in Selwyn. For about a year, French had been in a “business relationship” with King Cobras gang member Sears who bought cannabis from him, Crown prosecutor Mitchell
McClenaghan told the jury. But in the days leading up to Sears’ death, the pair had suffered a falling out over alleged monies owed. Sears was trying to collect a debt of $40,000 that he believed French owed the gang, the court heard. But French reckoned the gang actually owed him $20,000. On October 12, 2018, Sears and an associate went to a pet food business run by French to try and recoup the cash. A heated exchange ensued, during which a shotgun was allegedly produced. Sears and his associate took off but soon returned – this time allegedly with a pistol, demanding payment. French was punched in the face and the police were called, the court heard. It’s understood that as a result of that day’s exchanges, Sears ramped up the debt.
The next day, French took Cochrane, who he employed for manual labour at the pet shop, with him to his house for a firewood job. Cochrane took a loaded shotgun in a bag with him, the Crown alleges. As they drove along Telegraph Road, near French’s house, they drove past Sears and his girlfriend travelling the other way. Both vehicles stopped on opposite sides of the road. French and Sears got into a physical confrontation when Cochrane came out with the shotgun and pointed it at Sears, the Crown says. Sears allegedly walked towards Cochrane and asked what he was going to do with the gun. The court heard that Cochrane retreated to his vehicle. Sears followed and tried to take the keys out of the ignition, saying they weren’t going anywhere. The Crown says that Cochrane,
who was holding the shotgun through the door, then shot Sears in the chest and shoulder region, sending him staggering back to the road. Cochrane and French are accused of driving off as Sears’ girlfriend flagged down passing members of the public who tried to help. Sears died soon afterwards on the grass verge as a result of damage to his vital organs. Cochrane actively avoided police for a number of days afterwards before he handed himself in. He allegedly told a friend and church minister that he had shot Sears but that the gun had gone off accidentally. Police later raided the Christchurch house of Tereina Delia Sullivan where Cochrane had been living and allegedly found four guns under a manhole in the floor. Sullivan now faces firearms and obstructing the
course of justice charges. Cochrane’s defence counsel Kerry Cook told the jury that “death was not on his mind” that day. A “clumsy and simple” Cochrane had only stepped in to stop Sears “giving French a hiding”. He acted to defend French and himself from an intimidating and fearsome gang member, Cook said. It was only when he was trying to leave the scene and when Sears reached for the keys that the shotgun went off. Cook urged the jury to put themselves in Cochrane’s shoes during what was an “extremely fraught and stressful situation” that unfolded quickly. He warned the jury that some of the evidence is “going to be like a Tarantino film”, with guns and gang members. The trial, before Justice David Gendall, continues.
News www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
New Justice of the Peace
By Jaime Pitt-MacKay Jaime.p@theguardian.co.nz
Ashburton’s Justice of the Peace ranks have been bolstered after a new JP was sworn in at the Ashburton District Court on Monday morning. Alison Driscoll was sworn in in front of Judge Joanna Maze in the Ashburton District Court. Driscoll was born into a farming family and grew up in the Ashburton District. After attending Ashburton Borough School and Ashburton College, she worked at the Ashburton Guardian as a journalist. She married John Driscoll a little over 40 years ago and together they enjoyed working and managing family farms until the late 1990s when they moved to a lifestyle block nearer to Ashburton. The next nine years were spent owning and managing the Bernina Sewing Centre in Ashburton before it was sold. At the beginning of 2009 Driscoll began her current role as electorate agent to former Rangitata MP Jo Goodhew and in 2017 to Rangitata MP Andrew Falloon. In the course of her work Driscoll meets and assists a wide range of people in the Ashburton District.
sue.n@theguardian.co.nz
The generosity of two brothers who left their estates to the Mid Canterbury community is seeing more than $850,000 given away each year in grants to dozens of organisations. The Mackenzie Foundation’s 2019 grants programme totalled $841,173, given to 42 organisations, and similar amounts have been given each year since the foundation was established in 1978. Ealing farmers Alan and Don Mackenzie owned nearly 2500 acres of land, two stud herds of cattle and two stud flocks of sheep. Both were unmarried and decided to leave their es-
5
In brief Ruapehu rumbling A series of small volcanic earthquakes rumbled beneath Mt Ruapehu at the weekend. GNS Science says the larger events at the start of the quakes were approximately magnitude 1.5 and with later, smaller events were too small to be located by its earthquake detection-location system. “The seismic recordings indicate a source beneath the summit area, which is normal for volcanic earthquakes and volcanic tremor at Ruapehu,” a GNS spokesman said. “The sequence now appears to be over.” - NZME
Maggots in wounds
Alison Driscoll (right) was sworn in as a Justice of the Peace by Judge Joanna Maze (centre) on Monday. PHOTO JAIME PITT-MACKAY 240220-JPM-0003 She said she sees her role as a JP as an extension of the community service she has enjoyed as a member of the Rotary Club of Ashburton and as chair for two Cancer Society Relays for Life. She now lives with John in Ashburton.
They have four adult children, three of whom live in the Ashburton District, and eight grandchildren. She and John both enjoy time spent with their family, gardening, reading, family history and travel. The Justices of the Peace Act
1361 in England empowered JPs to apprehend, arrest and punish offenders and rioters. Judge Maze said it was a pleasure to be able to swear in a new JP, and that it was a role that often slides under the radar in terms of receiving recognition.
Community winners in foundation grants By Sue Newman
Ashburton Guardian
tates to a foundation that would benefit their community well into the future. The brothers were both diagnosed with cancer in the mid1970s and almost their entire wealth was transferred to the foundation shortly before they died. The trustees assumed ownership of the farming assets and continued farming until 2002 when they sold the farms and have since successfully managed a diverse investment portfolio. They specified that grants should be made over three categories – cancer research, treatment, provision of equipment, and the education and training
of trained people; agriculture – research, development, education for, and training and expansion of the science and practice of agriculture and for general charitable purposes, taking into account the needs of young people with disabilities or who have less chance in life than many of their peers. In its 2019 grants round, $327,500 was given to agriculture across four leadership trusts (including Nuffield and Kellogg) and to one innovation project. The University of Otago received $232,000 for cancer research and for a summer intern programme and $207,612 was granted to a range of organisa-
tions that benefited children. The largest amount in this category went to the Ashburton Learning Centre’s Boost reading programme in schools, $58,622 with Safer Mid Canterbury receiving $25,000 towards the Lives Worth Living suicide prevention programme. Among the $274,061 of general grants was $83,000 to the Ashburton Housing and Support Trust and $50,000 to the Maia Health Foundation. Trust secretary Trevor Croy has been with the foundation a from day one and has watched its investment pool grow in value from an initial trust capital of $826,247 to an accumulated fund of 17.380 million dollars.
The Health and Disability Commission has criticised a South Auckland resthome and one its staff members after an 86-yearold resident had 15 maggots hatch in his wounds. Heritage Lifecare Limited and one staffer have been found in breach of the Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers’ Rights for failing to provide adequate care to the dying man, a report released yesterday says. In the report the man has not been named but previous stories written by the Herald identify him as Evan, a former resident of Palms Lifecare in Pukekohe who died on March 9 last year. Rose Wall, deputy Health and Disability Commissioner, said the man’s endof-life care was “unacceptable” and that he suffered unnecessarily - NZME in his last months.
Dung beetle release Thousands of dung beetles are set to be released into the Mahia Peninsula as part of a Whangawehi Catchment Management Group initiative. The dung beetles will be released at Te Mahia School with the aid of local school children today at 9.30am. The farmer and marae-led collective’s project manager Nicolas CavialeDelzescaux said the children involved in the release are part of the Hill Country Futures project’s citizen science initiative. CavialeDelzescaux said: “Dung beetles are game changers. They will build and retain soils, integrate nutrients into the soil profile and cut off run-off. Releasing them complements all the hard work done by groups to plant riparian margins to reduce run-off - NZME reaching the streams.”
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News 6
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■ EVERYDAY PEOPLE
A magazine ad changed my life By Heather Mackenzie
photographers@theguardian.co.nz
A
chance purchase of a winter magazine in her home country changed Tokiyo Hall’s life and set her on a trajectory that would eventually see her living on the other side of the world. Born in the large city of Kyoto, Japan which has a population 1.5 million plus, Hall found herself drawn to skiing from a very young age. This enthusiasm saw her follow her passion into working as a ski instructor in Myoko, thought to be one of Japan’s oldest ski areas. It was here that she purchased the travel magazine featuring an article and accommodation advertisement for Methven and her dream of travelling and teaching skiing in New Zealand was born. “After seeing that, I thought New Zealand was the place for me.” Once again fate intervened and on a rainy day in Myoko, Hall found herself at a loose end due to the weather, so she snuck into a local café to get out of the rain. “When I was in there this Kiwi guy spoke to me in broken Japanese, about how wet I was from the rain.” It turned out that chatty-chap was none other than Methven’s own Jamie Allen, husband of Shino who had placed the accommodation advertisement in the magazine Hall had been reading earlier. “He told me to write to Shino about visiting Methven, so I did, and she told me I should come to Methven.” A skiing accident in Japan meant Hall’s Methven travel plans had to be put on hold for three years. When she was 22 and fully recovered from her skiing injury, Hall waved goodbye to her family and friends at the airport and set out for Methven for her first visit. “I loved it so much here, I kept coming back each winter from then on.” Over that time Hall did 20 winters back-to-back between New Zealand and Japan. Even though Hall’s dream was to teach skiing in New Zealand, ironically that is one of the jobs she did not do at Mt Hutt. Her first year in Methven Hall was travelling on a three-month tourist visa, which meant she couldn’t work. “I was here just being a skibum really, spending my time skiing and competing in races.” Changes to her visa applications meant she was able to enter the country on short-term working visas. Hall made the most of this and over the next few seasons at Mt Hutt she worked in the snow shop, for the lift department, was mountain hostess and even did a stint in the café. During these years she was often called on by the ski patrol
There are people from all walks of life, scattered across the Ashburton District. Today we launch a new series, Everyday People, in which we get to know those out there in the community. Not necessarily because they have excelled or are doing something spectacular, but more just because they are here and a part of the landscape.
Tokiyo Hall is living her dream in Methven. in order translate for an injured Japanese guest and this planted the ski patrol option in Hall’s mind. “I thought to myself, I can ski, and I speak English, so
patrolling would be a good fit for me.” In 1996 she became a fully qualified ski patroller after completing her training over the previous two seasons.
PHOTO HEATHER MACKENZIE 180220-HM-0807
This training she then took back to Japan where she worked as a ski patroller for a number of winters as well. “The ski patrollers at Mt Hutt were so nice. They told me I was
part of a team and if I needed help just ask. Plus, they treated me like an equal.” Hall pointed out that back in Japan being treated like an equal didn’t always happen. She recalled one time when the patrollers were called out to find a missing skier, Hall was gearing up to go out too. “The head patroller said to me that I couldn’t go out with the males. He said it was the female patrollers’ job to stay behind and make lunch.” That comment didn’t go down well with the feisty five-foot something extremely capable ski patroller. “I know I am short and there are some things I can’t do, but at least I can try.” Fast forward to 1999, by now Hall had purchased a house in Methven had a pet dog and had been working at the Methven i-SITE for two years, so she decided the next logical step was to apply for residency. “I wanted to stay here, as Methven is like a big family. Everybody says hi to each other and are always willing to help out when needed.” At the time the population of New Zealand was declining and as a result the government of the time were practically giving residencies away. “But not to me. Because I didn’t have any university qualifications New Zealand did not want me.” Once word of her plight got around the town the locals soon got behind her. In no time at all, 96 locals, including Jenny Shipley, had put pen to paper supporting her bid to stay here. “Once Jenny Shipley got involved things moved pretty fast and I got my residency within two months.” At around the same time she got together with her future husband, long-time Mt Hutt staff member Mike Hall. The pair married in 2003 and went on to have two boys, Connor and Lochlainn. Although Hall has made many trips back to Japan over the years, last year was the first time the whole family went on a skiing holiday to Japan. “The boys loved it. It was really nice for them to go to their heritage place.” Hall has no regrets about making Methven her home and said she is lucky to be here. “It was always my dream to live in New Zealand and luckily for me that dream has come true. I feel warm and safe here and not like a foreigner at all.” “Funny if Shino had never put that ad in the magazine I may never have come here.”
World www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian
Scrap with Becks recalled Melanie C believes her depression was sparked after a row with Victoria Beckham. The Spice Girls star has had a long battle with eating disorders and depression and believes it all stemmed from the dressing down she received after a row with her bandmate at the Brits in 1996. “I was so hurt and embarrassed. We’d all had a few bevvies and there was a little scuffle. We can’t say this on air but I asked her to go away. I was told if that ever happened again, then I would be out. I began to be really, really hard on myself. I couldn’t relax because if I did I might mess it all up.”
Medics and rescue workers carry a wounded boy to an ambulance after an earthquake hit villages in Baskale town in Van province, Turkey yesterday. PHOTO AP
■■TURKEY
Deadly 5.7 quake Nine people were killed in eastern Turkey by a magnitude 5.7 earthquake early yesterday, Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said. The quake centered just east across the border in neighbouring Iran, west of the Iranian city of Khoy, and affected villages in the Turkish province of Van. At least three of the dead were children, according to Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu. The health minister later said at least 37 people were injured, including nine in critical but not life-threatening condition. Iran’s official IRNA news agency said at least 75 people had been injured inside Iran, six of whom were hospitalised. A second earthquake – also of magnitude 5.7 – struck in the same area in Iran,
according to the country’s seismology centre. It was not immediately clear if the second quake caused further damage or casualties in either country. The US Geological Survey put the second earthquake’s magnitude at 6.0. Varying magnitudes are common in the immediate aftermath. Turkish broadcaster NTV showed images of locals and soldiers digging through the rubble of collapsed buildings yesterday, as families sat in snowy streets fearing further tremors. Emergency teams were sent to the remote mountainous region, which has a history of powerful earthquakes. Last month, a quake centered on the eastern Turkish city of Elazig killed more than 40 people. In 2011, more than 600 were killed when
a quake struck north of Van province’s capital. According to the European Mediterranean Seismological Center, the first quake happened at 9.22am local time (0552 GMT) at a depth of five kilometres. The effects of the quake hit four villages in Van. Seven of the fatalities occurred in Ozpinar village, where Soylu said search and rescue teams had arrived. He added that the quake caused 1066 buildings to collapse while the Education Ministry said a number of schools were damaged. Koca said 25 ambulances, a medical helicopter and 13 emergency teams had been sent to the region. The Disaster and Emergency Management Directorate (AFAD) said 144 tents for families had been dispatched.
■■CHINA
Miley Cyrus has announced she’s heading to Australia to headline a bushfire fundraiser concert next month. The Slide Away singer will be joined by Lil Nas X (of Old Town Road fame), The Veronicas and DJ Seb Fontaine for the World Tour Bushfire Relief charity concert at the Lakeside Stadium in Melbourne on March 13. In a tweet, Cyrus explained that the money raised from ticket sales “will go to Australian charities working to restore forests, wildlife, and communities affected by the devastating fires”.
Tamaki going on DWTS
Coronavirus ‘didn’t start in seafood market’ The coronavirus did not originate at a seafood market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan as previously thought, scientists say. The disease, which has claimed the lives of more than 2400 people worldwide, was
Miley doing fire concert
instead imported from elsewhere, said researchers under the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Institute for Brain Research. The team found that while the virus had spread rapidly within the Huanan Seafood
Wholesale Market in Wuhan, there were also two major population expanses on December 8 and January 6, suggesting the virus was introduced from outside the market. Earlier reports said the first known patient showed symp-
toms on December 8 and that subsequent cases had links to the seafood market. The team’s analysis said it was possible that the virus began spreading in early December or even as early as November.
MediaWorks is under fire with revelations that controversial Destiny pastor Hannah Tamaki is set to compete on Dancing With The Stars New Zealand. Tamaki, wife of Brian Tamaki, will compete on the show alongside transgender personality Mary Haddock-Staniland. Social media users have been left angry and upset. “Casting Hannah Tamaki isn’t an edgy take, it’s a smack in the face to some of our most vulnerable communities,” a Twitter user wrote.
7
Opinion 8
Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
OUR VIEW
Forty-two million reasons to hope, dream W
hat would you do if you won $42 million? It’s the 42 million dollar question at the moment and a sure-fire conversation starter as Lotto again this week reaches dizzying heights following a string of weeks where the top prize wasn’t won. Some will say they’d buy themselves a big house, a fast car, ensure their families never had to worry again and ensure they donated something back to their community. Others might suggest that they’d invest the money wisely and live carefree on any interest gained from such an investment and allow it not to change their lifestyle in the slightest. And the best part is, there’s really no wrong answer. Everything has merit, a big
house could be seen as an investment in property while it was revealed yesterday that should one person take the $42 million prize this week, and prudently decide to invest that entire amount, they’d net themselves more than $800,000 a year from the interest alone after the tax man had taken his share. Not bad business, is it? The only problem. The chance of winning Lotto in New Zealand are pretty remote. One in 38 million in fact.
That means you’ve got more chance of being struck by lightning, twice, giving birth to identical quadruplets and for the really obscure, you’ve got more chance of drowning in your own bath than winning. So, the odds aren’t really stacked in your favour. But that won’t stop millions of tickets being sold in the rush to tomorrow night’s draw and then again on the weekend if the magic numbers aren’t on someone’s ticket. The prospect of winning Lotto, creates wild dreams beyond the imagination and then just as quickly as they were formed, turns them right around and then crushes them. Until a week later when the thought of winning creeps back again when the next draw rolls around.
It’s a vicious cycle. You won’t find too many people who haven’t day-dreamed about what it might be like and just how they’d react if they were to become one of the few fortunate people to claim such a windfall. It’s nice to think about, but not really something worth getting caught up in because of the odds, and reasons mentioned above. But still, it’s nice to dream, isn’t it? I spoke to someone who’d had a considerable division one windfall from Lotto once, a couple of years after they claimed what was a modest amount, in comparison to what’s up for grabs at the moment. He spoke of the initial joy of the windfall actually turning into
stress as he made, in his own words, the fatal mistake of telling too many people and there were literally hundreds of people banging on his door hoping to get something from him for nothing. It ended up that he had to move away, something he never could have done prior to his win, to escape those who wanted to take advantage and he established himself a very successful life with only his most trusted friends and family around him and has since grown his financial situation incredibly through some smart business decisions. So, while the big win might be great – there’s also the prospect of it creating more problems than you’d like. But with $42 million in the bank, it’d probably be worth it.
the Tomb of the Patriarchs in the West Bank, killing 29 Muslims before he was beaten to death by worshippers. In 2007, The Departed won best picture at the Academy Awards; its director, Martin Scorsese, won an Oscar on his sixth nomination. In 2018, China’s official news agency said the country’s ruling Communist Party had proposed scrapping term limits for China’s president, appearing to lay the groundwork for Xi Jinping to rule as president beyond 2023. Ten years ago: President Barack Obama convened a health care summit with Democrats and Republicans; after a day of
debate and disagreement, the president concluded the talkfest with a bleak assessment that an accord might not be possible. Five years ago: Secretary of State John Kerry fielded dozens of questions from House Foreign Affairs Committee members worried about what Iran could get in a deal being negotiated to block its ability to make an atomic weapon. One year ago: R&B star R. Kelly pleaded not guilty to allegations that he sexually abused four people dating back to 1998, including three underage girls. Responding to director Spike Lee, who had used an Oscars
acceptance speech to urge mobilisation for the 2020 election, President Donald Trump tweeted that Lee did a “racist hit on your President”. Today’s birthdays: Former talk show host Sally Jessy Raphael is 78. Former professional wrestler Ric Flair is 71. Humourist Jack Handey is 71. Rock singermusician/actor John Doe is 67. Rock musician Dennis Diken is 63. Rock singer-musician Mike Peters is 61. Comedian Carrot Top is 55. Actress Veronica Webb is 55. Actor Alexis Denisof is 54. Actress Tea Leoni is 54. Actress Lesley Boone is 52. Actor Sean Astin is 49. Singer
Daniel Powter is 49. Latin singer Julio Iglesias Jr. is 47. Rhythmand-blues singer Justin Jeffre is 47. Rock musician Richard Liles is 47. Actor Anson Mount is 47. Comedian-actress Chelsea Handler is 45. Actress Rashida Jones is 44. Country singer Shawna Thompson is 42. Actor Justin Berfield is 34. Actors James and Oliver Phelps are 34. Actress Jameela Jamil is 34. Rock musician Erik Haager is 33. Thought for today: “Heroworship is strongest where there is least regard for human freedom.” — Herbert Spencer, British philosopher (1820-1903). - AP
Matt Markham
EDITOR
TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Tuesday, February 25, the 56th day of 2020. There are 310 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On February 25, 1964, Muhammad Ali (then known as Cassius Clay) became world heavyweight boxing champion as he defeated Sonny Liston in Miami Beach. On this date: In 1793, President George Washington held the first Cabinet meeting on record at his Mount Vernon home; attending were Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of War Henry Knox and Attorney General Edmund Randolph. In 1836, inventor Samuel Colt patented his revolver. In 1862, Nashville, Tennessee, became the first Confederate state capital to be occupied by the North during the Civil War. In 1943, 49 were killed in Featherston POW incident. Just outside the town, a memorial garden marks the site of the Second World War riot that resulted in the deaths of 48 Japanese prisoners of war and one guard. In 1954, Gamal Abdel Nasser became Egypt’s prime minister after the country’s president, Mohammed Naguib, was effectively ousted in a coup. In 1964, Eastern Airlines Flight 304, a DC-8, crashed shortly after taking off from New Orleans International Airport, killing all 58 on board. In 1986, President Ferdinand Marcos fled the Philippines after 20 years of rule in the wake of a tainted election; Corazon Aquino assumed the presidency. In 1991, during the Persian Gulf War, 28 Americans were killed when an Iraqi Scud missile hit a US barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. In 1994, American-born Jewish settler Baruch Goldstein opened fire with an automatic rifle inside
Opinion www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian
9
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The Queen’s Chain and other aspects of access B
eing able to access the coast and local rivers is important to a lot of New Zealanders. We’re lucky to have the concept of the Queen’s Chain, a strip of land, usually 20m wide, that exists to provide walking access along most of the coast, rivers and lakes. People often assume the Queen’s Chain applies everywhere but this isn’t true. In some places, the Queen’s Chain was never applied, so there are gaps. Even where it does, there may be access restrictions in place, to protect sensitive features (such as archaeological sites) or wildlife. There are other public reserves that serve to extend the Queen’s Chain. Councils can require an es-
Dr Lisa Brewer FROM THE FARM
planade strip along waterbodies as a condition of consent for subdivision into lots under 4ha. Access to water may still only be possible by crossing private land. In these cases, permission of the landowner is needed. Most are only too happy to say yes, but they have the right to say no and there may be good reasons why they do. During spring, disturbance of animals must be avoided or new-borns can get separated from their mothers and die. Farmers sometimes worry
that allowing public access will increase their risk under public liability or health and safety law. Trees might be being felled or there might be the proverbial bull in the paddock. Or allowing access could increase risk of theft and vandalism, and therefore affect their insurance. But generally, country people are trusting and a polite request will result in a yes. Some landowners may even want to legally establish public access across their land. Formal agreements are recommended, perhaps registering a legal instrument against the land title. Some things for landowners to consider are: What are their aspirations
for the land now and in the future? Who is paying for establishment and maintenance of the walkway? Who will users be and what will they be doing – walking, fishing, camping? How can risks to their land be avoided and who’s paying for damage? Can access be restricted at certain times? Dr Lisa Brewer is Federated Farmers Policy Advisor The views, opinions, positions or strategies expressed by the author and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions, positions or strategies of the Ashburton Guardian Co Ltd or any employee thereof.
YOUR VIEW A knighthood for Greg Donaldson? I read with interest that Greg Donaldson wants to burn our green waste, trimmings, timber and cardboard and that he plans to invest big money into an incinerator which he is operating near Ashburton. He is able to process tonnes
of material per hour with 99 per cent clean emissions. What a brilliant idea. If there was ever a person deserving a knighthood it is this man! Let us all, including local council, get in behind him and take responsibility for our own rubbish and make this idea not just big but really huge and burn all rubbish. We know private enterprise can
do it and cheaper than a price gouging government or local council. Think what the government has done to KiwiBuild and rental housing, both priced beyond most people’s ability to pay. No more carting rubbish for hundreds of kilometres to have it buried in plastic, less emissions from fewer trucks on our roads carting to a local incinerator. Shame on you, local council
and the environmentalists, you have been trumped by a clever businessman with common sense! It will be interesting to see if local council and the environmentalists show some common sense and give this man some support and don’t destroy his idea with excessive regulation and a can’t do attitude. Ray Logan
Are you ready to sell? I have buyers waiting Call Julie today on 021 354 885
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PO Box 77 We welcome your letters and emails, but: ■■ They should be of no more than 300 words. ■■ We reserve the right to edit or not publish. ■■ They must include your name. We will only publish under a nom de plume if a suitable case for anonymity is made clear. ■■ They must also include your address and phone number, which will not be published.
Rural 10 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
A friendship, with a difference Two young rural women, who have a friendship with a difference, will make their first public appearance together in a bid to change the way those in the rural sector think. Elle Perriam, founder of Will To Live, and Harriet Bremner, children’s author and safety campaigner, have both lived through tremendous grief, both suffering the loss of of their partners. With a bond shared through their deep grief, love of dogs, horses, farming and passion for people – the duo are pairing up for the first time to tell their stories, hosting an event at the Rolleston School auditorium on March 2 from 7.30pm. Presented by The Rolleston Lions Club, Two Rural Heroines will raise money for the Will To Live Foundation and Use Your Voice. Both young women have been on their own respective missions to change the thinking of rural New Zealand when it comes to farm health and safety and mental health and wellbeing. Perriam, 22, lost her boyfriend to suicide, inspiring her to start the Will to Live Foundation, and travel the country on the Speak Up tour. Speaking to rural communities in their local pubs, she has started a ripple effect, encouraging people to speak up about their mental health. “Rural men are notorious for being staunch about their feelings. We have had shepherds come up to us to thank us for starting the conversation. That just makes the whole thing worth it,” she said. Bremner, 31, who lost her partner in a farming accident, knows the importance of being practical when it comes to farm health and safety. “It concerns me that we have this ‘she’ll be right’ and ‘it’ll nev-
Elle Perriam (left), with Jess the huntaway, and Harriet Bremner with Poppy. er happen to me’ attitude in rural New Zealand. The thing is that it can happen to anyone, even the most experienced operators,” she said. Through her journey of grief, Bremner also realised the importance of looking after mental health and took herself along to a Will To Live evening where the pair connected. The inspiring duo have not only paired up to host this evening together, but have also been collaborating on paper. A former primary school teacher, Bremner is now fulfilling her
lifelong dream of writing children’s books using her beloved sausage dog, Poppy. She has her third book on the way called Use Your Voice, a rural tale about Jess, Perriam’s huntaway and Poppy – where Jess finds out how to regain her bark after losing it. This idea was recognised by the Mental Health Foundation and Like Minds, Like Mine, winning the 2019 Creative Grant. “It’s a story targeting social inclusion for children, where adults can start to have important conversations with their kids about
PHOTO DANA JOHNSTON
how to tell someone you trust how you feel, that it’s okay to cry when you feel the need to cry, and to surround yourself with good people who care,” Bremner said. “These are simple, but key messages we need to be sending our children, so they grow into teenagers and adults who are able to feel confident when it comes to talking about their mental health.” Bremner and Perriam believed that it was time to start open discussions addressing mental health and on-farm health and safety.
They have seen first-hand how attitudes towards these important aspects of life were often put aside and conversations are avoided, particularly by those in the rural sector. Hoping to influence farmers to put themselves and their people first, to have open conversations and to think safely, the duo believe it will save lives. The Rolleston Lions Club appreciated the generosity of the many rural focused sponsors who have helped put on Two Rural Heroines or who donated goods and services to be auctioned on the night.
AG CONTR AC TORS WELSHY HAS GOT SOME NEW WHEELS
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Rural www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
11
Ashburton Guardian
MARKET REPORT By Guy Trafford The ongoing effects of Covid-19, drought (and floods), and any number of other negative influences currently assailing producers and exporters alike, have certainly created a storm of interest from all sectors. It is perhaps interesting that within New Zealand the greatest concern seems to be regarding the economic fall-out from these events, in particular Covid-19. Keith Woodford’s (excellent) article earlier on interest.co.nz brought out quite a string of comment. From memory, apart from a brief mention from one reader that the virus would likely find spreading in New Zealand difficult due to our relatively low population, most comments focused upon how New Zealand, or the world economy, would suffer under its influence. This is despite Keith spending considerable time on the virility, or otherwise, of the virus. No doubt much of this attitude can be put down to our privileged position of isolation. We used to call it the tyranny of distance, now we need to consider it as one of our best assets, it’s certainly why the wealthy (and not so) are so keen to migrate here. But, if we are not so concerned about the actual effects of the virus (and I don’t happen to buy in to low population protection as in 1918 we only had around 1 million people and yet still lost droves and in quite remote communities), then is our attitude out of step with how the rest of the world views the threat? Markets The only positive thing to have occurred for pastoral farming in the last week has been the widespread rain that fell on much of the East Coast of the South Island over the weekend. For arable farmers it was perhaps not as welcomed as some must have been a bit cynical of forecasters’ accuracy to predict as I saw several crops being cut. More rain needs to come to trigger off grass growth but a pleasing sign at least. Sheep A continuation of the previous week’s slide overall. However, it needs to be noted that of the schedules monitored it was only the coops that continued to reduce lamb, and the private companies held their prices.
Mutton continues to take the biggest hits both in the schedules and in the saleyards where prices for all classes continue to decline. Wool Only coarse wool and lamb’s wool has been sold via auction in the last couple of weeks and both are staying on their downward trend hitting depths not seen for a long time. Beef No respite here either I’m afraid with schedules and saleyards reducing prices over all classes of beef. Deer The sad tale continues for venison also, with prices generally reduced yet again. Dairy With the release of the latest GDT auction results milk products are proving to be very resilient in the face of the Covid-19 impacts. There was a fall in prices of 2.9 per cent overall with whole milk powder and skim milk powder both down by 2.6 per cent. Given the dropping production locally, as a result of the growing drought conditions, it is likely that a lack of supply might have created a lift in the market in more normal circumstances. However, given the falls other agricultural products and commodities have been experiencing the 2.9 per cent does not seem such a bad outcome. Despite the late stage in the season, production wise, Westpac have reduced their forecast from $7.40 to $7.20. They are still sticking to $7.30 for the following season, still believing the impacts of Covid-19 on food markets to be relatively short. The ASB bank has reduced its forecast price for this season by 10c to $7.40. They have also reduced their milk production increase down to a 0.5 per cent decline on last year. Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell talking on The Country is still sticking to their rather broad band of $7-$7.60. Helping to mitigate the financial impacts is the reducing Kiwi dollar. Against the US dollar it is now down to 64 US¢ from the sixmonth high of 67 US¢. Imports will cost more but as an export nation a lower dollar will make us more competitive for ag products and as a tourist destination. Perhaps the most surprising occurrence in the GDT was the lift in the price of cheddar on the GDT now sitting at $7129.
Mark Love Contracting Ltd
- Rakaia
Mobile shingle screening and crushing plant, custom built for farmers’ work. Truck available for shingle spreading if required. Cost effective alternative Established 1985
H
Farm gate price watch … for the latest prices, visit www.interest.co.nz/rural February 24, 2020 current price range Saleyard prices … u LAMB ($/head) weighted average Store 85 -100 Prime 120 -163 u HEIFER (c/kg) 250-350 kgs Lwt Store 130.00 u STEER (c/kg) 481-580 Lwt Prime 204 -243 This week Processor prices … u LAMB ($) including 1kg woolly pelt 15.5 kg YM SI 102 17.5 kg YX SI 115 19.0 kg YX SI 125 21.0 kg YX SI 138 Local trade (c/kg) SI 710 (16-22kg) u MUTTON ($) including 0.5kg pelt 21.0 kg MX1 SI 92 u BEEF (c/kg) P2 steer SI 447 (270-295kg) P Cow SI 336 (170-195kg) M2 Bull SI 426 (296-320kg) Local trade P2 SI 500 (180-280kg) u VENISON ($/hd) gross AP Hind 50kg SI 385 AP Stag 60kg SI 468 AP Stag 80kg SI 624
4 wks ago
3 mths ago
52 week high low
1 year ago
170 286
20 90
430
134
323
220
52 week high low
113 128 139 153 790
133 150 163 180 880
101 114 124 137 720
133 150 163 181 880
100 113 122 135 700
110
136
102
136
92
497
595
471
600
447
393
480
350
482
333
483
575
440
579
426
560
600
520
600
500
410 498 664
441 536 714
471 572 762
505 612 816
385 468 624
Auction prices … u SI WOOL indicator prices (c/kg, clean) Mid mic (23.1-31.5) 998 1,019 Fine Xbrd (31.6-35.0) 317 367 Coarse Xbred >35 mic 258 277 Merino 2,070 2,114
987 419 308 2,160
Source: WSI, NZMerino 938 1,193 866 327 550 317 295 364 258 2,387 2,428 1,588
421 418 412
Source: Midlands Grain 422 440 300 420 435 280 417 430 290
Local market prices … u GRAINS ($/tonne, delivered Canterbury) free price Wheat, milling,12.5%p 416 420 Wheat, feed 414 420 Barley, feed 406 410
International market prices … u LOGS indicator prices, $/tonne Forest index Dec-19 122.00 121.00 118.00
128.00
u DAIRY (NZ$/tonne) Butter Skimmilk powder Wholemilk powder Cheese - cheddar
6,434 3,835 4,398 5,525
Fonterra milk price Fonterra dividend Fonterra share price
6,694 4,705 4,784 6,792
6,413 4,653 4,899 6,186
6,471 4,340 4,966 5,845
2018/19 final $6.35 2018/19 final $0.00
0.6606 0.5987
8,696 4,795 5,242 6,792
5,755 3,599 4,398 5,512
2019/20 f'cast $7.00 - $7.60* 2019/20 $0.15 - $0.25 NZX FCG $3.99
* before retentions
u EXCHANGE RATE (NZ$1.00=) US dollar 0.6349 Euro 0.5856
Source: PF Olsen 138.00 118.00
0.6413 0.5822
0.6879 0.6053
0.6929 0.6123
Comprehensive data is available from the supplier www.interest.co.nz/rural
0.6254 0.5579
Business 12 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■MANUFACTURING
BlueScope Steel suffers earnings drop
producer of steel, which it makes by smelting local iron sands with local and imported coal. It uses vanadium for hardening steel but also sells vanadium slag from its smelting to offset its other production costs. Its brands include Colorsteel, Axxis and Zincalume and it also has a 16 per cent stake in NZX-listed distribution firm Steel & Tube, which it acquired in 2018 to pre-
vent a takeover by Fletcher Building. Yesterday, the New Zealand and Pacific business noted that the contribution from vanadium by-products to first-half earnings was about $A27 million lower than a year earlier and $A11 million less than in the six months ended June 30. It had benefited from a “moderate” improvement in some
Guardian Shares & Investments Compiled by
E
Jeremy Flood
ON THE MARKETS
developments, with no major economic releases or central bank meetings due. On Monday, China will consider whether to delay the annual National People’s Congress (scheduled for March 5) on the back of the outbreak. The Official PMIs for China are out on Saturday afternoon, and should provide further insights into economic disruption in the region. In New Zealand, retail sales are out Monday and ANZ will release its first business confidence report of the year on Thursday. The latter will be of particular interest, given the contrast between our improving economic backdrop and the effect the situation in China is having on some sectors of the economy. The ANZ Business Outlook survey for 2020 will cover the month of February, and investors will be watching for evidence of how much impact the situation in China is having on sentiment. With trade tensions easing, the UK having ‘Brexited’, house prices experiencing a resurgence and forecasts for additional spending from the Government this year, we would’ve expected a further improvement in business confidence, following a solid bounce in December (which saw the
Own Activity measure rise to a 19-month high). However, coronavirus uncertainty has emerged over the last several weeks and those in the tourism and hospitality sectors will be feeling the effects. The reporting season continues, and this will be the key focus for most investors. It will be a busier five days than last week, as this week we will hear form the likes of Summerset, Meridian Energy, Scales, a2 Milk, Air New Zealand, Vista Group, Port of Tauranga and Tourism Holdings. Outlook statements will be eagerly awaited, with investors keen to hear just how much disruption local companies have seen across Chinese customer bases or business units. Many of these businesses will be seeing some impact on either customer demand or supply chains, so trading updates and outlook commentaries could be key. Jeremy Flood works for Craigs Investment Partners. This article should not be deemed as advice. Disclosure statement available free of charge and on request.
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
1563 257 2785 142 186 832 656 737 2491 2592 540 398 805 320.5 213 235 183 543.5 184 346 153 4049 536 538 691 145 140 120 691 190.5 251 415 1270 1650 715 420 221 61 366 473 231 905 656 270 701 332 318 290 2635 455
Sell price
1570 259 2820 142.5 187 833 674.5 740 2514 2600 545 400 809 322 230 239.5 185 547 185 349 154.5 4100 541 550 692 147 141 122 699 191.5 253 425 1290 1673 750 440 222 63 374 474 233 909 664 272 708 334 339 293 2695 460
Last sale
At close of trading on Monday, February 24, 2020
Daily Volume move ’000s
1563 –75 784.6 258 –15 3.5m 2806 –37 25.63 142 –1 625.9 186 –1 253.1 832 –33 1.1m 673 +35.5 1.1m 739 –16 644.1 2509 +9 183.0 2592 –13 380.6 540 –12 681.8 400 +1 108.3 805 –41 209.0 321.5 –3.5 1.5m 220 –9 188.1 238.5 –1.5 1.3m 183 –5 885.4 544 –11 545.5 184 –1 90.53 348 –1 76.16 154.5 –1 1.6m 4050 –123 209.6 540 –12 577.7 538 –16.5 957.0 691 –1 631.2 147 –2 76.35 141 –4 177.6 121 –2 3.7m 694 –19 220.6 191.5 –1 919.3 253 –1 217.9 425 –20 313.4 1285 +4 26.80 1670 –9 287.9 748 –12 24.57 430 –4 78.67 221 –3 128.5 61 –1 282.3 367 –13 427.9 474 –9 1.9m 233 –1 196.5 905 – 192.4 656 –28 67.64 272 –12 165.3 701 –7 27.69 332 –2 194.5 328 +3 205.0 293 +2 268.8 2651 –59 29.80 460 +3 976.5
S&P/NZX 50 Index Gross 12110 11978 11846 11714 11582 11450
21/2 24/2
Virus still impacting on markets
NEW ZEALAND SHARE MARKET
Source: NZX and Standard & Poors
14/2
■■SHAREMARKET REPORT
quity markets were mixed last week. Shares in New Zealand and Australia rose to fresh all-time highs and finished in positive territory, up 2.0 per cent and 0.4 per cent respectively. The top NZX 50 movers last week were Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, which rose 7.3 per cent, Synlait Milk, gaining 6.5 per cent and EBOS Group, up 6.1 per cent. Meanwhile, PushPay dropped 8.8 per cent, Refining NZ fell 6.3 per cent and Sky TV lost 4.6 per cent, making them the worst performers. The S&P 500 also posted a new record, although late in the week some nervousness set in and that saw the market finish 1.3 per cent lower. Investors took notice of flash PMIs for the month of February, which were released on Friday. The data pointed to a more significant impact from the coronavirus outbreak than some had expected. The US Composite PMI, which measures activity across both the manufacturing and services sectors, was well below expectations and fell into contraction for the first time since October 2013. The services sector, which has been very resilient throughout this expansion, was also notably weaker. Haven assets rallied further on the back of ongoing uncertainty. Gold prices rose to a seven-year high, the US dollar at its strongest level since April 2017 and the US 10-year Treasury yield falling to the lowest since July 2016. Looking ahead, markets will be watching for further coronavirus
product prices, while coal, scrap and some alloy costs had also declined. However, electricity costs remained “elevated” and infrastructure volumes had also weakened in the period. Addressing “financial under-performance” remained a continued focus. “Infrastructure activity has picked up at the start of the 2H FY2020 with a number of key projects being progressed,” the company said in its half-year report. Domestic volumes remained “robust”, with strong residential and commercial construction, but export prices in the Pacific had softened. Total volumes for the six months were about 2 per cent higher at almost 315,000 tonnes, with an 8000 tonne reduction in domestic sales being more than offset by a 16,000 tonne increase in exports. Domestic volumes fell 3 per cent to 230,700 tonnes, mostly due to a 7 per cent reduction at Pacific Steel to 85,000 tonnes. Export volumes were 22 per cent higher at 84,100 tonnes.
7/2
BlueScope Steel’s New Zealand business reported an 82 per cent drop in first-half operating earnings due to low prices for steel and vanadium. Sales revenue for the business, which includes BlueScope’s Pacific Island operations, fell to $A420.3 million for the six months to December 31, down 9 per cent from a year earlier. As well as weaker vanadium prices and lower regional steel prices, the company said poor weather and lower infrastructure spending had also reduced domestic volumes of long products – typically wire, reinforcing and beams. Earnings before interest and tax fell to $A12.9 million, down 82 per cent from the same period a year earlier, but up from $A8.7 million in the six months ended June 30. First-half earnings a year earlier had been 75 per cent higher at $A71.9 million, reflecting a period of strong vanadium prices. The business, which operates the Glenbrook mill and the Pa-
cific Steel plant formerly owned by Fletcher Building, was threatened with mothballing by its Melbourne-based parent in 2015 unless $50 million in annual cost reductions were achieved. NZ Steel then enjoyed two years of relatively strong earnings after shedding about 100 workers at Glenbrook in 2015, renegotiating freight rates and coal supplies and selling the export-focused Taharoa ironsands business. But the sharp drop in steel and vanadium prices the past year – coupled with sustained high electricity prices – has forced the business to renew its cost-saving efforts. It has been pushing back hard against proposed changes to electricity transmission prices that would add millions to its costs, as well as government plans to reduce protections for heavy industry trying to compete with rivals not facing carbon costs. In November, BlueScope told investors it was “imperative” that NZ steel-making remained globally competitive. Glenbrook is the country’s only
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NZME
24/1
By Gavin Evans
q S&P/NZX 50 Gross
11,857.12 –216.22 –1.79%
q S&P/NZX 20 index
7,873.37 –153.49 –1.91%
q S&P/NZX All Gross
12,798.01 –233.88 –1.79%
p Rises 23 q Falls 113 Top 5 NZX gainers Company
Chorus Delegat Gr Just Life Gr Steel & Tube Turners Auto Gr
daily % rise
+5.57% +4.54% +2.67% +2.50% +1.92%
Top 5 NZX decliners Company
daily % fall
QEX Logistics Warehouse Gr Plexure Gr Serko NZME
–8.33% –7.41% –6.38% –5.94% –5.71%
METAL PRICES
Source: interest.co.nz
p Gold
1,643.30
London – $US/ounce
+23.2
+1.43%
p Silver London – $US/ounce
18.56
+0.18
+0.98%
q Copper London – $US/tonne
5,702.0
–28.0
–0.49%
NZ DOLLAR
Source: BNZ
Country
As at 4pm Feb 24, 2020
Australia Canada China Euro Fiji Great Britain Japan Samoa South Africa Thailand United States
TT buy
0.9736 0.8551 4.7308 0.5987 1.4469 0.4978 72.26 1.7839 9.6854 20.34 0.6461
TT sell
0.9399 0.8229 4.1491 0.5723 1.3252 0.4799 69.17 1.5512 9.3279 19.34 0.6225
Disclaimer: NZX and MetService have endeavoured to ensure the correctness of the information; neither NZX, MetService related companies, nor this newspaper, nor any of their respective employees or agents make any representation as to its accuracy or reliability nor will they, to the extent permitted by law, be liable for any loss arising in any way from, or in connection with, errors or omissions in any information provided (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence). Please note: All products and services are subject to change without notice.
Your Place www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian 13
Showing off
TEST YOURSELF
Sporting a dog groomer’s most-needed hair accessory, Kimberley Frazer puts Reef, a standard poodle, through his paces before he was shown at the Ashburton Kennel Association shows held last weekend.
Test yourself with the Guardian’s weekday quiz 1 – Which way is the Queen looking on a New Zealand 20 cent coin? a. Front on b. To the right c. To the left 2 – The parietal lobe is in the? a. Ear b. Brain c. Liver 3 – What, approximately, is the current world population? a. 6.8 billion b. 7.8 billion c. 8.8 billion 4 – The name Aswan is associated with a? a. Middle Eastern ruler b. Popular dog c. Large dam 5 – The island of South Georgia is located in which ocean? a. Antarctic b. Pacific c. Atlantic 6 – What is the function of the ASA? a. To assist motorists b. To monitor advertising c. To promote alcohol misuse 7 – What was the title of the theme song for the film Titanic? a. I’ll Love You Once More b. My Heart Will Go On c. Wherever You Are 8 – How much carbon emission is generated by a passenger flying Auckland to Dunedin return? a. 86kg b. 186kg c. 286kg
PHOTO ASHBURTON GUARDIAN
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. 7Please 1 send your photos 4 to subs@theguardian. 6 the words 8 4 co.nz with 4 PLACE3 in the YOUR subject 5 line 7 and3we 8will run it in the Guardian or our website Guardianonline.co.nz 8 4 6 7
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1 3 9 5 2 8 7 4 6
8 6 5 7 4 1 9 2 3
5 9 3 2 7 4 6 1 8
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Answers: 1. To the right 2. Brain 3. 7.8 billion 4. Large dam 5. Atlantic 6. To monitor advertising 7. My Heart Will Go On 8. 286kg.
EASY SUDOKU
Smoked fish and potato filo parcels
■■ Peel and cut potatoes into cubes. Cook in salted water for 10 minutes. Mash roughly with a fork. Set aside. ■■ Melt 20g butter in a small pot. Add onions and garlic cooking for three minutes until softened. ■■ Stir in flour and cook without browning for three minutes. ■■ Slowly add milk to make a thick sauce. Remove from heat, add
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2 5 6 YESTERDAY’S 5ANSWERS 8 4 7
QUICK RECIPE 3 medium sized potatoes 20g butter 1 small onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic, crushed 20g flour 1C milk 2T chopped parsley 450g can smoked fish fillets, drained Salt and pepper 8 pieces filo pastry Melted butter for brushing 200g frozen beans, steamed 1 lemon, cut into wedges
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4 9 4 8 1 7 6 7 8 2 parsley, smoked fish and potato. Season with salt and pepper. ■■ Set aside to cool. ■■ Preheat oven to 180°C. ■■ Divide fish and potato mixture into four even lots (approximately four cups). ■■ Lie one piece of filo on a bench, brush with butter, then place another one on top. ■■ Place one cup of filling at one end, brush the edges with butter,
then fold into a parcel. Repeat with the remaining filo. ■■ Bake in the oven for 20 minutes. ■■ Serve the filo parcels with steamed beans. Tip: When working with filo pastry cover it with a damp tea towel to ensure it does not dry out. Wrap leftover pastry well and freeze. Recipe courtesy of www.countdown.co.nz
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7 6 2 4 1 7 6 9 2 5 8 7 Solutions for today in tomorrow’s Your Place page.
Heritage 14 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Money, money, money By Rosie Twamley. Money has changed a lot throughout time, but one thing that remains the same is that we use money to pay for goods and services. Coins and banknotes have been the main form of currency for hundreds of years but more recently eftpos cards and debit cards have taken over and changed the way we perceive our money. No longer do we hold our money in our hand every day. We get paid straight into our bank accounts which we can look at online, and then pay for goods using a plastic card, meaning that many people often never see their money in physical form. Some businesses are even going cashless due to the use of cards taking over ‘real’ money. In the past people have kept their money – coins and banknotes – in tins, money boxes, sock drawers, under mattresses, anywhere to keep it safe and all in one place. I sometimes think that I don’t know where I would store my pay if I got paid in coins and banknotes! Today banks are closing down in some small towns in New Zealand, which is a lot different to when banks were often one of the first buildings to be built in settlements, and once the town grew so did the number of banks! Ashburton had many banks, and still has many banks – some of the old bank buildings have survived and now house other businesses. The Bank of New South Wales building now has the Speight’s Ale House operating from it, and the old ANZ Bank building is now MTF Finance. Coins and banknotes Coins and banknotes even go through their own small changes. New Zealand used to use British coins as legal tender before we got our own currency in 1933. In our collection we have an example of someone’s collection of coins – all 151 of them – which include British
4 1. Post-British and pre-decimal New Zealand coins, in use until 1967. 2. The Bank of New South Wales building. 3. ANZ Bank, on the corner of East and Tancred streets. 4. The 2018 Armistice Day commemorative coin.
coins from Queen Victoria’s reign, and more recent coins from Queen Elizabeth’s early reign. These coins were part of New Zealand’s own national currency created in 1933. These coins were in a tin, which is indicative of how many found ways to reuse items they already had to store other objects. For example, storing coins in a tin that used to house a master foods spice – no one would suspect what was inside! Coin collecting was a popular pastime for New Zealanders, which boomed once New Zealand switched to decimal currency in 1967. I assume any old box or tin was useful for this hobby. Numismatics, which is the study of currency including coins, banknotes and tokens, was called the hobby of kings due to their passion for collecting coins. Coins were also made for commemorative purposes, like the 1974 Commonwealth Games coin which may be familiar for many New Zealanders! The millennium bank note was legal tender and a collector’s item, much like the 2018 Armistice Day coin. While the 50 cent coin could be used, it almost feels wrong not to keep it due to how unique it is! Like the uniqueness of collectors’ coins, New Zealand coins themselves are unique. New Zealand was the first British Dominion to stop using heraldic motifs on our coins, and we instead embraced our unique New Zealand identity through the designs on our own coins, which has continued today. Ashburton Our collection includes the national currency and the many changes it went through, and many international coins from Ashburtonians’ adventures overseas. We also have some local coins that are a part of an interesting time for coins. Token coins were used in the late 19th Century when notes and coins were in short
supply. Shops often issued their own notes and coins (bronze and copper tokens) to accommodate the shortage, being given as change that could only be used at that store. In a way they were the first kind of loyalty programme for shops! In our collection we have a token coin from Huffams Restaurant and three tokens from H J Hall grocers in Christchurch. To see more coins, banknotes and the odd and curious items on display, make sure to visit the numismatics display on now at Ashburton Museum.
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Sport www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian 15
■■BOXING
Fury calls out Anthony Joshua Tyson Fury expects Deontay Wilder to take up the option of a rematch of their heavyweight championship bout, but said he’s ready for fellow Briton Anthony Joshua if the American declines. Speaking after his seventh-round TKO victory over Wilder in Las Vegas, Fury sounded happy to take on either man. “I had a great and worthy dance partner in Deontay Wilder and I’m sure we’re going to do it again,” Fury told Behind The Gloves at the MGM Grand Arena. “If Deontay don’t want the rematch then let’s go A.J.,” Fury added, referring to Joshua. Fury (30-0-1) retained his lineal crown and took the WBC crown from Wilder (421-1), though Joshua holds the rest of the belts in the division.
RESULTS ■■ Bowls Ashburton Bowling Club Singles: John Kewish; Pairs: Alistair Mackenzie & Min Hill; Triples: Murray Anderson Doug Kinvig. John Kewish; Fours: Murray Anderson Min Hill Alistair Mackenie & John Kewish; Jnr Singles: Brenton Donaldson.
■■ Bridge Ashburton Bridge Club February 17 B & C Ladder N/S 1st Shirley Harris & Faye Priest, 2nd Paul Leadley & Bernie Jopson, 3rd David Fisher & George Brown E/W 1st Pauline Scott & Colin Clemens, 2nd Mary Bruce & Bev Blair, 3rd Pat Wise & Joyce Johnson February 18 A Ladder N/S 1st Mary Buckland & Sonia Gill, 2nd Bill Kolkman & Jim Rooney, 3rd Johnny Wright & John McDonald E/W 1st Anne & Maurice Reid, 2nd Linda Baker & Mike Holmes, 3rd Rewa Kyle & Maree Moore February 19 Valetta Trophy N/S 1st Judith Moore & Johnny Wright, 2nd Elaine Lattimore & Shirley Lattimore, 3rd Rosemary McLaughlin & Judith Edmond E/W 1st Sue Rosevear & Kay Robb, 2nd Rewa Kyle & Trish Downward, 3rd Trish Small & Leigh Wackrow February 20 Mary Mulligan Trophy N/S 1st Mike Holdaway & John Fechney,
DRAWS ■■ Golf Ashburton Golf Club February 29 The first qualifying round for the Club Championships wiil be held. This will be a Stroke Round off the Blue Tees. Starting Times: Morning start at 8.00am; Afternoon players report at 12noon for a 12.30pm start, Nine hole golfers report at 1.00 for a 1.30pm start.
■■ Slowpitch Hampstead Slow Pitch February 28 Premier Final: 6.30pm Devon Tavern D.1: Marines & Angels v Shits & Giggles; Section 2 Final: 6.30pm: Laser Electrical D.2: Reigning Champs v Laser Attack; 3rd & 4th Placings: 6.00pm: First National Real Estate D.3: As Good As It Gets v Demolition 7th & 8th Placings: 6.00pm: Dell Phillips Landscaping D.4: Lion Brown Club v Hawkies Hawks
A fight between the pair would unify the belts but the mouth-watering, all-British match-up might have to wait for a Fury-Wilder trilogy to be completed instead. The first fight between Fury and Wilder in December 2018 was called a draw. Wilder now has 30 days to decide whether to exercise his option of a third fight with the Gypsy King. Impressive as Fury’s performance was, he said it did not compare to his 2015 takedown of Wladimir Klitschko. “Nothing will ever be bigger than my Wladimir Klitschko win because that was my first championship ring,” Fury said. “I was 7/1 underdog when I beat Klitschko in Germany. “Tonight people expected me to win. “It was a 50-50 fight going in.”
2nd Rona Brownlie & John McDonald, 3rd Trish Downward & Jan de Jong E/W 1st Val Palmer & Pat Jordan, 2nd = Sue Rosevear & Paul Fergus and Perry Jowers & Maurice Small, 3rd Debbie Seddon-Sewell & David Sewell
■■ Cycling Mid Canterbury Social Wheelers February 19 20 Riders, 16km Frazers Rd. 1st Emma Hudson CT.32.53. HT. Go. RT. 32m 53s. 2nd Paul Hands CT.32.53. HT. Go. RT. 32m 53s. 3rd Matt Donald CT.33.55. HT.9.30m. RT.24m 25s. 4th Martin Hyde CT.33.57. HT.8.40m. RT.25m 17s. 5th Paul Chapman CT.33.58. HT.8.40m. RT.25m 18s. 6th Paul Macfie CT.33.59. HT.9.30m. RT.24m 29s. 7th Nick Grijns CT.34.00. HT.8.40m. RT.25m 20s. 8th Rob Hooper CT.34.02. HT.9.30m. RT.24m 32s. 9th Michelle Davidson CT.34.03. HT.8.40m. RT.25m 23s. 10th Brad Hudson CT.34.46. HT.12.10m. RT.22m 36s. F/T. 11th Mark Summerfield CT.34.47. HT. 12.10m. RT. 22m 37s 2f/t. 12th Tony Ward CT.34.47. HT. 12.10m. RT. 22m 37s 3f/t. 13th Oliver Davidson CT.34.51. HT.12.10m. RT.22m 41s. 4f/t. 14th Dave Knight CT.34.51. HT. 12.10m. RT. 22m.41s. 5f/t. Riders involved in accident who also finished Pam Harcourt, Dave Shurrock Nigel Chatterton. Brent Hudson, Richard Begg, Ian Hobson.
■■ Golf Ashburton Ladies County Vets Golf February 21 Results Par Round held Ashburton Sanae Hydes 3up on c/b, Joyce Van Der Heide 3 up, Daphne McDonnell 2 up on c /b from Lucy Tait and June Bruhns. Nearest the pins #4 Carol Shanks, #8 n/s, #12 Barbara Harris, #14 Heather Santy. Twos #4 Christine Ross. 9 Holes Jenny Matthews 6 up.
Ashburton Golf Club February 22 and 23 Harvey Norman Classic Overall winners: Gordon Crawford & Shane Beavan 122.75. In the Men’s pairs winners: Steven Schwass & Greg Overall 123.5, Blair Franklin & Paul Warren 124.75, Steven Kircher & Paul Greer 126.5. Sonelau Collins & Brent McKey 127.25, Brent Smith & Jason Overend 127.25, Ross Chatterton & Richard McKernan 128.25, Nick Wilson & David Morrison 128.5, Brian Rouse & Chris Bell 128.5, Murray Young & Steven Stratford 129, David Fisher & George Brown 129, Jeff & Dave Hewitt 130, Gywn & Dean Williams 130, Ian Rive & Wilson Hii 130.25, Kevin Steenson & Anthony Hose 130.25. Winners in the Women’s pairs were: Emma Silva & Kendall Lee 125.25, Natasha Wilson & Meg Ness 130.25, Hilary Ward & Jacqui Welch 132.25, Sally Smith & Fiona Rushton 134. Winners in the Mixed Pairs were: Hong Zhang & Jianmin Guo 125, Emily Wilson & Michael Thomas 128.75, Wendy & Eric Parr 129.75, Catherine & Robbie Bell 130, Peter Wright & Sally Lemon 130.5, Marilyn Walker
Tyson Fury lands a good one on Deontay Wilder on Sunday night.
& Vince Carr 130.5. Twos: Gordon Crawford (2), Kerry Branson (2), Sam Clarke, Charlie Alexander, Cameron Grant, Perry Hunt, Nick Knight, Hamish Niles, Brent A Smith, Kevin Smith, Peter Wakelin, Ryan Cockburn, Matthew Fine, Ryan Barham, Andrew Barrie, Catherine Bell, Josh Ackerley, Maureen Kerr, Christine Kinita, Mary-Kou Watson, Brent Smith, Hamish Finnie, Eric Parr, Zhang Hong. Nearest The Pins Saturday: #4 Pauline Bell, #8 Walker Lin, #12 Tim Newton, # 14 Jo Peacock. Sunday: #4 Kerry Branson, #8 Matthew Fine, #12 Kerry Branson, #14 Leigh Wackrow. Longest Drive Saturday: Women Catherine Knight, Men Steve Cowie. Sunday: Women Kendall Lee, Men Cameron Grant. Longest Putt on #9: Women Sally Lemon, Men Brian Nuttall.
Mayfield Golf Club February 18 9 Hole - Stableford Round Lucy Tait 33, Judith Webb 33, Helen Rapsey 33, Anne Marie Blair 33, Jillian Lake 32, Juliet McLeod 32, Mr Manns Bakery& Café 2nd Shot 2 or 11 Margaret Read, Sims Bakery Nearest the Pin 5 or 14 Lal Mulligan . Two’s: Sue Graham No 5, Margaret Read No 2, Lal Mulligan No 14 February 20 Mayfield 9 Hole Golf 1st Handicap & Putting Putting: 1st Elspeth Jaine 12 putts, 2nd Tessa Gallagher 14 putts Handicap Men: 1st Eddie Graham 46-15-31, 2nd John Greenslade 55-17-38; Ladies: 1st Tessa Gallagher 50-20-30, 2nd Cate Hogan- Wright 57-27-30 Greg Sim Builders No 2: Eddie Graham, Mayfield Transport No 5: Eddie Graham
Methven Golf Club February 22 Men’s Division Reduced to 9 Holes due to inclement weather. Stableford Winner: Terry Molloy 22pts, 2nd Russell Currie by lot 21pts. Other good scores: 21pts Phil Johnson, Piers Rolton. 20pts Mike Holmes, Gary Kermode, Craig Middleton. 19pts Michael Kemp, Allan Smith, Geoff Kelk, James Bell. 18pts John Mcgettigan, Gavin Santy, Dayle Lucas, Mike Gray, Ben Rutter by lot. Two’s: Michael Kemp, Piers Rolton x2, Phil Johnson, James Anderson. Closest to the Pin-Aqua Japanese Restaurant No 4: Piers Rolton. Hunters Wine No 6: Nobody. Ski Time No 13: Jim Lattimore. Green Parrot No 17: James Anderson. 2nd shot No 14: Jim Lattimore. Next Week February 29: Next round Rodger Harris Memorial. Kemp & Mcgettigan Trophys. Nancy McCormick Foursomes February 19 AM Winners: Ruth Smith & Roz Grant 9424.5-69.5, Heather Middleton & Marg Kelk 106-33-73; PM Winners: Sharryn Bree & Tania Wilson 86-21-65, Heather Middleton & Marg Kelk 99-33-66, Nancy McCormick Winners, Heather Middleton & Marg Kelk 139 18 Hole Stroke Round: Nola Hydes 101-3071, Sharon Burrell-Smith 108-32-76
Nearest the Pins: #4 Open Methven Travel Ruth Smith, #6 Open Methven Pharmacy Sharryn Bree, #13 Open Methven Foursquare Gayle O’Duffy, #17 Open Arabica Jenny Senior, #4 Sat Girls Cinema Paradiso Sharon Burrell-Smith
Rakaia Golf Club February 19 3 Clubs and a Putter – Kathleen Lawler Trophy 9 Holers: Lillian O’Hanlon 58-21-37; 18 Holers: Jill Burrowes 99-29-70 (Kathleen Lawler Trophy), Sandra Quinn 89-18-71, Sue Martin 101-28-73; Men - Stableford: John Harcourt 40 Railway Tavern 2nd shot no 3: Jill Burrowes, Rakaia Seed Cleaning 2nd shot no 6: Sue Martin, V Bell Nearest Pin no 8: Steve Booker, Chertsey Spraying 2nd shot no 15: Sandra Quinn, S. Quinn 2nd shot no 17: Teresa Booker Twos: Sue Martin # 6, Marion Wederell #17
Tinwald Golf Club February 19 Twilight Stroke Leading scores in the twilight stroke round: -6; Phill Hooper 32. Nigel Heney 35 c/b. 7-10: Mitch VanderKrogt 33. Neil Rayner, Lawrence McCormick 34, Brian Rouse 35 c/b. 11 plus: Arthur Pawsey 32, Graeme Mills. Roger Bruce 33, Selwyn Munro 34 c/b. Women: 0-14: Maxine Whiting 32, Pam McAndrew 33. 15 plus: Barb Cochrane 34, Emily Wilson 35. Non-Handicap; Shaun Hurley 40. Nearest the pin: # 2 Jacqui Beardsley. # 16 Andy Peck. Two’s; Phil Prendergast. Radio Hokonui hacker; Karen Young with net 46. February 22 Stroke Leading scores in the 1st round of the Smitheram (gross) and Grant (net) Trophies played on Saturday. - 12; Simon Ross 79-71, Daryl Young 86-74. 13-18; Ross Preece 81-64, Andrew Hill 8268.19 plus; Selwyn Munro 89-63, Ton Kittikote 87-68. Women; Barb MacGregor 77. Nearest the pin; Tinwald Liquorland # 2; Randall Feutz. Gluyas Ford # 6; Wayne Mellish. House of Travel # 12; Tetua Tuakeu. Ace Auto Electrical # 16; Sally Lane. G & R Seeds 2nd shot #11; Alex Roa. Two’s; Andrew Hill, Ross Preece, Poko Paraia. Net Eagle; # 13 Simon Ross, Selwyn Munro.
■■ Shooting Ashburton District Rifle Club February 23 February At 600 yards. TR, Allan White 50.5, 50.9, 100.14, Megan Snowden 49.2, 50.5, 99.7, Chris Kershaw 49.2, 49.4, 98.6, John Snowden 49.5, 48.5, 97.10, John Miller 49.2, 48.4, 97.6, Martin Fleming 48.2, 48.4, 96.6, John Fleming 47.6, 46.2, 93.8, Gareth Miller 47.4, 46.2, 93.6. FTR, Coby Snowden 56.2, 56.1, 112.3, Mark Alexander 53.3, 53.2, 103.5, Murray Cook
PHOTO AP
51.2, 53.1, 104.3. FO, Darral Bradley 55.2, 54.2, 109.4, David Smith 50.0, 47.1, 97.1.
■■ Slowpitch Hampstead Slow Pitch February 21 Marines & Angels 17-11 Demolition, Shits & Giggles 20-11 As Good As It Gets, Laser Attack 25-24 Hawkies Hawks, Reigning Champs 17-6 Lion Brown Club
■■ Squash Celtic Squash Club February 17 Team 9 beat Team 6 9-8: Jimmy Hunn beat Ron Carlson 2-1, James Bowker drew with Blair Horrell 2-2, Brendon Clark drew with Rebecca Abernethy 2-2, Lucas Raphoid lost to Guy Stanway 0-3, Kate Williams beat Jane Kingan 3-0. Team 3 drew with Team 1 8-8: Scott Broker lost to Billy Nolan 1-2, Rob Giles beat Melissa Wilson 3-0, Jade Coley lost to Hamish Trott 0-3, Riley Broker lost to Mike Keen 1-3, Jayden Adam beat Maria O’Reilly 3-0. Team 2 beat Team 4 12-6: John McDonnell beat Nathan Forbes 3-0, Phil Andrew drew with Chris Thompson 2-2, Kirsty Clay drew with Neil Keenan 2-2, Jan Lee drew with Hayden Robinson 2-2, Sian Hurley beat Sarah Forbes 3-0. February 19 Team 8 beat Team 7 10-8: James McCloy beat Wouter Myburgh 3-2, Tim Kuipers lost to Craig Campbell 0-3: Jordy Hooper lost to Shane Muckle 1-3, Sam Kuipers beat Jayden Adam 3-0; Sian Hurley beat Megan Bell 3-0. Team 5 beat Team 10 11-7: Ben Kruger drew with Paul Cousins 2-2, Chris Lima beat Ian Dolden 3-0; Nicky Dryland lost to Neil Keenan 1-3, Amy Muckle beat Charlotte Smith 3-0, Tate Dryland drew with Maggie Clark 2-2.
■■ Tennis Mid Canterbury Tennis February 19 Famous Grouse 16 v Out of Service 17, We Are Stihl Suzuki 17 v Tridents 16, What’s the Score 18 v Hackers 15, Let’s Play 15 v Council Crew 18, Grand Slammers 17 v The Aces 16, Family Affair 17 v The Raqueteers 16, Courtiers 14 v Mighty Meerkats 19. February 20 Division 1: Heineken Openers 4½ v Coasters 1½, Cates Grain & Seed 1½ v 4½, Croziers Turkeys 5½ v Lakers ½ Division 2: Geraldine 5 v Doubles Faults 1, Carrfields 3 v Ball Wackers 3, Court Nite 3 v Ruapuna 3. Division 2A: Cream of the Crop 4 v Agitated Panda 2, B Team ½ v Winchmore 5½, Faultless 1 v New Boys 5. Division 3: Backspin 6 v Farm & Kitchen 0, I’d Hit That – PB 4 v 4 Aces 2, Miss Hits 2½ v Rough Enough 3½, Read Revellers 6 v The Young & the Rest of Us 0, Wanna Bees 3 v RMF Silva – Great Sets 3, The Ladies beat In with a Shot by default.
Sport 16 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■ CRICKET
Rain creates Hawke Cup impasse Only 28 overs were possible over the weekend as Mid Canterbury and Southland’s Hawke Cup encounter ended in a rain-affected stalemate. Southland, who were still in contention for a Hawke Cup challenge, won the toss and elected to field at Timaru’s Aorangi Oval. Mid Canterbury opener Devon Flannery fell in the second over of the innings when he was trapped in front off the bowling of Jason Osborne for 5. Fellow opener Nick Gilbert also fell to Osborne, who was impressive across his 8 overs, to leave Mid Canterbury 26/2 with runs also hard to come by. While skipper James Southby toiled away at one end, Des Kruger took the attack to the Southland bowlers, hitting eight fours and a six in his high-octane 47. He combined with his captain for a third wicket stand of 73 before he was stumped off the bowling of Sam Nicholson. However play was abandoned at the end of the 28th over, with Mid Canterbury 104/3.
Right – Mid Canterbury’s Des Kruger hit 47 off 52 balls during the rain-affected Hawke Cup encounter against Southland in Timaru. PHOTO ASHBURTON GUARDIAN
Black Caps wrap up stunning win over India By Niall Anderson Ninety years after their debut, and 64 after their first win, New Zealand have brought up their century of test triumphs with one of their most famous victories. Two of the country’s greatest bowlers inspired the Black Caps’ 10-wicket win over India in Wellington yesterday – the 100th time New Zealand have tasted the sweet success of victory in cricket’s most treasured format. Of those 99 previous wins, over those 90 long years, few have been more impressive than this one. India came into this match as test cricket’s undisputed world No. 1 – a team that had ruled all comers in the Test Championship to claim a record seven straight victories, all by emphatic margins that underlined just how dominant a side they were. And yet, juggernaut or not, a trip to New Zealand left India with the same result that most touring teams receive these days – a demoralising defeat. It’s now 12 tests in a row without defeat at home for the Black Caps, and the fact that a dominant victory over the world No. 1 side doesn’t come as a completely seismic shock is a testament to just how far this side has come over recent years. In 2002 – 72 years after they made their test entrance – New Zealand reached 50 test victories. 18 years later, they’ve doubled that, with 32 victories coming in
Within a superb team effort from New Zealand over the past four days, there have been two superheroes, the fast bowling duo of Trent Boult and Tim Southee. PHOTO AP the past 10 years alone. When playing at home, even the best teams in the world struggle against the Black Caps’ mastery of their conditions; a fact proven once again yesterday as Trent
Boult and Tim Southee inspired something special. Resuming at 144-4, trailing by 39 runs, India still had hope of salvaging something from the test, with accomplished batsmen at
the crease in Ajinkya Rahane and Hanuma Vihari, both of whom had looked comfortable in getting through to stumps unscathed the night before. But, in pristine conditions at
the Basin Reserve, neither had any answers for the similarly immaculate bowling of New Zealand’s greatest fast bowling duo. It took just three overs for Boult to remove Rahane with a delivery that demanded a shot, but seamed away just enough to tickle the outside edge, before Southee suckered Vihari with a beautiful outswinger-outswinger-inswinger combination to rattle his stumps in the following over. If their batsmen couldn’t handle what was coming their way, then India’s bowlers had no chance. Ravichandran Ashwin was trapped in front by Southee, while wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant picked out the safe hands of Boult in the deep from Southee’s bowling as India were cleaned up for 191 – Southee ending with 5-61, and Boult 4-39. It left only nine runs required for the Black Caps openers, and Tom Latham and Tom Blundell needed just 10 balls to complete a historic victory. Sixty-four years on from the delirious scenes of their first test triumph, there was no need to rush the field or salvage a stump; nor even any particular awe at what had been accomplished – for the players, this was just another win. Don’t let their typically understated reaction fool you, though. This victory was well worth the famous milestone it accompanies – New Zealand have reached their century, and there have been few better moments than this.
Sport www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian 17
■■FOOTBALL
Jota double gets Wolves home over Norwich
Soggy start to the season Mid Canterbury United’s Niall Young looks to keep the ball away from a St Albans Shirley player in their pre-season friendly at Argyle Park on Saturday. Played in heavy rain, the visiting St Albans Shirley side came out on top 6-4 in an exciting game. Mid Canterbury opened the scoring, but were always chasing the game after the visitors scored three rapid-fire goals. Mid Canterbury’s pre-season continues this Saturday against Parklands at Argyle Park before the Canterbury Championship League kicksoff on March 21. PHOTO ROBYN HOOD 220220-RH-090
■■FOOTBALL
Fernandes stars for Man United Bruno Fernandes coolly rolled in a penalty for his first goal for Manchester United to set his new team on its way to a 3-0 win over relegation-threatened Watford in the Premier League yesterday. Anthony Martial also netted, for the third straight game, and teenager Mason Greenwood added a brilliant third goal as United climbed above Tottenham and Sheffield United into fifth in the standings. That is currently a Champions League qualification place following Manchester City’s recent two-season ban from European competitions by UEFA. Fernandes has slotted seamlessly into the United team since his January move from Sporting Lisbon. After grabbing his first assist in the 2-0 win over Chelsea, the Portugal playmaker got on the scoresheet for the first time against Watford. He was brought down by Watford goalkeeper Ben Foster – a former United player – as he surged through into the area,
and got himself up to impudently roll home the 42nd-minute spot kick, sending Foster the wrong way. It was no surprise to see Fernandes taking penalty duties, having scored 12 out of 12 from the spot when at Sporting. “In today’s market I think we got a good deal,” coach Solskjaer said of Fernandes, who moved to United in a deal worth up to 80 million euros ($88 million). “He’s given everyone a boost. “It means more than just getting a player in. “You can see the supporters, they’re used to players with that personality, mentality and quality so he’s been a big plus.” Watford striker Troy Deeney thought he had equalised in the 52nd when he bundled in following a corner, but the goal was disallowed by VAR because the ball struck the arm of teammate Craig Dawson as the defender went for a header off the cross. Watford, who have stayed in the relegation zone with 11 games left, were further pun-
ished when Martial made it 2-0 with a cheeky finish after his initial shot at goal was saved by Foster. The French forward collected the loose ball, beat Etienne Capoue with a lovely drag-back, and chipped Foster from an acute angle. “I am delighted with the week Anthony’s had,” Solskjaer said. “He has got his critics and I am one of his biggest probably because I keep demanding different stuff from him. “The skill (for the goal) is just mind-blowing ... But I want more from him and I’ll keep at him.” Greenwood made the points safe, collecting Fernandes’ inside pass and rifling a fierce shot into the roof of the net from just inside the area. Odion Ighalo, the former Watford striker signed by United from the Chinese Super League on transfer deadline day last month, came off the bench for his home debut and struck the post with a shot in the 84th after rounding Foster.
Fernandes goes down.
PHOTO AP
Diogo Jota added two more goals to the midweek hat-trick he scored in the Europa League as Wolverhampton beat last-place Norwich 3-0 in the Premier League yesterday to keep in touch with the Champions League qualification positions. The Portugal forward scored in the 19th and 30th minutes, then drove in a shot that struck the post before Raul Jimenez bundled home the loose ball for the third goal in the second half at Molineux. Jota has had an injury-interrupted season but is in a rich vein of form, having netted three goals in Wolves’ 4-0 win over Espanyol in the first leg of the Europa League last 32 on Thursday. He appeared to benefit from Wolves manager Nuno Espirito Santo’s decision to switch from his usual 3-4-3 formation to a 3-5-2 favoured at the end of last season, which saw Jota playing as a central striker alongside Jimenez rather than a wide forward. That meant right winger Adama Traore, one of Wolves’ best players this season, was dropped to the bench. “We know a player’s performance can go up and down,” Espirito Santo said of Jota. “It’s the right decisions, the right solutions we try to find to keep sustaining his performance. Not only him, but all the team. “Of course, I’m delighted with his goals. “It’s nothing specific – these things happen. His last touch has been clinical, Thursday and today, and hopefully it continues.” Wolves are managing to juggle their domestic and European commitments impressively and moved up to eighth place in the league, just two points behind Manchester United in fifth place. That is currently a Champions League qualification place following Manchester City’s recent two-season ban from European competitions by UEFA. Explaining the hunger of his squad following what was Wolves’ 44th game of the season, Espirito Santo said he and his staff are working seven days a week. “The way they recover, the way they respect themselves, the way the staff dedicates, we don’t have days off,” he said. “We are always preparing ourselves to compete. “This is how we want to compete, and the difficulty is to sustain it, so it requires a lot of hard work, and every day is harder. But it’s our job. We embrace the challenge, so everybody has to help – everyone.” It looks increasingly like Norwich will be returning to the second-tier League Championship after just one season in the top flight. Daniel Farke’s side, which has earned praise for its positive football, is seven points from safety with 11 games remaining.
Sport/racing 18 Ashburton Guardian
www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
■■ GOLF
Crawford, Beavan take golf classic
By Adam Burns
adam.b@theguardian.co.nz
Shane Beavan and Gordon Crawford collected the plaudits at the Ashburton Golf Club on the weekend. The pair secured an overall win in the two-day Harvey Norman Classic which wrapped up on Sunday. Rain put a dampener on the first day teams event on the Saturday which was followed by the two-person best ball format the next day. Beavan and Crawford’s score of 122.75 led them to the victory in the event, which comprised of 198 golfers – two short of numbers organisers were hoping for. Steven Schwass and Greg Overall also impressed, registering 123.5 to lead the way in the men’s pairs, followed by Blair Frankling and Paul Warren (124.75) and Paul Greer and Steven Kircher (126.5). Emma Silva and Kendall Lee won the women’s pairs event, chalking up 125.25, with Lee also hitting the longest drive on the final day, alongside her male counterpart Cameron Grant. The next best were Meg Ness and Natasha Wilson (130.25) and Hilary Ward and Jacqui Welch (132.25). Crawford, alongside Kerry Branson, also hit twos on the Sunday. Branson was nearest to the pin on two occasions during the final day.
Right – Kay Fox tees off during the Harvey Norman Classic at the Ashburton Golf Club on Sunday. PHOTO ROBYN HOOD 230220-RH-404
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Otago Greyhound Racing Club Venue: Forbury Park Raceway Meeting Date: 25 Feb 2020 NZ Meeting number: 3 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 12.15pm (NZT) OTAGO MAIDEN FEATURE SPRINT C0q, 310m 1 34232 Mitcham Magic nwtd..................J McInerney 2 57756 Impressive Gift nwtd..................J McInerney 3 64 Button It nwtd J M............................ McCook 4 58666 Gotcha Georgie nwtd..... M P Hamilton-Dyett 5 74 Tides End nwtd...................................J Allen 6 52222 Homebush Gambler nwtd..........J McInerney 7 45645 Opawa Nash nwtd.............................. J Rush 8 43636 Go Blue nwtd................................... R Wales 9 78666 Opawa Pauline nwtd........................ R Wales 10 72 Miss June nwtd..........................J McInerney 2 12.32 OGRC EARLY QUADDIE SPRINT C1, 310m 1 86877 Cosmic Marty 18.91...................J McInerney 2 38382 Goldstar Perrie nwtd S &................. B Evans 3 52463 Shanly Star 19.04......................J McInerney 4 14672 Homebush Fairy nwtd................J McInerney 5 52761 Homebush Stasser 19.03..........J McInerney 6 76776 Melting World 19.31........................J Guthrie 7 18588 Homebush Liz nwtd...................J McInerney 8 74742 Opal Hunter 18.86......................J McInerney 9 85553 Smokey Dodger 18.72.............. P Hammond 10 6414F Impressive High nwtd.................J McInerney
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Otago dogs
Today at Forbury Park Raceway 3 12.52pm WWW.GREYHOUNDSASPETS.ORG.NZ C0, 545m 1 56221 Bobble nwtd J &...............................D Fahey 2 7 Goldstar Aria nwtd S &..................... B Evans 3 2 Ripslinger Roxy nwtd................. A Bradshaw 4 246 Justin Lincoln nwtd S &.................... B Evans 5 22225 Miss Malia nwtd............................... R Wales 6 5 Mayhem Made nwtd................... A Bradshaw 7 8664F Opawa Rod nwtd............................. R Wales 8 5 Goldstar Darwin nwtd S &................ B Evans 9 4 Slippery Suzie nwtd S &.................. B Evans 4 1.09 OTAGO MAIDEN FEATURE SPRINT C0q, 310m 1 88845 Opawa Jaws nwtd............................ R Wales 2 33451 King Theoden nwtd..........................C Steele 3 8 Goldstar Harlowe nwtd S &.............. B Evans 4 53842 Mitcham Nikorima nwtd..............J McInerney 5 225 Bees Are Buzzing nwtd J M............. McCook 6 83265 Impressive Mood nwtd...............J McInerney 7 25425 Sea Spray Ash nwtd....................B Freeman 8 36875 Homebush Showoff nwtd...........J McInerney 9 57F86 Mitcham Queen nwtd.................J McInerney 10 37887 Homebush Jozie nwtd................J McInerney 5 1.27pm OTAGO MAIDEN FEATURE SPRINT C0q, 310m 1 636F7 Yappy Yap nwtd................................ R Wales 2 8 Double Queenie nwtd................J McInerney 3 6 Mitcham Rob nwtd.....................J McInerney
4 21 Homebush Ariana nwtd..............J McInerney 5 47434 Knocka Know How nwtd.................G Cleeve 6 58887 Pukeko Magic nwtd....................J McInerney 7 85653 Nykara nwtd J M.............................. McCook 8 2333 Mitcham Goldie nwtd................. A Bradshaw 9 886 Homebush Poppy nwtd..............J McInerney 10 77 Homebush Ivy nwtd...................J McInerney 6 1.44pm DAVE ROBBIE PHOTOGRAPHER STAKES C1, 545m 1 33263 Born Tasha nwtd.............................. R Wales 2 72545 Mitcham Manering 34.30...........J McInerney 3 14612 Homebush Fonzie nwtd.............J McInerney 4 57525 Know Talent 33.52...........................G Cleeve 5 54416 Max Volume 33.41..................... A Bradshaw 6 78764 Archie’s Ranger 32.93 J M............... McCook 7 81643 Goldstar Smithie nwtd S &............... B Evans 8 64454 Nippa Enough nwtd....................J McInerney 9 34745 Goldstar Alaska 33.05 S &............... B Evans 10 16265 Silouette Jet 33.21..............................J Allen 7 2.02 BRIAN BAGLEY DRIVER LICENSING STAKES C1, 545m 1 14233 Prince Rohit nwtd.......................J McInerney 2 24427 Baldrick 33.04............................J McInerney 3 621x3 Opawa Jane nwtd............................ R Wales 4 16718 Homebush Surgeon 32.82.........J McInerney 5 43674 Goldstar Ashton 32.81 S &.............. B Evans 6 73653 Punch On Woody nwtd..............J McInerney
7 53515 Mitcham Toddy nwtd.................. A Bradshaw 8 12274 Lethal Lettie nwtd....................... A Bradshaw 9 13547 Goldstar Beau nwtd S &................... B Evans 10 15645 Haze Adams nwtd J M..................... McCook 8 2.18pm ST KILDA VETERINARY CENTRE SPRINT C1, 310m 1 33743 Crushington nwtd.......................J McInerney 2 14642 Goldstar Halsey nwtd S &................ B Evans 3 55423 Goldstar Liberty nwtd J M................ McCook 4 88282 Homebush Jordie 18.89.............J McInerney 5 17786 Homebush Maree nwtd..............J McInerney 6 73511 Mitcham Usain nwtd...................J McInerney 7 77488 Gracie Lee nwtd.........................J McInerney 8 46668 Punch On Rex 18.86..................J McInerney 9 75453 Father Leo 19.54........................J McInerney 10 56753 Dusty’s Ink 18.87.............................B Healey 9 2.35 BROCKLEBANKS DRY CLEANERS SPRINT C2, 310m 1 64331 Homebush Aimee nwtd..............J McInerney 2 71711 St Andrews 18.75...............................D Lane 3 37243 Cool Beans 18.95......................J McInerney 4 67311 Homebush Bomber 18.49..........J McInerney 5 56421 Goldstar Flora nwtd S &................... B Evans 6 68471 Sass ‘Em Up 18.87 J M.................... McCook 7 15433 Elite Blueblood 19.59.................J McInerney 8 43232 Cash A Roo nwtd S &...................... B Evans 9 33217 Mitcham Trudy 18.81..................J McInerney
10 37265 Opawa Waihemo 18.63.................... R Wales 2.52pm NZ RACING SERIES GRADUATION (C2C3) FINAL NZRSf, 545m 1 84113 Viking Mafia 32.53 J &.....................D Fahey 2 11134 Goldstar Spook nwtd S &................. B Evans 3 13122 Ozzie 33.08........................................D Lane 4 72714 Punters Bolt 32.73........................... R Wales 5 16126 Classy Witch 32.54.........................G Cleeve 6 12275 Joe Bonanza 32.36....................J McInerney 7 15116 Mr Blackjack 32.70 J &....................D Fahey 8 72331 Know Conclusion 32.66..................G Cleeve Emergencies: 9 11235 Tucker nwtd........................................D Lane 10 64228 Punch On Buzz nwtd.................J McInerney SELECTIONS
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Race 1: Mitcham Magic, Opawa Nash, Go Blue, Tides End Race 2: Goldstar Perrie, Homebush Stasser, Cosmic Marty Race 3: Bobble, Goldstar Darwin, Goldstar Aria, Slippery Suzie Race 4: Opawa Jaws, Sea Spray Ash, Mitcham Nikorima Race 5: Homebush Ariana, Mitcham Rob, Double Queenie Race 6: Born Tasha, Homebush Fonzie, Goldstar Alaska Race 7: Opawa Jane, Lethal Lettie, Prince Rohit, Baldrick Race 8: Goldstar Halsey, Mitcham Usain, Homebush Jordie Race 9: St Andrews, Cool Beans, Cash A Roo, Mitcham Trudy Race 10: Viking Mafia, Ozzie, Classy Witch, Know Conclusion LEGEND: fsdt - First Start Here nwd - No Win this Distance fstd - First Start This Distance 31 13 - Best Winning Time This Track
Otago dogs
Today at Forbury Park Raceway
1 21423 Mitcham Pru 18.51..................... A Bradshaw 2 68718 Goldstar Avalon 19.03 S &............... B Evans 3 78725 Nikko Baxter 18.71.....................J McInerney 1 3.12pm EXTRA MEETING JET BET 9 STAKES C2, 2 85131 Homebush Zack nwtd................J McInerney 4 54541 Sozin’s Azure 18.81...................J McInerney 3 87371 Zefside 18.51.............................J McInerney 5 53736 Goldstar Dodge 18.72 S &............... B Evans 545m 1 66527 Know Denying 32.57.......................G Cleeve 4 42221 Punters Kirsty nwtd.......................... R Wales 6 31317 Punch On Scooby 18.69............J McInerney 2 21141 Opawa Slick nwtd J &......................D Fahey 5 42371 Dagny nwtd J M............................... McCook 7 67213 Ophira Bale nwtd..........................M Roberts 3 16878 Black Dan 32.63.........................J McInerney 6 37781 Goldstar Jay Jay 18.59 S &.............. B Evans 8 28626 Homebush Sayer 18.33.............J McInerney 4 34118 Goldstar Yankee 33.28 S &.............. B Evans 7 52125 Yi Feng 18.76.............................J McInerney 9 27636 Know Sweat 18.59..........................G Cleeve 5 35167 Replica Rango nwtd........................B Pringle 8 88271 Mitcham Becky nwtd........................C Steele 10 34145 Reign Of Fire 18.37....................J McInerney 4 4.02pm ST KILDA DASH C4/5, 310m 6 64228 Punch On Buzz nwtd.................J McInerney Emergencies: 7 32771 Mick The Mower 33.31...............J McInerney 9 63745 Blazing Banjo 18.72...................J McInerney 1 41516 Go Gunna 18.65.............................. R Wales 8 85561 Shift The Blame 32.60................J McInerney 10 23356 Jinja Liv nwtd J M............................. McCook 2 22443 Shaw Lee 18.25 J M........................ McCook 9 36864 Kia Tere nwtd S &............................. B Evans 3 3.45 PETER SINTON PLUMBING SPRINT C3, 310m 3 62254 Chasing Fame 18.27..........................S Keen Otago Greyhound Racing Club Venue: Forbury Park Raceway 10 46772 Bashful Buffy 32.64....................J McInerney Meeting Date: 25 Feb 2020 NZ Meeting number: 9 Doubles: 1 2 3.28pm OTAGO QUADDIE SPRINT C2, 310m and 2; 4 and 5 Trebles: 3, 4 and 5 1 34571 Know Logic 18.85...........................G Cleeve
4 36147 Hankenstein 18.32..................... A Bradshaw 5 32114 Our Anna nwtd................................. R Wales 6 81823 Homebush Caesar 18.30...........J McInerney 7 31866 Kiwi Gunn 18.63.............................R Adcock 8 58168 Homebush Alexei nwtd..............J McInerney 9 53667 Souffle Sue nwtd........................J McInerney 10 87278 Nippa Martino 18.53..................J McInerney 5 4.21pm RACING AGAIN THURSDAY 5TH MARCH C4, 310m 1 11372 Know Majority 19.02.......................G Cleeve 2 88674 Amuri George 19.08...................J McInerney 3 11121 Oakmont 18.60..................................D Lane 4 16238 King Toliman nwtd.........................D Roberts 5 23624 Disobedience 18.63 S &.................. B Evans
6 36535 Little Krakatoa 18.64.................. A Bradshaw 7 15526 Special As 19.23 J M....................... McCook 8 25437 Starr Blueblood 18.72................J McInerney Emergencies: 9 66476 Frizzled nwtd.................................M Roberts 10 12477 Amuri Magic 18.35.....................J McInerney SELECTIONS
Race 1: Goldstar Yankee, Shift The Blame, Punch On Buzz Race 2: Zefside, Yi Feng, Punters Kirsty, Homebush Zack Race 3: Ophira Bale, Nikko Baxter, Punch On Scooby Race 4: Our Anna, Shaw Lee, Kiwi Gunn, Homebush Caesar Race 5: Oakmont, Disobedience, Frizzled, Starr Blueblood LEGEND: fsdt - First Start Here nwd - No Win this Distance fstd - First Start This Distance 31 13 - Best Winning Time This Track
Racing www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Ashburton Guardian 19
■■OAMARU
It’s Shadow Minister’s Cup Jonny Turner Shadow Minister blew away any doubts his co-owners had about their 5-yr-old handling a grass track staying test when winning the Waikouaiti Cup at Oamaru on Sunday. The pacer outmuscled runner-up Rocknroll Max after a brief home straight battle, meaning Rakaia horseman Leo O’Reilly had trained, driven and coowned the winner of the 3000m feature pace. Angela O’Reilly, who co-owns Shadow Minister with her husband, admitted she and Leo had their reservations about how their horse would handle the Waikouaiti Cup distance. “We were a bit worried about how he was going to handle 3000m on the grass,” she said. Shadow Minister filled one half of a Mid Canterbury quinella in the feature race with the Laurence Hanrahan trained Rocknroll Max finishing second. O’Reilly will return to Oamaru today for the second day of the two-day meeting from the Waikouaiti Club and look to continue his hot form on the track. In his last two days of driving at the North Otago racecourse he’s netted three winners and holds a strong hand early on today with the talented debutant, Daggy Lamb. He will also drive last-start winner Barkley and Rafa Novak for Chris McDowell. Meanwhile, Ohoka trotter Never Mind left a quality line-up in his wake when bolting away with the feature trot on Sunday. Driver Matthew Williamson had the 6-yr-old in front soon after the start of the 2000m event, and the further Never Mind went, the further he got in front of his key rivals. The Muscle Mass squaregaiter came in to Sunday’s race after running a good premier night
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Leo O’Reilly trained, drove and part-owns Shadow Minister who won Sunday’s Waikouaiti Cup. before brought him on like it would.” Never Mind’s training since his Addington placing left no doubt about his condition heading into Sunday’s feature event, so Yesberg gave Williamson licence to use the tactics he is known best for. “With the way he worked during the week, I said to Matty ‘if you get to the front and anything gets to your wheel just quicken up again’,” the trainer said. Never Mind did not just quick-
race at Addington earlier this month. Though Never Mind ran on strongly into third in that race, trainer Trent Yesberg was disappointed with his horse’s effort behind One Apollo after Williamson found a nice run in the one-one for him. “I just thought he wasn’t quite ready for that last race at Addington on premier night,” Yesberg said. “I don’t think the race the week
PHOTO ASHBURTON GUARDIAN
en when challenged in the lead – he left his rivals breathless, going on to win race 10 by three and three-quarter lengths. Outsiders Playboy’s Brother and BK Dawn filled second and third placings, respectively. Beating a smart line-up has earned Never Mind another shot at premier racing at Addington. “We will probably give him a bit of a freshen-up now and look at the premier meetings coming up at Addington,” Yesberg said.
“That was a bit of a statement – so we will target wherever the good stakes are. “I think he will go through to the top grade. “He might not be up with the best ones when he gets there, but I definitely think he will get there.” The victory completed a successful week for Yesberg, who prepared, sold and purchased yearlings at the national yearling sales in Auckland and Christchurch.
19 645P0 Majestic Rose (U6) fr.............. J Morrison (J) Emergencies: Don’t Look Back, Dream Of Pat, Michelle, Rachmaninov 7 4.44pm PICK & SHOVEL/OMALASS - DRIED MOLASSES MBL PACE $9750, r40-r44,r45 w/c., 2000m 1 00000 Victor Tango (1) fr..................... L McCormick 2 07000 Shindal (2) fr................................. S McNally 3 59043 Canardly Remember (3) fr...............J W Cox 4 49334 Geoff’s Legacy (4) fr 5 40027 My Nikayla (5) fr..........................R McIlwrick 6 80000 Goodthingstaketime (6) fr............... G Shand 7 29103 Futura Easton (7) fr 8 04775 Tin Roof Blues (8) fr...................... G O’Reilly 9 00689 Von Richthofen (9) fr......................B Orange 10 02082 Little Rain (21) fr......................A Mugford (J) 11 09655 Rozzano (22) fr.....................S Tomlinson (J) 12 30556 Get It On (23) fr........................ M Williamson 13 77800 Pocket Call (24) fr.................... C D Thornley 14 69030 Honour Scroll (25) fr 8 5.09pm GLAMOUR HOOVES STABLES/GOLDEN FLEECE HCP $10,500, r50+ discrhcp, stand, 2000m 1 04035 One Over Dover (1) fr.............. C D Thornley 2 25x98 Mystical Star (1) 10M.................... S McNally 3 61466 Lisa Marie P (2) 10M 4 46611 Moniburns (3) 10M.........................B Orange 5 1085P Ali Lindenny (4) 10M 6 x7022 Playboy’s Brother (5) 10M.................S Ottley 7 x7315 Sun Swinger (6) 10M.............. J Morrison (J) 8 79403 BK Dawn (7) 10M.......................... P Wakelin 9 52117 Kiwi Crusher (U1) 10M...............M Hurrell (J) 10 34606 Riteur (1) 20M...........................B Williamson 11 21896 Only One Way (2) 20M............. M Williamson 12 51119 Rocknpop (3) 20M.....................A Tomlinson 13 x7190 Majestic Connies (U1) 20M...K Tomlinson (J) 14 57330 Humble Ladd (U2) 20M...............R McIlwrick 15 40567 Sundons Flyer (1) 30M...........J Young-Grant 9 5.41pm MCLELLAN FREIGHT LTD MOBILE PACE $10,500, 3yo+ r45-r60,r61-r63 w/c., mobile, 2000m
1 89070 Alexy (1) fr..................................D O’Connell 2 31364 Lucys Delight (2) fr.......................B McLellan 3 04052 Franco June (3) fr.................... J Morrison (J) 4 09540 Silent Rapture (4) fr......................C DeFilippi 5 5059x Paul’s Verdict (5) fr 6 33160 Lite Percussion (6) fr.........................S Ottley 7 97504 One Direction (7) fr..........................J W Cox 8 27174 Johnny Eyre (8) fr.............................R Close 9 10713 Gabby’s Star (9) fr.....................B Williamson 10 92011 Sheeza Sport (21) fr..................M Hurrell (J) 11 69361 Barkley (22) fr................................L O’Reilly 12 61700 Georgie Zukov (23) fr............... M Williamson 13 x0611 Mini Mine Yet (24) fr................. S O’Reilly (J) 10 6.13pm WOODLANDS STUD/MORRISONS SADDLERY PACE $9750, r40-r55, stand, 2000m 1 77800 Pocket Call (1) fr..............................L Dobbs 2 72190 Loissonya (2) fr..........................M Hurrell (J) 3 92010 Auchtercairn (3) fr...................J Young-Grant 4 40987 Chiller Bay (4) fr.............................B Orange 5 50002 Omar Sharif (5) fr..........................T Williams 6 24548 Standout (6) fr......................... J Morrison (J) 7 89203 Gotta Future (7) fr 8 900x9 Sister’s Delight (8) fr..........................S Ottley 9 06200 Fletch (9) fr............................... M Williamson 10 97276 Hes Fast And Furious (10) fr.S Tomlinson (J) 11 65809 God Only Knows (11) fr................... G Smith 12 81970 Rafa Novak (12) fr..........................L O’Reilly 13 0x000 Dixie Jazz (13) fr...................... C D Thornley 14 00000 Victor Tango (14) fr................... L McCormick 15 20026 Ronnie Pickering (15) fr................. B Barclay 16 53006 Essence Of Easton (16) fr............. G O’Reilly 17 80000 Bobby’s My Girl (17) fr......................P Davis 18 x5725 Terrier (U1) fr.....................................R Close
Waikouaiti harness Today at Oamaru Raceway (grass)
Waikouaiti Trotting Club Inc Venue: Oamaru (Grass) Meeting Date: 25 Feb 2020 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 1.17pm (NZT) WALLACE GROUP AMATEUR DRIVERS MOBILE PACE $7500, 4yo+ r40-r55, up-r69., mobile, 2000m 1 97609 Caesar’s Quest (1) fr......................... G Cook 2 99460 Playboy Prince (2) fr...........................M Love 3 00840 Dalness Arizona (3) fr.................... B Wilmott 4 0x007 Arma Twospoons (4) fr.................D Reardon 5 000x0 Lincoln Skipper (5) fr................. G Sinnamon 6 07398 Leading The Way (6) fr 7 60015 Pat Campbell (7) fr.............................S Wigg 8 09800 Aveross Rustler (8) fr 9 5x002 Pete’s Dash (9) fr....................... N Chalmers 10 00070 Stetson (21) fr..............................M McIntyre 11 20856 Senorita Margarita (22) fr 12 00070 Jetenara (23) fr.................................W Frost 13 03804 Highland Reign (24) fr........................C Wigg 14 92066 Four Starzzz Shiraz (25) fr.............. C Negus 2 1.52 ZEAGOLD QUALITY EGGS/GRAVES SADDLERY/RICOH TROT $9750, non-winners 3yo+, stand, 2000m 1 0 Sonny Lachlan (1) fr 2 56533 Midnight Memories (2) fr............ M Edmonds 3 74335 Emma Louise (3) fr........................B Orange 4 57589 Go Marg (4) fr.................................G Archer 5 32950 Gotta Ticket (5) fr..................S Tomlinson (J) 6 470 Abadabado (6) fr............................R Holmes 7 46 Fast Whispering (7) fr............... M Williamson 8 37440 Tease My Tartan (8) fr......................J W Cox 9 00838 Line A Love (9) fr........................ J Patterson 10 98708 Ken’s Dream (10) fr..........................L Dobbs 11 7780 Petronelli Gee (11) fr......................... A Milne 12 63507 Maranatha Atlas (12) fr................. G O’Reilly 13 35254 Superfast Lad (13) fr.........................S Ottley 14 23652 Rain Mist And Muscle (14) fr............ G Smith
15 3 In The Groove (15) fr 16 000x Petula Clark (16) fr...............................K Cox 17 0 Shandon Bells (U1) fr.................M Hurrell (J) 18 89900 Goose Healy (U2) fr....................C Markham 3 2.27 BLUFF PROTEINS LTD/DAVID OVENS BUILDER PACE $9750, non-winners 3yo+, stand, 2000m 1 83402 Megarock (1) fr.............................. G O’Reilly 2 06700 Attache (2) fr............................ C D Thornley 3 x0090 It’s A Laugh (3) fr............................... A Milne 4 Atarah (4) fr 5 84396 Handsome Harry (5) fr 6 80090 Onedin Smiler (6) fr......................... G Shand 7 4 Breeny’s Mach (7) fr................. M Williamson 8 87x06 Living Fantasy (8) fr..................B Williamson 9 07970 Franco Hatton (9) fr........................B Orange 10 200x7 Supreme Lincoln (10) fr.......... J Morrison (J) 11 Daggy Lamb (11) fr 12 42 Mayhem In Malibu (12) fr..................S Ottley 13 039 Blue Chip Delight (13) fr...............C DeFilippi 14 6875x Kingsdown Atom (14) fr..............C Ferguson 15 0x000 Santeria (15) fr......................K Tomlinson (J) 16 75076 Cambire (16) fr................................. G Smith 17 30008 Glenledi Bandit (U1) fr..........S Tomlinson (J) Emergencies: Franco Hatton, Kingsdown Atom 4 3.01 DYNES TRANSPORT/HOPE & SONS MOBILE PACE $9750, non-winners 3yo+., mobile, 2000m 1 x9900 K Mach (1) fr....................................L Dobbs 2 87P85 Prodigal Pete (2) fr............................P Davis 3 22948 Oliver North (3) fr..................... M Williamson 4 05656 Ticking Over (4) fr..........................R Holmes 5 07088 Classie Princess (5) fr.................R McIlwrick 6 70060 Shadow Aveross (6) fr.............J Young-Grant 7 9 Striking Gladiator (7) fr............. S O’Reilly (J) 8 5x244 Reattore (8) fr................................ S McNally 9 70960 Lucy P (9) fr....................................G Archer 10 09247 Silent Shadow (21) fr.............. J Morrison (J) 11 20647 Fraud (22) fr.....................................J W Cox 12 80530 Mach O’Melley (23) fr............K Tomlinson (J)
13 6x0x0 Manon The Run (24) fr............... R Needham 14 00579 Matai Dani (25) fr.............................. A Milne 15 34608 Archaic Lustre (26) fr 16 3 Uncle Chan (27) fr.............................R Close Emergencies: Striking Gladiator, Archaic Lustre 5 3.35pm OAMARU VETS/LLENNOCO LTD JUNIOR DRIVERS MBL PACE $9750, 4yo+ r40-r55. jun.d, mobile, 2000m 1 53473 Motoring Major (1) fr 2 05885 Hot Starff (2) fr.......................B Laughton (J) 3 54540 Ultimate Rocker (3) fr............... S O’Reilly (J) 4 74307 Markham Eyre (4) fr................ S Diamant (J) 5 90396 Magicol Ideal (5) fr..................S Thornley (J) 6 81860 Franco Sherborne (6) fr 7 38437 Mordecai (7) fr.......................K Tomlinson (J) 8 97212 Uno Mia (8) fr........................S Tomlinson (J) 9 x03P0 Skipperland (U1) fr.....................M Hurrell (J) 10 60664 Vigoroso (U2) fr.......................... R Heads (J) 6 4.11 SPEIGHTS/G K FYFE LTD: WE MAKE IT HAPPEN TROT $9750, r40-r49, stand, 2000m 1 24470 Rusty I Am (1) fr............................ P Wakelin 2 0P644 Sunnivue Phileah (2) fr............ C D Thornley 3 49403 Emma Frost (3) fr..................K Tomlinson (J) 4 33090 Midnight Assassin (4) fr...............C DeFilippi 5 70360 Don’t Look Back (5) fr...................... G Smith 6 04400 Dora Explorer (6) fr.............. D D McCormick 7 00000 Dream Of Pat (7) fr....................B Williamson 8 64920 Rogie Falls (8) fr............................ S McNally 9 03097 My Eyre (9) fr....................................P Davis 10 40079 The Night Sweats (10) fr............... B Norman 11 83000 Look Both Ways (11) fr.................. G O’Reilly 12 06552 Matai Jetstar (12) fr........................... A Milne 13 7x9x0 Spurs Of War (13) fr 14 65000 Jaccka Josh (U1) fr..........................J W Cox 15 89000 Michelle (U2) fr.................................W Higgs 16 00P60 Mickey Jay (U3) fr..........................R Holmes 17 97498 Rachmaninov (U4) fr......................... T Grant 18 53920 Sioux Princess (U5) fr.......................S Ottley
Pacifiers on : Skipperland (R5) 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
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Tuesday, February 25, 2020
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Daily Events Your opportunity to tell Mid Canterbury of your next event or meeting Daily Events is a FREE DAILY LISTING of MID CANTERBURY EVENTS to be held in the immediate future by non-commercial organisations. To arrange for events to be published in Daily Events, clip this form, fill in the applicable details and hand in to our LEVEL 3 office on Burnett Street or post to: Ashburton Guardian, PO Box 77, Ashburton 7740, to reach us no later than 12 noon, 3 (three) working days prior to the first publication or email: joyce.b@theguardian.co.nz CONDITIONS: 1. Telephoned information NOT accepted. 2. Forms MUST be signed by an authorised representative of the organisation concerned. 3. A separate form MUST be submitted for each future event and may be lodged with the Guardian as far in advance as desired. For example: A club which meets monthly may submit, say, 12 separate forms simultaneously – one pertaining to each meeting scheduled over the following 12 months. 4. The organisation acknowledges that no responsibility for errors or omissions will be accepted by the Guardian Company.
BLOCK LETTERS PLEASE Day of event. .................................................................................................................... Date of event .................................................................................................................... Starting time .................................................................................................................... Name of organisation...................................................................................................... ........................................................................................................................................... Nature of event (Use maximum of 6 words) ........................................................................................................................................... ........................................................................................................................................... Venue ................................................................................................................................ ...........................................................................................................................................
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TUESDAY 8.30am - 1pm ASHBURTON MENZSHED. For men of all ages, and all abilities, join us for a cuppa. 8 William Street. 9.30am ST DAVID’S UNION CHURCH. Walking group meets outside church. 48 Allens Road, Allenton. 9.30am - 4pm ST JOHN OPPORTUNITY SHOP. Open daily from 9.30am - 4pm and Saturday 9.30am 1pm. 129 Tancred Street. 9.30am ASHBURTON U3A. Coffee/Tea at St David’s Church, Allens Road. 10.00am Speaker Prof Dave Craw of Otago Uni, Geology Dept. “Gold Origins, History and Mining”. Visitors welcome. $10. 9.45am (for draw) WAIREKA GOLF CROQUET. Golf Croquet singles, new players welcome. Waireka, Philip Street. 10am MSA TAI CHI. Weekly exercises and Tai Chi
WEDNESDAY 6am ST DAVID’S UNION CHURCH. Sweaty Betty’s circuit training in Hall, 48 Allens Road, Allenton. 8.30am - 1pm ASHBURTON MENZSHED. For men of all ages, and all abilities. Join us for a cuppa. 8 William Street. 9am MSA TAI CHI. Men only exercises and Tai Chi (this is a new class). $3 per session. MSA Social Hall (excludes school holidays). 9.30am AGE CONCERN ASHBURTON STEADY AS YOU GO. Gentle exercise, 48 Allens Road, Allenton. 9.30am - 4pm ST JOHN OPPORTUNITY SHOP. Open daily from 9.30am - 4pm and Saturday 9.30am 1pm. 129 Tancred Street.
Feb 25 & 26, 2020 for arthritis. $3 per session. MSA Social hall, Havelock Street (excludes school holidays). 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 information phone Age Concern 308 6817. Seniors Centre, Cameron Street. 10.30am AGE CONCERN ASHBURTON STEADY AS YOU GO. Gentle exercises, weekly sessions at the All Saints Church, Chapman St, Methven. 12.00 - 2pm ASHBURTON JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. Signing Centre, all documents JP’s are authorised to sign can be actioned. Community House, Cass St, Ashburton, 1pm ASHBURTON MSA
PETANQUE SECTION. Club days Tuesday and Thursday. Boules will be supplied, all welcome. 115 Racecourse Road. 1pm AGE CONCERN ASHBURTON STEADY AS YOU GO. Gentle exercises, weekly sessions at the St Andrew’s Church, Main Road, Rakaia. 1pm - 2.30pm R AND R LINE DANCING ASHBURTON. Weekly beginner line dance class. MSA Social Hall Havelock Street, Ashburton. Enquiries Rayma 0274 867 504. 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 (for draw) WAIREKA GOLF CROQUET. Handicap Golf Croquet singles, new players welcome. Waireka, Philip Street.
3pm - 4.30pm R AND R LINE DANCING ASHBURTON. Weekly intermediate line dance class. MSA Social Hall Havelock Street Ashburton Enquiries Rayma 0274 867 504. 3.30pm - 5pm ASHBURTON TOY LIBRARY. Open every Thursday and Saturday with almost 1000 different toys to choose from for hire, plus also open every alternative Tuesday afternoon, starting February 4. 106 Victoria Street, The Triangle, Ashburton. 6pm RUN AND WALK SUMMER SERIES. Every Tuesday until March 31. 1km, 3km and 5km run or walk or combination. Cost $2, children under 18 free. Meet Domain Pavilion, Walnut Avenue. 7.30pm ASHBURTON TABLE TENNIS. Weekly games, everyone welcome, all abilities and some bats available. Ashburton Club and MSA Havelock Street.
10.00am ALLENTON CROQUET CLUB. Golf Croquet, new members welcome, Allenton Sports Club, Cavendish Street. 10am MT HUTT MEMORIAL HALL. NZ Alpine and Agriculture Encounter, Art Gallery and hall of memories. 160 Main Street, Methven. 10am ST STEPHEN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH. Holy Communion, Park Street. 10am - 3pm 206 CLUB AGE CONCERN. Join us for a fun day filled with activities for the over 60 years. For information phone Age Concern 308 6817. Seniors Centre, Cameron Street. 10.30am AGE CONCERN ASHBURTON STEADY AS YOU GO. Gentle exercises, ring Age Concern 308 6917. Buffalo Lodge hall, Cox 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 Rd. 10.45am MSA TAI CHI. Seated class for people with limited mobility. $3 per session. MSA Social Hall, Havelock Street (excludes school holidays). 1pm - 4pm ASHBURTON DISTRICT FAMILY HISTORY GROUP. Open for research, visitors welcome. Ashburton Heritage Centre, West Street. Closed most public holidays. 1.15pm (for draw) WAIREKA GOLF CROQUET. Golf Croquet doubles, new players welcome. Waireka, Philip Street. 1.30pm ALLENTON CROQUET CLUB. Assn Croquet, new members
welcome, Allenton Sports Club, Cavendish Street. 1.30pm AGE CONCERN ASHBURTON STEADY AS YOU GO. Gentle exercises, for more details phone, Age Concern 308 6917. Buffalo Lodge hall, Cox Street. 6.30pm 9pm THE MID CANTERBURY LINEDANCERS. 6.30pm to 7.30pm Beginners learn to line dance following onto easy intermediate level, 7.30 to 9pm. Instructor Annette Fyfe 0274 813 131. Tinwald Hall, Graham Street. 7pm - 9pm ASHBURTON UKELELE CLUB. Music group. Savage Club Hall, Cox Street. 7.30pm ASHBURTON PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY. Open Learning night, an invitation to learn basic digital photography, Senior Centre on Cameron Street.
Puzzles www.guardianonline.co.nz Puzzles and horoscopes
Cryptic crossword
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Simon Shuker’s Code Cracker
Your Stars
ACROSS 1. A meal coming? A change for him, who thinks so big (12) 8. Point out how to die in act of revision (8) 9. One worshipped the old one in turn (4) 11. Knotty youngster taken on in reversal (5) 12. It shows the temperature of Hermes’ counterpart (7) 13. How it got up to the ceiling fitting (4) 15. Attar a boy takes either way (4) 19. Around the North, calico is made brief (7) 20. Arrest old boy for being one of great wealth (5) 22. Does such a story come from the heights of imagination? (4) 23. In its original state it is in pert form (8) 24. Click with vernal member of the Coleoptera (6-6) DOWN 2. Finished the deed with nitrogen perhaps (5) 3. Her heartless clay was formed in a roguish way (6) 4. One – not me – could be punctual (2,4) 5. It’s not certain to develop into bud (2,5) 6. Dog that moves uncertainly, having a pain in the tummy (12) 7. They are used to eating late (6,6) 10. Essay what is subject for conversion (3) 14. As cruel and as unspiritual as can be (7) 16. Somebody indefinite, but singular (3) 17. It was a crab’s turn to be sacred in Egypt (6) 18. Eels in conflict will surround it with water (6) 21. Fish is, in short, splendid (5)
WordWheel Insert the missing letter to complete an eight-letter word reading clockwise or anti-clockwise.
WordWheel 618
R U Quick crossword 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
T S N I
8
Insert the missing letter to complete an
9
12
15
10
13
11
eight-letter word reading clockwise or Previous solution: DILIGENT anticlockwise. Previous solution: DILIGENT
14
16
17
www.thepuzzlecompany.co.nz 18
19
25/2
20
Sudoku 21 22
ACROSS 1. Weaken (4) 8. Unarmed (10) 9. Reflected (8) 10. Unclothed (4) 12. Abrupt (6) 14. Make possible (6) 15. Cable (6) 17. Farewell (3-3) 18. Mock (4) 19. To and fro struggle (3-2-3) 21. Coming together (10) 22. Pronounces (4)
DOWN 2. Put into words (10) 3. Water jug (4) 4. Infertile (6) 5. Pamper (6) 6. Stretch (8) 7. Small island (4) 11. Dawdle (5-5) 13. Rebut (8) 16. Reply (6) 17. Important person (colloq) (6) 18. Playing card (4) 20. Mists (4)
3 7 6 1 6 2 9 7 8 9 7 6 5 3
WordBuilder WordBuilder
R S F T O WordBuilder R S F T O
722
722
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 6many words 9ofExcellent three or15more letters, including plurals, can you make from the five letters, using each letter only once? No foreign words or words beginningsolution: with a capital are dare, allowed. are, aye, day, Previous There’s least dry, one dye, five-letter dear, dray,atdrey, dyer, word. ear, era, eyra, rad, ray, rayed, ready, Good 6 Very Good 9read, Excellent 15red, rye, yard, yare, yea, year
? T
Ashburton Guardian 21
Previous solution: are, aye, dare, day, dear, dray, drey, dry, dye, dyer, ear, era, eyra, rad, ray, rayed, read, ready, red, rye, yard, yare, yea, year
ARIES (Mar 21-Apr 19): The money situation is getting easier for you. The stress will lift. Focus on bringing as much creativity to the scene as you can and, suddenly, logistical problems will ease. TAURUS (Apr 20-May 20): If you’re waiting for the before/after moments, stop. You’ll get the transformation, it just won’t be condensed into a moment. But in 10 years, you’ll look back on it as though it were but a pinpoint. GEMINI (May 21-Jun 21): You’ve seen advocates and champions at work, and maybe you’ve had them in your life. You know what the role is and how it’s best played. Be the person you deserve to have on your side. CANCER (Jun 22-Jul 22): Things can get better, maybe even better than better. Things can get crazygood-spectacular. The trick is catching that upward trajectory and staying the course. LEO (Jul 23-Aug 22): There’s something in the song you love that plays on the radio during your commute, a piece of your life hanging in that jagged stretch between work and home that means so much and turns a tide. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sep 22): If you’re no longer offering something, that doesn’t mean you’re stealing from someone, although they might experience it as such. People get used to what they have. LIBRA (Sep 23-Oct 23): Another idea regarding the situation involves you thinking from the point of view of a different postcode, country and planet. Distance makes the mind grow wiser. SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 21): Success comes from allowing yourself but one pursuit at a time and keeping your focus quite small. The sequence is: where to go, how to get there, repeat. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec 21): To work on yourself isn’t the same as being selfish. Selfishness takes from others for your own gain. When you work on yourself, who are you taking from? If you can’t imagine this, you don’t owe what you think you owe. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19): Question for the psyche: “Who are you expecting yourself to be over the course of a day?” The roles can get overbearing until you realise the costumes are made of paper you can tear out of at will. AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18): Mistakes bring people together, more than anything else. Nothing comes together because everything is going smoothly. It’s the glitches that bring interaction, and most pleasant at that. PISCES (Feb 19-Mar 20): You intend to solve problems and make a contribution. The tricky part is that you have to consider the packaging. Packaging is both actually and metaphorically the bane of the modern world.
Previous cryptic solution
Across: 1. Sealed 8. Trade 9. Rhubarb 11. Trembled 12. Truro 15. Thou 16. Sky 17. Aria 19. March 21. Feckless 24. Torpedo 25. Oakum 26. Swears 7 Down: 2. Ether 3. Laburnum 4. Dart 5. Stump 6. Fall 7. Herd 10. Breakfast 12. Tots 13. Oak-apple 14. Rash 4 6 18. Flame 20. Cider 21. Foot 22. Cake 23. Sops
7 1 9 5 Previous quick solution 3 5 6 2 Across: 1. Glower 5. Assure 9. Bikini 10. Grille 11. Muck
Fill the grid so that every column, every row and 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9.
5 4
1 9 4
4 7 8 2 8
5 8 6 6 5 1 4 2 9
3 9 1 7 4 9 8
9 3 HARD
EASY
1 8 4 9 7 5 2 6 3
8
12. Flippant 14. Meteor 16. Pusher 19. Needless 21. Oust 22. Serene 23. Inters 24. Timbre 4 25. Eldest 1 8 9 Down: 2. Leisure 3. Wrinkle 4. Reinforce 6. Strip 7. Unleash 7 Theorem 4 6 8. Elector 13. Impassive 14. Mindset 15. 17. Shouted 18. Ensures 20. Lunar4 5 8
8 2
1
5 6 9 3 7 3 7 2 4 5 2 3 1 8
7
5 8 2 9 4 7 3 6 1
3 6 5 1 PREVIOUS SOLUTIONS 2 96 7 3 8 4 5 6 1
698 5 5 4 28 1 3 4 9 5 6 2 1 9 7 6 63 837 41 4 2 7 3 9 2
3 6 9 9 2 7 1 4 7 5 8
74 1 4 17 3 7 2 5 38 4 7 1 5 5 6 3 88 9 2 91 2 6 3 8 9 6 6 4 5
59
4 3 2 6 7 9 5 8 1
6 8 9 5 4 1 2 3 7
9 6 4 7 2 5 8 1 3
1 5 7 4 3 8 9 2 6
3 4 8 9 5 7 1 6 2
5 7 1 2 8 3 6 4 9
8 2 3 1 9 6 4 7 5
2 1 5 3 6 4 7 9 8
7 9 6 8 1 2 3 5 4
2 6 8 44 5 3 1 7
9
5 3
9
3
7 6
Guardian
Family Notices
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RANGIORA
LAKE COLERIDGE
Weather
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22 Ashburton Guardian
DEATHS
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21
ka
MAX
ia
MAX
bur to
OVERNIGHT MIN
12
gitata
21
SUN PROTECTION ALERT
10:05 – 5:20 AM
PM
PROTECTION REQUIRED Wear a hat and sunglasses Data provided by NIWA
Waimate
NZ Situation
Wind km/h
fog
isolated snow thunder flurries
sleet thunder
rain
snow
hail
60 plus
Canterbury Plains
Canterbury High Country
TODAY
TODAY
TOMORROW
THURSDAY Fine with increasing high cloud. Northerlies.
Rain about the divide, possibly heavy, scattered falls further east from afternoon. NW gale for a time, severe gale about tops.
Morning cloud, then fine. Northwesterlies, strong in exposed places.
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
About the divide: Rain, possibly heavy, easing to showers south of Mt Cook from afternoon. Elsewhere: Scattered rain clearing in the morning, and fine spells developing. NW gales, severe gale about the tops.
Showers and southerlies developing. Winds turning northeasterly late.
fine rain cloudy cloudy showers thunder showers thunder fine fine fine fog fine rain cloudy
Frankfurt Geneva Hobart Hong Kong Honolulu Islamabad Jakarta Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur London Los Angeles Madrid Melbourne Moscow Nadi
18 6 22 5 21 25 10 19 15 27 28 11 18 1 1
drizzle showers fine fine showers fine showers fine rain showers fine fine showers fine thunder
12 12 27 23 28 26 31 26 34 9 27 18 29 2 32
New York Paris Perth Rarotonga Rome San Francisco Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tel Aviv Tokyo Washington Zurich
9 4 13 19 21 7 25 14 24 4 12 4 18 -3 23
drizzle thunder thunder rain rain fine rain showers rain fine fine showers cloudy rain showers
Tides, Sun, Moon and Fishing m am 3 3
Tuesday 6
9 noon 3
9 pm am 3
6
9 noon 3
6
Thursday 9 pm am 3
6
9 noon 3
6
9 pm
2 1 0
5:59 12:06 6:14 12:26 6:35 12:46 6:54 1:06 7:13 1:27 7:35 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.
Rise 7:04 am Set 8:27 pm Good
Good fishing
Rise 7:06 am Set 8:25 pm Good
Rise 8:06 am Set 9:30 pm
Good fishing
Good
Rise 10:06 am Set 10:14 pm
Full moon
8:58 am
©Copyright OceanFun Publishing Ltd.
Good fishing
Rise 7:07 am Set 8:24 pm
Rise 9:06 am Set 9:52 pm
First quarter 3 Mar
fine
Hamilton
fine
Napier
cloudy
Wellington
fine
Nelson
fine
Blenheim
fine
Greymouth
fine
Christchurch
fine
Timaru
fine
Queenstown
fine
Dunedin
fine
Invercargill
cloudy
10 Mar 6:48 am www.ofu.co.nz
Last quarter 16 Mar 10:35 pm
Maori Fishing Guide by Bill Hohepa
For the very latest weather information, including Weather Warnings, visit metservice.com
10 11 33 27 17 21 9 33 4 28 22 16 15 10 14
6 7 22 26 11 9 6 25 -2 19 18 11 4 -3 7
25 29 23 26 23 21 24 20 22 21 22 21 22
River Levels
16 13 16 14 14 13 10 12 14 12 12 15 12
cumecs
1.07
Selwyn Whitecliffs (NIWA) at 2:05 pm, yesterday
Rakaia Fighting Hill (NIWA) at 2:00 pm, yesterday 146.9 Nth Ashburton at 2:05 pm, yesterday
4.15 nc
Sth Ashburton at 2:05 pm, yesterday
7.22
Rangitata Klondyke at 3:00 pm, yesterday
84.9
Waitaki Kurow at 2:07 pm, yesterday
474.3
Source: Environment Canterbury
Canterbury Readings
Wednesday 6
Auckland
Forecasts for today
29 9 34 11 29 31 20 25 31 35 34 27 29 6 5
overnight max low
Palmerston North fine
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
World Weather
FZL: Above 3000m
Morning cloud then fine. Wind at 1000m: Light, then NW 40 km/h developing afternoon, rising to 55 km/h at night. Wind at 2000m: NW 30 km/h developing, rising to 55 km/h in the afternoon and to gale 70 km/h at night.
Fine apart from morning cloud. Northeasterlies.
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NZ Today
FZL: Above 3000m
Morning cloud then fine. Wind at 1000m and 2000m: Light.
TOMORROW
Tuesday, 25 February 2020
A low to the northeast of the country directs an easterly flow over the upper North Island while a ridge lies across central New Zealand. The ridge weakens and moves onto the North Island tomorrow and a northwesterly flow develops over the South Island ahead of an approaching front.
mainly isolated cloudy drizzle drizzle few showers fine showers clearing showers
Fine apart from morning and evening cloud. Easterly breezes.
Ashburton Airport Temperature °C At 4pm 23.5 23.9 Max to 4pm 6.4 Minimum 1.2 Grass minimum Rainfall mm 0.0 16hr to 4pm February to date 48.6 Avg Feb to date 41 2020 to date 55.4 99 Avg year to date Wind km/h E 24 At 4pm Strongest gust E 35 Time of gust 3:00pm
© Copyright Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited 2020
to 4pm yesterday
Methven
Christchurch Airport
Timaru Airport
21.3 21.8 7.1 –
20.7 22.3 9.5 6.9
20.1 21.7 5.5 –
– – – – –
0.0 22.8 34 26.0 77
0.0 42.0 36 46.8 82
E 13 – –
E 39 NE 52 11:41am
E 13 NE 24 3:21pm
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FRIDAY: Fine with morning cloud. Northwesterlies.
less than 30
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THURSDAY: Fine with increasing high cloud. Northerlies.
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OVERNIGHT MIN
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23
TOMORROW: Fine, but some morning cloud. NE breezes.
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22
METHVEN
TODAY: Fine apart from some morning cloud. Light winds.
22
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Map for today
Ashburton Forecast
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TVNZ 1
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
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THREE
PRIME
6am Breakfast 9am The Ellen DeGeneres Show 0 10am Tipping Point 3 0 11am Cash Trapped Quiz show where six contestants compete in fast-paced question rounds with the twist that nobody leaves until somebody wins. Hosted and based on an original idea by Bradley Walsh. 0 Noon 1 News At Midday 0 12:30 Emmerdale PGR 0 1pm Coronation Street PGR 3 0 2pm The Ellen DeGeneres Show 3 0 3pm Tipping Point 0 4pm Te Karere 2 4:30 F Dog Squad 3 0 5pm The Chase 0 6pm 1 News At 6pm 0
6:30 Darwin And Newts 0 6:40 Moon And Me 0 7:05 My Little Pony 3 0 7:25 Star v The Forces Of Evil 3 0 7:50 Bunnicula 3 0 8:15 The Lion Guard 3 0 8:35 Goldie And Bear 3 0 9am Infomercials 10am Neighbours 3 0 11am The Bachelorette NZ 3 0 Noon 2 Broke Girls AO 3 0 1pm Judge Rinder PGR 2pm American Housewife PGR 3 0 2:30 Home And Away 3 0 3pm Shortland Street PGR 3 0 3:30 Powerpuff Girls 3 0 3:40 F The Barefoot Bandits 3 0 4:05 The Deep 0 4:30 Friends 3 0 5pm The Simpsons 3 0 5:30 Home And Away 0 6pm The Big Bang Theory 3 0 6:30 Neighbours 0
6am The AM Show 9am House Rules PGR 3 The House Rules 2018 Grand Final sees two teams face a last challenge to win the $355,000 prize. 0 10:20 Infomercials 11:25 Millionaire Hot Seat 3 0 12:25 Face The Truth PGR A wife is tired of being the breadwinner, but will her husband get a real job? 12:55 Dr Phil AO 1:55 Married At First Sight Australia PGR 3 0 3:25 Seafood Escape 3:55 Darren Robertson’s Charcoal Kitchen 4:30 NewsHub Live At 4:30pm 5pm Millionaire Hot Seat 0 6pm NewsHub Live At 6pm
7pm Seven Sharp 0 7:30 Dog Squad Puppy School It is decision time for police pup Raptor. 0 8pm Earth’s Tropical Islands Borneo – a world cut off from a huge mainland by rising sea levels. 0 9:15 Drag SOS AO 0 10:15 1 News Tonight 0 10:45 Sunday 0
7pm Shortland Street PGR 0 7:30 The Bachelorette NZ A trip away leads to a risqué game of truth or dare. 0 8:30 Paranormal Caught On Camera A ghost appears on the Gettysburg battlefield; a sea monster surfaces in Ireland. 0 9:35 All Rise PGR 0 10:35 Two And A Half Men PGR 3 0
7pm The Project 7:30 Married At First Sight Australia PGR 0 9pm Talking Married PGR 0 9:10 NCIS AO NCIS investigates a marine corporal who murdered her neighbour while being treated for insomnia by a hypnotherapist. 0 10:10 NewsHub Late 10:40 The Blacklist AO 0
11:45 I Am Innocent AO 3 In 2005, Aaron Farmer was sentenced to eight years in jail for a rape in which the victim identified her rapist as having ‘rat-like’ features. After two years in jail, his conviction was quashed. 0 12:45 Te Karere 3 2 1:10 Infomercials 0 5:35 Te Karere 3 2
11pm Mom AO 3 0 11:30 Station 19 PGR 3 0 12:25 The Resident AO 3 0 1:10 Shortland Street PGR 3 0 1:35 Infomercials 2:35 Quantico AO 3 0 3:20 Love Island UK AO 3 4:15 The Crystal Maze 3 0 5:05 Neighbours 3 0 5:30 Infomercials
11:35 Face The Truth PGR A wife is tired of being the breadwinner, but will her husband get a real job? Midnight Infomercials
Earth’s Tropical Islands 8pm on TVNZ 1
BRAVO 10am Four Weddings USA 3 11am Snapped PGR 3 Noon Keeping Up With The Kardashians PGR 3 1pm The Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills PGR 3 2pm Below Deck AO 3 3pm Undercover Boss 3 4pm The Kelly Clarkson Show 5pm Hoarders 3 6pm Judge Jerry 6:30 Love It Or List It 7:30 Stop Search Seize PGR The officers of the Irish Customs Teams deal with tobacco smugglers at Dublin airport; contraband is delivered in Monaghan; a van in Cork Port reveals a hidden compartment; Ollie the drugdetection dog is on the case in Shannon Airport. 8:30 Botched PGR 3 9:30 The Killer Affair AO A mother’s affair with an old boyfriend causes suspicion when someone close to both of them is murdered. 10:30 Snapped PGR 3 11:30 Snapped – Killer Couples AO 3 12:20 Infomercials 3
NCIS
9:10pm on Three
SKY 5 6am Jeopardy! PG 6:25 Wheel Of Fortune PG 6:50 The Simpsons PG 7:15 Robot Wars 8am Border Security – Australia’s Frontline M 8:25 Highway Thru Hell PG 9:15 Hardcore Pawn PG 9:40 CSI MV 10:25 SVU MV 11:10 Robot Wars 11:55 Jeopardy PG 12:20 Wheel Of Fortune PG 12:45 A1 – Highway Patrol MVLC 1:35 The Simpsons PG 2pm Raw Live MVC 5:05 Wheel Of Fortune PG 5:30 Hardcore Pawn PG 6pm Highway Thru Hell PG 7pm Border Security – Australia’s Frontline M 7:30 CSI MV 8:30 World’s Wildest Weather PGV 9:30 Outback Truckers PG 10:30 SVU MVS 11:15 Highway Thru Hell PG
Wednesday
12:05 Robot Wars 12:50 Wheel Of Fortune PG 1:15 Jeopardy! PG 1:35 Border Security – Australia’s Frontline M 2am Outback Truckers PG 2:50 World’s Wildest Weather PGV 3:40 SVU MV 4:25 Hardcore Pawn PG 4:50 CSI MV 5:35 The Simpsons PG
11:50 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert PGR The best of Stephen Colbert’s satire and comedy, discussing politics, entertainment, business, and more. 12:50 Closedown
MOVIES PREMIERE
MOVIES GREATS
6:35 Slaughterhouse Rulez 16VSC 2018 Comedy. Simon Pegg, Nick Frost. 8:20 Collide MVL 2016 Action. Nicholas Hoult, Felicity Jones. 10am Lost In London MLS 2017 Drama. Woody Harrelson, Owen Wilson. 11:45 Slaughterhouse Rulez 16VSC 2018 Comedy. Simon Pegg, Nick Frost. 1:30 Sicario – Day Of The Soldado 16VLSC 2018 Action. Benicio Del Toro, Josh Brolin. 3:35 The Leisure Seeker MVLSC 2018 Adventure. Helen Mirren, Donald Sutherland. 5:25 Support The Girls MLSC 2018 Comedy. 7pm Johnny English Strikes Again PGVL 2018 Comedy. After an unexpected cyber attack reveals the identities of all active undercover agents in Britain, Johnny English returns to investigate. Rowan Atkinson, Ben Miller. 8:30 Breakthrough PG 2019 Drama. When a woman’s 14-year-old son falls through the ice on a frozen lake, all hope seems lost, but his mother refuses to give up. Chrissy Metz, Topher Grace. 10:30 Terminal 16VLS 2018 Drama. Margot Robbie, Simon Pegg.
7:03 RIPD MV 2013 Action. Ryan Reynolds, Jeff Bridges. 8:36 Jumper MVL 2008 Adventure. Samuel L Jackson, Hayden Christensen, Rachel Bilson. 10:02 Barbershop ML 2002 Comedy. Ice Cube, Anthony Anderson, Cedric The Entertainer. 11:42 Killer Joe 18VLS 2011 Crime. Matthew McConaughey. 1:22 Austin Powers In Goldmember MVLS 2002 Comedy. Mike Myers, Beyonce Knowles. 2:55 Dogtown And Z-Boys ML 2001 Documentary. 4:25 Get Smart PGV 2008 Comedy. Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway. 6:15 Captain Phillips MV 2013 Drama. Tom Hanks, Barkhad Abdi. 8:30 Barbershop 2 – Back In Business ML 2004 Comedy. Calvin has a new problem as urban developers try to smarten up the neighbourhood with big-brand shops, including a hairstyle chain. Ice Cube, Sean Patrick Thomas. 10:20 The Hobbit – The Battle Of The Five Armies MV 2015 Adventure. Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman.
12:10 Crypto 16VLS 2019 Thriller. 1:55 Don’t Knock Twice MVLC 2016 Horror. 3:30 Do I Say I Do? PGC 2017 Romance. 5am The Leisure Seeker MVLSC 2018 Adventure.
12:40 Hollywood Homicide MVL 2003 Action Thriller. 2:32 Get Smart PGV 2008 Comedy. 4:19 Captain Phillips MV 2013 Drama.
Wednesday
MAORI
6am Ben 10 3 0 6:25 The Powerpuff Girls 3 0 7am Cricket – Blackcaps v India (HLS) 8am Nicky, Ricky, Dicky And Dawn 3 8:30 The Moe Show 3 0 9am Celebrity Antiques Road Trip 3 10am The Doctors PGR 11am The Chase Australia 3 0 Noon Everybody Loves Raymond 3 0 12:30 Chicago Justice AO 3 0 1:30 Frasier 3 2pm The Late Show With Stephen Colbert PGR 3 3pm Wheel Of Fortune 3:30 Jeopardy 4pm A Place In The Sun 5pm 3rd Rock From The Sun 0 5:30 Prime News 6pm Rugby League – Super League (HLS) Castleford Tigers v Wakefield Trinity. 6:30 Sky Sport News 7pm The Crowd Goes Wild 7:30 The Great Australian Bake Off 0 8:35 N Carol’s Second Act PGR 9:05 N The Unicorn PGR A widower is eager to move on from the most difficult year of his life, only to realise he is utterly unprepared for the dating world. 9:35 Qi PGR 10:50 Supercars Championship
Wednesday
CHOICE
6:30 Paia 6:40 My Mokai 7:10 He Rourou 3 7:20 E Kori 3 7:25 E Ki E Ki 7:30 Haati Paati 3 7:40 Huhu – Te Tunga Rakau 7:50 Huritua 8am Polyfest Kapa Haka 3 8:30 Sidewalk Karaoke PGR 3 9am Easy Eats 3 9:30 Opaki 3 10am Celebrity Playlist 3 10:30 Whanau Living 3 11am Nga Tangata Taumata Rau 3 Noon Nanakia PGR 3 12:30 Finding Aroha PGR 3 1pm Nga Pari Karangaranga O Te Motu 3 1:30 Opaki 3 2pm Toku Reo 3 2 3pm Polyfest Kapa Haka 3 3:30 Playlist 4pm Polyfest Kapa Haka 3 4:30 Pukana 3 2 5pm Paia 5:10 My Mokai 5:40 He Rourou 3 5:50 E Kori 3 5:55 E Ki E Ki 6pm Haati Paati 3 6:10 Huhu – Te Tunga Rakau 6:20 Huritua 6:30 Te Ao – Maori News
7pm Whanau Living 3 7:30 Moosemeat And Marmalade PGR 3 8pm Ahikaroa AO 3 8:30 Wild Kai Legends 3 9:30 Hunt With Me AO 3 10pm Waka Ama Sprints 3
11pm Te Ao – Maori News 3 The latest news, with an inclusive approach to Maori news by connecting directly with communities. 11:30 Closedown
SKY SPORT 1 6am French Top 14 – La Rochelle v Toulon (RPL) 8am French Top 14 – Clermont v Bordeaux (RPL) 10am Pro14 Weekly Highlights Show 11am Gallagher Premiership Highlights Show Noon French Top 14 Highlights 12:30 Rugby Nation 1:30 French Top 14 – Lyon v Racing 92 (RPL) 3:30 French Top 14 – Toulouse v Montpellier (RPL) 5:30 Super Rugby – Stormers v Jaguares (HLS) From DHL Newlands, Cape Town. 6pm Super Rugby – Rebels v Sharks (HLS) From AAMI Park, Melbourne. 6:30 Guinness Pro 14 Weekly Highlights Show 7pm Super Rugby – Bulls v Blues (HLS) From Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria. 7:30 Six Nations Review Show 8:30 The Breakdown 9:30 Super Rugby – Crusaders v Highlanders (RPL) From Orangetheory Stadium, Christchurch. 11:30 The Breakdown
Wednesday
12:30 Six Nations Review Show 1:30 Six Nations – Wales v France (HLS) 2am Super Rugby – Reds v Sunwolves (RPL) 4am Super Rugby – Stormers v Jaguares (RPL)
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6am Trust Me I’m A Doctor 7am River Cottage – Veg Every Day 8am Hope For Wildlife 9am Bondi Harvest With Guy Turland 9:30 Buying And Selling With The Property Brothers 10:30 Mysteries At The Museum 11:30 Salvage Hunters 12:30 Colombia With Simon Reeve 1:30 Ancient Egypt’s Darkest Hour 3:30 My Family And The Galapagos 4:30 Jamie’s 30-Minute Meals Jamie cooks Thai red-prawn curry with jasmine rice, cucumber salad, and a papaya platter in 30 minutes. 5pm Gourmet Farmer Afloat 5:30 Mysteries At The Museum 6:30 American Pickers 7:30 Location, Location, Location 8:30 My Dream Home 9:30 Designing Paradise 10pm My Floating Home 10:30 American Pickers
11:30 Mysteries At The Museum 12:30 Bondi Harvest With Guy Turland 1am Jamie’s 30-Minute Meals 1:30 Gourmet Farmer Afloat 2am Cash Cowboys 3am My Family And The Galapagos 4am Designing Paradise 4:30 My Floating Home 5am Mysteries At The Museum
SKY SPORT 2 6am Blackcaps v India (RPL) First Test, Day Four. 8am Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) Australia v India. 8:30 Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) West Indies v Thailand. 9am Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) White Ferns v Sri Lanka. 9:30 Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) Australia v Sri Lanka. 10am Blackcaps v India (HLS) First Test, Day Four. 11am L Blackcaps v India First Test, Day Five. From the Basin Reserve, Wellington. 7pm Blackcaps v India (RPL) First Test, Day Five. From the Basin Reserve, Wellington. 9pm Blackcaps v India (HLS) First Test, Day Five. From the Basin Reserve, Wellington. 10pm Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) Australia v Sri Lanka. 10:30 Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) India v Bangladesh. 11pm Blackcaps v India (HLS) First Test, Day Five. From the Basin Reserve, Wellington.
Wednesday
Midnight South Africa v Australia (HLS) Second T20. 1am Women’s T20 World Cup (RPL) Australia v Sri Lanka. 4:30 Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) Australia v India. 5am Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) Australia v Sri Lanka. 5:30 Women’s T20 World Cup (HLS) India v Bangladesh.
Can’t make our open homes?
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
Ashburton Guardian 23
25Feb20
DISCOVERY 6:35 Fast N’ Loud PG Caddy Rust Bucket/Bel-Air Beauty 2/2. 7:30 The World’s Deadliest Weather Caught On Camera PG 8:20 Outback Opal Hunters PG 9:10 Diesel Brothers PG 10am How It’s Made PG 10:25 How Do They Do It? PG 10:50 Railroad Australia PG 11:40 Swamp Murders M Dark Water. 12:30 The Perfect Murder M A Shot in the Dark. 1:20 Web Of Lies PG With Friends Like These. 2:10 The World’s Deadliest Weather Caught On Camera PG 3pm Bering Sea Gold PG Three’s Company. 3:50 Deadliest Catch M Last Damn Arctic Storm. 4:45 Fast N’ Loud PG Flugtag Flyer/Wicked Wayfarer. 5:40 Railroad Australia PG 6:35 Outback Opal Hunters PG 7:30 BattleBots PG 8:30 Expedition Unknown PG England’s Vanished Crown Jewels. 9:25 Unexplained And Unexplored PG Killing Meriwether Lewis. 10:15 Ed Stafford – Man, Woman, Child, Wild PG 11:05 Naked And Afraid MVL A Screw Loose. 11:55 How It’s Made PG Wednesday 12:20 How Do They Do It? PG 12:45 The World’s Deadliest Weather Caught On Camera PG 1:35 Deadliest Catch M 2:25 Moonshiners MVL 3:15 Bering Sea Gold PG 4:05 What On Earth? PG 4:55 Naked And Afraid MVL 5:45 Deadliest Catch M
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www.guardianonline.co.nz
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Sport
24 Ashburton Guardian
Fury calls out Joshua
Southee helps NZ win big
P15
P16
SEVEN STRAIGHT!
The Mid Canterbury tennis team celebrate a seventh consecutive Browning Shield title win in Christchurch over the weekend. By Adam Burns
adam.b@theguardian.co.nz
Mid Canterbury extended their recent dominance of tennis’ Browning Shield on the weekend. The team clinched the title in Christchurch, making it seven shield triumphs on the bounce after winning all three of their matches. Strengthened by unbeaten showings from Diego Quispe-Kim, Tessa McCann, Nishitha Maarka, Maia Lui and Jess Aldridge, it was the turn of the region’s young guns to do the damage. Ellesmere offered the stiffest
challenge when proceedings got under way at Wilding Park on Saturday. The men’s doubles struggled against their Ellesmere opponents, falling to defeats in all three fixtures to put them on the back foot and down 5-1. However, Mid Canterbury did enough in the other categories to edge the tie 13-11. In the top seed singles matchup, Quispe-Kim outclassed Jonathan Nowley 6-2, 6-2. Meanwhile, Lui’s three-set success against Jessie McCormick proved crucial in the overall pic-
ture, as did Jason Feutz and Jane Brosnahan’s 9-8 (4) mixed doubles result over Michael Hadfield and Olivia Wrathall. The remaining match-ups were more comprehensive. Mid Canterbury completed a landslide triumph over North Canterbury on Saturday afternoon to cement their favouritism for the shield. A 6-0 sweep in both the men’s and women’s singles categories ensured North Canterbury did not get a sniff. The only two blips came in a women’s doubles match between
Brosnahan and Dianna Leonard, albeit in a third set tie-breaker, and Leonard and Feutz’s 6-9 loss in mixed doubles action. Another clinical showing against Malvern 18-6 when the tournament resumed on Sunday sealed the win. Quispe-Kim showed no mercy as he crushed Bevan Johns 6-0, 6-0. Cameron McCracken repeated the dose against Max Aldridge, winning by the same margin. However in the match of the day, Tyler Leonard got up over Pavle Filipovic 7-6 (2), 3-6, 10-6 in
what proved to be a titanic struggle. Rhys Cromie and Peter Leonard dropped a set then came back to beat Aldridge and Sebastian On. It was a similar situation for Brosnahan and Dianna Leonard, who also came from behind to knock off Michele Reid and Rebecca Turner. The young trio of Maarka, Lui and Jess Aldridge were also exceptional in their singles encounters. A five from six scoreline in the mixed doubles capped off a fine all-round showing from the talented team.
Shane Beaven, Gordon Crawford in classic form
P18