North Dunedin, Dunedin

1485 days ago

Did your family celebrate Halloween this year?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

We saw some friendly ghosts and even some costumed pooches this year! We'd love for you to spread the joy further than your backyard by sharing a snap from your Halloween festivities below 🎃

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1485 days ago

Things change. You can too.

Te Wānanga o Aotearoa

We’re holding information sessions to help you enrol with us in 2021. Find out about courses, meet tutors and enrol in one easy process.

Sessions run at various times on campus and if you can’t make it, join us on Zoom. Secure your place for 2021.
Book in today

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1486 days ago

South Dunedin & Climate Change public forum @ Caversham Baptist Church - Sunday 8 November, 7pm-8pm

Julian from South Dunedin

Find out more about South Dunedin’s climate change challenges and how you can help shape the area’s future.
DCC staff will present their South Dunedin Future programme.
Beginning with a meet & greet (tea / coffee).
Everyone welcome.
Location: Caversham Baptist Church, Corner of Surrey St … View more
Find out more about South Dunedin’s climate change challenges and how you can help shape the area’s future.
DCC staff will present their South Dunedin Future programme.
Beginning with a meet & greet (tea / coffee).
Everyone welcome.
Location: Caversham Baptist Church, Corner of Surrey St & South Rd.
Enquiries: ph 4558566, admin@cavy.net.nz

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1487 days ago

The case of the stolen gates far from open and shut

Jake Kenny Reporter from Community News

Watergate, Corngate, and now – Gategate?

Police have been investigating the mysterious theft of eight wrought iron gates from around Dunedin in recent weeks.

While the case was not closed, police confirmed half of the gates – which may have been targeted to sell as scrap – had been … View more
Watergate, Corngate, and now – Gategate?

Police have been investigating the mysterious theft of eight wrought iron gates from around Dunedin in recent weeks.

While the case was not closed, police confirmed half of the gates – which may have been targeted to sell as scrap – had been recovered.

Acting Senior Sergeant Anthony Bond said some gates were recovered and returned to '’their very thankful and appreciative owners'' on Thursday.

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1487 days ago

Make your own modernist art

The Team from Resene ColorShop Dunedin

Make your own modernist art and release your inner Matisse with easy-to-create canvas artworks. Use Resene testpots to suit your colour scheme for a co-ordinated look.

Make the most of this weekend with this easy step by step project idea from Resene. Find out how to create your own.

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1487 days ago

Poll: Which NZ destination do you most want to travel to?

Lorna Thornber Reporter from Stuff Travel

To celebrate the refreshed Stuff Travel website, enabling you to dream, plan and now book your next escape all in one place, we're giving away a $100 voucher.

To go into the draw to win simply vote below on which of the following destinations you're most likely to use your voucher on. … View more
To celebrate the refreshed Stuff Travel website, enabling you to dream, plan and now book your next escape all in one place, we're giving away a $100 voucher.

To go into the draw to win simply vote below on which of the following destinations you're most likely to use your voucher on. Visit travel-booking.stuff.co.nz for inspiration and to view all the other destinations.
Explore now

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Which NZ destination do you most want to travel to?
  • 4.3% Auckland
    4.3% Complete
  • 20.7% Coromandel
    20.7% Complete
  • 6.2% Rotorua
    6.2% Complete
  • 5.6% Taupō
    5.6% Complete
  • 5.7% Wellington
    5.7% Complete
  • 18.7% Nelson Tasman
    18.7% Complete
  • 10.3% Marlborough
    10.3% Complete
  • 28.5% Central Otago/Lakes
    28.5% Complete
2856 votes
1487 days ago

How to hold a beer festival during Covid: 'It's forced us to think'

Nicole Reporter from Dunedin News

It has not been easy preparing for this week's Dunedin Craft Beer and Food Festival during Covid but attendance is looking strong, an organiser says.

More than 12,000 people are expected to attend Forsyth Barr Stadium over the last two days of October with about 70 vendors offering craft … View more
It has not been easy preparing for this week's Dunedin Craft Beer and Food Festival during Covid but attendance is looking strong, an organiser says.

More than 12,000 people are expected to attend Forsyth Barr Stadium over the last two days of October with about 70 vendors offering craft beer, gin, wine, martinis and food.

Read more about the journey to putting on an event in the current climate here.

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1488 days ago

Student-led beer festival attracts thousands, but only a few hundred Scarfies

Jake Kenny Reporter from Community News

Turns out students are good at organising a beer festival.

Now in its eighth year, this weekend’s Dunedin Craft Beer and Food Festival should see 12,000 people pour through the gates of Forsyth Barr Stadium to sup on ale and cider and enjoy music from the likes of Don McGlashan and Ladi6.

View more
Turns out students are good at organising a beer festival.

Now in its eighth year, this weekend’s Dunedin Craft Beer and Food Festival should see 12,000 people pour through the gates of Forsyth Barr Stadium to sup on ale and cider and enjoy music from the likes of Don McGlashan and Ladi6.

Perhaps unusually for Dunedin, most of those beer lovers will not be students.

The festival is run by the Otago University and Students’ Association (OUSA), which launched it eight years ago on the concrete pad at Forsyth Barr as rain, wind and hail struck the roof.

“In those first couple of years, people were pretty nervous,'’ Jason Schroeder, OUSA’s events and venues operations manager admits.

That trepidation wasn’t entirely unfounded, with students’ alcohol-fuelled incidents attracting negative headlines.

Schroeder said for many it was difficult to understand why OUSA would put on a beer festival, which crucially was not aimed at students.

But word soon spread about the event, and by the next year the festival had encroached to a part of the grass, and then the year after reached the halfway line.

Within four years it covered the entire grass surface, and in recent years has become a two-day event, Friday and Saturday, with the former aimed at working professionals, Schroeder said.

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1488 days ago

Neighbourly 101: Contact Us

Neighbourly.co.nz

The Neighbourly team is here to lend a helping hand! Whether you have some questions around how the site works, or you need help updating your details or settings, getting in touch with us is simple:

- Click "Settings" at the top right of the website
(If on mobile, click your profile… View more
The Neighbourly team is here to lend a helping hand! Whether you have some questions around how the site works, or you need help updating your details or settings, getting in touch with us is simple:

- Click "Settings" at the top right of the website
(If on mobile, click your profile picture and select "settings")
- Select "Help”
- Under Top Articles, select "Contacting Neighbourly"
- Click on the link to our Contact Us page

We look forward to hearing from you!

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1489 days ago

Riddle me this!

NumberWorks'nWords Dunedin

What kinds of dogs and how many of each kind does Troy have? Leave your answer in the comments below!

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1489 days ago

Crowing rooster leads to two-year legal wrangle for Dunedin City Council

Jake Kenny Reporter from Community News

It is nothing to crow about, but the Dunedin City Council is locked in a long-running legal battle over a rooster.

''Any rooster-related questions?’' Dunedin mayor Aaron Hawkins asked his fellow councillors at a council meeting on Tuesday.

The question came as the council’s … View more
It is nothing to crow about, but the Dunedin City Council is locked in a long-running legal battle over a rooster.

''Any rooster-related questions?’' Dunedin mayor Aaron Hawkins asked his fellow councillors at a council meeting on Tuesday.

The question came as the council’s animal bylaw review came up in the council’s agenda, and feathers were quickly ruffled.

Roosters emerged as the prime target, with council community services general manager Simon Pickford revealing Dunedin was one of the few authorities to allow roosters in urban areas.

It was an issue that could drive neighbours '’to distraction’’, and the council needed to consult on the matter to see if there was appetite for change to the current bylaw.

Pickford confirmed in a statement to Stuff that the council was “involved in ongoing legal proceedings relating to multiple complaints of rooster noise emanating from a Pine Hill property”.

“We are unable to comment further on the specifics of the case while the matter remains before the courts.”

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1489 days ago

Beware...some adorable ghosts may be haunting your streets.

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Halloween can be a fun way to connect with your community. But naturally not all homes in New Zealand will get involved.
If your house is open to trick or treaters this weekend, or if you know of some popular, local streets for trick or treating, please share these below.

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1489 days ago

Popular baby product recalled

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Herobility Eco Feeding Spoon and Eco Baby Spoon & Fork have been recalled as they pose a choking hazard for babies. It has been found that these can break into small pieces.

The product has been sold at Mummum, Global Baby, Hatch Boutique, J Ballantynes, Mighty Ape, Smith and Caugheys and … View more
Herobility Eco Feeding Spoon and Eco Baby Spoon & Fork have been recalled as they pose a choking hazard for babies. It has been found that these can break into small pieces.

The product has been sold at Mummum, Global Baby, Hatch Boutique, J Ballantynes, Mighty Ape, Smith and Caugheys and The Nile from October 2019 to October 2020

If you have one of these forks/spoons and the date stamp is marked 2019 or earlier (or no date stamp is shown), the company advises to stop using the product and contact Bloom and Grow NZ to organise for a gift voucher to the same value.

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1490 days ago

Hitchhiking, controversial spots, and Covid-19: The green mayor's first year

Nicole Reporter from Dunedin News

Aaron Hawkins says he's proud of Dunedin, which has a reputation nationally for being a progressive and forward-looking city.

“We should be proud of that fact that we are taking our social and environmental wellbeing seriously at a time when that isn’t universally true, and at a time when… View more
Aaron Hawkins says he's proud of Dunedin, which has a reputation nationally for being a progressive and forward-looking city.

“We should be proud of that fact that we are taking our social and environmental wellbeing seriously at a time when that isn’t universally true, and at a time when it is most urgent.”

Read more about the Dunedin mayor's first year in office here.

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1497 days ago

Notorious Dunedin street gets extreme makeover to honour killed student

Nicole Reporter from Dunedin News

A street synonymous with student partying was given an extreme tidy-up by those honouring one of their own.

Sophia Crestani, 19, was killed in a stairway pile-up during a party last year.

In July, her Wellington-based parents launched The Sophia Charter, which included agencies working on a range… View more
A street synonymous with student partying was given an extreme tidy-up by those honouring one of their own.

Sophia Crestani, 19, was killed in a stairway pile-up during a party last year.

In July, her Wellington-based parents launched The Sophia Charter, which included agencies working on a range of measures, including cracking down on large parties and reducing rubbish in the area.

Crestani’s family called for a mass cleanup of the student quarter following her death, and that was again repeated on Friday at noon.

Hundreds of students, armed with rubber gloves, brooms, and rubbish bags took to the student quarter.

Crestani's childhood friend Emily Jenner, 20, said the cleanup, which centred around the notorious student hotspot of Castle St, was about '’putting the charter into action''.

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