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Old-schOOl extra-mile service and tip-tOp results, time after time Helen Michell 021 210 3228
a lt O G e t h e r B e t t e r
October 20, 2023
Watts rides blue wave to huge majority... p2-3
Mike Cohen flees Israel as terror strikes close... p5
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Fright nights! Local Halloween events... p8
Local harbour users count cost of sewage leak Devonport peninsula beachgoers and boaties were this week still dealing with the disruption of the massive weeks-long sewage leak caused by a sinkhole across the Waitematā Harbour in Parnell. Rowers, Sea Scouts and yachties were all forced off the harbour due to health risks caused by the spill and the rāhui imposed as
a result. And though hopes were high that the flow of sewage would be permanently halted with the installation of a bypass as the Flagstaff went to press this week, uncertainty remained over when activities could resume. Auckland Council says national guidelines for recreational water quality specify that multiple ‘clean’ samples are required after a
water-quality incident before warnings can be removed. Water users on the north side of the harbour – where beaches at Bayswater, Devonport and Torpedo Bay were deemed “unsafe” – could only hope the necessary samples would be tested and the rāhui lifted To page 4
Rowers forced off Waitemata-
Safe haven... Takapuna Grammar Rowing Club scrambled to transport its crews and boats to Pupuke for some precious on-water training after the harbour was deemed unsafe. Club captain Nia Shipkov (front) and crewmates were among those training on Saturday. Details, page 4.
Election
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 2
October 20, 2023
True-blue once more: incumbent Watts wins big Voting in North Shore largely mirrored national trends in favour of the centre-right, delivering sitting National Party electorate MP Simon Watts a resounding victory on his return for a second term in Parliament. Watts received 20,059 (61.9 per cent) of the total of 32,363 votes counted on election night, giving him a majority of 13,100 over his Labour rival George Hampton, massively up on his 2020 election-night margin of just 3982 and much more in line with his predecessor Maggie Barry’s 2017 majority of 12,716. Watts told the Flagstaff he was humbled by the result and eager to keep advocating for the North Shore in a transformative governnment led by new Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. He headed to Wellington on Monday afternoon for caucus meetings this week, after spending part of the morning standing at Hauraki Corner with supporters holding ‘Thank You’ signs for the benefit of passing voters. BOOTH BAYSWATER, Bayswater School
National won 51.2 per cent of the party vote in the seat, and Labour just 18.2 per cent. On election night in 2020, Labour pipped National 40.4 per cent to 35.2 per cent. The results return North Shore to its traditional status as a true-blue National Party seat. First-time Labour candidate and former diplomat Hampton did slightly better than his party in securing 21.5 per cent of the candidate votes. Among the three minor parties that put up electorate candidates on the Shore, Pat Baskett for the Greens did best, gaining 2475 votes, despite not attending local meetings or seeming to otherwise promote herself. Anna Yallop from Act ranked fourth, with 1575 votes, followed by Abe Gray of Top with 889 votes. Act were third-ranked among the parties on election night, securing 3643 party votes, or 11.25 per cent, compared with national support of 9 per cent.
The Greens were close behind in North Shore with 3444 votes (10.6 per cent), followed by New Zealand First, which did not field an electorate candidate, with 1317 votes (4 per cent) and TOP on 739 (2.2 per cent). Of the other 11 parties on the ballot, New Zealand Loyal polled highest at 141 votes and the Leighton Baker Party lowest with just four votes. The table below breaks down election night voting by booths in the Flagstaff circulation area. Special votes, comprising up to 20 per cent of total votes cast, including those from overseas, are yet to be tallied by the Electoral Commission, but will not make enough difference to change the North Shore result. Official results, including specials, are due to be announced on Friday 3 November. The allocation of list seats is expected to be firmed up by Monday 27 November, after a by-election in Port Waikato. • The Flagstaff will report the final results in a future issue.
LAB George HAMPTON
LAB Party Vote
NAT Simon WATTS
NAT Party Vote
GREEN Pat BASKETT
Green Party Vote
ACT Anna YALLOP
ACT Party Vote
TOP Abe GRAY
TOP Party Vote
NZF Party Vote
244
196
355
266
84
138
33
76
52
35
37
BELMONT, Belmont Intermediate
98
73
215
180
34
54
24
43
9
13
16
DEVONPORT, Ferry Terminal
568
417
866
681
157
287
56
202
43
41
57
DEVONPORT, Community House
236
183
258
195
67
121
29
62
30
23
27
DEVONPORT, Devonport Yacht Club
110
89
153
112
39
54
12
37
12
16
12
DEVONPORT, North Shore Rugby Club
849
663
1,595
1,253
268
452
133
362
79
55
116
HAURAKI, Chapel Hall
173
136
353
276
54
86
38
67
28
18
50
HAURAKI, Hauraki School
103
92
238
175
30
42
21
58
13
16
19
NARROW NECK, Vauxhall School
125
93
161
124
40
67
16
33
11
16
21
STANLEY BAY, Stanley Bay School
102
67
118
96
17
47
14
27
11
8
15
2,608
2,009
4,312
3,358
790
1,348
376
967
288
241
370
2023 Vote (Peninsula voting places)
31.1%
23.9%
51.4%
40.0%
9.4%
16.1%
4.5%
11.5%
3.4%
2.9%
4.4%
2020 Vote (Peninsula voting places)
43.9%#
46.9%
40.8%
27.0%
6.1%#
10.9%
2.7%#
9.9%
4.4%#
2.0%
2.0%
TOTAL
The above is a summary of preliminary results. For minor parties’ and other candidates’ results, visit www.electionresults.govt.nz. # Electorate seats were contested with different candidates in 2020.
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Election
October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 3
Luxon’s former office-mate leaves Opposition days behind North Shore MP Simon Watts chose to celebrate his re-election with family at a Devonport cafe on Sunday morning. The National Party MP broke out the bubbles at Dulcie on the waterfront for a quiet toast with wife Shannon, their two sons, aged 11 and 13, his proud parents who were up from Cambridge for the weekend and his brothers. Watts told the Flagstaff “family comes first” and while he was mindful that being in government would place extra demands on his time in Wellington, representing North Shore people was his driving force. “I’ve tried to be a good local and visible MP,” the Belmont resident said, adding his electorate office had helped around 1000 constituents in his first term. “I’m not going anywhere, it’s my home.” Being in government provided the bonus of being able to do more for the Shore, he said. As well as key policies on the economy and crime, this included investment in infrastructure. The Watts family’s post-rugby watching brunch followed an election evening spent with around 200 supporters at The Grange at Smales Farm, Takapuna, and a later trip over the Harbour Bridge to National’s Auckland party headquarters on the waterfront, joining leader Christopher Luxon, other MPs and party faithful. Parliament will sit again from 12 November, after special votes are counted. Watts holds existing roles as party spokesperson for climate change, regional infrastructure and associate revenue. Coalition arrangements will see responsibilities shared around, but he is keen to step up. “The climate-change portfolio is one that the leadership has entrusted to me to take a lead on,” he noted. Asked if sharing an office with Luxon, when both were part of the intake of new National MPs in 2020, might have been a
Celebrating... Shannon and Simon Watts enjoy a post-election brunch at Dulcie on the Devonport waterfront lucky break, he said the newbies had struck a bond due to shared corporate backgrounds and values. “I consider him a friend, and our families talk,” he added. The former banker and hospital finance manager isn’t getting ahead of himself, however, despite having been tipped in some media circles as a future Cabinet minister. He says it has been a steep learning curve and a lot of hard work since he and Luxon entered Parliament in Opposition “It’s been a wild ride.” Watts said the new Prime Minister had “an internal cadence of energy and drive”. This was focused on delivery to make New Zealand better and bring people together.
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Shannon Watts, a senior marketing manager, said her husband fully deserved his own increased majority due to “the amount of work he’s done”. The MP’s mother, Margaret, who with her husband, Campbell, raised their sons on a Waikato orchard, said Simon had surprised her when he first said he wanted to become a politician. “Oh my goodness, why do you want to do this?” she recalls asking initially. Later, she decided: “It must be in the DNA.” Her own father, who died when Simon was young, had once been National Party chairman for Waipa, in the days when Marilyn Waring was its trailblazing MP. Campell said he was “very proud” of what his son had achieved to date.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 4
October 20, 2023
Water activities disrupted as summer beckons From page 1 without the loss of too many more days of their respective seasons. The Takapuna Grammar School Rowing Club was badly hit, with its crews deprived of their usual six-mornings-a-week training from Bayswater after all the Waitematā’s beaches were declared unsafe by council and a rāhui was placed across the harbour by Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei on 28 September. The club had to transport its boats, support craft and crew to Lake Pupuke on Saturday morning for precious time on the water ahead of regattas in November and December. “It has completely disrupted our training programme,” club president Joanna Gilbert said. Rowers had been forced to train on machines prior to the session at Pupuke. Using the lake was a “massive logistical exercise” and only made possible with the support of the North Shore Rowing Club and council. Along with transporting boats and rowers, the club had to put together a full risk assessment and safety plan for a different venue. The Calliope Sea Scouts based at King Edward Pde were another group kept ashore, with no on-water activities possible at the beginning of term 4. Scouts and cubs weren’t going on the water or even the beach while the water was polluted, said assistant leader Jeff Reddecliffe. Scouts would normally have been sailing at this time of year, with the younger cubs and keas kayaking and swimming. Preparation for camps and regattas had been disrupted. Reddecliffe was not expecting a quick resolution. “I think it’s going to take a while to flush out of the harbour,” he said. Devonport Yacht Club’s racing season is not due to start until 28 October, but members involved in racing out of Westhaven have had events cancelled, club commodore Tony Bullard said. The club would “keep our fingers crossed” that the harbour would be declared
safe in time for the season opening. “If it’s still going then, we’ll be cancelling our races.” The decision to declare beaches on the north side of the harbour unsafe seemed to be vindicated by testing, which on 28 September found enterococci bacteria at the ‘red warning’ level of 280 units per 100 millilitres of water at Devonport, beside Windsor Reserve. Although numbers there have subsequently been low, another ‘red warning’ reading of 280 was recorded at Bayswater as recently as last Friday. Five days earlier, a reading of 200 was recorded at Stanley Bay.
Unsafe... A sign at Torpedo Bay warning against swimming, fishing or gathering shellfish Black “do not swim” water-quality alerts were given for all harbour beaches, including Bayswater, Devonport and Torpedo Bay, on 27 September. Cheltenham Beach was also declared unsafe until last week, when its black warning on the Safeswim site was lifted – although signs warning against swimming remained in place as recently as Sunday. Narrow Neck Beach has not been subject to such a warning, although test results of 110 and 98 were recorded there on 2 and 3 September – below warning thresholds but well in excess of any test results from Cheltenham or Torpedo Bay. Emergency testing is ongoing at 45 sites
in the harbour and as far north as Takapuna. The head of council’s Healthy Waters, Nicholas Vigar, said multiple clean samples were needed both to meet guidelines but also because the effect of discharges would vary according to tide and wind conditions. Council-controlled organisation Watercare said that once overflows ceased, it intended to carry out a combination of water- and sediment-sample tests. Last week, overflows were still entering the harbour at the western end of Wynyard Basin and two sites near Mechanics Bay. Watercare expected its wastewater bypass would be commissioned on Tuesday this week, which would “stop or significantly reduce” overflows in normal conditions, though wet-weather overflows might still occur. “As we commence pumping, solids accumulated in the pipe may disrupt the pumps over the initial days of operation.” Testing showed beaches on the north and west of the harbour were not currently impacted by contamination, but Safeswim warnings remained “to respect the rāhui”. After the bypass was operational, Watercare and Auckland Council would continue to be guided by Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei on the rahūi. “Once the improvement to water quality due to the bypass is confirmed, the blackpins status of individual locations within the inner Waitematā will be reviewed.” The Auckland Regional Public Health Service has warned against shellfish collection in contaminated areas for at least 28 days and said fish could also be contaminated. “People should avoid fishing from rocks or boats near the sewage plume in the harbour.” This advice was not being followed by at least one fisherman seen fishing from rocks near Devonport Yacht Club two Sundays ago. A spokesperson for ferry operator Fullers 360 said it had been disinfecting equipment and taking precautions when lines came in contact with the water.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 5
October 20, 2023
Massacre strikes close to home for visiting Kiwis Former long-serving peninsula local-body politician Mike Cohen is returning from a devastating trip to Israel. Cohen’s family visit coincided with the Hamas attacks from 7 October and hit particularly close to home, with one of the worst sites of civilian massacres being a kibbutz where his daughter Talia Cohen Wolf had been staying and where the Cohen family once lived for 18 years. The visit of Mike and wife Julie and wanting to get together for a belated birthday celebration meant Talia and her two young daughters were not still staying with friends at the Kibbutz Kfar Asa when the terrorists struck. The farming community of around 750 people, located just 3km from Gaza, was hosting a music festival at the time, swelling numbers in the area. Around 1000 people were gunned down, Israeli officials reported, including women and children in their homes. “It has been a very emotional period comforting those impacted, our friends and their families and people we had lived with over so many years,” Mike Cohen told the Flagstaff. “It is still very raw.” He was emailing from Dubai early this week during the trip back to New Zealand. The family was due home to Bayswater shortly after the paper went to print. Cohen detailed the family’s links to the kibbutz where the “horrendous massacre” had taken place. “It was our home for 18 years, as it was developing,” said Cohen. Both his daughters were born and grew up at the kibbutz. The family has since kept in regular touch with friends there, aiming to make trips every couple of years to see friends of 40 years’ standing.
Rocked... Local identity Mike Cohen was due home from Israel this week Talia’s links went even deeper, including a stay there while pregnant in 2021. She ended up stranded there for a time, trying to return home through the Covid
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challenges of the MIQ system. During that period, her elder daughter attended the kibbutz kindergarten. This year, she returned to the kibbutz to stay with lifetime friends and their children. But with her parents flying in from Spain on 4 October, she left before the Sukkot music festival ended to reunite with them in a rented apartment in Tel Aviv. “As a result we were saved from a horrendous family tragedy,” Cohen said. The family had planned to then travel together to the kibbutz at the end of last week. Instead it faced the challenge of securing a flight out of Israel to get home. Since the attacks, airlines have reduced and cancelled flights, but the Cohens managed to get one with Emirates via Dubai. “We were lucky to be on it,” he said. Emirates had reduced its services and most of the European and some of the American airlines had cancelled regular flights. Cohen said all survivors from Kibbutz Kfar Asa had been evacuated, as were those from other kibbutzim in the area. They had been relocated north to other kibbutzim or were staying with family and friends and across Israel. He noted Israel was just one-12th the size of New Zealand. Cohen, who recently turned 74, first stood for the Devonport Community Board in 1998, and later became its chair, and chair of the New Zealand Community Boards Association. Under the change to a ‘super city’ structure, he became Devonport-Takapuna Local Board chair. He finally stood down, after 21 years of service, in 2019, removing any temptation to stand in that year’s elections by booking a six-week trip to Israel to see his daughter and grandchild.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 6
October 20, 2023
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North Shore United Association Football Club
Notice of Annual General Meeting 2023
Monday 13th November start 7.00pm at Allen Hill Clubrooms, Lake Road Devonport. www.nsu.org.nz
Shore wins big in Harbour awards The icing on the cake of a celebratory 150th year for North Shore Rugby Club came at the North Harbour’s club prizegiving this month, when Shore won a number of top awards. It was named Most Successful Club in the Union and Junior Club of the Year, after a season in which its premier side won the North Harbour championship. The premier team’s coaches, Rua Tipoki, Impressions Jazz Band Chris Davies and James Hincho, were named Club Coaches of the Year and firstDevonport RSA presents five Oscar Koller was picked as Premier AN AFTERNOON OF JAZZ Club Player of the Year. DATE 5TH NOVEMBER. Danielle Mellow, a premier team flanker 1.30 PM - 3.30 PM. and one of 12 Shore women who made the DOORS OPEN AT 1PM. Harbour team this year, won the Sharyne TICKETS $15, CHILDREN Diver Memorial Cup. 12 AND UNDER FREE. Danjela Martin was recognised for OutREFRESHMENTS AND LITE SNACKS AVAILABLE. standing Contribution to Senior Rugby. Devonport RSA
North Harbour Premier Club Player of the Year Oscar Koller Women’s premier XV and sevens coach Rob Todd, a former professional player with a long involvement with the club, was also last week announced as coach of the North Harbour Women’s 7s team for its 2023 campaign.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 7
October 20, 2023
Devonport sculptor revisits France in father’s footsteps Devonport sculptor Helen Pollock had a moving time in France last week, at the opening of the New Zealand Liberation Museum – Te Arawhata, in Le Quesnoy, where one of her works is exhibited. Themes of memory and commemoration underpin all her pieces, including one she will return in time to see displayed at Sculpture onShore at Fort Takapuna next month. Pollock told the Flagstaff that the trip to Le Quesnoy, with husband Derek Brickell, had particular personal poignance. Her father served as a signaller in the town, where New Zealanders are fondly remembered for liberating locals from the Germans in World War I. “It’s hugely significant, that he walked in this town, this square, etc,” she said. The museum’s unveiling was a ceremony attended by many dignitaries from New Zealand, France and Britain. “Today we are driving back across France through the small towns and villages [where] the New Zealanders – including my father – fought their way against the Germans, across northern France.” This was the ‘Great Advance’ of 1918, she said. At Le Quesnoy, Pollock’s sculpture Victory Medal depicts 49 pairs of feet (the number in a small platoon, she says). The commission echoes an earlier work she showed in a gun emplacement at Fort Takapuna in 2010. “They are rough, unprocessed foot-sloggers’ feet. One pair is cast in bronze – a ‘recognised hero’. It makes the point that they were all heroes,” she says. The museum, in a heritage building restored after private fundraising, includes a display by Weta Digital. It is expected to become a significant attraction for New Zealand visitors to France. Its official unveiling attracted former governors-general Dame Patsy Reddy and Sir Jerry Mateparae, military and diplomatic
Poignant return... Sculptor Helen Pollock and husband Derek Brickell in Le Quesnoy personnel and the Princess Royal’s husband, Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence. Former North Shore MP Maggie Barry and husband Grant Kerr from Stanley Point were also there. Pollock has made several visits to Le Quesnoy, including in 2018 for the battle’s centenary, when her sculpture was unveiled. Locally, her work is part of the permanent
Thank you for your support North Shore Simon Watts MP for North Shore Authorised by Simon Watts MP, 1 Earnoch Ave, Takapuna
collection at the Navy Museum at Torpedo Bay. Pollock and Brickell next have a side-trip planned to Scotland, including the Shetland Islands. They will be home just in time for Sculpture onShore’s opening on 2 November. She has supported the fundraising event since its early days. • Memory cast in bronze, page 46-47
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 8
October 20, 2023
Eek! Halloween events descend on peninsula Go boo at Narrow Neck or at the last council-funded version of a favourite at Bayswater Two local mothers have created a new Halloween event to bring the community to one space, rather than have children wandering the neighbourhood. Boo at the Beach will see cars, bikes and tents set up shop for a condensed trick or treat in the Woodall Park car park on Halloween Eve, with other activities and competitions helping keep everyone entertained. Trick or treaters will be able to pay a gold coin to have the chance to dunk Devonport-Takapuna Local Board chair Toni van Tonder into cold water, with all proceeds going to local charity Kai 4 Communities. The idea for a car-boot trick-or-treat event was hatched by Anni Dowden-Jones and Julie Taury, who wanted to maintain the trickor-treat concept but in a central location, as Dowden-Jones saw during her time living in the United States. “It’s a really popular way to let kids trick or treat in a safe controlled environment especially in urban areas,” she said. The pair wanted to do something that would bring the community to one space. They posted a trick-or-treat map last year, but decided to change the event format when Devonport business Clean for Good announced it would come up with a guide to decorated houses. Dowden-Jones was disappointed about the clash, but said it was a positive that the community now had more Halloween events to enjoy. All dressed up... Boo at the Beach organiser Anni Clean for Good director Stephanie Ray said it had been running Dowden-Jones in her disco-ball Halloween outfit its house-decorating competition since 2020. last year Putting out a list of the houses aimed to make it easier for people Cars it has decorated will be out and about from 23-27 October, to see the houses involved. So far 16 house entries have been received. The company will with photographs encouraged. • Boo at the Beach, 31 October, 5.30-8pm. judge the winners and award prizes.
Zombies (and foodtrucks) booked for Bayswater trail The Bayswater Halloween Trail on Saturday 28 October is promising to be bigger and better than last year, with fan favourites returning and new activities added. Big crowds turned up in 2022, and returnees will again have the chance to experience Devonport Drama’s zombie run, Circability’s games, face painting and the Devonport volunteer fire brigade showing children around a fire engine and letting them spray the hose. Drama students from Takapuna Grammar School will be doing a monster ‘riddle and run’, in which the monsters will ask each
child a riddle – a correct answer earning a lolly and the wrong response leading to pursuit by the monster. Bayswater Ave beside Bayswater Park will be closed off to traffic to allow for the activities, games and stalls. This year, participants will be made to work for their treats by doing a trick or playing a game “Otherwise people get swarmed and they’re just standing there handing them out,” said Abby Jones, the community events manager for trail organisers the Devonport
Peninsula Trust. The trail is the trust’s last event funded by the Devonport-Takapuna Local Board, which has ended its funding for the group. Jones said that following feedback from last year’s trail, food trucks will be on hand so parents won’t have to cook dinner once they get home late. “It’s basically about getting out with your family, and kids seeing other people dress up.” • Bayswater Halloween Trail, Saturday 28 October from 5-7pm.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 9
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 10
October 20, 2023
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October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 11
Calliope Sea Scouts ‘Ship’ upgrade nearly completed Celebration is in the air as the Calliope Sea Scouts near the end of a major upgrade of their ‘Ship’ on King Edward Parade. Built in 1906 for the North Shore Rowing Club, the building is a landmark on Devonport’s waterfront and much-loved community meeting place for family celebrations and other activities such as Yoga by the Sea. Thanks to local fundraising, grant funds and pro-bono expertise the building now has a new roof, heat pumps and a sturdy concrete boat ramp. Exterior repairs to the timber building and re-planking the top section of the boat ramp are all that is needed to see the ‘Ship’ fit to serve Devonport for many years to come. The lower section of the original timber boat ramp is in the intertidal zone, and has been regularly damaged and repaired or replaced since the Scouts took ownership of the building in 1966. The last major repair in 2019 lasted only two years, leading to the decision to replace it in concrete. Work by Mike Ashmore (engineer), Jackie Gillies (conservation architect) and Barb Cuthbert (planner) resulted in a design for the new structure, resource consent and funding from council’s Heritage Fund and the Lottery Environment and Heritage Fund. Gill and Gundry stepped up to build the new ramp, working with ‘neap’ low tides to complete the work in just two days. Ashmore was left in awe of the skill and efficiency of the construction team overseen by Walter Gill, Simon Gundry and led by Ben Gundry. “An incoming tide is a tough constraint. Building boxing and pouring concrete in time for it to set before it’s swamped by the tide is a precision operation. Ben and his team achieved it masterfully.” Jeff Reddecliffe, Calliope Sea Scouts assistant group leader, is keen to begin the summer boating season. “We coped without the boat ramp, but the ease and safety of launching boats with the concrete ramp has us looking to expand our numbers and programmes. We are hugely grateful to everyone who made our ‘Ship’ upgrade possible. It shows the strength and commitment of the community to support Devonport’s heritage and activities that have been a feature of our suburb for over a century.” Back in business... (from top) the Gill and Gundry concrete team during construction of a new concrete boat ramp; the reroofed and repaired ‘Ship’, once again in weatherproof shape on the site it has occupied since 1906; the building, then the home of the North Shore Rowing Club, on the club’s opening day in 1908, with Duder’s Wharf to the right. (The historic photograph, held in Devonport Museum collection, was originally a postcard.)
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October 20, 2023
Jarring success makes every day crunch-time Local teenager Tahlia Bull seems to have hit an entrepreneurial jackpot with her ‘loaded’ peanut butter. Now, she tells Helen Vause, she has to keep working on her business. Five months after Tahlia Bull started selling hand-crafted peanut butter mixed with sweet things, she’d made over $100,000 in sales. The business vision of the Hauraki teenager has well and truly taken off – she’s leading the way in the fledgling ‘loaded peanut butter’ market, at least in New Zealand. In her first weeks in business, her jars of peanut butter mixed with sweet additions, were selling at the rate of 1000 a week, generally at over $13 a jar. An astonished Bull , who has just turned 18, found her Better Butta business rocketing away – whether she was ready for such rapid growth or not. With local sales steady and climbing and a market building in Australia, Bull’s feet have barely touched the ground as she single-handedly refines her business. At Takapuna Grammar School (TGS), right from her early teens she says she’d realised business was her passion. She toyed with ideas, especially related to food, but she says her own “obsession” with peanut butter eaten in combination with various sweet things looked worth exploring. With research, she found others overseas, notably in the US, were already ‘loading’ peanut butter with biscuits, sweet sauces and more, creating jars of sweet goey treats. She believed she could launch the concept here. Bull decided on a range of five flavours, with the capacity to offer a changing roster of other combinations. She starts the production process by putting roasted peanuts through her peanut mill to produce the basic peanut butter. This is then mixed, swirled or topped with various kinds of confectionery, then put into jars. The most popular mix in her range is ‘Cookie Monster’, which has swirls of blue
Taste of success... Hauraki teen Tahlia Bull marshmallow, chocolate biscuit chips, caramel sauce and more. Bull decided to pitch her products through social media to teenage girls like herself, who she’d identified as her market. Rave reviews by high-profile TikTok users helped set sales booming. She made the decision to quit school in the second term of this year and chase her dream. “That was a really hard decision. Although I was sort of done with school and really wanted to throw myself into the business, I was definitely torn about turning my back on higher education at this stage of my life.” Although she thought she had a carefully thought-out business plan, her almost overnight success pitched her into fast learning
and a demanding production schedule. Processes had to be refined quickly and plans for a certified kitchen had to be actioned quickly. That meant taking over and fitting out the garage at home, where she lives with her proud father, Mike Bull. The young entrepreneur says she had a shot at selling via markets, but was disappointed after a fairly quiet day at an Auckland weekend market. She says that experience confirmed her feeling that she needed to be target her market much more closely. Her instinct was to market through the social-media channels popular with her generation. “TikTok and targeting the ‘influencers’ who have a direct online connection to their followers, seemed the obvious way to go for me.” Her first video posting on TikTok, also attracted 150,000 views. “They are girls just like me and we follow the same social media stuff.” She points out that anyone like her can have a go at selling through TikTok. Her launch video, which she put together herself, introduced her hands-on during a day in the life of her business. To keep her viewers interested and attract new buyers, she has a video to make and post at least a couple of days a week. She is pleased to have 16,000 followers on TikTok and to have had 138,000 ‘likes’ across all her videos. She credits her time rowing with TGS crews for helping build the determination and willingness to work through challenges she has needed in her one-woman business. She rowed for three seasons and for her fourth season she was cox of a boys’ crew. “I wasn’t very big and I was not that
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 13
October 20, 2023
Home-made... For now, Bull’s business is based at home in Hauraki, but she’s looking for bigger premises confident when I first started. But rowing really built my confidence and on the way through I learned a lot about organisation and leadership. And I learned to be a lot more assertive and more focused. That was a big influence on me.” Bull has many decisions to make about how she will continue to build her business. She is already looking for bigger premises away from her home. At her age, she says, she’s not been eligible
for credit or loans that could have enabled more rapid investment into her business. The high cost of commercial premises on the North Shore means she will need to look a bit further afield to expand next year. Looking back, she says one of the most challenging things in her business journey was the rapid takeoff in sales. “I wasn’t ready for that. I didn’t have the resources in place and I was very slow in getting my products ready so I had to pull an
awful lot of all-nighters to keep up. “You just don’t realise what you don’t know until you are confronted with it. So I’ve had plenty of embarassing moments as I’ve learned things the hard way.” She has to keep constantly working on every aspect of her business, she says. “But I can be confident now that it’s going well. I am doing what I wanted – to be seriously setting myself up very well for my future.”
Kids Workshop Make a Santa Sack Using hand-crank vintage sewing machines make a Santa Sack to keep or gift. When: Sat 4 November 10am - 12pm Children must be 8+, limited numbers Cost: $45 includes all materials To book: info@navymuseum.co.nz or T: 09 446 1824 www.navymuseum.co.nz 64 King Edward Parade, Devonport
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 14
October 20, 2023 Devonport 09 446 2030 Proud Sponsor Of North Shore Rugby Club
Devonport 62 Vauxhall Road 5
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Auction Thursday 9th November at 1.00pm In Rooms (Unless Sold Prior)
View Saturday/Sunday 1.00pm - 1.30pm harcourts.co.nz/L24874169
Space, Sun and Sea Views in Cheltenham Available for the first time in 37 years, this landmark Cheltenham bungalow was extended and expanded by its current owners to provide the essential space, light and flow for modern family life. The 592sqm freehold property is located at the very heart of the vibrant Vauxhall village and just a two-minute stroll from Cheltenham beach. Generous proportions and a beautifully balanced floorplan provide ample space for living and entertaining. The ground floor offers a large separate lounge with wood burner, open-plan living, kitchen and dining space, plus another tiled casual living zone that flows out to the deck. The huge rear garden is fully fenced, flooded with sun and completely flat. While some recent renovations have been undertaken and the home is perfectly comfortable as it is, there is undeniable scope here for the new owner to further maximise its solid bones and dream location.
Maria Stevens 021 979 084 maria.stevens@harcourts.co.nz Cooper & Co Real Estate Ltd. Licensed Agent REAA 2008
Marissa Muirhead 021 337 222 marissa.muirhead@harcourts.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 15
October 20, 2023
Devonport 09 446 2030 Proud Sponsor Of North Shore Rugby Club
Devonport 11 Summer Street 3
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Auction Thursday 9th November at 1.00pm In Rooms (Unless Sold Prior)
View Saturday/Sunday 12.00pm - 12.30pm harcourts.co.nz/L24197207
Classic Villa with Stunning Garden Perfectly positioned on the sought-after side of Devonport’s Summer Street, this classic villa has been thoughtfully enhanced with a series of stylish and functional contemporary features. Small families and downsizers will love the ideal proportions, single level floorplan and stunning gardens that envelop the home. Soaked in sun and filled with light, the very best of old and new is on display here. Three double bedrooms are serviced by the family bathroom and separate toilet. The master suite has a custom-built walk-in wardrobe and separate office space. The formal lounge can be closed off from the open-plan casual living, dining and kitchen area, which flows out to the deck and beautifully landscaped rear garden. The lush flat lawns that frame the property are fully fenced, so are safe for kids and pets.
Maria Stevens 021 979 084 maria.stevens@harcourts.co.nz Cooper & Co Real Estate Ltd. Licensed Agent REAA 2008
Marissa Muirhead 021 337 222 marissa.muirhead@harcourts.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 16
October 20, 2023
Sunday, 1st October Beaches | Views | Heritage
JOIN US! ENTER NOW
21km Half Marathon 10km Classic 5km Fun Run & Walk 2km Kids Dash
Devonport 1/38 Old Lake Road 4
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Auction Thursday 2nd November at 1.00pm In Rooms (Unless Sold Prior) View Saturday/Sunday 10.30am - 11.00am harcourts.co.nz/L24371129
Cooper & Co Real Estate Ltd. Licensed Agent REAA 2008
Huge Affordable Home - With a Lift! For all this property offers, you will not find cheaper in the Narrow Neck area, and buyers/families/investors on a budget should inspect. Investor quits after 13 years of ownership – she has already bought. It’s been a popular rental, due to its size and location. The property is approx. 230m2 which includes two garages. There is a lift/elevator in the property. The property is at the highest point of the surrounding landscape and enjoys sweeping views. The two garages below provide internal access to the home, with parking options in front of both. There are two storage rooms within the property, ideal for those who work from home or who run businesses where storage is required. The front garden area is fully fenced. It did not suffer from flooding in the January floods, nor has it since. Narrow Neck Beach is a mere 550 metres walk away.
Jackie Mark 021 458 797 jackie.mark@harcourts.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 17
October 20, 2023
Devonport 09 446 2030 Proud Sponsor Of North Shore Rugby Club
Devonport 3/67 Vauxhall Road 2
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Auction Thursday 26th October at 1.00pm In Rooms (Unless Sold Prior) View Saturday/Sunday 10.30am - 11.00am harcourts.co.nz/L24196014
Cooper & Co Real Estate Ltd. Licensed Agent REAA 2008
Lock up and Leave Discover the perfect blend of convenience and coastal living with this 2-bedroom townhouse or lock-up-and-leave in charming Cheltenham, Devonport. Situated just moments from Devonport's beautiful beaches, this townhouse offers easy access to seaside relaxation and leisurely strolls. Enjoy your morning coffee or dine out at charming local cafes, all within walking distance. Skip the traffic and take advantage of hassle-free access to Auckland City via a quick ferry ride. Unwind in your very own private garden oasis, exclusively for your enjoyment. The property has been newly refurbished, to provide for light bright and neutral tones throughout. Say goodbye to parking concerns with dedicated covered off-street parking at your doorstep. Don't miss out on this fantastic opportunity to embrace the Devonport/Cheltenham lifestyle. Contact us today to arrange a viewing! Jane Hastings Jackie Mark 021 735 263 021 458 797 jane.hastings@harcourts.co.nz jackie.mark@harcourts.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 18
October 20, 2023
Local asset sales likely to take two years or more Selling council-owned community assets identified as surplus by the Devonport-Takapuna Local Board could take two to four years, board members have been told. The response from Auckland Council staff came to a question by board chair Toni van Tonder at a workshop last week about council’s service-property optimisation programme. “That’s far longer than I’d been expecting you to say,” van Tonder observed. Deputy board chair Terence Harpur wanted to know if the full amount from any sales would be returned to the local area, and was told that costs for staff time would be deducted. “We timesheet charge for every 15 minutes of time – like a law firm,” said an adviser from council property arm Eke Panuku. This time might cover valuations, legal input or other professional services. Board member Mel Powell asked if staff would be available to guide boards on commercial prospects of sales. Without further charges, any advice on saleability would be “high-level” only, members were told. Harpur welcomed the information on the process, but added: “We have no plans to sell or optimise anything at this stage.” In September, the board asked staff to compile a full list of council-owned properties in its area, to gain a clear picture of its assets
portfolio before deciding what it might do. Van Tonder confirmed at the time that it wanted to consider selling assets to free up money for other purposes. The board is yet to receive the list. Council’s citywide service-optimisation programme – described in a report tabled at the workshop as a “development funding tool to address underperforming service assets that aims to deliver improved community outcomes” – gives boards delegated authority to nominate assets for disposal, with the aim of freeing up funds for other local services. It springs from Mayor Wayne Brown’s budget cuts and transferral of some decision-making back to boards; having had their funding cut, they are being asked to look for savings on their own patches. Local members were assured money from a sale would come back for local use, not disappear into a central pot. “If the local board doesn’t want to proceed it won’t go ahead,” an adviser said. At the workshop – being repeated at 19 other boards across the city – examples of service-optimisation targets were given. They were: under-utilised land, facilities in poor condition or an unsuitable location or those that were no longer fit for purpose or large enough – provided they had “sales viability”. Service assets this might cover could be a local park or reserve, art gallery, library,
swimming pool, recreation centre, sports facility, community hall, community centre or other community facility, staff said. “If the land is under-capitalised it may have additional value for development potential.” Air space could also be sold. Van Tonder asked: “Do you work to an expected timeframe from approval to sell to time to market?” The response suggested getting a quick return might be no easy matter. She was told reserve-land changes of status might have to go through the Minister of Conservation, and that Unitary Plan changes might be needed with some property. The need to meet optimal market conditions was another factor. Powell asked if the council team had considered approaching groups such as Scouts and Guides regionally, noting that in the board area there were eight buildings owned by them, some no longer in regular use, on leased council land. “How do we have a conversation with them?” The council adviser took note of that, saying Plunket was another organiation it had approached about its current needs. Ponsonby was an example where Plunket surrendered its rooms and moved to a new location in a council building. “We are asking our communtiy to share their spaces, but if they own their own building we can only ask.”
Devonport 09 446 2030 Proud Sponsor Of North Shore Rugby Club
Waiheke Island 4/23 The Strand
Idyllic Waterfront Apartment
View Saturday 2.00pm - 3.00pm harcourts.co.nz/L24194455
Experience unique island living in the historic Heritage Hotel building, one of only six apartments in a 1920s colonial-inspired complex. Recently refurbished with new flooring and a fresh coat of paint, the apartment boasts lofty ceilings and inviting French doors and windows, blending timeless appeal with a modern aesthetic. The upper level features an open-plan kitchen, dining, and lounge leading to a sunny north-facing deck. It also includes a master bedroom with ensuite powder room, a second bedroom and a tiled bathroom. The lower level offers flexibility with two extra rooms, a second bathroom and a TV/games room. Convenience is key with ample interior and lockable, exterior storage plus designated parking for the Sealegs and another vehicle. Enjoy easy access to waterfront restaurants, public transport and world-class vineyards.
Cooper & Co Real Estate Ltd Licensed REAA 2008
Greg de Marigny 021 266 1671 greg.demarigny@harcourts.co.nz
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For Sale Price by Negotiation
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Karen McMahon 027 572 9659 karen.mcmahon@harcourts.co.nz
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October 20, 2023
Y ou’r e invited to our exclusive Travel Evening
Viking River, Ocean & Expedition Cruising Exploring the World in Comfort EXCLUSIVE ON THE NIGHT OFFERS Deposit now…book later. Pay a deposit of AU$1,000 per person & receive AU$200 per person off your cruise fare Plus… Book any Viking ocean, river or expedition cruise within 2 weeks of the event and receive an AU$200 per stateroom shipboard credit. Plus… First 6 bookings receive a FREE ship * inspection and lunch onboard Viking Orion in Auckland, 15 January 2024 *Subject to Schedule
Spot prizes on the night. Food and Beverages will be provided.
Exclusive Thursday 26 October, 6:00pm The Rose Centre, 4 School Road, Belmont, Auckland 0622
Numbers are limited. RSVP: viking@hot.co.nz
DEVONPORT 0800 027 847
I
TAKAPUNA 0800 246 669
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 20
October 20, 2023
Let there be (no) light
Blinking heck... A flashing pedestrian-crossing light recently installed at a new crossing on King Edward Pde, near Church St, has since been removed. Auckland Transport said the “Belisha beacon” was installed in error by a contractor and removed at the contractor’s expense. Flashing lights are generally being fitted to all new crossings but could “in certain situations” be replaced by orange discs, a spokesperson said. That was the case for the crossing above. All of the remodelled crossings in the Victoria Rd town centre have flashing lights.
Harmony Hall faces parking loss to clear way on footpath Two of the three vehicle parks outside Harmony Hall on Wynyard St could be lost, to clear the way for pedestrians. The parks are not part of the ground lease for the Devonport Senior Citizens Association, which is up for renewal. Devonport-Takapuna Local Board chair Toni van Tonder said vehicles parked front-on outside the hall on Wynyard St often overlapped the footpath. The spots “only fit a [Suzuki] Swift”, she said at a board workshop, calling for a reconfiguration. “I think we need to get rid of the painted car park lines,” she told council staff. “It’s a main commuter network.” A single accessible horizontal parking space could be created, she suggested, or the lines removed. Staff agreed the lease did not provide parking in its footprint. They said they could “enforce in a nice way”. Their advice was to allow a new lease to the Senior Citizens on standard terms of 10 years, plus a 10-year right of renewal. This is expected to be signed off, with other local leases also in the pipeline, at a board business meeting.
WINDOW TREATMENTS FOR YOUR HOME We are a professional design practice who create beautiful homes in Devonport and through-out Aotearoa. Our expertise includes interior design, renovations, kitchen & bathroom design, furniture and much more. We work on projects alongside architects and builders to bring new builds and renovations to life or work with you directly to help plan the home of your dreams. Our free measure and quote service is offered for all window treatments including drapes, blinds, shutters and more.
67 Victoria Road Devonport 021 343 299 or visit islandinteriors.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 21
October 20, 2023
Style woven with stories of Cornwall
Open: Monday - Saturday 9:00am - 5:30pm Sunday 10:00am - 5:30pm 24 Milford Road, Milford Centre, Auckland seasaltcornwall.com
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 22
Letters
October 20, 2023
Previous channel dredging degraded Cheltenham Beach for years
House News
Our Term Four timetable is in full swing and it’s jam packed with exciting classes, workshops and community meet-ups. We are very grateful to all our volunteers who have helped with events and our working bees over the last few month. Come and check out our updated and refreshed Kōwhai Room. The room is perfect for small meetings, counselling sessions, or a quiet working space. An upright piano is also now in the room, so is a wonderful space for piano lessons. Email events@devonportcomhouse.co.nz for hiring inquiries or go to our website. Ngā mihi nui, Devonport Community House Team www.devonportcomhouse.com
What's New? HOT DANCE! Every Wednesday 7.30pm-8.30pm $15 per class
Transform yourself physically, mentally and spiritually using this fun rhythmic dancebased class. Teacher Kauan Gracie has vast experience as a dancer, having studied dance in Italy and then taught across Brazil and the United States. We are thrilled to have her teaching a dance class at the House and with our new mirrors in the hall, it is a fantastic opportunity to get fit and have fun!
PAINTING WORKSHOP Starting Tuesday 24th October
Tuesday nights 24th October- 28th November 7pm-8.30pm $180pp/6 weeks A six-week course focussed on developing your own work, ideas and creativity using acrylic, watercolor and mixed media. Book at www.paintingworkshops.eventbrite.co.nz
/Events/ Kids/Teens Market & Swap Shop! Saturday 18th November 1-4pm For more info go to www.devonportcomhouse.com
Island Interiors is proud to support Devonport Community House Ph: 09 445 6667 islandinteriors.co.nz
The proposed dredging of Rangitoto Channel will have a significant impact on the Devonport foreshore. The channel is dredged deeper where it turns. Because of its proximity and the prevailing winds, Cheltenham Beach is particularly vulnerable. The last major channel dredging degraded the Cheltenham Beach environment for years. A nuisance fibrous seaweed remained in the ecosystem, moving up and down the beach in the shallow water as the winds dictated. The water itself was murky with the suspended solids for over two years, and the
once-healthy rock pools were suffocated. Since then seagrass began colonising the once-pristine sand flats. I commend the board for seeking more information, and believe the coastal area should be monitored before, during and after the dredging. Also a public meeting should be held so the wider community are well informed. Beyond the consequences to the environment, it would be apposite for close dredging to occur in winter. And beyond all that, should we not question the paradigm of ‘bigger is better’? For whom? Sarah Bloomfield
Upgrade makes Devonport safer I would like to express my support and enthusiasm for the recent road changes in town. The Devonport Primary School crosswalks, wheelchair-accessible bus stop on Victoria
Rd, and reduced speed limit on King Edward Pde, among other updates, all make Devonport a better and safer place to live. Tighe Wall
Write to the Devonport Flagstaff
We welcome letters. Please limit to 300 words on local topics. Noms de plume or unnamed letters will not be printed. Email news@devonportflagstaff.co.nz or write to Letters, PO Box 32 275, Devonport.
October 20, 2023
Sport
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 23
Too quick! TGS cyclist blitzes rivals at national champs
Out in front... Road-race champion Zara Hayward outpaces rivals from Diocesan and Baradene to take the honours at the National Schools Road Race Championships in Palmerston North Takapuna Grammar School (TGS) cyclist Zara Hayward has become a national champion in a tight finish at the National Schools Road Race Championships in Palmerston North during the recent school holidays. She won the under-15 category in the championships, after first joining a breakaway group of top riders. When one of her rivals launched a sprint
away from the group, Zara pursued her, claiming the lead and the championship. She said it felt great to win the race, and the support she got from her family and fellow TGS cyclists had made it feel even better. “Riding back to the TGS tent knowing what you have done not only for yourself but the school was amazing,” she said. “I was exhausted, but couldn’t stop
smiling the whole day after that.” Zara said she had big ambitions in cycling but for now is focusing on smaller goals to get there. “My big big dream would be to bring back home a yellow jersey from The Tour de France Femmes, but every big dream has its stepping stones. For now, it’s doing the same next year.”
Table-tennis star collects swag of medals at nationals
One of many... Carrie Guo (centre) after receiving one of her five gold medals at the national table tennis championships in Invercargill
Takapuna Grammar School table-tennis star Carrie Guo has dominated her rivals at the sport’s national championships in Invercargill. Carrie claimed nine medals, including five golds, at the tournament held earlier this month. The Year 11 student won gold in under-15 girls singles, girls doubles, mixed doubles and girls teams event, and under-19 mixed doubles. She also won silver in the open women’s teams event and bronze in the under-19 girls singles and girls mixed doubles, and the open women’s singles. Carrie said she was happy with her results. “I also felt a little bit scared because there were many good players that were younger than me and played very well so I’m scared that if I get to play them again, would I be able to win?” Carrie told the Flagstaff as this was her last year in the under 15 category she wanted to continue her success into the under-19 age group next year, and make the podium in the open women’s categories at next year’s nationals.
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 24
October 20, 2023
Devonport 09 445 2010
Barfoot & Thompson Limited Licensed REAA 2008
Major sponsor for the North Shore Cricket Club
FOR SALE
DEVONPORT
3
1
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NEW LISTING
DEVONPORT
1
1 / 2 4 N GATA R I N GA R OA D
FOR SALE
barfoot.co.nz/853839
VIEWING Please call for viewing times or an appointment to view.
Tracey Lawrence 021 1720 681 Trish Fitzgerald 021 952 452
Gorgeous original cottage with a sympathetic character extension to the rear plus a pretty tree filled garden in this popular central location.
barfoot.co.nz/854461
3
2
1
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DEVONPORT
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(unless sold prior)
VIEWING Sat/Sun 1:00 - 1:30pm
Tracey Lawrence 021 1720 681 Trish Fitzgerald 021 952 452
3
1
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1 8 C AU T L E Y S T R E E T
DEADLINE SALE
barfoot.co.nz/855377
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FOR SALE
1 / 2 9 6 L A K E R OA D
Fully renovated, beautiful character, with double glazing for a whisper quiet and warm home.
2
12:00pm 8 Nov 2023 at 39 Victoria Rd, Devonport
NEW LISTING
HAURAKI
2
TENDER
By Negotiation
If you are looking for a quality, character-filled, solid home then you need look no further than this lovely bungalow, close to village, schools & beach.
3
2 1 VAU X H A L L R OA D
Closing 2pm, 24 Oct 2023 (unless sold prior)
VIEWING Sat/Sun 3.00-3.30pm
Tracey Lawrence 021 1720 681 Trish Fitzgerald 021 952 452
FOR SALE By Negotiation
Built when houses were made to last, this central Devonport beauty shines like a beacon! Beautiful native wood floors, and room for backyard cricket!
barfoot.co.nz/854240
VIEWING Sat/Sun 12:00-12:45pm
Lance Richardson 021 796 660 Suzy Wang 022 199 7808
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 25
October 20, 2023
Devonport 09 445 2010
Barfoot & Thompson Limited Licensed REAA 2008
Major sponsor for the North Shore Cricket Club
FOR SALE
DEVONPORT
3
2
2
2
NEW LISTING 1
1 / 9 S E C O N D AV E N U E
TAKAPUNA
TENDER
barfoot.co.nz/854020
(unless sold prior)
VIEWING As Advertised
Sue Harrison 021 909 549 Toni Gregory 021 044 3663
(unless sold prior)
- Location, Sun, Elevation - Vacant Posession - 2 Level Townhouse - Floor Area approx
Phone For Viewing Times
VIEWING
Sue Harrison 021 909 549 Toni Gregory 021 044 3663
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2
FOR SALE 1
TAKAPUNA
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1 O N E P OT O R OA D
AU C T I O N
barfoot.co.nz/855687
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4:00pm 9 Nov 2023
barfoot.co.nz/855350
70C FRANCIS STREET
Just completed, this brand-new architecturally designed family home provides a sumptuous launchpad from which to explore the region.
1
Renovate & Realise!
NEW LISTING
TAKAPUNA
2
TENDER
Closing 4:00pm 18 Oct 2023
This 1960s townhouse has been masterfully reimagined locking in its 'mid-century' magic to deliver a contemporary and elegant home.
3
1 / 2 8 N O R M A N R OA D
10:00am 16 Nov 2023 at 8 The Promenade, Takapuna (unless sold prior)
VIEWING Sat/Sun 1:00-1:45pm
Samuel Tang 021 688 364
FOR SALE $1,345,000
- Big Bold & Affordable - Total Floor 200m² - Walk to Shops, Beach & Excellent Schooling - Abundance of Parking - Motivated Vendors
barfoot.co.nz/851976
VIEWING Phone For Viewing Times
Ron Sadler AREINZ 021 613 546
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 26
Sport
October 20, 2023
Top prospects... Auckland under-13 champions: (back from left) Brooke Wilson, Lilian Carey, Anja Kozenof, Sacha Curson, Margo Slade; (front) Michael Kwok (Coach), Romey Jewell, Pace Beckett, Poppy Cousins, Georgiana Cooke and Gabby Kwok. (Absent: Renee Barrett and Emma Nedelec-Spake.)
Champion North Shore girls team goes undefeated North Shore United’s under-13 girls team has aced Auckland’s top league for their age group, going unbeaten all season and topping the table by 13 points. Coach Michael Kwok said the league was harder than their points tally suggests. The side had many close matches and comeback wins. The “exemplary” season had been the culmination of five years of work, Kwok said. He has coached the team throughout, teaching the players the game, from the basics of how to kick a ball to positions and
styles of play. This was the first season he had focused on the importance of positional play, and had seen a “massive uplift” in their understanding of the game and their technical ability. Kwok coached a positive possession-based style, teaching players the basics of passing, off the ball movement and what areas of the pitch to be in at what times. “It’s good passing the ball around, but you’ve kind of got to have an objective when you’re doing it.” Eight of the team’s players have been in
the squad for the whole five years. Kwok said the unity they have developed and expectations of each other got them through the toughest matches. He said the team had no standout players but rather played as a unit, where everybody pitched in and played their part. The team will progress to playing 11-a-side on full-sized pitches next season. Kwok believed that from the level of possession, technical ability, long passing and running he saw in the last four games of the season they’re ready for the step up.
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16/10/23 16/10/23 16/10/23 4:46 4:46 4:46 PM PM PM
October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 27
Tidy trio... (from left) Dylan Murray, Oliwia Kudzia and Tom Chu stopped for a photo during their hunt for rubbish during a clean-up session at Windsor Reserve and the adjacent beach
Coffee and doughnuts help inspire clean-up Around 15 local residents joined in a clean-up of Windsor Reserve and Devonport Beach last Saturday before being rewarded with free coffee and doughnuts. The event was orgnised by building firm Pitch Black Construction. Owner Joe Williams said the company had been doing a major project in the area, with staff enjoying what the village had to offer. Because of this, Willians thought it was right to do something positive to “give back” to the community he said. Being a free diver in his spare time with a love of the ocean led to him deciding a clean-up was the way to do so.
Quality time... Mia Carter (above) and her son Wilder Collins (7) said they pick up rubbish on the beach regularly when they go swimming, so doing it with the promise of free doughnuts and coffee was a bonus. Sonya Northgrave (left) sifted through the sand for rubbish to collect.
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 28
October 20, 2023
Devonport 1 Grove Road
Gracious character on Kiwi Quarter Acre
5
Deceptively large, bursting with character and less than a three -minute walk from stunning Cheltenham Beach, this recently re-furbished grand manor-style home sits on a quarter acre of sunny landscaped grounds and is also an easy stroll to the local cafes, Narrow Neck Beach, and the Waitemata Golf Club. This stately 1920s home’s beautifully preserved heritage features will impress lovers of period design, with its well-proportioned rooms, stained glass windows and timber joinery. A recent contemporary make-over included re-painting, new lighting and new carpets throughout with refurbishing of windows and doors. Family living is easy with up to five bedrooms, four bathrooms and three living areas, with the ground floor studio set up for independent living.
Auction (unless sold prior) 1.30pm, Thu 2 Nov 2023 28 Northcroft Street, Takapuna Phone for viewing times Linda Simmons 027 459 0957 linda.simmons@bayleys.co.nz
bayleys.co.nz/1470640
bayleys.co.nz
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 29
NEW LISTING
Belmont 39 Williamson Avenue
Easy-going life | Easy-care home
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If you are looking for an easy-going family life in an easy-care modern home, you will enjoy the seamless ease of low-maintenance and stylish living at this beautifully private Belmont haven set on a 621sqm site. Architect-designed and built for the current owners in 2005, the weatherboard residence boasts top quality craftsmanship and great proportions, as well as sensational views of the city skyline and harbour. Aspect to the sun was the driving force for the design with morning sun streaming into the east-facing modern kitchen and all-day sun in the north facing lounge, outdoor living and garden. You will love the convenience of being so close to Belmont Primary and Intermediate as well as Takapuna Grammar – and skipping Lake Road traffic!
Auction (unless sold prior) 1.30pm, Thu 9 Nov 2023 28 Northcroft Street, Takapuna View Sun 12-12.30pm Linda Simmons 027 459 0957 Emma Lynskey 021 803 873
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BAYLEYS REAL ESTATE LTD, DEVONPORT, LICENSED UNDER THE REA ACT 2008
bayleys.co.nz/1470638
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 30
October 20, 2023
NEW LISTING
Devonport 14 Macky Avenue
home on Macky Ave 4Magnificent 2 2 family 3
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Auction (unless sold prior) Located just three houses back from beautiful Cheltenham beach and enjoying private gate access to Maungauika 2pm, Wed 8 Nov(North 2023 Head), this magnificent character home celebrates the very best in Devonport living. It’s on Street, the market for the first time in nearly 20 years and has been masterfully Bayleys House, 30 Gaunt Auckland renovated and immaculately maintained by its current owners who have relished bringing their Central family up in this heavenly location. An elevated aspect affords the residence spectacular sea views, Phone for viewing times all-day sun and great light, while the functional floorplan absorbs a crowd and accommodates Linda Simmons 027with 459ease. 0957During the major renovation, the original 1920s heritage was family and visitors seamlessly incorporated while drawing inspiration from the coastal setting. Emma Lynskey 021 803 873
Auction (unless sold prior) 2pm, Wed 8 Nov 2023 Bayleys House, 30 Gaunt Street, Auckland Central Phone for viewing times Linda Simmons 027 459 0957 Emma Lynskey 021 803 873
BAYLEYS REAL ESTATE LTD, DEVONPORT, LICENSED UNDER THE REA ACT 2008
BAYLEYS REAL ESTATE LTD, DEVONPORT, LICENSED UNDER THE REA ACT 2008
bayleys.co.nz/1470632
bayleys.co.nz
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October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 31
NEW NEWLISTING LISTING
Devonport Devonport3636Calliope CalliopeRoad Road
SUMMERTIME SUMMERTIMEVILLA VILLA
55
Extending Extending beyond beyond aa traditional traditional single single bay bay villa villa and and into into the the realms realms ofof style style and and convenience, convenience, this this twotwostorey storey character character home home embraces embraces the the diversity diversity ofof today’s today’s families families and and caters caters for for all. all. The The welcoming welcoming upstairs upstairs lounge/living lounge/living area area complete complete with with gas gas fire, fire, window window seat, seat, shutters, shutters, and and chandelier, chandelier, enjoys enjoys aa special special ambience, ambience, and and the the bi-folding bi-folding kitchen kitchen windows windows and and north-facing north-facing deck deck offer offer front front row row seats seats toto the the 10m 10m xx 4.5m 4.5m heated heated salt-water salt-water pool pool below. below. The The lower lower floor, floor, with with independent independent entrance entrance and and internally internally access, access, presents presents aa world world ofof possibilities possibilities with with itsits two two remaining remaining bedrooms, bedrooms, bathroom, bathroom, aa living living area, area, aa space space that that could could serve serve asas aa home home office/dining office/dining area, area, aa kitchenette, kitchenette, and and garage. garage. Ideal Ideal for for large large families families needing needing extra extra room room - its - its flexibility flexibility cannot cannot be be overstated. overstated. Ready Ready for for summertime! summertime!
Auction Auction(unless (unless sold sold prior) prior) 1.30pm, 1.30pm, Thu Thu 22 Nov Nov 2023 2023 2828 Northcroft Northcroft Street, Street, Takapuna, Takapuna, Auckland Auckland View View Sat/Sun Sat/Sun 12-12.30pm 12-12.30pm oror by by appointment appointment Blair Blair Monk Monk 021 021 399 399 966 966 Kathryn Kathryn Robertson Robertson 021 021 490 490 480 480
bayleys.co.nz/1451518 bayleys.co.nz/1451518
BAYLEYS BAYLEYS REAL REAL ESTATE ESTATE LTD, LTD, TAKAPUNA, TAKAPUNA, LICENSED LICENSED UNDER UNDER THE THE REA REA ACT ACT 2008 2008
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October 20, 2023
NEW LISTING
Devonport 4/18 Cambria Road
Location, potential and price!
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Here is a wonderful entry-level opportunity to get onto the property ladder. This tidy, low maintenance, two-bedroom unit offers you the chance to refresh and restyle to add value. There is an extra-large single garage as well as attic and under-unit storage. Close to Cheltenham shops, cafes, golf course, croquet club and excellent schools. Within easy walking distance to Narrow Neck or Cheltenham beach and Devonport village and ferry. Brilliant first home or easy investment property to add to your portfolio - view now.
Auction (unless sold prior) 1.30pm, Thu 2 Nov 2023 28 Northcroft Street, Takapuna, Auckland View Sun/Sat 1-1.45pm Lynda Betts 021 278 3024 lynda.betts@bayleys.co.nz
bayleys.co.nz/1470642
bayleys.co.nz
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October 20, 2023
Work for hospice shared across generations Hauraki grandmother Judith Priddy shares an extra-special bond with one of her grandchildren, 17-year-old Olivia, who has followed in her footsteps as a volunteer for Harbour Hospice. Judith was one of the charity’s early fundraisers, from its fledgling days 40 years ago. Olivia volunteers at its Devonport shop. “The times we had were brilliant – there was a big group of us, and we’d meet every month to set fundraising targets and plan events,” Judith recalls. “We had balls, tennis tournaments, we started house and garden tours, we did all sorts. And all the catering we did ourselves. This was on top of my full-time job as a legal executive and I was also a mother and studying, too, so it was very busy!” The group on a mission was pulled together by the late Carolyn McCondach, a fierce advocate for hospice following the death of her 14-year-old daughter from leukaemia. She invited helpers to give a year to hospice but most, like Judith, stayed longer. She volunteered for eight years, until her late husband became ill, and still supports hospice events and donates to the hospice shops. Olivia has enjoyed hearing about her grandmother’s fundraising days. When the Takapuna Grammar School prefect and keen cricketer saw a story in the Devonport Flagstaff about some fellow students who volunteered, she was inspired. “I didn’t really think that people my age would volunteer for hospice but once I saw that I thought, ‘How cool’”. She has recruited her friend Isla to volunteer at the shop, too. “I love chatting to the customers and setting out the displays, and the work has made me realise the impact of hospice in the community,” Olivia says. “When people come in to donate goods they’re really proud to make their donation because they understand the value of Family affair... Veteran hospice fundraiser Judith Priddy with her granddaughter Olivia, who volunteers at the Devonport hospice shop hospice.”
Belmont 63 Seacliffe Avenue 809sqm
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Auction (unless sold prior) 1.30pm, Thu 2 Nov 2023 28 Northcroft Street, Takapuna, Auckland View Sat/Sun 2-2.30pm Blair Monk 021 399 966 blair.monk@bayleys.co.nz Victoria Mules 021 679 349 victoria.mules@bayleys.co.nz BAYLEYS REAL ESTATE LTD, TAKAPUNA, LICENSED UNDER THE REA ACT 2008 BAYLEYS REAL ESTATE LTD, DEVONPORT, LICENSED UNDER THE REA ACT 2008
Land, Location and Opportunity! This prime summer location offers the full package for discerning buyers. Enjoy as is, renovate, or develop – the choice is yours. With top-tier schools and beautiful beaches within close proximity, this location embodies the quintessential Kiwi dream, nestled within a neighbourhood that values family and community.
bayleys.co.nz/1470637
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 34
October 20, 2023
TRANSFORMING OUTDOOR SPACES With thoughtful design and beautiful planting
Key aspects of a Sculpt garden include: Spacial design Functional layout Professional designers Floral, biodiverse and productive gardens
021 549 161 hello@sculptgardens.co.nz www.sculptgardens.co.nz
October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 35 ADVERTISING FEATURE
Hoping to attract feathered friends? Plant a tree Hauraki-based Sculpt Gardens suggests a selection of the best trees for attracting birds to your garden. There are multiple benefits of having a beautiful garden that both you and our feathered friends can both enjoy. As well as improving our mental health, the presence of birds in our gardens plays a vital role in ecology and the continuation of New Zealand native plants. Trees are essential for creating a safe habitat for birds. They provide shelter, food, a place to nest, and crevices where they can hide and store food. Some trees provide more benefits than others, and will therefore attract more birds. The bird-attracting trees we recommend below are suited to an Auckland climate and are often planted in our landscape designs. With the right conditions and care, you can grow a Bird magnets... A tui in a grevillea (above) and a kererū in a kōwhai beautiful tree that will attract some of these BOTTLE BRUSH precious New Zealand birds: A native to Australia, the Bottlebrush (Callistemon) is a popular, easy-to-care-for and GREVILLEA This hardy, tolerant exotic has a stunning spi- hardy specimen that is very suited to our der-like flower that can be seen throughout most Auckland climate. of the year. With a variety of colours available, IRISH STRAWBERRY TREE there is a grevillea to suit most gardens. The Irish strawberry tree (arbutus unedo) is a spectacular specimen tree, bearing its KOWHAI Kōwhai, the unofficial flower of New Zealand, bright red fruit in autumn. The fruit, whilst is guaranteed to bring birds to your garden. It admired by the human eye, is an irresistible produces a a flush of drooping bright-yellow treat to the birds. flowers. We hope this is a starting point for you to confidently select a beautiful tree that is PURIRI Puriri (Vitex lucens) is another native tree, suited to you and the birds in your garden. Remember that climate, location, and known for its beautiful colourful flowers. With large, dark green glossy leaves, and pinky-red environment are all important factors in flowers, it is admired by the birds – and the determining the health and success of your chosen tree. human eye.
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Replace them with UPVC awning inserts Looks like sash windows but with double glazing Warmer, drier, quieter and safe! German Quality All windows can have this system Free Measure and Quote sales@ecoauckland.nz or 021 277 0563 www.ecoauckland.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 36
October 20, 2023
The Art of Kitchen Design The kitchen sits at the very heart of every home. It is the space where the whole family gathers to cook, eat and relax – be it first thing in the morning over breakfast before school or work, in the evening for the family dinner, or at weekends entertaining with friends. It is the one room in the house you need to get right, whether building new or renovating.
that your new kitchen will be a space where cooking is a joy rather than a chore. They are also constantly learning, updating their knowledge with the latest industry design trends, innovations, and technological advancements.
When it comes to design and installation, the kitchen is also the most complex space in the home. Most kitchen installations will require up to a dozen or more separate trades and suppliers and will need precise project management to complete on budget and on time. And when it’s finished, your new kitchen will have to serve many functions and look stunning – making its design crucial. It’s fair to say that your new kitchen can make or break your home, so ensuring every detail is perfectly executed from the outset is vital. The team at Kitchens By Design has an impeccable reputation for designing and delivering beautiful kitchens spanning 30 years. It has also won over 70 National Kitchen and Bathroom (NKBA) Awards, making it the most awarded and trusted independent kitchen design company in New Zealand. In addition, Kitchens By Design has access to not only its own manufacturing facility, but also other high-end manufacturing facilities, meaning it can offer its clients a fully projectmanaged, concept-to-completion service.
It Starts with Great Design The foundation of any successful kitchen is an excellent design, which calls for a talented, experienced and qualified kitchen designer, of which Kitchens By Design has three. Because every space is unique, a cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all approach doesn’t work with kitchen design. A kitchen designer will take the time to understand your lifestyle, tastes and cooking habits. They will also consider all the practical aspects of your space, including layout, plumbing and any structural issues that may need to be resolved. They will then craft a design tailored to your specific needs, ensuring that your kitchen is visually pleasing and the perfect space to work in.
Save Money, Create Space Engaging a specialist Kitchen Designer involves consultation and some initial costs, but the results can often lead to long-term cost savings. Designers help you make informed decisions about materials, appliances, and layout choices, preventing costly mistakes. Additionally, they can suggest energy-efficient appliances that contribute to reduced utility bills over time. Maximising space is a hallmark of effective kitchen design and the designers at Kitchens By Design excel at this. They identify underutilised areas and transform them into clever storage solutions, incorporate space-saving furniture, and ensure that every inch of your new kitchen serves a purpose.
Form and Function The designers at Kitchens By Design understand the importance of an efficient workflow and placing appliances, workstations, and storage areas in strategic locations. This attention to detail ensures
One-Stop Shop As mentioned, the kitchen is the most complex space to build or renovate. There are so many moving parts, and it involves more sub-trades than any other room in the house. That’s why engaging an experienced
October 20, 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 37
team that can offer a complete design-build service is important – especially one with access to specialist cabinet makers and relationships with trusted sub-trades and installers that go back decades. Finally, delays and overspends are the plague of many home projects. Having one company and one ‘go-to’ person to deal with who will project manage the entire process of your new kitchen is essential to avoid any unforeseen problems, thus avoiding budget and time blowouts. If you are thinking about a new kitchen or bathroom, whether a renovation or for a brand-new build, give the team at Kitchens By Design a call. Better still, make an appointment to talk to one of the designers in person at their new showroom at 9 Melrose St, Newmarket (09) 379 3084. For inspiration, take a look at their website at www.kitchensbydesign.co.nz
Visit our showroom, by appointment: 9 Melrose Street, Newmarket (09) 379 3084
kitchensbydesign.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 38
Trades & Services
(formerly Ogden Electrical, same people & service, different name)
North Shore based renovations, new builds, design & project management since 1985.
Call us for all your Electrical & Data requirements No job too big or too small No travel charge Shore-wide
Carl Ogden – 445 7528 carlo@searchfield.co.nz
Trustworthy licensed builders specialising in residential alterations/extensions, kitchens, bathrooms, tiling, re-cladding.
Contact Alex Carey on 0274 660 666, or visit our website
October 20, 2023
Big City Drainage & Plumbing
Professional Quality Service
• Gasfitting • Certifying/Licensed • Digger Hire • Plumber/Drainlayer • All Aspects of Plumbing & Drainage
www.efd.kiwi
dan@allaspects.co.nz 0800 143 051 or mob 021 119 3227
Professional and affordable electrical repairs and installations
Your local handyman in Devonport
RECOVER YOUR
LOUNGE SUITE
Call us for a free quotation and put the life back into that favourite chair or lounge suite
AWARD FURNITURE Phone COLIN on 480 5864
FENCE BROTHERS
• FENCES • REtAiNiNG • PERGOLAS WALLS • DECKS • PROPERtY MAiNtENANCE
www.fencebros.co.nz CONtACt GREG FOR A FREE QUOtE
0800 336 232
09 445 3447
DEVONPORTELECTRICAL.CO.NZ
YOUR LOCAL CRAFTSMAN
PLUMBER
Friendly, experienced service for all of your plumbing needs.
CALL DERRICK TRAVERS
021-909790 445-6691
Handyman 021 1968 908
vikinghandyman@yahoo.com www.vikinghandyman.co.nz
We guarantee our Workmanship
Backed by over 35 years’ experience of quality preparation and painting
ph ross kingdom
021 723 413
registered professional painters
Professional Quality Service Craftsman Plumber and Gasfitter
Ph 021 841 745 David Mortimore New installations Repairs and Maintenance
Precision Plumbing 2010 Ltd
david@precisionplumbing.co.nz www.precisionplumbing.co.nz
Glass & Glazing Specialists For Residential, Commercial & Custom Projects
Mirrors Showers Obscure Glass Reputty Broken Glass
Double Glazing Lead Lite Repairs Low E Thermal Safety Glass Hush Glass
devonportglass.co.nz . 021 148 1804
Locally Owned
• North Shore & Auckland wide • Residential & Commercial • Interior & Exterior • Roofs • Painting & Plastering
Ph: Luke Piper 021 410 766
October 20, 2023
Family owned and operated since 1999
Full Servicing • Repairs W.O.F • Wheels/Tyres HAYDEN & KAYLA CUMISKEY
Ph (09) 445 4456
Email: devoautocentre@gmail.com
1A Fleet Street, Devonport
Trades & Services
Andrew Holloway Floorsander • Floorsanding • Floorsanding • Polyurethaning staining • Polyurethaningand and staining • Tongue and Groove repairs • Tongue and Groove repairs • Serving Devonport since 1995 • Serving Devonport since 1995 Please phone for a free quote Please phone a 4519 free quote Phone 027for 285 Phone 027 285 4519 ahfloorsanding@xtra.co.nz ahfloorsanding@xtra.co.nz www.ahfloorsanding.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 39
Tony Gasperini
Qualified Local Arborist Tree & Tall Hedge Specialist
027 770-0099 Devonport, Auckland tony.gasperini@gmail.com
John Bisset LtD
Painting & Decorating Specialists Serving Auckland for over 35 years Master Painter of the Year 2017 Interior and Exterior – New and existing, roofs, fences, decks and balustrading, wallpaper stripping, paint stripping, gib stopping, pressure cleaning. Accredited Lead-based Removal Specialists.
Plumbing, Gasfitting, Drainage, Roof Leaks
MAINTENANCE SPECIALISTS Prompt courteous service Fully insured for your peace of mind
Call Mat
Office: 445 8099 email: info@bissetltd.co.nz
0800 277 566
www.bissetltd.co.nz
Certifying Plumber, Gasfitter and Drainlayer
Roof & House Wash 1st Rate Property Services Roof & Gutter Cleaning Lichen/Moss Treatment House Washing
Long-term Care for Your Property
0800 025 515
m: 021-072-2414 e: admin@1st-rate.co.nz
www.1st-rate.co.nz
• Restore • Repair • Retrofit double glazing Call us today on • Bifold repairs 022 471 4469 and upgrades stella@devontimber.com www.devontimber.com
25 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN AUS & NZ SERVICES
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PLASTERING / WOOD STAINING & WATER BLASTING WALLPAPER STRIPPING FREE QUOTE info@pyramidspainting.co.nz
All Safe Electrical Services Ltd • New builds and renovations • Rewires • Home network cabling • Wall-mount TVs • Home theatre
LocaL to Devonport Call Peter Cairns for your free quotation
Phone 021 858 243 or 445 4675
email allsafe.electrical@xtra.co.nz
• Electronic and mechanical lock installations • New keys for existing locks • Lock repairs • Lock Hardware
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 40
October 20, 2023
20 years ago from the Flagstaff files HOUSE-WASHING SERVICES
• SOFT HOUSE WASH • ROOF WASH • PATHS, DRIVEWAYS • GUTTER WASH • SPIDER TREATMENTS • PRE-PAINT WASH • MOSS MOULD TREATMENTS
Your local Devonport house washer
Low pressure house wash Driveway and concrete cleaning Decks and fences Roof treatments Locally owned and operated
• Stanley Bay students Francesca Stafford (10) and Storm Heaven (13) save a toddler from drowning at the Mt Albert Aquatic centre. • A Calliope Rd team which emerged from Stanley Bay School wins the Devonport Top Team competition. • Devonport Cinema is still without an operator despite hopes an agreement would be reached two weeks ago. • North Shore Cricket Club has a cracking start to the season, thrashing Cornwall, with Craig Batty taking four wickets for 20 and Evan Atkinson three for 10. • Windsor Reserve’s band rotunda is lined up for an upgrade. • Council investigates replacing pōhutukawa trees and claret ashes on Victoria Rd with European varieties. • Sewage overflows and poor drainage continue at Stanley Bay. • Simon Lamb arrives as Takapuna Grammar principal, aiming to encourage students to become more involved in extracurricular activities: sport, music or drama.
Call Will 022 517 3077
• Renovation projects at Vauxhall Rd and Cheltenham Beach are profiled at a Devonport Heritage night. • Escalating vandalism in Devonport prompts Community Board members to consider installing surveillance cameras or employing security guards to monitor local parks. • The 1902 Coronation of King Edward II is celebrated in Devonport and recalled in the Rod’s Ramblings history column. • Bayswater School celebrates 50 years. • Stella Dixon, whose family ran the Irresistible Tea Rooms in Victoria Rd, for many years, dies. She was a community worker involved in Plunket, Devonport Kindergarten, Vauxhall School and the Devonport Yacht Club. • Tom Van Roekel sets a national record in the 13-14-year-old category for his indoor rowing time over 2000m. Takapuna Grammar wins seven gold medals at the national secondary schools champs. • Fashion designer Nadine Freundlich is the Flagstaff interview subject.
Classifieds ACCOMMODATION
WANTED
To Let. Two bed unit. Easy walk to village.Ga- Vehicles wanted Dead or Alive, cash paid rage. Private garden. $570 per week. 445 7206 or 0800 333 398. SERVICES OFFERED 021 234 5121.
SERVICES OFFERED Experienced house sitter, Devonport. Bookings available December to April. References provided. Enquiries: suziclipsonboyles@gmail.com FixIT Handyman - excellent work, practical budget, most jobs welcome, interior/exterior free quote. Josh 021 261 8322. Sash window repairs. Renew cords, adjust weights, balancing for even running – any problem with your sash window. Work done on Saturdays only. Hubert 021 274 4191.
24 24 Hour 24Towing Hour Towing 24 Hour Towing Hour Towing Devonport Devonport Owned Owned Devonport Devonport Owned Owned Operated and Operated andand Operated and Operated 1 Fleet Street, 1 Fleet Devonport Street, Devonport 1 Fleet Street, Devonport 1 Fleet Street, Devonport Phone 445 Phone 0483 445 Phone 445 04830483 Phone 445 0483 email: office@fleetstpanel.co.nz email: fleetst@ihug.co.nz email: fleetst@ihug.co.nz email: fleetst@ihug.co.nz email: fleetst@ihug.co.nz www.fleetstpanel.co.nz www.fleetstpanel.co.nz www.fleetstpanel.co.nz www.fleetstpanel.co.nz ESTABLISHED ESTABLISHED ESTABLISHED ESTABLISHED ESTABLISHED 1971 1971 1971 1971 ESTABLISHED 1971 1971 Dennis Hale Dennis & Hale Nathan & Nathan Hale Hale
WANT TO ADVERTISE?
Devonport Flagstaff Classified Advertising. It really works. To make a booking please email us at sales@devonportflagstaff.co.nz
Reach your 24 24 Ho Devonport Peninsula Dev Devonp customers and aO cost-effectively
1 Flee 1 Fleet Str
Contact the FlagstaffPhone Ph for our rates and dates. email:
email: flee E sales@devonportflagstaff.co.nz www www.flee W www.devonportflagstaff.co.nz
Dennis Hale & Nathan Hale
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 41
October 20, 2023
Taking action... Belmont Intermediate School students (from left) Amy Simpson, Madeleine Western and Evie Hobbs
Fears for reefs prompt fundraiser A trio of Belmont Intermediate School students have been inspired by a school project to try to raise awareness of the risks to ocean reefs. Year 8 students Evie Hobbs, Amy Simpson and Madeleine Western will hold a fundraising cake stall at the Devonport ferry terminal next week. “We decided to run the bake sale, because we wanted the locals to enjoy it as well as them realising an important cause,” Madeleine said. The girls first contacted the Flagstaff before the end of last term, eager to spread the messages their class had learned about the consequences of reef degradation. They want reefs here and overseas better protected. Once back at school this term, the girls decided to take practical action through a fundraiser.
Money raised will go towards a New Zealand organisation, Experiencing Marine Reserves, that runs educational programmes about marine conservation, which includes giving schoolchildren an experience of reef environments. The girls’ project found that unprotected reefs are dying fast: “Only 32 per cent of reefs currently have some protection, leaving the other 68 per cent of reefs to rot away.” Fisheries management was needed, they said. Reefs were a vital source of the world’s oxygen and a source of new medicines, their research also found. “You can support us by showing up to our fundraiser.” • Cakestall, Sunday 29 October, 11am2pm, under shelter at the Devonport Ferry Terminal.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 42
October 20, 2023
Takapuna
Grammar
SCHOOL NEWS
OCT 20, 2023
TGS Cricket Tour of the Gold Coast The tour squad at Auckland airport
The Girls’ 1st XI played ten T20 games, mostly playing two games a day to replicate what they will face in December when they represent Auckland at the National tournament. The girls played five local schools and had games against touring Manawatu representative sides coming out with a 50/50 win-loss record. Perhaps the most pleasing win was against Queensland State champions, Brisbane State High School. The top five performances for the team with the bat were: Izzy Fox 92*, Maia Scott 81*, Maia Scott 63*, Raiha Jeory Reynolds 60* and Izzy Fox 56*, and with the ball; Jasmine Perry 4 for 12, Orla Langdon 4 for 16, Izzy Fox 3 for 7, Orla Langdon 3 for 15 and Scout Hallman 3 for 18. The Development side was the hardest for local opposition to match, with many schools fielding their 2nd XI’s. This gave the group some tough matches but the team continually improved, losing their second-to-last game on the last ball, and gaining a win on their final match against Matthew Flinders Anglican College. The squad was also fortunate to have a batting masterclass with former North Shore Cricket Club and Auckland Aces player, Graeme Beghin. The top five performances with the bat were: Max Murray 57, Finlay Weaver 54, Finlay Weaver 50*, Ryan Corner 40, and Finlay Weaver 33. With the ball: Ben Moorby 3 for 30, Theo Wilkins 2 for 4, Luka Hart 2 for 24, Arlo Ostwind 2 for 24, Ryan Corner 2 for 32. The Boys’ 1st XI played games of either 40 or 50 overs against Coomera Hope Island CC, The Southport School, Brisbane Grammar, Churchie, Brisbane Boys College and Matthew Flinders Anglican College. With many of these schools fielding between 20-30 boys cricket teams during their season they provided tough competition for our team. While the boys lost to Churchie and had the game against Brisbane Grammar abandoned due to the weather, TGS secured wins against all the other sides, with some fantastic results. The top five results with the bat were: Christian Scott 110, Christian Scott 103, Aniq Hamza 79, Christian Scott 78 and Daniel Middleton 65. With the ball; Christian Scott 3 for 2, Dominic Cook 3 for 21, Aidan Simpkins 3 for 34, Daniel Middleton 3 for 35 and Dominic Cook 2 for 10. The Australian Cricket Tour provided a fantastic opportunity to grow, hone and develop players’ skills off and on the field. It has proven incredibly beneficial for Takapuna Grammar Cricket since the biannual tour began in the nineties. We are already looking forward to our next tour and seeing the fruits of the past tour in Term 4 with our players.
The Girls 1st XI
Boys development squad after batting masterclass with Graeme Beghin (back row RHS) and with coach, and NSCC Premier Captain, Will Clarke (back row LHS)
October 20 , 2023
Arts / Entertainment Pages
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 43
New staffer seeks to broaden Rose Centre’s appeal The Rose Centre in Belmont has employed a well-known local face in a brand-new role to help turn it into more of a hub. Bayswater resident Abby Jones, the former community events manager for the Devonport Peninsula Trust, is the centre’s newly appointed community engagement manager. Jones said her goal for the role is to get more people through the centre’s doors and make it more of a general space for locals. “I feel excited, because Belmont needs a hub,” she said. “There’s a lot of community here.” She wanted plays that “push boundaries” to be staged at the centre’s theatre to attract different audiences. People often had to go into the central city or to Takapuna to see those kinds of shows, she said. “It’s quite a big mission to get over to the city sometimes. It’s like a four-hour mission, with a babysitter [required] whereas if you can get some of the material that’s pushing boundaries here, it’s only a quick mission up the road.” The centre will continue to offer the Company Theatre productions that regulars are accustomed to, but Jones wants to diversify the material being performed. She has also been in contact with locals
Seeking to diversify... Abby Jones wants more people through the Rose Centre’s doors A big rebrand is coming for the centre about starting clubs such as chess and knitting clubs that will have regular space in 2024. Jones said she couldn’t reveal details at the centre. “I hope to provide a lot of things that yet, but said it would modernise the logo accommodate all walks of life in our and aim to freshen up the appearance of the centre. community.”
Vic’s foyer extension should be ready for birthday show
From the ground up... Fisher Jervis and others from the Devonport Construction team lifted the floor during the Victoria Theatre foyer upgrade
Work on extending the Victoria Theatre foyer is proceeding at great pace and is targeted to be ready for the theatre’s 111th birthday concert next week. The project, which has been planned for years, will use the internal foyer behind the downstairs cinema as a gathering space for audiences. The sloping floor in this area is being levelled, acoustic doors installed and the space upgraded, with new deco-style furniture, fittings and wallpaper. The Vic is a listed heritage building so when the floor was lifted, an Auckland Council heritage specialist had to investigate what lay beneath. An earlier timber floor from 1929 still existed, but nothing of any historic significance was found, only a number of 1970s drink cans, so work was able to proceed. “We have the Vic’s 111th anniversary concert on Thursday 26 October so the race is on to have the work finished for that, but it will be tight,” said theatre trust co-chairperson Mark Sigglekow. The theatre opened in 1912 and has had a rocky history, requiring a community effort to save it. Sigglekow has project-managed the work, which is extremely involved because of the historic nature of the theatre. “It’s such an old building so you never know what you will find when you start pulling things up and there are quite stringent fire egress and safety conditions to be met,” he said. The band Unsung Heroes will perform for the anniversary, with its trademark evening of songs, stories and images from New Zealand’s past. This was a huge success last year, with actor and band member Peter Elliot telling stories of our settler past in a beautifully crafted mixture of theatre, music and images. • Concert, 7.30pm, 26 October. Tickets $35, at thevic.co.nz
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 44
October 20, 2023
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Arts / Entertainment Pages
October 20 , 2023
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 45
Depot’s new branding snares design honour The Depot’s rebranding has won a top design award, recognising the Devonport arts institution’s smart new look. North Shore designer Matt Hammond is behind the work which includes a new logo emblazoned on the building’s Clarence St exterior. He collected a gold award at the Best Awards for design held in Auckland this month. Depot director Amy Saunders said: “It’s a great recognition of all the work that went into it.” Rather than a sweeping change to its name, the idea was to better pull the Depot’s various strands together, she said. The wider rebranding combined six existing websites into one for a cohesive professional look, along with new signage and logos. “What Matt did was to create an identity across all our organisations,” Saunders said. He worked to a brief from gallery staff, including its kaitohutohu cultural adviser, Terehia Walker, and came up with three ideas. The chosen design references tukutuku panels and colours that speak of the maunga and moana, with a bold black background. Hammond, who has an agency background but now runs his own business from Smales Farm, said he enjoyed the challenge. “It’s one of those projects that’s not corporate or commercial.” The idea centred on a visual depiction of a central hub, recognising that the Depot was more than the art gallery many thought of it as. It has long housed a sound studio and also offers skills training courses for creatives. Of more than 1000 entries into the category of “small brand identity”, Hammond’s Depot entry was one of 20 to get gold status. Saunders said the Depot was attracting strong visitor numbers under its new look, rolled out earlier in the year. Particularly popular were its Matariki show and the current Auckland studio potters show which is open until 28 October. This had drawn 400 people on opening day and good foot traffic since. “Ceramics is a very popular art form at the moment,” said Saunders, putting this down partly to it being accessible and affordable. Looking ahead, she says the Depot hopes to open a shop next year in its small streetfront gallery space, to provide another reason for people to visit, along with an outlet for artists and craftspeople.
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The Devonport Flagstaff Page 46
Arts / Entertainment Pages
October 20, 2023
Local sculptor’s bronze chair finally exhibited after An empty chair rich in meaning is Devonport sculptor Helen Pollock’s heartfelt contribution to a major sculpture exhibition. Pollock, whose father died when she was nine, says the work, cast in bronze, speaks of loss and memory. “It is the chair at our kitchen table at that time. I couldn’t bear to sit on it.” She began crafting The Empty Chair several years ago, working from home. Covid disruptions to the last Sculpture OnShore event, forcing it solely online, means only now will it be shown outdoors it at Fort Takapuna, where people can see as she imagined they would. The chair could be seen to signify loss or absence, she says, be that due to death or estrangement. “Its usual occupant is no longer physically present. It is also a ‘Chair for Sensing’ – for sensing connection through time and space, and more tangibly and specifically, through memory.” Pollock, whose work is in international collections, has a strong history with the local event and says she feels loyal to the organisers and the Women’s Refuge cause it fundraises for every two years. Her initial connection was in its early days, when it was held in the Becroft Garden overlooking Lake Pupuke in Takapuna, before it shifted to the larger site at Narrow Neck.
Seat of power... Helen Pollock’s The Empty Chair will be exhibited at Sculpture OnShore “It’s a wonderful occasion and very well organised,” she says. Pollock says she conceptualises all her work, be it for museums or exhibitions, in a similar way. One of her first Sculpture OnShore pieces, Wave, part of an ‘Arms’ series, led
to the creation of Falls the Shadow, which was shown at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in 2018, ahead of being permanently installed at the Passchendaele Memorial Museum in Belgium for the battle’s centenary. It melds clay from the battlefield with clay from Coromandel. She also has a major installation, Victory Medal, at Le Quesnoy in northern France, where she recently attended the New Zealand Liberation Museum – Te Arawhata official opening. (See story, page 5). Closer to home, another well-known example of Pollock’s work is As Above, So Below, on permanent display at the Navy Museum in Torpedo Bay. It shows outstretched arms and is in the museum’s World War I commemoration pavilion, cast from bronze and steel and incorporating water, with a “weeping” bronze ladder ascending skyward. It commemorates the bravery of those who served at sea. “All of my work in some way is about memory and commemoration,” she says. Pollock has a second work at this year’s Sculpture OnShore – The Chambered Nautilus. She notes that the nautilus develops within its shell and when it dies leaves behind its dwelling place of great beauty. The exhibition at Fort Takapuna will feature work by artists from around the country and displays by local schoolchildren. It runs from 4-19 November.
McGee work explores writing and male friendship Greg McGee, one of the country’s foremost the writing process,” he said. writers, with major film, television, theatre McGee has revisited the play for the Vic and fiction credits to his name, will speak series, and brought out the emotional focus at The Vic about his play The Write Stuff at the centre of the play, particularly the rethis Sunday. lationship between the two main characters. His play is the second being performed “I’ve gone back to the essence, that pecuas part of the Victoria Theatre Trust’s fifth liar beast called male friendship, a theme I Play Reading Series. seem compelled to return to,” he said. McGee burst onto the country’s theatre The play is about a writer whose selfscene with his landmark play Foreskin’s worth is teetering on the edge when his best Lament in 1980 and has since friend, a banker, offers him a forged an award-winning screenplay to write. But the writing career in film and offer is not all it seems. television, and with novels McGee will take part in a and a memoir. question and answer session T h e Wr i t e S t u f f i s a after the reading. light-hearted look at the Two of Auckland’s best acagonies of writing and is tors provide the cast. considered a must-see for Stephen Papps will make a would-be writers who might welcome return to the Vic. He think they have a novel or a performed in a 2021 reading of Actor Stephen Papps The Campervan at the venue. play in them. “When I wrote the original Edwin Wright has been a version of this play, I was in a bit of a blue familiar face in many New Zealand film and funk about the whole screenwriting process, television productions. feeling a bit jaded – a psychological state I • The Write Stuff, at The Vic, Sunday 22 think every screenwriter gets to sometimes,” October at 4pm. Tickets $17.50 at thevic. McGee says. co.nz “It’s a tough industry. The Write Stuff Next Sunday, 29 October, the final reading was a kind of dark but uplifting therapy, a in the series is of Matthew, Mark, Luke and humorous and heightened-reality version of Joanne by Carl Nixon.
Inside story... Greg McGee says his The Write Stuff presents a humorous and heightened-reality version of the writing process
October 20 , 2023
Arts / Entertainment Pages
The Devonport Flagstaff Page 47
sitting out Covid
Long arms... Helen Pollock’s As Above, So Below, at the Navy Museum. Right: The artist at work at home in Devonport in 2021.
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