25 June 2012

Letter to the editor: Doctors' Point Beach and vehicles

Dear editors, 

Saturday 23 June was beautiful, really warm and sunny. Lots of people (families, children, dogs) came to the beach [Doctors' Point].  I was there around 4 p.m. when the tide was rising and the walking space was getting limited.
 
The end of the beach by the caves was taken up by two unmuffled trailbikes doing large circles and charging up and down the sand bank.  They then came back to the inlet end of the beach and did further loops and wheelies. 
Access to the carpark was by then cut off by the tide. They took the bikes over the sand-dunes and onto the path between the farm fence and the back of the dunes to the carpark. After that they drove along Doctors Point Rd, up and down White Rd, and then up and down Thornicroft Rd, zooming and revving loudly. 

Another walker told me that they [the bikers] said they could go on the beach because legally it is a road. However, to get to it they had to leave the formed access road through the QE2-covenanted reserve. The sign on the reserve states no vehicles off roads. 
 
Furthermore they were illegally on the road (and therefore on the beach) in the first place -- the bikes had no numberplates. 

Clearly they were enjoying themselves. I wonder if they considered how many other people's enjoyment was sacrificed for that. Or the risks of harming someone, particularly on the narrow path behind the beach, and traveling at speed on Doctors Point Rd where a lot of people walk on fine days, and visibility is extremely poor around the bends. Or the legality of driving on the road (including the beach) without number plates.

What do other people think about this? 

Yours,

Elizabeth Gutteridge, Waitati

23 June 2012

Open Letter to Blueskin Bay residents

By Mark Brown and Mark Dickson

 

The A & P Show Committee is announcing that its next annual show day will be on April 13, 2013.

 

We are inviting persons, groups, organisations, associations, businesses and any other interested parties to join us in celebrating life here in Blueskin Bay – our people, environment, activities, community groups, sports clubs, local authorities and trusts, services, businesses and more.

 

This list is by no means comprehensive. We are blown away with how many potential participants there are in this small geographical vicinity and the diverse range of things going on, of which many of us may not be aware.

 

This letter is intended to give early notice, so you can put the date into next year's diary and have time to think about how you might be able to showcase what you do and help make this show a great community celebration.

 

We hope that you or your group will be interested in participating in this show. Please phone or email either Mark Brown or Mark Dickson to register your early interest.

 

Mark Brown, phone 482 2833, email: blueskin@xtra.co.nz

Mark Dickson, phone 482 2504, email: waitatistores@xtra.co.nz

WARRINGTON SCHOOL: Term 2 Report; Matariki

by Wendy Russell, Acting Principal

It has been a very busy term with four new entrants commencing school.  They each bring a certain little wow factor and huge character to the classroom.

The school has been extremely busy with our annual Matariki celebrations including the lantern parade and beach clean-up, Kaupapa Maori Festival, the Fun Run and the visit from Starlab.  Our winter sports teams have had a fabulous and successful season so far with pleasing results.  Some children are now trialling for Otago representative teams and we wish them luck.

Matariki was a huge success this year.  We have had such positive feedback, which is fantastic.  We were confined by space this year, with our new playground still under construction, but it seems to have proved very successful having the performance in a different area!  We were lucky with the weather which brought out the wider community.  Thanks to Paul and Patrick for their wonderful ukulele entertainment and Tarn, Mira and Florence for their amazing stilt walking. 

 

Fun Run. The students and staff were all buzzing last Wednesday.  A large number of children dressed up as favourite characters for this event and I have to say they looked amazing!  There were lots of spot prizes which were supplied by Nicola Shanks from Sport Otago.  The Otago Daily Times included a photo of us in  last Thursday's paper and it looked very cute.  At the end of the run, children were each given a fruity, juicy ice-block.  Back at school we held a presentation where each student was given a participation certificate.  There was a medal for the best dressed participator which went to Jazzy Couch.  The winning class that fund-raised the most money was presented with a trophy – well done to Room 2 for winning this.  Overall the school made a profit of $1,300 which will go towards sports equipment.  Thank you to everyone who supported this event!

Our principal, Mr Parker, has been on leave this term travelling around Europe and we look forward to his return in term 3.


Matariki

On Monday it was Matariki.  There are four corners of Warrington that you go to, I went to the domain with Floyd.  I carried a star-shaped lantern.  Floyd and I ran to the front.  The people coming from the domain were the first to get to the place where all the groups met.  Then it was the people from the Paua Farm.  Then we went up to school.  First the drummers did their drumming.  After that Room 1 did the haka.  Then the whole school sang two songs.  Then we went and played in the dark.  The bank looked like a deep swamp in the dark.  Floyd and I stayed close together.

Alex Cameron


I was walking to the Paua Farm with a lantern shaped as a star.  There were many people at the farm, there were drummers and one teacher there.  We waited a long time so we started to walk, then we met Jacob and Isaac.  We kept on walking then finally we got to the top of the hill.  Everyone was waiting at another hill.  When we got to school we sat down.  All the children sang -- the singing was amazing.  Then everyone went and had some food and the children played in the bushes.

Mikey Rainbow

WARRINGTON SCHOOL: Transit of Venus

It was Wednesday, 6th June, 2012. I was jumping with excitement, my hands were shaking, my heart was pounding as I waited in line.  Steven had very kindly brought his telescope down and made a special cover so we could see it.  It was my turn to look, I was so excited, this is a once in a life time experience.  My eye hit the the edge of the lens, I saw it!  It was amazing seeing the sun and Venus' shadow on it. I was amazed and could not stop looking. Thank you Steven.

Jazzy Couch


A transit is when Venus or another planet passes between us (the Earth) and the Sun.  The next Venus transit will be in 2117.  I peered through the telescope with one eye, and gradually concentrate on the small black dot in the bottom right corner of the enormous round sun. Venus must've been 100 or so times smaller than the Sun (my estimate).

Lichen Sorrel

 

The Sun

still in the sky.

Venus

a little black dot

crosses really slowly

the orange red fire.

I stare

in amazement.

Jasmine Johnson

 

I was up the tree then Steven came into sight, he was carrying a telescope.

I ran to Steven.  About five minutes later I got to see through the telescope.

I saw Venus, it was across the sun.

I was flabbergasted.

Rammy El-dessouky

21 June 2012

Opinion

By David Clark

As the Member of Parliament for Dunedin North I was very pleased to hear of the Government's back-down in relation to its failed proposal to increase school class sizes through staffing cuts in the public education sector.

 

The policy U-turn highlighted a Government which is absolutely, completely, and in all aspects, out of touch with the mood of the people. 

 

The job cuts which were announced in this year's Budget, would have had a brutal and devastating effect on how much time teachers spent with pupils. I believe they would have seriously reduced the quality of education in New Zealand.

 

The mood, not only among Dunedin North constituents, but of the majority of New Zealand, was one of open defiance.

 

This prompted the Prime Minister to finally see common sense prevailing.

 

Public pressure forced a back-down on another failed National Party policy.

 

Labour is very concerned about the future of New Zealand's education system.

 

I am thankful to all who made their voices heard in the defence of education.

 

It was gratifying to march in Dunedin recently alongside such a wide variety of people -  members of Grey Power, children and those whose efforts helped organise the public protest forcing the Government's embarrassing back-down.

 

It's believed the rally was the largest public march since the first major neurosurgery campaign.

 


20 June 2012

OROKONUI ECOSANCTUARY

By Sue Hensley

The two ambassador takahe that arrived at the end of May have taken
off in different directions. The larger bird, Te Hoiere (Maori for
his previous home of Maud Island), has taken up residence on the
grassland area, staying close to the enclosure and food. He is still a
bit wary of people but is often seen. The other, Quammen (after author
David Quammen's "The song of the Dodo"), has gone "bush" away from people
although he knows the sound of the quad bike means his food hopper
will soon be replenished!

Another animal for advocacy purposes is also now in residence but in
the Visitor Centre. He is a Canterbury jewelled gecko who is unable to
be released to the wild. This will give people the opportunity to see
one of these "endangered by poaching" creatures.

July is packed full of events.
Matariki (June 23 – July 7) features Richard Nunns, Fleur Sullivan and
a star watch with Kai Korero Kane Holmes. Our Waitati School Kapa Haka
group will also perform and a hangi rounds out the programme.

Educator Tahu McKenzie has a number of exciting workshops for the
young at heart both at Orokonui and various sites around the city as
part of the Science Festival (June 30 – July 8). Other workshops
follow on into the school holiday programme.

Details of all these events can be found on www.orokonui.org.nz or on
our facebook page. The Visitor Centre and cafĂ© are open daily 9.30 –
4.30pm.

19 June 2012

Warrington Hall Spruce-up

By Lynn Hastie


Warrington Hall has had a good spruce up, we now have our new lino and fridge freezer. The kitchen is very well equipped to host a party, get together or special occasion you may wish to celebrate.

The hall is easy to heat, there are heaps of tables and chairs and it is available to hire out at reasonable rental.

If you would like to have a look at the facility or would like to hire it then please phone one of the committee members; Ruth Porteous 482 2849, Rowena Park 482 2667 or Lyn Hastie 482 2896.

Congratulations to our neighbours at the Warrington Playcentre. They have worked long and hard to upgrade their playground and what lucky children to have such a special garden to play in. Well done to you all. Long live Playcentre!




Blueskin Garden Club

By Lyn Hastie

We met on June 14 at the Warrington Hall where our speaker from Youthgrow was most interesting. He talked about his
gardening/nursery work and working with young folk in  Dunedin.
Our next meeting is to be a mosaics workshop on Saturday July 14 at 10am. Full details are on the club email and this day is for club members only due to limited space.
Our August meeting will take us to the Blueskin Cafe for coffee and cake and our speakers will help us to categorise trees, shrubs etc for our spring flower show in September.
Club members are keen to rekindle the autumn festival type competitions we used to have at past A&P Shows. Ideas are welcome for next year's big day in April.
Contact Lyn Hastie at hastie2@xtra.co.nz

 




BLUESKIN ENERGY PROJECT

by Scott Willis

I fell in love on Global Wind Day (15 June) with nine 850kWh wind turbines, cloaked in mist on the summit of Mt Stuart, the site of Pioneer Generation's newest renewable generation project. What a great community opening it was, with Metiria Turei, Eion Edgar, Allan Kane and farmer/landowner Rob Hewett all adding entertaining support to Pioneer's Fraser Jonker's opening address, amidst sausages, Waitahuna School artwork, cups of tea and coffee. Our small Blueskin team headed up into the snow and stood awed under the quiet majesty of these animated objects, quietly powering about 3000 local households – embedded generation feeding the local network.


What a lot has happened in June, and it is all working up to an exciting next six months for the Blueskin Energy Project (BEP). We're teaming up with the Energy Cultures Team at the University of Otago to conduct a small community energy advice trial between July – Nov 2012. In Blueskin (Long Beach, Purakaunui, Osborne, Waitati, Evansdale, Warrington), this will mean a small number of home energy assessments and a telephone advice service. Sign up to the BEP Update by emailing me if you want to be kept in the loop. As more of us understand the simple steps we can take in our own homes, get access to existing subsidies, etc, and begin budgeting for the more complex solutions, we'll all increase our energy awareness and be able to share skills and knowledge with neighbours and friends, and build greater resilience.

 

Last month I hinted at more on the financial side of the wind cluster. An economic site is determined not only by it's capacity factor – which is a crude measure of wind resource – but also by other factors including the cost of development, on-going maintenance, etc. All our analysis reveals that the returns we expect to get from investing in the wind cluster are in line with other wind developments in other parts of NZ, modelled here using the WindFlow 500 turbine. There's unlikely to be any immediate benefit in terms of your electricity price at this stage, but there'll be investment returns and wider community returns, once the wind cluster is operational.


Once we've held our next set of important community meetings in September (look out for them) we'll be in a position to decide on proceeding with establishing the business entity. The business entity, when established will be responsible for driving the project from that point on, i.e. securing legal contracts, devising investment options, raising finance, preparing the resource consent, and building the wind cluster. Until then we're commissioning a set of updated wind resource assessments and getting professional assistance with detailed financial modelling, while exploring the best options for selling the approximately 5.2 GW/hours of annual electricity production, expected from 4 WindFlow 500 turbines.

 

It was wonderful to see the great community support evident at the launch of the small Mt Stuart wind farm at Waitahuna – our project is smaller again, but what Pioneer have done is not only develop small wind technical skills. They've also demonstrated the economic viability of small wind and how that in turn benefits community as well.

 

The website www.blueskinpower.co.nz/ is where you'll find fresh information as it comes to hand, or contact Scott on 482 2048 or by email scott@blueskinpower.co.nz.

18 June 2012

OPINION: Community Power Generation

By Jenny McDonald

I'm concerned about the Blueskin Energy Project proposal.

A yellow flyer which arrived in my mailbox the other week did little to allay my fears, however it
did prompt me to look at the website, do some thinking, discuss with friends and fiddle around with
some back-of-an-envelope calculations. I'm no expert in these matters, just an enthusiastic amateur
who lives as sustainably as I can and off the grid. Here are three reasons why I worry about the
wind farm proposal:

1. In the event of an extended power cut or disruption to the grid, the fact that we have
community-owned turbines doesn't help. If the Waitati substation goes out, as individuals,
we will be the proud owners of a power-generation facility that we cannot access. Precisely
the same position as grid-connected folk are in now.

2. The proposed wind site and other sites tested seem to be on the margin for a viable wind
farm. The figures given by Blueskin Power project an annual output of 1300MWh/annum
from each 500kw turbine. This means a projected capacity factor from the turbines of 29%.
Other similar scale wind farms around NZ seem to be around 38- 45% (e.g. Mt Stuart and
Horseshoe Bend). I'm keen to understand why the projected capacity factor for the Porteous
Hill wind farm seems low by comparison. I imagine it is because of the wind speeds but
would like to fully understand why it is only 29% (or have my calculations corrected!). I
would also like to better understand how much of a risk this presents for the project as a
whole. Does it mean for example, that the power we would be producing is relatively more
expensive than say power from a farm with 38% capacity?

3. Control of the power supply and costs, no matter which business model is chosen, will still
largely rest with a small number of commercial and/or government funded organisations
with a vested interest in the generation and distribution of energy (e.g. Windflow Systems,
Powernet, the University). This interest may continue to be congruent with our vested
interest in a resilient Blueskin Bay community or it may not be ... very hard to say at this
point. I think of the milk price example. As a nation we can easily produce our own milk but
the price we end up paying for milk as individuals is now totally divorced from our control
as consumers. Small independent wind farms may quickly become dragged into complex
national pricing schemes and once again individuals and communities risk their resilience.

A wee while ago now at a public meeting, someone, I think it might have been Ian Buchan,
suggested that the community negotiate as a group with the power companies using our usage
patterns as a bargaining chip. This made good sense to me and has the benefit of being a low-risk,
low-cost initiative. I wonder what happened to that suggestion?

Thinking further along these lines, what I would love to see is every householder supported to be an
active stakeholder in the daily management of their power, with a real ability to influence the
behaviour of large organisations who we depend on for supply, and crucially with resilience in the
event of grid failure.

Perhaps my worries about the wind farm proposal are unfounded. I hope so and I hope if nothing
else my concerns will generate further discussion. But in case they are not completely off the wall,
here's a back-of-an-envelope alternative proposal for how we might achieve resilience for less risk
and with more tangible gains for the community.

Imagine all 939 households in the Blueskin area generated, on average, a small amount of power
and were set up to contribute this back to the grid. A conservative (and rough) estimate of the total
power generated per household from existing domestic technology, e.g. 1 or 2 solar panels might
average out at say 200 Wh/day/household. Per annum that would total 68MWh or around 5% of the
power output of just one of the proposed wind turbines (939 x 200 x 365 = 68547KWh). So far,
not sounding that attractive as an alternative proposition, right?

Now imagine that each domestic grid-connected set-up included a means of storing energy (say 200-
300Ah) and a smart controller that ensured your storage battery was always fully charged, that gave
you an 'at a glance' readout of your power consumption and worked out for you the best times to run
domestic appliances based on current charge level from your own power source and peak/off-peak
grid prices. In the event of a grid outage the device would automatically switch across to its internal
battery and a warning would sound if you attempted to run any device that would either overload
the system or rapidly drain the battery. Lights, radio, TV, computer, pellet burner, electric ignition
gas stoves, califonts etc could all keep working.

Such devices do already exist, typically as backup for grid-connected alternative energy systems.
Can we work with designers/suppliers to create or adapt a low-cost device to meet the needs of
grid-connected consumers who generate a small amount of alternative energy as backup in case of
grid-outage and to help them manage their power consumption?

As a community we would have around 68MWh of energy per annum that we could use as our own
private buffer and with which we could more easily make decisions about our peak and off-peak
usage. We could also use this flexibility as a collective bargaining chip with the electricity suppliers.
As consumers we'd get to be hands-on in terms of experiencing, learning about and managing in a
small way, alternative energy.

Significantly, each of us would have a degree of resilience if/when the grid fails. Some people may wish to, or be more easily able to, generate more power. This will not only
benefit them, but it will also benefit everyone by increasing the size of our power buffer and
bargaining power. Others, like me, might even consider connecting to the grid if they felt there was
a collective benefit to be derived from this.

What up-front investment would be required to get such an idea off the ground? I suspect
significantly less than the roughly $5000 per household (a total of $4.5 million) to establish a
wind farm (not counting ongoing maintenance costs, risks related to actual power output,
commercial agreements etc) and with no guarantee of resilience let alone return on investment.

Perhaps my suggestion will not withstand serious scrutiny. But personally I like the idea of building
resilience and community independence as a first priority. I prefer the idea of us as a community
calling the shots we can. And I believe in actively promoting a concept which empowers individuals
and small communities while minimising the risk and reducing reliance on boardroom deals.

* Scott Willis from the BRCT will respond in the August issue.