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1896 days ago

Fundraising tournament for men run by the Glen Eden Bowling Club raises $2100 for the Prostate Cancer Foundation NZ.

The Team from Glen Eden Bowling Club

The Blue Ribbon Prostate Cancer tournament was the second annual charity event the club has held to bring together players, sponsors and supporters to help highlight important health issues for the community.

52 players from across Auckland (plus 2 who drove up from Taranaki), supporters, and even the club cat put on their best blues and came to Glen Eden to enjoy a great day of bowls, raffles and an auction to support an important cause.

Part of the tradition for these events seems to be the weather; with the club again facing torrential rain in the days leading up to the event. Organisers were worried about the weather but delighted to awake to blue skies over Glen Eden on Saturday morning which in an uncanny repeat of conditions from last year’s Pink Ribbon event stayed clear and dry until a downpour just 10 minutes from the scheduled end of play.

Alongside the keen competition the issue of prostate cancer was highlighted. John Woodards from the Western Auckland support group spoke before the start of play about his experience of prostate cancer. At the end of play Graeme Woodside, Chief Executive Officer of the Prostate Cancer Foundation spoke thanking the club and the players for the opportunity the tournament provided not only to raise funds to help with the foundation’s work, but also for the opportunity to raise awareness of a disease that’s the number one cancer in Kiwi men, with one in eight guys being diagnosed with prostate cancer. It's the third biggest killer cancer in kiwi males, with 650 dying of it every year out of the 3000 men diagnosed with it.

Graeme pointed out the sobering statistic that out of the 60 guys listening seven or eight would be affected, and the risk increases if there’s a history of the condition in your family, so he stressed to the men in the audience that they need to be getting to the Doctor and checked. Graeme was asked about how often guys should be getting checked, to which he responded once a year;

"The idea is that if you are over fifty you should be going in and ask your doctor, and I know some doctors are a bit ambivalent about doing it, just press the case and say "I want a check" because once you start getting checked they have got a baseline there, and then when you get subsequent checks each year or every couple of years after that, they've got something to measure against what your normal level is. You should be getting health checks anyway with your cholesterol and all those sorts of things. Make sure when you do that, when you go to the doctor, just tick the box. It's the same blood that comes out of your arm for the cholesterol and liquids and blood sugars and all those sorts of things. And as for the PSA test and then ask them to do the finger up the tail end cause there's nothing quite like it [Laughter]"

Thanks were given to the sponsors who helped to make the event such a success: Rymans Healthcare helped with prizes and contributed to the catering, Hydroflame Plumbing and Gas sponsored the bowlers’ “guy tea”, and goods were generously donated for the auction or lunch by Fresh Choice Glen Eden, Little India, Logan’s Auto, The Trusts, Judy and Boe Olsson, Jenny Tough, Jim Close, and the Aussie Butcher New Lynn.

Appreciation was also expressed to the volunteers who helped with the organization of the event and the provision of refreshments on the day; Jenny Tough, Janet, Judy Olsson, Val, Siosiana, Jane, Sharon, Steph Cawte from Rymans, Judy Raill, Graeme Storie (Auctioneer) and Jeremy Brosnan (MC).

Final placings - Wins, Ends won, Points scored

1st Jeremy Brosnan, Jeff Tough & Ray Brown (Glen Eden) - 3 22 55)
2nd Steve Boyce, Jim Close, & Ivan Unkovich (Glen Eden) - 3 19 34)
3rd Martin Dixon, James Gavin & Gavin Brown (Royal Oak) - 2 ½ 16 34
4th Steve Hoeft, Phil Atkin & Keith Earl (Pt Chev) 2 - 16 29
5th Peter Lipsham, Dean Mullins, and Steve Lipsham (GEBC) - 2 16 24
6th Peter Hurle, Glen Rich & Graham Growcott (Blockhouse Bay) - 2 15 32

The consolation prize went to Wayne Russell, Phil Metcalf & Steve Catlin (Glen Eden) and the best dressed team award was well deserved by Ian McKenna, Henry Fane & Colin Ayris-Webster (Pt Chev)

Contact details

Glen Eden Bowling Club
gebc1922@gmail.com or 027 418 1397

Prostate Cancer Foundation
PO Box 301313, Albany, Auckland 0752
HELPLINE: 0800 4 PROSTATE (0800 477 678)

info@prostate.org.nz
Prostate Cancer support group Auckland West
John and Lilian Woodards
021 208 2089
aucklandwest@prostate.org.nz

More messages from your neighbours
10 days ago

What's your favourite recipe for gooseberry?

Mei Leng Wong Reporter from NZ Gardener & Get Growing

Love gooseberries? Share your favourite way to enjoy them. We're looking for our readers' favourite family recipes for this delicious crop. Send yours to mailbox@nzgardener.co.nz, and if we use it in the magazine, you will receive a free copy of our December 2024 issue.

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11 hours ago

CONSUMER 24 October 2024 :Why did New World and Pak'nSave delete a crucial online shopping tool?

Susan from Massey

24 October 2024
Why did New World and Pak'nSave delete a crucial online shopping tool?

On this page
What a Consumer member noticed
What our survey found
Foodstuffs responds: ‘We’re upgrading our digital platform’
What Consumer says: ‘It’s bizarre’
Chris Schulz
By Chris Schulz
Senior Investigative Writer | Kaituhi Mātoro Matua
Whether it's clothes, shoes, appliances or food, anyone who shops online regularly knows there's one tool that's become ubiquitous: the ability to rank searched items by price.


Consumer spent an hour browsing local retail websites and couldn't find a single one that didn't give customers access to that tool.

From clothing stores Hallensteins, North Beach and Barkers, to shoe stores Number One Shoes, Sketchers and Platypus Shoes, to appliance stores Harvey Norman, Noel Leeming and JB Hi-Fi, to large-scale marketplaces Trade Me, Kmart and Farmers, the filter buttons marked “highest-to-lowest" and “lowest-to-highest" are easy to find and available for everyone to use.

So, it was a surprise to hear from a Consumer member that two of the websites they use most often – New World and Pak'nSave – had removed the ability for shoppers to be able to do this.

New World and Pak'nSave are owned by the same company, Foodstuffs, and rank among the country’s biggest retail websites. Yet, over the past few months, Foodstuffs has quietly removed the rank by price tool from both. It may not be back for quite some time. The question is, why?

What a Consumer member noticed
The message arrived through Facebook. It said: "I'd like to draw your attention to the fact that both Pak'nSave and New World have removed the option to sort products by price.

"If anything, they should have added the option to sort by unit price, but no, it now automatically sorts products by popularity, which makes it much harder for consumers to find the cheapest product."

Consumer wanted to find out if this was true, so we jumped online and tested the websites for both New World and Pak'nSave.

It's true! The ability to rank any searched item by price, whether that's coffee, milk, bread or meat, is no longer available through the website of either supermarket. (The function remains if you're shopping via the app.)

In a cost-of-living crisis, when the rising price of groceries has been at the forefront of everyone's minds, that's a disappointing and niggly change.

"This is not okay!" said our complainant.

Then something else caught our eye while we were browsing: the same brand name kept coming up in our searches again and again.

What our survey found
To check to see if the price-ranking function might magically reappear, Consumer plugged 10 different everyday items into the search engines on the websites for New World and Pak'nSave: butter, Colby cheese, tinned tomatoes, white sugar, flour, milk, spinach, almond milk, toilet paper and baked beans.

In almost every search, Pams products came up as the first result, both in the drop-down search function, and in the ranked search results. Pams products for butter, Colby cheese, tinned tomatoes, white sugar, flour, milk, spinach and almond milk all came first; for toilet paper, a Pams product was fourth; for baked beans, it was third.

Pams is the in-house brand owned by New World and Pak'nSave. In recent years, products by Pams have proliferated on the shelf, as have the equivalent in-house brands for supermarkets owned by Woolworths.

Consumer believes expanding in-house ranges at supermarkets lessens choices for consumers, hurts local suppliers and increases supermarket profit margins.

Screenshot of New World online

Foodstuffs responds: ‘We’re upgrading our digital platform’
Consumer approached Foodstuffs with concerns about its removal of the ability to rank searched items by price. We said we believed it was unfair to shoppers to remove a crucial online tool during a cost-of-living crisis.

A spokesperson responded: “We're upgrading our digital platform and improving our e-commerce offering with more transparent unit pricing. Soon, we'll add a new sort feature allowing customers to sort products by price or unit price.”

That’s a reference to new unit pricing rules. From August 2025, the websites for supermarkets must display unit pricing, making it easier for consumers to compare the price of products on what they cost per unit of measure.

The spokesperson says it removed the ability to rank items by prices on search pages for both websites at the end of May; for category pages, the changes were made for New World in late July, and for Pak'nSave in late August. When asked if they had a date the tool might return, the spokesperson said: "We don't have an exact date yet."

Consumer approached Woolworths – Foodstuffs’ biggest competitor – to see if it had any plans to remove its online search ranking function.

A spokesperson replied: “Woolworths New Zealand has no plans to remove the ‘sort by price’ feature. We know that our online customers use the sorting and filtering options to find the best value and we have recently made these options more prominent.”

Regarding our observations that its search function promotes its own products over those of other suppliers, the Foodstuffs spokesperson denied this.

“Our goal is to make finding products quick and convenient, whether customers are searching or browsing categories,” they said.

“Search results aren't biased toward Pams products – they’re based on regional sales data or customers’ inferred preferences. Occasionally, we may boost categories or pin products for promotions, but there are no specific rules for Pams. Logged-in users get personalised results, while logged-out users see region-based data.”

What Consumer says: ‘It’s bizarre’
Jessica Walker, Consumer NZ’s acting head of research and advocacy, calls the supermarkets’ removal of a crucial online search function “bizarre”.

“It seems bizarre that Foodstuffs would remove the option to filter by price, especially at a time when New Zealanders are continuing to struggle with the cost-of-living crisis,” she says.

She points to Consumer’s in-house Sentiment Tracker survey as proof that food prices remain among the biggest concerns facing household budgets right now.

“It’s nonsensical that two of our biggest supermarkets would move away from enabling online shoppers to browse products by price,” she says.

“Even if this is a temporary measure while Foodstuffs is preparing the roll-out of unit pricing online, it’s doing a disservice to their customers who want to get the best bang for their buck in the meantime.”

As for allegations Foodstuffs was pushing its in-house brand Pams through its online stores, Walker says Consumer has voiced concerns in the past about this tactic limiting choice for consumers.

“This latest online update reaffirms those concerns,” she says.

17 days ago

Six tips for improving security around your home

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

1) Improve outdoor lighting
Ensure that streets, driveways, and front yards are well-lit. Motion-sensor lights around homes deter trespassers by reducing hiding spots and illuminating their movements.

2) Trim your trees
Overgrown shrubs and trees provide cover for intruders. Keeping them well-trimmed around windows and doors improves visibility and reduces potential hiding spots.

3) Secure Entry Points
Ensure doors, windows, and gates are always closed when you are away from the house. Upgrade to more secure locks, deadbolts, or even smart locks for added protection.

4) Add a security camera
Place security cameras in the main entry points to your home. Doorbell cameras are also relatively cheap and a great way to keep track of who is visiting your home when you aren't there.

5) Start a Neighborhood Watch Program
You could reach out to members on Neighbourly to form a group of neighbors who can regularly keep an eye out for suspicious activity and report it. You could also check with Neighbourhood Support to see what is existing in your area.

6) Introduce yourself to your neighbours
The closer you are to your neighbors, the more likely they’ll notice when something unusual or suspicious is happening around your property

Feel free to share anything that you do around your area to deter crime.

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