WordJot Trial Mode.   Need a blog or email newsletter? Try WordJot Blogs

Permaculture Activities and Events

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

The Hamilton Permaculture Trust has a great list of events coming up this year. For  a full list of details please see attached pdf.

27 February is the Good Life Expo at the Hamilton Gardens. If you want a stall please contact Cheryl 834 2249
Speakers include Charmaine Poutney and Tanya Cumberland, Xanthe White, Ian Mayes, and others. Take a guided tour around the Te Parapara Garden with Wiremu Puke. Bring your children to see the productive animals, learn about bee keeping, and lots more.

PDC:  There is also a 12 part Permaculture Design Certificate, starting with the first weekend  on the 20th and 21st February. The other modules  are one day.

Adobe oven workshop 20th 21st March

Organic Gardening course Wednesday mornings 10 - 12
Beginnning March 10th to March 31st.
Popular course held at Waimarie Community House with Community garden on site for viewing examples.

Jan.10.pdf


Events Jan - February

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

Saturday 30 January
FRIENDS OF WAIWHAKAREKE: NEXT WORKING BEE

Time: 9am-noon
Meeting point: Brymer Rd entrance .5 km north of Zoo ( NOT Bavistock Rd entrance this time)
We look forward to seeing you and your friends there. Bring gloves,gumboots,morning tea and tools for releasing plants.

Contact phone: Catherine Smith 07 8558296 or Moira Cursey 07 8465066

Saturday 6th February
(World Wetland Day is 2nd February - this is the Waikato Event)
WAIKATO WETLANDS: Peat Lake Combo

Location(s): Lake Kaituna (Lake B) and Lake Serpentine

Discover the unique peat lakes in your backyard with the Department of Conservation and the National Wetland Trust at these relaxed, family-friendly events. Come to one or both lakes. Activities include:

Lake Kaituna

10am– 12 noon

Lake Serpentine

2pm – 4pm

• Guided walks/talks

• Guided walks/talks

• Wetland treasure hunt

• Sneak peek at big plans for ‘The Serp’

• Interact with live fish

• Waikato Wetlands online directory launch

• Wetland plant display

• BYO picnic lunch

• Kayaking (subject to minimum number bookings – please indicate your interest when you RSVP)

How to get there: The events are both drive-yourself, but please register your interest before the event.
Lake Kaituna (Lake B) can be accessed from the Hayes property, 400 Lake Road, Horsham Downs (north of Hamilton)
Lake Serpentine is located on the left of State Highway 3 when heading south from Ohaupo to Te Awamutu

Bring: Appropriate clothing and footwear, sunscreen and hat, water, a picnic lunch, money for kayaking and blueberry ice cream at Lake Serpentine.
RSVP/Contact: Elisa Karwowski (DOC) Ph: (07) 850-8378 or email ekarwowski@doc.govt.nz

14th February - Forest and Bird/KCC Trip
From mudflats and mangroves to clean sand and cockles

Find out about the secret lives of the animals that live in the Tauranga harbour. Excellent trip for families. Bring lunch, togs, sunhat and sunblock. Easy walking in bare feet.

Leave Hamilton 8.30 Meet at 10am.  Beside the Waikareao estuary at the end of Coach Drive, which turns off Grange Road in Otumoetai.
First, an inner harbour walk on the Waikareao estuary leaving from the carpark at Coach Drive, followed by lunch on the beach and then a walk on the outer harbour flats in the early afternoon when the tide will be very low.
Leader: Al Fleming
Enquiries contact Philip Hart 856 7992


Cloth Nappy workshops

Friday 12th February @6.00pm
Saturday 13th February @9.00am

Venue: Parents Place, 87 Boundary Road, Hamilton

Interested in Using Cloth Nappies?
Choosing cloth nappies can be quite confusing because there are so many different styles available and a lot of conflicting information.
Come along and let "The Nappy Lady" dispel all the myths, show you how they work and explain all of the things you could possibly want to know about nappies. She will show you how to choose the style that will suit your family and how easy it actually is to use cloth nappies.
Each couple will receive a Free nappy trial pack valued at over $45 to take home.
Cost: $15 per couple
Bookings are essential: Please contact Kate Meads (aka The Nappy Lady) on (07) 5492955 email kate@nappydays.co.nz. There are limited spaces available and they book up very quickly.


Funding Workshops

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

Free Funding workshops are starting soon in Hamilton and around the Waikato region. See attached pdf for places and dates.

First one is on February 11th at Hamilton Gardens Pavilion from 6 - 8pm. This is the only evening one.

Please note that you need to register to go, so RSVP to Community Waikato.

poster for funding workshop2010.pdf


Saturday 16th January

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

8.30pm Classic Hits Outdoor Cinema Series - E.T.

Come to Garden Place for the Classic Hits Outdoor Cinema Series for the Steven Spielberg classic from 1982. See the story of the Extraterrestrial that the world fell in love with. ET is afraid…alone…and wants to phone home!

So can you with your new Vodafone mobile! Tune into Classic Hits to be in to win a Vodafone Mobile PLUS front row bean bag seats for you and 3 friends.

 Bring the kids, a blanket and pack a thermos...free summer fun

9am Jubilee Weedbusters group

Meet at Boundary Road entrance, anyone and everyone welcome, the group would love some extra help.
Very easy work, and beautiful (and cool) environment to spend a couple of hours in, if you haven't been to the bush lately come and see what we are up to.

Phone Katherine 839 4452 or 021 267 2773

 

 


Cycle safety petition

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

Cycle safety petition - we want to encourage people to cycle to reduce carbon emissions, but they need to be able to do it safely - so please take a couple of minutes and sign this - note you do not have to donate anything, just your time.

"1.5m to Survive! NZ Safe Cycling Strategies 2020"

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/ridestrong/

 ------------------------------

Cyclist's chilling last words

By Anna Rushworth
4:00 AM Sunday Jan 10, 2010

Mia Pusch described truck drivers as 'beasts' in her online postings.
A young German tourist hit and killed by a truck this week wrote of aggressive Kiwi drivers just a few days before her death.
Mia Susanne Pusch, 19, had been cycling around New Zealand since her arrival in the country early last October.
Her last blog, written on December 30, gives chilling details of the problems caused by truck drivers passing her at "phenomenal speed".
She described the truck drivers as "beasts" who seemed oblivious to cyclists.
The cause of the crash, which happened about 11.50am last Tuesday in a passing zone on State Highway 3 in the central North Island, is still under police investigation.

Pusch was about 4km north of Bulls and heading towards Wanganui when she was struck by a truck and trailer heading in the same direction.
In her last blog, Pusch wrote: "When one is a cyclist on New Zealand roads, one is not only torn from one's daydreams by diving-bombing magpies but is more often threatened by a more nasty species that really requires more attention: truck drivers."

While commenting on more positive car drivers, she criticised truckies.
"One usually finds this species driving permanently at a phenomenal speed in a race against time.
"These beasts seem oblivious to the fact that their loud beeping can have no effect in making the heavily laden, long-distance cyclist go any faster.

"They swerve past the cyclists who are struggling under their own steam at break-neck speed mainly within only a half-metre to a metre gap, all the while aggressively honking their horn.
"The fact that this in no way improves the situation, but in fact makes it worse, appears not to enter the minds of these people."

Her mother Gesa replied to the blog from Germany: "I hope you don't come across any more of these negative horn honkers. I love you very much. Your loving Mama."
Pusch's blog also gives accounts of the hot pools in Rotorua, cycling in Taupo and her time in Nelson and Blenheim in early December.
She wrote of being blown off her bike and into a ditch while riding against the wind in the South Island, and hoped it would be her only crash.
By Christmas Eve she was in Christchurch. In her last Facebook entry, on January 2, just three days before her death, she posted a message saying she had named her bike "Pinkie" while visiting Christchurch. Her mother posted a reply: "Hi Pinkie! Hang in there - only three more weeks of dragging Mia around."
Pusch was hit by an 18m-long, 40-tonne truck.
The director of the trucking company said his driver was traumatised and would be off work for several weeks.
He said the driver was experienced and the company had not been involved in an accident like this before.
"It's subdued everything around here. "There's no reason for it to happen, it's a mystery. It's very hard on the driver, that's for sure."
Greg Hamilton, of Bike NZ, said Pusch's blog sadly reflected the experiences of local cyclists, as well.
"The amount of comments we have on a daily basis of near misses on New Zealand roads ... it's a very clear message that it's a scary place to be." Hamilton wanted the Government to invest in driver education alongside their plans for a national cycleway.
"New Zealanders are just not good at sharing the road."

 Bike NZ's "1.5 to survive" petition - to highlight cyclists needed 1.5m space on the road - has collected 15,000 signatures in three months. Government duty minister Pansy Wong yesterday offered her condolences to the Pusch family and her friends.
Wong said she hoped potential cycle tourists would see the police investigation into Pusch's death as a sign the Government took road safety seriously.
Police still want to hear from any motorists who were on the stretch of road between Bulls and Lake Alice on Tuesday, who saw either Pusch on her bike or the yellow truck and trailer.

 - HERALD ON SUNDAY  By Anna Rushworth


District Plan review and Waikato River Independent Scoping Study

Posted 14 years, 7 months ago    0 comments

Hamilton District Plan review

Have your say!
The District Plan controls what activities people can carry out on their land and how they go about it. The plan affects all of us – it sets out all of the rules and policies for anyone who wants to develop and use land in Hamilton. This covers many things including the management of significant issues like urban growth and the protection of environmentally sensitive areas, as well as more minor matters such as how close buildings may be built to property boundaries.
The District Plan is a legal document prepared by Hamilton City Council under the Resource Management Act 1991(RMA). The District Plan defines the way in which the city’s natural and physical resources will be managed to achieve the purpose of the RMA - to promote the sustainable management of natural and physical resources.

Info about the plan: http://fastforwardhamilton.co.nz/page/5-Home
or go straight to Submission form

 

Waikato River Independent Scoping Study

NIWA is holding three consultation meetings with stakeholders as part of this study. This is the second round of meetings to confirm that the information collected accurately reflects the views of the community.Participants will also be asked to provide comment and feedback on the values and issues.
Attached is information and agenda for the meetings which are being held on the 16th and 18th February at the Genesis Energy Room, Waikato Rugby Stadium.

WRISS invitation stakeholder workshops.pdf


13th January Lakeside walk

Posted 14 years, 8 months ago    0 comments

Lakeside Evening Stroll next Wednesday January 13th, 6 to 8pm starting at The Verandah. Organised by Living Streets
Bring your own picnic, or book a table at The Verandah as a reward for walking either right round the lake or even doing one of the shorter paths if you have small children, elderly relatives or are just recovering from the holiday season!

We have several of us able and willing to lead groups on either the full circuit or the short walks, so bring your friends and celebrate the existence of an admittedly short and less than balmy summer, by enjoying our lovely lakeside environment.

If the weather really treats us badly, we will aim for same time, same place the following week, January 20th.
We look forward to seeing as many of you (along with your friends and relations!) as can make it next week.

 Enquiries to Judy McDonald Phone 07 8552019

 


Happy Christmas everyone

Posted 14 years, 8 months ago    0 comments



Shim