15 January 2016, Issue 786
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Bursts of colour are thrown into the air, covering people in all shades of red, yellow, green and blue. “It is like a paint fight with coloured powder,” says Colour Splash event co-organiser Dhruva Reid. Higor and Tara Fiuza arrived at last year’s Colour Splash
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at Mount Maunganui in white T-shirts and left covered top-to-toe in colour. Now Bay of Plenty residents will get a chance to show their true colours when the free event returns on January 30. To read the full story, see page 5. Photo: Taylor Shea Photography.
Friday 15 January 2016 1 The Strand, PO Box 240, Tauranga Phone 07 578 0030 www.theweekendsun.co.nz ads@thesun.co.nz newsroom@thesun.co.nz
The Weekend Sun
2 The Weekend Sun is published every Friday, circulating throughout the Western Bay of Plenty, delivered free to 66,600 homes of more than 159,700 residents from Waihi Beach, through Katikati, Tauranga, Mt Maunganui, Papamoa and Te Puke including rural and residential mailboxes. The Weekend Sun is produced by Sun Media Ltd, an independent and locally owned company based at 1 The Strand, Tauranga.
Sun Media Ltd Directors: Claire & Brian Rogers Editorial: Andrew Campbell, Letitia Atkinson, Elaine Fisher, Zoe Hunter, Merle Foster, David Tauranga, Dan Sheridan, Hunter Wells, Laura Weaser, Greg Taipari. Photography: Tracy Hardy, Bruce Barnard. Advertising: Kathy Sellars, Suzy King, Lois Natta, Rose Hodges, Lucy Pattison, Bianca Lawton, Cath Jump, Doug Britton, Chloe Brown, Leah Rogers, Aimee-Leigh Brunsdon, Mere KawhaBrears, Jo Delicata, Katie Erasmus. Design Studio: Kym Johnson, James Carrigan, Kerri Wheeler, Kyra Duffy, Amy Bennie, Lauren McGillivray. Digital Media: Jay Burston Office: Julie Commerer, Melanie Stone, Kathy Drake.
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If you can’t make it, fake it The year ahead is looking bright and breezy for Sun readers. We know this because we are psychic. Over the holidays my mates and I figured out how to read the future. I’m looking forward to making some stunning revelations throughout the new year, so all of our faithful readers will be forewarned of impending future things. One of my first predictions for the new year, is foreseeing the return of that blockbuster tellie series, ‘Sensing Murder’. I just had this feeling that the programme was coming back on our screens, and
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Politically Incorrect rabbitings by SunMedia owner/editor Brian Rogers
besides, Gwyn Brown told me it was. He’s also psychic and I predict he’ll tell you more, later in this column. Our psychic powers are running hot this summer. As Gwyn so rightly points out: “Not one crime will be solved, not one body will be found, and more victims who are sadly left grieving for their missing loved ones will be lied to, by charlatans who prey on them at their weakest.”
See, Gwyn is psychic, too. ‘Sensing Murder’ will again likely become one of the highest rating shows in New Zealand, gaining more viewers than even some rugby test matches. Yet the office of the police commissioner confirms that no psychic information has ever been instrumental in solving a case in New Zealand. Following that series will air the latest RR production, ‘Sensing Codswallop’. It’s a one-part series because that’s all it will take to expose fakes. Meanwhile, read Gwyn’s take on the Sensing Nonsense saga, below.
Sensing Stupidity! Lowest of the low Let me just state for the record that I have real psychic powers. I am also a little on the short side, although at one time my family used to be giants, but that’s because my great great great, probably another 30 greats, grandmother’s donkey spat in the eye of the village witch doctor... true story, unlike much of the following unfortunately. ‘Sensing Murder’ has hit our TV screens again so I thought I would join in, have a go, maybe get myself a real job. The ‘Sensing Murder’ psychics are all, without exception, fakes. Not one of them has ever solved a murder, or found a dead body, or been useful in anyway. The only thing they are good at is fleecing your money. Those who prey on people who are at their weakest are the lowest of the low. What do they think when they make up messages from your departed? What kind of person can actually do that with a clear conscious? You know it’s amazing what you can make people believe just by picking up on their body language. If you don’t believe me, go to YouTube and watch a guy called Derren Brown. Now he is truly amazing. He could be a psychic, you could believe he was, if he didn’t tell you how he does the things he does. ‘Sensing Murder’ did an episode on Jane Furlong, where the ‘psychics’ predicted she would be found under an Auckland
building site. Two years later Jane was found at Port Waikato, 100km away from where she was ‘said’ to be. How terrible for her family to have their hopes built up by a ‘psychic’ and then have that hope dashed and all their lies revealed for what they really are.
Digging holes
Some of you may remember when they managed to dig a few holes at McLaren Falls Park in 2006 where they said Luana Williams would be found... yep, nothing. One of the team regulars, Sue Nicholson, has worked on more than 14 criminal cases as part of ‘Sensing Murder’, and hasn’t provided a single lead that has amounted to anything. Wait, I tell a lie, she has apparently according to her webpage, but due to the nature of what she discovered, it has to be kept confidential for the sake of the families. Another true story of a real psychic event. Kelvin Cruickshank and Deb Webber are the other regulars. In 2004, Australia’s Channel 7 broadcast a hidden camera episode where Deb Webber was caught on film ‘contacting’ people who didn’t exist. You can make out of that what you like, but my advice would include words like ‘fake’ and a few more.
Prize unclaimed
Stuart Landsborough, owner of Wanaka’s Puzzling World, has publicly offered the ‘Sensing Murder’ team, including their
production team, and any other selfprofessed psychic, a prize pool of thousands of dollars if they can prove their abilities. The money is still unclaimed. There are many other such prize pools of money available for anyone that can prove they have psychic abilities… all unclaimed. Well, so far. Wait, maybe I can get my hands on some of it if my prediction comes true. Now, I get the sense of closure aspect. It would be nice to imagine our departed smiling down on us, to think about them having gone on to a better life. I don’t believe that’s true, you only get one life, but I know some people do believe it, and that’s fine. If it brings a sense of closure to you, then who am I to poo-poo the idea. But for someone to make money out of people’s need to have that closure by lying, is abhorrent. If they really had those powers, why not simply tell you? Why charge you money? If they truly had powers and were finding bodies all over the place, Police departments would have them on their payroll earning gazillions because that would be cheaper than real working cops. You don’t see faith healers working in hospitals for exactly the same reason you don’t see psychics finding all the missing bodies.
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IMPORTANT STUFF: All material is copyright and may not be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher. Sun Media makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all information and accepts no liability for errors or omissions or the subsequent use of information published. The rest of this disclaimer, concerning psychic phenomenon, is not available due to unforseen circumstances.
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
3
Bay’s economic outlook
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remains positive For the third quarter in a row, Bay of Plenty residents remain more positive about their region’s economic outlook than any other region in New Zealand, according to a recent survey.
It’s the third quarter in a row the December Westpac McDermott Miller Regional Economic Confidence survey has found Bay residents’ economic outlook was positive. The survey shows 41 per cent of households are upbeat about the prospects for the region over the next year, placing the region ahead of Otago, which is in second place. Westpac industry economist David Norman says the survey showed the positive sentiment has persisted in the Bay since June
2013, and is the highest reading since December 2009. “A resurgent kiwifruit industry, strong house price growth, and falling unemployment all point to this rise in optimism. “Electronic card sales were up 8.4 per cent in the September 2015, quarter, compared to the same quarter last year, and house prices were up strongly in the region’s largest city, Tauranga.” David says guest nights grew 3.3 per cent in the three months to October 2015, compared to the same period a year ago. “At the same time, we must acknowledge that the economic outlook does vary across the region. Our view is that the west is looking a lot rosier than the east, where a tepid forestry sector means views on the outlook are likely to be more mixed.” Separately, the Westpac McDermott Miller survey also examines consumer confidence, producing an index that summarises responses to questions including how
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respondents view their own financial situation, and their current willingness to buy a major household item. The regional breakdown of the Westpac McDermott Miller Consumer Confidence Index showed Bay of Plenty consumer confidence remains quite subdued, at 109.6, up by 2.6 points since September. This compares to a national average of 110.7, which was up 4.7 points. “The regional economic confidence and consumer confidence numbers, seen together, tell an interesting story,” David says. “Although households are overwhelmingly optimistic about the outlook for the region, consumers are less bubbly about their own situation.” David says a net 18 per cent of respondents believe now is a good time to buy a big ticket household item, but this is only the eighth highest result across the 11 regions. The survey was conducted during December 1 to 11, 2015.
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Friday 15 January 2016 A selection of some local breaking stories featured this week on...
The Weekend Sun
4
Trevor the Train’s final destination It has provided entertainment, formed memories and sometimes caused a kerfuffle with children not wanting to leave the back of a Mount Maunganui video store for about two decades.
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Blaze rips through Mauao
About 40 firefighters from the Western Bay of Plenty battled a fire on Mauao in the early hours of Thursday morning. Firefighters were called to a blaze on the northeastern ridge about 12am. Assistant area commander Aaron Waterreus says the fire was burnt and around of scrub around 800-900sqm. He says although there was some strong winds, the conditions meant firefighters were able to control the fire and keep it to a relatively small portion of Mauao. It’s unclear how the blaze started and police are investigating.
Bees swarm in Welcome Bay It was a hive of activity at the Welcome Bay Tavern carpark with bees swarming through the car park. A caller to 0800 SUNLIVE news hotline says a beehive was transported on the back of a white truck to the tavern’s car park. The queen bee landed on a neighbouring car parked outside the tavern shortly before 4pm on Tuesday and the rest of the bees in the hive followed. The eyewitness says the hive was one of several being transported on a white truck and once the three men inside the vehicle saw what was happening “they laughed and then drove off ”. Local hobbyist beekeeper Geoff Martin was called to the scene to clear the bees.
Police chase accused behind bars A Maketu man facing a raft of driving charges following high-speed chase in Papamoa has been remanded in custody. Kauri Arthur Kerr, 23, was arrested after the vehicle he is alleged to have driven crashed into a car and an Armco barrier at Te Maunga on Sunday afternoon. He is charged with reckless driving, failing to stop, dangerous driving, exceeding 100kmh in a 50kmh zone and being an unlicensed driver. Police say Kerr already had warrants out for his arrest for receiving stolen property and possessing methamphetamine prior to the chase on Sunday.
SunLive Comment of the Week This comment was posted by R1Squid in response to the Dick Smith CEO stepping down.
“From now on, if I am requested to make a deposit on an item I wish to purchase (from any retail store), I shall ask for a personal guarantee from those prepared to give it, otherwise, it will be cash on delivery.”
Children have played, climbed, and ridden United Video’s big red choo-choo train – this reporter did too. But now, Trevor the Train is on the move. It will mark the end of a 20-year legacy as the video store closes its doors at the end of this month, with Trevor believed to have been in the shop since it opened. A United Video employee since 2013, Brooke Hargreaves says the main reason for shutting up shop is a change in the way TV and movie watchers enjoy their content. “To be honest, it’s a big mix of things, but if you had to pinpoint it to something it’s the online technology taking over. “I used to see the same people every week. I know most my customers by name, and then you just don’t see them for six months. “They’ve either got Netflix, Lightbox, or they’re downloading or legally watching online because they can.
“The thing is there’s just not the business there. It’s just keeping up to date with what people want.” Brooke believes movie watchers are slowly pressing pause, or even stop, on the future of renting DVDs. “I give it maybe five years, or even in the next 12 months it will be interesting to see what happens.” The DVD store has more than 20,000 titles, and Trevor the Train, to sell before February. Trevor has since been listed on Trade Me for $1 reserve. “There’s a bit of paint that’s flicked off it, but he’s still in pretty good nick,” says Brooke. “It would be awesome in someone’s house if they’ve got a big playroom. I don’t know if he is waterproof, so I don’t think he’ll be okay outside unless someone waterproofed him. He loves the indoors.” Last time we checked, the 1.75m tall, 1.3m wide and 3m long train was going for $250. With the ‘closing down sale’ signs now up, owners Frank and Lyn Dudson want to thank their customers for their loyalty. They’re grateful for the support, the laughs and jokes, says Brooke. To bid on the train, search Trevor the Train in the ‘Other’ category in the antiques and collectables tab on www.trademe.co.nz United Video staff member Olivia Handley, with customers George, 9, and Ella, 8, McDonald and Jasmine Edwards, 7, on the front of Trevor the Train. Photo: Tracy Hardy.
Have your say on Te Puke upgrade The first stage in a major upgrade for Te Puke Main Street is underway, with a chance for residents to have their say on how the town centre should look. Western Bay of Plenty District Council has released three design concepts of the upgrade for residents to view and comment on, as well as a survey seeking what town centre features people value most. Council’s development engineering manager Peter Clark says the Te Puke Main Street Upgrade Project is about creating a high-quality, robust and attractive town centre that works well for both pedestrians and road users. “This is an opportunity to upgrade the town centre and change it from a place used as a through route, to a destination. “We can do this by making changes to pedestrian safety, parking access, traffic flow, speed restrictions and the landscaping and physical environment.” The upgrade is a result of council taking ownership of the newly named Te Puke Highway (previously State Highway 2) from New Zealand Transport Agency after
the Tauranga Eastern Link opened in August, 2015. “As part of the handover, NZTA agreed to fund the upgrade works. So long as the work is completed by June 30, 2017,” says Peter. Three initial design options for the town centre have been designed by Boffa Miskell, using the same key designer from the Te Puke Walkway Project linking the main street with the Park. An online site has been created for people to view and share feedback on the design options. They are also encouraged to take a very short survey asking what features people value in a town centre. Anyone can view the options and have their say at haveyoursay.westernbay.govt.nz/tepuke-upgrade until the end of January, 2016. To view the concepts in detail, they are available in hard copy at Te Puke Library. Following the feedback period, a preferred option will be selected and further analysed to confirm its suitability. Construction is expected to begin in spring 2016.
Feedback call on TECT village proposal Tauranga City Council is seeking feedback on its proposal to sell land at the Historic Village to Tauranga Energy Consumer Trust, to be used to build a community hub. An open day with elected members and council staff will be held at the Historic Village on Monday, January 18 from 3pm to 7pm. Council will also have a stall at the Lions Markets at the Historic Village on Sunday, January 17 from 8am to 1pm for people to share views. “I encourage everyone to come along, have a chat and find out everything they need to know about council’s proposal,” says Mayor Stuart Crosby. The 4790m2 site is in the eastern portion of the Historic Village. It is mainly an undeveloped green space, which is used occasionally for events and is available for the public to access and use also.
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
5
Put on a splash of colour Higor and Tara Fiuza arrived in white T-shirts and left covered top-to-toe in colour. They’d been to a free Colour Splash event – and Bay of Plenty residents will get a chance to show their true colours at Colour Splash Mount Maunganui, held in Coronation Park, on January 30.
Inspired by the festival of Indian antiquity – Holi – Colour Splash is a known as the festival of love and colours, inviting people of all ages to throw handfuls of coloured dyes. “It is like a paint fight with coloured powder,” says event co-organiser Dhruva Reid. The history behind the event stems far back in time, with the carnival of colours finding a detailed description in the Vedic literatures of ancient India. “It’s depicted in sculptures on walls of old temples and a stone inscription belonging to 300 BC found at Ramgarh in the area of Vindhya has mention of Holi in it,” says Dhruva. “Colour Splash is a time to cut loose with renewed energy. It’s a festival of forgiveness and new starts, which aims to generate harmony, togetherness and connection in the society, over-looking age, race and religion.” Dhruva says the colourful event is increasingly celebrated outside India, in many parts of the world, signifying the victory of virtuousness over iniquity. “The intent is to bring the people from all communities and back grounds together to strengthen and deepen the social and spiritual fabric of our country.” “In bygone millennia, natural washable plant and mineral-based dyes were used, such as turmeric, neem, and vermilion. Today, water-based pigments, harmless to grass and skin, are increasingly used.” People are encouraged to wear clothes they don’t mind becoming coloured, as some of the dye might not fully wash out. The free event visits Coronation Park on January 30 from 12pm-5pm. Visit coloursplash.nz Zoe Hunter
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Asbestos now confirmed in the Mount library Tauranga City Council has confirmed the discovery of asbestos at the Mount Maunganui library building. Library staff were informed in December that part of the grounds outside the library was fenced off following the discovery of asbestos in the soil. It is thought to have come from water blasting the building. “This area of soil will be removed once a suitable contractor is available,” says city council
communications manager Aimee Driscoll. “In the meantime, the fence will remain in place.” The asbestos fibres came from the parapet cladding and roof membrane, says Aimee. “The roof membrane and top edge of the parapet cladding were painted before Christmas. This will prevent any further potential asbestos contamination.” “Asbestos was a common building material in NZ and poses no threat if not disturbed.”
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The Weekend Sun
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Cu rt a i n a n d Bli n d A man and his airport
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The boss Ray Dumble on the black top. Photo: Bruce Barnard.
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An unlikely triumvirate running “TRG” – the code for Tauranga City Council’s most successful commercial enterprise – the airport, gateway to the city, gateway to the Bay. An unlikely triumvirate because fat gardener and thin gardener probably don’t know de-icing boots from papi lights, or ailerons from altimeters. But they keep the gateway groomed to a nicety, thank you very much. And they leave all the aeroplane stuff to the man universally known simply as ‘Ray’. Ray is Ray Dumble. He’s a big bear of a man. He would probably hold his own in the Steamers’ engine room. He’s the boss, and his business card reads: Airport Manager. It could also read shrewd operator. Because in 13 years he’s grown the airport business 500 per cent – from a turnover of $1 million in 2002 to $5 million today. “Flourishing,” he says. And TRG has been regional airport of the year twice under his stewardship. Is it all Ray’s doing? “No!” said one industry source. “But he’s a bloody big part of it.” And Dumble’s turned a tidy little surplus of $1.5 million for the city, for you and I – the ratepayers. We don’t get to play with it though. It’s invested
straight back into the business. But with numbers like that, he must be a favourite son in the soggy, sporeridden corridors of Willow Street. That same industry source also told me Ray Dumble and the airport business was sacrosanct – the politicians wouldn’t dare meddle with it. But it could easily have been very different for Ray. And the airport for that matter. “When I first applied for the job, I didn’t even get an interview,” he says. Ray doesn’t mind telling a story at his own expense. Another guy was appointed but never took it up. “I wasn’t even next in line.” He says he basically telephoned and invited himself for an interview when it was re-advertised. “They made it difficult. They gave me 45 minutes to mock up a 10-year development plan.” History tells us he did a good job. “Link 579 cleared TaurangaWellington two at flight level two zero zero, Dotar One departure, Squawk five zero two two.” A Dash 8 pilot is talking gibberish to the tower. They have their own language. It is a language of clarity for safety’s sake. When the towers speaks it is parroted back by the pilot. No room for misunderstanding. It was a tongue in which Ray himself was once fluent – because in a previous life, he was an airline pilot. But he got a bad back. To read the full story, visit www.theweekendsun.co.nz; Search ‘A man and his airport’.
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I recently unsubscribed from an email newsletter because it suggested ways in which I could ‘be more like Karlie Kloss’ in 2016. Why would I want to do that? Karlie Kloss is a world-famous model – beautiful, stunning and abundant in the appearance department. But that’s her and I’m me (so far from the reaches of modeldom), so why would I aspire to try and look like a superhuman beauty when it’s never going to happen. And besides, it’s a shame that Topshop (the sender of the newsletter) thinks that that’s what I should be aspiring towards. I have every respect and love of fashion and beauty. That’s why I subscribe to these things in the first place. But I want to be inspired by design, art, trends and the ways in which fashion and clothes can make the best of who I am. It’s a worry that Topshop thinks
women want to look like someone other than themselves. But the reality is that many women do spend time trying to look like someone else. Life is surely about becoming the best and most fulfilled version of yourself, not someone else. We can be inspired and taught by others to bring out the unique qualities we have in ourselves. But to try and be someone else is simply negative – if only for the fact that it’s simply impossible. Stop looking out the window, or you’ll crash. Focus on your own unique path, how you can be the best you can be, rather than trying to aspire to be like someone else. As Oscar Wilde famously said, “Be yourself, everyone else is taken.” That’s my only resolution for 2016.
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
7
Riding in style, safety and silence Three-year-old Finley Reece leans forward, pulls back the throttle and grins from ear to ear. He’s never put foot to bicycle pedal before, but he’s already a pro at riding the new electric motorbikes at the Amped Motorbike Park in Papamoa. “He’s having a blast,” says dad Matt, who co-owns the business with Craig Hunter. Craig’s children Sam, 7, and Zac, 6, are also out riding on what’s said to be New Zealand’s first electric motorbike track. Owning the business makes Matt and Craig the coolest dads in the world. It says it on their business cards. They’re the sole importers and suppliers of the new generation, high-quality European-built electric motorbikes available for rent at the park. The Amped Motos are small enough for three to 12-year-olds to ride, but strong enough to carry 100kg.
“We say if kids can ride a balance bike easy enough, they can ride on one of these,” says Matt. “But they’re more than a toy, they go foot for foot with a petrol powered motorbike.” Finley’s going full bore on the track but there’s no loud growling of an engine. The roar’s been replaced with a whisper. That’s because these bikes are totally electric. There’s no clutch or gears – just a throttle, on and off switch and a safety lanyard which operates like an emergency stop. “You just plug them in to charge and away they go,” says Craig. “They don’t spill oil when they’re lying down and there’s no hot exhaust pipes.” “We call them ‘mother and neighbour friendly’,” says Matt. “It teaches the kids balance, throttle control and risk awareness. “We enforce the fact that it is a real little motorbike, so the kids themselves have to take a certain amount of responsibility.” There’s a low humming sound as Finley pulls up beside Dad. “How was that buddy?” There’s no reply, just an ear-to-ear grin that stayed there for the rest of the afternoon. Visit Amped Motorbike Park at 176 Parton Road, or see the Amped Motos, Electric Motobikes NZ Facebook page. See these tearaway tots (and reporter Zoe) in action at www.theweekendsun.co.nz to watch an exclusive video. Zoe Hunter
Finley Reece, 3, races around. Photo: Tracy Hardy.
Make a quick online check before you drive away “Picking up your mouse or your smartphone before you pick up your keys – and planning your journey – could save you a lot stress and unnecessary time on the road,” says New Zealand Transport Agency journey manager Nigel D’Ath. He’s advising Bay of Plenty motorists to start their journey online and plan ahead to avoid
delays as road works season ramps up this month. The warmer, dryer weather during the next five months means NZTA work crews will be out in force, working on major projects. Roadwork sites will present drivers with speed restrictions and other traffic management issues during the summer season,
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so make sure you allow extra time for travelling, says Nigel. “Checking out the NZTA’s website before packing up the car can help people choose the best routes and times to travel.” Readers can also check www. sunlive.co.nz which has regular traffic work information for throughout the Bay of Plenty.
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Friday 15 January 2016
New research on local sea lettuce
Bay of Plenty Regional Council is hoping new research will assist ongoing work to reduce sea lettuce nuisance for Tauranga visitors and residents. Tauranga Harbour projects manager Bruce Gardner says the council is investing $210,000 a year to support research led by the University of Waikato Coastal Chair of Science and local PhD students. Sea lettuce is a naturally occurring algae that’s native to New Zealand. Its growth is mainly influenced by coastal currents, nutrient levels, water temperature and water clarity. BOPRC has warned Western Bay of
Plenty residents to expect increased levels of sea lettuce this summer due to long-term trends which show the largest blooms coincide with the El Nino weather patterns which are forecast this year. Bruce says the research is just one component of BOPRC’s threepronged approach to sea lettuce management. Sea lettuce concerns should be reported to BOPRC’s Pollution Hotline on 0800 884 883 or Tauranga City Council on 07 577 7000. Further information about sea lettuce in Tauranga Harbour, see www.boprc.govt.nz/sealettuce
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The Weekend Sun
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Age is just a number Eric de Lautour is a fast runner. “Faster than anyone else my age,” the 95-year-old says with a chuckle. He’ll be the oldest competitor of the Waikato Bay of Plenty Masters Athletics championships at Tauranga Domain Reserve on January 16-17. Does he want to win? “I always win at being the oldest one.” Eric runs almost every day for about an hour from his Bethlehem home. “I start off walking and finish up with a few sprints. I go up Orange Lane and I can run through a park which is a 5km circuit. “There’s not a flat in it – it’s up and down. Stirling Gate Hill is quite a challenge.” A hill is a challenge, but a 1500m sprint isn’t? Apparently not. “In my age group I’m number one in the 800m and 1500m internationally,” says Eric. “That was after competing at Rarotonga in the Oceania games in October.”
He’s being modest. Eric is world number one in the 800m and 1500m run, world number three in the 400m run and 200m dash, and ranked world number four in the 100m dash. He’s New Zealand’s fastest in all five categories. Waikato Bay of Plenty Masters Athletics president Murray Clarkson expects about 25 masters athletes competing in the championship events including hammer throw, discus, shot put, javelin, long jump, hurdles and more. “Some athletes use this weekend’s championships to prepare for the national competition in Dunedin this February.” Murray says masters athletics provides good camaraderie for the athletes. “The main purpose is to keep active and to bring a group of people together with a common interest.” The Waikato Bay of Plenty Masters Athletics championships is at Tauranga Domain Reserve on January 16-17 from 9am each day. Zoe
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World record holder Eric de Lautour. Photo: Tracy Hardy.
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Friday 15 January 2016
9 Carolyn Hogg with daughter Ruby, seven, and pup Summer.
The day Summer did a runner It was the day the dog, the puppy, came home. Summer, the Cocker Spaniel, was weak, lame and hungry after a week in the bush evading searchers. It was like scenes from ‘The Incredible Journey’. There was wailing, tears and eight-month-old Summer was safe. “Starving, of course,” says breeder Carolyn Hogg, “so I was up every two hours overnight feeding her small amounts.” It’s a storybook outcome to a distressing week for Carolyn, her daughter Zoe and a puppy. But it’s also a story about people, many of them complete strangers, affected by a family’s anxiety, the need to find a puppy and to get it safely home. “It was the most amazing thing about this whole week,” says Carolyn. “Whenever I started to lose hope, someone, and often a complete stranger would txt or stop me and offer words of encouragement. It kept me going.” The story of collaboration, of people pulling together, began two weeks ago. Summer belongs to Carolyn’s daughter Ruby. But it was her sister Zoe who took Summer to a dog show at Waipuna Park, Welcome Bay. The dog got a fright, got loose and took off into wetlands. The next day Carolyn is on Facebook and inviting people to go for a walk to look for Summer.
“She is shy so may not come to you,” Carolyn warns. They do. Complete strangers. “Please keep looking,” implores Carolyn. There are sightings over the next couple of days, first thing in the morning. So Carolyn invites locals to join an hour-long stake-out “to flush Summer from hiding”. Again people turn out in numbers to help, to support. There’s a posse but they are unsuccessful. “Thanks James, Laura and Tegan for your help,” posts Carolyn. People are touched and responsive to the predicament of the Hogg family. “But I’m feeling pretty down,” Carolyn says on Facebook after five days of fruitless return trips from their home in Rotorua. “However you [Facebook] and Welcome Bay people are amazing.” The next day Carolyn and Zoe are overwhelmed by two further spontaneous acts of kindness and compassion. Sheena offers use of a campervan so the Hoggs can stay over. And yet another couple, Patrixa and Lee, who live nearby, offer them somewhere to park up. Despite that support, hope is ebbing. She posts on Facebook that “sightings are infrequent. And whenever Summer is spotted she runs and hides.” The hardest part for Carolyn was calling it quits each day. To read the full story, visit www.theweekendsun.co.nz; Search ‘The day Summer ran away’. Hunter Wells
Where to walk your best friend around the Bay Some dogs can go anywhere. Bona-fide guide dogs, certified hearing ear dogs, companion dogs certified by the Top Dog Companion Trust, and specified agency dogs on active service have free access to go where they want. But your SPCA-rescued pup is not as lucky. However, there are plenty of places you can spend quality festive time with the canine without getting slapped with
a fine. You can exercise your dog almost anywhere in Tauranga as long as it is under control, including most parks. Exceptions include McLaren Falls Park, all Mauao base and summit walks, the Elms Reserve, Moturiki (Leisure) Island, and the Papamoa Hills Park. Adding the dog as a member to your beach cricket team is possible; but again, there are exceptions. Dogs are not allowed
on the Mount Main Beach from Moturiki Island to Mauao, Omanu Beach within 200m of the Omanu Surf Club premises, or on Papamoa Beach within 200m of the Papamoa Surf Club premises, or anywhere along Pilot Bay. While regulations often allow dogs to run free, owners must carry a leash at all times. Dogs must be leashed when walking near a public road to ensure it is under complete control.
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Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
10 Head of the Saxon, defender of York, Richard Lees with marauding attackers Elisey Kobzev and Maddie Knibbs. Photo: Tracy Hardy.
Take a trip back to medieval times Hear ye, hear ye! All ye subjects of the Bay of Plenty are hereby summoned to revel in the most wondrous festivities of the 2016 New Zealand Medieval Faire next week.
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Run by Baldaquin Incorporated Society of NZ, take a trip through time to an age of Romans, Vikings, English Knights and wild barbarian hordes at the Tauranga Racecourse from January 22-24. Faire co-ordinator Andria Goodlife says on offer will be a range of medieval activities and workshops, an artisan marketplace, living history displays and encampments – and battle re-enactments! “We’ll be celebrating the 866 Siege of York by a Viking army led by Halfdan and Ivar the Boneless and also hoping to
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re-enact the Battle of Hastings in 1066,” says Andria. “This year we’re expecting anywhere up to 180 reenactors, traders and living historians taking part in the faire, which is very special as it’s a rare to get that many people all in one place at one time.” It begins next Friday with the Squire School and Princess Party for children where the young ones can learn about medieval times in a fun and interactive way. Then proceedings go up a notch on Saturday and Sunday with living history displays, tournaments and competitions including archery, siege artillery, beardedness, combat and dance. An artisan traders market will also be up and running at the faire with a range of stalls offering high quality handmade goods, including some which have been created using authentic medieval techniques.
A re-enactor herself, Andria says the faire is about celebrating history because if you don’t know where you’ve been “then you’ll never know where you’re going”. “I like the connection with people who were my ancestors and using my hands to make, create, fashion and fix things,” she explains. Andria is also an experienced combatant, who is handy with a quarterstaff and confesses to enjoying the rush of adrenaline that comes with battle. “Especially when you’ve been skirmishing with someone equally skilful and you then manage to outwit them and land a blow.” But what about being on the receiving end of a strike? “I don’t mind getting hit, it makes me laugh!” she says – laughing. For more information visit: nzmedievalfaire2016.webs.com
THE N I L E V A R T
David Tauranga
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
11
On board for new adventure Tauranga chess enthusiasts will have the opportunity to learn and enjoy the game from two of New Zealand’s best chess players. Serious chess players from around the country will recognise the names of Bob and Viv Smith between the both of them they have represented New Zealand a staggering 26 times. Starting on Monday (January 18) the pair will run the Mount Chess Club, Tauranga’s first daytime chess club and as Bob puts it, “the only one in the area to offer full length chess games”. It’s the brainchild of twice New Zealand Champion Bob and his wife Viv, a 10-times New Zealand Women’s Champion. They also have many decades of experience in organising chess clubs and events. Bob is a former New Zealand Chess Federation President, while Viv has a New Zealand Order of Merit for her work in chess. “A daytime chess club seems like an ideal way to use our knowledge
for the benefit of the community,” Bob says. “Chess is not only a fascinating game but is also great for keeping your brain sharp as you get older, helping to ward off problems such as Alzheimer’s Disease.” The Smiths believe a daytime club will be a hit with those who no longer feel like driving out at night to play chess. Their new club also has the distinction of being the only one in Tauranga where people can play chess at a standard time control – the slower rate favoured by the World Chess Federation. “Typically games will last between two and three hours,” says Bob. “That provides more time for serious thought, produces better games and gives the players more satisfaction.” The couple will provide all the sets and chess clocks for the new club. All intending players need to do is turn up on Monday afternoons from 1pm at the St Thomas More Church, 17 Gloucester Rd, Mount Maunganui (opposite Bayfair). The weekly fee of $3 includes afternoon tea. Greg Taipari
Fishing means phishing when it’s online Summer is a time for more fishing – and also for more phishing. Phishing is the practice of sending fraudulent emails claiming to be from trustworthy companies to convince you to reveal passwords and credit card numbers online. But it’s not just emails – Skype is another rich phishing ground for fraudsters. The good thing about avoiding Skype scams is, a lot of them are the same. The contact will be a nice ‘white
English’ sounding name such as Richard William, Tom Butler, or John Symons. The photo, for some reason, will always be of a man in a military uniform in front of a US or UK flag. Even if your privacy settings only allow contact from people in your Contact List, the Generals still get through. Do not be tempted to reply to them. Click Decline, then tick Block and Report as Spam in the pop up box, then click decline again.
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Join Chelsea Winter, Celebrity Cook and Dedicated Foodie, on this specially created Trafalgar guided holiday of Italy. Chelsea will be instore on the 28th of January to tell you all about the journey and her love of Italy and its food, wine and experiences. Come and enjoy some complimentary drinks and nibbles and find out how you can join her on a once in a lifetime journey.
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Bob and Viv Smith, both experienced chess players, are starting a new club. Photo: Bruce Barnard.
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The Weekend Sun
Cheating the cheats: Get scam savvy “How did they get my name? And how did they get my address?” Was it through entering legitimate online competitions? Some pointed questions from an indignant Siobhan Carpenter of Tauranga after being targeted by international scamsters. “They also addressed it to 8/43H and I don’t actually use the ‘H’ when I write our address.” The envelope arrived in her letterbox from Malaysia. It contained a glossy brochure from what purported to be a travel company called Winter Rose Holidays. The vision statement tells Siobahn she is, ‘our utmost priority and we challenge ourselves to bring you the perfect holiday’. It also tells Siobahn she is the winner of a competition that she never entered. But to claim her $US 165,000 prize she is obliged to provide, ‘required information for further verification’. The alarms bells immediately rang with Siobhan, and now they’re ringing at Consumer New Zealand. Chief executive Sue Chetwin says, “In reality these are fraudsters snooping around for bank account details and other personal information.” Siobahn is not the only target. This is a widespread scam involving travel
companies with names such as Glorious Moment Vacation, Humble Glory Travel, and Spirit Seven Travel. When you contact the company to claim your prize you are asked to pay a fee, ‘to cover Government taxes or any other mandatory costs’. The fee can be several thousand dollars. Not surprisingly, you don’t see your winnings. “And you lose your money,” says Sue. There have also been complaints about calls from computer technicians claiming to be from Spark or Microsoft. Various ploys are used in an attempt to extract personal information or gain remote access to PCs. There are a number of ways you can stay scam savvy: • When buying online, ensure the billing process is secure (https:// and a padlock symbol in the URL). • Make sure the company has a physical address and phone number. • Use the Companies Register at companies.govt.nz to see if the company exists. • Beware of cold callers promising bargains or instant riches. Legitimate companies don’t do this. • If you think you have been scammed, call the police. • If you have inadvertently handed over your personal information, contact your bank and suspend your account. Fortunately Siobahn Carpenter was immediately awake to the Winter Rose Holidays rort. The company was forecasting a revenue of $7,000,000 this year. But not one cent of it is Siobahn’s money. Winners & losers: Siobhan Carpenter is the latest target of a competitionwinning scam.
The Weekend Sun
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Friday 15 January 2016
Friday 15 January 2016
The Government says schools will be able to offer two credits towards NCEA level 1 for passing the learner licence theory test. Four credits will be offered for NCEA level 2 for passing a restricted licence and an additional two credits at the same level for gaining
a full licence. Education Minister Hekia Parata says too many people are missing out on jobs because they can’t drive and too many are going into the court system for driving without a licence. Hekia says schools aren’t required to teach students to drive but could choose to incorporate the theory test into their Year 11 English programme if they wanted to. The actual testing will still be carried out by relevant licensing agents.
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Removing the risk of getting a job that’s not quite up to your standard, Desmar Cleaning Service’s policy is if you’re not happy with it, and they can’t fix it, you don’t pay for it.
field that requires considerable experience and training to produce superb results.” Desmar Cleaning Services also offers builder’s cleaning, giving a newly built home a thorough once-over to ensure move in day is as easy as putting the cups in the cupboard and putting Owner Mark Jensen has been in the industry your feet up. for 17 years and is dedicated to providing “We will go in and clean up after the a quality service for commercial and builders – the shavings, plastic wraps, residential jobs. appliances, etc. You go in and you “We can take on any task – from don’t do anything – all the cleaning ceiling cleaning to floor care and is done, including the windows.” maintenance. We are specialists in Take the hassle out of your cleaning stripping, sealing and polishing of with Desmar Cleaning Service’s 100 vinyl flooring with more than 18 years’ Mark Jensen, owner of Desmar Cleaning Services. per cent guarantee. experience. This is a very specialised
Passenger service businesses under review People can make submissions on a newly released consultation paper that looks at options for new rules for passenger services such as taxis, private hires, shuttles, and ridesharing. Earlier this year the Government initiated the small passenger services review to ensure regulations for the sector were both fit for purpose and flexible enough to accommodate new technologies. Transport Minister Simon Bridges says the review found the
regulations, established in the late-1980s, need updating due to changes in technology, the range of services now offered and changing consumer expectations. “Technology, such as smartphones and apps, are really changing the range of services on offer and the way they operate. “The proposed options set out how to simplify the regulations and ensure they are fit for purpose, accommodate new technologies and maintain the safety of
passengers and drivers.” Associate Transport Minister Craig Foss says the Government is a strong supporter of innovations that enable all NZers and their businesses to enjoy the benefits of new technology. “Before the Government makes a decision about the appropriate level of regulation, we’re seeking feedback.” Submissions close February 12, 2016. For more information, see www.transport.govt.nz/spsreview
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NCEA credits for passing licence From April 1, 2016, students who pass their driver licences will be able to gain credits toward a future career.
The Weekend Sun
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Friday 15 January 2016
Friday 15 January 2016
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Plan for trouble-free fun Bay of Plenty Police is advising people to tell them about their house parties to make it easier to sort out any issues that may arise. Some areas in New Zealand, including the Bay of Plenty, have introduced party registers. Registration means Police are aware of the party and have a record of who to speak to; making it easier for them to help sort any issues that arise.
Anyone who registers also receives a helpful pack with useful tips and tactics to help an event run smoothly. Even if you live in an area that doesn’t have a party register, you can always notify your local Police station so they are able to keep an eye on things. Whether you are a host or a guest, Police encourage you to have a plan and stay safe.
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The Weekend Sun
Keeping cool on a budget Believe it or not, summer is here! And while that can bring with it glorious days spent in the great outdoors, it can make time spent at home rather unappealing. While an air conditioner is an energy efficient, unobtrusive and convenient way to keep the rooms crisp and comfortable during those hot summer nights, give this modern technology a helping hand with these low to no cost solutions to keeping your house at a reasonable temperature.
NO-COST SOLUTIONS
1. Draw blinds or curtains to keep sunlight out during the hottest hours of the day, especially on windows that get direct or reflected sun. Some window shades and roller blinds are designed to let you see out, but they still block most of the direct rays. 2. Turn off unnecessary lights and electrical appliances – this reduces a home’s heat load. 3. When cooking keep windows open, put lids on saucepans and use an extractor fan to reduce steam and heat. 4. Ventilate – keep doors or windows open at opposite ends of the house to create a through-draught, or cross ventilation.
LOW-COST SOLUTIONS 1. Install safety catches on your windows so you can leave them open all day, even when you’re out. 2. Install thermally lined blinds or curtains on the sunniest windows, to control the amount of heat a room receives.
3. Investigate the price of a shade sail (some start at just $50) to protect outdoor areas – it will also reduce the amount of sun that gets into the room that leads to that outdoor area, and so help keep the temperature down inside the home. 4. If you have a heat pump with heating and cooling functions, try to use the fan-only or dehumidifier options to cool your house. The cooling function will use more energy and should only be necessary on the hottest days. 5. Use natural resources. Vines, trees, and shrubbery are very useful of keeping direct sunshine off the house walls and roof, and they actually work to cool the air, as well. Select trees and shrubs that lose their leaves in the winter so the sun can shine through when one wants some free solar heating.
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
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Some pointers to purchasing Buying a home – it’s a time for cool heads. It’s a time for smarts. It is not a time for high emotion and rash decision making. Market experts have some pointers. Don’t move your money about six months out from buying a home. Don’t mess with your credit profile. Banks want to know you are reliable and want a complete paper trail so they can give you the best loan available. Be pre-approved. Being pre-approved means the bank or lender has looked at all your details and they’ve let you know how much you can afford and how much they will lend. That gives you buying power. Don’t try to time the market or figure out the best time to buy. It’s impossible game. The best time to buy is when you find your perfect house and you can afford it. Bigger isn’t always better. The largest house appeals to a smaller catchment of buyers and you never want to limit potential buyers when re-selling. The worst
house in the best street still applies because the worst house per square foot will always trade for more than the biggest house. You are buying a house, not dating it. Falling in love with a house might force you into a dud financial decision. Instincts are always better than emotions because instincts will tell you that you are getting a good house for good value. Invest in a home inspector. It’s not a cost but an investment because a few hundred up front could save you tens of thousands. And at the auction an opening bid should be a realistic one. Respect the seller. The bid should be based on what you can afford and what you really believe the property to be worth. And don’t forget to stalk the neighbourhood before that opening bid. Know your prospective home in all its moods – first thing in the morning and last thing at night. Drive by at all hours of the day. Do some serious commuting to all points – know how far it is to everywhere. That will affect how you feel about a house six weeks down the track.
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Pass me another accent note, darling I was re-assured I would love my present. That’s always dangerous territory. I recall unwrapping the present under expectant gazes – all the time gearing up for an appropriate reaction. It was a cushion. “No, it’s not,” I am told. “It’s a piece of art. Well, it is a cushion but it’s an artwork.” And not an inexpensive cush... I mean, artwork either. $156. That’s nearly $160 you kick on the floor when a man prostrates himself on the sofa in full cricket watching mode. You do not need cushions to watch cricket on TV. Isn’t that what couches are for? Sitting on and lying on. Like floors are for standing on, beds for lying in, paths for walking on and cars for driving. And it’s impossible to do any of those things properly when you are infested and even over-run by cushions – no matter how pretty they are, no matter how expensive an artwork they be. Why clutter a couch needlessly and to the point it is no longer useable for the purpose intended? I read somewhere “cushions form an accent note in a room”. But I can’t reconcile spending $4000 on a couch as a receptacle for “accent notes”. The author of that story also had a cushion cynic in tow. He describes cushions as “wodges of foam that get in the way of him sitting on the couch”.
That says it all. The average guy will never develop a passion for cushions. He will never see blowing a wad of cash on hideously mismatched cushions as being crucial to interior design of his home. They will not make him a happier or better person. I know – I have enjoyed countless cold investigations on CI without the assistance of cushions or “accent notes”. And when I spill my tipple it’s never over an artwork. Life is simpler and more comfortable without cushions. It’s not that I am ungrateful for my present. It’s a fine big square black and white cushion emblazoned with a hibiscus. It was dragged home from overseas with love. So that’s my take on this cushion – a token of affection, of love, not of comfort nor necessity. Cushions equal clutter.
Jim Bunny
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Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
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Building consents up in the Bay A total of 227 new dwelling consents valued at a combined $68 million were granted across the Bay of Plenty in November of last year.
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Mt Maunganui: 91 Newton St, (07) 572 0044 Tauranga: 47 Waihi Rd, (07) 578 4169 Conditions: Buy Resene premium paints, wood stains, primers, sealers, wallpaper, decorating accessories and cleaning products and get the GST (15% off the full retail price) off at your Resene ColorShop and participating resellers. Excludes Crown, trade and industrial products, PaintWise levy and account sales. Paint offers also available at participating Mitre 10 MEGA and Mitre 10 stores. Not available in conjunction with any other offer. Offer closes 3 February 2016.
Figures released by Statistic New Zealand earlier this week show this number rose by about 50 per cent on the 114 new dwellings consented, valued at $38m, back in November 2014. The Bay of Plenty experienced the second largest increase of the country’s 16 regions, trailing behind Wellington’s 328 consented new dwelling – up by 224 on November 2014. In total, 26,793 new dwellings were consented across New Zealand over a 12 month period ending in November 2015 – the highest it’s been in more than a decade. Business indicators manager Clara Eatherley says the 2831 new dwellings consented in New Zealand last November was also the largest number granted in a single month since March 2005’s total of 3027. “November is usually a big month for residential building consents and 2015 was no exception,” says Clara. “Dwelling consents were up 17 per cent from the
year before, driven by increases for houses 7 consents, gures show 22 ere granted fi nd and retirement village la ea Z Statistics New million, for new houses w units.” 15. lued at a $68 of Plenty in November 20 va While a total of $1.6 in the Bay billion of building work was consented in November – comprising $1.1b of residential work, and $531m of nonresidential work. “This is the first time that residential building consents have passed the billion dollar mark,” Clara adds. rein in development contributions, Building and Housing cut compliance costs and invest in Minister Dr Nick Smith says the latest improved sector productivity. Our figures were encouraging and confirmed new $435 million HomeStart support the success of the Government’s policies package will help 90,000 people into to grow housing supply. home ownership over five years.” He says the Government is freeing The next steps in the Government’s up more land faster through Housing programme include consulting on a new Accords it has with councils around the Urban Development National Policy country, which includes the Tauranga Statement, and a reform of the Resource City and Western Bay of Plenty Management Act to address long-term Regional councils. issues affecting housing supply and “We have initiatives in place to afforability. David Tauranga constrain building materials costs,
DIY Dad strikes: Home alone horror Wake up, get dressed, pour a cup of tea and eat breakfast. That’s a usual morning ritual for most people. But for one Tauranga dad, a typical morning ritual goes like this: wake up, get dressed, pour a cup of tea, eat breakfast, and paint the house. We won’t name names, because we think he got slightly pink-cheeked from The Weekend Sun’s last ‘DIY Dad’ article, the one when his wife came home to the kitchen sink ripped out. But his disastrous DIY duds are becoming more adorably amusing and more outrageous – and too humorous not to print. A handy man at heart, this DIY Dad tends to think with his tools sometimes and it can get him into some serious trouble. The latest do-it-yourself venture resulted in a completely oblivious wife coming home to a half
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painted house. “What did you do today dear?” she asks DIY Dad. He has that cheeky look in his eye again, the one his wife knows means trouble. DIY Dad chuckles as his wife begins searching the house for another one of hubby’s ‘great ideas’. She’s outside now and there’s a momentary pause as she eyes the different coloured exterior. Her home was cream coloured when she left for work this morning, now the bottom half is painted gunmetal grey. “What happens if I don’t like the colour?” she asks. “I’ll fix it,” replies DIY Dad. He will, or he won’t. Maybe he’ll get to it another day, after he slaps a quick coat of paint on the interior, or builds a new outdoor table out of the firewood. DIY Dad keeps things exciting. It’s always a surprise coming home to DIY dad, except his wife doesn’t like DIY Dad’s surprises. ha painted hom lf Do you have a DIY dad with e projects always on the go? We want to hear about your dad’s disastrous DIY duds. Email your stories and photos to editorials@ thesun.co.nz, or post them on our Facebook page, Zoe Hunter www.facebook.com/theweekendsun
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Friday 15 January 2016
Driveway programme a success for safer homes Housing New Zealand is set to exceed its driveway safety programme target, with improvements due to be made to nearly 14,000 properties across New Zealand by the end of June 2016. The programme, which began in 2013, aims to reduce the risk of children being run over in the driveways of state homes, by installing fencing, self-closing gates with child-resistant latches, speed restriction signs, speed humps and convex mirrors where appropriate. Housing New Zealand’s chief operating officer Paul Commons says the $30 million programme originally had the target of inspecting and making improvements at 13,000 properties where there are young children living at them. “What we’ve found is that the interventions we’ve had to make on average are not as extensive or expensive as we had first thought, therefore we’ve been able to complete more of them. As a result, we’re on target to complete more than the 13,000 properties.” Housing New Zealand supports Safekids Aotearoa’s programme to improve awareness of how to reduce the risk of driveway safety
run-overs, by providing driveway safety advice for tenants and also through a guide for private property owners on how to ensure their own driveways are as safe as possible. The spring and summer months are traditionally the deadliest time for driveway run overs. Safekids Aotearoa, ACC, Starship Foundation, Evan Christian, Housing NZ, Auckland Council and NZ Post have joined up to bring you five tips that can reduce the risk of a child being run over in your home driveway. 1. Use safety gates. The warm weather means doors are often left open, making it easier for children to sneak out unnoticed. Consider using safety gates if you have toddlers and doors that lead to a driveway. 2. Be vigilant around meal times. Most run overs happen late in the mornings and early evenings when parents are busy preparing meals, arriving home or leaving the property. Ensure a responsible person is assigned to watch over young ones during these times. 3. Have a fenced play area. Toddlers are more at risk of being involved in a driveway run over because they move much faster than we think. Having a play area separated from a driveway in addition to supervision can help.
Solving your renovation problems Sue is the first-line of service in the Service with a smile, a friendly presence and a familiar face – the family family business, and her approachable manner means you’ll get to speak with business of Renovation & Maintenance Solutions are more than just their name. someone who knows your lingo and can While renovating homes and providing help field your questions with ease. Meanwhile, licenced builder Tony on-going home maintenance checks will provide a professional service and and repairs are their aim, their numberinsure that one priority you enjoy the is delivering process and stand-up deliver a top customer service quality job. to their clients. He has been in “Tauranga has the trade since a lot of older he left school customers and and experienced people living in all areas of on their own, maintenance and sometimes and renovation they find it hard Owners Tony and Sue Grubner. work. ringing up a Both have builder,” says an eye for detail – which means owner and director Sue Grubner. “We the hands-on pair will go the extra tailor our business for those who might mile for your home renovations and find it difficult to call on a tradie for maintenance. assistance.”
4. Slow down and always check. Even if you don’t have children, be careful around driveways-- It’s summer and children are out and about. 5. Don’t rely on cameras and mirrors. Mirrors and cameras are useful tools for parking, but do not give you a 360 degree view from the driver’s seat. Don’t rely on tools—walk around the car and make sure children are supervised by a responsible adult.
Housing New Zealand has invested $30 million into keeping Kiwi kids safe at home.
Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
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STAFF CAR PARK (no time limit)
ENTRANCE TO STAFF CAR PART (no time limit)
Path
to main reception
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MAIN RECEPTION
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and ! wrap
Friday 15 January 2016
Friday 15 January 2016
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The Weekend Sun
health & beauty Making supplement jargon simple – and fun A Tauriko-based business is taking a unique – and humorous approach – to the serious subject of our health and wellbeing.
taurine, CoQ10 and DHEA 7-Keto for an energy boost), ‘My Jeans Have Shrunk’ (green coffee and guarana for weight management) and ‘I’m Surrounded by Idiots’ (stress relief ), it is clear these are not your traditional type of health products. Health House’s new brand, Helfee, is a Made in Health House’s Tauriko factory, range of “serious supplements for the not Mike says the state-of-the-art facility boasts so serious”. The brain child of Mike Coory, “temperature and humidity controlled clean director of the Tauranga business, these rooms, and modern blending and capsulating natural health supplements are aimed equipment”. at getting young and the young at heart “From start to finish we control every step involved in taking care of themselves one of the process, so you can be confident of the capsule at a time. highest quality. With imported products “We think it is important there is sometimes a risk that what the to start with preventative label says may not match the contents. health care before problems “Being made in NZ means strict arise,” explains Mike. manufacturing standards are “While you can get the guaranteed and if you visit our shop majority of your vitamins in Tauriko you can see and many minerals from the products actually food, it is not always being made. Having possible to get all of our call centre and them. We think it is shop right here in better to try a low risk, Tauranga means you more natural approach can speak to someone to health care before local that understands going down the your needs.” pharmaceutical path.” For more information With names such as Health House shop manager or to order online, visit ‘Kick up the Backside’ Maree Rood with their survival kit. the website www.helfee.co.nz (a natural blend of caffeine,
Time for self-discovery in the New Year
SERIOUS
The New Year often calls for a ‘new self ’, but change isn’t always easy. This year, why not try the spontaneous way of bringing a change in yourself? Meditation is an ancient practice that brings inner peace, improves concentration, reduces stress and helps lead a balanced lifestyle – all of which can greatly impact on your general wellbeing. Dr Tina Chiang (25), who practices Sahaja Yoga meditation, says, “It has changed my perspective on many aspects of life. It has helped me become more positive and to overcome various challenges. “When you discover peace within, it is a miracle. You realise that you don’t need to turn to materialism, substances or other temporary means – the solution comes from yourself.” David Sharp, who has been running Sahaja Yoga meditation classes in Tauranga for the last 14 years, says, “The benefits of meditation are that people, young and old, can at will, switch off their mind and negative thoughts.”
SUPPLEMENTS FOR THE NOT SO SERIOUS
www.helfee.co.nz • 0800 140 141 Health House Shop - 1 Whakakake Street, Tauriko KIWI MADE
Sahaja Yoga meditation is a simple meditation technique that takes meditators to a state of ‘thoughtless awareness’. This state is known to be achieved with awakening the dormant Kundalini energy and balancing the Chakras. Chiang and her fellows will be exhibiting this technique and helping Tauranga’s local community understand this simple and valuable practice. Tina is hosting a Sahaja Yoga Medication workshop on Thursday, January 21 at 7.45pm, Papamoa Community Centre (Mako room)/Library Building, 15 Gravatt Rd. For more information visit www.freemeditationnz.com or call 022 152 9602.
Dr Tina Chiang leads a meditation workshop.
The Weekend Sun
health
& beauty
Friday 15 January 2016
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Take control of your skin Just like the adage: ‘New Year, new you’, the professional and experienced team at Caci Mount Maunganui want you to look and feel your best in 2016.
Nestled among a group of professional services, Caci Mount Maunganui make beauty easy by offering complimentary consultations, interestfree payment options and personalised treatment programmes. Plus, there’s plenty of free parking right outside the door. Experts in appearance medicine, skin rejuvenation and laser hair removal, the team don’t just focus on what’s on top of the skin. They’re there to help resolve all of Bay of Plenty residents’ skin concerns – and achieve great results. Owned by Papamoa husband and wife team Ange and Ross McAinch, the Mount Maunganui Caci clinic on Girven Road offers a range
of skin services including, appearance medicine, Botox, laser hair removal, skin rejuvenation – and a full range of beauty therapy treatments. They also offer Co2 Fractional Laser – one of Caci’s most advanced skin treatments, which is designed to treat advanced signs of ageing encouraging skin rejuvenation. “Our priority is helping clients with their skin concerns, to ensure that you’re going to get the best results,” says Ange. “So we make sure that we’re looking after the whole person and not just your skin.” For confidential, friendly and expert advice, contact the team at Caci Mount Maunganui and book a complimentary consultation today. Sign up to a personalised treatment programme in January with Ange and her expert team at Caci Mount Maunganui and receive one months’ payments free.
LOOK AND FEEL YOUR BEST IN 2016 WITH CACI MT MAUNGANUI The professional and experienced team at Caci Mount Maunganui want you to look and feel your best in 2016.
Silly season keeps ED staff busy Santa wasn’t the only one kept busy with Tauranga Hospital’s Emergency Department treating 2056 people during the Christmas/New Year holiday period. An average of 171 people were treated in a 12-day period, which began on Christmas Day and finished on January 5. New Year’s Day was the busiest with 191 presentations. Clinical director Dr Derek Sage says staff also treated a large number of people for minor ailments and believes the message that “the emergency department is for emergencies” is still not getting through to people. “If a medical problem can wait until a regular working day, or be attended by an alternative source including GPs, pharmacies and dentists, then the advice is to utilise them. “If people feel they need to attend the ED they will be confronted with significant waits to be seen with those who are sickest being seen first.” Dr Sage says the average daily number
More than 2000 people presented to Tauranga Hospital’s Emergency Department over the Christmas/ New Year holiday period. of patients during the holiday period has been steadily increasing, with 140 patients in 2010 and 150 in 2013. Go back to 2002 and ED staff would have expected around 90-115 patients a day. “Now that range is consistently around 140-160 and higher at this time of year. “The community can be very proud of the way the ED and wider hospital staff pulled together to deliver, such a consistently high standard of care during such a busy period.” David Tauranga
Ph 0508 KIWIFRESH (0508 549 437)
At Caci we make beauty easy by offering complimentaryconsultations, interest free payment options and personalised treatment programmes. We are the experts in appearance medicine, skin rejuvenation and laser hair removal.
Sign up to a personalised treatment programme in January with Ange and her expert team at Caci Mt Maunganui and receive 1 month free!* Book your complimentary consultation today. 43 Girven Rd, Mt Maunganui mtmaunganui@caci.co.nz
07 562 0028 mtmaunganui.caci.co.nz
Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
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Preschoolers At-home Uniquely Achieving
Do you need Childcare?
Consider home based childcare with one of our PAUA Educators. Our Educators are supported by qualified teachers who visit regularly. 20 Hours ECE and Work and Income childcare subsidies are also available for those who qualify.
Passionate about Preschoolers?
Are you a Mum (or Nana) at home interested in earning extra income? We are looking for people throughout your region to join our home based education team. PAUA provides training, ongoing support and learning resources. You can set your own hourly rate based on your experience and qualifications.
ph 0800 728 277 www.paua.ac.nz
Adopting grandparents Mrs McGuinness’ face lit up each time her grandchildren visited. A simple gesture, but it brightened her day. The retirement village got a little lonely sometimes. She’d always look forward to a visit from her daughter Shelley and the grandkids. “Mum lived at Metlifecare’s Somervale Retirement Village until she passed away. When I went and saw my mum and took my kids, I saw how much that perked her day up.” But for some residents, family communication is done by phone, in a letter, or by birthday or Christmas cards once a year. “Not many of the residents have family and friends locally, or if they do they don’t have a lot of visits,” says Shelley. So, the children at Olive Tree Education and Care centre have adopted grandparents just across the road. They make a special visit to Somervale each time a resident has a birthday. Shelley, an Olive Tree teacher,
Pre-schoolers, Chardae Bryant, Lennox Sorato, Millie Hathaway and Aidyn Ottesen, assisted by teacher Emmi Tzanakos, sing songs for residents, Roy Johnstone and Ruth McLennan. Photo: Bruce Barnard. says the children make a birthday elderly, and the elderly have got card and wrap up some chocolates the time and the patience to offer in a small silk bag for the birthday the children. We are lucky to be man or woman. across the road from one another.” “They gather around and sing The children have been visiting ‘Happy Birthday’ and sometimes the elderly residents since 2012, a few extra songs,” says Shelley. when Metlifecare’s Somervale Sometimes the residents return Retirement Village team leader the favour. “There is one lady who and diversional therapist Diane sings ‘You Are My Sunshine’.” McLaughlin crossed the street Somervale runs many to speak to Olive Tree’s head programmes to entertain the teacher Philip Brickell. residents, but Shelley says they’re “She was thinking particularly more than willing for the children of residents in the High Care unit, to interrupt their activities. who were often lonely with family “Children have got so much far away, or without the time to energy and happiness to offer the visit very much.” Zoe Hunter
The Village Space starts this term If you have a new baby and are looking to connect with other mothers and share learning about infant development, then the Bethlehem SPACE Group is the place for you.
Lyndsay Morgan
Our Centre Manager is an internationally trained infant care specialist. The Village Tots area offers: • Sensitive individualised care • Peaceful respectful environment • Qualified, experienced staff • Low child-teacher ratios
The Village is the provider of the SPACE programme in Bethlehem. 171B Moffat Road, Bethlehem
(Next door to Décor Garden Centre)
Phone (07) 576-0183 www.villagechildcare.co.nz
Able Auckram enjoys his first experience with paint at Village Space. VILLAGE
SPACE (Supporting Parents and Children’s Education) is a 30-week support group for first time parents with newborn babies. Parents discuss relevant child development and parenting topics, and have play sessions that support their children’s learning. There are opportunities for parents to meet and to get to know one another, discussion and information sharing on relevant child development and parenting topics as well as the opportunity for babies to interact and explore play through a range of experiences. Learn more about your baby through sessions on sleeping, crying and communication, establishing attachment, movement and more from experienced facilitators in a baby-friendly environment. The Village SPACE will start on Thursday,
VOICE With Claire Topping from The Village Childcare
February 11 at the Bethlehem Community Church, Moffat Road, Bethlehem from 9.3011.30am. If you would like further information, please do not hesitate to contact Claire Topping at The Village Childcare Centre for more information on 576 0183 or the SPACE website www.space.co.nz “The value of SPACE for parents is almost immeasurable,” says Sarah Te One, SPACE NZ Trustee. “As a first time parent it’s quite an isolating experience and SPACE brings you out of the home and into a community.”
Looking forward to YOUR future!
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
25
Gaining skills and confidence for life A great CV is essential, and Summerhill A1 Youth Academy can help teenagers looking for something extra to better theirs, while increasing life skills and confidence. The academy offers a Leadership Course for those aged 15-19 years, working in confidence and leadership building, community work and outdoor adventure. Coordinator Garth Collings says, “Our goal is to give Bay of Plenty young people a springboard into a lifetime of confidence.” On completion the participants will be presented with the Summerhill Gold Card. “This will give future employers and educators an online link to the young person’s outstanding character reference, and that’s the point of difference their CV will have over others.” Set on a working farm and public adventure centre in the Papamoa Hills, a lot
of what is done over the course incorporates the outdoors. Activities offered include tramping, an overnight bush sleepover, a high confidence rope course, and options such as car maintenance, strength finder, cooking 101, barista training and gliding. To boost participants’ life skills training, courses are completed including ‘The Seven Great Habits’, ‘Moneywise’ and ‘A Survival Guide for Life’, with 16 top guest speakers on specialised subjects. Participants also undertake eight hours on a community project of their choice. “It’s $900 worth of value for only $100 investment,” says Garth. The course starts Sunday, February 14 and runs for nine Sundays and two Saturdays, finishing on August 14. “Excellent for your CV, unforgettable for you.” Apply today by phone to Garth Collings Summerhill Academy CEO Garth on 027 828 8940 or visit the website, Collings and girls mentor Paige summerhillacademy.co.nz Karolyn Timarkos Marshall. Photo: Tracy Hardy.
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BAY LEARNING ACADEMY A new centre for your Learning needs
Smart employers know the value of older workers As the significant cohort of Baby Boomers start moving into retirement, retaining and employing mature workers will be an increasingly smart solution for businesses in the attraction of skills and talent. A one-day forum was hosted in the Bay of Plenty last year by the Tauranga Chamber of Commerce, Age Concern, and economic development agency Priority One looking at the opportunities and issues of employing mature workers. It also provided tools to help employers and employees undertake the transition
required as a result of the ageing demographic. Keynote speaker AUT Business School Professor of Work and Organisation Tim Bentley says, “The impact of an ageing population on the workforce is one of the top three concerns of industry, but they haven’t yet got their heads around the implications. Being age friendly will be a competitive advantage for organisations, and being engaged in work will be good for older people.” It is likely we will look back and see ‘retirement’ as a 20th century anomaly, with the creation of a different vision of our later years developed in the near future. With people living longer and sometimes experiencing 20-30 years of ‘retirement’, this opens up a whole new space in which to engage in meaningful work and activity, either paid or voluntary. A key message from the forum was that people will continue to live longer, so it is important that this stage of life and work is redefined. Partners in Change principal
consultant Geoff Pearman says, “We have not added decades to life expectancy by simply extending old age. We have opened up a new space partway through the life course – a second and different kind of adulthood that precedes old age. As a result, every stage of life is undergoing change.” One of the most common ways of dealing with a skills shortages is to encourage existing mature-age workers to stay past retirement age. Although retirement-aged workers currently only make up five per cent of the workforce, they will comprise 13 per cent by 2036. This means considering more flexible working arrangements, ensuring jobs are restructured and designed to suit older workers, developing leadership strategies, and succession planning. A recent report from PwC economists on harnessing the power of older workers concluded countries can add billions of dollars to their economy if they follow best practice in harnessing the potential of older workers.
The Workforce Ageing Survey 2014 found workers aged 50 and over are seen as valuable and hardworking by employers, and are regarded as more productive and better in a crisis. “More mature workers tend to require lower levels of training and less supervision, are often more reliable and loyal, and have a strong work ethic.”
STUDENT BEGINNERS CLASS (Year 9 equivalent) $90 per term
Mondays & Wednesdays 4:00pm - 5:30pm
STUDENT INTERMEDIATE CLASS (Year 10 equivalent)
Tuesdays & Thursdays 4:00pm - 5:30pm
$90 per term
STUDENT NCEA LEVEL 1 CLASS Mondays &Wednesdays (Full year course. NCEA credits avail- 4:00pm to 5:30pm able here.) $90 per term
STUDENT NCEA LEVEL 2 CLASS (Full year course. NCEA
Tuesdays &Thursdays 4:00pm to 5:30pm
ADULT CLASS (2 levels)
Tuesdays only 6:30pm to 8:30pm
credits available here) $90 per term $90 per term
THE THECOURSE COURSEFEATURES: FEATURES: ••Values Values ••Leadership Leadership ••Team-building Team-buildinggames games ••Public Publicspeaking speaking ••Business Businessenterprise enterprise ••Culture Cultureand andenvironment environment ••Team Teambuilding buildingweekend weekend …and …andmore more
MANDARIN CORNER * ••Life Lifecoaching coaching ••Gliding Glidingand andflying flying ••First Firstaid aid Job&&study studyopportunities opportunities ••Job ••Inspirational Inspirationalmovies movies &&books books ••Budgeting Budgeting
(a social time to practise your Mandarin) *Gold coin donation appreciated
Wednesdays 6:30pm to 8:30pm
STUDENT NCEA LEVEL 1, 2 & 3 Thursdays only
NCEA credits can be obtained here. 6:00pm to 8:00pm $90 per term (shortened course. Terms 1 & 2
CHILDREN’S CLASS
(Primary & Intermediate age students) $50 per term
only) Saturdays only 1:00pm - 2:30pm
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Focus on migrants’ contribution to Bay Successfully attracting and retaining skilled migrants to the Western Bay of Plenty sub-region is the focus of a new partnership between Tauranga City Council, Western Bay of Plenty District Council, Priority One, and Immigration New Zealand. The four organisations have developed the Western Bay of Plenty Regional Partnership Agreement – a three-year plan to work collaboratively on shared priorities. Tauranga Mayor Stuart Crosby says skilled migrants, investors, and
international students have a “critical role to play in the continued economic growth of the Western Bay of Plenty”. And Western Bay of Plenty District Mayor Ross Paterson agrees, saying strong relationships between local councils and government agencies are immensely important. “This RPA provides a framework from which we can work together to connect the WBOP with the world.” The organisations will share research, information and best attraction and retention practices.
The Weekend Sun
Become skilled in a new language Tauranga’s Chinese Community School, based at Tauranga Girls’ College, is a place where learning Mandarin is possible for everyone, says TGC Principal Pauline Cowens.
language and anyone who wants to learn at as low a cost as possible.” In conjunction with the Chinese Community School, other language classes have also been established, in Japanese, Spanish, and Korean as the Chinese Community school has become the heart of a languages nest at Tauranga Girls’ College. For more information visit www.tgc.school.nz
“As the Chinese language becomes more important in the global economy, the School is a place where more people are taking up the opportunity to enrol.” The school offers on-site lessons in Mandarin and Chinese culture, art, and customs to high school students and adults, as well as children’s classes and an outreach programme to local primary schools. “Mandarin can be a challenging language to learn so encouraging students to study it at an earlier age gives them a better understanding. “Having more Mandarin speakers in New Zealand is crucial for the growing relationship with China and the school provides a great opportunity for people in the region to be able to understand and learn the Chinese culture and also the language.” The school’s programmes are supported by a Mandarin language assistant from The Confucius Institute at Victoria University, an organisation promoting artistic, cultural, and intellectual exchange between China and New Zealand. “The Chinese Community School Keira Moriarty, 9, with the Chinese Community School’s is a community service, delivering to Mandarin Language Assistant Wang Ying. everyone who wants to learn Chinese
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
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Overseas experience well-suited for role The children have grown up and you’ve spent years earning a living. Now it’s time to look forward to life’s next chapter.
Whatever your age, Oxford Aunts may give you the opportunity to fulfil your dreams of an international career if your life experience in nursing or caregiving skills meets their requirements. Established in 1967, Oxford Aunts is a specialist company that provides nurseled live-in homecare. Jill Brayshaw recently returned from the UK after spending time as a live-in carer with the agency and enjoying holidays with family and friends. The Bay of Plenty woman says the rewarding job enables people to continue enjoying life while living overseas, meet people from all walks of life and see the UK countryside, as well as London, Oxford and other cities. “My experience gave me opportunities to work in the beautiful Cotswold area
and in two different cities. I have also enjoyed the friendship of other carers from New Zealand and other countries.” Jill says being a live-in carer is a unique role offering many rewards. “You’re fully supported by an experienced head office team, who offer you flexible live-in work as a caregiver in the UK to suit your availability, lifestyle, working holiday or travel plans. “Oxford Aunts provide free accommodation when you do your induction training, as well as ongoing training and supervision during your assignment.” To become a live-in carer, phone 0800 692 868. Your call will be re-directed to the UK free Jill Brayshaw says being an of charge. Oxford Aunt is a rewarding career.
New Year scholarships now up for grabs It offers an accommodation credit of up to $7000 which will be applied to Halls of Residence fees. Applications close March 11. The University of Waikato Academic Merit School Leavers Scholarship is for New Zealand citizens, permanent residents, or temporary permit holders, or Australian citizens who have achieved the required entry qualifications. It has a value of up to $3000. Applications close February 8. For further information and application forms for these and other scholarships, visit www.waikato.ac.nz/ scholarships. There are 10 awards of $500 for part-time study and 15 of $1000 for full-time study up for grabs in the BoP Polytechnic Study Awards. Applications close January 18. Two BOP Polytechnic Peter Bulfield Memorial Scholarships (Business Administration) are available, with a value up to $750. Applications close May 20. For further information and
application forms for these and other scholarships, visit www.boppoly.ac.nz/ go/scholarships
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Once the silly season is over, and the hangovers dissipate, it’s time for students to look to the future again, and the University of Waikato and Bay of Plenty Polytechnic have many scholarships on offer to help fund study. These include the Bartlett and Buckley Scholarships for schoolleavers, providing support to first-year accounting students at the Waikato Management School with a value up to $1500 for each scholarship. The closing date for applications for both is January 31. The Brian Smith Memorial Entrance Scholarship provides support for two first-year undergraduate students at the Waikato Management School with a value up to $1800. Closing date for applications is January 31. The D.V. Bryant Trust University of Waikato Residential Scholarship is for students with proven academic potential whose financial circumstances are severely constrained.
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The Weekend Sun
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
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How does your garden grow This is the time of year where summer vegetables are in abundance in our backyards, fruit and veg stalls and farmers markets.
cook the haloumi. 3. Cut the haloumi into thick slices and fry in a hot pan until the sides are golden. Add to the zucchini mixture along with torn basil leaves. 4. Serve as a warm side salad at your summer barbecues or top with pan fried fish for a Friday night treat.
My favourite is the good old zucchini, which is so versatile with their mild sweet flavour – not just in savoury dishes, but sweet as well. Make sure you pick them young as they have thinner skins and a much sweeter flavour. You have to keep a HEALTHY close eye on them as 1 packet (250g) MATTERS they tend to double of haloumi With Hayley Marie in size overnight. 10 fresh Locally supported by NZ Farm Shop This delicious basil leaves zucchini and haloumi Method salad just screams summer and I’m excited 1. Coat Zucchinis in a good dollop to share this one with you. of garlic oil and half of the salt and pepper. Place on a very hot grill pan Zucchini and haloumi or barbecue grill (about gas mark 5-6) for about 1 minute each side summer salad (the zucchini should be still firm Ingredients with chargrill lines on them). 6 medium-sized zucchini, Cut into large chunks on angle halved lengthways and place in a bowl. 4 tablespoons garlic oil 2. Toss the cut zucchini with 1 tablespoon flaky sea salt another good drizzle of garlic oil, 1 tablespoon cracked black pepper toasted pinenuts, the remaining 2 tbsp of toasted pine nuts salt and pepper and the zest on Zest of 1 lemon one lemon. Set aside while you
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Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
30
Exposing freshwater fraud There’s growing disquiet about how Government is dealing with freshwater and its future control. Mr Key is on record as saying no-one owns the water and in effect the government administers freshwater, its use and allocation as guardian and trustee for all Kiwis. Those who claim government or its representatives have held secret (confidential) public excluded meetings with tribes to the detriment of all other citizens are correct. Whether government itself does deals with tribes over freshwater or achieves this through pressure placed on Regional Councils to accommodate part-Maori interests is of little moment. The Bay of Plenty Regional Council Draft Regional Water Quality Plan Change is underway and this BOPRC outfit is so beholden to Maori interests, it is a foregone conclusion that part-Maori will receive race-based and co-management preferential treatment to the detriment of other Kiwis. Just checkout BOPRC ‘Fact sheet for Maori’, particularly Paragraph (7) Greater recognition of role of Tangata Whenua on Fresh Water Management and
Paragraph (8) Water Management areas and opportunities to engage with maori. See also ‘Keep Water Kiwi’ advert( visit NZCPR Website) for full details and if you want to scare the living daylights out of yourself, check out ‘Freshwater Iwi Leadership Group’ website. One Cabinet Minister says, “Government has made it plain no-one owns water, but the government has acknowledged that iwi have rights and interests in Freshwater and Government and Iwi Groups are exploring these.” Control of water effectively equals ownership. This should focus locals’ attention on BOP’s National MP’s Bridges, McLay, Muller and Tolley who are not being up-front with citizens. You should be outraged so don’t put up with it, demand a referendum on freshwater – after all it was good enough for Mr Key to spend $27 million on the inane flag change fiasco to divert attention away from TPP, freshwater and economic issues. R Paterson, Tauranga
Double standards in government A man has been found guilty of threatening to put deadly 1080 possum poison into baby formula in shops around NZ. Good work by the law. You will be shocked to learn that the Department of Conservation have published that the killing agent in 1080 is fluoride. Yes, the same fluoride that is in your toothpaste and many water supplies. It is a very effective
possum killing poison, they say! The fluoride in one or two tubes of toothpaste will kill all the possums in a hectare, they claim. Fluoride is listed in your chemist’s poison book with cyanide and strychnine, three deadly killers.
i-Site change a smart move The decision to move the Mount i-Site is logical, particularly after the public outcry when the original i-Site in Salisbury St was moved. As for the new building, I suggest the toilet block on Salisbury St be demolished and the new I-site building build there, to include new upgraded public toilets since most older tourists need a comfort stop before boarding a bus to Hobbiton, Rotorua or other tourist destinations. This strategy removes the outdated public toilet and provides an i-Site with street frontage, which is more convenient for visiting motor tourists and others visiting the Mount, as well as the cruise liner visitors. M Lewis, Mt Maunganui
NZ Health Department claim fluoride, in water supplies, kills dental caries. I believe, if it is strong enough to kill caries, it is strong enough to hurt babies. The law is passing sentence on one man for threatening to poison our babies with fluoride. Why is the same law ignoring the continuous poisoning of our babies, with fluoride, by councils all over New Zealand? K Evans, Tauranga
Lettuce debate! Our hot topic That was a thoughtful and well-researched letter from Phillip Donnell about the benefits of mangroves “Removal of mangroves less clear cut” (WS, December 31). Phillip is absolutely right. Lowlying coastal properties will need protection from rising sea levels and mangroves are nature’s best defence. N Conn, Wellington
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
31
Chippy puts the fear into its consumer
uq
uets
hours, one innings of the ODI. Okay, ‘Watermelon Boy’, the attention seeking 10-year-old at the Melbourne Big Bash was the first. He apparently only ate “the best part of the big fruit.” But he did go viral on the internet. Our man went quietly about his business, pips and all, made his watermelon disappear in record time, kept a scorebook running on the game and also made a few “golds” disappear too. What a man! BARBED WIRE We climb mountains in the Bay of Plenty, we achieve the unachievable, we excel. Just recently we learnt about a study showing us to be the fifth busiest visitors to porn sites in New Zealand. This country’s national average visit time is nine minutes and 37 seconds... but we can add 13 seconds to that average in the Bay? We are exceeded only by Gisborne (don’t they have beaches and fishing?) Hawke’s Bay, Chatham Islands (nothing else to do), and Taranaki. But rugby is still bigger than porn. During the Rugby World Cup Kiwi visitors dropped 47 per cent. And before fingers are pointed at we disgusting males, let it be known the study shows more NZ women enjoy porn than most other countries with 35 per cent of Kiwi visitors to one site being female.
ire
a cricket getaway. Better than Pukekura Park and way better than Seddon Park. And it was added enjoyment sitting with an Aucklander who was lamenting about Eden Park being okay for some things but good for nothing. It certainly is a dog of a cricket ground. BOUQUET It’s amazing how some people can while away holiday time. Like the innovative Waihi Beach wine maker who figured how to inflate a full Swiss 75cm core stability exercise ball without a pump. You simply find a straw small enough to go through the valve and start huffing and blowing. Ok, you could have read ‘War and Peace’ in the time it took him to blow it up. But he did it. And what about the bloke at the Bay Oval (again) who devoured an entire watermelon, skin and all, in just three
Bo
BARBED WIRE I had already overdosed on vitamin D after six hours in the sun at the cricket at Bay Oval. At the beer tent I had exceeded the statutory two standards drinks per day several-fold and I think I may have even scoffed a bratwurst with onions and mustard at one point. The stains on my shirt told me I had. Basically I was doing to my good health what the Black Caps were doing to the Sri Lankans out on pitch. Anyhow, I decided to cap off an indulgent day at the cricket with fish ’n’ chips on the way home – two pieces of terakihi and half a scoops of chips please? May as well make it a full scoop. But then off goes the saturated fats alarm. Nowadays in Bureta, a $9 parcel of greasies comes with a mandatory health warning. Did they deliberately pack my parcel to scare me? BOUQUET While on cricket, we own a jewel in that Bay Oval facility. A purpose built cricket ground, an amphitheatre, easy access, close to town and a white picket fence to boot. Idyllic! We just need those light towers in tout de suite, a few trees and other bits and bobs and it’ll be perfect as
W d e & Barb
Is it all part of it? The correct use of a term I just thought I’d drop a note to point out something puzzling in the letters by M Brooks (December 24, 2015,”Special holiday why!” et alii). The said M Brooks makes a point of using the term part-Maori. Now it must be said that because New Zealand was a British Crown Colony, most of the ‘foreign parts’ in these ‘part-Maori’ are British. Now British law is rather firm on the matter of people combining their properties and efforts to form a collective body, which is what a tribe is; British law is also rather strong on the matter of inheritance. People using the term part-Maori appear to be saying
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that part-British descent precludes the British right of collective inheritance under law derived from British law. Could M Brooks and
others kindly stop using the term partMaori? It makes you look stupid, and detracts from your argument. Wesley Parish, Tauranga
Got something to get off your chest? Or someone you’d like to thank? Bouquets & Barbed Wire is a weekly column where our reporter Hunter Wells shares your rants and raves. If you’d like to submit one for print, email your Bouquet or Barbed Wire to letters@thesun.co.nz for inclusion in a future issue.
LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL REAL ESTATE? Call Liz Watson! there’s no place like home (07) 571 7755 027 223 2263 liz.watson@eves.co.nz
Friday 15 January 2016
32
The Weekend Sun
The Weekend Sun’s ever popular guide to ‘What’s On’ in the Bay. Pg 35
There’s a starman, waiting in the sky The first time I heard Bowie it was ‘The Laughing Gnome’. I was little. I loved it. Even at that young age I knew it was a bit cheesy but “Here, what’s that clicking noise? That’s Fred, he’s a metrognome?”, “Where do you come from? Gnomeman’s land”, all those awful puns, they made a small English schoolboy smile. Or perhaps the first time I heard David Bowie it was on Top of the Pops, 1972, singing ‘Starman’. I remember holding a small portable cassette recorder up to the television so we could listen to it endlessly and learn the words. That’s what we did each week with the charts, which were bulging with glam rock. English music was in the grip of ChinnChap dominance, glam acts whose songs were written and produced by Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman. Bowie had the
extravagant looks, but was clearly on a whole different level. We discovered the astounding piano and musical complexity of ‘Life On Mars’ and were introduced to Lenin in its lyrics (yes, we all thought it was about John Lennon). ‘Space Oddity’ (the album) was reissued under that title and clearly there was more here in the strange long songs that concluded each side than your average pop single. Seven minutes of ‘Memory of a Free Festival’; ‘Cygnet Committee’ clocking in at nearly 10. These were taboo-breaking acts to a 12-year-old with little musical knowledge. And what sticks in my mind now, now that I can put that time in context, is just how astonishing Bowie was in the 1970s. You could argue that Dylan ruled the 1960s, but the 1970s were Bowie’s. In 1970 and 1971 we were brought ‘The Man Who Sold The
World’ and ‘Hunky Dory’, with hits like the former’s title track, ‘Changes’ and ‘Life on Mars’. But it was 1972 with ‘The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust’ and the Spiders From Mars that Bowie really took off. It is a near-perfect album, every song a classic. ‘The Space Oddity’ album, initially ignored in 1969, was re-released later that year, but by then Bowie had moved on, picking up the coruscating avant garde piano of New Yorker Mike Garson for another stone cold classic, Aladdin Sane. The same year, 1973, he recorded an album of affectionate covers, ‘Pin Ups’. The year 1974 saw his toughest rock album yet, ‘Diamond Dogs’, a concept piece about a dystopian future, but even before the US tour for that finished he became enamoured with soul music, recreated in classic Bowie style as 1975’s ‘Young Americans’. A year later saw synthesisers enter the mix with the challenging ‘Station To Station’, before Bowie decamped to Germany and between 1977 and 1979 produced, along with Brian Eno, his acclaimed ‘Berlin Trilogy’, ‘Low’, ‘Heroes’, and ‘Lodger’. His success can be measured in the fact that when he released 1980’s ‘Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)’ it was actually seen as a “comeback” since ‘Lodger’ contained no hit singles. That’s 11 years and 13 albums. Incredible. I am glad to have been a teenager during those years and to know the music I liked then has lasted and can bring the same intense joy and pleasure. Thanks Mr B.
When country comes to town The local A & P show is about as old as Tauranga itself.
to the A & P Lifestyle Show to reflect the fact most of our rural land is now in small holdings rather than large farms. The name’s changed, the family fun hasn’t. That says something about the enduring appeal of There are pony rides, Clydesdale wagon rides and the 121-year-old show, which launches again at the free activities like water slides and a climbing wall. Tauranga Racecourse on Saturday, January 23. There’s the perennial tests of strength, the tug-o-war A&P shows originally show cased and promoted and strongest man contest. Records will fall. agricultural improvements but now bring the Jumping dogs, live music and all the regular experiences of the farm and country life to the fairground attractions. backdoor of city dwellers. For city dwellers who’ve drifted There will be traditional favourites like into the country there’s a Lifestyle wood chopping, equestrian events and Lane with trade sites of special home industries. For many kids it will interest to lifestyle block holders. For be their first sight of a pig or a cow fuel stops, there will be food galore. being milked by hand. The equestrian ring will be busy They can even get up close and with miniature horses, harness horses, personal with farm animals – western riding and the handsome petting alpacas and baby goats, Arab horses. yes kids patting kids. Susannah Bunce The Tauranga A & P Lifestyle Show There’s nothing permanent milking a cow at is on at the Tauranga Racecourse on except change itself. This year a previous event. Saturday, January 23 from 10am. the show is being re-branded
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
33
Tour de Bay this February Workplace competition returns in 2016 with Sport Bay of Plenty’s Tour de Bay Corporate Challenge.
The Three Musketeers (2015 Tour de Bay Team) from Toi Te Ora Public Health Service.
REVIEW: Magnificent message in 16th Avenue Theatre’s ‘Star*Man’ 16th Avenue Theatre’s Youth Division latest musical production ‘Star*Man’ is a show filled with youthful energy, fantastic music, marvellous performances and a magnificent message for both young and old.
Reece Ratcliffe (Tony) did a great job playing on the contrast between their characters, which was central to the show. The performances offered by Liv Nightingale (Mandi) and Andre Liddicoat (Ziggy) was also superb. Also a big well done to Iya Jarbadan (Drew), Holly Brebner (Gem) and John-Stephen Davern (Neil), and the chorus line of Severn Gore, Paige Gee, Written by Tauranga playwright Sam Aston Martin, Manny Martin and Martin and directed by Miller Gore, it Jay Atkinson, who all got stuck in follows Luke Starman – a lover of all and went about their jobs perfectly. things ‘70s, but is bullied because of Apologies to the lads of the cast, but it – whose life takes an unexpected twist the singing efforts of the leading ladies after he’s hit by a car and wakes up in was a highlight for me, a 1979 discotheque. though Angus’ The Star*Man cast rendition of is a good example Barry Manilow’s of why we should ‘Mandy’ was be proud of the truly remarkable young emerging in its awkward talent we have here awesomeness. in Tauranga. They Also, a special threw themselves mention to Reece into the show with and John-Stephen wild abandonment, – damn you guys brought passion to 16th Avenue Theatre’s Youth Division can dance. their performances, ‘Star*Man’, latest musical production ‘Star*Man’ and most of all, presented by is on stage until January 23. showed how much 16th Avenue fun it is when you’re up on stage. Theatre’s Youth Division, is on stage Angus Stewart (Luke Starman) and David Tauranga until January 23.
In teams of three, get cycling and clock up as many kilometres as possible during February; totals are collated each week with the goal of virtually cycling the 410km around the Bay of Plenty. Last year 179 teams collectively cycled an astonishing 154,000km. As well as an overall prize there are weekly $100 vouchers courtesy of Ride Bikes for most teams entered from a workplace, best team photo on Facebook and most improved team. Teams will also enter the draw to win morning tea shouts from Robert Harris Café. Sport Bay of Plenty recreation team leader Jen Riley encourages workplaces to enter as many teams as possible, to “create a bit of banter with your own inter-workplace contest or challenge another business or organisation to take part”. Jen says Tour de Bay is all about giving people a fun incentive to get on their bikes and explore some of the great cycle trails around the Bay of Plenty. “Not only is cycling good for your health, but it is also a clean and green form of transport and a great way to get to work.” Entries are now open online at www.sportbop. co.nz/tourdebay. Workplaces need to register by January 26 to receive a free goody bag. Tour de Bay is one of many activities happening over Play in the Bay’s Bike Month. To view the Bike Month calendar visit www.sportbop.co.nz/ februarybikemonth For more information contact Dahl Gerdit-Singh on 07 578 0016.
Accumulate kilometres by cycling during February with the aim of virtually cycling around the Bay of Plenty, totalling 410km!! Registration closes 29th January. Register before the 26th and receive a free goody bag. Grab your workmates and sign up at
www.sportbop.co.nz/tourdebay Mt Maunganui
36.3km
Tauranga
Get you
22.8km
Maketu
Te Puke
Matamata
53.5km Tirau
Mt Ngongotaha
54.6km
7.7km
Rotorua
Women’s Triathlon
Friday 15 January 2016
The Weekend Sun
34
A soaring good time
The Grumman Avenger torpedo bomber expected at the airshow from the Biggin Hill facility at RNZAF Ohakea. Photo: Gavin Conroy from Classic Aircraft Photography.
Bay of Plenty residents have an opportunity to see an event never before seen in Tauranga, at the Classics of the Sky – Spitfire at Sunset airshow next weekend. During the displays, a Yak 55 aerobatic aircraft will race the Portland Express, a Western Star linehaul truck. Other displays planned to entertain the public include various flying and static displays, UAV handling, and the ever popular NZ Police Dog and AOS demonstrations. The air displays range from the Grumman Avenger, the WWII torpedo bomber expected from RNZAF Ohakea, to the Harvard display team, gyrocopters, gliders and the Gilmore Waco Taperwing, and, of course, the Supermarine Spitfire, which is expected to close the air displays at sunset. This airshow is a change in format from the larger
weekend airshows held in the past. Organisers are planning a family friendly event and are encouraging people to bring their families and friends, deck chairs, sun umbrella, and picnic or purchase food from the food vendors available. There is a bar available for the purchase of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. It is fully licenced and people are not permitted to bring their own alcohol on site. Gates open at 2.30pm, with more than 140 trucks from The Truck Show on display, and children’s entertainment at that time. People will also be able to take flights in classic aircraft and a helicopter during the afternoon. The evening finishes with a ‘night glow’ from the trucks. For more information check out the website www.tcas.co.nz and Facebook pages for Classic Flyers NZ, Classics of the Sky Tauranga City Airshow and The Mount Truck Show.
Digging begins for V8 action Preparations are underway for the return of the jetsprints, with the first bit of ASB Baypark Stadium’s turf set to be dug up this Monday. Digging begins on January 18 to form the temporary watercourse track to be constructed for the ENZED 2016 UIM Jetsprint World Championship on January 29-30. Round two of the championship at Baypark will feature practice and qualifying rounds on Friday, while the Saturday is where spectators will see 21 Suzuki Superboat and 21 Altherm Group A boats from around the globe giving it everything they’ve got in full race mode. The jet boats are expected to reach up to 130km in under
Service fees will apply.
two seconds on the purpose-built aqua-track on the stadium’s rugby in-field. The main event finals racing is from 4pm-10pm on Saturday, January 30, gates open 1pm. Practice day and qualifying rounds run 6pm-10pm on Friday, January 29, gates open from 5pm. (Admission to Friday practice day is with a two-day pass only). To secure your seat and save $10-$20, visit www.eventfinda.co.nz The Weekend Sun has six double GA adult passes to the Saturday event of the ENZED 2016 UIM Jetsprint World Championship to give away to six lucky readers who can tell us when digging begins? Enter online at www.sunlive.co.nz under the competitions section. Entries must be received before Wednesday, January 20.
The Weekend Sun
35
JULIE’S
Saturday 16 January
Sunday 17 January
Coronation Park, Mt Maunganui 8.3am – 5pm, weather permitting. Tauranga Society of Artists offer for sale a variety of art to suit all tastes.
Worship service at Welcome Bay Primary School Hall, 309 Welcome Bay Rd 10am. Breathtaking Grade - Judge Series. Judges 1:20-36 “Volitional disobedience” Preacher: Richard Roodt. All welcome. www.bbf.net.nz
Art in the Park
Car Boot Sale
Greerton Village School, Greerton Road 7.3011.30am. Cost $5 per site. Shirley/Keith 577 1116 or 0274 146 040
Community Church Car Boot Sale
At Evans Rd Community Church 8-11am. Car wash. Food. $5 a space. Arthur 574 1822
Curekids FMX Show
Fraser Cove carpark 3pm, 5pm & 7pm.
Dick ‘Magic’ Johnson
Held Jan 30 - Pauly K Christiano, the Invisible Man, food & drink specials available all night at Waihi Beach Hotel. Doors open 8pm. Tickets from Waihi Beach Hotel, 60 Wilson Rd. ph 07 863 5402
First Dance of the Year
St Pat’s Hall, Beatty Ave, Te Puke. Old time & sequence dancing with good company & lovely supper. Entrance fee $7 for all. Organised by Te Puke Scottish Soc. Valerie 573 7093
Judo Training
At Tauranga Clubrooms, Moreland Fox Park, Greerton 10am. No fees. Get fit & learn effective self defense systems. Kevin 021 0794 368
Outdoor Movie Night
At Masonic Park 8.45pm. Grease. Entry via gold coin donation, all proceeds to Kids Can Charity. Presented by The Phoenix.
Papamoa Cruisers
Mystery cruise or new trail Paengaroa. Mobility scooters, slow bikers, strollers. Load wheels on the trailer at the car boot sale, Community Church, 30 Evans Rd, Papamoa 8-11.30am. Iain 027 572 2987
Self-Healing Workshop
Learn an easy way to improve & maintain your well-being. Jan 23 & 24 9am - 4.30pm. Sacred Journeys Sanctuary. Maggie 549 3337 or www.sacredjourneys.co.nz
Tauranga Indoor Radio Control Car
Club race day at Greerton Hall, Cameron Rd from 9.30am. Track set up from 10am. Practice starts 11.30 approx. First meeting of the year. A points system will be run throughout the year to determine a champion in each class.
Tauranga Synchronised Swimming
Jan 23 - ‘Have a go session’ – looking for new swimmers aged between 7 & 11years. Come along to the lane pool at Baywave 10am. The session is for 2 hours & is free. Ange 552 5416
Te Puna Speed Sheer
Jan 23 at Top Shot Bar, Te Puna (behind Farmlands) 5.30pm – late. Live music, raffles & more. Gold coin entry.
Bay Bible Fellowship/Lord’s Day
Bethlehem Lions Market
Held 1st & 3rd Sun of month at Historic Village, 17th Ave, Tauranga 8am - 1pm. Stallholders - booking a carpark site is essential. Email Alf bethlehemmarket@lionsclubs.org.nz
Katikati Tramping Club
Dickies Flat – Mangakino – Dubbo. Moderate. Tom 549 2860
Maketu Rotary Club Market
3rd & 5th Sunday at Village Green, Park Rd, Maketu. Stalls $10. Maureen 533 2340
Petanque Tga/BOP Club
Every Sun & Thurs at Cliff Rd 12.45pm. Also at Club Mt Maunganui 12.45pm. Boules available, tuition given. 578 3606
Prayer for the Sick
Four powerful services with international evangelist Steve Zapata. At Elizabeth Community & Arts Centre, 169 Elizabeth St Jan 17 6.30pm, Jan 18 & 19 7.30pm. Jan 20 at Cliff Road Sports Centre, Cliff Rd 7.30pm. Presented by the Potter’s House Christian Church.
Quakers in Tauranga
Meet each Sunday in hall behind Brain Watkins House, cnr Elizabeth St/Cameron Rd 10am for an hour of mainly silent worship followed by tea/ coffee & talk. 544 0448 www.quaker. org.nz
Radio Controlled Model Yachts
Meet Sun 1.30pm & Thurs 5.30pm at pond behind 24 Montego Drive, Papamoa, to sail electron & similar 3ft long yachts for fun. Beginners welcome. Graham 572 5419
Spiritual Gathering, the Psychic Cafe
Spirituality, healing, new age, friendship & fellowship. Meet the Bay’s top psychics, healers & spiritualists. Greerton Hall, Greerton 7pm. Door charge $10, everything else free. 578 7205 or www.psychiccafe.nz
Tauranga Big Band Annual Picnic
At Kulim Park 11am - 2.30pm. Bring your picnic lunch.
Tauranga Friendship & Social Club
Walks, dinners & outings for over 50’s. Barbara 544 7461
Te Puke Country Music
Club day at St Patrick’s Church Hall, Beatty Ave 1pm. Great band, great entertainment. Door fee $4.
Monday 18 January Body & Soul Fun Fitness
For over 50’s, social events & guest speakers. Mon & Fri Greerton Hall Cameron Rd. Tues Wesley Church Hall, 13th Ave. Weds City Church cnr Otumoetai Rd/Sherwood St. Thurs at
Tauranga Senior Citizens Hall, Norris St behind Pak n Save. All classes 9.1510.15am. First class free. For men & women. First class for the year Jan 18. Happy New Year. Dianne 576 5031 ‘Qualified Sport & Physical recreation instructor’.
Citizens Advice Bureau
For free, confidential information and advice about anything call in Monday-Friday 9am-5pm 38 Hamilton Street, Tauranga or Freephone 0800 367 222 or 578 1592. Justice of the Peace Service every Mon 1-4pm, Weds & Thurs 9am-11.30am. Weds 9.30 – 12.30 CAB Service at Welcome Bay Community Centre. Migrant Clinics Tues - Fri 1pm-4pm. – All welcome no appointment necessary.
Civic Choir Tauranga
Restarts Feb 1 - every Monday at Wesley Church, 13th Ave, Tauranga 7.30pm. www.taurangacivicchoir.org.nz or Heather 575 9092
Fitness League
Ladies 50 plus exercise with dance to music. Improve posture, energy, toned body, increase strength & fun. Every Mon at Greerton Senior Citizens Hall, 39 Maitland St 9.3010.30am. Gloria 573 4429
Harmony a Plenty Barbershop Chorus
Every Mon at Bethlehem Community Church, 183 Moffat Rd 7pm. New members welcome. Graham 571 5576 or www.harmonyaplenty.co.nz
Judo Training
At Tauranga Clubrooms, Moreland Fox Park, Greerton 6.30pm. No fees. Get fit & learn effective self defense systems. Kevin 021 0794 368
Meditation & See What Unfolds
Every Mon 7-9pm with Kevin Reed. A variety of meditation techniques & spiritual discussion. Join in. Kevin 578 7205 or www.psychiccafe.nz
Meditation Group
Free classes Mon 10am & Weds 7.30pm. Find peace, spiritual awareness & the meaning of your life. David 576 9764
Mount Chess Club
Mondays at St Thomas More Church, 17 Gloucester Rd 1-4pm. The only place you can play standard length chess in Tauranga. $3 per session. Sets, boards, clocks & refreshments provided. Bob/Vic 575 5845 or 0274 786 282
Recycled Teenagers
Gentle exercise for 50’s forwards, & injury or illness rehabilitation. Mon & Weds, 14 Norris St, Tauranga Senior Citizens Club, behind Pak n Save. Tues at St Mary’s Church Hall, Girven Rd. All 9 - 10.30am. Classes taken by qualified instructor. First class free. Jennifer 571 1411
Continued...
Friday 15 January 2016
Friday 15 January 2016
Tauranga Senior Citizens Club
Cards, 500 & Bridge Mon & Thurs. Indoor Bowls Tues, Weds & Sat at 14 Norris St, behind Pak n Save 1-4pm. Register by 12.45pm. $2 includes afternoon tea. New members welcome.
Tuesday 19 January Balmoral Kilties
Marching team. Ladies aged 30-60yrs welcome to join this awesome sport for fun, friendship & travel. Experience preferred but not essential. Anita 571 4096 or 021 0257 6094
Bayfair Petanque Club
Tuition & boules available for learners & visitors. Every Tues & Thurs at Bayfair Reserve, Russley Drive 1pm. Margaret 572 3173
Bethlehem Pottery Club/Gallery
Open Tues, Weds, Thurs at 13 Bethlehem Rd 9.30am – 3.30pm. Email: bethlehempottery@gmail. com or 552 4460
Fitness League
Ladies 50 plus exercise with dance to music. Improve posture, energy, toned body, increased strength. Every Tues at St Columba Church, 502 Otumoetai Rd, Cherrywood 9.30-10.30am. Gloria 573 4429
Recreational Cycle Group
Every Tues at Palmers, Ohauiti 9am. Pam/Andrew 544 3272. Every Weds at Sulphur Pt, near Nautilus, off Cross Rd 9am. Cam 552 4513. Every Sun at Papamoa Sports & Recreation Centre, Parton Rd 9am. Heinz 574 1543
Ocean Running
5k Mount Fun Run every Tues 6pm. Run or walk, walkers start from 5.30pm, runners 6pm. Register at Mount Ocean Sports Club, Pilot Bay 5.15pm. $5 entry, includes free drink & opportunity to win a spot prize after the run. All welcome. Phil 021 383 354
Wednesday 20 January Cards
Do you play cribbage or would like to learn the game? Every Weds at Tauranga RSA 1pm. New members welcome. Rona 578 7939
Fernlands Spa Water Exercise Classes
Weds 10.45-11.45am held rain or shine but not during school holidays. New participants planning to attend ph Jennifer 571 14110
Guardians Aotearoa
Neighbourhood Run/Walk
Tues, Thurs & Fri at Pyes Pa 6am start. Ask about free recovery shake. Svetlana 027 616 2124
New Social Book Club
Commencing Feb 9 10.30am & Feb 13 1.30pm. No fees. For venue, Joy 021 0243 9129
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103 0429
Men changing men group, meets fortnightly Wednesday, at the Papamoa Surf Club 7-9pm. Colin 021
Healing Rooms
Experience God’s healing touch at Bethlehem Town Centre, cnr shop behind PO/Bookstore, & at Papamoa Healing Rooms. Over all of January please direct
all inquiries to 021 110 0878 www. healingrooms.co.nz. We will be resuming as normal early Feb.
Leisure Marching
Requires new ladies for non competitive marching. No experience required. Every Weds at Morland Fox Park, Greerton 8-9.30am. Tricia 543 4581
Mount Healing & Spiritual Centre
Omanu Bowling Club, Golf Rd, Mount 7.30pm. First evening for 2016. Come along & share an interactive evening with guest speaker: Annis Parker. Door entry $3. Janet 0272 640 226
Mount RSA 8 Ball Club
Every Weds at Mount RSA 6.30pm. Enjoy a game of pool or learn to play. Come along. Gail 022 647 5314
Mountain Bike Group
Meet at RideBikes, 393 Cameron Rd 6.15pm. Jen 578 0016
Single Coffee Club 60+
Mixed company for singles 60+ that meet once a week for coffee, enjoy socialising & making new friends. Email: mixandmingle@xtra. co.nz or 027 439 4267
Tauranga Embroiderers’ Guild
Every Weds at Tauranga Rowing Club rooms, Memorial Park 10am 2.30pm & 7.30-9.30pm. Juniors 4-5.30pm. Beginners & experienced stitchers welcome. Nancy 544 4778
Tauranga Mid-Week Tramping Group
Otanewainuku North Ridge. Waterfall to summit option. Grade mod, approx 5.5hrs. Sheryl 574 3743
Toastmasters
Build your confidence, find your voice & open doors of opportunity
in 2016. Join the happy bunch at City Early Start. Every Weds at Avgas Cafe, Classic Flyers 7-8.15am. 021 044 5654 or www.cityearlystart. co.nz
Gourmet Night Market
Forest & Bird Walk
Every Fri at Coronation Park, Mt Maunganui 5pm until dark. A diverse range of speciality streetfood from some of the Bay’s top foodtrucks & restaurants.
Meditate to discover your ‘self’
At Tauranga Clubrooms, Moreland Fox Park, Greerton 6.30pm. No fees. Get fit & learn effective self defense systems. Kevin 021 0794 368
Thursday 21 January
Judo Training
Orokawa Bay Waihi Beach, pohutukawa lined beach. Moderate. $10. Leader: Carole 576 5698
Learn how to meditate & find your inner peace. All it takes is 10mins daily practice to find yourself more positive & balanced. Join the Sahaja Yoga meditation workshop to find out more. Papamoa Community Centre (Mako Room), Library Building, 15 Gravatt Rd 7.45pm. Follow-up classes held every Thurs. www.freemeditationnz.com Luca 022 152 9602
Tennis Seniors WBOP
Players 35+, Tauranga Lawn Tennis Club, Wharepai Domain 9am - 12pm. $3 ball fee. New members welcome. Lynda 575 0627 or tswbop@gmail.com
Friday 22 January
Art Waihi Annual Exhibition
Jan 29 - Feb 1 at Waihi Memorial Hall, Seddon St, Waihi 10am - 4pm. Guest artist: Val Tubman & Craft Artists. Gold coin entry.
Enzed 2016 UIM Jetsprint
World Championship Jan 29 – Round 2 Practice Day/Qualifying Rounds at ASB Baypark Stadium. Gates open from 5pm. Jan 30 – Round 2 Final, gates open from 1pm.
NZ Medieval Faire
In Tauranga for the first time every Jan 22, 23 & 24. Friday 12.304pm, Sat & Sun 10am - 4pm. Displays, tournaments, traders’ market, have a go activities. No gate charge. Saturdays attendees will pay $10 to enjoy the A&P Show. Andria 021 0225 5898 or http:// nzmedievalfaire2016.webs.com/
TaiChi QingGoing 18 Moves
A good way to improve your health. Every Fri at Greerton Hall 6.307.15pm. Gold coin donation, all welcome. 07 571 5168.
The Sociables
A 30’s/40’s age group of males & females that meet up once a week to socialise by dining out or participating in local activities & events. 022 0120 376.
“What’s On” in the Weekend Sun is a free service for non-profit clubs and organisations. Email julie@thesun.co.nz or fax 571 1116 or post to PO Box 240, Tauranga.
Deadline is 3pm Tuesdays. Contributions should be less the 20 words please.
GIGGUIDE & ENTERTAINMENT Greer’s Gastro Bar Sunday 17 – Dovetail 5.308.30pm. Jazz and easy listening acoustic duo. Mount RSA Friday 15 – Tony Wellington 7.30pm. Saturday 16 – Helen Riley 7.30pm. Sunday 17 – Andy Bowman
MEDIUM
4.30pm. The Hop House Friday 15 – Comedy night with Cori Gonzalez & Jamie Bowen 9pm. Saturday 16 – Dylan Israel 4pm. Sunday 17 – shotgun Tuesday 4pm.
SUDOKU
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The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
37
What guides you through life? This New Year provides a wonderful opportunity to continue the journey of building a life. For this is what we’ll be doing as we navigate 2016, develop friendships, parent, study, worry, hope, cry and laugh together. I wonder what will guide you in your journey and shape you as you build your life? Our lives are formed and informed by our experiences, the traditions we grow up with, and our best attempts at rational and reasonable thinking. As well, we humans also tend to look for a “bigger story” through which to make sense of life and find guidance. Various religions offer different stories which adherents attempt to live by. An atheist believes in a particular story. Anyone who says: “there is no bigger story” is in fact
describing a part of the story they believe. We’re all exercising faith and entrusting our lives to one thing or another. The step of faith a Christian makes is to entrust their life to Jesus; to God’s story as revelled in the Bible. This is the “big story” that serves as a guide in life. It’s a declaration that to simply live as one feels fit, falls short of God’s intent for humanity. We are to relate to God, each other and creation in a particular manner. We are called to a life of humility, trust, sacrificial love and to pursue the way, the truth and the life of Jesus. The Bible offers a deeply fulfilling way of life; for everyone. We’ll be exploring this more at St Luke’s on Sunday, as will other churches in our city throughout the year. Why not get along to a church near you and allow the life of Christ to guide you as you build your life Joseph McAuley, St Luke’s throughout 2016?
The breath-taking grace of God is here Life has many ironies that stretch our thinking, challenge our moral conscience and stir our spiritual belief or disbelief. Of particular interest, are global, local, and family events that appear outside of our control and cause devastation, and often with irreversible consequences. As we all know, many of life’s adventures do not always pan out as anticipated, nor do they always end with living happily ever after. This month, Bay Bible Fellowship began exploring God’s ‘Breath-taking Grace’ from the book of Judges in the
Bible. Already our eyes are opening to the many and varied ways in which God expresses His loving grace throughout the most horrendous circumstances. Judges records that the nation of Israel had changed its attitude (in approximately 1040 BC). They were no longer committed to obeying the Lord, instead “Everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judge 17:6). There was a new way of thinking. While this liberated, man-centred mind-set allowed for any and all pleasures, it failed to recognise or warn of the eternal responsibilities
and multi-generational consequences. This series permits us to view from God’s perspective, a whole other paradigm in relation to the most difficult of circumstances. We’re asking God what He thinks, what He values, what He grieves over, and what He admires. We’re seeing that time and time again, when least expected, when least desired, through the least obvious ways, God steps in with His unparalleled mercy. We invite you to join us every Sunday morning at are Highly Favoured, 10am in theYou Welcome Bay School Hall, 309 Welcome You are Highly Favoured, Bay Road, as we explore God’s truth. Blessed You are Highly Favoured, Deeply Loved & Greatly
You are Highly Favoured, Deeply & Greatly Pastor Loved Lincoln Forlong, BayBlessed Bible Fellowship Deeply Loved & Greatly Blessed Deeply Loved & Greatly Deeply Loved & Greatly Blessed Blessed LIVING WORD FAITH CHURCH LIVING WORD FAITH CHURCH LIVING FAITH CHURCH Come this LIVING WORD WORD Come Join Join us usFAITH this Sunday SundayCHURCH
Come this Sunday Come Join Join us us Sunday us this this Sunday SERVICE AM AMBER CRESCENT, SERVICE TIME: TIME: 10 10Come AM Join19, 19, AMBER CRESCENT, JUDEA JUDEA SERVICE TIME: 10 AM 19, AMBER CRESCENT, JUDEA SERVICE TIME: 10 AM 19, AMBER CRESCENT, JUDEA SERVICE TIME:Rod JUDEA Tel: 3321 Senior Sue Tel: 541 541 3321 Senior Pastors: Pastors: Rod10&&AM Sue Collins Collins 19, AMBER CRESCENT, Senior Sue Senior Pastors: Pastors: Rod Rod &&www.lwfchurch.org.nz Sue Collins Collins Senior Pastors: Rod &www.lwfchurch.org.nz Sue Collins www.lwfchurch.org.nz www.lwfchurch.org.nz www.lwfchurch.org.nz
www.citychurchtauranga.org.nz
Tel: Tel: 541 541 3321 3321 Tel: 541 3321
WESLEY CHURCH 9.30am MORNING WORSHIP Led by Rev Leigh Sundberg Minister: Rev Leigh Sundberg 100, 13th Avenue, Tauranga ph: 578-8493 http://www.wesley.co.nz
ST STEPHENS CHURCH 9.30am MORNING WORSHIP & HOLY COMMUNION Led by Rev Doris Elphick Deacon: Margaret Birtles Brookfield Terrace, Otumoetai ph: 576-4961
Friday 15 January 2016
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trades & services
CLASSIFIEDSECTION PH: 07 928 3042 or email aimee@thesun.co.nz these pages can be viewed online at www.sunlive.co.nz
Freshen up your features As the warmer months bring family and friends outdoors, now is the time to deal with an unsightly issue that may cause your house to look less-than-perfect: moss and mould. Bay of Plenty E Wash owner Bay of Plenty E Wash owner Mark Gordon Mark Gordon has got it on a job. covered, and with regular rain we are currently experiencing, household. it’s the perfect time for a clean-up as As well as moss and mould the chemicals in his products work removal, Mark and his team offer best in wet conditions. roof treatments, gutter and pre-paint E Wash uses biodegradable cleaners, cleaning, and can take on jobs from which means the environmentally Katikati to Pukehina. friendly products aren’t harmful to “We offer free quotes; and because pets or plants and can be used on roofs we do all the work ourselves, we know where rainwater is collected for the the job will be done properly.” Whether it’s a residential, commercial FREE QUOT or rural building – Mark ES! says the company can clean small homes to multi-storied buildings. “Cleaning a building helps prolong the life of paintwork and building materials. We also clean buildings as part of the preparation for a re-paint.”
www.crewcut.co.nz
We Specialise in: • Continuous Spouting • All Metal & PVC Spouting systems • Long-run Roofing
xterior wash
• Fascia • Repairs & Leaks • Spouting & Roof cleaning • Moss & Mold control Dave Pope Trade Qualified Licenced Building Practitioner
Phone 027 433 4234 or 07 975 0583 davidwmpope@yahoo.co.nz
New Builds Alterations Renovations Additions
Signed, sealed, delivered… and filed You’ve just started a small business, or your business is suddenly booming, and there’s just not enough hours in the day to keep on top of all that pesky paperwork that needs to be dealt to. What do you do? Give Adminz Administration Services a call. Marketing, administration and bookkeeping – they’ve got the tools and the skills to keep your administration under control. Run by Adminz Administration Services owner Vivienne Stephens and her small team, the experienced staff can help you with everything from formatting contracts and documents, to invoicing, payroll services,
Owner Vivienne Stephens.
PowerPoint presentations and custom marketing flyers and letterheads. “We don’t do anything off a template,” explains Vivienne. “Everything is designed to suit your business and needs. It can be quite time consuming to get things looking professional, but that’s where we are here to help.” Staying a small team Administration Services means personal service, so you know exactly what you’re getting from Vivienne and her team, ensuring a seamless service. For prompt, efficient, professional service Give Vivienne a call call Vivienne on 07 579 9130 today to discuss your email vivienne@adminz.co.nz www.adminz.co.nz business requirements.
Admin
93 Wharf Street, Tauranga
Your local specialists
Call/text/e-mail us for a FREE no obligation quote Ph: 07 542 1016 Mob: 021 02051038 E-mail: kiwispout@kiwispout.co.nz
The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
39
trades & services
Deck Restoration
We specialise in restoring weathered decks, fences & outdoor furniture
From this...
To this...
Deck cleaning, staining & oiling - fence staining & painting - garden furniture restoration 07 552 5311 Deck&FencePro specialists or 0274 108 940 Paint, Oil & Stain Restoration
broken window handle? • • • • *finance available
doors • windows locks • hinges handles conservatories
for a FREE quote
07 571 4491
AAA
REE FELLERS BIG OR SMALL - WE DO IT ALL
MASTER
PAINTERS TAURANGA
Friday 15 January 2016
40
Check it out in next weeks issue
THE WEEKEND
trades & services
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The Weekend Sun
Friday 15 January 2016
41
immigration services
funeral services
remembrance
From
$1799
Incl GST
for sale deceased
situations vacant
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OPEN: Monday-FridayÊ8.00am-5.30pmÊÊÊ SaturdayÊ9.00am-5.00pm
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Tel:Ê07Ê578Ê6017
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www.farmerautovillage.co.nz www.farmerautovillage.co.nz
public notices
travel & tours
travel & tours
public notices
Friday 15 January 2016
mobility
The Weekend Sun
42
cars wanted
entertainment
Buyers of Damaged, Unloved & Unwanted Vehicles Good photos help sell real estate, and can increase the perceived value of the property.
Great NZ People who are Honest Vehicle Buyers Follow us on Facebook
0800 382 828
health & beauty
computer services
financial
appliance services
financial
Needthiscash
Summer?
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0800 34 62 63 | www.linsa.co.nz 1 7 4 D E V O N P O R T R O A D, TAU R A N G A | ( 0 7 ) 5 7 8 7 7 1 7 Terms and conditions apply. Subject to Linsa Finance lending criteria and responsible lending guidelines. All loans must be approved and drawn down in our branch. Establishment and account maintenance fees apply.
SPACE? Ideal as an extra bedroom or home office Three convenient sizes: standard 3.6m x 2.4m - $70pw large 4.2m x 2.4m - $85pw xtra-large 4.8m x 2.4m - $100pw Fully insulated with lockable ranchslider, large window, power, security lights, curtains, carpet, smoke alarm & even a small deck. Minimum 6 month rental period. Visit our display cabin at: 17 Plummers Point Road, WHAKAMARAMA or 159 Jellicoe Road, TE PUKE or call for a free brochure.
The Weekend Sun
RUN ON LISTINGS www.sunlive.co.nz/classifieds.html accounting PS & R ACCOUNTING – Contact us for a free quote to have your Annual Accounts and Tax Returns completed. We have 16 years experience and are based at Mount Maunganui. Phone Peter 0221366012. Email trefusis@ihug.co.nz
arts & crafts SCHOOL HOLIDAY WORKSHOPS 19 Jan: 10am12pm Ceramic painting: Cost $11-$26. 1:30-3:30pm Photo Mosaic. Cost $25. 20 Jan: 10am-12pm: Decorate a heart Cost $20. 1:30-3:30pm Polymer Pens Cost $20. 21 Jan: Ceramic Painting Normal hours 10am to 4pm. Tuesday to Saturday. Call Mary at Clay Art Studio in the Historical Village 07 571 3726
bible digest ”BUT I AM LIKE an olive tree flourishing in the house of God: I trust in God’s unfailing love for ever and ever. Psalm 52:8
cars for sale CAR FAIR – buy or sell any vehicle every Sunday at 11th Avenue Car park opposite Mad Butcher 8am-noon. Ph for more information 027 733 9686 or www.taurangacarfair.co.nz
computers COMPUTER GETTING you down? Problems, viruses, upgrades, internet, new or refurb PC’s tuition, or advice. Ph Bruce for a no obligation chat or quote 576 7940 or 021 260 9183 FREE ON SITE DIAGNOSIS & quote. We come to you & don’t charge extra for travel. Pensioner discounts. Ph Kyle at Tech Solutions 027 828 7078
curriculum vitae NEED A C.V.? Don’t let your C.V. get lost amongst all the others. I can help you stand out on paper. A C.V. For You can provide you with a personal and professional touch. “Get the interview….Land the job” Contact via www.facebook.com/ acvforyou or 021 27 27 912
entertainment TAURANGA TANDEM SKYDIVING best buzz in the Bay! Gift vouchers available. Ph 574 8533 today
flatmate wanted
BROOKFIELD AREA, available 17 January. Male or female professional to share 3 bedroom home. Must be tidy and reliable. Only $175+expenses. Call or text Leah on 021 557 445
gardening ABLE GARDENER, experienced, efficient, knowledgeable, highly qualified. Maintenance, pruning, hedges, shrubs, roses; disease/
Friday 15 January 2016
43
gardening
cont.
pest control, lifestyle blocks, garden renovations; design & plant. Ph Tita 027 654 8781 or a/h 542 0120 LAWN MOWING covering all of Tauranga. Experienced contractor, reliable service. Ph Chris 549 0446 or 027 200 8578
health & beauty NATURAL NEW ZEALAND Health Products & Clinic. Something for everyone. NZ Registered Natural Therapies & Natural Medicine Practitioners. Opposite BP Te Puke. Ph 573 5533 www.naturaltherapiesnz. com and www.kiwikitz.com
housesitters TRUSTED HOUSESITTERS available from 12 March - 25 April and 9 June - 9 July 2016. 15 years housesitting experience in Tauranga, excellent references. Ph 027 302 8328
livestock AC PETFOODS collect injured & unwanted cows & horses. Ph 0800 369 6269
book online now trades & services
trades & services
BOP BOATWORKS Interior and exterior carpentry solutions. Refits, Maintenance and valets www.bopboatworks.co.nz email: Cameron@bopboatworks.co.nz
removal, satisfaction guaranteed free quote. Ph Steve Hockly 571 5958 or 027 498 1857
BRYCE DECORATING Interior & exterior painting, wallpapering. Quality work. Ph Wayne 579 5588 or 021 162 7052 COMPLETE RENOVATIONS to new constructions. 25 years + building exp. LBP licensed. No job too small. For free appraisals ph 021 023 46787 ELECTRICIAN, 18+ years experience, NZ registered. Residential & commercial, maintenance & service, new builds, renovations. Fast, friendly service. Ph Andrew 022 354 1960 GRANITE BENCH TOPS rebuffed and resealed. Protect your investment! Good rates. Qualified tradesman, 30 years + exp. Ph 0204 0864 211
FOUND KITTENS, various areas, various colours Ph SPCA 07 578 0245
HANDYMAN BUILDING and section maintenance, decks, fencing, pergolas, painting, water blasting, odd jobs. Free quotes Ph Rossco 027 270 3313 or 544 5911
Found Tricoloured female puppy, Gate Pa area, Ref:23185 Ph SPCA 07 578 0245
INSECT SCREENS Measure. Make. Mend. Ph Rob at Magic Seal 543 4940
lost & found
Found Black/brown Rabbit, Papamoa area, Ref: 23183 Ph SPCA 07 578 0245 Found White Male Rabbit, Papamoa area, Ref: 23181 Ph SPCA 07 578 0245 Found Cream Longhaired Male adult cat, Omokoroa area, Ref: 23179 Ph SPCA 07 578 0245 Found light ginger male adult cat, Mount area, Ref: 23178 Ph SPCA 07 578 0245
mooring for sale TOWN REACH, good position. $3,000. Ph Ian 027 238 1710
spiritual guidance SPIRITUAL GUIDANCE & counselling. Need some direction? Confused, not sure where you’re heading? Readings, Healings and Counselling by experienced therapist. Ph Kerry 021 607 797 or 07 552 6768
trades & services APPLIANCE REPAIRS For service of all Fisher & Paykel, Haier and Elba appliances, Ph 0800 372 273 for your local technician. BOAT BUILDING repairs and maintenance. Timber & fibreglass trade qualified, boat builder. Ph Shaun 021 992 491 or 07 552 0277
PAINTER/DECORATOR Interior and Exterior, quality workmanship friendly services. Over 20 years specialising in residential and more. Quality paint at trade prices. For your best advice in all areas. Ph Shane Mount/Tauranga Decorators 07 544 6495 or 021 575 3071 PAINTING & DECORATING Exterior & Interior Painting Gurus, Roof Painting, High quality workmanship, prompt service, fully insured, satisfaction guaranteed, get the A Team @ Fresh Coats Painting. Call 022 421 4261 PLASTERER Interior 30+years Skimming Walls, make good Ceilings, Walls, Cornice Cove, Plasterboard, Stopping. New Builds. Small Jobs. Free Quote. Contact Stan 021 130 262 ROOF REPAIRS free quotes for all maintenance of leaking roofs, gutter cleaning & repairs. Chimney maintenance & repairs. Registered roofer, 30yrs exp. Ph Peter 542 4291 or 027 436 7740 TILER 30 years + experience, qualified in all aspects of tiling. Available now! Ph 0204 0864 211 TREE SHRUB and hedges trimming, topping removal, rubbish removal, palm pruning or
WHAT’S EATING YOUR ROOF? Have it cleaned from $145. Non caustic, acid or bleach. No pressure, biodegradable product. Professional, friendly service. Free quotes. Ph Justin 022 0638 273
Photos: Chris Callinan.
transport DRIVING MISS DAISY – available for all! Special needs are catered for including assistance with a walker or wheelchair. Ask for us if you have an injury and have ACC subsidized transportation needs. Safe, friendly, reliable service. Ph Jackie from Driving Miss Daisy 552 6614
Samuel Hulbert, 12.
travel & tours ”A A A” - NEW COUNTRY LODGE KINLOCH LUNCHEON. - Tour 2: - Lake Waikaremoana & Mahia. - Tour 3: - Lake Cruise Venture. - Tour 4: - “Good Mourning Mrs Brown” Show, including tickets. - Tour 5: South Island by Rail Autumn Holiday, plus many fun day trips, memorable holidays & entertaining shows for 2016. Contact The Hinterland Tours Team for more information and your Free Newsletter. Door to Door Service. Ph 575 8118 or 027 235 7714.
Emma Thompson, 5, with her dad Andrew. Murphy Waide (12yrs, no. 756) and Lilly Rall (11yrs, no. 755) get a drink after their run.
There was plenty of fun had by those taking part in the Mauao Fun Run on Sunday.
No.8 TOURS TRAVEL CLUB – Summer Season Tours 2016 - January 1/Sunny Nelson, Abel Tasman Cruise and French Pass. February 1/Glorious Rangitoto & Kawau Islands 2/ Dunedin & Caitlin’s 3/Te Anau, Mavora Lakes, Doubtful & Milford Sounds, 4/Phantom of the Opera. March 1/Great Barrier Direct, 2/Wandering Wairarapa 3/Hanmer Springs Rainbow & Molesworth Station -Andre Rieu Concert - Seats are filling up fast - Great Day trips available BOOK NOW Free door to door service & colour catalogue - Ph No8 Tours team on 579 3981 or Email info@no8tours.co.nz
venues FOR WEDDINGS, FUNCTIONS OR MEETINGS+ check out No.1 The Strand, a beautiful historic setting. Email: kim@ no1thestrand.co.nz or www.no1thestrand.co.nz WEDDINGS, PARTIES, MEETINGS etc - The perfect venue. With stunning Harbour views, fully licensed bar & kitchen onsite. Restaurant open every Friday from 5pm & Sunday from 4.30pm, kids under 12 years dine free with every paying adult. Tauranga Fish & Dive Club, 60 Cross Rd, Sulphur Point. Ph 571 8450
Sam Hawkins, 5, and mum Jacinda Hawkins from Mount Maunganui.
Adrienne Rereti and Tia Duffell, 2, who ran the whole course with her nana.
Pushing a sleepy oneyear-old Aio-kaikriki is Pareamio Kuka,15.
Taakahi Borrell and Tarewa Watson, 8, from Tauranga.
Friday 15 January 2016
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The Weekend Sun