Eyrewell Forest, West Eyreton

792 days ago

Collector items - classic children's books

Briony from Kaiapoi

1965 edition of Robinson Crusoe - $10
2008 edition of The Faraway Tree Collection - excellent condition - $20

Price: $10

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792 days ago

Folding bed for sale

Briony from Kaiapoi

Excellent condition. Single bed, extra length. Stainless steel frame, head rest. Mattress attached to bed, outer quilted and zipped so inner can be replaced if need be. Top half ratcheted for reclining. Handles on both sides for easy moving. Brakes on wheels. Safety bolt for open and closed … View moreExcellent condition. Single bed, extra length. Stainless steel frame, head rest. Mattress attached to bed, outer quilted and zipped so inner can be replaced if need be. Top half ratcheted for reclining. Handles on both sides for easy moving. Brakes on wheels. Safety bolt for open and closed position. Heavy duty storing protection cover. Some linen included.

Price: $150

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792 days ago

For sale Single mattress

Lee from Swannanoa - Ohoka

Single mattress for sale - $20

Price: $20

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792 days ago

Music Recital

Jillaine from Rangiora

Come and hear students from North Canterbury Registered Music teachers perform. Saturday 20th August at 4pm. Rangiora Town Hall. Free entry. This event is sponsored by the Waimakariri Community Arts Council

794 days ago

WIN with AO Travel and Stuff newspapers

Stuff

Hey Neighbours!

Australian Open and Stuff newspaper are giving you and a friend the chance to kick off grand slam season in Melbourne next year with an epic prize valued at over $8,000! Simply follow the link below and enter your details to be in to win.

Competition closes on Friday 12 … View more
Hey Neighbours!

Australian Open and Stuff newspaper are giving you and a friend the chance to kick off grand slam season in Melbourne next year with an epic prize valued at over $8,000! Simply follow the link below and enter your details to be in to win.

Competition closes on Friday 12 August 2022. Terms and conditions apply.
Find out more

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794 days ago

Re-energise your morning with the Sunday Star-Times.

Stuff

Enjoy an Antipodes skincare duo (RRP$50) when you purchase a three-month subscription to the Sunday Star-Times for just $52.

Subscribe at mags4gifts.co.nz antipodes Terms and conditions apply.
Find out more

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794 days ago

Desperately looking for Les (We have Found Les)

Pauline from Rangiora

Hello, hoping someone can help , we are trying to contact Les whose phone number we have misplaced. He is a cancer survivor we know he lives in Southbrook , We also knows he visits Northlands occasionally and has a coffee and reads the paper. if anyone knows him please can you help us contact him … View moreHello, hoping someone can help , we are trying to contact Les whose phone number we have misplaced. He is a cancer survivor we know he lives in Southbrook , We also knows he visits Northlands occasionally and has a coffee and reads the paper. if anyone knows him please can you help us contact him really appreciate it. Thank you contact Ian 0272775464 thank you for those who replied let’s hope our journey goes well

802 days ago

Public Meeting for Strategic Planning for Submissions For Mill, White and Bradleys Rd

Tina from Swannanoa - Ohoka

This is a planning session on how to organise private submissions for the development in Ohoka Village. This is to organise group leaders to focus submissions strategically so all issues are represented. No council will be present. Just locals with a keen interested to write submissions to the … View moreThis is a planning session on how to organise private submissions for the development in Ohoka Village. This is to organise group leaders to focus submissions strategically so all issues are represented. No council will be present. Just locals with a keen interested to write submissions to the council. This is a brain storming session to discuss how we as a community can support and organise. If you are keen to help organise, write submissions, and support the process them come along. This is not a meeting to complain or protest. We need to develop a plan. We have less than 3 weeks. The meeting Is Sunday 17/07/2022 at the Ohoka Hall At 4:00 PM Please make a sign. Taking pictures for the media.

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824 days ago

Is your broadband bill about to increase? Don't throw money away.

NZ Compare

Spark have recently announced a price increase of $3 - $5 a month for new and existing broadband customers and other providers seem likely to follow suit.

Information collated by our research team has found that tens of thousands of Kiwis are still missing out on hundreds of dollars of savings … View more
Spark have recently announced a price increase of $3 - $5 a month for new and existing broadband customers and other providers seem likely to follow suit.

Information collated by our research team has found that tens of thousands of Kiwis are still missing out on hundreds of dollars of savings each year on their broadband bill, because they are failing to shop around for cheaper broadband plans.

We estimate that over 500,000 households would be able to pay less for their broadband each month but many consumers are unaware of the fact that they could be making these savings and people often don’t know where to start when looking for a change in broadband plan or provider.

This is where NZ Compare can help. Our websites are simple to use and if you need more help, our friendly, Auckland based, customer support centre can advise on the most suitable broadband plan for your needs and help talk you through the switch. With unlimited fibre broadband plans available for less than $60 a month why would you pay more?

Find out more at NZ Compare or call the team on 0508 226672

CORRECTION: This post has been amended to clarify that the price of fibre and copper broadband internet services will increase, and that the increase is between $3 and $5 a month, not only $5 a month on fibre broadband plans as previously posted. (Amended at 10.31am, June 23, 2022)

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794 days ago

Create a statement

The Team from Resene ColorShop Rangiora

Transform an old wooden easel with Resene paint into a statement piece for a glam office or homework desk!

Find out how to create your own.

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796 days ago

Garden (Rose) Arch

Gail from Eyrewell Forest

I am looking to purchase a garden (rose) arch, please if you have one that you no longer use, I would love to give it a new home.

796 days ago

Managers pulling pints and washing dishes to keep doors open in Hanmer Springs

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from Northern Outlook

From reporter Liz McDonald:

School holiday visitors and staff sicknesses are putting further stress on Hanmer Springs businesses already struggling to find workers.

The North Canterbury township has had to manage without the backpackers it traditionally depends on as a temporary workforce, … View more
From reporter Liz McDonald:

School holiday visitors and staff sicknesses are putting further stress on Hanmer Springs businesses already struggling to find workers.

The North Canterbury township has had to manage without the backpackers it traditionally depends on as a temporary workforce, leaving accommodation and tourism business owners run off their feet.

At the Rustic cafe and tapas bar on the main street, owners Stacey and Zane Inglis are putting in 12 or 13 hour days, seven days a week.

Stacey Inglis said they had “shipped the kids off to their nana” while they cover long shifts starting at 5am for the duration of the school holidays.

“It’s been very busy, we are trying to keep it together. Staffing is a huge issue in Hanmer and everyone is short at the moment.

“Normally we rely on backpackers to take on jobs.”

Zane Inglis said he was working as “part chef, part dishwasher”, as well as filling other roles, to keep the doors open and customers happy.

The cafe has five staff, down from the normal seven or eight, and some of those have been off sick.

Some businesses in the town have shut up shop because of staff illness, while others are carrying signs asking customers to be patient.

Businesses with the doors closed because of staff sickness when the Northern Outlook visited on Monday included A-Maze-N-Golf mini-golf and maze, and Mumbles Cafe.

Hanmer Hospitality Ltd owns five bars and restaurants in the town, but sometimes has to close at least one to keep the others sufficiently staffed.

Hanmer Hospitality director Alan McNabb said they were already stretched with roles not filled, and now winter illnesses and Covid were hitting the staff they had. Some former staff were even coming in to help out, he said.

“We start every day thinking things are fine, and then we’ve got three staff down stick. On Saturday, we were three chefs short, in the middle weekend of the school holidays.

“The managers all just have to roll their sleeves up, we either have our hands in the sink or we’re pulling pints.”

Losing the backpacker employment market because of the pandemic had affected the whole town, he said.

“They’d come here travelling from somewhere like England, want to work as much as they could for a few months, then move on.

“Young Kiwis don’t want to live in a small town, or work weekends. That’s when we’re busy.”

The company is now paying staff double time after 10pm on Saturdays to get enough people for late shifts. They also have accommodation available to try and attract staff.

McNabb said that from a resident population of about 1000, the town swells to between 4000 and 5000 during holiday periods, and 6000 when the town is at its fullest.

“Every day is a challenge.”

Hanmer Springs thermal pools and spa manager Graeme Abbot said they were “managing to scramble through”, despite being short of workers.

On some days 10% to 15% of employees at the complex had been absent due to illness, he said.

“It’s harder to get some people in, especially staff that need to be qualified like lifeguards and staff therapists.

“In Hanmer, if we are being stretched, so is everyone else in town.”

797 days ago

Beef, ordered from here

McDonald's

For delicious grass-raised beef New Zealand is the perfect combo.

An ideal climate, lush pastures and innovative farming produces enough beef for Macca’s in New Zealand and around the world. Our patties are 100% quality beef, and all that’s added is a dash of salt and pepper when cooked.
View more
For delicious grass-raised beef New Zealand is the perfect combo.

An ideal climate, lush pastures and innovative farming produces enough beef for Macca’s in New Zealand and around the world. Our patties are 100% quality beef, and all that’s added is a dash of salt and pepper when cooked.

We partner with many Kiwi farmers who produce our beef, including those at the world-class Whangara Farms.
Find out more

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797 days ago

Council to oppose 850-home development in rural Canterbury town

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from Northern Outlook

From reporter Amber Allott:

A North Canterbury council will oppose a subdivision that could transform a rural village into a town, but developers say the development will provide new homes and an economic boost to the district.

Earlier this month, the Waimakariri District Council put a private … View more
From reporter Amber Allott:

A North Canterbury council will oppose a subdivision that could transform a rural village into a town, but developers say the development will provide new homes and an economic boost to the district.

Earlier this month, the Waimakariri District Council put a private plan change request for an 850-house development at Ohoka out for public submissions.

Rolleston Industrial Developments – owned by the Carter Group’s Philip and Tim Carter – wants to rezone 155.9 hectares of farmland between Whites, Bradleys, and Mill roads to residential land.

The subdivision would be called Ohoka Estate, built in stages with most sections between 500 and 1000 square metres. It would also feature shops, a public square, and a school or retirement village.

Waimakariri District mayor Dan Gordon confirmed the council would be making a submission opposing the private plan change, and “urbanising part of Ohoka”.

Since the council had decided to make a submission, the application would now be handled by independent commissioners.

The council had hired an independent lawyer and specialists to help prepare the submission, he said, and the draft would be considered at their August 2 meeting. It would be publicly available on the council website closer to that date.

Due to public interest in the private plan change, the council also had someone on hand to help explain the process and give advice on how to lodge a submission.

Several of Ohoka’s 600 residents had voiced concerns a big development would destroy the little village’s quaint, rural nature, and said the sudden influx of new residents would put a strain on existing infrastructure.

Ohoka is currently home to mostly larger homes on lifestyle blocks, plus some smaller properties, a domain, community hall, primary school, petrol station and small church. House prices range from about $1.2 million to $3.5m.

Analysis by the Christchurch, Selwyn and Waimakariri district councils, released last August, also found greater Christchurch would need 77,000 more homes in the next 30 years.

The Carter Group’s Philip Carter said they believed it was important there were housing opportunities in Waimakariri for both new and current residents.

“Our proposed subdivision will not only provide supply for new houses, it will also give the district an economic boost.”

They would talk to local iwi and the community to get their input as the development progressed, he said.

“We are very conscious of the high-quality village atmosphere of Ohoka, with its extensive large-scale trees and streams, and our proposed development will keep existing trees and use rural style roads and fencing.”

Carter said they were proposing a good mix of section sizes, including larger sections of 0.5 to one hectare close to smaller sections, “all of which will have rural outlooks”.

“We want to ensure Ohoka Estate is well-connected to the existing Ohoka Village and that we maintain Ohoka's special rural character.”

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798 days ago

26 More Classrooms Needed if development goes through for Ohoka Primary

Tina from Swannanoa - Ohoka

The MOE has a firm stance on not adding any more schools in Ohoka. If the change of plan goes thru, Ohoka primary will be the zoned school for the New Ohoka Development. To met demand they will need 26 more class rooms to cope. The principal of Ohoka Primary said Ohoka school as it is today wont be… View moreThe MOE has a firm stance on not adding any more schools in Ohoka. If the change of plan goes thru, Ohoka primary will be the zoned school for the New Ohoka Development. To met demand they will need 26 more class rooms to cope. The principal of Ohoka Primary said Ohoka school as it is today wont be able to cope. They will have to build a new school and they will loose all the rural charm the school has on offer now. All the schools in Ohoka area are close if not over capacity. Please send in a submission to not approve this change in the district plan. ANYONE, ANYWHERE can make a submission. www.waimakariri.govt.nz....

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