The Wānaka App
The Wānaka App
It's Your Place
Trades ServicesHealth BeautyLove WānakaChristmasJobsWin StuffListenGames PuzzlesWaoWellbeing
The Wānaka App

People


Designer rethinks waste
Designer rethinks waste

09 August 2022, 6:51 AM

In her latest collection, local designer Ruby Urquhart continues to illustrate how waste products can be transformed into beautiful, useful things, instead of going straight to landfill. No New Material Needed (NNMN) is a collection of puffer jackets made from salvaged and second-hand products: the majority of the materials come from tents discarded after Rhythm and Alps music festival. Ruby has combined materials from tents and decommissioned parachutes with second-hand cotton lining to create the new collection, which will launch at Wānaka store 56Rocket next weekend.Ruby salvaged abandoned tents from Rhythm and Alps and combined them with materials from decommissioned parachutes and second-hand cotton to create the jackets.“Now the tents have become loud, fun and cosy jackets,” Ruby said, “but I can't help but think about the other 10 skips full that got thrown out the years that I was collecting them.”Ruby, who grew up in Wānaka and is currently based in Christchurch, studied art at The Learning Collection and was a painter before starting her business Broken.  The second collection from the 27-year old’s emerging brand continues to build on its founding ethos - that no new material is needed because so much that already exists is thrown out every day.“As it goes with most of the materials I collect, it took time for a good use for the tents to reveal itself,” Ruby said.Ruby collected the tents for two consecutive years before the idea to create puffer jackets with them came to her. Then came the long process of finding complementary materials and the intricate work of creating the garments.The collection will launch at 56Rocket in Wānaka on July 23 before select pieces are sent to Wellington to feature at boutique store The Service Depot.The final collection features a mix of unique ‘one off’ jackets as well as some simpler styles which will be available in a range of sizes.Ruby is proud of the end result, in which 98 percent of the materials are salvaged: “The only new component is the zip.” Still, she says she’d rather the tents had been taken home and reused by their owners: “The best use for a tent is as a tent."Ruby’s first collection under Broken transformed bike tyres’ inner tubes into handbags and NNMN, similarly, gives new life to waste.They both build on Broken’s overarching goal: “We are aiming to reduce the demand for new materials being produced by reusing materials that would otherwise go into landfills,” Ruby said.Collections like this, Ruby hopes, will help connect people to the life cycle of the things they buy, own and discard.Broken’s latest collection, No New Material Needed, will launch at 56Rocket at 18 Dunmore Street on July 23 with opening drinks and nibbles from 6pm-8pm.  The collection will remain in-store until July 25 before select pieces are sent to Wellington to be featured at boutique The Service Depot. PHOTOS: Ruby Urquhart

Wānaka’s Luxembourg link
Wānaka’s Luxembourg link

14 July 2022, 11:38 PM

Wānaka officially has its first consulate now that a Wānaka resident has been appointed as Honorary Consul for Luxembourg.Frauke Oddone, who lives in Far Horizons, has just recently received the approval of the New Zealand Government for her appointment.“I am very excited and motivated,” Frauke told the Wānaka App. “I have many ideas for what we can do for our region.”Frauke and her Italian husband travelled to New Zealand in 2013 and fell in love with the South Island. The following year they began planning to move to New Zealand to retire, and were granted visas in 2019.She still can’t believe their luck: They flew to New Zealand the day the borders closed due to Covid-19 restrictions, on March 20, 2020.The couple had planned to fly here in April but while watching the pandemic take hold they accelerated their plan by a month.“It was just incredible timing,” she said.Frauke has more than enough qualifications for the role of Honorary Consul. A chartered accountant, she spent the past four years of her career as chief strategist for KPMG Luxembourg.Luxembourg’s population is around 600,000, Frauke said, which allows its inhabitants to “get to know one another” and network with government, business, and technology.Luxembourg is a landlocked country bordered by Belgium, Germany, and France, and at 2,586 km2 it is one of the smallest sovereign states in Europe. It was one of the founding members of the European Union.Yet Frauke appreciates the similarities between Luxembourg and her new home of New Zealand.“New Zealand is a very dynamic, small, entrepreneurial country where you can achieve something quickly - there are not so many layers of bureaucracy.“We see the same dynamic: Small is beautiful.”The request signed by the Grand Duke of Luxembourg to consider Frauke for the role of Honorary Consul was officially approved in March by the Embassy of New Zealand in Brussels and the Government of New Zealand.“It was a nice surprise,” she said. “I didn’t expect the New Zealand government would accept the consulate being based in Wānaka.”Frauke is enthusiastic about the opportunities to promote Otago goods after the free trade agreement signed by prime minister Jacinda Ardern in Brussels last week. She said she hopes for a “stronger exchange” between the two countries.Luxembourg has one of the biggest turnovers of cargo flying into Europe, and it serves as a clearing house for Western Europe.“I am very excited about reconnecting and I can see big opportunities between the two countries, in start-up, fresh exchange, and digital.”She said when it comes to the ‘green agenda’, “there are many good ideas here and a strong dynamic in Europe.”“I’m hoping to connect some more dots and try to make New Zealand more visible to Europe.”Frauke is flying back to Europe next week for the first time in two and a half years, and plans to meet some of the representatives of the Luxembourg government which promote the #GoInternational Agenda, the Australia New Zealand Chamber of Commerce, and Kiwis she knows who head large businesses in the Grand Duchy.“Luxembourg is in the centre of Europe and has such an international culture,” she said.“There will be some ideas I can pick up in Europe and bring back to the community.”Frauke and her husband do a lot of hiking and “enjoying nature” around Wānaka, and she is equally enthusiastic about Otago’s agriculture, wineries, and tourism.“People in Luxembourg are very keen to go overseas. That can be revitalised.“And the Grand Duke might be interested in coming to Wānaka.”PHOTO: Wānaka App

Simon Telfer to stand for Wānaka Community Board
Simon Telfer to stand for Wānaka Community Board

12 July 2022, 11:34 PM

Business advisor and active transport advocate Simon Telfer has announced he will stand for the Wānaka Community Board (WCB) at the October local body elections.“The Wānaka Community Board has an opportunity to reclaim its influence and respect. To lead our town in a future focused, positive and inspiring way,” Simon said.“We need more energy on the board to champion initiatives on behalf of Wānaka, rather than just reactively responding to whatever is presented by [Queenstown Lakes District Council] QLDC staff. “If elected, I will bring a fresh energy and a proactive attitude to the board, plus a track record of both working with, and challenging, QLDC.”Simon has acted as a director and advisor to privately owned businesses across New Zealand for the past 20 years.Since 2016 he’s served as a Bike Wānaka committee member, lobbying for the QLDC to purchase Sticky Forest from its Maori owners. He also leads Active Transport Wānaka’s advocacy to build a network of safe cycleways, including Aubrey Rd, Lakeside Rd, Ballantyne Rd and the SH84 underpass to date.In 2020, as part of QLDC’s Covid-19 recovery, Simon chaired the district wide Regenerative Recovery Advisory Group which helped to re-imagine a diversified local economy and better community wellbeing over the medium and longer term. Simon said he is committed to ensuring QLDC gives Wānaka its fair share of resources and prioritisation.Some of his priorities are ensuring people are at the “heart” of the Wānaka town centre redesign; constructing a network of safe and protected cycleways as quickly as possible; supporting local businesses; and empowering local volunteers. “The next three years will see significant decisions around the future of Wānaka Airport, creation of the Mt Iron Reserve and rejuvenation of our town centre.  He said he believes he is well placed to represent the community and contribute meaningfully to these discussions. “I have an ‘environment first’ approach to further airport development, balanced with a need for the Wānaka community and businesses to have good connections with the rest of the country,” he said.Simon lives in Wānaka with his wife, Jo Shearer, and two daughters who attend Mt Aspiring College.Find more information on Simon here. PHOTO: Supplied

MAC students show passion for te reo
MAC students show passion for te reo

10 July 2022, 11:33 PM

Two Mount Aspiring College (MAC) students placed well at the 2022 Māori speech competition Ngā Manu Kōrero in Invercargill last week after delivering strong and passionate speeches.Ngā Manu Kōrero is regarded as the most significant event on the Māori education calendar for nurturing the oratory skills and developing the confidence of Māori students in speaking English and te reo Māori.Year 12 student Melia Brett competed in the Korimako (Senior English) section which includes both impromptu and prepared speeches. She placed third for her prepared speech and second overall in Korimako, MAC te reo Māori teacher Kaz Roberts said.Melia’s speech, ‘You don’t just wake up one day and have resilience’, talked about her great grandfather growing up surrounded by te reo but being beaten at school for speaking it; and how her parents went to MAC when there was no support for learning te reo.She talked about the progress over the past 25 years and how “slowly but surely” te ao Māori (the Māori way or world view) is being integrated back into society: “A long and difficult journey that would not have been possible without resilience”.Year 10 student Ryan Enoka competed at the competition for the second time, and MAC principal Nicola Jabobsen said he has “gone from strength to strength”, as attested to by his first place in the Junior Boys' English category. Ryan competed in the Sir Turi Carroll section with his speech, ‘My journey to reclaim my reo starts with me’.He talked about the challenges of learning te reo in “the heavily pakeha Wānaka region”, a long way away from his iwi and other cultural opportunities, where the nearest marae is more than three hours away.While MAC has been very supportive, Ryan said there are still areas that need work, noting that Māori can only be taken as a half year subject in year 10, unlike Spanish.“[Te reo] needs to be held much higher in the eyes of kura and prioritised within the education system,” he said.Ryan’s mother Mandy told the Wānaka App that Ryan started learning te reo through kapa haka at Wānaka Primary School, and continued at MAC.“It’s his absolute desire and passion to learn as much as possible about his culture,” she said.“Both students put in a great deal of personal time to prepare for the competition, and as a college, we are very proud of how they represented themselves, their culture, whānau and their school,” Nicola said.The speeches are available on the event’s livestream here. Melia’s speech begins at 1.11.30, and Ryan’s at 1.22.30.PHOTO: Supplied

More people need to put their hand up for council, mayor says
More people need to put their hand up for council, mayor says

08 July 2022, 11:32 PM

Mayor Jim Boult says he is disappointed only one person has signalled they will stand for the role of councillor in the upcoming election.Lisa Guy has confirmed she will be standing in the Arrowtown-Kawarau ward but, with a handful of existing councillors planning their departure, Jim says he is disappointed there are not more candidates.“A strong council is vital for the district’s recovery and again I strongly encourage community-minded people to consider their availability,” he said.Jim said he was pleased there were already three good candidates who have announced they will contest the mayoralty. He said this was “a good sign for the future of the district”.The candidates announced so far include councillor Glyn Lewers, Labour Party general election candidate Jon Mitchell and Startup Queenstown Lakes CEO and former lawyer Olivia Wensley.In April Jim confirmed he would not contest this year’s mayoralty and he said this week he has no plans to endorse any individuals. “It is up to the community to decide who will lead the district for the next three years and it would be completely improper of me to influence that in any way.”Candidate nominations for the local body elections officially open on Friday July 15 and close on August 12.This year Wānaka/Upper Clutha Ward voters can vote for a new mayor, and - for the first time - four rather than three Wānaka councillors. Members of the Upper Clutha community won the fight to retain the Wānaka Community Board (WCB) this year, so there will also be four seats on the board to vote for.‘Stand Up Wānaka’ is a new group aims to support Upper Clutha residents who are interested in standing for council or the WCB.See also: ‘New group offers support for local body candidates’.QLDC also has resources available for anyone considering standing at the election and plans to hold a candidate information session soon. “A strong council is vital for the district’s recovery and again I strongly encourage community-minded people to consider their availability,” Jim said.The local body elections will be held on October 8.PHOTO: Wānaka App

Police work needs community on side - Wānaka’s new top cop
Police work needs community on side - Wānaka’s new top cop

27 June 2022, 11:55 PM

Newly minted senior sergeant Christopher (Chris) Brooks has had his feet under his new desk in the Wānaka police station for just two weeks, and he’s full of ideas for how to deal with the challenges facing the Wānaka community.A “Christchurch boy”, Chris has served 35 years in the police force in Canterbury, Auckland, the North Island Lakes district, and most recently six years in Queenstown.He has always worked as a frontline officer, he told the Wānaka App, including as a rural police officer, and an alcohol and drug prevention officer.“You can’t police without the community on your side,” he said.Chris has been working on drug and alcohol prevention in Queenstown, collaborating with the hospitality industry and community groups to reduce assaults and “try to stop people getting hurt as much”.New Year’s eve is already a focus for Wānaka’s new senior sergeant.He knows Wānaka from policing at events here, and said he and his team are already planning for New Year’s eve.Chris is concerned about the way young women in particular can be treated over the New Year period, and said his goal is that “everyone that comes here on holiday should go home safely”.There is an increase in the number of events now the border is open, and Chris wants to work with the community to find ways of impressing this community’s values on visitors. “The good news is we have a fantastic relationship with bar owners,” he said.“We’re trying to work with the community about how we tell these people who come to festivals and New Year’s eve: don’t leave your values at home.”Chris has already met with the Wānaka Alcohol Group to discuss this challenge.While the Wānaka police do a good job with community engagement, he believes they can do even more.“I’m really excited to finally get my feet under the desk. I’m enthusiastic and I’ve got some ideas for being more involved in the community,” he said.Chris said the main challenge here continues to be keeping our roads safe.“We have big roads, and we want to keep people from hurting themselves.”He warned that Wānaka police are planning a road policing safety operation in June, focusing on speed, safety belts, and cell phones. “Do the basics well, because you don’t know who’s coming around the corner,” he said.Chris said the police have already started seeing crashes on the district’s roads from visiting drivers.Another challenge for Wānaka is dealing with the impact of the drugs that follow summer festivals and events.While Wānaka’s drug problem in general is no worse than in other places, Chris said, he thinks it may be more visible than in a city.“But we as a smaller place can do more about it.”Wānaka is fortunate to have “some very experienced officers” among the team of 20 or so in the station, Chris said, and we also have a new rural liaison officer, Constable Ben Wallbank, whose role is to work with our smaller rural communities, for example regarding theft and road safety.“That’s great for this station - someone to support farmers and people with lifestyle blocks.” Chris is a rowing coach, and a “sportsperson in general”, he said.“I’m passionate about rowing and I’m really excited to contribute to the rowing community here.”He will be moving his family to Wānaka and two of his children will start at Mount Aspiring College next year.PHOTOS: Wānaka App

Full marks for former MAC student and NZ Top Scholar
Full marks for former MAC student and NZ Top Scholar

24 June 2022, 11:55 PM

Olive Blyth, one of Mount Aspiring College’s (MAC) head students last year, has been awarded the New Zealand Top Student Scholar for Drama for 2021. “It is a very significant achievement for any student to receive the top award in their subject domain,” MAC head of arts Emily McRae told the Wānaka App.“We have a number of students who have successfully achieved external scholarship exams in our Arts and Performing Arts programmes over years but this is the first time we have had a student achieve the top for their cohort in New Zealand award.”Emily explained that for students to tackle the drama exam they must first build a diverse range of practical skills and achieve mastery in a range of styles of performance. The students then commit to a regular tutorial programme across the year to develop a programme of work to fit the tight conditions of the exam. She said drama has conditions not found in any other external exam on the schedule: It is a live practical performance presented to two examination supervisors who record the work on camera; the student must present three sections of work in a short space of time; and the student must speak flawlessly about the theoretical approaches to their work; all under specific time pressure.Olive is studying in Wellington in the New Zealand Jazz Music programme and continuing with some drama studies. “It is a true test of the ability to perform with excellence practically under high stakes live conditions,” she said.. Olive (who uses the gender pronouns they/them/theirs) received full marks of 24 out of 24. Olive also passed the music scholarship exam. “[It was] a huge work undertaking all round by Olive with incredible drive and focus required to get there,” Emily said.Olive is currently studying in Wellington in the New Zealand Jazz Music programme. They are also continuing with some drama studies as part of their overall learning.  In 2020 Olive was selected to represent New Zealand in the Shakespeare Globe Centre New Zealand (SGCNZ) Young Shakespeare Company in England in 2021.Read more: MAC performing arts student London-bound“It was an utter pleasure to teach and mentor such a dedicated student over four years in drama classes,” Emily said.“Olive is an incredibly brave, determined and focused student who will continue to break ground and do exciting things in the professional music and performing arts arena.”Find more about MAC's Arts programme here.PHOTOS: Supplied

Long-serving Waitaki MP announces retirement
Long-serving Waitaki MP announces retirement

22 June 2022, 11:51 PM

After 14 years as the National MP for Waitaki, Jacqui Dean has announced she will retire at the 2023 election.Waitaki, which includes the Upper Clutha, is one of the largest electorates in the country.“It’s a vast electorate and I have loved representing every inch of it,” Jacqui said. “The reality is that I’ve spent the past 25 years in public service – first in local government and then as a Member of Parliament. “It’s a long time by anyone’s standards so now feels like the right time to signal my intention to move on.”Jacqui said she has advised National Party leader Christopher Luxon she will not put her name forward at the upcoming election, which she says gives the party plenty of time to select an “excellent candidate” to stand in the electorate.“I feel proud of the contribution I’ve been able to make over my 17 years as an MP,” Jacqui said.She has served under PM Sir John Key, as commerce and consumer affairs minister under Sir Bill English, and more recently in opposition as National’s spokesperson for conservation and as assistant speaker.Jacqui has taken an interest in local issues like the future of Wānaka Airport and in a previous interview told the Wānaka App that Wānaka has a special place in her heart.“I haven’t missed a Wanaka A&P Show in over a decade, enjoyed Warbirds over Wānaka, the occasional walk up Mount Iron to blow away the cobwebs, and bike rides around the Outlet Track when the autumn leaves are falling.” Jacqui said she believed New Zealand needs the National Party to win the next election and she believes Christopher Luxon would make an “excellent” PM.“National is in a fantastic position and I will do everything I can in the next 18 months to support Christopher Luxon, Nicola Willis and my caucus colleagues to ensure National wins the 2023 election.”PHOTO: Supplied

Mat Woods takes on new tourism role
Mat Woods takes on new tourism role

20 June 2022, 11:50 PM

A local businessman who has helped grow some of Wānaka’s top tourism assets has been hired as Destination Queenstown’s chief executive.Mat Woods, known for his distinctive glasses, passion for all things snowsports, and business acumen, will take the reins at Destination Queenstown on June 20, company chair Richard Thomas confirmed yesterday (Thursday May 19).“The DQ Board were impressed with Mat’s energetic approach and his understanding of the issues, the sector and his involvement in the development of the region’s destination management plan,” Richard said. “He brings strong leadership and commercial skills and a deep focus and understanding of revenue generation. He is entrepreneurial and has a solid history of building businesses.”Mat is also currently the chair of Lake Wānaka Tourism and a member of the Snow Sports NZ Board.Most recently he held the role of general manager at NZ Fine Touring and prior to that he was GM of Queenstown Experience at RealNZ and head of sales and services at Cardrona Alpine Resort and Treble Cone. Before entering tourism, Mat had run operations for Torpedo7 and been a managing director of R&R Sport. The Wānaka App profiled Matt in 2020, learning about his unconventional path, his love of the snow and his views on local tourism. See also: Sunday Profile: Mat Woods - Opportunity knocks Former Destination Queenstown chief executive Paul Abbott resigned earlier this year.Mat’s strong stakeholder management skills and his experience with Lake Wānaka Tourism mean he will be able to “hit the ground running,” Richard said.Mat said he is excited to take on the role and looking forward to getting started next month.PHOTO: Supplied

ORC chief executive resigns
ORC chief executive resigns

25 May 2022, 3:32 AM

Otago Regional Council (ORC) chief executive Sarah Gardner announced this week that she is leaving the organisation.Sarah had held the chief executive position since January 2018 and ORC chair Andrew Noone said she had been a “well-respected and highly thought of chief executive”. “It has been an absolute privilege to lead such a special organisation full of talented people who care about their region,” Sarah said.Highlights of her time with the organisation include the new programmes for biosecurity and catchment management in Otago; the development of a “fit for purpose organisation with the budget and staff to do its best work”; the extensive progress made on planning for land and water management; and the development of partnership with treaty partners that has become significant in many aspects of ORC’s work, Sarah said.“While often misunderstood, the work of regional councils is vital to the future of regions like Otago,” she said. “Management of natural and physical resources, building resilience to natural hazards and climate change, and facilitating community work for environmental benefit, pest management and landowner led outcomes is imperative for future generations.”Sarah said regional council staff are special people who work hard and sacrifice more lucrative careers for the public good.Andrew said Sarah had made a considerable contribution in her time at ORC.“She has raised the practice and performance of the organisation…Her legacy will be evident in several areas, particularly with the strength of the team she has built in the organisation, with the greater role council is playing in projects making a difference on the ground across Otago, with the fit for purpose freshwater policy in progress and in the exciting new headquarters development that the organisation expects to relocate to next year,” he said.“Mrs Gardner will be sorely missed and we wish her every success for her future.”PHOTO: Supplied

New chair for housing trust
New chair for housing trust

23 May 2022, 3:30 AM

The Queenstown Lakes Community Housing Trust (QLCHT) has appointed local businessman Richard Thomas as chair.QLCHT is a not-for-profit social enterprise created to manage and deliver affordable housing solutions to those essential to the community who cannot afford it.Richard’s appointment follows the resignation of previous chair Andrew Blair, who had been in the role since October 2018 and retired at the end of April.  Richard said he is looking forward to progressing the trust’s work further as chair and a trustee. “I believe I’m well connected to the community and plugged into the issues people in our region face,” he said. “The importance of wellbeing and community have never been greater in this very trying and uncertain Covid-19 environment. The stress and pressure on business owners, employers, employees, and families is real. It has significantly ramped up as the pandemic has taken hold and it will have a long tail.“On top of that, inflationary pressure and the region’s housing affordability are putting home ownership even further out of reach for families wanting to call the Queenstown Lakes region home. I look forward to being part of the housing solution for many local residents in both the short- and long-term future.”QLCHT deputy chair Joanne Conroy said Richard is a welcome addition to the trust.“His intimate knowledge and understanding of local community issues, along with his extensive business acumen, means he’s well placed to steer the trust on the next phase of its journey.”Richard has a commercial background and has been involved in businesses throughout New Zealand and overseas. After returning home from the UK in 2002 to take over a family-owned business, he’s now a director of Skyline Enterprises Ltd amongst other local entities. He is also involved in other facets of the Queenstown Lakes District, including Snow Sports NZ and is the chair of Destination Queenstown. Joanne acknowledged the valuable contribution from outgoing chair Andrew Blair, who led QLCHT for more than three years. “We feel privileged to have had Andrew at the table and wish him all the best,” she said.PHOTO: Supplied

The boy from Gorge River
The boy from Gorge River

21 May 2022, 3:28 AM

Christan Long’s unconventional childhood in remote Gorge River has trained him well for a lifetime of adventure in some of the world’s most demanding environments, and now the Wānaka resident has written an account of his life.Chris (30), who attended Mount Aspiring College (MAC) for his final year of schooling, is the son of Robert Long and Catherine Stewart, who live in isolation at Gorge River, two days’ walk south of Haast.The family (including Chris’s sister Robin) has come to be known as “New Zealand’s remotest family”. Chris has now visited 60 countries on six continents, spent time in Antarctica and the High Arctic, and “had quite a good look at the world”.He has taken care of 300 huskies in Norway, led a trip to Cape Adair (Antarctica) with three scientists to collect penguin poo, cooked on a Russian icebreaker, and learned to sail on the Northwest Passage.“Growing up I learned how to be self-sufficient and reliant. You learn to live in harmony and balance with nature.”Chris said the skills he learned can be applied anywhere.“I’m now comfortable living anywhere on earth.”Chris credits his upbringing; his Outdoor Pursuits instruction at MAC with Dave Cassaidy; and his completion of an outdoor leadership and management course at Otago Polytech, with making him “hireable” for outdoor jobs.After Polytech he set off to learn and explore as much about the world - and himself - as he could.“Pretty much my first job was working in the kitchen of a Russian icebreaker ship in Antarctica,” he said.Luckily, he doesn’t fear learning something new, or being thrown in at the deep end. Christan with his parents and their books.Despite never having sailed before, and knowing he got seasick, he hitched a berth on a yacht sailing the Northwest Passage (the sea route between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through the Arctic Ocean).“We set off in the remains of a tropical hurricane in New York: Thunder and lightning and five to 10 metre waves; 45 knots of wind. We learned in the process. It was like a crash course.“When you push your comfort zone, that’s when you learn the most about yourself and the place you’re in.”Chris’s father Robert, who has lived at Gorge River for more than 30 years, wrote A Life On Gorge River in 2010; his mother Catherine followed in 2012 with her own book, A Wife on Gorge River.Chris told the Wānaka App he always expected to one day be asked “what happened to the kids who grew up in Gorge River?”.The Boy From Gorge River is his answer.  In June 2020 he was commissioned by Harper Collins to write the book, and took advantage of the circumstances of the Covid-19 pandemic to do it.He was living in Norway looking after the 300 huskies at the time. After returning to New Zealand, he spent his MIQ time writing, and another month at Gorge River to finish. After a few months’ editing, the book went to print in December 2021.Chris hopes the book (with a 50/50 focus on his childhood and his adult life) will “inspire anyone to get off the couch”, either to go on an adventure or maybe plant a vegetable garden in the backyard.“Younger people, whoever they are, want to go and explore the world. And it doesn’t matter where you come from, you can achieve that.“People will teach you anything as long as you’ve got personality and are keen to give things a go.”Meanwhile Chris is staying in Wānaka for the winter and enjoying being “a bit settled”. After that, there are many places he’d like to explore, and he’s not sure which one will be next. Perhaps the Himalayas, he said.“If you see me around town, tap me on the shoulder,” he said. “I love talking to people.”The Boy From Gorge River is available from Wānaka Paper Plus and The Next Chapter. You can learn more about Chris and his adventures by following @wildkiwiadventurer on YouTube and Instagram.Chris will also be speaking at the New Zealand Mountain Film and Book Festival in Wānaka in late June.PHOTOS: Supplied

Obituary: Lesley Burdon - a ‘pioneering woman of principle’
Obituary: Lesley Burdon - a ‘pioneering woman of principle’

19 May 2022, 3:26 AM

A pioneering member of the Upper Clutha community, Lesley Burdon, was farewelled at her home on Glen Dene Station, Lake Hāwea, last week (Friday April 22).Lesley was a former Queenstown Lakes District (QLDC) councillor and member of the Wānaka Community Board (WCB).She died on April 14, 2022, aged 78.Her life touched many people, Wānaka Anglican vicar Damon Plimmer said at the celebration of her life, in the garden she created overlooking Lake Hāwea.“She was a woman of generosity and principle. a great supporter of her community, including her church St Columbas; pioneering the way for others and offering a vital voice to the issues of the day.”Lesley and her husband Jerry had been married for 57 years, and have three children, Jo, Richard, and Andrea; and eight grandchildren.Lesley Burdon and husband Jerry.“Her other great love - other than me - was her magnificent garden,” Jerry said at the service.Lesley started her garden (well known in gardening circles) from nothing at Glen Dene. “I moved the fences three times and said ‘that’s it’,” Jerry said.Daughter Jo said Lesley was the family matriarch, who embraced all things in the community.“Mum had a wonderful vision and energy for the land and the people and was an amazing farming partner for Dad,” she said.Lesley was one of only two women on the Rabbit and Land Management Advisory Committee, and the first female chair of the WCB.“She stood up for what she believed in,” Jo said.Richard said his mother was also chair of Wānaka St John at a crucial time, “when Wānaka was changing from a small rural community to a fast growing tourism town”.She was positive, enthusiastic and generous, he said, and loved helping people.During her six years on the QLDC and WCB, from 1992 to 1998, “her values remained firm as a rock”, he said.Her passion was getting the job done, with a focus on the protection of green spaces, he said. “She participated in over 500 hearings and plan reviews… [and was] known for her debating skills. She poured her heart and soul in getting good outcomes for the district.”The Wānaka App spoke to Lesley in September 2021, talking about the proposed petition to end the Upper Clutha’s association with the QLDC.Lesley said she was the first woman chair of the WCB and “it was a hell of a battle”.She said any move for Wānaka to leave the QLDC might make the council “pull its socks up”. Her concerns included the low proportion of QLDC rates spent in the Upper Clutha, and Wānaka’s access to council staff. “Queenstown is not looking after us,” she said. “We all like to feel we are getting value for money.”Lesley, a trained nurse, joined the Vincent Hospital Board in 1987 and in 1989 became a member of the Otago Health Board, advocating for rural health services.She and Jerry farmed Glen Dene Station from 1979 until Richard took over in 2003.Former councillor Neville Harris worked with Lesley on both the council and WCB.She was a great debater and orator, and had the potential to be mayor, he told the Wānaka App.Neville worked with her on the first District Plan, which was an “horrendous job”, involving thousands of submissions. “Lesley was very precise,” he said.Wānaka’s Green Belt (from Wānaka Station Park, Pembroke Park and the recreation reserve, through to Faulks Reserve and the Golf Course, then Lismore Park and Eely Point) had been dropped in the changeover to district plans, and Lesley was a strong advocate for the area to be included and protected for the long term.“She was a bit like a dog with a bone,” Neville said.“We would still talk to each other about two or three times a month about what was going on and what we would do to fix it.’“She was a great woman,” he said.

Ed Taylor stands down from community board
Ed Taylor stands down from community board

25 April 2022, 11:07 PM

Wānaka Community Board (WCB) deputy chair Ed Taylor is encouraging locals to get involved with this year’s local body elections.Ed announced yesterday (Wednesday April 20) he won’t be standing again after serving two terms on the board.  “For the most part it’s been a very rewarding experience and I would urge anyone who wants to be part of helping shape the town’s future to put their name forward,” he said.WCB chair Barry Bruce expressed his appreciation for Ed’s substantial contribution to the board.“Ed has the unique ability to envisage the long term future, a valuable attribute that has contributed hugely to our community and the community board,” Barry said,“I'm sure Ed will continue to contribute and serve the Wānaka and Upper Clutha community in different ways.”Ed says it’s been frustrating getting used to the time it takes for the wheels of local government to turn but nearing the end of his second term he’s starting to see a range of WCB driven projects come to fruition.“There’s some real momentum now to complete a number of projects which we have been talking about for a long time. I’m especially looking forward to getting stage two of the Lakefront Development Plan completed over the next six months and also the roundabout at the Mt Iron/ Hāwea turnoff intersection.”Ed is looking forward to progress on stage two of the Lakefront Development Plan. PHOTO: Wānaka AppEd said he’d like to see some work done soon to address issues around downtown parking - before visitors start arriving again in big numbers next year.  “Let’s not wait till we’re busy again; much easier to do these jobs when it’s quiet. We need to identify some more long-term parking options for workers. They may just have to walk a bit further than they’re used to.”Ed believes the future looks bright for Wānaka.  “With forecasts of a potential Wānaka population of anywhere between 30,000 and 50,000 in the next two or three decades, the town is going to continue to change and evolve,” he said.“The prospect of the Silverlight film studio is a great example of ways we can diversify our economy to take the pressure off tourism.”Ed said he is also watching Christchurch International Airport’s proposal for an airport at Tarras with interest.  “If you take a wider regional view it makes sense to have one airport which is able to service all the passenger and freight needs for this fast-growing region.”“Wānaka will always be a desirable place to live and even when it becomes a small city it can still be a vibrant and fantastic place to live and raise families,” he said.At this stage, only WCB members Quentin Smith (who is also a councillor), Chris Hadfield, and Barry Bruce have confirmed they will run again this year.Quentin told the Wānaka App he has “every intention of standing again for the Wānaka/Upper Clutha Ward council seat, subject to any curveballs life throws in the next few months”.Chris said he was “99 percent sure” he would stand again.“My biggest issue is going to be how to get more of the locals engaged in the future issues and off their keyboards,” Chris said. Local body elections will be held on October 8, 2022 and candidate nominations officially open on Friday July 15.

Southern DHB boss resigns
Southern DHB boss resigns

21 April 2022, 11:03 PM

Southern District Health Board (SDHB) chief executive Chris Fleming has announced he is stepping down to pursue new business opportunities with his family.After 30 years in the health sector, 15 of which were leading three different District Health Boards, Chris will finish up with the SDHB on June 30."Despite the exciting future ahead in health, with the transition to Health New Zealand on July 1, I have been contemplating the right move for me and my family, and I’ve decided that the time is right for me to do something completely different for now,” Chris said. "We will be relocating to the Waikato which is where I am originally from."The resignation comes as Health New Zealand, a new Crown entity, prepares to take over the planning and commissioning of services and the functions of the existing 20 District Health Boards.SDHB chair Pete Hodgson said the board was grateful for Chris’s efforts in leading the organisation."Our response has been to express our gratitude to him for his steadfast leadership of the Southern DHB, and to wish him well in the next passage of his life," Pete said."Leading the Southern DHB is not for the faint-hearted. Its challenges have always been cultural, geographical, and financial. The forthcoming new Dunedin Hospital and the move to the new health system have both presented the opportunity and obligation to create New Zealand’s most modern health system. “Chris has seen us begin that journey," he saidThe chief executive of Health New Zealand will determine the next steps in terms of leadership for SDHB staff as it transitions to Health NZ. No formal decisions have yet been made.PHOTO: Supplied

‘Eye opening’ role addressing social cohesion
‘Eye opening’ role addressing social cohesion

01 April 2022, 12:47 AM

In the midst of an Omicron surge, and in the aftermath of a 23-day protest occupation at New Zealand’s parliament, one Wānaka resident is playing a role in improving social cohesion in New Zealand.Kathy Dedo, LINK Upper Clutha manager, is a member of Kāpuia, the Ministerial Advisory Group on the government’s response to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the terrorist attack on Christchurch mosques.Last week was the third anniversary of the mosque attacks (March 15), and the Wānaka App sat down with Kathy to talk about her role on Kāpuia, and the wider implications of this work on social cohesion.Response to the mosque attacksThe Royal Commission of Inquiry into the 2019 mosque attacks issued a report recommending 44 things the government could do to avoid such events happening again.One of those recommendations was to form a ministerial advisory group to advise the government on implementing the recommendations.“Our role is to provide independent advice with a goal of increasing social cohesion and safety for all New Zealanders,” Kathy said.“It’s a very robust set of recommendations, and gives government a mandate to make changes.”The group’s role is broad, battling “those big systemic things” like racism, colonialism, extremism, terrorism, inequity and inequality. Specific issues on the table include national security, gun laws, reporting mechanisms for hate crimes, and more.Kāpuia gives feedback to a range of government departments with those responsibilities, thereby “amplifying voices of people who often are not heard”, Kathy said.The membership is “multicultural and representative of our increasingly diverse Aotearoa”, Kathy said, including refugees, and “people who know what it feels like to not be safe elsewhere and in this country”. Kathy is the Southernmost representative and can contribute a semi-rural point of view.Kāpuia, with Justice Minister Andrew Little. PHOTO: SuppliedKāpuia was formed in June 2021 and Kathy was appointed in October after a rigorous application process. “It’s transformative and eye-opening. I feel privileged to be in the group,” she said. “It has been humbling and I do a lot of listening.”Kathy’s role on Kāpuia gives her a valuable perspective on the wider issue of social cohesion. Not a new challenge, social cohesion has also been fractured by the government’s implementation of vaccine mandates in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.Division from Covid-19 restrictionsKāpuia comes from the whakataukī (proverb) “Ki te Kotahi te kākaho ka whati, ki te kāpuia e kore e whati”: If there is only one reed, it breaks easily, but gather many together they will not break. In Kāpuia, the reeds reflect the different cultures in New Zealand; when we come together we are strong and cannot be broken. “By standing together in New Zealand, we will enhance social cohesion and create a safer country for everyone - by being together we cannot help but have each other’s backs,” is the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet’s interpretation of Kāpuia.The aim of Covid-19 mandates was to increase vaccination rates, both to protect vulnerable demographics and ensure the country’s health services would be able to cope during an outbreak.But the impact, including in Wānaka, has been polarising. A small but vocal number of local people have protested regularly against the mandates. Some joined the protest in Wellington in February, and others protested daily on Ardmore Street in solidarity.Local people protest Covid-19 restrictions on Ardmore Street. PHOTO: Wānaka AppIn a district with more than 95 percent of the eligible population double vaccinated, the protestors “don’t represent a deep division but rather a small, vocal minority,” Kathy said.However, the presence of a small, disaffected group is significant for social cohesion locally.Social cohesion is about all individuals and groups having a sense of belonging, inclusion and participation, recognition and legitimacy, Kathy said. “It’s not about making everyone the same.”That sense of inclusion was damaged for those people who chose not to be vaccinated. For some, the consequences were significant.Where to from here?“In Kāpuia, one of the things we’ve come to is the need to look forward,” Kathy said.“We can get trapped in relitigating the past. We move forward as a society not by ignoring the past but by understanding it, learning from it, and then asking, how do we move forward together?” Kathy says trying to understand what people are going through is a good starting place.Having empathy goes back to believing in the collective and the common good, she says.“We all call this place home, we all should feel at home in this place.”The Upper Clutha community has expressed quite a lot of support for one another over the years, Kathy said, citing a 2017 LINK survey which identified “the sense of community and a supportive community” in the Upper Clutha’s top five values.“I don’t think, fundamentally, that has changed,” she said. “In our community there are people quietly getting on with supporting one another every day.”Shared valuesThere are some disturbing trends, such as people “shouting before they talk”, and using keyboards to express their concerns, Kathy said.There are also some tangible things which need work, such as reaching a shared notion of the objective idea of fact, Kathy says.Civics, history education and media literacy are part of the solution, she said, and Kāpuia is working with the Ministry of Education on diversity and inclusion projects, such as the new history curriculum.And in situations where there is disagreement about facts and trusted sources of information, the challenge is: “How to extend open mindedness and grace to people with a different point of view, when we can’t agree on fact,” Kathy said.It comes down to identifying shared values, she added.“We might disagree about nine out of 10 things, but what do we agree on, and is that the basis for re-forming a relationship?”Getting to know each other sounds like a simple and perhaps naive solution, but Kathy said initiatives such as LINK’s ‘Neighbours Day’ which encourage us to get to know each other better are useful.“The point of getting together is to share and talk. You’re going to find common ground.”Kathy also feels hopeful when looking at the next generation.“The young people today, they are adaptable, not as jaded. They are naturally open minded to start with. Our kids are more accepting.”Find more about Kāpuia here.

Local writer’s foray into mystery genre
Local writer’s foray into mystery genre

15 March 2022, 9:10 PM

A local woman has recently published her fourth book and is already writing her fifth.  Helen Herbert’s most recent book, Lost Property, which is available at Paper Plus Wānaka, is a mystery about a woman who returns from a work trip to find both her home and husband missing. “It follows the trials and tribulations faced by this woman as she tries to find out what happened,” Helen said.  Helen wrote her first book at 13 - “not a very good one!” - but it wasn’t until her retirement to Wānaka in 2011 that she started writing fiction again. Once she sits down at her computer the words come fairly easily. “I start the book and then the characters start to almost write themselves,” she told the Wānaka App.Helen’s latest novel, Lost Property, is available now at Paper Plus Wānaka.Helen’s books are very character driven, she said, and in Lost Property the protagonist meets some unusual characters and she tries to find out what happened, each of whom have their own story and teach her something along the way.  Lost Property is Helen’s first foray into the mystery genre.She has also written A Year of Change (a story about the lives of a group of characters who live in the same Christchurch cul de sac), Executive Dilemma (a romance set between Wellington and Italy) and There and Beyond (which explores the lives of five young women on their adventure from post-war Britain to New Zealand).  Each novel has taken Helen roughly a year to write but it can sometimes be difficult to find time for writing: “I find myself busy with all sorts of things.” Helen says her books are light reads and women make up the majority of her readers.  Her fifth book, currently underway, begins with a woman discovering a baby abandoned at a bus stop. The second chapter begins with the story of the person who left it there.  “I love putting words together,” Helen says. “It’s always been something I did for myself.” Hard copies of Lost Property are available at Paper Plus Wānaka and her other books are available online in e-book format here. PHOTO: Supplied

Local builder taking steps to prevent suicide
Local builder taking steps to prevent suicide

13 March 2022, 9:10 PM

Wānaka man Glen Thurston has announced a campaign to prevent unnecessary deaths in the construction industry, and he is drawing on his own experience.At just 18 years of age Glen attempted to take his own life and for many years was ashamed of his illness, using alcohol to self medicate.“When I went through it on the building site there was no education, there was no talk, there was no nothing,” Glen said. “My vision is to start a campaign for mental health in the construction industry to help break the stigma associated with depression and mental health.“The ultimate goal above all else is to help prevent anymore unnecessary deaths with more education around suicide prevention and to connect more tradies to the support needed.”To raise awareness, Glen is commiting to climb Corner Peak (1,683m) near Lake Hāwea every day for 53 days beginning on December 1, 2022. Fifty-three is the average number of suicide deaths in the construction industry since 2017, one person every week.“I will attempt to climb Corner Peak everyday for 53 days in honor of those averages,” Glen said.He is asking local tradies and construction companies to support him by joining him on one climbing day and committing to implementing the MATES inducted programme in their businesses.“I hope to get each day sponsored by companies in the construction industry,” he said.“Sponsorship is not by way of money but by way of commitment by the company to join the MATES programme and receive their general awareness training (GAT).”Glenn said that the general awareness training has been shown to significantly improve construction workers’ confidence in noticing other people’s distress as well as their competence in encouraging co-workers to seek support.“In New Zealand, there is this perception that speaking up about personal mental health is weak,” he said. “Particularly in my industry, when we see someone struggling or trying to ask for help we tend to brush it off or look the other way.“What I am trying to do is both encourage conversation and create a support network that holds each other to account. So when someone does reach out we not only know how to engage with them, but also have the tools to support them in getting help.”Glen says he chose Corner peak because it suits the name of his campaign, ‘Turn the Corner’, and because waking up with depression can feel “mountainous”.“Getting into the mountains is my way of meditation, it brings me to such a happy place,” he said.The MATES programme is designed to build and strengthen communities in the construction industry by helping people be supportive and provide an environment that encourages positive wellbeing.Find out more and sign up to support Glen here.Facts about the climb:Each ascent and descent of Corner Peak is a return trip of around 17km53 days is a total of 901kmEach climb has an elevation gain of 1,570m53 days is an elevation gain of 83,210m - climbing Mount Everest around nine times.PHOTO: Supplied

101-120 of 397