Te Awamutu News | January 18, 2024

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TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 1

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

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JANUARY 18, 2024

Rates: where to now for council? By Mary Anne Gill

An early return to the debating chamber today for Waipā councillors to flesh out double-digit rates increases has been cancelled so staff can grapple with a longterm plan thrown a huge curve ball last month by the new government The Three Waters reforms, opposed by most local authorities including Waipā, is off – so costs from 2027, which were to be transferred to the mega water authority are back in. The impact on the council’s long-term planning and rates is significant, Strategy manager Melissa Russo warned councillors at an emergency council meeting four days out from Christmas. A campaign discussing the rate increases, signed off by councillors last year, will be in “black and white”. Council public relations staff say it signifies a no-frills approach and would enable the campaign to stand out in an advertising “sea of colour” environment. One councillor – Clare St Pierre – is already on record as saying she is concerned the long-term plan consultation is happening the same time as discussion on Ahu Ake, Waipā’s blueprint spatial plan for the next 30 years. It will say the district’s future looks bright. D-day for councillors to get a handle on how the books look now with water back in is only 12 days away. Sources say the proposed cumulative three year rise of 38.9 per cent is at risk of creeping up to 50 per cent. Continued on page 2

The old Te Awamutu museum building was closed, but there are plans to build a land wars museum.

Cambridge wants a new library…

Residential • Rural Commercial • Tennis Courts

Good Local heads south Good Local Media – the company which publishes The News – has added another masthead to its portfolio. Owner David Mackenzie announced this week he had purchased the King Country News, which had been part of the Beacon Media Group based in Whakatane. In November he extended the company’s footprint north by buying the Waikato Business News. Mackenzie said the King Country publication was a natural new sister operation to the Te Awamutu News and Cambridge News and it would continue to drive local news and issues. He was “delighted” to have the King Country News and all its staff as part of Good Local Media. “The King Country News has been publishing for over 110 years and is respected and well read in Te Kuiti and Ōtorohanga,” he said. The King Country News – formerly known as Waitomo News - also produces the King Country Farmer, a website and app. “King Country News will continue to serve these communities alongside Te Awamutu News and Cambridge News, with no cross over of distribution,” Mackenzie said. “No other media has this reach and readership across the Waipā and King Country regions.” Good Local Media brings a raft of experience to the King Country News. Advertising and commercial activities will be led by advertising director Janine Davy. “We have customers who have business interests in Te Kuiti and Ōtorohanga so by adding the King Country News we are able to provide great advertising solutions assisting them with their marketing needs,” Mackenzie said. Good Local’s editorial is headed by Roy Pilott and includes highly experienced journalists Viv Posselt and Mary Anne Gill. “We see a strong future for community newspapers, and will continue to stand up and be voice for our communities we serve,” Mackenzie said.

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THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

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Readers’ contributions of articles and letters are welcome. Publication of contributions are entirely at the discretion of editorial staff and may be edited. Contributions will only be considered for publication when accompanied by the author’s full name, residential address, and telephone number. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the publishers. The Te Awamutu News is published by Good Local Media Limited.

Te Awamutu is proving to be full of people out and about having fun in the summer sun. Among them on Tuesday was four-old Shaya Stanton, pictured on the seesaw seat at the playground next to Selwyn Lane’s Livingstone Aquatics Centre. After stopping for a quick photo for The News, she and her dolly - Doc McStuffins - headed off to get some ice cream with mum, Madelyn. Photo: Jeremy Smith

Cyanobacterial levels at Lake Ngā Roto are still at a level which represent a health risk to the public. The predominant cyanobacterial species present is a type that is known to produce toxins and can cause serious illness. The cyanobacterial bloom extends to most parts of the lake and toxins can trigger asthma, hayfever, skin rashes and stomach upsets. Te Whatu Ora Health Waikato “strongly” advises against water-based activities on the lake. See: Jade sets a Maadi target, page 9.

Rates: where to now for council? Finance staff will present a revised budget at a council workshop on January 30. Councillors will look again at capital heavy projects in Cambridge - the Town Hall upgrade, new library/ community hub and Water Tower - and district-wide the Te Ara Wai land wars museum in Te Awamutu and recycling. St Pierre said at one of the council workshops last month that Cambridge featured too heavily among the projects. “It’s a little bit skewed,” she said. Mayor Susan O’Regan said at the same workshop she was concerned Waipā had too many big projects on go.

“I’m anxious in the climate we are in financially… I just want us to bear in mind that is where those dollars are falling currently,” said O’Regan, who favoured pushing the new Cambridge library/community project out further. Councillors will drill down into other costs such as community grants and funding of external organisations. Costs for Cambridge’s new $105 million wastewater treatment – due to be up and running by 2026 - will come back to council. Waikato Regional Council put stringent conditions in place when it granted a 35-year

resource consent for the plant last year. There could be thousands of dollars in savings from Local Government Minister Simeon Brown’s announcement council’s consultation documents will not have to be audited. Waipā would look to “peer review” instead using what it says would be from a qualified and credible third party. But that is at odds with a warning from Auditor-General John Ryan last year that there is a lack of transparency in some councils’ finances. Waikato Chamber of Commerce chief executive Don Good said he would look

Continued from page 1

closely at what Waikato councils would settle on for their rates and which “pet projects” would be dumped in favour of core functions. Ratepayers should be asking what led to double digit rate increases and which decisions “led to this state of affairs and who authorised the overspending.” Could it be an issue of governance, he asked members last week. “For voters, fiscal prudence and hard decision-making will be among the key performance indicators for our local politicians over the next two years.”


TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 3

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Briefs… Tuia leaders

Waipā mayor Susan O’Regan is on the lookout for another aspiring young Māori leader to join her Tuia programme. Te Awamutu’s Maude Rewha came under O’Regan’s wing last year and came a long way. Candidates must be between 18 and 25 and be available for the first wananga at Te Kuiti Pā from March 1 to 3.

Dam road shut

Mercury contractors closed the Karāpiro Dam Road a week before scheduled on Sunday due to unexpected additional critical work on the refurbishment of a penstock unit. The road was to have been open during the annual Waka Ama championships on the lake but Mercury decided it was best to close it to keep people and the community safe. Waka Ama organisers were told of the late change, the company said.

Traditional support from ACC

ACC is providing rongoā Māori – traditional Māori healing - at this week’s national Waka Ama championships. Its partnership with Waka Ama is part of a strategy, Huakina Te Rā, which has the vision of Tōnui Ake Nei – A Thriving Aotearoa. So the thousands of competitors at this week’s event at Lake Karāpiro have access to the biggest tent on site, a whānau zone where they can get a traditional ACC health message. Rongoā Māori includes herbal remedies, physical therapies and spiritual healing. Māori are twice as likely to suffer a serious

injury than non-Māori, but 34 percent less likely to make an ACC claim. Similarly, Māori clients generally account for 12 percent of new claims but account for 16.7 percent of the population. The agency wants to balance those figures up and has made efforts to lift its profile at Karāpiro. About seven in 10 competitors in Waka Ama events are Māori or Pasifika and this week’s event is the biggest of its kind. “Waka Ama as an event is truly unique,” ACC chief executive Lara Collins said. “In the sense that multiple generations of one whānau can compete at the same event, from tamariki through

to kaumātua, that’s what makes Waka Ama – mā te katoa, mō āke tonu (for all, for life). Deputy chief executive – Māori Tumuaki Whakarae Renata Blair (Ngāti Whātua Ōrakei) said ACC was focussed on providing a better service to whānau Māori and Māori communities. If ACC has agreed to provide support for an injury, claimants can request rongoā Māori as part of their rehabilitation. Rongoā Māori claim volumes more than doubled in the 12 months to November 2023 to 5649. Rongoā services are also being accessed by 59 percent of all clients.

Out on the water

Kerbside recycling

A standardised collections system for recyclable products will be introduced across the country from February 1. Plastics marked 1, 2 and 5 will be recycled along with ice cream containers, some food trays and plastic bottles – while plastics marked 3,4 6 and 7 and containers for biscuits, bottle lids, pottles and soft plastic bags will go into the rubbish bin.

Construction begins

A new roundabout is underway in Kihikihi at Whitmore and Oliver streets as part of the $8.04 million Te Ara Rimu-Kihihiki pathway project. Whitmore St is closed from Whitaker to Dick St with a detour in place. The pathway is part of transport agency Waka Kotahi’s $17.4 million investment in the district from the Climate Emergency Response fund offering more transport choice. The other work is in Cambridge.

Mighty River Domain at Lake Karāpiro has been a hive of activity as the 2024 Waka Ama Sprint Nationals progress. The week-long event, in its 34th year, is the largest event on Lake Karāpiro’s annual sporting calendar and the biggest waka ama event. It attracts paddlers from all over New Zealand and offshore and is expected to inject millions into the Waikato economy. More than 3000 paddlers – 500 up on 2023 – will be watched by up to 12,000 spectators daily during the course of the event’s nearly 300 races. More than 500 paddlers this year are younger than 10. Junior paddlers were the first to compete on Sunday, and pictured is competitors in one of the day’s final races as they head over the finish line. Photo: Jeremy Smith

John, a man of many words By Jeremy Smith

John Herbert has commentated on so many races he’s been called the voice of waka ama. The Waka Ama National Sprint Championships head announcer has only missed two years in the event’s 34-year history, calling “thousands” of races in that time. He missed one when he shifted to Australia about 12 years ago, the other was because of covid-enforced restrictions in 2021. He now flies back from Perth each year to lend his voice to the championships. “I’ve lost count of how many races it is now,” John said when speaking to The News from the commentary booth on Sunday. “But it’s an incredible job. If the

racing gets exciting, I can’t help but get excited too and let loose. “People often chuckle about how much they hear that in my voice.” This week, as the 2024 national championships unfold at Lake Karāpiro, there are more than 300 races to add to John’s commentary resume. He has a team of eight commentators around him to share the race calling load. “It’s absolutely teamwork these days, I couldn’t do it without them.” John first started paddling competitively in 1988 for Nga Hoe Horo o Pawarenga Outrigger Canoe Club in Northland. It was one of only three waka ama clubs in New Zealand – but the sport was booming when he commentated at the nationals in

1992. More than 3000 paddlers from around New Zealand and offshore are expected at this week’s nationals. From his vantage point, the commentary booth at the “world class” Lake Karāpiro, he can only remember two dead heat finishes during his time at the nationals. “And that’s incredible, because these we have cameras on the start line capable of a thousand frames a second.” John’s commentary journey has taken him worldwide. One highlight among likely hundreds, he said, was commentating during the International Va’a Federation sprint championship, held at Dorney Lake in Windsor, England in 2022.

Head announcer John Herbert has called races at all but two of the past 34 Waka Ama National Sprint Championships. Photo: Jeremy Smith

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THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Why I say usually By Janine Krippner

Lava flows usually don’t kill people, but they do inflict significant damage infrastructure and homes. Being the focus of my research as I get into the new year, this is adding to my work on how the La Palma eruption impacted local communities and applying those lessons to Auckland. On the surface we see buildings that are bulldozed, burned, or buried. Under the surface there are homes, livelihoods, communities, and memories. Beyond the obvious impacts to buildings is the damage to infrastructure. Responding to an eruption requires a range of utilities providers to work with information given by emergency managers and volcano monitoring agencies. Volcanologists have to figure out important details so that people can make critical decisions. Measuring a disaster by fatalities alone ignores the immense loss and trauma associated with these events. We can usually outwalk lava flows - but what happens when we can’t? Nyiragongo is a volcano in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that has an active summit lava lake, where very hot and fluid lava is cycling up and down within the vent, maintaining its fluid form. Goma, the capital of the North Kivu province, is about 15 km away. In 1977, when the population was around 50,000, an eruption of rapid lava flows from the lava lake draining down through fractures in the flank covered 16-20 square kilometres in a couple of hours, killing around 75 people. On January 17, 2002, the ongoing eruption changed again. Lava began to extrude

from a large system of fractures across 10km on the southern flank, draining the lava lake. Two lava flows entered communities, destroying 15 per cent of the city and leaving around 120,000 people homeless by the next day and ultimately up to 150 people died. Another similar event in 2021 also resulted in fatalities These are some of the few eruptions where lava flows have directly caused fatalities. Those lava flows moved at speeds of tens of km/hour with the composition of the lava being a controlling factor here. This particular volcano produces magma (below ground) or lava (above ground) that has very low amounts of silica or SiO2. Generally, the higher the SiO2, the stickier or more viscous the magma/lava is, so these low contents mean it can flow faster. When I talk about any hazard there is pretty much always a “usually” in my description. There are always those examples of when a volcano did something different, something unexpected, something disastrous. Those times have come with many harsh and painful lessons. It is our responsibility as volcanologists to take all of these into account to determine if they could happen at a given location, and to keep all the possible options in our minds as we focus in on which more likely hazards people should prepare for. For just one word, “usually” holds within it these powerful stories, reminders to be mindful of all the possibilities and to be adaptable during an evolving situation.

FAITH IN WAIPĀ

History in our bones By Norris Hall

Undoubtedly many readers will have read in local media, or heard through word of mouth, of a time consuming yet productive project detailing the history of various buildings and businesses in Te Awamutu’s central business district of times gone by. This worthwhile endeavour, spearheaded by local historian, Alan Hall (no relation I’m sorry to say), and genealogy enthusiast Sandra Metcalfe, will culminate in a midyear publication of a detailed history of retail and mercantile effort and vision. It will be something which long-time residents, amateur historians and others will take pride in; as well as benefitting from the information so carefully and industriously assembled, a reference for the future of the past. Full marks go to those who have taken the time and energy in recording this uniquely important legacy for posterity. Our district of Waipa is steeped in history, some of it not so good, while other parts record the development of the area in the past – local politicians, farmers and business owners. The historic churches of St. John’s in the cradle of Te Awamutu, and St Paul’s in the fertile rural Rangiaowhia area are both reminders of our shared heritage. Some of us may have ancestors who were those original settlers and shopkeepers, soldiers and others. Family history is important in our lives, although to some it may be as dry as dust and of no significance. That very personal history informs us, through the lives of previous generations, of who we are, what we are, where we come from, and how we are shaped in our respective lives by other forces at work. Ideally, and hopefully, it also engenders

within us family pride, a knowledge of geography in addition to providing a basis for onward and beneficial personal development. History on occasion can also be a harsh teacher if we do not learn from the past. “Where do we come from?” is a, if not the, defining question that we may be called upon to face and consider. Very much like our Māori residents and citizens who place great importance to their family lineage, so too do the Jewish people. That acquired and treasured knowledge gives them a special sense of belonging, of family and extended kinship, and of cultural and ethnic heritage. Both Matthew and Luke, as they wrote their respective Gospels, began their offerings by establishing the credentials of their one central focus, Jesus of Nazareth, by providing his genealogical lineages. For Matthew, it was paramount since he was writing for a principally Jewish reading audience. And for Luke, from a historical viewpoint. By doing so, they set the stage as it were for what was to follow, giving a background to the persona and ministry and teachings of that one influential individual. Hopefully the soon-to-be published account of one part of Te Awamutu’s history and progress will inspire many of us to examine our own unique and respective heritages, to trace our own ancestral lineages, if not to emphasise how and where we belong and how family history has shaped us to be what we are today. Happy digging up the bones of our history!

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THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Change at top for rūnanga By Jeremy Smith

One of the first Māori to serve on a Waipā District Council committee has stood down as Ngāti Apakura Rūnanga Trust chair. A statement on the trust’s website confirmed Bill Harris resigned at the end of November - just weeks out from 160th Rangiaowhia commemorations being planned next month. “Trustees have met,” the statement said, “and appointed a new executive committee. “Orrin Kapua will step up as chair, George Griggs has accepted the role as deputy chair and Julia Martin is continuing as financial officer”. Calls by The News to both Kapua and Harris for comment were not immediately returned on Monday. Griggs though told The News it was a privilege to be chosen for his new role At the same time Harris resigned as chair, trust secretary Erina Stockman resigned as trust secretary. The trust statement said both resignations had been accepted “with great reluctance”. “We gratefully acknowledge the long commitment through leadership and hard work both have given. They can take pride in their roles.” Some “wonderful milestones” had been achieved during Harris and Stockman’s tenure, the statement said, including

AL HOUSES INTO UD OF.

Bill Harris

negotiations with Te Arawhiti on land at 61 Rangiaowhia Rd which resulted in it being returned to the iwi. Some of the new executive’s key priorities, the trust statement said, are to work with trustees to deliver on Ngāti Apakura Rūnanga Trust’s 10-year strategic plan and the 160th commemorations at Rangiaowhia.

On February 21, 1864, British soldiers attacked Rangiaowhia village, four kilometres east of Te Awamutu. At that time the community had been an industrious centre of agriculture – exporting food around the country as well as to Australia. Harris has been a driving force behind the resurrection of the Alpha

Hotel in Kihikihi, a move helped greatly by the benevolence of its owner, former politician Arthur Anae who is based in Auckland. The project has seen the Alpha given a new lease on life through a steady as she goes work project which ultimately aims to turn the hub into a community centre. In August, Harris was named as one of three mana whenua Te Kanohi representatives on the Waipā District Council. He sits on the Strategic Planning and Policy Committee. Te Kanohi representatives sit on council’s Strategic Planning and Policy, Service Delivery, Finance and Corporate and Regulatory committees. Each has voting rights on their committee. Harris – who is of Ngāti Apakura, Ngāti Maniapoto and Pare Te Kawa descent - has previously also been on council’s Service Delivery Committee. Harris has stood twice for election to the council’s Māori ward seat. There is little doubt that during the February 21, 1864 attack at Rangiaowhia, soldiers shot Māori who attempted to surrender – and later returned to loot the village. Ngāti Apakura and Ngāti Hinetu say terrified villagers fled, a few shot at the troops, and some sheltered in prayer houses. Some in those houses were gunned down as they tried to get out of the building when it began to burn down and at least seven died inside.

TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 5

Waka ama boost for Waipā By Jeremy Smith

Accommodation providers district wide are reported to be “packed” as a consequence of Waipa hosting the national Waka Ama Sprint Nationals at Karāpiro. The event, which started on Sunday, has attracted almost 3300 competitors – aged five to 83 - from more than 70 clubs. About 12,000 spectators will be at Karāpiro watching. Mighty River Domain site manager Liz Stolwyk said eftpos transaction data from Waipā in previous years showed the event contributes at least $6 million to the region’s economy. She expects that figure to be higher this year. A team of 12 is working across 16-hour days this week at the domain – and the event has almost 200 volunteers. “This week, halls, marae, sports clubs and a wide range of accommodation providers are all fully booked – it’s fantastic opportunity for our district to be showcased and I hope we roll out the red carpet for the many thousands of visitors expected,” Stolwyk said. Waka Ama New Zealand CEO Lara Collins told The News waka ama is the fastest growing water sport in New Zealand and organisers love returning to Lake Karāpiro each year.

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6 | TE AWAMUTU NEWS

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

School time for super heroes By Jeremy Smith

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Thousands of youngsters are preparing to check off a milestone in coming weeks – the first day of school. Among them are two Te Awamutu friends Brax Morris and Emlyn Richards, who attended Learning Links Childcare together – and are preparing their Batman and Spiderman backpacks In Brax’ case he reckons he knows what the most important item on the ‘to do’ list is as school preparations ramp up – a Batman backpack. And by that metric, it’s job done. Mum Sam though isn’t so sure – there’s still the school uniform and required stationery to collect next week, before Brax starts at Te Awamutu Primary School at the end of the month. In 2024, Term 1 starts between January 29 and February 7. And for Brax, the start of the school year can’t come fast enough, dad Regan said. “Absolutely, he’s been excited about starting school for about six months,” Sam agreed.

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Brax Morris is starting at Te Awamutu Primary School this year. Photo: Jeremy Smith

Emlyn Richards in his new Kihikihi School uniform. Photo: Jeremy Smith.

“It will be fun,” Brax said. Brax’ sister, eight-year-old Ella, is also looking forward to another year at Pokuru School. In Kihikihi, Emlyn is delighted to have got his new uniform, which he proudly displayed for The News. While mum Shayna said Emlyn has “mixed feelings” ahead of term 1, there is a theme developing which she reckons will help make the transition easier – a Spiderman backpack, lunch box and drink bottle. “What can I say, he just loves all things Spiderman,” Shayna said. Another positive is the fact Emlyn will join his brother, eight-year-old Desmond, at Kihikihi School. “It is a great environment and the fact it’s nice and close to us makes it really helpful.” Meanwhile, 2023 marked the completion of Te Awamutu College’s first year under an enrolment scheme, which appears to have run smoothly. Soon after college students return, they can expect to make use of the newly completed multipurpose sports complex. There were delays in opening the complex, which was originally slated for completion in October.

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Health New Zealand’s chief clinical advisor Is encouraging people to look only at “trusted sources of information” when trying to find answers to health questions. Sharon Sime, Te Whatu Ora – Health New Zealand Chief Clinical Advisor Health Protection - was responding to questions form The News about a pre-Christmas post on the New Zealand Doctors Speaking Out with Science website which asked if the government was using a measles outbreak to create a “fear for compliance” again. The website referred to the Covid vaccination programme as a “terrible three year jabicide”. It was responding to a statement from health minister Shane Reti who reported plans were in place for a response to an outbreak, most likely measles, over a defined period – December 23 to January 7. The planning was in place – but in fact there have been no new measles cases reported in New Zealand since November. “Misinformation can spread very easily in

a range of different ways, such as through social media, websites, pamphlets, posters and letterbox drops, and even via television, radio and print,” Sime told The News. “One of the best ways to stop misinformation spreading is by only reading official sources… we all have a responsibility to do this and if people see any examples of misinformation about health issues… we encourage them to report it. The website said a vaccine will decrease the chance of catching measles, but that it used to be called a ‘childhood disease’ until there was a vaccine to sell “and then it became a serious, highly contagious, lifethreatening disease”. A measles epidemic in 2019 infected almost 2200 people in New Zealand and resulted in two deaths. In Samoa where 5700 people caught the disease, 83 died. At that time vaccinations rates there had dropped to under 35 per cent - three months later it was up to about 94 per cent.


TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 7

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

It’s Tyler to the rescue By Roy Pilott

Te Awamutu College old boy, tanker driver Tyler Lindsay, spotted Elwin the kākāpō late at night.

Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari neighbours are being offered “aversion training’ for their dogs – as part of the project to establish the North Island’s first breeding colony for over a century. Community support for the sanctuary has been a key to its success – and thanks to the publicity it generates, one of its taonga is back in safe hands after hatching an escape plan. Since being moved from the bottom of the South Island, the colony of male kākāpō have been working out ways to breach the perimeter fence on Maungatautari. Several have managed it, putting themselves in danger from dogs – and vehicles. Elwin the kākāpō breached the security fence on the mountain last week – and was found thanks to an eagle eyed tanker driver. “At first I thought it was a turkey,” Tyler Lindsay told the News It was after 1.30am and he was on his Fonterra milk pick up in Scott Rd when he rounded a bend to see Elwyn in the process of crossing the road. Lindsay was thankful his

speed was slow enough at the time to stop. He got out of his vehicle, but Elwin had already gone bush. “It took me a second to work it out because I’ve never seen a kākāpō, but I have come across posts about them escaping – that’s what made me think it was one.” He alerted the department of conversation hotline and emailed Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari. The conversation on the hotline clearly took the call centre by surprise – “she said it has to be a kea – but I explained the big green parrot had come out of Maungatautari and she realised what had happened.” Rangers found Elwin, none the worse for his outing. Tyler, 32, a former Te Awamutu College student, lives in Rukuhia and works as a tanker driver and contract slaughterman. Ten kākāpō were originally released on the maunga, but since the escapes three have been returned to the South Island. A media release from Sanctuary Mountain applauded Tyler Lindsay’s help and noted “we have been recently reminded that

Kākāpō Elwin.

conservation is and must be a community effort.” “Trialling new habitat for kākāpō is an important step in the wider kākāpō recovery programme and we are grateful for the ongoing collaboration between the Kākāpō Recovery team, Ngāi Tahu, Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari and iwi and the vigilance of our community.”

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Now that work could see dogs in the area trained to be part of the caring programme too. “For residents surrounding Maungatautari, we are in the process of contacting you and offering the opportunity for dogs to have kākāpō aversion training as this is considered an area of risk,” the media release added.


8 | TE AWAMUTU NEWS

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

A welcome spot of rain By Jeremy Smith

Rain on Monday was the first a Parawera dairy farmer has seen this month – now consistency will be key to making further in roads towards combating a hot, dry summer. “Up until just before Christmas, we were really pleased with the regular rainfall we’d been getting. “And, some rain on Christmas Day was a fabulous Christmas present too,” Jennie Macky said. Jennie and her husband

James have been farming at their 220 effective hectare property 15 kilometres southeast of Te Awamutu since 2008. They became farm owners there in 2022 and have about 1000 cows. A second smaller farm the Mackys lease in Kihikihi is about 74 effective hectares. Rain gauge data at the Macky’s Parawera property shows more than 50mm of rain fell in October, November and December respectively. At last check on Monday,

roughly 10mm of rain had fallen. There are times though, Jennie said, when she and James can watch rain falling in nearby areas such as Pirongia from their property, but it ends up bypassing them. “Given the high heat we’ve been having, and the wind, any moisture dries up very quickly. “We’re not necessarily after big downpours. Rather, consistent, separate rainfall events of anything just over 10mm are what really make a cumulative difference.”

Beer O'Clock

Another beer, please It’s been a long time between beers. The last edition of this column ran before the Covid lockdown. “I’ll get it up and running soon,” I have regularly told Gary and David between beers. You might recall the column came about because David Mackenzie, the publisher of Good Local Media – and Gary Bulling, the man who designs and lays out the pages in the Cambridge News and Te Awamutu News – enjoy discussing the pros and cons of a good ale once the papers have been put to bed. No claims to fame of expertise, we just like a good beer. So, at our end of year gathering, Gary’s contribution was enough to motivate me. Gary arrived with a six pack of a one-off run of low carb Epic ales. Beers that no longer exist

The Three Beers – David, Roy and Gary

from a brewer who stopped brewing. What’s more, it was called Beer O’Clock. This was a special run for the Trade Tested crowd – at the same time Epic had it under the Blue brand. It surprises me that more companies do not get special runs of beer made with their logo attached as gifts. It surprised me even more to hear of the demise of Epic – liquidation was announced in July - was a real shame – they produced great beers constantly.

This one might not be as memorable as some which were available at the Tap Room in Nelson St – but it was a nice drop and an even better conversation piece. And those low carb numbers are getting popular. In August it was announced the Epic Beer had been bought by the Russell Group and Hancocks Group - so fingers crossed, we will see the brand on shelves again. In the meantime, I’ll be reporting on what’s being sampled around me – I might even look at a zero alcohol wine and some offerings from the Williams Warn home brewing world.

Jennie, an experienced dairy vet, told The News there are two key considerations she has been telling clients to be aware of at this time of year. And they are foremost in her mind on farm too. Those are the importance of avoiding heat stress on cows – the Mackys have sprinklers installed in their cow shed yards to this end – and having an awareness of any possible increases in “excessive” spores which cause facial eczema in light of this week’s rain. Facial eczema spores are fungal spores in the pasture.

They produce a toxin which damages a cow’s liver and can cause skin irritation. Cows which have facial eczema often display lower milk production than cows which don’t, and it can sometimes result in death. And, night temperature above 12 degrees Celsius, coupled with rainfall, can result in high humidity – potentially giving rise to rapid spore count increases. “That obviously means now is a good time to start monitoring spore counts,” Jennie said.

Jennie Macky

Two unfortunate accidents By Meghan Hawkes

Edward Brennan was very cold having just come off guard at the Armed Constabulary camp at Kihikihi on a June morning in 1873. To warm himself he began skylarking about with John Verner, wrestling with him in fun. But John, who had been cutting tobacco, had a penknife in his hand and when Edward fell forward, he was stabbed in the heart and died within minutes. Edward, 29, had formerly belonged to the 18th Regiment Royal Irish, nicknamed Paddy’s Blackguards, which came to New Zealand in 1863. The Regiment was formed mainly of volunteers from the Irish Militia and was soon involved in skirmishes in Drury and surrounding areas of the North Waikato. Paddy’s Blackguards were the last regiment to leave New Zealand, in 1870, although some, like Edward, stayed and became part of the Armed Constabulary. Edward and John were inseparable friends and John was greatly depressed by the loss of his mate. Great sympathy was felt for him. An inquest absolved him of any blame and returned a verdict of accidental death. Edward was buried at Hairini Catholic cemetery. While danger was ever present on the battlefields, for these men it could also lurk within the relatively safe confines of daily life. Ten years after Edward’s ‘melancholy accident’, Trooper James Neill, a bandsman in the Waikato cavalry corps, was marking the butts - mounds of earth on which targets are mounted - at the Te Awamutu rifle range. The firing party consisted of seven men, and after one trooper missed the target, Bandsman Charles Alexander prepared to fire. No danger disc was visible and as it was unusual for the marker to leave the butts after a missed shot, he was assumed to be safely out of the way. After a short pause Charles

Alexander fired. As soon as he did, he saw James Neill fall forward. He had been shot through the right shoulder. No one had seen him and no danger flag was waved. The firing party ran up to the target, and discovered all three danger discs still inside the marker’s butt. The bullet had struck James and was supposed to be lodged in the left lung, as no point of exit was visible. James told his father that, thinking that he might discover where the previous shot had struck, he was coming out of the butts with a danger disc in his hand and when he was shot this disc fell back into the marker’s butt. The 34-yearold said he blamed no one. James lingered for three days and was attended to by Dr Blundell for shock before a fatal rheumatic delirium set in. The inquest investigation was a most searching one and found that the danger flag having been stolen from the butts, a disc was substituted as a danger signal. The Coroner directed the attention of the jury to the definition of homicide by misfortune, pointing out that the evidence showed that the man who fired the fatal shot was doing a lawful act, and had no intention to hurt any person. A verdict of accidental death was returned, and a rider added that no firing should be conducted without danger flags. Charles Alexander was held blameless. James was buried at Rangiaowhia cemetery with military honours. In a curious coincidence his father, himself a member of the corps, had been accidentally shot at target practice some time before.

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TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 9

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Jade sets a Maadi target By Jeremy Smith

Sitting in the skiff on Sunday, an excited Jade Hood is all smiles. The 12-year-old Pirongia School student is about to go for her first doubles row – under the watchful eye of the experienced Tony Edmondson. The News was there as the pair – both Te Awamutu Rowing Club members - set out for the training row on Lake Ngā Roto on Sunday. “Her coaches have already told her she’s better than I was, and I’m absolutely fine with that,” mum Claire says as the pair depart. Jade took up rowing barely four months ago in September, likely encouraged by the fact her mum – a former competitive swimmer - is already a masters rower with the Te Awamutu club. Claire reckons Jade, who will attend Te Awamutu College next year, has already set her rowing sights high. “She does lots of other sports at the moment, but I’m sure rowing is the sport she will stick with most in the long term.” Jade has already mentioned wanting to compete at the Maadi Cup – New Zealand, and the Southern Hemisphere’s, ultimate secondary schools rowing event. Last year, more than 2000 rowers competed in over 400 races across 52 events at Lake Karāpiro. All told, 156 medals were won by 49 schools. And, when she’s eligible, Jade wants to be one of those future winners. Other Te Awamutu Rowing Club members out for an early morning training session on Sunday included Aaron and Pip Leppard, who row as a mixed double. The pair are among 12 Te Awamutu club rowers – eight women and four men - preparing to compete at this weekend’s masters regatta, the 2024 Dewar Shield Blue Lake Regatta held on Rotorua’s Lake Tikitapu, or Blue Lake. Te Awamutu Rowing Club regatta secretary Ann Edmondson said this weekend’s event will be a good gauge ahead of other events which are on the club’s competitive radar - including the North Island Rowing Club championships at the end of the month, and next month’s New Zealand Rowing Championships. Club members are being extra vigilant to clean and wipe down rowing skiffs after each training session in light of a public health warning in November following a significant increase in the lake’s cyanobacterial levels. The cyanobacterial species present produces toxins which can cause serious illness.

CLASSICAL SONGSTRESS

Aaron and Pip Leppard – who will compete as a mixed double in Rotorua this weekend – pictured training on Lake Ngāroto on Sunday. Photos: Jeremy Smith

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Tuesday 30 January, 10am Jade Hood, 12, goes for her first doubles row, with Te Awamutu Rowing Club’s Tony Edmondson teaching her the ropes.

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10 | TE AWAMUTU NEWS

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

TALKING ECONOMICS

Letters… No confidence

In my opinion, the extortionately high proposed rates increases are neither welcome nor acceptable, nor are Waipā District Council’s feeble excuses why there is a need for massive increases in these austere times. Comparing us to other broke/broken councils - is this the new benchmark standard? Why compare us to, say, Hamilton with their proposed 25% increase in rates? Simply, inexperience, incapable, unable to deliver, council staff and councillors are to blame for this travesty, who have now made the district financially unsustainable - these are not my words but the council’s own words as per their ‘Audit & Risk Reports’ - the same repetitive reports being ignored by our leadership. Their actions clearly demonstrate they are not fit for purpose to administer or financially manage the district – yet willing to continue spending up large, fly to France and hold a lavish party on our tab. Council is ignoring, nor adverting, nor planning for these known events post Covid, actions considered negligent, just as ignoring expert warnings and advice from financial experts and leading economists on repeated occasions, instead racking up more debt on unnecessary nice to haves. When will this madness stop? When our annual rates bill is a staggering unsustainable, unaffordable $5000 or $10,000? I have no confidence in our council, or elected council. People should voice frustration and concerns if they are not

happy with the current regime and neglected district. (Abridged) Hayden Woods Te Awamutu

Close call

If you were one of the four cyclists on State Highway 3 near the Te Rahu turnoff at approximately 12.15pm on January 13 travelling north, then you need to have a sharp look at your decision making. What you did beggars belief. Putting your hands out to the right to signal you were moving that way from the left hand side of the road to the middle of the road, which is also dangerous, might be okay in the confines of town but on a highway where cars are doing 100 kms an hour it is suicide. Luckily only three of you proceeded and the fourth stayed put. If that person had also gone, I would have had nowhere to go but through one or all of you. If I had been a few seconds earlier things could have had a tragic outcome. Heather Gibbs RD3 Hamilton

Letters to the Editor

• Letters should not exceed 200 words • They should be opinion based on facts or current events • All letters to be emailed to editor@goodlocal. nz • No noms-de-plume • Letters will be published with names • Please include full name, address and contact details for our records only • Letters may be edited, abridged, or rejected at the editor’s discretion • The editor’s decision on publication is final.

Where do we start? I decided to write my first column for 2024 about the big economic problems New Zealand faces. There are many, and some go beyond big – they are enormous. None have arisen suddenly they have been slowly building up, sometimes for decades. Shocks from the rest of the world play only a very small part in any of them. We have succeeded in creating these enormous problems ourselves. I will look briefly at four of the biggest problems. The infrastructure deficit: almost every day we read stories about infrastructure deficits in important sectors: roads, water pipes, hospitals, sewage pipes. This week saw a story on the Department of Conservation. They have an estimated $300 million of deferred maintenance. This may force them to close tracks or huts or sell off conservation assets. Infrastructure NZ’s chief estimated recently that our total infrastructure deficit was around $200 billion. Our annual GDP is around $400 billion so our infrastructure deficit is now 50% of our GDP. It has taken decades of underinvestment to reach this level. It will take decades to solve. What worries me is that there doesn’t seem to be any mechanism in New Zealand

By Peter Nicholl

for solving it. We have no medium- or long-term planning processes. The debate on these issues often involves central and local government arguing whose responsibility the investment is or saying “we can’t afford the investment”. Not making these types of investments is usually a classic case of false economy. The problem won’t go away and delay is almost sure to make it more expensive. A bloated and inefficient public service: the number of people on the public payroll (staff and consultants) has risen substantially in recent years. But citizens’ and businesses’ satisfaction with the performance of the sector has fallen substantially. The sector seems to focus on reports and advertising campaigns rather than on final outputs and outcomes. People argue about the effectiveness and fairness of the raft of reforms that were labelled Rogernomics in the late 1980s. But one element of those reforms that I don’t think should be argued about was the introduction of strong performance criteria and monitoring systems throughout the public sector. At that time, New Zealand was regarded as the world leader in this area. I have no idea what performance criteria and monitoring systems are being used in the public service today.

Whatever they are (and I am hoping a system does exist) they don’t seem to be producing effective performance. Inflation and high prices: the inflation beast that central banks created and fed with their low interest rate policies has at least stopped growing. But it hasn’t yet been tamed and I think New Zealand has a bigger problem in this area. We have become a high price economy in almost all areas. Excess regulation, with little or no cost-benefit applied, low productivity and weak enforcement of competition laws all play a role. Falling educational standards: some may say this isn’t an economic issue. But if our educational standards continue to fall, there will undoubtedly be economic consequences. The country will continue to get relatively poorer. That’s what we have been doing for the last 30 years or more. Our GDP per head is now the 52nd highest amongst developed countries. I am old enough to remember when we were fourth. Unless the above problems start to be addressed, we will continue to slip further. Welcome to 2024. 10

990

24 Horizon (7) Came rest (7) 26 Largeto settlement (4) Walking track (4) 28 Spouse (7) Change genetically (6) 29 Food grain (6) Ban (6) 30 Firmly stuck together Firm determination (7) (6) Without or 31 Severelycaution criticised (6) prudence (10) 33 Swallows (5) Direct carefully and safely 35 Sorcery (5) (8) 36 Musical work (4) Receded 37 Skipper’s(5) hands (4) Technical talk (6) 43 Did duty (6) 44 Accounts Off coursecheck (6) (5) 46 Love god (4) Downtrodden, subjugated 47 Violent storm (7) (9) 48 Specialist (6) Filtering (9) 49 Girl’s name (5) Evil spirit (5) 50 Went with (8) (7) Gain ground 51 Endemic (6) (2,6) See you later 52 Flown goods (3,7) Keyboard instrument 53 Wild goat (4) (11) 54 Earnest (7) Sailing vessel (5) 59 Temporary repair (5) Not intoxicated (5) 60 North Briton (4) Quite crazy (2,3,2,1,6) 64 Dirty mark (5) Revolution (5) 65 Goodbye (2,6) 67 Chopper landing area (7) 6 Let go (7) 4 5 68 US lawman 6 (7) 7 70 Employee (6) 7 Eventual outcome (6) 8 Large woody plants (5) 71 Root vegetable (6) 72 Young pig (6) 10 Scheme (4) 75 Tropical fruit with 11 Leaping athlete (7) 15 pink flesh (5) 12 Salve (6) 77 Scrapbook (5) 17 Scientist’s 17 workshop 78 Unit of heat (5) (10) 79 20 Seabird (4) 18 Segment (5) 80 Loyal (4) 22 Bread snack (8) 23 Wild (5) 22

61 Bridegroom’s ACROSS ACROSS 50 attendant (4,3) 1 Greet (7) 54 1 Take place (5) 62 Extent (6) 4 Move towards in a 55 4 Matching siblings 63 (9,5) Gets back (8) fighting attitude (6,2,2) 11 Game fish (5) 66 Chess player’s call56 (9) 9 Tiny aperture (7) 57 14Expel Body 13 (4) organ (5) 68 Perspiring (6) 15Black-and-white Factual TV programme 69 Body shape (6) 60 14 bird 73 Foolishness (5) (6) (11) 61 16Reduce Fort(6) troops (8) 74 Coastal swamp tree 15 19Hide Comfort someone (8) in 16 (7) 62 disappointment, (7) (10) 76loss Ostracism 19 Enormous (10) 65 20 sound or leg hearing 20Of Upper (5) 81 Captain (7) 82 US (8) 66 21 Impudent, brazen (9)state (6) 21 (5) 67 24Deluge Fictitious name 83 (9)Risqué (6) 84 Skin hole (4) 24 to try harder 26Incite Rugged (6) 85 piercing Three-pronged spear (4,2) 72 27 High-pitched and (7) 25 Abrade 73 (6) (6) 86 On the wrong track; 27 trickery 74 31Deception, Characteristic (5) (9) 32 Royal daughtervery (8)mistaken (3,3,4) 79 87manner Temper fit (7) 32 (8) exhaustive 80 34Gifted In an 33 Game bird (6) (10) 34 involuntarily 81 38Shake Firmly loyal (7) DOWN 1 Incorrect (5) (7) 82 39 Horse barn (6) 2 Glossy (8) 38 Begged (8) 83 40 Restless (6) 3 Stance (anag) (6) 39 Deluded (6) 84 41 Cipher (4) 4 Photography brown 40 Well-ventilated (4) 42 Takes receipt of (7) 41 Ornamental stone (5) tint (5) 45Written Philanthropic 5 Second-hand (4) 42 composition (10)

24

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25 26 28 29 30 33 35 36

37 Lacking sensation (4) 42 Meat jelly (5) 43 Food providers at social event (8) 44 Crush flat (6) 45 Lullaby (10) 46 Highest point (4) 47 Early childhood (7) 48 Get here (6) 49 Telling fibs (5) 51 Looked at (4) 52 Bother (7) 53 Begrudged (6) 58 Nearly finished (6,4) 59 Rear part of boat (5) 63 Sot (8) 64 Stage whisper (5) 65 Fragmented puzzles (7) 68 Seer (7) 69 Yacht harbour (6) 70 Die (6) 71 Rolled document (6) 75 Narrow passageway (5) 76 Larva (4) 77 Musical work (4) 78 Accurate (4)

Police line (6) Component parts (5) Let fall (4) Badly behaved (7) Cold era (3,3) Pretends (4) Full of twists and turns (8) Radio crackle (6) During (10) Hops kiln (4) Melodic (7) Sky fluff (5) Bad luck! (4,6) Grieve for (5) One habitually active during late hours (5,3) Confiscation (7) Believe to be guilty (7) Reviewer (6) One belonging to a club or society (6) Emergency (6) V-shaped cut (5) Give in (5) North Briton (4)

8

9

10

29

DOWN: 1 Wrong, 2 Lustrous, 3 Enacts, 4 Sepia, 5 Used, 6 Release, 7 Upshot, 8 Trees, 10 Idea, 11 Hurdler, 12 Lotion, 17 Laboratory, 18 Piece, 22 Sandwich, 23 Angry, 24 Skyline, 26 City, 28 Husband, 29 Cereal, 30 Bonded, 31 Slated, 33 Gulps, 35 Magic, 36 Opus, 37 Crew, 43 Served, 44 Audit, 46 Eros, 47 Tempest, 48 Expert, 49 Irene, 50 Escorted, 51 Native, 52 Airfreight, 53 Ibex, 54 Sincere, 59 Patch, 60 Scot, 64 Smear, 65 Au revoir, 67 Helipad, 68 Sheriff, 70 Worker, 71 Potato, 72 Piglet, 75 Guava, 77 Album, 78 Therm, 79 Tern, 80 True. 31

32

33

36

39

11

12

13

16 18 21 23 26

28

38

2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 17 18 22 23

27 30

ACROSS: 1 Welcome, 4 Square up to, 9 Pinhole, 13 Oust, 14 Magpie, 15 Lessen, 16 Secrete, 19 Gargantuan, 20 Acoustic, 21 Flood, 24 Spur on, 25 Scrape, 27 Chicanery, 32 Talented, 33 Grouse, 34 Tremble, 38 Implored, 39 Misled, 40 Airy, 41 Agate, 42 Essay, 45 Let the side down, 52 Acids, 55 Crude, 56 Loom, 57 Preach, 58 Sturgeon, 61 Best man, 62 Degree, 63 Recovers, 66 Checkmate, 68 Sweaty, 69 Figure, 73 Folly, 74 Mangrove, 76 Banishment, 81 Skipper, 82 Hawaii, 83 Ribald, 84 Pore, 85 Trident, 86 Way off beam, 87 Tantrum.

(5) 1 2 3 45 Fail one’s colleagues or associates by falling below their standards (3,3,4,4) 14 52 Etching liquids (5) 55 Unrefined (5) 56 Weaving apparatus (4) 19 57 Sermonise (6) 58 Caviar fish (8)

DOWN

34

35

37 40

41


TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 11

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Te Awamutu at your fingertips It’s all on your local App – are you?

Countr yLife

The Te Awamutu App is the go-to place for your latest mobile news, sport and opinion. Every day, locals open the app to stay informed about what’s happening in Te Awamutu. But there isn’t only news on this app: it features upcoming events, funeral notices, the latest properties for sale, places to eat and drink, events, activities, local businesses, and much more. Download the Te Awamutu App, look around, you might be surprised by what you find. • News • Property • Sports • Rural • Lifestyle • Dining • Events • Activities • Art & Culture • Funerals • Jobs • Shop • Stay • Professionals

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12 | TE AWAMUTU NEWS

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

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Quick crossword 1

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Across 1. Siren (5) 4. Noisy insect (6) 7. Fuss (3) 8. Load (6) 9. Subtle difference (6) 10. Thin lining (8) 12. Limp and straggly (4) 13. Pandemonium (6) 15. Soldier’s steel helmet (inf) (3,3)

16. Remain (4) 17. Germs (8) 19. Exit (3,3) 20. Overfamiliar, outdated (3-3) 22. Go wrong (3) 23. Performer on ice (6) 24. Bird of prey (5) Down 1. Funfair (9,4) 2. Assist (3)

3. Craze (5) 4. Link (7) 5. Dare (9) 6. Sterilise (13) 11. Male animal, related to sheep (5,4) 14. Criminal, gang member (7) 18. Tedious task (5) 21. Hound (3)

Last week Across: 1. Behead, 4. Chapel, 9. Denim, 10. On the go, 11. Excited, 13. Head, 14. Foul-mouthed, 17. Pong, 18. Wrestle, 21. Chamber, 22. Giant, 24. Eyelet, 25. Bridge. Down: 1. Bidder, 2. Hen, 3. Admit, 5. Hatchet, 6. Prevalent, 7. Look, 8. Word for word, 12. Chocolate, 15. Legible, 16. Seethe, 19. Eager, 20. Ache, 23. Add.

Sudoku

E S J V N O O S N O M O Y P I C T T L I G H T N I N G S E T T L E D V S C Y C L O N E T H A W E H E A T T O U M E R U S S E R P C M I L D T O R M Q O S M J F L O O D P C R D H T F H I G H N C H I L L Y E C L O U D Y N S B O O O O D Y Z H R T Y Y N Y E O E P W S C I X F U A A H G R D P R I V M E T U H T A T S T G G S E P U S E A R Q O N A I F Q U I O N R I O S R D M G H R S N D M R R F O D N P E E M A H A U N H G N E B B W U U N R H L C B P B M A I E O T S I M K W P E X O A B M X I D N A C Y T D H O E F S P S Q M C L D O E A I N J W D D I C I C L E M R O T S L H T N N N O F E T A M I L C U Y M M L V Q U A O V E R C A S T I J T S I O M E D S BRIGHT CALM CHANGE CHILLY CLIMATE CLOUDY COLD CONDITIONS CYCLONE DAMP DEPRESSION DOWNPOUR

FLOOD FOGGY FROST GALE HAIL HEAT HIGH HUMID ICICLE ISOBAR LIGHTNING MILD

www.teawamutursa.co.nz

MIST MOIST MONSOON MUGGY NIPPY OVERCAST PRESSURE SETTLED SEVERE SHOWER SNOW STORM

SUNNY SUNSHINE TEMPERATURE THAW THUNDER TORNADO

326

Fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9.

MEDIUM

All puzzles © The Puzzle Company

Last week Sudoku

Wordsearch P A C K A G E S N L R T H C I Q H C E I S H A K E R T S E H C J V S X P B D Z E F X E L I K D R A B B A C S A O J D O F T N C I T Y R I G T L A F O W B O L K U R P W Z C A K R T T M C P L B O B E T O O N P A B E H C W J D A C C T C R M U U A E R W L H H E T R N S D R M G A H C V E A W E R H A B L S A F A O C G M A S R F L K T A O H B T N S U U D N P N D B E E W H Y H E T A O S E L C U U S N O L D X B H L N P N T A P D L M R K H T L I C P T C K I E R L O H V X N K T L A S K T L B S S C A G L V P U S U S E I H O E R A A D U C Y E M R A C B A W H B U S B T O H P O T V T L S A U C E P A N A R C V A S E Q N F R V M A K R K A T C A P S U L E E E

From the New York Times bestselling author of A FLICKER IN THE DARK and ALL THE DANGEROUS THINGS comes a gripping psychological thriller about female friendship and dark secrets ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham

Margot went to college in South Carolina for a new start. It’s a chance to get away – from her small town, her family and the memories of her dead best friend. She gets her wish when the enigmatic Lucy invites her to join two other girls in a shared house for their second year. But as Margot gets to know the girls, she begins to realise that something’s off about Lucy, she’s not quite what she seems. Six months later, Lucy is missing and a boy from the frat house next door is dead, leaving Margot in the wake of the investigation. But as the police continue to dig, they realise Lucy isn’t the only one with secrets. ‘Dark, intense, and completely addictive.’ Laurie Elizabeth Flynn, author of The Girls Are All So Nice Here

STACY WILLINGHAM worked as a copywriter and brand strategist for various marketing agencies before deciding to write fiction full time. She earned her BA in Magazine Journalism from the University of Georgia and MFA in Writing from the Savannah College of Art & Design. Her debut novel, A Flicker in the Dark, is optioned for film and television by Oscar-winning actor Emma Stone and entertainment company A24. She currently lives in Charleston, South Carolina, with her husband, Britt, and her Labradoodle, Mako.


TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 13

THURSDAY JANUARY 18, 2024

Summer seafood winners When it comes to fishing, I’m an unsuccessful angler. Fish must know what I have in store for them and dart away. It’s most frustrating. But I love a fish fuelled summer. Most seafood is low in calories but high in protein, omega-3, a variety of B vitamins and many minerals. However, the number of calories in a fish dish will, of course, depend on the cookery method. Deep-fried fish contains at least twice the calories of baked fish. The microwave oven is excellent for fish cookery. It’s simple — just place fillets on a plate, drizzle with a little wine or orange juice and a few chopped fresh herbs and freshly ground black pepper. Cover and microwave on high for three to four minutes per 500 grams for sensationally fresh flavours. Squid is relatively inexpensive. It needs either speedy cooking or to be cooked slowly enough for the squid to become tender again — but not in between. That is when it becomes tough. Versatile squid is excellent in soups or chowders, in stir-fries, Mediterranean-style stews or salads and as with mussels, it is low in fat and kilojoules but a great source of the vitamins and minerals. Serve seafood — the taste of good health. THAI-RIFFIC SNAPPER Other white fish could be substituted for the snapper. 750g skinned and boned thick snapper fillets 4 mushrooms, thinly sliced 1 rasher bacon, thinly sliced 2 long red chillies, sliced 1 spring onion, sliced 1/4 cup coriander leaves Sauce: 1 tablespoon cornflour 2 tablespoons each: soy sauce, grated root ginger 2 cloves garlic crushed Place the snapper in a large, shallow microwave-proof dish. Cut 4-5 slits in each fillet. Insert the mushrooms, bacon and chillies into the slits. Top with the spring onion and coriander. Combine the cornflour, soy sauce, root ginger and garlic. Sprinkle over the fish. Cover with plastic film. Microwave on high (100%) power for about 7 minutes or until cooked.

with Jan Bilton

Thai-riffic snapper

Seafood salad with lime dressing

Alternatively, cover with foil and bake in a 180°C oven for about 20 minutes. Garnish with extra coriander, if preferred. Serves 4.

2 shallots, diced 1/2 cup risotto rice 2 cloves garlic, crushed 1 teaspoon finely grated root ginger 2 1/2 cups well flavoured fish stock, boiling Topping: 25g butter 2 cloves garlic crushed 1/2 green capsicum, diced 1 rasher bacon, diced 1 small smoked chorizo, thinly sliced 200g squid rings, halved if large 2 tomatoes, diced 2 teaspoons Asian-style sesame oil Heat the peanut oil in a non-stick frying pan. Sauté the shallots, until softened. Stir in the rice until coated in the oil. Add the garlic and root ginger. Stir in about a half cup of the fish stock. Stir until the rice has absorbed the fish stock. Repeat this procedure using a half cup of boiling stock each time, until the rice is just cooked. Meanwhile, melt the butter for the topping in a heavy pan. Add the garlic, green capsicum, bacon and chorizo. Stir-fry until the bacon is just cooked. Add the squid rings and stir-fry for 1 minute. Add the tomatoes and sesame oil. Cover and remove from the heat. Stand for 2-3 minutes until the squid is cooked. Place the rice in shallow bowls and top with the squid mixture. Serves 2.

SEAFOOD SALAD WITH LIME DRESSING 300g skinned and boned cooked fish eg: snapper, hoki, monk fish and mussels, squid, prawns or crayfish 1 carrot, julienned 1 cup each: mung bean sprouts, watercress 2 cups mesclun salad leaves Lime Dressing: finely grated rind 1 lime, makrut (kaffir) lime preferably) 1/4 cup fresh lime juice 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil 1 teaspoon each: Dijon-style mustard, caster sugar freshly ground salt and pepper to taste Cut the cooked seafood into bite-sized portions. Combine the carrot, sprouts, watercress and salad leaves in a large bowl. Whisk the ingredients for the dressing, until the sugar is dissolved. Toss the salad ingredients with the dressing. Stack the seafood and salad onto serving plates. Serves 4 as a starter or 2 as a main. EAST-WEST SQUID RISOTTO I used frozen squid. Risotto: 1 tablespoon peanut oil

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Permanent Part-Time Special Needs (SESTA) car and van drivers required for the Hamilton and surrounding areas, no less than 15 hrs per week. School term work only plus VACANT four weeks paid annual SITUATIONS leave. Full training is provided.

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TE AWAMUTU NEWS | 15

FUNERAL SERVICES

FUNERAL SERVICES

Family Notices

What you need: l

Full Class 1 Licence (minimum 2 years)

l

Passenger Endorsement (we can help you obtain this)

A responsible and caring approach Special NeedsDrivers Drivers - Hamilton Special Needs - Hamilton

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Te Awa Lifecare is one of New Zealand’s leading privately owned residential villages. Located in the beautiful town of Cambridge in Waikato, NZ, in a spacious rural setting, Te Awa Lifecare is an outstanding purpose-built facility offering a full range of independent and assisted living care options including a rest home, hospital and dementia care suite. We pride ourselves on being a community within a community, offering not only quality care but also companionship, security and new experiences. Our housekeeping team contributes significantly to the experience, the culture and the community of Te Awa. Housekeeper It is time to add a housekeeper to our existing team. Our staff are chosen for their skill and caring approach and we aim to create strong connections and trust with them. We will choose the right housekeeper for their attitude and fit in the team. Our team is proud of the environment they work in and the part they play in making it look at its best for our residents and guests. Why you should work with us at Te Awa Lifecare – • You will work in a team that is supportive of each other and proud of the reputation they have developed • Your physical working environment and the resources you have access to are first class • You will feel a sense of belonging to the wider community of residents and staff • Your working hours will be sociable, and family orientated. You will have: • an enjoyment of housework and helping people keep their homes in tip top condition • a passion for great customer service and respect for people personal space • the ability and flexibility to work as part of a team • excellent communication skills • common sense and a solutions focused approach • a positive and professional attitude If this sounds like you and you are motivated to be part of our unique and energising culture, please send a cover letter explaining why you are interested, along with your CV, to employment@teawalifecare.nz. Come and be part of the community, get to know our wonderful residents, support them to embrace life. We look forward to hearing from you! Apply now! Applicants for this position should have NZ residency or a valid NZ work visa.

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Permanent Part-Time Special Needs (SESTA) Permanent Part-Time Special Needs (SESTA) car andcar van Get on Board with Go Bus and come and van drivers forTransport the Hamilton and drivers required forrequired the Hamilton and surrounding areas, join ourthan great team in Hamilton! surrounding less than 15 hrs per week. no less 15areas, hrs perno week. School term work only plus paid leave. annual School term work only plus four four weeksweeks paid annual If you want to be part of a business that is making leave. Full training is provided. Full training is provided. a difference in your community, then we want to What you need: hear W h afrom t y o uyou! need:

• Full Class 1 Licence (minimum 2 years) • Passenger (we can help you obtain this) l Full ClassEndorsement 1 Licence (minimum 2 years) • Arecruitment responsible and caringincludes approach a Drug and Our process l Passenger Endorsement (we can help you Alcohol Testwith and a Police Vetting check. Get on Board obtain this) Go Bus Transport and come join our great team in Hamilton! l A responsible and caring approach T be s u to c cbe e spart s f u lof, aa business p p l i c a nthat t s fisomaking r t h i sa differIf o you want pence o s i in tio n m u s t b e athen N ewe w want Z e a lto a nhear d Cfrom i t i z eyou! n, your community,

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If you want to be part a businessresidency that is making To apply please email –ofpermanent New Zealand Citizen, have or hold a valid difference in Visa yourwith community, then we want to joanne.burman@gobus.co.nz or call 021-747-191. NZ Work no restrictions. hear from you!email – To apply please

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to vote

Four passionate NEWS | 1 promote put their Māori economic that “empower” district names forward candidates have development councillor, to be a Waipā create job get constituents but they Māori initiatives opportunities.entrepreneurs to the polls.are struggling Dale-Maree When and to Morgan or no trust people – The News went says Māori 7.43 per to press as a youngerin council processes Waipā Māori only cent had little Grinter’s Funeral electoral of the 2368 on 176 but that all whānau, candidate At last the roll could she Home are three daysyear’s local body had voted. Barney from kaumatua connect with dedicated Manaia providing to elections, felt unvalued 2417 eligibleto go, nearly personalised says Māorito rangatahi. with and meaningful voters had 14 per cent of told him in the past. was an then took funeral Jim Goddin the services, as they opportunity voted. A The Funeral DirectorJP Māori voice – 548 votesthat through to late rush to unify seat on council as the life unique you that a collective leading Awamutu – 309 of which nearly 23 per cent celebrating. are voices would work with lawyer cast for The drive to achieve It was his It’s Takena a realwere other Te newspaper resignation, Stirling. line in districtto get Māori great outcomes. suspension 07 827 6037 wards across from practice,prompted by 3 Hallys Lane, Waipā was councils was the by election. Cambridge office@grinters.co.nz his the which resulted JUNE www.grinters.co.nz 2021 amid one of several a long one –22, Voting and2023 in much fanfare to make and boxescloses at noon Māori voices the call Follow us tomorrow Facebook on at local from The News. in had become Cambridgeare available (Friday) government in Te - postal progressively of a lack option. voting is Awamutu and of confidence quieter level no longer Māori communities, because The four and connection an candidates to offer And a The with are a choice voting to largely EuropeanNews argued. for voters. different enough Bill Harris establish council antagonistic and informeddescribes himself Waipā agreed, a Māori isamid seeing ward voices in table through spokesperson as a strong sport and Māori the players with some his experience at the council Māori to wards provide community. district’s stars at their Cambridge sports a direct Kanohi best - on Sunday as one of links Gaylene wayCambridge and have contribute to days later representatives. Gaylene were Roberts for decision-making the Roberts three hosted the named in the All Blacks absence representation says she ByatSteph of Māori women’s football council. wants to Bell-Jenkins and two ward representatives, being elected In the world cup. Barney Manaia as general Māori representation. the Peter’s firs Award month guarantees team out and Cambridge captain Olivia McDonald sporting event from the biggest women’s • Waipā on the planet, District Addy Mason, Middle School student teams are playing the trophy who 32 for arrived High School. Te Awamutu Council offices at Cambridge Football Club’s U12plays for Cambridge By Mary Anne and Cambridge in Gill Addy is looking Barcelona team. The FIFA Women’s forward to • Te Awamutu Argentina shown to students World Cup was watching play Waipā councillors “They’ve probably from Cambridge Library Stadium. The Sweden at Waikato High School, say a government watch-dog been in more generally match between agency two world and St Peter’sCambridge Middle School • Countdown for two years the waterways the superpowers when it learned failed to raise size of the because of scheduled opportunity Cambridge, who had clams.” super breeding a red flag Te Awamutu the to be played is one of five gold clams to the The News invasive were found the tournament, in Hamilton Cambridge be photographed with at Karāpiro. in the• Fresh MPI scientist understands it was not Choice Leamington during High prefect it. which runs Waikato August 20. first team captain River and from July 20 last month who discovered the an They lamented Jess Savage senior girls’ to guests and clams but a researcher New Zealand • Fresh Choice the agency’s welcomed of urgency spoke about and Australia apparent lackTe government organisation. from another at hosting the sport, calling gender equality Awamutu. are codid not alert a meeting this week event, which In recent weeks, in noting it told would both men andfor equal opportunities students were the clams have level or run the council at a high be detected in for women. enough sporting event the single biggest women’s any advertising been the Waipā She was the and Waikato water supply Pukerimu in history. warning attract two with the trophy,first to be photographed intake It is expected picking the River users about the lake billion treatment plant and Parallel Road at the then joined to clams up and risk Cam Roigard: viewers. water on stage by into other waterways. Mercury confi and hydro dam operator introducing of from speedway St Black – Page them to All one of its waterrmed 7it had 11. “This could Peake found clams Road in Dale-Maree said deputy be quite disastrous at Karāpiro. “We’re still intakes Cambridge for us,” mayor Liz Morgan Stolwyk. what we’ve early enough The News learned that got,” 07 827to get on top of territorial authorities 6259 other river But Stolwyk said Smith. Regional, Waikato – including Waikato unconvinced. and O’Regan are Bill Harris councils – were district and Hamilton “We weren’t Strawberry part of the city communications. Waipā mayor also kept have out of the initial plants loop. have arrived! executive Garry Susan O’Regan arrived! It'sus very quickly This could get away and chief It’s time get region’s council Dyet wereto to prioritise these time this and perhaps we need on among get the these planted bigwigs who Ministry of we have has another right now,” said Stolwykto planted summonsed so Primary Industries reason to be so you all your who you can be She manages biosecurity frustrated. (MPI) can winter essentials staff be enjoying enjoying the Karāpiro before Fieldays. to a meeting attracts in Hamilton Domain which this thousands this family in store family of people to favourite favourite lake every MPI director events on the year. come spring. come his organisationgeneral Ray “Every day Smith Get conceded spring. in quick is had not Get in to mayors escalated The tiny gold a potential risk,” she quick and grab and the issue said. and clams are be part of any chief executives.yours breeders – They would today!grab up to 400 every prolific ongoing activity,yours He suggested day - and he said.today! initial reports suggested there were government likelihood other of eradicating there was no Waipā councilorganisations, and even are hermaphroditic them. The 469 Bond 2 Oliver aware of clamsitself, who might have the female reproductive– having both clams Street Road Te male and been in the river Cambridge 07 870 organs. spawn (breed) Ph 07 Awamutu for some time. 6328 834 3553 (opposite in spring and They typically Mon– Mitre 10 late summer. Mega) Jess Sat Fri 9am CAMBRIDGE

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– 5pm Savage, Addy 9-4pm Sun 10-3pm Women’s World Mason and Olivia @HuntingandFishingCamb McDonald Cup when it visited Cambridge were the first students www.huntingandfishing.co. photographed High School this week. with the FIFA ridge nz

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BedsRus Store Name VISIT Street Address TALK Phone Number DREAM bedsrus.co.nz

Locally owned & operated

50+ stores Locally owned 30 Day Comfort 50+ stores 50+ stores Over 30 years Locally owned 30 Day Comfort 30 Day Comfort nationwide & operated Guarantee nationwide nationwide Guarantee experience Guarantee & operated

VISIT Street Address

BedsRus Store Name VISIT Street Address TALK Phone Number DREAM bedsrus.co.nz TALK Phone Number

DREAM bedsrus.co.nz

Over 30 years Over 30 years experience experience

*Excludes Zero pillow. Offer valid to 06.06.23 or while stocks last. Discount offers apply to selected beds and bedding only, prices as marked. Offers exclude Everyday Dream prices, run outs, clearance stock (unless otherwise stated) and not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. See in- store for details. We reserve the right to correct errors and misprints and to change product specifications. All products are advertised in good andvalid will be available,Everyday circumstances ourapply control. Product ranges between stores some are available in selected stores only.store *Excludes pillow. Offer to 06.06.23 orexcept while instocks last. Discount offers tostock selected andvary bedding only,and prices marked. exclude Everyday Dreamoffer. prices, outs, for clearance (unlesstheotherwise stated)errors and notandtomisprints be used inand conjunction any other offer. See instore for details. edding only,Zero prices asfaith marked. Offers exclude Dream prices, runbeyond outs, clearance (unless otherwise stated) notand toasbe usedproducts inOffers conjunction with other See run indetails.stock We reserve right to correct to changewith product specifications. All products are We reserve the right to correct errors and misprints and to change product specifications. All products are Off er valid toandfaith 30.01.24 while stocks last. Discount apply tobeds selected beds and only, prices asanymarked. Off ers in good andproducts will beoravailable, except in circumstances beyondoff ourers control. Product ranges vary between storesbedding and some products are available in selected stores only.exclude Everyday Dream prices, run outs, clearance stock (unless otherwise stated) and not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. See in- store for details. We aryadvertised between stores some are available in selected stores only.

reserve the right to correct errors and misprints and to change product specifications. All products are advertised in good faith and will be available, except in circumstances beyond our control. Product ranges vary between stores and some products are available in selected stores only.

www.murrayhun�urnishers.co.nz

63 Maniapoto St Otorohanga | Ph 07 873 8640

220 Alexandra Street Te Awamutu | Ph 07 214 2161

45 Arawata Street Te Awamutu | Ph 07 214 2244


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