Life + Style 13 October 2017

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21 August, 2015

life+style The Weekend Sun 1

Lasts a lifetime Page 2

THE WEEKEND

Marineland

Plaque from the past

Art of the garage sale

Susan Harrison-Tustain

Messy church


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life+style The Weekend Sun 21 2015 13August, October, 2017

Summer loving Getting that matching indoor-outdoor flow

With summer just around the corner, now is the perfect time to get your indoor-outdoor flow just the way you want it. If you’re wanting to treat yourself and your home, it could be time to get some new indoor furniture, and The Design Depot in Mount Maunganui has some perfect pieces to finish off your living space. With some gorgeous new indoor furniture ranges coming for summer, The Design Depot has something for every home – The Halo and Bleu Nature ranges bring together style and comfort effortlessly to create memorable pieces for your home. UK range Halo offers furniture that is classic in style, durable, practical and will last for many years to come. A standout piece from the Halo range is the Halo Luscious Sectional Sofa. Made from goose feathers and down, and upholstered with fine grade hemp, this sofa was created to provide instant and lasting comfort while adding voluptuous presence to a room. The Bleu Nature range has been designed to give life back to driftwood and help bring nature into contemporary interiors. Bleu Nature furniture is a look at the elegance of a curve in marble or raw wood, the sensual feel of leather, the generosity of a seat or 100 per cent feather stuffing; it’s about elegance and

comfort, style and aesthetic value. Combining what would typically be seen as contrasting materials such as wood, leather, marble, metal and linen, the Driftwood range from Bleu Nature creates pieces with great emotional value. “We want to embrace the beach life here in Mount Maunganui and these new ranges celebrate that. The Bleu Nature range in particular brings the beach feel into the home,” says Kylie Marsh. “We love getting to know customers and their spaces and love to put together furnishings to suit their lifestyle.” And if you want to create that perfect indoor-outdoor flow, The Design Depot can help furnish your patio, deck, or outdoor living space. “Our outdoor range is arriving in store next week, just in time for the long weekend,” says Kylie. When it comes to summer, New Zealand is a nation that likes to spend our time outside, and nobody knows that better than those who live in the beautiful Bay of Plenty. Whether it’s a late brunch, a big family barbecue or a Christmas lunch, the furniture outside needs to be up to the task.

The Design Depot will be stocking new outdoor ranges, ‘Cove’ and ‘Coast’ which are New Zealand-designed to suit our lifestyle choices. These ranges are available exclusively to The Design Depot in the Waikato and the Bay of Plenty. “Both gorgeous ranges come with a five-year warranty,” says Kylie, “and are New Zealanddesigned to withstand New Zealand elements”. “All the materials have been specifically

sourced and chosen from around the world to withstand New Zealand seasons and elements”. So whether you are wanting to jazz up your Bay home or your getaway bach, The Design Depot can help you dress up your indoor and outdoor spaces. To view The Design Depot’s stunning ranges visit the Mount Maunganui store at 13 Totara St or the Hamilton store at 52 Alexandra St. For more information call 07 572 0215.


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13 October, 2017

“We have vulnerable wildlife, such as seals, penguins and dotterels around these areas, making it unsuitable for dogs”

Marineland

Brent Lincoln

Photo: John van den Broek

Yesteryear’s Marineland was located at Moturiki Island, also known as Leisure Island, and was previously an old quarry site in the early 1900s. Blasted out with explosives, the large open space created was filled and stocked with dolphins and other marine life from 1966-1981. Nowadays Moturiki and nearby Motuotau Islands, along with Mauao, are home to little blue penguins, petrels, and other native birdlife. Western Bay Wildlife Trust report that the local little blue penguin population was unknown until the Rena oil spill crisis. Three hundred and fifty oiled penguins – mostly from Mauao, Moturiki and Motuotau – were caught, cleaned and released back into their original environment. During this time an estimated 800 little blue penguins were discovered nesting on Mauao, 200 on Moturiki and 400 on Motuotau. During August and September, seal pups, just weaned from their parents, make their way ashore to rest from stormy seas, lying on the rocks and sand to sleep for hours. Last summer, a pair of oystercatcher birds successfully raised chicks on Mount Main Beach. In 2017, dotterels are already making themselves at home, ready to scrap out a nest. A vulnerable species, only 2075 northern New Zealand dotterels were counted in the 2011

breeding season census. Their main threats? Humans, dogs, cats, stoats and rats. The scent of a dog can distress penguins and seals and Tauranga City Council has made parts of the beach ‘no dog’ zones. Dog owners in Tauranga are spoiled for choice with a large number of parks, reserves, beaches and public areas where they can exercise their dogs. However, Mount Maunganui Main Beach, Pilot Bay, Mauao, Moturiki Island, and within 200m of surf clubs are dog-free. “We have vulnerable wildlife, such as seals, penguins and dotterels around these areas, making it unsuitable for dogs,” says animal services team leader Brent Lincoln. “We ask that dog owners please be mindful of our wildlife and ensure their dogs are not being exercised in prohibited areas, which includes the grassed area, boardwalk, dunes and beach.” Council’s animal services team regularly patrol these areas and can issue a $300 fine to anyone breaking the rules. The public can also help by reporting any dogs that are in prohibited areas to the council on (07) 577 7000. Dog owners are aware they must pick up after their dogs, and ensure they have control of their dog at all times. If a dog is likely to cause danger, distress or nuisance, it must be kept on a leash. Nature’s marine land is something we can all help safeguard. Rosalie Liddle Crawford

Photo: Cate Duff

Marineland is returning to the Mount, but not as we once knew it.

Photo: Rosalie Liddle Crawford

Safeguarding our wildlife


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13August, October, 2017 life+style The Weekend Sun 21 2015

Plaque from the past Olive Love’s call for a museum Olive Love phoned me.

Photo: Bruce Barnard

“I’ve got something you need to see.” I knew she had a dozen or so donkeys, a large St Bernard dog named Frodo and a tortoise named Yoda. And a cat. I wondered what else she could possibly have, I was intrigued. She rang back. “I’m off to rescue a donkey, you’ll have to come another day.” Eighty-seven, she was off to adopt a donkey in Rotorua. I put my curiosity on hold. Olive has walked her dogs through Yatton Park for many years. Aware that the trees carry plaques, she only realised one had gone when she saw the Lawson cypress it was attached to cut and lying on the ground. “I can’t tell you when I first saw the plaque. I’ve watched that tree grow.” Over the years the plaque had embedded itself into the bark. Made of a tough resin type compound it had withstood weather and the tree’s growth, floating steadily upwards as the tree grew. “I rang the council and asked if I could have the sign,” says Olive. “And the next thing it’s here.” She was surprised to find it intact and delivered to her door complete with wire attached with which to hang it. We wondered when the plaque had been made and attached to the tree. Known by tangata whenua as Te Tutarawananga a Tamatea-arikinui, Yatton Park was once the location of a pa site to which Nga

SWIMMING POOLS & SPAS

Te Ahi, Ngati Ruahine and Ngai Tamarawaho have connections. After the battles of Gate Pa and Te Ranga in 1864, gifts of land were made to Maori who had not fought against the imperial troops. One of these, Hamiora Tu, who had guided the 68th Durham regiment to the rear of the pa, was allocated land in the locality. This land was bought by John Chadwick in 1867. By 1872 John and his son John Alfred had purchased most of the area between 18th Ave, Cameron Road, Church St and the Waimapu estuary. The park’s collection of exotic and native trees were mostly planted around 1866. A four-room homestead was built by the Chadwick family and at the foot of the bluff below, small steamers would draw alongside a wharf. Tauranga City Council has added large signs along the paths showing photos and text that tell the history of the area. It doesn’t escape notice that the plinths may be acting as a sort of historical ‘filler’ while Tauranga continues without a museum. I realise it may be controversial to suggest that, but one does wonder. Olive breaks into my pondering. “The text on the plaque is wrong,” she points out. She’s right. The text says it’s from Psalm 66:3 but actually it’s from verse four “All the earth worships Thee; they sing praises to Thee, sing praises to They name.” Olive would like to see the plaque go to a museum.


13 October, 2017 21 August, 2015

“I think it’s very important to look after our history. And tell stories of the past. And photos of the past”

“I think we should have a museum here. There’s a lot of conflict about that. But its history and it belongs. A museum should be here. “It’s like restoring the Christchurch Cathedral.They should never knock it down. It’s one of those things isn’t it? We haven’t got a lot of aged things. “I think we definitely need a museum. Tauranga does seem to be leaning that way. We hope.” Olive was nine, living in Folkestone, Dover when the war started. “They were bombing one of the cathedrals and you never get them back, that’s the thing. “I can remember going to a museum on the way home from school, and we used to ask to see the butterflies. There was a big Kodiak bear in there, it used to stand half way up the stairs. As kids we always used to go and have a look.” Yatton Park plays a commemorative role for the Tauranga district. Notable among the memorials are an olive tree for the war in Crete, Kate Sheppard camellias for the centennial of Women’s Suffrage and gardens denoting the relationship with our sister cities of Hitachi, Yantai and San Bernardino. Olive tells me about her son Andrew and his wife Louise who are travelling through Europe. “Louise does a wonderful blog each week called ‘Roaming with Love’. It’s absolutely lovely. All those beautiful buildings. They don’t knock them down over there. All the cathedrals and castles and all those things, they look after them.” “This is why so many people troop around Europe,” muses Olive. “It’s full of history. “Thousands of people do that.”

She feels that the little bit of history we do have here we chop down and get rid of. “For goodness sake what’s wrong with people?” she asks. “If I have to get to 87 to think things like that, well, don’t take any notice of what youngsters think at the moment, when they get to a serious age, they’ll agree with me.” “I think it’s very important to look after our history. And tell stories of the past. And photos of the past. In a way I live in the past.” She laughs. “How many donkeys do you have now?” I ask, distracted by the sight of them walking past. “Fourteen.” I love these chats with Olive. Rosalie Liddle Crawford

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October, 2017 life+style The Weekend Sun 2113August, 2015

Strategy and distraction The art of the garage sale My sister Bev wasn’t coping. We were in Taupo “They won’t let us join, we don’t belong here,” said “Yes they will,” I responded, quietly perturbed, on a Friday night and she knew there would Bev. because if she doesn’t get her garage sale fix we’d have be garage sales the following morning but to go to Rotorua early the next morning. We were actually in Taupo to celebrate my mother’s didn’t know where.

Photos: Rosalie Liddle Crawford

Coming from the South Canterbury town of Fairlie, population about 1000, garage sales aren’t as common an occurrence as they are in my neck of the woods. When she comes up north the unspoken rule is she has to go garage sale-ing. The local Taupo petrol station had run out of papers, so she was now looking on Google. “Just type in ‘Taupo garage sale’ to Facebook,” I said, typing it myself. Immediately up came a local group with 500 members. I asked to join.

80th birthday. I have four younger sisters, two of them live in the South Island, and two in the North Island. The two southerners were born in the same year and married men from Fairlie, both friends. The two northern sisters are twins and married brothers. This may seem a little weird, but it’s not, it’s my family. When one of us has a birthday the six of us meet up and visit another town or city for a weekend. Within minutes we were accepted into the Taupo Facebook group, and I asked where the garage sales were the following day. Immediately there were friendly replies. Bev loaded up her phone’s Google map and plotted the most efficient path to get us to as many as possible in the shortest timeframe. We were already deep into the strategy that is the Liddle family ‘art of the garage sale’ planning. Importantly, she was happy. The next morning she was in the bathroom at 5am, hairdryer blowing, singing loudly. Another great strategy to ensure all six participants were awake and moving. Did I say I love my sister? Speed being our top priority, we all donned bright red wigs. It means a fast getaway from one garage sale or market to the next if we can spot each other easily through the crowds. My sister Yvonne has a rule – no running. Being a triathlon athlete she doesn’t seem to believe sprinting


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“Speed being our top priority, we all donned bright red wigs. It means a fast getaway from one garage sale or market to the next if we can spot each other easily through the crowds”

is running and so we pour out of the van only to find she’s already chatting to the homeowner. Everything on sale is brand new, from a shop closure. Yvonne nudges me. She’s spotted something she really wants. Immediately I recognise the start of the distraction move. I play along, bemused. She ignores the item and picks up something else nearby and makes a point of holding it up high, looking inside and under it. She has the owner’s attention. “How much for this?” Yvonne asks. The owner replies. Yvonne looks a little dismayed but smiles and puts it down. She picks up something else at random. ‘What about this?” The owner gives a price. Yvonne eventually finds her way to the object she really wants. Looking disinterested, she asks ‘What if I buy this along with those?” The owner pauses and ponders and comes up with a discounted figure for all three. Yvonne mulls on that, I point out other things, and she says “Well I don’t know. I think I’ll leave it, thanks”. Immediately the owner makes another offer and Yvonne decides to just take the third item, the one she wanted all along. She gets it for about one third of the original price. We’re off again. I haven’t bought anything yet. We stop at three more places, arriving fast, spilling out of the van, aware that the owners are goggling at the wave of six red-wigged women race-walking up their driveways. We come across one estate sale where family members are selling the personal treasures built up over a lifetime of someone they loved. I wonder

how people part with what I like to think of as breadcrumbs that lead us to memories, but then one person’s memory of their aunt or mother is not someone else’s. We talk for a while about her life. She was an artist. I pick up some of her sketches, canvases and drawings and ask “how much?” “You can just have them,” the niece replies. I tuck them away in the back of the van. It’s an extraordinary feeling having something that was once an expression of another person. We arrive at a church fair. Hundreds

of people! I’m grateful for the wigs. One of the men on the barbecue flirts with my mother. Lots of laughter. The tables inside are a mass of colour and excellent bargains. I meet an author who has written a book about her brother. I buy it. Everyone walks out with bags full. We leave behind a trail of chuckles and hilarity. Garage sale-ing is more than just finding a bargain. It’s time together laughing, and finding things that remind us of shared memories. And creating new ones. Rosalie Liddle Crawford

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October, 2017 life+style The Weekend Sun 2113August, 2015

Susan Harrison-Tustain A life graced with golden light How many ways can I say ‘how marvellous’? I’m lost in the timelessness of the paintings of Susan Harrison-Tustain. Transcended to another place and time; and awed, I find her work quietly astonishing. Softly colourful and atmospheric, gifting me hushed moments, they also bemuse me with their sometimes gentle surrealism. I find myself adrift in the overlays of light caught between the layers of paint. How is that even possible? Moving around the canvases, I find they bathe the room. Some are whimsical yet all are meaningful. In fact deeply so, with hidden thoughts and suggestions that reflect the artist’s inner unconscious desire to beckon us to touch our stilled hearts to time and show us the gift that is life. The joy of viewing Susan Harrison-Tustain’s newest collection of paintings is deepened on meeting the painter herself. She steps lightly through her kitchen with a floral caftan flowing around her; her soft auburn hair piled high into a French knot of glamorous waves. Asking her about life as an artist, her eyes soften with that well-known gentle smile seen in her books and online painting tutorial videos. She reflects on the immense joy that painting gives her and how nourished she feels by her idyllic country surrounds. Susan has lived in the Oropi hills with husband Richard for about 20 years – their French-styled ivy-clad house elegantly placed with its rolling countryside view of Mauao.

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“The house flows really well. It’s a sanctuary. It has that lovely peaceful view over the hills, and so much bird life.” Driving into the road at the bottom of the hill, she says she feels like she’s coming home. “It’s amazing. Going to your peaceful place.” It’s from this pastoral space that her latest collection of paintings has flowed, full of imagination, and inspired by nature. And wonderfully, also by a newly discovered muse. This divine inspiration is Alice Sea, who captivated Susan during a Tarnished Frocks and Divas event. Alice’s fluid movements as she swirls and allows the music to flow through her reflects a similar kindred free spirit fluent within Susan. Weaving sound and paint from brush to canvas, Susan has captured the dance musical moments in time, when golden music notes entwine with ivy leaves, and vibrations through tapping feet tremble the golden eggs in the soil beneath. Alice, inspired by earth, sky, and nature, has played this timeless quality into her own journey of sound, her music influenced by calypso, traditional folk, hip-hop and dub. ‘Her Song’, a painting of Alice with bow barely brushing violin strings, blends a gilded surround, a visual fusion of golden sound. An anonymous quote Susan includes in her catalogue: “Music has the power to make us smile, and bring us to all types of tears. It can carry us back in time, and inspire us to dance in the moment. “For all our happiest days, and our saddest, there is music.” During the exhibition, Alice will be playing her

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13 October, 2017

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“To be able to fly to the beat of your own wings, that’s a really important thing. For me painting is so exciting, and it’s such a thrill. I get withdrawal symptoms if I can’t paint”

Edge – A Celebration of Gold and Colours’ has already generated much anticipation. Renowned internationally, she has foreseen the considerable interest that will be generated by providing two opportunities to view the new works. The first is in Auckland, at Mahoenui at Coatesville, with 2010 New Zealander of the Year Sir Ray Avery officially opening the exhibition. The second is in Tauranga at Design on James in Te Puna from October 21-22. Rosalie Liddle Crawford

Photo: Bruce Barnard

instruments, evoking and weaving the sense of captivating atmosphere that emanates from the collection of artworks. Susan’s fascination with this passing of time is supremely reflected in ‘Tempus Fugit’, a miniature oil on palladium leaf painted on a poplar wood panel. A perky fantail perches on a pendulum-swinging fob-watch, oblivious to its precarious predicament. ‘Will the last thread of the fraying twine unravel before we open the doors of the gilded icon frame so she can discover the freedom to fly with the beat of her own wings?’ is the question posed in the exhibition catalogue. “To be able to fly to the beat of your own wings, that’s a really important thing,” says Susan. “For me painting is so exciting, and it’s such a thrill. “I get withdrawal symptoms if I can’t paint.” Her oil on 24-carat gold leaf and palladium leaf on poplar wood panels, or on Belgian Linen, open up the beautiful spaces in her spirit that Susan inhabits. They are truly and simply beautiful, and full of sustenance for a tired soul. Innocence, imagination, nature’s moments and the beauty of childhood waft through further scenes that offer quiet introspection. Susan is a master of both oil and watercolour. Klimt’s use of gold leaf in his paintings has resonated with her, and she has devised her own techniques, combining the use of gold and palladium leaf with oils to develop these unique works. Her 2017 exhibition of paintings, titled ‘Gilded


Photo: Bruce Barnard

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October, 2017 life+style The Weekend Sun 2113August, 2015

Messy Church Death cafe and movies I was being sent messages from a Facebook friend about a Death Cafe in Papamoa. And something about a messy church. Also, why was the movie ‘Monsters University’ being screened in a funeral parlour? So many questions! What was going on over there in Papamoa East? I decided to investigate. It turns out that Legacy Funerals has built an impressive facility in Te Okuroa Drive which includes a 200-seat chapel, plus smaller rooms, a catering lounge and plenty of on-site parking. The new venue has been constructed as part of Legacy’s commitment to support families in the rapidly expanding Papamoa suburb. I wandered into the new building to meet newly appointed Community of St Aidan’s the Reverend Julie Guest and thought ‘wow!’ “It’s a great huge auditorium which Legacy directors hoped people might use for other things,” says Julie. “People might have concerts here.” Last year Legacy approached Reverend Adrienne Bruce, the Regional Dean in the Bay of Plenty for the Anglican Diocese of Waiapu, to say they’d be building. “They offered us the use of the building if we could provide them with a receptionist,” said Adrienne. “So we thought ‘what can we put in here that will offer a new way of being church to the Papamoa community?’ As our greatest resource is our people, we put Julie in as one of our newer priests as someone with heaps of energy and creativity. So Julie begins with no congregation, just a community to relate to, a

facility to do things in and a stipend - and a husband willing to assist.” One of the things that Waiapu has had success with around the diocese is ‘Messy Church’, which originated from the Anglican Church in the UK. The website says “Messy Church is about people coming along to church in all their messy lives and families. Coming to God as they are and seeing what a Christian community is all about”. There’s food, a gathering around tables, so people can be human together. The five key ingredients are that it’s for all ages, that there’s a celebration, hospitality, creativity, and that it’s Christ-centred. Adrienne says that as an Anglican Church they do not exist for themselves but for the community of which they are a part. “Helping people develop their spiritual lives is as important as the emotional, physical and mental lives”, says Adrienne. The Anglican Diocese of Waiapu, of which Adrienne and Julie are a part, is committed to providing community for all ages, through worship and social services. Adrienne and husband Arthur were co-vicars at Mount Maunganui when, in 2000, they and their parish leadership began the Dovecote Op shop. In 2001 they started the Beachaven Community House, and then picked up Papamoa Community Support Centre in Domain Rd. It’s now relocated to the Wai O Uru Village in Hartford Ave, renamed as Papamoa Family Services, and operates as a community social service agency. Services include community education, budget


13 2017 21October, August, 2015

“We decided we want to do something that’s not traditional church, but helps meet people in a whole different way. Churches don’t exist for themselves, they exist for the community”

advice, family support, youth services, seniors support, counselling, addiction services, information and advice. The primary goal is to assist people to take positive action in their lives by providing expertise, support, resources and information. Beachaven Family Services, (formerly Papamoa Community House), in Palm Springs has a number of group activities that anyone can attend, including playgroups, craft groups for kids and adults, music group, recreation group, walking group and a monthly lunch for seniors. Staff also offer advocacy for individuals and families. In her role, Julie organises Death Cafe events at Fashion Island’s Gana Café. At a Death Cafe, people, often strangers, gather to eat cake, drink tea and discuss death. The objective is ‘to increase awareness of death with a view to helping people make the most of their (finite) lives’. First established in September 2011, Death Cafes are spread across Europe, North America and Australasia. As of today, there are 4994 Death Cafes in 51 countries. So, what was that thing about ‘Monsters University’ being screened in a funeral parlour? “The confusion is that because it’s Legacy that has the building here, people automatically think funerals,” says Julie. “What they don’t realise is that churches do funerals all the time. “We decided we want to do something that’s not traditional church, but helps meet people in a whole different way. Churches don’t exist for themselves, they exist for the community. How can we live in this part of the community and offer something?”

Julie plans to launch a regular twice-monthly Community Unity Sunday event where people can volunteer to do something in the community such as help with sand dune coastal care or take a meal to a neighbour. “Then, twice a month, we’d be here at Legacy Gardens offering tea and coffee and a place where people can be heard,” says Julie. “I will take requests into the chapel to pray. People can join me or not. The important thing is to offer a place for people to belong with no strings attached.” The Legacy Garden building is surrounded by a doggy day care, children’s day care and what Julie calls ‘a car daycare’. “People can drop their car off at the Papamoa Automotive Service next door and come have a coffee with me while they wait,” she says. Julie can be contacted at www.communityofstaidan.com Rosalie Liddle Crawford

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