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From one side of local government to another: Michael Ross
From one side of local government to another: Michael Ross

23 September 2019, 1:55 AM

There’s not much Michael Ross doesn’t know about local government in Otago and Southland. So how did this former council chief executive find himself on the other side of the fence, lobbying Queenstown Lakes District Council (QLDC) and the Queenstown Airport Corporation (QAC) at the helm of the Wanaka Stakeholders Group? Michael grew up in Oamaru and started his career working as an accountant. While living in Queenstown, he became a board member of the Queenstown Promotion Board because of his interest in tourism. He managed to persuade QLDC to introduce rate-based funding for the Queenstown Promotion Board. This success raised his profile locally so that when the role of deputy general manager at QLDC came up, Michael’s application was successful. This was the start of a long and varied career in local government. Michael laughingly describes himself as “the most recycled chief executive in Otago/Southland local government”. Michael served at QLDC from 1989 to 1995, looking after the Wanaka Community Board because of his close family ties to Wanaka. He was then appointed chief executive to the Clutha District Council, where he spent five years before moving to Southland District Council for another four years, also as chief executive. After this, he moved to Oamaru to serve as chief executive of Waitaki District Council, where he remained until his retirement from local government in 2017. During this time, as Michael moved from place to place for work, the one constant in his life was Wanaka. Michael’s family have owned property here for 52 years, and Michael remembers childhood holidays at Glendhu Bay even before that. “My dad eventually got sick of camping and bought a section,” Michael said. “I love Wanaka to bits - I’ve always wanted to be here but struggled to find suitable employment in the area.” So, one way and another, it seemed a natural choice for Michael to retire to Wanaka. Thus far, Michael’s retirement has been a busy time. Like many people in Wanaka and the surrounding area, Michael was concerned about plans for developing Queenstown Airport. A year ago, a small group of people started getting together to discuss concerns around the airport. In particular, at that time there was a public consultation around plans to increase the air noise boundary of Queenstown Airport.The fledgling Wanaka group made a submission to council on the air noise boundary, in support of the Queenstown Stakeholders Group. The noise boundary consultation process attracted 1500 submissions, 92.5 per cent of which were opposed to any change to the air noise boundary in Queenstown.Then on October 2, 2018, QAC’s CEO announced that there would be no further moves to increase the air noise boundary of Queenstown Airport, and that the focus would now shift to developing the Wanaka Airport Masterplan.“That’s what really got us [the Wanaka Stakeholders Group] started,” Michael said. “I put my hand up to put a group together, because I felt that my local government background would be helpful.”The Wanaka Stakeholders Group has now become a more formal entity, with about 2700 members in the Wanaka area. The group is now an incorporated society and has developed its website at www.protectwanaka.nz.Like many people in the Wanaka area, Michael was concerned that the community had not been consulted on the real extent of what was planned for Wanaka airport. “There was a consultation process back in 2016 to 2017, but it was all about leasing the airport. The possibility of commercial jet services arriving in Wanaka was not fully discussed with the community back then,” he said. After this consultation, QLDC issued a long-term lease on Wanaka Airport to the QAC. At the time, council undertook to retain ultimate control of the airport through mechanisms contained in the lease and via QAC’s Statement of Intent process.Michael said that despite numerous requests, he and the group have been unable to view details of the lease, so they can’t be sure it actually does stipulate that QLDC will retain ultimate control of the airport.“Wanaka Airport is a community asset that’s being taken away from the community,” Michael said. “There hasn’t been a transparent and open process - this community has not been consulted on the real extent of what was really planned.”Michael added that Wanaka is a community that cares a lot about the future of the area. “The reality is that when we set up a stand in the main street, people walk up and say ‘where can I sign?’ We don’t even have to explain what we’re lobbying for - everyone is now aware of the issue. ” A criticism recently levelled at the Wanaka Stakeholders Group is that it doesn’t represent the interests of local businesses. Michael refuted this claim, adding that among the 2,750 members of WSG, about 500 identified themselves as being local business owners.  Michael estimates that his work for WSG takes up about 10 to 20 hours a week. Outside of this, he is a keen golfer and also enjoys the other outdoor pursuits that Wanaka is famous for: mountain biking, skiing and boating. Michael and his wife Susie have three adult daughters and are currently enjoying a visit from their first grandchild. PHOTO: Supplied

Profile: Caroline Oliver
Profile: Caroline Oliver

23 September 2019, 1:53 AM

At first meeting, you could be forgiven for thinking Caroline Oliver is an Auckland ‘lady who lunches’, but there’s much more to her smartly-dressed, sociable persona - she recently worked for a biotech company where her PhD thesis and ongoing work have contributed to a ground-breaking approach to cancer treatment.Caroline has lived in Wanaka for almost a year and has made herself very much at home in this community, leading music sessions for preschoolers, chairing the Wanaka branch of the National Party, and as a member of St Columba Anglician church’s committee, the Upper Clutha Parish Vestry, the Wanaka branch of the Royal Society of NZ, and service group Rotary.It’s a long way from her role as research officer in the Kode Biotech laboratory at the Auckland University of Technology, from which her work has been cited in more than 40 published papers.Kode is involved with a range of biosurface engineering techniques, and one of its innovative technologies is licensed to an immunotherapy company which is now on the brink of releasing a personalised treatment of cancer. Clinical trials have resulted in an unheard of 100 per cent regression rate, Caroline said.The synthetic animal-antigen molecule ‘AGI 134’, Kode’s patented treatment, is injected into primary tumours. The immune system rejects animal tissue, so it attacks the modified tumour and in the process destroys the tumour. Meanwhile the immune system is educated to recognise the person’s own tumour antigens, and it destroys unmodified primary and secondary tumours.“I’m very proud of the company and very privileged to be involved,” Caroline said. Her link to the company dates back to when she worked at an Auckland blood transfusion centre. She had a staff member called Stephen Henry (now a professor), who went on to establish Kode Biotech. Kode was awarded NZ Innovator in Health Science in 2015.‘AGI 134’ has been through hazard trials and clinical trials, with incredible results, Caroline said. The therapy secured US Food and Drug Administration approval last year. “It will be so dramatic when it’s on the market,” she said. “It will revolutionise cancer therapy.” Kode has more than 100 patents for different therapeutic techniques, and Caroline herself has two patents: for neutralising antibodies, and measuring cell survival.She left Kode last year when her contract expired. “I’d made my mark. I thought it was unfair to others who need the funding, and I didn’t want to stay in Auckland.”Caroline’s involvement in the field was almost accidental, as her heart was in working on tissue transplant techniques. But being married with three children meant developing her career further wasn’t really on the cards. “I fell off the ladder,” she said.She would go to university from 9am to 2.30pm then race off to pick up the kids from school.“You might have done something amazing but you had to leave it for tomorrow,” she said, although she admitted to sometimes heading back to the lab after 8pm.She earned a Master of Applied Science, and a PhD, in which she looked at neutralising blood group antigens.“Unknown to me, it would become the basis for the Kode cancer therapy,” she said. “I was just delighted to contribute what I did.”After finishing her PhD in 2013 she was accepted at both Cambridge and Oxford to do further study on stem cell and regenerative medicine technology. This self-confessed “party person” livened up the workplace at the Stem Cell Immunotherapy Lab and Research Labs in Oxford University; and she is pleased the staff morning teas she instigated are still continuing. “I’m very collegial in my work.”She also spent time in stem cell laboratories in Birmingham, Liverpool, Bristol, Kings College, and the John Goldman Centre, London.After her divorce in 2016 she built a house in Wanaka, not far from the house she and her husband had used as a holiday home since 2009. She joined St Columba, which she loves for its modern traditional approach and “intelligent level of worship”. The church is - and always has been - a big part of her life, and Caroline says her belief boils down to two things: “Love each other as you love yourself; do to others as you would have them do to you.”She also values the structure the church provides in caring for others. She has always done a lot of voluntary work - she inherited an “altruistic gene” from her parents: “Cubs, Brownies, school committees, church,” she lists. “To me, church is outside the church.” Caroline led a pre-school Mainly Music session in Auckland for 14 years, and now coordinates the “wonderful programme” here in Wanaka. She also provided ‘science in the classroom sessions’ for Year 5/6 at Cornwall Park and Glen Innes school (she has a Teacher Aide Certificate) and is hoping to offer the same thing here in Wanaka. There’s more: Caroline sings soprano in the church choir and is practising for The Messiah later this year, as well as studying a certificate of small business management (to support her dress-making - she makes most of her own clothes).It’s a diverse range of activities. “I describe my life as a series of Venn diagrams - and I’m in the middle,” Caroline said.A recent full day included Mainly Music in the morning, lunching with friends, attending the Lazareth Quartet in the evening, followed by her business class - and managing to fit in a glass of wine along the way.“You could not do that in Auckland because you wouldn’t have time with the travel,” she said.Caroline is determined to make the most of life after watching two close friends die in the past year; and she is excited about the imminent release of the promising new cancer treatment to which she has contributed. “I feel I’ve ticked all the good boxes,” she said.PHOTO: Supplied

Tony Wellman and a lifetime of saving lives
Tony Wellman and a lifetime of saving lives

23 September 2019, 1:51 AM

In the 29 years he’s been volunteering for the Wanaka Fire Brigade, Tony Wellman has seen it all.An electrician by trade, Tony is also the leader of the Wanaka Road Crash Rescue Team which is off to France next month to compete in the World Crash Rescue Championship after winning the Australasian Road Rescue Championships in July. The British are the current world champions but Tony believes Wanaka has what it takes to steal that top spot.“You’ve always got a chance on the day. Who said Australia was going to beat New Zealand last weekend [in the rugby]?” he said.Despite his three decades as a volunteer, Tony said he started out late in the brigade, compared to some of his friends at the time. Yet most of them are gone and he’s still going.Volunteering for the rescue team is a big commitment — and one that affects the whole family.“Training is two hours a week on Mondays. Then you have the call outs, which can be anything from a quarter of an hour for a false alarm to four or five hours. We cover up to Haast for car rescues so you could be away for three or four hours quite easily,” Tony said.It’s not just the number of hours - it’s also the fact that you can never predict when your help might be needed.“You have to either be single or have a very understanding partner, otherwise there’s no way you can do this.”Luckily for Tony, his wife understands his passion for helping others.Tony doesn’t like talking about himself but is well aware that he and his team regularly save lives. He doesn’t do it to boost his ego, though, and says a big part of the reason he’s kept going for so long is the Wanaka community. “The town looks after you. That’s why it’s like a payback thing,” he said.His dad was heavily involved in Rotary when he was younger and he remembers people trying to convince him to leave the fire brigade and join the Rotary. But his passion for the work of the fire brigade ran stronger and he never left.Tony’s family moved to Luggate when he was just four-years-old, then to Wanaka when he was about 15. He’s a son of this region and said he remains passionate about it, despite all the changes the area has gone through in recent years.Wanaka, in particular, has gone through explosive growth since Tony moved here but he says, at heart, it’s really still a small town.“People are just lovely, they really do look after you.”While people might still know you by first name, Tony said the growth is even more noticeable when he thinks about the number of callouts the fire brigade volunteers get these days.“When I started we only did fires and the odd car crash. We went from 50 calls a year to now about 200 calls a year. We’re way busier.”The numbers might get higher but the level of attention paid to each person who needs help never changes.These days, the fire brigade gets a lot more mental health support than it used to get when Tony started but he said some days are still tough. And while the number of callouts is higher, the reasons are very much the same old ones. “Drink driving, ice, people not driving to their abilities... People thinking they’re awesome rally drivers, then next thing you know, we’re picking them up off the road,” he said.“Some things you see and you never forget.”Fortunately, that also applies to good things, like the days when you get to save someone’s life. Those are etched in Tony’s memories even more strongly than the bad days.He wishes more people would join the brigade and experience the joy of making that big a difference to someone else’s life.PHOTO: Wanaka App

The gift of teaching
The gift of teaching

23 September 2019, 1:49 AM

What does it mean to be gifted?This is something Danielle Nicholson, a teacher at Central Otago REAP’s One Day School, thinks about often. She leads a programme for gifted Year Five and Six children who are pulled out of the regular classroom one day a week and put in a learning environment catering specifically to their needs.“There’s a great deal of misunderstanding about what the word means,” Danielle said. “Being gifted doesn’t mean a child will be successful - it’s really important these children are taught to use their gift.” Surprisingly, gifted children are much more likely to fail university than other high achieving students, which is just one of the many unexpected things about the ‘gifted’ label.While best diagnosed by a psychologist, there are a range of traits often shared among gifted children: having a greater depth of emotion than others at a young age, a stronger sense of idealism and justice and often presenting as overly sensitive. A high IQ may play a role, but experts disagree on the efficacy of IQ as a measurement of giftedness, and it can be other characteristics, from a highly developed sense of humour to a tendency to disengage in the classroom, that can indicate a child might be gifted. Helping gifted children manage these varied traits - and the advantages and disadvantages they bring - is Danielle’s specialty.After first training as a teacher in her hometown of Auckland, Danielle almost immediately found her niche working with gifted children. A two-year ‘trial run’ moving down south with her husband and first baby while on maternity leave became permanent when her dream job became available through REAP. After 13 years teaching the One Day School, she is still incredibly passionate about the role. Our conversation ranges from discussing hobbies to her studies and where she grew up, but it keeps quickly returning to gifted children and the One Day School programme. Being gifted is labelled as a disability in some countries, and Danielle says without nurturing it, it can have serious impacts on someone’s life as a child and then as they become an adult. “Generally speaking, boys identify as developing behavioural problems and girls have emotional problems. We diagnose boys to girls 5:1 because boys’ symptoms are more noticeable.”Everything she teaches the children must help them succeed in life far beyond school, and it’s far from the maths or science test-measured environment of a regular classroom. “If it’s only useful this year I won’t teach it.”A tall order - but Danielle thrives in her chosen environment, and ongoing research informs the way she teaches. “The lens through which these children see the world is different from the everyday child,” Danielle says. “We teach them about social, emotional, and ethical development as well as high level thinking so they can learn more about themselves and become successful humans.” And interestingly, she wants them to fail sometimes: “If a gifted child doesn’t reach the point where they fail at something, they’re not pushing themselves hard enough.“There’s a dopamine hit that comes from doing challenging activities, and they feel it more because they’re generally more emotional, but get the opportunity less often [because they’re less stimulated in a regular classroom].”After repeating the mantra to challenge themselves to her students many times, Danielle decided it was time to do the same herself, which is how she ended up founding and running the Contact Epic bike race (around Lake Hawea) without any specific experience in the area. While she was looking for inspiration, the bike race idea was floated by her sporty husband (Sergeant Aaron Nicholson who retired from the police force in 2018). Danielle’s not one for bike riding but she is an “organiser by nature”.“My husband is massively into the outdoors and does the exciting stuff. I sit in the office and do logistics.” She says the multi-job life is typical of people in Wanaka. The Nicholsons have two children who each have “very different learning styles” - the elder is now at university and the younger one is at Mount Aspiring College. They’ve become true Wanaka kids - one even called her a ‘Jafa’ not long ago. Danielle wears her Aucklander badge proudly, but she loves Wanaka too.“I don’t love the cold but I love the people and the sense of community and that all groups here intermingle - even if by accident. Your character rings true in the end when you live here.”She’s also a keen skier; loves walking, yoga, wine, food, and people but, as it does throughout our conversation, her work returns to the fore and is at the top of her list of interests. “My true passion is teaching gifted children.”It’s rewarding work: Danielle said some of the most heartening moments have been watching the students learn about world events, from climate change to the Christchurch terror attacks, and talk compassionately and thoughtfully about how they can take action to make positive change. When I met with Danielle, she’d been visited that morning by a former student who is now studying at an overseas university.“He’s just divine,” she says “and doing incredibly well. He talks a lot about the impact the school had on him. I think he’ll go on to do real good in the world.”PHOTO: Supplied

Susie Meyer - breaking the mould
Susie Meyer - breaking the mould

22 August 2019, 9:17 PM

Wanaka GP Susie Meyer may not fit the stereotype of a rural general practitioner (GP), but that’s not surprising, as she followed a less traditional path into medicine. The fifth of 11 children born to a family of “careless Catholics” in Washington State, Susie was a cheeky bespectacled girl with her nose in a book (when she wasn’t playing sport). She came from a working class family where everyone grew up to be a teacher or “helper” of some kind.She aspired to change the world as an activist and, at university in the late 1970s, it was all about feminism, along with all the other things that came with the 70s.After dropping out of university in the US, Susie and a friend became ski bums and moved to Wyoming. “We thought skiers had a cool lifestyle.” She and a friend drove a borrowed station wagon to ski resort Jackson Hole, where she stayed for four years. After meeting a Kiwi who suggested she study medicine, Susie agreed and moved to Auckland where she enrolled at university.“I thought it would be a good idea to be a doctor and do some good, so I was driven by that.” She was certainly driven: first she had to complete a BSc; having never done sciences, she enlisted the help of tutors to get started and read the chemistry text book cover to cover. Susie likes forming groups, and at medical school she set up study groups (“I picked people who were smarter than me”) so her learning was social.Susie (seated centre) with four of her ten siblings. PHOTO: SuppliedThere was plenty of scope for Susie’s activism at medical school - she wanted to promote cooperation over competition. She worked to change the university’s policy of posting people’s ranked exam results to using code numbers instead of names; arranged for better access to counsellors; and organised tutorials for Pasifika students.It was the 1980s, and while Susie liked New Zealand’s “girls can do anything” approach, she noticed it was tempered with “as long as they make everyone a cup of tea too”.She decided to live in Dunedin for her intern years, and spent three years at the hospital before getting winter work on Wanaka’s skifields, which she alternated with summers at the hospital. In those days, Treble Cone’s on-duty doctor was also a ski patroller, pulling rigs and exploding bombs for avalanche control. Susie loved it.When she graduated she was 35 with a young son (Beach, now 28-years-old, with her partner Whitney Thurlow). Susie decided to take her father’s advice: “Don’t worry about what you want to do, worry about where you want to live.” Susie wanted to live in a small town and Wanaka fit the bill. As a training GP she commuted daily to Alexandra or Queenstown - over the gravel Crown Range. There were no female GPs in Wanaka, and people kept asking Susie to set up a practice. She initially set up on her own in 1995, in a small sleepout behind the dentist, which she decorated with items from home. “It was all very homespun.”Susie has kept active. PHOTO: SuppliedSusie had trained with Lucy O’Hagan and Simon Brebner in Dunedin, and connected well with them - all three were a little “out of the norm”, she said.She asked them to join her in her fledgling practice and they agreed. “Setting up the new practice created diversity in Wanaka township,” Susie said. But she and Lucy had to find a new formula of working as GPs. “Basically we had to re-invent the model, because we didn’t have wives at home.” They came up with the shared patient concept, and worked in teams.The practice, Aspiring Medical, eventually moved to premises on Dungarvon Street, then expanded; and finally moved to the new Wanaka Lakes Health Centre in 2011.It was a busy life. Susie and Whitney also operated a business called Wild Walks for eight years (it has now been amalgamated with Aspiring Guides). Susie would be on call at night for the practice 14 hours at a time; she often worked nights and weekends, and missed countless social engagements. She had her first Christmas off three years ago.“These sorts of commitments are a service, a career of dedicating yourself to the community,” she said. “Also, these things are not done in isolation there is a whole team of health workers supporting me.”The work was varied and challenging. Dealing with car accidents, and supporting people who are dying are some of the hardest aspects of a rural general practice, she said.Susie also maintained her involvement with groups. She served on a range of advisory committees, including the national advisory committee for the Royal NZ College of GPs (RNZCGP). She was a member of the Central Lakes Health Network, advising the Southern District Health Board on service delivery in the district, and teacher liaison for the RNZCGP. She taught undergraduate and postgraduates in medicine for 17 years, which took her to many practices around Otago and Southland. She was instrumental in negotiating for the Wanaka after hours service that she believes is the gold standard for care. Susie’s involvement has been such that last weekend she was recognised by the RNZCGP for a career of community service.Related: GP recognised for community serviceAfter 25 years in Wanaka, Susie says the issues of equity and access to health care services remain, but while public health care stops at Dunstan Hospital in Clyde, Wanaka’s access to private care has been maintained - for example, you can usually be seen by a GP on the same day you call to book an appointment.“People who come here now have less difficulty getting access to health care. We are much more of an urban environment,” she said. There’s a flip side: our rapid population growth is challenging infrastructure development, she said. And the fact that we are the furthest community from a base hospital remains an issue. The answer for now is that rural GPs have to be upskilled, Susie said.She retired from clinical work in March this year. She retired before 65, she said, because she was “worried about becoming an old fuddy-duddy doctor”. Susie wanted to stay dynamic in her approach but figured she may not be as sharp as she was at 35. Plus, she wanted to be more creative and she’s seen too many people retire too late to enjoy it. She wanted to take advantage of having kept active with skiing, tramping, biking and walking.Being a GP in a small town means you know a lot about people, and while you may get approached in the supermarket for health advice, you’re also very aware of the people around you and what they’re going through, Susie said. “The thing I’ll probably miss is knowing people in depth.”“I want to be more creative, free of time pressure, free of the burden of working so much,” she said. “My life used to be scheduled six months ahead. Now I don’t have any time pressure.”She has some plans for retirement, such as a few writing projects to finish - including a young-adult novel which she somehow managed to write in what spare time she has. She might try to publish it. “I’m a sort of ambitious character.”She has also written her own story of doctoring in Wanaka, which will appear in the upcoming second edition of Skirt Tales (an update of the Suffrage centennial historical accounts of women in the district) - her “first published piece”.Susie has retired from general practice but not from activism. “I want to do some good activist work. I’ve done women, I’ve done health; I’d like to do something for the environment. I’m going to see if I can offer something,” she said.

Carol Bradley - a little bit mental
Carol Bradley - a little bit mental

15 August 2019, 9:12 PM

Machu Picchu beckons but first Carol needs to raise thousands of dollars and go to the movies. That’s Carol Bradley’s focus as her year long quest to raise awareness of mental health issues comes to fruition.Next Friday (August 2) an audience of 70 plus will attend a special screening of Disney’s Lion King at Paradiso and hear Carol speak on behalf of the Mental Health Foundation (MHF). The price of the movie ticket includes a donation to the cause as Carol aims to raise in excess of $4000 for the foundation.In addition to watching the movie, Carol will be holding raffles, sizzling sausages, and handing out spot prizes and vouchers generously donated by local businesses and organisations. “I’ve been blown away by the kindness and generosity of locals and also the stories that are coming in, as well, about other people’s struggle with mental health,” she said. “I wanted to do something that would bring the community together but also be uplifting and kind,” Carol said. She selected the movie because it deals with grief and survivor’s guilt but also compassion, friendship and loyalty.A vegetarian, Carol takes one for the team at her fundraising sausage sizzle outside Mitre 10. PHOTO: Wanaka App When she’s not raising awareness on behalf of the MHF, this full-time working mum teaches physical education and health at Mt Aspiring College (MAC). Born in England, Carol chose her teaching vocation in the 1990s starting out as a physical education teacher in 1992. In those days, PE teachers were also cross-trained in personal and social health (PSE) and within three years she was taking the lead in PSE education as dean at a sixth form college.“Back then it was sexuality, drugs and alcohol. Now, when we talk about health, it’s always about wellbeing.”Asked to define wellbeing, Carol said coming to New Zealand and discovering the Maori philosophy of wellness, or hauora, “really resonated” with her. The four dimensions of hauora - mental emotional wellbeing (self-confidence), social wellbeing (self-esteem), spiritual wellbeing (personal beliefs), and physical wellbeing (health) are the foundation stones of wellbeing - “when everything is in a complete state of balance.” This philosophy is encapsulated in Te Whare tapa Wha - the four walls of the Whare where if one wall doesn’t have strong foundations, it will affect the other three, she said. As a teacher, she recognises that today’s students are facing a range of wellness issues with mental health and mindfulness becoming increasingly important as, research indicates, New Zealanders tend not to discuss the subject. “We’re very good at keeping our bodies fit and healthy but not so much our minds,” Carol said. “When it comes to mental health, we close things down rather than talk about it.”Four years ago, she went to Australia and trained in the “Mindfulness for Schools” project and brought that experience back to MAC where it was formally introduced to the curriculum. Carol, with her boys Red and Tay, in Ubud, Bali. PHOTO: Supplied “Teaching has to be relevant, up-to-date and appropriate,” she said, and today’s teenage “stress” is triggered by factors she never had to experience. She admits when she was a teenager in the 1980s her peers didn’t talk about anxiety or depression. “We’d say we were a bit sad or down but a word like anxiety wasn’t a part of our language.”Today, anxiety is experienced by most teenagers, Carol said, and much of it stems from social media, such as cyber bullying, sexting, gender roles and body image. The prevalence of personal phones and devices and the rise of social media indicates today’s kids are much more disconnected, she said, and she’s now “spending time teaching empathy”.“Our kids do all their chatting through their phones, so they’ve lost the natural ability to empathise. You can’t tell how a person’s feeling if you’re not looking them in the eye and being fully present.”And Machu Picchu - well that’s the “bonus” to this year of raising mental health awareness. With her 50th birthday on the horizon, Carol said she had been looking for something to sink her teeth into when she discovered the MHF challenge to raise awareness, which finishes with an epic adventure to Machu Picchu, Peru. “It ticks all the boxes for me. It is something I want to do as a mum, first of all, to show my kids that what you put your mind to you can do. You can be anything and do anything; you just have to have the heart to achieve your goals.”Carol also sees this year long effort as reinforcing her credibility as a teacher. “I need to be able to walk the walk. It’s too easy just to talk it up but not do anything.”“This challenge has been a personal project where I could give a little back and, besides, Machu Picchu was always on my bucket list.”Together with 12 strangers from around the country, each with their own personal reasons to promote MHF awareness, Carol signed up for the challenge which culminates in a 12 day Inca Trail trek to Machu Picchu, starting September 6.“It will be incredible when I get there - I’ll be living the dream,” Carol said.Between now and then though, there’s a lot of planning, fundraising, school class work, and packing to go. And going to the movies, of course. There are still tickets available on facebook Carol says, but she expects a last minute rush. For movie tickets click here. Anyone just wishing to donate to the cause click here.

Honest Wholefood Co - making sustainability affordable
Honest Wholefood Co - making sustainability affordable

11 August 2019, 9:10 PM

After nine months of planning, the Honest Wholefood Co is open for business, and the first two weeks of operation have been a whirlwind for the owners, sisters Emma Brown and Nicola Cross.The Lake Hawea-based company sells kitchen, bathroom and laundry essentials without the packaging these goods normally come in. Emma and Nicola source bulk products and sell on the goods in reusable, recyclable packaging - or, better yet, customers can provide their own reusable containers.Wherever possible, the bulk products are sourced from companies already using waste free packaging for the stock, and the prices are set to match or beat the supermarket - a tall order for the entrepreneurial duo. “We want to help people access waste-free products,” Nicola said. “If it’s too expensive, people just won’t buy it.”With backgrounds in marketing (Nicola) and accounting (Emma), the pair sought to provide for customers something they themselves wanted - easy, affordable essentials without waste.Nicola lives as close to zero waste as she can, which requires everything from baking biscuits for her kids when they want them instead of buying packaged ones, to - until recently - driving long distances to find low-waste, affordable pantry basics. The understanding that it can be both difficult and time-consuming to live to a low waste life inspired the pair to make access to their products as simple as possible. “It shouldn’t be complicated, Nicola said. “We try to make it easy.” Nicola and Emma considered opening a retail store before deciding that an online shop, plus providing deliveries, would be the best option, at least to start with. “We try to be really responsive, and work like a storefront online.”Finding suppliers who are willing to deliver goods in waste free packaging - and are also ideally locally or New Zealand based - is an ongoing challenge, but it is an important aspect for the Honest Wholefood Co. “We don’t want to just be a front for the customers who don’t get packaging with what they buy, but also be really responsible at the back end.”Honest Wholefood Co sell more than 150 products through their online store. Visit it here.PHOTO: Wanaka App

Merino Meg
Merino Meg

08 August 2019, 9:07 PM

Merino sheep farmer Meg Taylor defies all the stereotypes.  The Dunedin-born former tourist lodge owner has just 162 hectares of fairly flat land ten minutes drive east of downtown Wanaka. Her farm is made up of three river terraces and the only ‘high country’ is in the views. What’s more, she runs a mere 720 ewes and has been a full-time farmer for less than three years – though she was very involved in her late husband’s farm, and ran it for two years, with help, after he died in 2008. “I herded sheep, set up fence breaks, fed out to stock, drove the tractor and loaded hay etc, etc, quite regularly,” Meg says. “I wouldn’t have gone into farming full time if I hadn’t known what I was getting in to.”While some local cockies were sceptical when Meg started farming merinos on flat riverside land, she had done her research and so far it’s going very well.  “It’s not ‘high’ country that’s essential for merinos, its ‘dry’ country. There are lots of flat merino stations in the Mackenzie Basin and the Maniototo,” she adds. “It’s also a myth that you need to starve merinos to get fine wool. The research now says to feed them as well as you can.”Driving in the ute around the farm, delivering salt blocks to her sheep, it’s easy to see why she loves farming. There are picture perfect panoramas wherever you look, the grass is lush and the sheep are robust and happy.  “And I’m not answering the same questions again and again,” Meg says. After 19 years hosting tourists over dinner at Riverrun – a boutique luxury lodge Meg and her late husband John Pawson built in 1996 - the conversation could get repetitive. “I’m loving not having to be careful about saying what I really think.” When you’ve got Republicans and Democrats around the same table keeping discussions civilised could be quite a challenge, even for a practised diplomat like Meg.After the lodge, moving into the male dominated world of farming was relatively simple. Meg’s happy to be farming merinos (“They’re my favourite sheep, but I guess every farmer feels like that about their particular breed”) and unlike other sheep, merinos are commanding very good prices for their wool.“Ordinary wool earns two or three dollars a kilo at the moment. Merino wool sells for up to $20 to $25. And the meat market is good too.” Meg has led a varied and interesting life. She met her husband John in Melbourne when he was establishing outdoor clothing brand Kathmandu and she was doing a PhD in English Literature at Monash University.Their home was always full of people talking about Kathmandu and eventually Meg decided she may as well join in officially. “It was an exciting time. The business was growing very rapidly. It included retail shops - eventually in both Australia and New Zealand - wholesale and a busy mail order service. Mail order was a key strategy in those days - rather than internet. I did the catalogue and marketing from 1990 on.” Kathmandu became a big successful business, and Meg and John eventually sold their shares in 1994.They took a year off to go climbing and have adventures, and the following year moved to New Zealand, bought some farmland bordering the Clutha and Cardrona Rivers and started building the lodge. Meg threw herself into tourism, with the same enthusiasm she previously had for retailing outdoor clothing and would later have for farming. “It’s like there’s a switch in my brain turning from one thing to the next.”  There are some constants in her life, one of which is a love of the outdoors. And that particular love has a strong connection to everything she has done both professionally – outdoor clothing, tourism in Wanaka and then farming wool for outdoor clothing – and in her recreation – which includes a passion for cycling and mountain sports.Tragically, John died in a climbing accident in 2008. Meg leased out the farm and continued to run the lodge for another eight years. She also set up another tourism business called Green Journeys with two other lodge owners, which offered ‘luxury holidays, accommodation and experiences’.Eventually Meg decided she was ready for a change. Three years ago she sold the lodge and her share of Green Journeys and became a full-time farmer.She threw herself into learning everything she could and has loved every minute of it. “It’s a very exciting time to be farming. So much is changing. I’ve got an auto-drafter in my sheep yards and I’m planting nitrogen-fixing legumes rather than applying nitrogen. There’s lots happening in the eco and technology spheres.” It’s also an exciting time to be living in Wanaka. And like many locals, Meg is not letting her work or her lifestyle stop her from fighting to protect the town she loves.“My friends and I had been discussing Queenstown Airport Corporation’s plans for developing Wanaka Airport and after six months of talking decided it was time to do something. “ Now when she’s not busy on the farm, Meg can be seen in town helping run the Protect Wanaka information and membership drive stand.“It’s fascinating talking to people on the streets about the issue. Almost no-one wants a $400 million redevelopment so the airport can take jets. There are so many other things that $400 million could be spent on in Wanaka; waste water infrastructure, medical facilities, parking, roading, school facilities and so on."“Our key request is that Wanaka people should have a say in the development of Wanaka Airport. QAC is planning for millions of passenger movements and this will change Wanaka massively and for ever.”“The plan for the airport is not driven by any vision for Wanaka’s future but instead by constraints on the development of Queenstown airport. The easy solution is to look over the hill to the green fields of Wanaka. We’re happy with 50 seater domestic flights to service the local market but we don’t think the dual airport model being proposed is in any way for Wanaka’s benefit."“We want our council to have a vision for Wanaka’s future, beyond seeing our town as a solution to Queenstown’s problems.”PHOTO: Caroline Harker

From Wanaka to Broadway
From Wanaka to Broadway

03 August 2019, 9:40 PM

Rising star Thea Erichsen already has loads of accolades under her belt, from starring as Annie in Showbiz Queenstown's production of 'Annie' to traveling to Los Angeles and performing at Disneyland. But this young singing, dancing and acting talent has recently been offered her biggest opportunity yet: she has been selected to perform at the 2019 Broadway Dreams Showcase in New York City. The 16-year-old former Wanaka teen - now living in Auckland - took part in the Broadway Dreams New Zealand summer intensive workshop in January 2019 in Auckland. The week-long programme is designed to strengthen New Zealand's upcoming talent, and allows students to receive training and support from current Broadway creatives and performers. At the end of the week the United States faculty awarded four students scholarships for the Broadway Dreams Showcase, and Thea was one of the four. Thea needs to raise funds to travel to New York and for her accommodation while she is there, and she has come up with an innovative way to do it - to travel back to Wanaka for a one-off performance. Her show, ‘Wanaka to Broadway’, is coming up on Sunday July 28. Thea is bringing with her other talented performers from Auckland, and local Wanaka dancers and singers will also be part of the evening of musical theatre.The show is an opportunity to enjoy a night of entertainment and attending will help make Thea’s trip possible.The Broadway Dreams Showcase is a huge opportunity for young performers, giving them the chance to work alongside current Broadway performers, directors and choreographers, plus the showcase will be viewed by some of the best industry representatives. To book your tickets to Wanaka to Broadway, click here. If you are not able to attend but would like to help Thea’s goal become a reality, you can contribute to her Givealittle here.PHOTO: Supplied

Hamish McLean: international athlete and aspiring engineer
Hamish McLean: international athlete and aspiring engineer

26 July 2019, 9:36 PM

Champion swimmer Hamish McLean has just been selected to represent New Zealand at the 2019 World Paraswimming Championships in London. It’s not his first outing at “the Worlds”. Indeed he’s an experienced international competitor having trained or competed in Australia, England, Scotland, Spain, Germany, the United States and Brazil.He now studies in Christchurch but the former Mt Aspiring College (MAC) student still considers Wanaka home.It’s where his dog Charlie and his mum and dad, Claire and Alastair, live and it’s where he comes to chill. With Wanaka’s new swimming pool he can even keep up his training and still enjoy the benefits of being at home.Born with achondroplasia, Hamish is a person of short stature who has excelled at something he truly enjoys. He discovered his talent for swimming competitively after his first “meet” as a member of the Wanaka Swim Club. He was 11-years-old when he attended his first national swimming competition and by 15-years-old he was representing New Zealand at “the Worlds” in Glasgow, and a year later at the Paralympics at Rio in 2016.In Rio he swam in four events - a big ask for an Olympic novice whose name was only added to the team at the eleventh hour.“I was a little disappointed that I didn't get selected at first. But I had kind of prepared for both situations, if that makes sense,” Hamish said. “Training ramped up a lot as soon as I found out. And I had to let the school [MAC] know as I was going to be having a whole term off in the 2016 year.” At Rio, Hamish set an Oceania record in the paralympic final of the Men's 400m Freestyle S6, finishing seventh in the event. His goal at these “Worlds” is to improve his personal best times in freestyle and individual medley and qualify for the Paralympics in Tokyo next year where he’s aiming for a podium finish in his specialist events, the 400m freestyle and 200m medley.He said there’s a big difference between the “Worlds” and the Paralympics. “There are so many more people, as there is more than one sport. It was a little overwhelming at first but you settle in and it is great fun in the end,” he said. Hamish (back row, 2nd from right) with his 2019 World Champs team, including Cameron Leslie (left) and Sophie Pascoe(centre). PHOTO: BWMediaHamish said he hasn’t been mentored by any one person to achieve the heights he’s climbed but he was lucky to have made some good contacts early in his career.At his very first national swim meet, he made friends with Sophie Pascoe (New Zealand’s most successful Paralympian with nine gold medals and six silver medals from three Olympics). “I’ve always looked up to Sophie and she’s always been very supportive and helpful,” he said. “She invited me to be on her relay team [in 2011] and I was really stoked to be swimming with her.” He’ll be training with Sophie’s coach Roly Crichton in Christchurch in the lead up to these World Championships. Another teammate he’s often travelled with to international events over the years is Cameron Leslie (para swimmer and Wheel Blacks (wheelchair rugby) who has represented New Zealand at the Paralympics at Beijing (2008) and Rio, as well as the Worlds 2012.As with any success story, there’s always been a good deal of struggle, effort and self-discipline required to get there, but Hamish thinks his path to success has benefitted from his start in a small town.“The Wanaka community has been really good in supporting me,” he said. Everyone at MAC knew him and got behind him when he was fundraising with sausage sizzles outside Wanaka New World; or mini auctions through the Wanaka Swim Club.He was even offered the use of a private swimming pool for training when Wanaka’s public pool was closed for earthquake strengthening works.“I don’t think it would be the same in a big city like Christchurch but Wanaka is such a tight-knit community, it’s so much better,” he said. Hamish still swims under Wanaka Swim Club’s name. PHOTO: SwimInfo NZHe has also appreciated the flexibility offered by Canterbury University for him to juggle exams and assignment deadlines while attending national and international meets.Hamish is studying a four year Bachelor of Engineering with Honours degree at Canterbury. “It’s really interesting and I’m enjoying it but it is hard work with lots of assignments and tests.”He’s currently leaning towards civil and structural engineering. “My cousin and my uncle are both civil engineers and what they do seems pretty interesting and cool.”He’s enjoying the challenge of being a student and continuing his training. Bishop Julius Hall was his home for his first year and, together with “a bunch of people I met at the hall”, he’s gone flatting this year. “I’m not too bad at cooking and with my training I’m trying to keep a nutritional balance with lots of vegies and pasta. I do need to eat healthily to perform well but I think I’ve got a good balance that works for me.”Seven swim sessions plus two gym sessions each week is his standard routine and it keeps him at peak performance. “Any more and I start to get sick or injured.” Endless hours of training sessions can get quite long and tedious but it’s all worth it in the end, he said. “When I’m training I just think about random things; the easy training sets can be relaxing but when you have to turn it up a notch it gets pretty hectic and tiring and all you’re really thinking about is when it’s going to be over.”Right now, with only eight weeks before the New Zealand team departs for England, Hamish is “just putting in the hard yards”. At home, he’s enjoyed swimming at the Wanaka pool, especially being able to relax in the hot pool after training, and has been training with Wanaka Swim Club’s new head coach Cameron Stanley. “He’s a good coach and a very good fit for the Wanaka Swim Club.”Hamish’s advice to anyone who wants to succeed is to find something they really enjoy and stick at it. “You’ll always do well if you have a passion for it. Don’t be put off when it gets hard; it will pay off in the end.”

Nine teachers named for new school
Nine teachers named for new school

18 July 2019, 9:33 PM

Nine teachers have been appointed to the foundation teaching staff at Te Kura O Take Kārara, Wanaka’s new primary school, which will open for classes next year.Foundation principal Jodie Howard said a strong mix of teachers with a wide range of skills had been appointed following a rigorous selection process. “We were very happy with the quality of the applications from within and beyond our district,” Jodie said.Two of the teachers who will join Take Kārara currently teach at local schools. Estelle Moore will transfer to Take Kārara from Hawea Flat School and Fergus McLean will transfer from Wanaka Primary School.All other teachers are either new to teaching or come from elsewhere in the South Island. The new teachers (and their current schools) are Anita van Looy (Clearview School, Rolleston), Anna Mulconroy (Highfields School, Timaru), Anna Murdoch (Heathcote Valley School, Christchurch), Caitlin Buttle (Knights Stream School, Christchurch), Jillian Macfie (beginning teacher), Joe Miller (Goldfields School, Cromwell), and Olivia Pearce (beginning teacher).The teachers will be employed from the beginning of Term Four this year and will be working with the leadership team to prepare for the opening of Take Kārara at the beginning of 2020. The school will initially cater for a roll of 400 students. Jodie said there would be opportunities for children, parents, caregivers and whānau to connect with the teachers before the end of the year.Expressions of interest for enrolment at Take Kārara are now open and can be completed via the school’s website, where more information about the new teachers can also be found. Meantime, construction of the school in Three Parks is proceeding smoothly, with steelwork for the buildings now clearly visible on the site alongside the Wanaka Recreation Centre, Jodie said.The new school has been created to accommodate the rapidly growing population in the town and the increasing number of school students. It will be complementary to Wanaka Primary School and Holy Family Catholic School.Visit the school’s website here.

Not just a farmer’s wife: Chanelle O’Sullivan
Not just a farmer’s wife: Chanelle O’Sullivan

15 July 2019, 10:04 PM

Chanelle O’Sullivan has only lived in the Upper Clutha for a few weeks but she feels right at home.The mum-of-two has gained a name for herself online with her Instagram account, but her social media handle - “just a farmer’s wife” - doesn’t paint the whole picture.The “just” is in jest, of course. Anyone who’s ever met a farmer’s wife knows how busy they always are, and what a range of roles they have.Chanelle moved from Pleasant Point, South Canterbury, to the Hawea area about eight weeks ago with her husband Dave and the couple’s two children, when Dave took up a job managing a nearby station.“The name [justafarmerswife] came about because I run a group with 12,000 rural women across New Zealand - Farming Mums NZ - and quite often women felt treated as ‘just’ a farmer’s wife,” she explained. “It’s very sarcastic. Any woman living on a farm wears many hats at any one time.”The group started in 2013 and has been a helpful hub for Chanelle to both stay connected with like-minded people and also work in the industry she loves.She is involved in a number of aspects of the farming and agriculture industries, independently from her husband’s career. As well as managing the Facebook group, she works in social media and marketing for different agriculture businesses, runs the family’s Airbnb in Twizel, works with Farmstrong on improving the life of farming families and has a few other business ideas simmering away.Her children, seven-year-old Isabelle and four-year-old Hunter, also make sure she’s busy every day — and she wouldn’t have it any other way.Chanelle with children Isabelle and Hunter.Chanelle knows first-hand how isolating farming life can be, not just for the farmer but for the whole family. It often involves moving away from friends and relatives, sometimes regularly, constantly leaving support networks behind. Her Farming Mums Facebook group works as a stable support system for those in that position.The last couple of months have also been an example of how much Chanelle benefits from the support of that online community. Uprooting the family from Pleasant Point, all the way to Hawea, wasn’t easy but she’s happy to find her feet again now in the Upper Clutha.The region, she says, ticks all her boxes. “I love it here. It’s been a full on few months but I’m loving it. We love the outdoors. Every 10kms, there’s another DOC sign with another walk or a river or something to explore and that really suits us,” she said. “And I love that you can take dogs on so many tracks down here.”Living just outside Hawea, she says she gets the best of both worlds: the quietness of countryside living and the convenience of having everything she needs nearby, whether she turns on the road to Cromwell or Wanaka.Born and bred in Auckland, Chanelle always knew she’d grow up to live in a rural setting. She remembers visiting a farming station while on a family holiday in the South Island, as a child, and deciding right there and then that was the kind of place where she’d live as an adult.She moved from Auckland to Canterbury on her own, via a detour to study agriculture in Hamilton, and met her now-husband Dave not long after arriving in the south. She never looked back.“The thought of traffic makes my heart race. I hate wasting time,” she said, when asked about what turns her off city living. “I just don’t like the rat race.”Animals and the outdoors have always been a true passion for Chanelle. Her first job was at a pet store, then she became a vet nurse, and is now farming.“I love the outdoors aspect of farming. You do something different every day,” she said.“I’d suffocate in a 9-to-5 job. I know some people really like routine. Sometimes I wish I did too but it’s just the way I work, I have to have ten things on the go.”It’s probably a few more than ten at the moment, but it’s too hard to keep track as Chanelle continues to say yes to all the opportunities that come her way — and then thinks up new ones in whatever spare time she gets.One of her goals is to get better at taking time for herself, and she is encouraging all other rural women in New Zealand to do the same. She’s recently worked with Farmstrong on a nationwide survey to understand the struggles and needs of farming families. The survey found that, for farming mums in particular, one of the main struggles is the guilt that comes from… well, everything.“Guilt that comes from being away from the farm, guilt from being away from the kids, the typical mum guilt,” Chanelle said. “Self-care is also tied to self-confidence. It then plays off in your family and everything else you do, but it’s easier said than done.”Chanelle is using her Facebook group to remind women to take time to do things they love, one thing a day, whatever that is. The important thing is that you find your one thing. Just one thing. But remember: the “just” is sarcastic.PHOTOS: Supplied

‘Outstanding contributors’ recognised
‘Outstanding contributors’ recognised

12 July 2019, 9:57 PM

The Rotary Club of Wanaka recognised two outstanding contributors to the Wanaka community on Saturday (June 22) when it awarded Paul Harris Fellowship awards to Lynne and Ralph Fegan.At a dinner at Cardrona Hotel to celebrate the annual change-over to a new club president, out-going president George Scott outlined the services of the husband and wife team.“It was a great honour to present the award to two people who have made and continue to make such a selfless contribution to others,” George said.Lynne and Ralph came to Wanaka in 1996 after 30 years in Franz Josef Glacier where they owned a supermarket and souvenir shop. They set up bus company Wanaka ConneXions and Lynne set up the Alpine Community Development Trust (Community Networks), becoming its inaugural chairperson.Lynne was also chair of Women’s Probus & Travel Club, held treasury positions with the RSA, U3A, the Presbyterian Church and Concert Society; she found speakers for Grandview Probus and worked with Queenstown Lakes District Council on the Wanaka Town Centre Strategy CommitteeLynn Fegan responding to her award.Ralph is a familiar Wanaka identity, known for his community work. He has worked with victim support, been chair of Lake Wanaka Tourism, is active on the RSA committee, civil defence and fire brigade, as well as a justice of the peace and wedding and funeral celebrant.George said Ralph is passionate about Wanaka Airport and the Wanaka community. Other people are foremost in his mind and often his prioritising of the needs of others is to his own personal detriment, not that you would ever hear that from him, George said.“The members of the Rotary Club of Wanaka acknowledge the wonderful dedication, work ethic and enthusiasm that Ralph and Lynne have brought to the local Wanaka community,” George said.A Paul Harris Fellowship Award is recognition for outstanding work and contribution both to Rotary and to the community.It was in 1905 that Paul Harris, an American, founded the Rotary Organisation. The award in his name is held in high regard throughout the Rotary world.PHOTOS: Pip O'Regan

Local historian looks to the future
Local historian looks to the future

08 July 2019, 9:54 PM

Barbara Chinn has lived in Lake Hawea for nearly 20 years and she’s seen a lot of change. In fact, as she said when we met for a cup of tea in a busy Wanaka cafe, “change is the only constant”.When the historian and author moved from Dunedin to Lake Hawea with her husband about 18 years ago, there were fewer than 100 pupils in the local primary school. That number has more than doubled now.She says she sees the growth in the community every day but, however much it has changed, it’s still her favourite place in the world.“I think one of the main interesting things is the way the community is growing. There are different opinions about how it should grow and there’s quite a lot of controversy at present.“What I like about it is that many of the houses have been built for families where the parents work locally and so they live there, they’re not holiday houses. What I don’t like is the idea of the special housing area, which is beyond what we thought was the boundary of the township and has no public transport. It’s ridiculous.”Barbara is heavily involved in the community and is passionate about identifying and trying to solve the challenges it faces. She’s part of the Hawea Community Association, as well as the Lake Hawea Guardians, and the Foreshore Group. She works with the Upper Clutha Historical Record Society, and is also applying for funding for Hawea archives to be housed in the Lake Hawea Community Centre.“We’ve got quite a few records in there already and I have to sort them out. I’m currently applying for funding. It’ll be a year or so before it’s underway,” she said.She might be in her seventies, but she’s not letting age slow her down.“On Thursday mornings I work with the foreshore group, and we do weeding. Then later that day, I leave and I go with the ‘grans group’ to the Hawea school. We meet up with very young children at the library and they each bring their reading book and they read to us. When they’re done, they choose a book and we read to them,” she explained.Her husband Trevor Chinn, who she refers to as Trev, passed away late last year. Since then, Barbara’s seen even more examples of what a tight-knit community Hawea is.“We don’t know everybody but everybody cares for everybody else. Since Trev died, I’ve noticed it even more,” she said, explaining how everyone made sure she was looked after through that tough period.The loss of Trevor was a loss for the community and for New Zealand as a whole, as the country lost one of its great meteorologists and glaciology experts. But no one felt the loss as deeply as Barbara.The couple had been together since their university days in Christchurch.“I got together with him because of our shared interest in the outdoors and the mountains,” she said.He taught her what he knew about glaciers and she inspired his love of tramping in wild places. By the time they met, Barbara had been tramping and climbing for years, since before becoming a teenager. He hadn’t done much tramping at all but took to it like a natural.“We did a lot of climbing and tramping together. Including one or two first ascents of minor peaks,” she said.Her passion for tramping and climbing came from her uncle and aunt, with whom she used to spend her holidays as a young girl, just outside Christchurch.She had to wait to turn 15-years-old before joining the local tramping club, which she did as soon as she was allowed.“After I’d been married for seven or eight years, I started teaching, and I ran the school tramping club at Christchurch Girls (where I’d been a pupil). I taught English but tramping was very important to me. I used to take the kids on ski trips as well on the weekends,” she said.It was their love for the mountains that drove Trevor and Barbara to settle in Hawea. “We had a kayak, mountain bikes, we went tramping… we thought it was perfect. I still think it’s a great place to live, even if I can’t do most of those things now.“You can’t live in this area and not appreciate the outdoors. I was lecturing in Otago shortly after we moved here and I used to get up very early on Monday morning to be in my office [in Dunedin] by 9am. Then I’d come home on Wednesday and as I got closer and closer my heart would lift. I knew we’d done the right thing.”The historian says she’s not “particularly optimistic” about the future but sees the current movement trying to fight climate change as a positive thing. “It’s incredibly important. Much more important than many people realise,” she said.Barbara believes that, in 50 years time, future historians will look back at our time and be astonished at the way we’re burning all the fossil fuels. “That’s the main thing.”As for local matters, she thinks it’s important to address the growth of the region but she’s not sure what the right answer or approach could be.“We came here because we didn’t like living in the city. Other people are perfectly entitled to feel the same way. I wonder whether the growth can or should be stopped. It’s tricky.”Whatever happens to Lake Hawea, one thing is certain: Barbara’s heart will continue to lift any time she gets closer to the mountains.PHOTO: Supplied

An educational ‘visionary’: Sue Heath
An educational ‘visionary’: Sue Heath

05 July 2019, 9:50 PM

When Sue Heath applied for a maternity cover position as acting principal of Hawea Flat School, she never expected she’d still be there 21 years later - as much a part of the fabric of the school as the bike park and the vegetable garden.She probably also didn’t imagine she would one day stand before a crowd in central Wanaka, and be roundly applauded as she gave an impassioned speech in support of the nationwide teachers’ strike.Her words clearly struck a chord with the assembled community that day (May 15): “Our children are our future and their education is too important not to show that we have solidarity, that we are serious and that these issues facing the education sector have to be addressed now.”Sue first discovered a love of teaching when she was living in the Philippines with her husband and young family in the early 1980s. For over two years, Sue taught her sons (then eight and five-years-old) at home using materials from the New Zealand Correspondence School.“I found it fascinating to watch how learning unfolds for children,” she said. “Especially for Jeremy, as I had the chance to watch him progress from the very beginning of his schooling.”On the family’s return to New Zealand, Sue applied for teachers college, initially in Christchurch but she transferred her place to Dunedin when the family moved there in 1984.In those days, teachers were guaranteed a job after graduation, and Sue found hers at Kaikorai Primary School in Dunedin. This was an inner city school with ten classrooms, which was to form a stark contrast to Hawea Flat.When Sue arrived at Hawea Flat School in the last term of 1998, the school consisted of two classes: a senior room and a junior room. Sue taught one of these classes alongside her duties as principal. She continued as a teaching principal until around 2007, when the school roll had grown to the point that the school qualified to have a dedicated, non-teaching principal.Sue Heath at Cardrona with husband Harold and Will, one of her eight grandchildren.Today the Hawea Flat School roll stands at 228. And although Sue has clearly been instrumental in various building projects to accommodate the growing school, she would rather talk about the support she’s given to the children’s projects.“I always like to encourage the things that the children, staff and the community hold dear,” she said. “Projects like the Grans' Garden, Enviroschools, and more recently Garden to Table, which sees the children growing food and then preparing and eating it.”Sue said teachers use the Kath Murdoch model of inquiry in their teaching, which empowers children to take action as a result of their learning. One example of this is the safety sign built by Hawea Flat kids beside the wave on Camphill Road. This came out of an inquiry into how they could take action to make their community safer.During her career, Sue has seen many changes in the education sector. She remembers teaching when Tomorrow’s Schools came in, when a lot of time was spent writing policies and procedures. Then the new New Zealand curriculum came out in 2006 and things took a turn for the better.“Under the old curriculum, there were hundreds of achievement objectives that were outcome based. I remember literally standing on a tennis court counting how many children could throw a tennis ball because that was one of the objectives that we had to measure. The new curriculum was brilliant because it had a clear vision of young people as confident, creative, connected, life-long learners, and gave schools the scope to respond to the interests and needs of children and their community.”Te Kura O Take Kārara principal Jodie Howard, who was deputy principal at Hawea Flat School for 13 years up until the end of 2018, described Sue as a “true visionary”.“Sue is always 100 per cent behind whatever the kids want to do,” she said. “She always fights for their causes at Board and PTA meetings to make sure the kids’ dreams came to fruition.”One example of this was when the kids wanted a bike park at school, Jodie said. “Sue just got on and made it happen - even to the extent of taking some kids in to the council to ask for consent to create the bike park.”Sue will be retiring from her position as principal at the end of this year. Her plans for the future are still unfolding but include biking some trails within New Zealand and training her new puppy to be better behaved.PHOTOS: Supplied

Local man honoured in Queen’s Birthday Honours list
Local man honoured in Queen’s Birthday Honours list

20 June 2019, 8:25 PM

Albert Town’s Donald Thompson has been made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit (ONZM) for services to people with intellectual disabilities in the Queen’s Birthday Honours announced today (Monday June 3).Donald has spent more than 35 years advocating to improve the lives of New Zealanders with intellectual disabilities.“I’m absolutely thrilled and humbled to get it,” he told the Wanaka App. “It was a surprise - it came out of the blue.”Donald is a life member of IHC, which advocates for the rights, inclusion and welfare of all people with intellectual disabilities, and he served at every voluntary level of the organisation.Donald’s involvement with IHC began about 36 years ago when his daughter, who has special needs, was about two-years-old.“We found we needed some support with family life. We used all the services IHC provided.”The family used the services, and certainly gave back to the organisation. Donald was North Otago Branch president for 12 years and national president from 2005 to 2015. He also led a governance review of the organisation, which included streamlining the IHC board, after which he transitioned into the role of board chair from 2015 to 2017.Donald has been a director of IHC subsidiaries, IDEA Services and Accessible properties, and a trustee of the Donald Beasley Institute, which promotes research and education in the field of intellectual disability. He has made numerous submissions to parliament on behalf of IHC members, and in 2008 committed to taking legal action against the Ministry of Education over its failure to ensure inclusive education for all children.He has also attended numerous international conferences promoting New Zealand’s rights record and achievements for people with intellectual disabilities.Previously an Oamaru farmer with family business interests in Wanaka, Donald and his wife Gaye moved here in 2002. He describes himself now as semi-retired, and is still involved with IHC.PHOTO: Wanaka App

For the birds: Stu Thorne
For the birds: Stu Thorne

18 June 2019, 8:28 PM

Forest-dwelling rats, cats and all things ermine have a special place in Stu Thorne's heart. He wants them to meet their maker - Game of Thrones style - and leave the birds alone.Into his fifth decade of conservation work, the last nine as a volunteer since his retirement from the Department of Conservation (DoC), Stu has made the trip into the Matukituki valley countless times to enjoy the area and work to improve reestablish its once thriving birdlife.“I’ve had such a long involvement and I'm pretty passionate about what happens up there,” Stu said.He recalls visiting the Matukituki Valley as a boy and being thrilled by the amount of birdsong in the area.Returning in the 1970s, employed by the former Department of Lands and Surveys as a ranger for the huts and tracks programme, he has lived in Wanaka ever since, becoming increasingly concerned about the diminishing number of native birds due to attacks from predators, especially stoats and rats.DoC was established in 1987 and Stu was with the recreation portfolio for another 10 years before taking on the role of programme manager for biodiversity until his retirement.Two projects he considers highlights of his career involved successfully translocating two species to the Wanaka area: alpine robins and buff weka.The weka were transported from the Chatham Islands in 2001 to populate islands on the lake, successfully breeding away from predators. Now numerous generations later they are a common sight on Mou Waho and Stevenson's Island with their curious, social nature (a liability on the mainland) appreciated by boatloads of visitors.In 2008 Stu acted on an idea he had to bring breeding pairs of robins from the Routeburn area and releasing them in the bush behind Aspiring Hut. He said the paperwork was the most difficult part of the project and he teamed up with Queenstown’s biodiversity officer Barry Lawrence to make it all happen.Taking on the monitoring role banding the birds as well as checking traplines alongside Stu, his wife Heather estimates there are now about 400 robins from the original 22 released in the area.The two have worked as a team for years with Heather becoming an integral part of the bird recovery programmes.Stu and Heather with one of the traps.“Once you get married to someone in DoC it becomes part of your life, if I wanted to see him, I had to get involved,” she said.While the bush bashing and slog of getting and managing traplines can be hard at times, especially when the weather turns, the long term rewards are worth it, Heather said.“One of the most exciting times was when I saw a bird that was banded and it was one of the originals - at least 12-years-old. I thought ‘hmm... this is great’. Just a privilege to get out and work with the birds.”Stu has also had stints in Antarctica and Raoul island doing similar work, but the Matukituki remains his regular patrol, with side trips to Makarora and other local spots monitored by trapping volunteers.Their volunteer work increased in scale in 2013 with the formation of the Matukituki Trust.Established and supported by Derek and Gillian Crombie to do predator control work in the valley, the trust now has a total of 780 traps extending along the road from Mt Aspiring Station homestead, up as far as the Cascade Saddle, French Ridge, Liverpool Hut and into Gloomy Gorge.At last count about 700 predators had been dispatched over the past year by the DoC 200 and 250 traps used.With a core team of about ten regulars, a number of others join in from time to time, including an increasing number of overseas visitors keen to do a day in the field as well as sometimes offering valuable donations.The trust is now expanding to look at other translocations.A project to introduce mohua to the valley is in the pipeline following a peer-reviewed biodiversity study, Derek Crombie said. “All the scientific advice has indicated the area is suitable.”Observations over the past summer have also been positive with lots of sightings of kakariki, robins, rock wren and a number of fledging kea suggesting successful nesting is becoming more commonplace.A “killing machine” stoat with a tui.The stoats, however, appear to be adapting as well, with regular sightings above the treeline as well as an alarming increase in wild cats, 40 of which were caught in live trap cages over the past 15 months.In 2008 a stoat managed to swim 200 metres to Stevenson’s Island to kill four buff weka chicks before being caught, reinforcing the rodents’ reputation as a “killing machine” with an ability to travel between 20-30 kilometres a day in the rugged alpine terrain, Stu said.While the birds may be oblivious to their benefactors' efforts, Mautukituki mustelids might have a different view of the Thornes’ marauding through the neighbourhood with a group of trust volunteers - possibly similar to the view villagers on the Central Asia steppes had when Genghis Khan turned up unannounced on their doorstep with a bunch of his mates.The trust founders say the efforts of the long-time volunteers (led by programme manager and former longtime DoC ranger Paul Hellebrekers) is invaluable.“Their expertise is locating [trapping areas] and knowing when to monitor or to clear,” Derek said.There is strong support from DoC in their ongoing partnership. DoC supplies the traps and assists with transport with the current Wanaka biodiversity ranger, Flo Gaud, providing valuable information on predator movements with tracking tunnels.Stu and Heather are a vital part of the bird repopulation programme, Gillian Crombie said. “They’ve been outstanding, have absolute passion for the valley, and got them set up and breeding.”PHOTOS: Supplied

Local writer behind ‘Driven’
Local writer behind ‘Driven’

16 June 2019, 8:31 PM

Lake Hawea journalist Catherine Pattison has known racing driver Hayden Paddon since the very early days of his career, so it’s entirely fitting that he should choose her to ghost write his autobiography.The first time Catherine wrote about Hayden, he was a little-known 18-year-old from Geraldine and she was just starting out on her career in motoring journalism. “I went to my sports editor and said I wanted to write about this young driver,” she said. “He was less than keen but said I could write something as long as I kept it brief.”Catherine wrote the story and Hayden went on to win the New Zealand Rally Championship for the first time in 2008. Since then she has followed his career closely, writing about him many times and even handling his media enquiries for a couple of years in 2007 and 2008. Hayden asked Catherine to ghost write his autobiography just before Christmas last year and the pair were advised by publishers Penguin Random House to get the book on the shelves for Fathers’ Day 2019.Catherine said the process of writing the autobiography, entitled “Driven”, had been both a huge opportunity and a steep learning curve. After five months of solid work, the book is now at the proofreading stage.Hayden (whose parents live in Wanaka) is managed by Wanaka motorsport PR specialist Kate Gordon-Smith.For anyone wanting to know more about the book, the Penguin website has this to say: “In Driven, Paddon details the many highs and lows along the road to the top. He opens up about his struggles with bullying, depression and loss as a young man, and goes on public record for the first time about the 2017 accident in which a spectator was killed and his controversial dismissing from the Hyundai Motorsport team in 2018.”The autobiography’s launch is set for August 2019.PHOTO: Vaughan Brookfield

Cam: Wanaka’s Four Square man
Cam: Wanaka’s Four Square man

15 June 2019, 8:36 PM

Cam is one of those people who make you smile. He is the face of Four Square in Wanaka and is a face known to probably everyone in the town. Especially those who forgot something at the supermarket.He’s been there now for eight years and has no plans to move on.“I’ve got nothing else to do and besides, no one would employ me – I need too many smoke breaks,” he says.His life seems pretty much work, work, and more work, starting at 5am offloading trucks at the shop and continuing until 10pm. And wait, there’s more – six months ago he had the opportunity through Foodstuffs to take on a new Four Square store at Albert Town.“It’s baby steps at this stage for that one,” Cam said.So how many hours a week does he work? “Just put ‘huge’,” he said.As he said, anyone with a small business just does that. That’s just the way it is.Cam’s been a hard worker all his life. He did holiday jobs while at school in his Maniototo hometown. “There was no choice – you had to work.”Afterwards he became a shearer, first in the Maniototo, then on to Taranaki, Western Australia, then the UK.After five years of this he had an awakening of sorts. “I decided I was too fat and lazy to carry on with that.”After that rash, (his word), decision, he decided self-employment was for him so he moved back to New Zealand to Dunedin where he had vending machines “everywhere” and then bought the Rob Roy Dairy with his older brother Mike.They moved it from a site on George Street to the corner of George and Albany Streets.Mike moved on, Cam bought him out and stayed there for 20 years.“It’s world famous, that dairy, for its ice creams and milkshakes, and it’s still going strong. And when you have 20,000 students pass by each day, that’s kind of handy.”During the world-famous Rob Roy chapter, Cam married Julie. They met “somewhere in Europe” while they were both there on holiday and that was that. Julie had been a business banker in Perth, but when she made the move to Dunedin she re-trained as a dental nurse.And at the end of the Rob Roy chapter they scouted around looking for what was next and decided on Wanaka and the Four Square. Wanaka had been a second home in a way to Cam as his parents had a crib at Makarora when he was young.Cam (Campbell) and Julie Sinclair’s two daughters, Nikita, 14, and Evie, 15, both work in the store and at times at New World. It’s total family involvement for the Sinclair family. The work ethic is admirable.Cam attracts reliable staff (one member is still there after 20 years, another ten).He admits, however, that finding staff in Wanaka is, for all businesses here, an issue. Expensive housing and rental costs did not help this.He’s a strong believer in community and donates to a huge list of groups and causes in Wanaka, including Food for Love, junior netball and rugby.“As a small local business I like to help the community as much as I can.” Donations can be either food or money, depending on the need.On the subject of change in Wanaka, Cam accepts it as inevitable. However, he said early consultation with businesses about the current proposed changes to the township would have been preferable.He sees change in the shop too, with so many customers now seeking gluten-free goods, which they pay “horrendous” prices for.What about theft? “All businesses have this. It’s a big thing. I don’t see any particular reason for it. They’re just naughty people.”Cam couldn’t recall when he last had a holiday. Ask him what he does to relax and he has to think.“I guess lie on the couch, spend time with family and friends.”.He is 50 – so what did he do to celebrate? “I worked, then I had maybe one too many beers,” he said.The family make a great team for Four Square. Cam attributes a lot of the success to Julie.“Now she’s got a few clues. I don’t have that many. If it wasn’t for her I could be lost someplace.”Hard working - and humble.PHOTO: Supplied

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