Monday 31 December 2007

Expats pulling pints for Poms in Speight's first UK pub

CAMERON WILLIAMSON - The Dominion Post | Monday, 31 December 2007

As an export story, it's almost unprecedented, except for the dispatch of coals to Newcastle.


But Londoners are now drinking pints of New Zealand gold medal ale off the taps at a Speight's Alehouse beside the River Thames.

Speight's has achieved the unlikely equivalent of selling ice to the Eskimos by serving draught beer to the English, and cannily employed fiercely loyal expatriate Kiwis to do it.

The sight of a weatherboard Speight's Alehouse sitting beside the Thames at Canary Wharf recently was the opening move in a campaign to export Speight's to Europe. And the way it has been achieved is novel: sending a fully built alehouse on a coastal trader, all the way from Speight's home town, Dunedin.

The Great Speight's Beer Delivery is a story of persistence, determination, stoushes and triumph over adversity - and that's before you hear about the reality-TV style trip that four mates have undertaken to deliver an alehouse to London for a homesick Kiwi.

Of course, the goal of selling beer to the Brits has been wrapped in a story that demonstrates what the brand is all about.

"This is about good mates showing the loyalty, honesty and staunch determination to help out a friend in need," Speight's brand manager, Stu McIntosh, says.

It stemmed from a fairly innocent e-mail from former Dannevirke farmer Tim Ellingham, who was hankering for a cold Speight's after a gruelling day fighting London's dirty, boring grind.

He found himself a bit homesick for the brew, and the crew, he had left behind.

"After dragging myself through the Tube and sitting bored at work, nothing would be more welcome than a cold Speight's at the end of the day," he wrote to the beer makers. But rather than send off a couple of dozen cans to cheer the poor bloke up, Speight's response was to find Tim's best mate, Wellingtonian James Livingstone, and suggest that he and some mates do the honourable thing and deliver the beer in person to London. And not just a couple of slabs, they said: a true mate would do the generous thing and send a whole pub.

The project got serious discussion at Lion, agency Publicis Mojo got involved, and the Great Beer Delivery snowballed into a reality-show behemoth.

Mates were recruited from keen young applicants in a national interviewing drive and from 2009 applicants, 1000 were interviewed, a shortlist of 50 was drawn up and a team of four was selected to accompany James.

They were Mark Wilson, a mouthy Southlander, Taranaki teacher Tim Cleaver, newly married Dunedin IRD manager James Munro, "Big Unit" Lindsay Gilbert. When he became homesick and returned from the Bahamas, Steve Nichol, a farmer from Clark's Junction, Central Otago, replaced him.

Cameramen tracked every activity, every tear and tiff, producing short episodes as the crew sailed across the world, an interactive website built a community of supporters to follow the 25,000km journey, and a suitable ship - the 1000-ton MV Lida - was engaged.

Expats cruising the Internet in London became involved and told their mates, and the campaign became one of the most engaging, viral, friend-get-friend marketing initiatives to hit the Internet waves.

With the arrival in London in October, the journey was complete, and was celebrated with endless "awesome" toasts charged by the 5000 litres of Speight's that accompanied the ship. Then the task of establishing the beer in a permanent alehouse in central London became the focus.

A team of executives from Speight's owner, Lion Nathan, and their planning agents, led by corporate affairs director Liz Reid, entered the equivalent of the lion's den - trying to establish an alehouse in the City of Westminster, an area controlled by a council with the reputation of being conservative and prescriptive, and full of centuries-old pubs (about 2000).

The rather more humble yellow weatherboard two-door pub - with white-framed windows, welcoming wooden bar and shiny copper taps - was trucked from Canary Wharf to the top of an existing Walkabout bar at Temple tube station. It has a six-month remit to seed the ground while a permanent site is developed nearby, probably in the shell of an established pub.

The two-container, blue-and-yellow temporary pub is the 15th alehouse in the concept-bar chain that includes the Shepherd's Arms in Wellington's Tinakori Rd.

But this one is a bit different. It was built, by Speight's preferred team, the Three Bald Men, in two interlocking 12m steel containers. It has been unloaded and reloaded a dozen times during the voyage and will continue to be the forerunner for the five permanent alehouses in five years planned by Lion.

The whanau of friends, contacts and compatriots from the campaign will be at the core of Speight's marketing machine.

Stu McIntosh, in London to lead the last charge, said: "These expat Kiwis are the best brand ambassadors we could hope for.

"There are almost 400,000 of them in England, many in London, and we hope they will bring their English and international friends to enjoy Speight's Alehouse hospitality."

A new entry in NZ's top 20

Long serving political figure Don McKinnon has been appointed to the Order of New Zealand, stepping into the place vacated by Maori Queen Dame Te Atairangikaahu, who died last year.
The Order of New Zealand is the country's highest and most exclusive honour, with only 20 living members permitted at any one time.
Mr McKinnon spoke about the appointment while holidaying in northern Tuscany.
"It's a great honour to be ranked alongside so many extraordinary fellow New Zealanders," Mr McKinnon told The Dominion Post.
Dame Te Ata was "a wonderful lady", he said.
"I had a lot to do with her during my time as a minister, both in and out of New Zealand, so that makes it very, very special."
Mr McKinnon tops a New Year honours list that includes opera star Dame Malvina Major, former MP Marilyn Waring, entertainers David McPhail, Johnny Devlin and Ray Woolf, and former All Whites coach Kevin Fallon.

Dame Malvina, who becomes a Principal Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, said: "When I was made a dame, I thought that was it. I did not feel anything would follow a dame.

"It certainly came as a complete surprise. It's lovely, really great."

Mr McKinnon described the past year as one of the toughest in his career because of the "dramas" in Fiji and heightening tension in Pakistan.

He is in his second term as Commonwealth secretary-general, a post he has held since retiring from Parliament in 1999 after 21 years as a National Party MP. He ends his tenure in April. He and his wife, Clare de Lore, plan to return to New Zealand and build a house on Manukau Harbour. "I need fresh, clean New Zealand air and sunshine," he said.

High Court judge Edward Durie has been made a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, as has human rights advocate Margaret Shields, of Pukerua Bay.

Former National Party MP Professor Waring has been made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. The arts are represented by actor McPhail, who has been made an officer of the order, rock 'n' roller Johnny Devlin and musician Ray Woolf.

Expatriate businessman Owen Glenn, who in 2005 gave the Labour Party $300,000, becomes an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit.

MATT CALMAN and BEN FAWKES - The Dominion Post | Monday, 31 December 2007

Auckland City from the North Shore

Auckland Motorway

Waiwera

Puhoi

On the Way Back to Auckland

Fishing at high Tide

Waitangi

Waitangi

We're here in Bay of Islands

Kawakawa - Paihia Crossroad

Approaching Whangarei

Eutopia - is North of Waiwera

Approaching Waiwera

The Road to Orewa

Happy New Year - 2008


Wishing everyone a Happy New Year for 2008. For the Chinese out there - It will be the Year of the Rat - February 7th

Cockle Hunting - Paihia -

First Christmas site gains 'historic' tag

5:00AM Wednesday December 26, 2007
By Tony Gee
Samuel Marsden held New Zealand's first Christmas service in 1814.

The Bay of Islands site where Samuel Marsden held the first Christmas service in New Zealand in 1814 has been formally recognised and registered as a historic area by the Historic Places Trust.

Registration of Rangihoua at the mouth of the Bay of Islands now identifies it as a place of outstanding heritage significance.

The trust's Northland area manager, Stuart Park, said Rangihoua was significant because it was the first place in New Zealand where there was prolonged early contact between Maori and Pakeha before British colonisation. This makes Rangihoua one of the foundation sites of modern, bicultural New Zealand.

Visitors to the area can walk the historic landscape on the Marsden Cross track where the Rangihoua pa site was once effectively the country's first capital.

Mr Park said Rangihoua in 1805 consisted of about 100 houses surrounded by gardens producing exceptionally good quality potatoes which were used as currency for incoming ships, whose crews traded axes, adzes and hatchets for fresh supplies.

It was the earliest Maori trading post and a significant economic centre after the then-Governor of Norfolk Island sent technology and animals - one of the earliest introductions of European goods into New Zealand.

Rangihoua chief Te Pahi went to Norfolk Island and Port Jackson, where he met senior New South Wales chaplain, the Rev Samuel Marsden.

The pair became good friends, although Te Pahi died four years later in 1809. His successor, Ruatara, went to Australia, where he lived with the Marsden family in Parramatta while learning about European agriculture. The first mission in New Zealand was established in 1815, which became the first long-term Pakeha settlement in the country.

Hongi Hika followed Ruatara and, under his patronage, the missionary society set up another mission station at Kerikeri near Hongi's pa, Kororipo.

Two of New Zealand's oldest standing buildings - the Kerikeri Mission House and the Stone Store - survive from this period.

Sunday 30 December 2007

Wellington prepares for Hobbit movie windfall

The Dominion Post | Thursday, 20 December 2007
Wellington is set to reap a windfall to match all of Bilbo Baggins' riches, thanks to Peter Jackson's new Hobbit movie deal.

Budgets of US$150 million (NZ$198 million) are expected for each of the two films, and film studio executives say it is likely Wellington will again be home base for Middle-earth.

Based on JRR Tolkien's The Hobbit, the movies will be made simultaneously and released in 2010 and 2011.

They will tell the story of hobbit Bilbo Baggins before the events of The Lord of the Rings.

Michael Lynne, co-chief executive officer of New Line Cinema, said most of the movies would be made in Wellington. It is understood sites in Queenstown and Te Anau are also being considered.

Preproduction begins next month, but no script-writing can begin till a strike by writers in Hollywood ends.

Jackson was in Wellington yesterday, back from filming The Lovely Bones in the United States, but he made no comment on the Hobbit movies.

Wellington Chamber of Commerce chief executive Charles Finny said the return to Middle-earth would be worth "many, many millions of dollars" to Wellington.

"Hopefully this will ensure continued buoyancy in the [film] industry for at least several years to come."

The movies will be also a bonanza for Jackson. The renewal of his relationship with New Line has also been lucrative, The New York Times reporting yesterday that his settlement with the company over Lord of the Rings profits was worth US$40 million.

News of the Hobbit films has sent fans into a frenzy.

Erica Challis, a founder of a popular Tolkien website, said anticipation was already growing. "We are all very excited ... It's absolutely buzzing, the e-mails are flying."

Jackson will produce the movies with his screenwriter wife Fran Walsh, but has not yet signed to direct them, citing scheduling difficulties with his other projects, including The Lovely Bones and TinTin.

However, Jackson and Walsh will have almost complete creative control over the films, with MGM chief executive Harry Sloan saying: "It's Peter's project."

Dollar signs elusive

By GREG NINNESS - Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 30 December 2007
LAWRENCE SMITH/Sunday News

Home-owners and exporters have little to look forward to in 2008, with both mortgage interest rates and the exchange rate expected to stay high next year.


"I think one would have to be quite brave to speak too loudly about what fixed mortgage interest rates might do next year," said BNZ chief economist Tony Alexander.

"About four months ago I was saying fixed mortgage rates might come down by 0.5% in 2008. Now I think they may not come down at all and if they do it will be minimal.

"The reason is, while they will remain supported by domestic monetary policy remaining firm, what happens offshore is pure guesswork at the moment."

While the US Federal Reserve could make further cuts to interest rates in that country, strong inflationary pressure in Europe and Australia could see central banks there raising them.

And the outlook for floating rates isn't much better.

Alexander isn't ruling out the possibility that the Reserve Bank will cut wholesale interest rates next year, a move which would flow through to lower floating mortgage rates.

"But if they do, it will not be until really late in the year."

In the meantime, there was already pressure for floating rates to go higher even if the Reserve Bank took no action at all on the interest rate front next year, he said.

Real estate agents will also have little to cheer about next year.

Alexander is picking the number of housing sales to fall from about 100,000 this year, down from a peak of about 120,000 in 2003, to about 75,000 to 80,000 in 2008.

The only bright spot is that unsatisfied demand from first-home buyers and investors looking for bargains should help support housing prices, he said.

Alexander is also cautious about picking where the NZ dollar might be headed next year.

"Ever since the currency got through US65c in 2004 people have been always having to upgrade their forecasts and it is the same now," he said.

"Most forecasters are saying maybe we could hit US80c in the next few months, but we'll finish 2008 lower than we are now. But the risk is that we finish 2008 maybe near to where we are now. The prevalent view is that the NZ dollar will go up in the first half [of 2008] and go down in the second half.

"But to me what it means is a warning to exporters that maybe for the next 12 months they could do some hedging."

Stars like it Kiwi style

By TAMMY BUCKLEY - Sunday News | Sunday, 30 December 2007

A summer star-spotting frenzy has broken out with two of Hollywoods' biggest names believed to have been joined by one of the world's richest men.

Oscar winners Charlize Theron and Jack Nicholson were reported to be enjoying the sights and sounds of Auckland's Waiheke Island.

And last night music fans were on alert for a possible sighting of the celebrity pair at the first of two Little River Band concerts at the island's Ridgeview Estate winery.

Nicholson, the star of movies such as One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and As Good As It Gets, is no stranger to the country and was one of countless high-profile spectators who arrived here to watch the 2003 America's Cup.

Unconfirmed reports suggest the 70-year-old film legend has a property on Waiheke.

South African-born stunner Theron, who won her Oscar for Monster, has visited before and is a friend of Kiwi filmmaker Niki Caro who directed her in North Country.

Meanwhile, the small northland community of Ahipara was buzzing last week after a surprise appearance by Microsoft founder Bill Gates, said by Forbes magazine to be worth $73 billion.

Gates apparently enjoyed a two-hour quadbike tour near the surf town.

Local quadbike tour operator TuaTua Tours last night refused to confirm to Sunday News that Gates had been in town.

"I can't confirm anything," a spokeswoman said, citing client confidentiality.

Gates, a frequent visitor to our shores, reportedly flew in on Boxing Day with his family and a small platoon of security guards in tow.

The celebrity rumour mill also suggests superstar Johnny Depp is due to visit the surfing hotspot over the next few weeks.

New Zealand has fast become a top holiday retreat for the rich and famous.

When Tom Cruise came in 2003 to film The Last Samurai around New Plymouth he praised the country's beauty and Taranaki's "stunning and breathtaking" scenery and the warmth of the Kiwis he met.

"New Zealanders are known for their warmth and hospitality and generosity and I certainly have seen every bit of that since I've been here," Cruise said.

Singers Jack Johnson and Ben Harper's love for the country and Raglan's surf saw them buy properties in the coastal town.Country music star Shania Twain has also found a haven here, purchasing Motatapu Station near Wanaka a few years ago.

Trans-Tasman rowers set foot on Aussie soil

Sunday, 30 December 2007
A team of four rowers has set foot on Australian soil after completing the first trans Tasman row in 31 days.

Steven Gates, Andrew Johnson, Kerry Tozer and surfboat champion Sally Macready set out on November 29 from Hokianga Harbour, north of Auckland.

They arrived to cheers from wellwishers at Sydney's Neutral Bay at 10.15am (NZ time) after clearing customs at Watsons Bay earlier.

The team members appeared fit and healthy as they were reunited with family and friends.

Gates described the feeling of entering Sydney harbour as "absolute euphoria".

"We were beyond the point of exhaustion, we really were," Gates told reporters.

"We pushed that envelope to its absolute limit and to hit the heads this morning at four o'clock and to know that this was all going to be over really soon was just the most powerful feeling."

Macready was greeted by her students from Loreto Normanhurst and said she was looking forward to having a shower.

"We were pretty confident the whole way, we had ups and downs but we were pretty confident," she said.

"I can't wait to have a nice long shower."

Macready was unsteady on her feet as she spoke to the media and thanked more than 40 spectators who welcomed the team.

"My legs aren't feeling too bad, it's just after being at sea for that long I've sort of got off and it's like you're very drunk, so I find it hard to be balanced at the moment so it's almost like when we were seasick on the first few days."

She said the main aim of the trip was to cross the Tasman sea safely.

"For us it was really just to get across, but it's a bonus always to get a record."

The crew received a congratulatory message from two Australian kayakers who have been delayed by bad weather in their attempt to kayak from Australia to New Zealand.

"We've been in touch with them a bit and every day found out how they're going and we went within 100km of them at one stage crossing paths," Macready said.

"It will be nice to hear that they're safe and sound and have made it."

Gates said the four rowers battled severe weather, encountered sharks, whales and dolphins and narrowly avoided a collision with a ship.

"There were some really nasty storms and some really lucky incidents with ships where they hadn't seen us," he said.

"They were coming for us and if it wasn't for Sal seeing them, identifying them coming towards us, grabbing the spotlight and sticking it in their eyes, we probably wouldn't be here."

-AAP

Sunday 16 December 2007

Kia ora from London town

5:00AM Thursday December 06, 2007
By Stephen Jewell
As I emerge from the tube station, the chaotic throng of shoppers milling around the junction of Oxford and Regent streets initially confuses me. It's the first Saturday in December and more than one million Londoners have descended upon the city's premier retail district, which has been pedestrianised for the occasion. Despite the absence of cars, the West End is even more hectic than usual, but as I make my way through the crowd, I am drawn to the familiar accents of the friendly faces queuing outside the Salvation Army's Regent Hall.

Today, the church is playing host to London Maori club Ngati Ranana's 13th annual Christmas celebration of Maori and Polynesian culture. As a trio of Salvation Army horn players from the Regent Hall band push past, one of them remarks on the impressive size of the sold-out crowd.

Upon entering the auditorium, the intricately carved arch that forms the centrepiece of London-based artist George Nuku's set looms auspiciously over the stage, turning the theatre into an erstwhile marae for the afternoon.

_Burrows - who co-hosts with New Zealand-born Samoan performance artist/poet Rosana Raymond - opens the festivities with a heartfelt "kia ora".

"When a Maori says kia ora to you, you should say kia ora back," he declares - before the muted response prompts him to add the proviso "with some enthusiasm."

First up on stage are the young members of Te Kohanga Reo o Ranana, who perform an endearing piece, based on a story written by their own Sade Anderson. According to British-born member Gerry Williamson, the kohanga reo is very much the heart and soul of Ngati Ranana.

"Some of the children are of Maori descent but are not born in New Zealand," she says.

"But even though they are born and raised overseas, they are still aware of their Maori heritage and are able to be taught Maori customs and culture."

Ngati Ranana - which translates as "descendants of London" - was first formed in the late 1950s with the intention of providing expat Maori with a place to learn te reo and cultural traditions such as haka and waiata. The club regularly performs at weddings and anniversaries, and for visiting dignitaries, politicians and film and sports stars.

"The concert is mostly a thank you to our friends and family and the people we've worked with throughout the year," says Aaron Hapuku, who hails from Christchurch but has called London home for more than five years. "The majority of people here live and work with English people, so this is an opportunity to get together and show them exactly what we do."


Originally, the concert was solely the province of Ngati Ranana but in recent years Pacific Island groups have also been included on the bill. "There's a major Polynesian presence in London now," says Hapuku.

"We've done what a lot of other cultures, such as the Muslims, have done in London. What we enjoy about London is that you can walk up the street and hear half a dozen conversations and only three or four of them will be in English.

Strangely, people in this melting pot tend to be more patriotic. They hang on to their traditions, religions and cultures."

The programme is evenly split between Maori and Pacific Island acts. London Fale's traditional Tongan and Fijian songs contrast neatly with Raymond's hip-hop slam-style spoken word poems, while the colourful dancers and thunderous log drums of Beats of Polynesia threaten to bring the house down. Finally, Ngati Ranana bring the show to a close with a stirring set of original song and dance that climaxes with a special haka written by Hapuku.

"I wanted to write something that reflected on those people who came across all those years ago and started Ngati Ranana as well as those who came before them, such as Hone Heke," he says. "When the British first went to New Zealand, all those early Maori chiefs came over to London to meet Queen Victoria and the British Crown. They made the presence of our people known to the rest of the world."

As the title of one of Ngati Ranana's waiatas written by John Dwyer suggests, the concept of turanga-waewae - having somewhere to call your own - is even more important to Maori living in London than it is to those living in Australia because of the distance from Aotearoa.

"Back home, turangawaewae is centred around a certain piece of land but, because we are in London, it is more about the place that we have to stand with each other," says Hapuku.

Saturday 15 December 2007

:02AM Wednesday December 12, 2007
By Jim Eagles

I presume the view of Auckland from the top of Sky Tower was stunning. The photos certainly suggest it was. But I was too scared to look.

Instead I was studying the fragile-looking metal grille under my feet, the one making up the 1.2m-wide circular walkway that now runs all the way around the tower 192m up, wondering if it really would take my weight.

The experience wasn't helped by the fact that through the holes in the grill I could see tiny cars and ant-sized people moving around on the street way, way below.

I was also focussing very hard on retaining my balance and trying to tell myself how easy it would be to walk a 1.2m-wide path at ground level.

It was a stunning day, with almost no wind, but it still seemed as though the tower was swaying around ... or maybe it was just that my knees were shaking.

Welcome to SkyWalk, Auckland's latest terrortraction, which officially opened on Saturday as part of the tower's 10th birthday celebrations.

Skywalk 360

http://www.skywalk.co.nz/
'A towering accomplishment'
SkyWalk 360® is a new adventure activity where participants experience a guided interpretation walk on Sky Tower’s famous pergola.

Adventurers experience the heightened sensations of being outside the Sky Tower’s observation decks on a 1.2m walkway, with absolutely nothing on either side except a 192m drop off.

You are out there beyond the realm of the window cleaners – actually being part of the view. The basic idea is to walk onto the pergola on the east side of the SkyJump platform and traverse the 360 degrees of the ring stopping at several points for interpretation including Auckland history, landmarks and of course a smattering of old fashioned Kiwi humour to provide local flavour and help steady the nerves!

Do it 363 days a year at Sky City corner of Federal and Victoria Streets, Auckland (Not open Christmas day or New Years Day

Friday 14 December 2007

Western Springs

Saturday 8 December 2007

New UK visas require stopover in Wellington

The Timaru Herald | Wednesday, 05 December 2007

Kiwis wanting to head off on their OE will first see themselves landing in Wellington because of new security restrictions on United Kingdom visas.


People going to the United Kingdom for more than six months will have to be finger-printed and photographed after the British Government introduces biometric visas on December 11.

About 12,000 New Zealanders who visit the United Kingdom each year will have to book an appointment at the British High Commission in Wellington to have their fingerprints scanned and a digital photo taken. Applications will be denied if people refuse or are unable to provide acceptable finger scans and photographs.

Timaru travel agent Kate Flynn said biometric information was just an added cost for people working hard to meet the hefty OE restrictions.

Travelling to the nearest British embassy was another expense on top of airfares, visas and the $6000 of savings needed.

The British High Commission looked unlikely to lower visa costs but hoped to open facilities in Christchurch and Auckland in January 2008.

Mrs Flynn said global security had increased the restrictions on travelling since 9/11. People applying for an American or French visa also had to visit the country's embassy before their application was granted.

Mrs Flynn believed the tougher restrictions might deter some people from doing their OE, choosing instead to travel further abroad for shorter stints.

The biometric system was already operating for United Kingdom visa applications in more than 100 countries around the world. It was now the global norm for protecting against identity fraud.

Data would be sent straight to the United Kingdom allowing immigration to validate people's identity on arrival. It would be held for 10 years and was protected by the United Kingdom's Data Protection Act 1998.



LIGHT RELIEF: The antics of Bret, left, and Jemaine in Flighto f the Conchords offer a glimmer of hope to viewers.

Conchords save viewers' sanity

Ah, for originality on the television. Chance would be a fine thing, which is why there's a glimmer of hope having Flight of the Conchords still up and going on Prime (Monday, 10pm).

It's not rating through the roof, but what do you expect when it has to follow the beyond-contempt comedy Welcome to Paradise.

By the way, did you see the show's director Geoff Murphy's cameo appearance at the end of the last episode dressed up as some sort of Irish cultural figure dancing in a crowd scene?

Apparently there's a very strong possibility that this stinko show could actually get a second season. They're kidding, surely?

On Flight of the Conchords Murray, Bret and Jemaine's band manager, had decided to add a bongo drummer with a penchant for solos to the duo and make it a threesome.

The lads were not impressed and fell out and split up, with Jemaine getting Dimitri on his keytar to join his "band" and Bret soldiering on with the odious bongoist.

There was an extremely endearing moment when Murray and the lads were bickering about the makeup of the band, when Murray suddenly noticed they were standing in front of a map of New Zealand.

"Look, we shouldn't be arguing in front of the map. It's not right," Murray tsked tsked, herding the party away from the background of the sacred cartography.

In a cruel twist of muso fate, Dimitri and Todd ride off into the sunset to become overnight recording sensations and even Mel, The Conchords' odious stalker, defects to the new boys on the block.

With discord in The Conchords it was a little skimpy on the song offerings and fans had to content themselves with Bret doing gauche knock-offs of 80s dance routines instead. He ain't no Flashdancer but the effort put into constructing a geekish dance routine that went on for some minutes would have been just as tricky as trying to look like a professional.

Sunday 2 December 2007

Mai Time comes to an end

Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 02 December 2007

MAI WAY: Oliver Tukino Coddington and Gabrielle Paringatai will host the end of Mai Time.

Maori youth show Mai Time comes to an end, its first and last presenters talk to Karen Tay about its legacy.

Oliver Tukino Coddington was 12 when he first appeared on Mai Time. "The crew was filming in Raglan one day and I just jumped in front of the camera."

It was the first year Mai Time went to air as a stand-alone show and the little boy from Raglan was awe-struck at seeing his own young, brown face on TV.

So it is no surprise that, 11 years later, the 23-year-old Maori presenter chose Mai Time as the launchpad for his television career.

Coddington and fellow presenter Gabrielle Paringatai will host the last episode of the iconic TV2 Maori youth series on Saturday morning. The 12-year-old show has been canned by TVNZ to make way for a new series that is still in the works.

The series first appeared as a segment on the TV One Maori current affairs programme Marae, before going on to get its own timeslot on TV2. It won praise over the years for its emphasis on the use of te reo and its positive portrayal of Maori culture and role models all back when Maori TV was still just a twinkle in someone's eye.

The final episode, says Paringatai, will involve "glitz, glam, red carpet, highlights of the past 12 years, old presenters, new presenters, Mai Time history".

Coddington has been with the show two years and Paringatai, a former a primary school teacher, just a year. Both are sad to see the end of the show, and not just because they will lose their jobs.

"It's probably one of the few shows where you could see positive Maori stories. Maori don't always come off the best in the media, but you watch Mai Time and Maori are always on top," Coddington says.

Paringatai is more philosophical: "It was a shock," he says. "But all great eras must come to an end eventually, and this time around it just happens to be Mai Time."

The show came to be known for its eerie knack of picking out local talent way before they become celebrities. Former presenter Stacey (then Daniels) Morrison who was with Mai Time for nearly eight years and is now a radio host on Flava FM is presenting a small segment on the final episode on this very topic.

"We do seem to have interviewed a lot of people just before they become really, really famous," Morrison says. "When you're not at a primetime show, you're not top of the list when you want to interview people. So you have to get creative about it and grab people before they're too cool for school.".

One of those tall poppies is former All Black Carlos Spencer "people were like, who's this guy with the funny haircut? We interview him and next minute he's humongous".

Then there were people like Brendon Pongia and Melody Robinson; both appeared on the show before they went on to the Tall Blacks and Black Ferns. There were so many athletes that after a while, the running joke became "you wanna be an All Black, come on Mai Time," Morrison quips.

She was one of the show's five original presenters, along with Teremoana Rapley, Quinton Hita, Mike Haru and Bennett Pomana. All have gone on to successful media careers and still keep in touch. Hita, who was the youngest member of the Maori Language Commission, had a brief acting stint on Shortland Street and now makes short films with his own company Kura Productions. Haru is a DJ with his own show on Base FM. Rapley is a producer and hip-hop artist and Pomana a DJ at Flava FM.

Hita admits he would still be a smalltown boy if not for Mai Time.

"It was my foray into television. In terms of my longer-term career trajectory, it was the catalyst for me to come to Auckland, which opened up the door for me."

He credits the show with helping him clarify what he wanted out of life.

"Two things stand out for me. One is the presenters. What was really great about Mai Time is everybody got along, which doesn't happen all the time. And back in the day, Mai Time offered Maori youth an opportunity to participate in national television," says Hita.

Mai Time never attracted huge numbers of viewers (its early Saturday morning slot was perhaps a deterrent), but even so, Paringatai and Coddington grew up watching it. Morrison and Haru still have people approach them about their time on the series.

Haru feels the show became a victim of its own agenda. It didn't stay relevant to today's rangatahi.

"With all the technology that's available to the youth today, the show really has to have some kind of learning curve. It's got to be something that's going to make me want to sit down and watch Mai Time. To me, it's just catering for young little kids."

He uses Maori TV as an example of what good Maori programming should be about.

"When I look at it, it's really professional and they play good programmes. I don't think they just box themselves into one style."

For Hita, Mai Time was an opportunity to work towards the bigger picture rather than a chance to watch hip-hop videos, undoubtedly why many youth tuned in. The series was the first to bring hip-hop into the mainstream during the 1990s, before it became chart music.

"We [Maori youth] were renegotiating our identity at the time. Things have changed since but Mai Time was an important vehicle. So in that sense a lot of these new shows targeted at Maori youth is Mai Time's legacy. So even though we played hip-hop music, which helped to hook in the younger Maori generation, more importantly, there were a lot of field items in there and it was always from a Maori perspective."




The final Mai Time screens on TV2, Saturday, 10.30am.

Army medal theft 'insult' to our nation's heritage

:00PM Sunday December 02, 2007
By Derek Cheng


Charles Upham, double VC winner during the Second World War.
Nine Victoria Crosses were among a dozen medals stolen from the Waiouru Army Museum early this morning, in what the Defence Force says is an insult to the nation's heritage and history.

Defence Force personnel and police are appalled at what appears to have been a well-executed robbery that targeted the gallantry medals in a building protected by an alarm, security cameras and regular patrols.

The alarm at the museum went off at 1.10am, but when a security guard arrived within minutes, there was no sign of the thieves.

Two George Medals and an Albert Medal were also taken in the robbery. The most recent addition to the VC medals - awarded to Corporal Willy Apiata - was not taken.

The VC is regarded as the highest military honour that can be awarded.

Chief of Army Major General Lou Gardiner said the theft was an attack on everything that soldiers had fought for in the last century.

"The value of these medals is what they symbolise and what they were awarded for. They were awarded for extraordinary valour, for courage and commitment and come to symbolise what our military forces have committed to over the years. It's a lot more than just monetary value.

"My message to the thieves is that you've stolen an important part of New Zealand's heritage. [These are] just not some medals for some medal collector. They symbolise some huge sacrifices that New Zealanders, over a century worth of conflicts, have actually put in for their country."

Defence Minister Phil Goff said the theft was a crime against the nation.

"These medals are national treasures. New Zealanders will be appalled and disgusted at the greed and self-interest of those who have stolen the medals."

The museum's executive trustee, Lt Gen (Rtd) Don McIver, said the medals would be worth millions on the black market.

"Some of them will be hard to sell. Every one of them is identified by name on the medal and in that context they could be identifiable as stolen.

"But that wouldn't mean hard collectors wouldn't be prepared to have the medals, even if they couldn't display them.

"They can't be replaced. You can get replicas of the medal sets, but they are known as replicas and in terms of value, it's nominal."

The family of New Zealand's most decorated soldier, Captain Charles Upham, last year sold his VC and Bar for an undisclosed amount, estimated to be well in excess of $1 million.

When asked to describe what he thought of the offenders, Mr McIver said: "I don't think I could out loud."


Inspector Steve Mastrovich said the thieves seemed to know what they were looking for.

"Entry was gained through a fire escape at the back of the building ... by smashing a window and opening a door.

"They targeted the Valour Alcove, which is where the gallantry medals are kept. It looks as though it was well-planned and well-executed.

"Some material was left behind, so it looks like they possibly had an idea of what they were looking for."

He said the thieves only broke into one display cabinet before escaping through a fire escape door. He had yet to determine how they fled the scene.

Major General Gardiner said there were no leads at this stage.

All security measures at the museum - including reinforced glass, security patrols and security cameras - had worked as they should have.

"In an event like this the security will be looked at again. But all the standard operating procedures were activated and ... everyone's done the right thing at the right time," he said.

Video footage has been handed to the police. Border control had also been put on alert in case someone tried to tae the medals out of the country.

The medals that were stolen belonged to the museum, families of war heroes and trusts. All artefacts in the museum are insured.

The museum director was last night making contact with all families of medal-winners.

Police have set up a hotline - 0800 349 0606 - for anyone that may have information leading to the recovery of the medals.

Saturday 17 November 2007

Netball: It's Ferns v Aussies again

5:00AM Saturday November 17, 2007
By Suzanne McFadden

Silver Ferns goal-shooting star Irene van Dyk fends off a determined bid for the ball from Jamaican Althea Byfield during last night's aggressive semifinal. Photo / Kenny Rodger

Netball World Championships
Netball: Relieved South Africa overcome Samoa
Netball: Ice queen cracks a smile as she awaits final countdown
Bruised and battered, the Silver Ferns will be charged with adrenalin for their biggest game in four years tonight - the defence of their world netball title.

Their gripping semifinal fight-back win over Jamaica last night took its toll, but Ferns coach Ruth Aitken insisted they are prepared for the physical battle that is always on the cards with arch rivals Australia, their confident opponent in tonight's final.

"That's what these championships are all about. So whether they are sore or not the adrenalin will certainly kick in. The recovery will be first class, but there's no doubt it takes a toll on the body. But we've just got to get on with it."

New Zealand have never won a world netball championship at home; neither have they ever notched up back-to-back title victories.

Their opponents Australia are perennial foes. They have a formidable record in world championship history - eight time winners, three times runners-up.

Since the first tournament in 1963, when Australia beat New Zealand by one goal, the two teams have been rarely separated by more than two goals at a world tournament.



AdvertisementSince the last World Championships in Jamaica in 2003, where the Silver Ferns beat Australia in the final 49-47, the neighbours have met another 18 times. The record stands at 10 victories to the Silver Ferns, eight to Australia.

While Australia have had the upper hand in recent times, they are still smarting from losing both their world and Commonwealth crowns to New Zealand.

The encounter beneath the hoop between Australian captain Liz Ellis and the Silver Ferns' super shooter Irene van Dyk - once again the most accurate shooter in the world - will be a highlight.

For two of the most experienced players in global netball - both in their fourth world championships - this may be their swansong.

Ellis predicts the more consistent side will win tonight.

"You can't let yourself go down at any quarter, you can't let yourself feel the tired legs, you can't let yourself drop at any stage. It's just going to be really consistent, simple netball."

Van Dyk was buoyed by last night's fightback: "At the beginning of the year Australia got ahead of us by 10 points and we couldn't fight back. Now we've crossed that barrier and we've realised there's more in the tank."

'Is your heart pounding like mine?'

A 19-year-old giant almost brought the Silver Ferns crashing down in one fell swoop of her dangling arms last night.


For three quarters of the world championship semifinal, Jamaica seemed poised to crush New Zealand's dreams of back-to-back world titles, using their 1.96m tall shooting sensation Romelda Aiken as their weapon.

Monday 12 November 2007

Schoolboys' grundy run banned

NZPA | Monday, 12 November 2007

Cold water has been poured on the country's only sponsored high school grundy run.

Year 13 students at the town's Marlborough College traditionally storm the field of their female counterparts clad only in their underwear for an annual grundy run.

But the principals of both colleges have this year banned the event.

"It has not been an event that we have condoned for many years," Marlborough Girls' College principal Karen Stewart told the Marlborough Express.

"Both colleges met and discussed it and we decided that it could cause possible damage to property, among other things."

The "other things" included dangerous driving and obscene behaviour.

"At this time of the year we should be getting them ready for exams."

Boys' college principal John Rodgers confirmed he had asked the boys to refrain from taking part.

"The simple reality is that it's not possible to organise an event like that without destructive behaviour being a part of it.

"We have made a simple request to them, and they have been told they are not to be absent from school."

But several students told the newspaper they planned to press ahead and had even secured sponsorship from underwear brand Jockey; each boy would be sent a pair of underpants.

"They were the only school in New Zealand to approach us, and that was one of the reasons we couldn't refuse," Jockey Men's New Zealand product manager Amanda Carmichael said.

Netball: Silver Ferns steamroll Wales

5:42PM Monday November 12, 2007
By Cathy Walshe

Silver Ferns 86 Wales 24

New Zealand netball coach Ruth Aitken made full use of her bench as the Silver Ferns steamrollered a hapless Wales 86-24 at the world netball championship here today.

After a blitzkreig start, the Silver Ferns worked a myriad of different combinations intelligently, and ground Wales into submission in yet another one-sided pool match.

New Zealand opened at a ferocious pace, playing focused, full-throttle netball, an 11-goal scoring spree going unanswered by a shell-shocked Wales.

New Zealand shooters Irene van Dyk and Jodi Te Huna found space in spades, both in and out of the circle, and with the midcourt running riot, revelled in a flood of possession.

Wing defence Julie Seymour was at her destructive best, hunting the ball and menacing Welsh wing attack Amanda Evans as she tried in tandem with centre Anna Mayes to find ways to work the ball into shooters Rebecca James and Cara-Lea Moseley.

Wales had only 10 shots on goal in the entire spell, sinking just five as the Silver Ferns look composed in converting 25 of their 27 attempts to lead 25-5 at the end of the first quarter.

The Welsh recovered somewhat in the second quarter to double their scoring rate and trail 15-47 at halftime, the fired-up Siver Ferns continued to find space freely thanks to some concentrated through-court defence.

Aitken used her bench freely, making wholesale changes at halftime.

Maree Bowden took over from Laura Langman at centre, while Joline Henry came on for Seymour and Leana de Bruin took over the goal defence bib from Sheryl Scanlan.

Maria Tutaia also came on at the break as Van Dyk was again rested by Aitken, finishing with a 91 per cent success rate in sinking 39 from 41 attempts.

The onslaught slackened slightly in the third quarter, with the Silver Ferns taking time to settle the changes and the midcourt looking a little more tentative.

But with Casey Williams in outstanding form at goal keep, there was always a steady supply of possession for Tutaia and Te Huna to convert and New Zealand led 65-20 with 15 minutes remaining.

Aitken tweaked her attack again at the three-quarter mark, moving Bowden to wing attack and bringing Seymour on at centre. Paula Griffin came on for Tutaia at goal attack, and Te Huna moved back to goal shoot, and the Silver Ferns machine rolled on to an inevitable victory.

- NZPA

Tui and Jack Daniels

Monday 24 September 2007

Mild Spring weather came to an abrupt halt this afternoon when severe thunderstorms hit the Auckland, Waikato and Waitomo regions.

About 30mm of rain fell along with hail 20mm in diameter, and wind reached gusts of 110km per hour.

The temperature dropped suddenly in a few minutes from the maximum high of 20C to under 13C.

MetService ambassador Bob McDavitt said the storms started on Auckland's North Shore about 4pm before travelling northwest of Hamilton, where they were due to ease about 8pm.

He said there may have been about 450 strikes of lightening but most were from cloud to cloud, with only about 10 hitting the ground.

Election Time - Who are the people standing?


Thursday 6 September 2007

Thursday 23 August 2007

Road block to tracing family history

Tracking down one's ancestry can unveil tales of love and long-lost reunions but it could soon become difficult.
The Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Relationships Registration Amendment Bill, if accepted, will mean organisations such as genealogists and the Salvation Army Family Tracing Service will be met with road blocks, says Robyn Williams, Howick chairwoman of the New Zealand Society of Genealogists.
"It will affect people doing research when they're putting their family together.
"Genealogy is a long process and you need clues to find more information," she says.
The bill has been proposed to help reduce identity fraud and provide greater security and privacy for New Zealanders.
It means most people wanting information other than their immediate family will need written permission from the person they want documentation on.
"If I did not have access to a relative's death certificate I may not have located a newspaper article about his death. People track family members for health reasons too," Ms Williams says.
Salvation Army Family Tracing Service director Major Bronwyn McFarlane says providing help to people trying to get in touch with missing relatives will be hindered.
"In one example, a dying father in the United Kingdom had not been in contact with his New Zealand based son for 16 years," she says.
"In his final days of life, he wanted to know if his son was alive and well. In locating the son, the crucial piece of information was a marriage registration document. Under the bill, however, we would not have been permitted access to the document."
The bill was introduced to Parliament in February and public submissions closed in May.
By REBECCA PAPPRILL - Eastern Courier Wednesday, 15 August 2007

Queues at ATM as it doubles cash

9:08AM Thursday August 23, 2007

Hordes of people flocked to a Queenstown ATM this week after the machine started doubling their money.
Police said a concerned taxi driver alerted them to the problem on Tuesday night after the driver saw queues of up to 20 people lining up at the Kiwbank ATM.
"There were queues of 15 to 20 people at any one time for a good six hours from about 10pm until 4am," the taxi driver said.
"It was a backpacker bonanza."
A KiwiBank spokesman Bruce Thompson said a contactor had incorrectly stacked the ATM with $20 notes in the $10 box and vice versa.
Unfortunately a lot of people took the opportunity for "a Tuesday night bonus" until the bank was alerted and the machine shut down.
Some people had had an attack conscience and returned the money yesterday, Mr Thompson said.
And some people ended up with less than they expected as anyone seeking to take out $20 only got $10.
- NZPA, NEWSTALK ZB

Jackson and Tamihere running for mayor

:00AM Thursday August 23, 2007By Wayne Thompson

Two former MPs turned talkback hosts have entered mayoral races - Willie Jackson in Manukau and John Tamihere in Waitakere.
Promising to inject lively and colourful debate into campaigns for their cities, the pair are also highlighting their track records for being forceful advocates.
They are aiming to replace retiring Manukau veteran Sir Barry Curtis and Waitakere Mayor Bob Harvey, who is seeking a sixth term.
"The Maoris are coming" joked Mr Tamihere as he and Mr Jackson walked up the summit of Mt Eden yesterday. But Mr Jackson, his co-host on Radio Live, showed annoyance at being asked whether the duo, if elected, would show a more serious and bureaucratic side?
"Everything I've done is serious," said Mr Jackson. "We've been politicos all our lives, we have been advocates for years. We have a bit of fun but we also address serious issues.
"It's no publicity stunt. This a serious challenge by two people who are committed to representing people."

Monday 20 August 2007

Thursday 16 August 2007

Region's whitebait season opens with whimper

YVETTE BATTEN yvette.batten@tnl.co.nz - Taranaki Thursday, 16 August 2007
Jean Keith of Waitara chose to open the whitebaiting season rather than spend the day bowling.
Taranaki's Jean Keith had no trouble choosing between bowls and whitebaiting yesterday.
She wasn't going to miss the start to her 40th year fishing from the banks of the Waitara River for anything.
"It was a matter of going to bowls or coming to opening day," she said.
And she fishes the "hard way" - scooping a large net through the water in time to the music wafting from her trusty little radio.
"I find it easier putting this net in the car rather than one with poles and screens," she said.
But bending and pulling the net through water can be hard on her muscles. "Tomorrow I will know all about it," she said.
While the effort was first class, the catch wasn't with barely enough for a fritter.
"Like any fisherman, we all hope it (this season) is going to be a good one," she said.
But the season wouldn't be opened properly unless the traditions were adhered to.
"The first few you catch, you put back in the water. It gives you a clean conscience," she said.
Mrs Keith can spend up to five days a week, during the season, at her sunny riverbank spot on the Karaka flats.
"Sometimes you've got to get up fairly early to get a posie. Once it gets out that they're running the river bank, it's like race day."
And at the end of the day she gives most of her catch away. She recommends turning the whitebait into a big fritter by cooking with four or five eggs in butter, seasoned with salt and pepper.
Department of Conservation programme manager biodiversity Bryan Williams said yesterday's catch was average.
"Some people caught up to three kilograms, while others just got a cupful."
Mokau whitebaiters got the best catch, while Waitara and other smaller rivers weren't too good.
DOC had a couple of complaints about people fishing illegally, which were followed up, but the people had moved on. Copies of the regulations are available from the DOC offices.
"There's really no excuse," Mr Williams said.

Thursday 9 August 2007

Potato head

I am a potato head. I will eat potatoes anywhere, any time, done anyway and with anyone. Potatoes done six ways will be my last meal when I go to prison for killing people who eat McDonalds. Because it's winter I am now allowed to talk about potatoes again. Given the choice, I would write about potatoes every week.
We have quite a choice of potatoes now in New Zealand; although we're still a way behind Bolivia which has 250 varieties.
Potatoes are between 70 per cent and 80 per cent water, 10-20 per cent starch and 10 per cent sugar, mineral and protein. Not as the diet fascists would have us believe, 100 per cent sugar. In terms of calories, eating a potato is no different from eating an apple or a banana. How can that be bad for you? The fact you can hide a lot of butter and oil in them is beside the point.
Potatoes should be kept in the dark in a paper bag, not in plastic. Maori always kept them in a pit.
Except when the recipe prohibits it, it's a good idea to eat potatoes scrubbed, not peeled; stirred, not shaken because the layer immediately under the skin contains most of the vitamin C and flavour.
It's important to buy the right potato for the right dish. It's madness to mash a waxy Jersey Benny, for example, and folly to make a salad from floury puff balls. It can only end in tears and then your salad will be too salty. Here's some tips:
Cut waxy potatoes into 1.5cm cubes and fry in duck fat. Apart from horse fat, there is absolutely nothing better in which to fry potatoes. It gives them a creaminess and earthiness.
Boil waxy potatoes in thick slices, then toss them with thickly-sliced, rustic sausages and vinaigrette.
Puree Agrias with hot olive oil and milk, through a ricer.
Scratch Agrias with a fork and put them under the rack roast meat is cooking on.
Cut Agrias in half lengthwise and roast them face down on sprigs of thyme, salt, pepper and olive oil. The thyme sticks to them prettily.
Make potato bread.
Make a warm salad from Peruperu Maori potatoes which are waxy and sticky. The creamy yellow skin is splashed with purple.
Mash purple Urenika Maori potatoes. You need to use a lot of liquid as they are dry and floury. They look dramatic with mashed carrots and mashed Brussels sprouts.
Make a fish tagine with waxy potatoes, preserved lemon, fresh coriander, tomatoes and saffron.
Or Vichysoise, which is leek and potato soup.
Try Jansen's Temptation - sliced Agria potatoes baked in cream, anchovies, allspice, topped with fresh bread crumbs. This recipe is essential for winter carb loading and preservation of girl curves.
5:00AM Monday July 30, 2007By Peta Mathias

Thursday 26 July 2007


New Music TV Show - Bassline to be produced19Jul07

A new Maori Television show showcasing the cream of New Zealand music will stage a series of gigs between August and November this year.
BASSLINE – to be produced by Auckland-based Revolution Productions – will film the live performances and interviews with the artists as well as interesting and straight-to-the-point field stories.
Presented by Te Awanui Reeder from chart-topping band Nesian Mystic and B-Girl Sheeq from Auckland radio station Flava, the show will offer an insight into the sound and culture of the local music scene.
The gigs that are filmed for BASSLINE will benefit the charity, Youthline, which provides personal development initiatives and counselling to young people.
To learn more about BASSLINE and to find out how to be a part of the show, contact TK Davey at Revolution Productions on 09 308 9100, mobile 021 126 0011 or email tk@revprod.tv.

Saturday 21 July 2007

Saturday 14 July 2007

Children of the 50s, 60s, 70s,

we would be in class and someone would be called to go to the murder house - it was awful - I still get palpatations when I have to go to the dentist. No injections back then, just slow drilling and pain!!!
The Murder House" it sounds like a Stephen King title lol but yeah, omgosh it was sooo terrifying sitting in class knowing that when your poor classmate came back from t.m.h. it would be YOUR TURN! It was all in alphabetical order so we all knew when we'd have to go. And the waiting.... waiting... waiting... and then in walks the classmate and looks in your direction.... ooohhhh I'm surprised we all don't have heart conditions from the trauma... ;)
Hated it. Had one HUGE fat dental nurse that kept screaming at me to open my mouth wider, it was as wide as I could get it & was already sore. Just cos her fat fingers wouldn't fit in it.I actually had to have four teeth out top & bottom as my jaw is too small to hold the normal amount of teeth, but that's another story & dentist. waving & holding out hand for a TT2*.
I was born in the 60s hated school, especially the dental nurses. Im sure they just drilled our teeth for the fun of it.. half the fillings I have now probably were never necessary. My children have 1 or 2 max. Yes it was a lot safer back then on the streets, used to bus into the city and walk home after work from the bus stop.. wouldn't do that now.
anything phsycodelic and hotpants and trouser suits and muslin dresses and pink mens shirts and flowery boys boardshorts.
at the dairy they could sell you 3lb bags of sugar on a weekend but weren't allowed to sell 6lb bags.
I was a child of the 40's and I can remember the unsalted potato chips which had a small bag of salt enclosed, plus the stiff petticoats which my Mum always had starched for the big Sat. night dances. Anyone here from Hamilton where I grew up? Remember the Starlight Ballroom in Htn and the Teen-a-rama Rock 'n'Roll dances?
friend of my Dad's worked in a clothes shop and gave my sister & I a paper dress each. Does anyone else remember them? You could just cut them to length. Ours were striped across ways in colours of yellows & orange. Yuk, hated mine so never wore it. Didn't like the person who gave them to us either.
40 years ago today..... Decimal currency changeover. Who remembers this ditty? One and two pence stay in line on DC day, drop one down from three to nine on DC day, ten to twelve you drop down two, conversion's easy when you do, you'll be set for DC day. The 10th of July thissss yeeeaarrr!
There must have been different songs in different areas as the one I remember went like this. *One a penny, one cent, two a penny two cents, three a penny, two cents too. Four a penny, three cents, five a penny five cents, six a penny, five cents too.* Can't remember any more of it.
Our netball coach was named Fred, and we'd sing this song on the bus trip...Seven little girls, sitting in the back seat kissing and hugging with Fred. Hard case cos he was old and wrinkly. I'm sure he lapped it up though lol
was always sent to the dairy to buy Dad's tobacco & tissues. He got, "a packet of Grey's Fine Cut and a double book of yellow tissues." I use to run all the way saying that over & over so I would get it right at the shop.On Saturday nights, Nana & I would go to the dairy where Nana would get the Saturday Star Sports paper & a chocolate covered bar & I would have a bag of popcorn and a Chokito[spn] bar.I never ate the middle out of the bread but did nibble the corners off.*
remember, My parents giving my-self and my younger siblings castor oil on a Saturday, then mum would give us a hot cup of tea after-wards to wash it down. I hated that crap but my brother loved it. I remember we had to have black molasses too, once again my brother loved it and my sisters and my-self hated it. Our parents said we had to have it clean us out, so that our blood wouldn't be dirty, lol, I'm cracking up to my-self writing this.
Yep, we had to save to buy things we wanted, or did without. Now kids seem to think anything they get was theirs by right and a lot of what they get they don't appreciate anyway. Not happy with one TV, they expect to have one of their own in their room. Glad my kids understood I couldn't afford to do things like that. Had to buy things like food first. lol.As the saying goes, the more you earn the more you spend. What happened to saving? Admit I can't save, even now. Something always crops up just as you think you are nearly on top of the bills.*Sigh.*
did you have school banking? We used to take our bank book and our 6d or 1s to school each week. One kid in our class used to bring 2/6d - we thought he was rich!! It was amazing how the money mounted up - we were taught to save from a very early age.
yeah the banking, we took our Post Office Savings book and 1/- to school on the Wednesday and got the book back on the friday. I think someone from the PO came to the school to pick up all the books. Did you have a Dr Barnadoes Box as well???
yes I remember the apples in tissue paper. Dad used to order cases of fruit from hawkes bay every year - they used to be sent by rail and every year without fail some of the fruit had been pinched.
grew up in Hawkes Bay (but I didn't pinch that fruit... honest ;)) I remember one year at primary school all our class went to a packing shed with our prewritten letters for overseas pen pals, that were packed with the fruit that were being sent overseas. Some of us, including me, got penpals out of that. What a novel idea.
I remember standing on the Duke Of Edinborough corner in front of a telephone box ( only because i was too small to climb on top ) and trying to look up at the balcony of the St George Hotel and watch the beatles
Mum used to make malt biscuits using maltexo. They were yum. Mum also used to make her own wholemeal bread when I was young and I had very healthy lunches for school. But I used to swap them for white bread with marmite and lettuce. I still like marmite and lettuce on white bread! I think we used to get malt bread years ago - does anybody remember that.

The "Things You Never See Around Anymore" list

Ever thought about all the items that were once objects of desire but have just disappeared from our lives? I'll start the list (then it's your turn). Dial telephones, Sony Walkmen, big brown teapots, candlewick bedspreads, ashtrays, slide projectors, turntables, records, castor oil, typewriters, pressure cookers, macrame hangings ...
those doll things that cover the toilet roll and the dolls that go on the bed..
Georgie pie
chatter rings (damn annoying things) and roller skates lol
golliwogs, and those little dolls that you got at a&p shows, and buzzy bees, records, old cartoons that we use to watch as kids.
COMIC books... Richie Rich! and JugHead
seame street, play school nice one stu. wombles muppets smurfs
top cat, flintstones, jetsons, yogi bear, atom ant
brady bunch, bewitched, hogans heroes, HR pufnstuf, bugaloos
Knuckle bones, marbles and hop scotch Cowboys and indians... Gollywogs. Oops am I allowed to say that?
Slinky's, Splat, those rubber-gel hand thingies that you slap against a surface, 1 & 2 cent lollies, brown plastic appliances, carpet in bathrooms, Rainbow Bright, spokey dokey's....
playing elastics.use to play that all the time at school
Crank handle telphones black baby lollies, witches britches, stockings with seams up the back, fur coats
Spaceman Candy sticks with the red tips like cigarettes, they are all white now
Half pint milk bottles in school,,,Moggy Men, Banana Bikes, Sherbet Dabs, Apple Shampoo, Bendix washing machines, milk tokens, moolies, Joe 90, Gigantor, Mrs Beasley dolls, Kewpie dolls, crank handles on cars, 78 records, 6 o'clock closing.....
Anniseed wheels. kids putting disprin in their coke bottles just to get high. lol Jem and the holograms.
No TV and sing songs around the piano at night, racing home made trolleys down the street, ghastly home made tartan trousers, stove-pipe trousers, hats and best clothes on the bus to go to 'town', trolley buses in Auckland, trams in Auckland
men in shorts, long sox and sandles and I hope like hell that fashion never ever comes back
tea cosies, men in stubbies,glass milk bottles, the 8'clock paper, the Auckland Star.......Bell bottom trousers.
petticoats with blow up thingies in the hem, teddy boy irridescent socks, really high teased up hair...hot pants clothing
Bata Bullets and Bubblegummers and those pinafores that had a pleated tartan skirt and a plain white cotton top half so you could wear a hand-knitted jersey over top of it
those pants with the...3 white stripes down the sides with that bit that went under the foot, cant remember what they are called but males shouldnt have worn them the mind boggles trying to remember what they are called- Stirrups,
tt2 iceblocks
Banda machines (pre-photocopiers) They made heaps of prints in purple ink that smelled yum... carbon paper for typing... milk tokens... milk bottle tops (used to make stuff out of them)...
the sherbet lolly that used to come in a triangle container....it had a piece of licorice you dab in the sherbet. Pears shampoo that smelt like real apples. Ra Ra skirts. An egg beater.
The free farmers bus.. and the farmers playground in the Hobson Street store. Yup, with the cafe, and the toy cars etc. :) Spent many happy holidays there... was a special treat to go there once during the school holidays. And then we'd fight over who would give the toll bridge man the coin on trip back to the North Shore.
Vinegar & Tomato sauce.....In big bottles on the fish & chip shop counter. We used to help ourselves and squirt it onto the chips before they wrapped them up.
Treasure tip iceblocks, caramel tablets, Rarotongan Orange and Lime Smash Fizzy Drinks made by Thompson Lewis.
Big Hair and Padded Shoulders Power Suits, pantyhose with inbuilt panties,Kaydee Plastic Sandals, legwarmers, fluoro bike pants, red gumboots, Norm Kirk and other leaders of integrity.
Twinkies They have no nutritional value whatsoever (which is why they are no longer sold in NZ) but damn they tasted Good! :0)
White gloves for the summer/black gloves for the winter(?!) 6d bottles of drink, bottles you could take back to the shop and the innocence not to embarrased about it. Paper straws that came apart if you took too long drinking from it. Respect for the parents. I luv Lucy, The Flintstones and Laverne and Shirley. Frys mint bars and Frys chocolate truffles. Getting three jobs in one afternoon because you were bored with the old one.
Emerald Drops
The goodnight kiwi smacking in public, raleigh 20 bikes, european immigrants.
The goodnight Kiwi on TV Telethon, carless days, bright orange flags kids used to put on their bikes, toffee bars, K-Bars, multiple bangles on girls arms
view master
Buying non-sliced bread I was around before sliced bread. Used to buy a chubby loaf and eat the middle out of it by the time I was home. I got into so much trouble.
Golden kiwi lottery tickets. Pounds, shillings and pence and half pennies (hapennies). Mary Quant make up, vanity bags as accessory bags, tie dyed tee shirts, twin sets
I remember Nomads, they were so comfy But I had the cheaper ones first called "Donalds" (i think, something similar) I used to really like twinkies too.
Homestead Chicken, RTR Countdown Mag, Frank Flash
grapefruit juice in glass bottles from when the milk man delivered your milk to your home, along with the bread.
partyline phone lines, stubbies,hot pants...drain pipe addidas tracksuits, needle and spud ear peirsings
Lovely gold shiny paper in cigarette packets that we used to dress our little dolls in and make gold crowns with..
Hula hoops brown supermarket shopping bags, Butcher shops seem to be disappearing , prams and pushchairs with four wheels.
Those small (1") pink plastic baby dolls that you could put into match boxes for beds. I think they sold for about 6d (5c)
Lanes Emulsion cod liver oil tablets in schools, chocolate delight fizzy and Blue Lagoon. McKenzies and Deka stores. Milkbars, bodgies and widgies.
every delivery vehicle was either a CF bedford van or a TK bedford truck
Does the Rawleighs man still go door to door with his products ? Bwwaaaa that Lanes Emulsion was disgusting. Every Saturday night we had it shoved down our throats. Also, the Bond Brush man used to come door to door.
String you entwined round your fingers on one or both hands and made things like parachutes, cup and saucer
Those paper thingies you folded in certain way... which colour do you chose, which number do you chose, open it up and there's a written message like... your feet smell
I don't miss Lanes Emulsion ever and ever nor those disgusting Iron tonics nor Mother Superior dragging us out of the Milkbars away from the Bodgies. They had Cars with "peaches, this is your can" painted on the doors
Nappies A line full of cloth nappies blowing in the wind..Babies gowns they were kept in till about 3 months,matinee jackets..Horse and cart delivering milk in glass quart and pint bottles where I lived.
knucklebones, four square and elastics! They also had knitted baby booties and bonnets!
Rolling a weeks' supply of ciggies from my Father's packet of Capstan Tobacco. And keeping a rolled ciggie for my own personal use. I was only 5. Being given driving lessons in a Wolsley Car at 5 and I could drive the truck too. People have no faith in their kids today.. I miss that get up and go from the 1950's.. Being able to pour a good Beer from a flagon with a whisky chaser. Chucking the home brew out of the washing machine and digging a hole for the Dunny..Girls had to do everything..
Acid drops, deck and the HUGE twenty cent lolly mixtures!! Roller skates, bubble skirts, the radiogram and old records, nomad shoes, Princess Di haircuts, intervals in the movies so you could stock up with fresh lollies or have a pee, ponchos, Starsky and Hutch Jackets, Pokie machines with the big handle instead of pressing a button.
Trademe July 14 2007

Christmas salesman turns 100

A man who made thousands of family get-togethers special is ready to do some celebrating of his own.
Karl Misa, who founded one of Auckland's biggest Christmas tree farms, turns 100 on Monday.
"I've worked hard and I have had a good life," he says.
The centenarian moved to New Zealand from the Croatian village of Podgora in 1925.
He joined his brother Tom, who had moved here 10 years earlier.
Together they bought a poultry farm on Balmoral Rd in 1940.
It's now the base for a festive family business.
The business started during World War Two when Karl stayed in New Zealand with the Home Guard.
He cut the tops off the many macrocarpa trees on the property and then sold them as Christmas trees.
At the time their top customers were American servicemen.
"They would buy the trees for their sweethearts," Karl says.
The keen moviegoer says bachelorhood and red wine are the secrets to his long life.
He also worked as a dairy farmer and gum digger before opening Capitol Fish Mart in Balmoral with Tom and running it for 40 years.
Karl lived with his brother, his wife Antica and their five children.
Tom's eldest son Roni says Karl was like a second dad, especially after his own died in 1966.
"We always had our family around, and he's had such a great impact in all our lives."
Niece Sylvia Sokolich says the family, including many nieces and nephews, are lucky to have Uncle 'Sisi' still around.
"He's never been alone, he's always been supported and loved," she says.
Karl was active into his 90s, and was known for growing orchids and selling plums, grapes and firewood.
Illness has taken its toll and he's now living in the Guardian at Hillsborough, formally Hillsborough Hospital.
But he's proud of his life, especially his superior selling skills.
"I could sell snow to Eskimos."
Karl will celebrate his birthday on Sunday at Eden Terrace's Dalmatian Club, where he is a life member
By AROHA AWARAU - Central Leader Friday, 13 July 2007

Tuesday 10 July 2007

By SUE FEA - The Southland Times Tuesday, 10 July 2007

She's a hard road delivering the perfect beer, boy

SHE'S A HARD ROAD: Some things never change, like good southern men. True-blue Southlander Mark Wilson has been chosen by Speight's to 'man' its giant floating Speight's bar all the way to London.
Some things never change, like good southern men – and they're still making them, bred with all the star qualities of their fathers before them.
True-blue Southlander Mark Wilson, 26, now a Queenstown marketing manager, has the right credentials.
That's why Speight's picked him from more than 2000 applicants to safely "man" its giant floating Speight's bar all the way to London.
In just over a fortnight Mr Wilson with set sail with Lindsay Gilbert (South Canterbury), Jamie Munro (Dunedin) and Tim Clever (New Plymouth) for a "boys' sea trip" on The Great Beer Delivery, stopping off at Samoa, Panama and New York along the way.
Waiting at the dock in London will be a very thirsty James Livingstone, who sparked off the whole idea by writing to Speight's to complain about English beer.
The four Kiwi blokes will have 75 days of male bonding behind the bar and become TV stars along the way, making sure the cameras get some good nautical mileage.
A former Southland Boys' High School pupil, Mr Wilson played rugby and cricket and built tree-huts, before heading into the bush shooting and then to Otago University for five years "to further my drinking education", completing a science and commerce degree.
Queenstown then became the epi-centre of his "golden triangle", which takes in Manapouri, Dunedin and Invercargill.
"I'm a bit of a home-body – I mean, crikey, it's all right here, why would you leave? "Queenstown is sort of like going on your OE without going anywhere – this way I got a lot of international experience and a few little tools to help when I go look at the world."
But when the opportunity to promote his beloved Southland "while drinking Speight's" came up this year, he just couldn't turn it down.
"Southland's the heart of the beer, I feel. If I can't get Speight's (in a pub) I'll leave, I won't buy anything, unless it's forced on me – I'm 99.8 percent pure Speight's."
As a southern youngster attending "keg parties in woolsheds", Mr Wilson said he could not have dreamed of anything better than being given free Speight's and talking about the Stags and Southland.
Close at hand will be a signed Southland Stags jersey and the Southland centenary rugby flag.
On arrival in October, Mr Wilson will be forced to promote the sponsor's product in English pubs for two weeks, quenching the thirsts of the Kiwi masses longing for home.
And he even gets to fly a mate over to join him for free.
School and university buddy Doyle Richardson, now a father of two, is the chosen one.

Saturday 7 July 2007

Welsh rarebit

4:59AM Thursday July 05, 2007By Amanda Laird
If the definition of a great winter supper is a dish that's simple to make and tastes delicious, look no further than this Welsh rarebit. Hot buttered toast is covered with a melted cheese, mustard and ale mixture and grilled until golden brown - heavenly!

Serves 2
20g butter70 ml dark ale220g grated Caerphilly or Lancashire cheese2 tsp English mustardSalt and freshly ground black pepper4 slices hot buttered toast
1. Preheat the grill to moderately high. Melt the butter in a small saucepan over a low heat. Add the ale and cheese, stirring until the cheese has melted. Add the mustard and season to taste.
2. Spread the mixture on to the hot buttered toast and grill until golden brown and bubbling.