Southern DHB chooses Access Homehealth

Following an extensive tender process, the Southern DHB has selected Access as one of only three providers to deliver a new model of home and community support services in Otago and Southland. This is an extension of the services we currently provide in the Southern Region.

To enable us to have appropriate service capacity in Otago, we have entered into an agreement to purchase the well-established local company, Dunedin Home Support Services. We also have a subcontract arrangement with another highly regarded organisation, Mosgiel Abilities Resource Centre. 

We are extremely proud to have been selected for this key role, especially against a backdrop of a reduction in the number of suppliers contracted by the Southern DHB. This demonstrates a continued confidence in the support that we provide to the community. 

This new contract offers Access and our staff new and exciting opportunities, including new roles and new ways of doing things, as we cater for a large increase in clients.   

Southern District Health Board Tender

Thursday, December 20, 2012
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The Cry of A Morepork - Writings of Evelyn Parkes

 

Edited by Anne and Leonie Hayden

 

The Cry of a Morepork is a collection of clippings, letters to editors, essays and observations written by Evelyn Hilda May Parkes over her lifetime; a shy but vibrant farmer’s wife, mother, church goer and community volunteer. Each excerpt was taken from Evelyn’s ‘book’ – a fragile, yellowing old exercise book in which she proudly pasted her clippings – or from her personal journals.

 Anne and Leonie Hayden are her daughter and granddaughter, respectively, and with this labour of love they have paid tribute to an unassuming but extraordinary woman.

 This book provides a rare insight into the life of one woman whose life was impacted by the Great Depression, a suppressed mother, a father who was a veteran of WW1, her two daughters and her marriage to a Waikato farmer. Evelyn’s writing, much of which was published in farming periodicals, local papers and the New Zealand Herald, with one piece broadcast on radio, portrays with unsullied honesty and humour her life and development as a writer and observer of life. Implicit in these pages is a story which tells why and how feminism came about and what has been achieved individually and collectively by rural women of New Zealand.

 Evelyn’s stories are not grand adventures or fairytales – they are real life and real love and family. They are a peek into a bygone era and the lives of your own parents and grandparents.

  “In 1947, during our honeymoon, I visited the Mount for the first time. It was a holiday weekend and we saw many people. In particular, one family we saw fascinated me with some indefinable quality of their own. The parents appeared to be in their 30s. The wife was a small brown mouse of a person and it was easy to see that the focal point of her life was her husband. Pale, prematurely aged, he had the face of one who had endured some terrible experience, but had won through. I believed them to be Continental folk and wondered whether they were Jewish.

Suddenly I realised the difference between them and the other holiday makers. Happiness is something that New Zealanders wear casually as a cloak thrown about our shoulders. But this family wore theirs hugged tightly about them. They appeared so devoted to one another in a quiet and rather special sort of way. One day while sunbathing, I saw the unusual sight of a man in a towelling beach robe walking toward the water. Then I noticed how pitifully thin were his legs. As he slipped off the robe before striding into the surf, I saw his terribly scarred back and dropped my eyes, an intruder on his privacy. Here was an individual result of the maelstrom of fury and violence that had shaken the world. Here, too, we had witnessed the spiritual victory of one family over mental and physical anguish. The experience left a tremendous impact on me, as vivid today as it was then.”

 

- Evelyn Parkes, New Zealand Herald, February 1969

The Cry of A Morepork

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The Cry of A Morepork - Writings of Evelyn Parkes Read More

The vegetable gardens at South Westland Area School are set for a big boost, thanks to the school winning a $2,000 gardening grant from Rural Women New Zealand and Meridian Energy this week.


Rural Women New Zealand national councillor, Pam Thomlinson, will present the jumbo-sized cheque on behalf of Meridian at a special ceremony to be held at the school on Tuesday 11 December at 9am.  

South Westland Area School was one of fifty-two hopeful South Island rural primary schools that applied for the two grants on offer.  

The other successful application came from Lyttelton Harbour Basin Schools – a grouping of eight schools that collaborate on gardening projects.

Rural Women NZ national president, Liz Evans, said “We are pleased to be able to support children in learning where their food comes from, and how easy it is to grow when you have the right equipment and materials.

“We are also giving the school a copy of our publication “A Good Harvest – Recipes from the Gardens of Rural Women New Zealand” with tips on growing fruit and vegetables, and lots of great recipes for using the produce once it’s grown.”

Meridian is also gifting a copy of the publication to the fifty unsuccessful schools. 

South Westland Area School currently has several small garden plots that are managed by different class levels throughout the school.

However, they struggle with high rainfall, and having to take covers on and off their plots for weeding and planting.

The $2,000 gardening grant will be used to buy a tunnel house with irrigation to extend and optimise the growing season.



New Tunnel House for South Westland Area School

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The vegetable gardens at South Westland Area School are set for a big boost, thanks to the school winning a $2,000 gardening grant from Rural Women New Zealand and Meridian Energy this week. Read More

Complete this survey and BE IN TO WIN!

www.surveymonkey.com/s/Trees_on_Farms

So … you’ve got a new lifestyle block and want to plant some trees … you’d like to get into a bit of farm forestry … or you want to put in some shade trees or shelter belts on your farm …

But what to plant? How to look after the trees once their planted?  And where to go to find out the best information?

Rural Women New Zealand is supporting a new project: ‘Trees on Farms: making better use of information resources’, which is being funded by the MPI Sustainable Farming Fund, the NZ Farm Forestry Association and Scion Research.

The first thing the project team would like to know is:  What are the best ways of letting people know about planting and managing trees?  
They’ve put together a short survey, and to encourage you to complete it, will put you in the draw for petrol vouchers, a copy of ‘Native Trees of New Zealand and their story’ by John Wardle,  and our own very popular cookbooks ‘A Good Spread’ and ‘A Good Harvest.’
Once they know how people would like to receive the information, the project team will turn their focus to putting together a database of the best information sources for planting and managing trees.
Leading farm foresters, forestry consultants and researchers are all contributing, to make sure that the database is a storehouse of current knowledge and best practice.  Sounds useful …

Thanks for completing the survey!  Here’s the link again:  

www.surveymonkey.com/s/Trees_on_Farms

Trees on Farms - what to plant and how to find out

Monday, December 10, 2012

Complete this survey and BE IN TO WIN! Read More


The present dry conditions affecting the country will be putting an added strain on many families. Rural Women New Zealand is organising drought events to bring people together to support each other at this time.  Funding support for such events may be available by contact Rural Women NZ's national office - (04) 473 5524.

If you need specific help in the case of breakdown in family relationships and violence, it's good to be aware of the It's OK to Ask for Help campaign.

Often people want help from friends, family and neighbours. What you do and say can make a difference to someone’s life. 

Violence is not just physical. Some common signs that one person is controlling and intimidating another are:

constant criticising
texting and or calling to check up
telling someone what to do, wear, and say
pressure to have sex
controlling finances
harming animals.

How can you help?
Listen to your intuition.  If you feel something’s not right, here are some things to say:
Are you ok?
I’m worried about the way your partner checks up on you all the time
If you ever need to talk about anything, I’m available 

It takes a lot of courage for someone who is in a violent or controlling relationship to tell someone about it.  

If a victim tells you, it’s important to listen and take it seriously.  If someone talks to you about wanting to hurt or control their family, it’s important to challenge the behaviour not the person. 

Let people know that help is available. Call the family violence information line on 0800 456 450 to find local services.  

Never put your own safety at risk.  If a situation is dangerous and someone might get hurt, call the Police on 111, even if you’re not sure.

For more information go to www.areyouok.org.nz

Family Violence? It's OK to Ask for Help

Wednesday, December 05, 2012


The present dry conditions affecting the country will be putting an added strain on many families. Rural Women New Zealand is organising drought events to bring people together to support each other at this time.  Funding support for such events may be available by contact Rural Women NZ's national office - (04) 473 5524. Read More

Children at six North Island rural schools will be encouraged to get their hands dirty as they develop vegetable gardens and orchards after being selected as the lucky winners of $2000 gardening grants.


Rural Women New Zealand and Farmlands will present the cheques to the schools over the coming week.

National president, Liz Evans, says “This is the third time that Rural Women New Zealand and Farmlands have collaborated to distribute the proceeds of the popular Farmlands Ladies Nights, which are held around the North Island during October.

“The resurgence of interest in eating fresh food and getting back to basics was reflected in the number of applications we received, with 113 rural primary schools applying for grants.”

The money will be used to buy equipment, seedlings or plants to start a vegetable garden or orchard, or further develop one already in place.

The schools will also receive gardening equipment from McGregor’s Gardening, a gardening starter kit from Yates, fertiliser from Agrisea NZ Ltd and a copy of ‘A Good Harvest – recipes from the gardens of Rural Women New Zealand’ so the children can put all their produce to good use.

The successful schools are:

Ohuka School, Wairoa 

Tinui School, Wairarapa

Toko School, Stratford 
Tomorata School, Wellsford 
Pukekawa School, Tuakau 

Tauriko School, Tauranga 






Garden grants give little green fingers a boost

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

Children at six North Island rural schools will be encouraged to get their hands dirty as they develop vegetable gardens and orchards after being selected as the lucky winners of $2000 gardening grants. Read More

Read All NewsRecent news

Twenty exciting and innovative businesses are in the line up for the Rural Women New Zealand Enterprising Rural Women Awards 2013.

The judges now face the challenging task of choosing finalists in the four entry categories: Love of the Land (sponsored by Agrisea Limited), Help I Need Somebody (sponsored by Telecom) Making it in Rural (sponsored by Fly Buys), and Stay, Play, Rural (sponsored by Access Homehealth Ltd).


These four category winners will go on to compete for the title of Supreme winner, Enterprising Rural Women Award 2013.


"This is the fifth year we've run the Enterprising Rural Women Awards," says RWNZ National President, Liz Evans. "Each year it's rewarding to see the diversity of businesses successfully run by women in rural areas and the significant inputs they make into the wider economy.


"Through these awards Rural Women NZ aims to celebrate their success and raise awareness of women's entrepreneurship, which helps to grow dynamic rural communities."


Entries in this year's Love of the Land category include a fresh produce and gourmet food business, a combined sheep and beef, orchard and farm forestry operation, a native tree nursery, a blueberry grower and product retailer, and a honey business.


In the Help I Need Somebody section there is a butchery and deli, a hair and beauty salon, a skin and sun protection product company, a workplace health and safety service, and an online Kiwiana gift store.


Competing in the Making it in Rural is a merino fashion designer and retailer, a children's book author and illustrator, an exporter of animal products for the medical, pharmaceutical and dietary supplements market, a glass artist, a business that makes soaps and massage oils, and a natural pet care products manufacturer.


Stay, Play, Rural entrants have plenty to offer with farmstay and homestay businesses in the running, as well as an astronomy tourism venture and a luxury lake cruise enterprise.


The Enterprising Rural Women Award winners will be announced at a special ceremony to be held on the opening night of the Rural Women NZ national conference in Christchurch on 23 May.


Check back here over the next month to meet the entrants. Also, visit our Facebook page.

Strong Contenders for Enterprising Rural Women Award 2013

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Twenty exciting and innovative businesses are in the line up for the Rural Women New Zealand Enterprising Rural Women Awards 2013. Read More

ERWA Entrant Jan HarperAdult Learners' Week/He Tangata Matauranga is a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) initiative supported by the Tertiary Education, adult and community education providers at a local level and the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO.


This year, Adult Learners' Week will take place 2 - 8 September. Currently, there is funding available for programmes offered to adults who are looking to improve skills such as literacy (including digital) and numeracy, and for strengthening social cohesion. All event ideas will be considered for Adult Learners' Week, however, so all are encouraged to submit an application form. Past events range from teaching English to an immigrant in a private home, a programme at the local library, a community support group, and a private training organisation. 


Adult Learners' Week is put on bythe  Adult and Community Education (ACE) Aotearoa, the lead body for adult and community educators and a voice for adult learners. To learn more about ACE and Adult Learners' Week, visit the website.


If you'd like a copy of the application form for funding an event, click here. Applications are due by 30 May and will be processed by 8 June.

Adult Learners' Week applications now open

Monday, April 29, 2013

ERWA Entrant Jan HarperAdult Learners' Week/He Tangata Matauranga is a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) initiative supported by the Tertiary Education, adult and community education providers at a local level and the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO. Read More

Rural Women New Zealand National Conference – Christchurch 23-26 May 2013

See the Draft programme here

The Student Volunteer Army’s Sam Johnson and Helen Heddell, Farmy Army catering co-ordinator extraordinaire, will give a unique perspective on the Canterbury earthquakes as guest speakers at the Rural Women New Zealand national conference being held at The Chateau on the Park in Christchurch from 23 to 26 May.

It will be an opportunity for 200 Rural Women NZ members from around the country to look ahead as they focus on the conference theme ‘The Future’s Bright – Inspire a Generation’.

“We are looking forward to coming to Christchurch, and are starting off with a bus tour to get a better perspective of the issues the city is facing,” says national president Liz Evans.  

“It will be a chance to see first-hand the effects of the earthquakes and the innovation and resilience of Cantabrians as they rebuild their lives.”

The Land and Water Forum will be the focus of a Water Seminar being held on the first day of conference, with panelists Prof Jenny Webster-Brown from University of Canterbury’s Waterways Centre for Freshwater Management, David Caygill of Environment Canterbury, Green MP Eugenie Sage and Federated Farmers’ grain and seed chair Ian McKenzie.  

“The focus will be on drought preparedness, water storage and irrigation systems, which are not only topical, but also tie in with the UN International Year of Water Co-operation 2013.”

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker and Hon. Jo Goodhew, Minister of Women’s Affairs and Associate Minister of Primary Industries, will be official guests at the conference opening ceremony. 

“Then Peri Drysdale of Untouched World will set the scene for our Enterprising Rural Women Awards ceremony.  She will talk about her journey to success, from a nurse who didn’t know the difference between an invoice and a statement to a New Zealand fashion and sportswear brand icon.”

The suspense will build as our four category finalists in the Enterprising Rural Women Awards 2013 give short presentations about their businesses, before the Supreme Winner is announced.

The Rural Women New Zealand national conference is always an opportunity to learn something new, be inspired and re-kindle friendships.

Workshops sessions will focus on technology, local body elections and the future focus of the organisation.
Social functions will include a Camelot-themed medieval festival and a gala dinner with guest speaker Leona Dargis, a visiting Nuffield scholar from Alberta, Canada, who’ll be sharing her enthusiasm for the agricultural sector.

We are grateful to all our sponsor partners, and in particular Telecom, Fly Buys, Animal Health Board, Chorus, NZ Post, Agrisea and Access Homehealth Ltd.

For registrations contact national office (04) 473 5524, or a registration form is available in the Members' Only area of this website.  

National Conference 2013

Friday, April 12, 2013

Rural Women New Zealand National Conference – Christchurch 23-26 May 2013 Read More

School bus safety Rural Women New Zealand has cause to celebrate ‘Back to School’  this year as two rural safety initiatives it’s been promoting get the green light.

We have been advocating for safer speeds around rural schools for several years, and are thrilled that variable speed limits are to be extended to 23 rural schools, following the success of a trial at seven rural schools in 2012,  says Rural Women New Zealand national president, Liz Evans.

“We’re also delighted that a trial of active, flashing, 20km/h signage is to go ahead on a fleet of school buses in Ashburton early this year, with funding approved just before Christmas.

“Our rural children are often placed in very vulnerable situations getting to and from school, and we welcome both these initiatives to raise driver awareness and slow down traffic,” says Mrs Evans.  “We will be actively promoting both these to our nationwide network of members.”

In the first trial, the NZ Transport Agency says the variable speed limits have resulted in an improvement in driver behaviour and reduction in speeds around the rural schools that took part, and the trial will be extended to 23 sites by the end of 2013.

The variable speed limit is set at 70km/h past schools in 100km/h zones, and 60km/h for schools in 80km/h areas.

The speeds are displayed on electronic signs, which allow the speed limit to be changed locally at agreed times.  

Mrs Evans says it’s encouraging to see innovative technological solutions being used to solve safety concerns.

“Technology is also the answer when it comes to reminding drivers about the 20km/h speed limit past school buses, and  it’s exciting that the Road Safety Trust has approved funding for a trial of active signage on school buses.”

The four stage trial with a bus company in Ashburton is expected to get underway in the next few weeks.

Bright 20km/h signs with flashing lights will be illuminated to alert drivers to the speed limit in both directions when passing a school bus that has stopped for children to get on and off.


The additional schools are:
•  Amisfield School, Waikato
•  Ararimu School, Papakura
•  Dairy Flat School, Dairy Flat
•  Elstow-Waihou Combined School, Matamata Piako
•  Kaimai School, Western Bay of Plenty
•  Loburn School, Waimakariri
•  Newstead School, Waikato
•  Opoutere School, Thames Coromandel
•  Pahoia School, Western Bay of Plenty
•  Puni School, Waiuku
•  Pyes Pa Road School, Western Bay of Plenty
•  Swannanoa School, Waimakariri
•  Te Wharekura o Te Rau Aroha School, Matamata Piako
•  Tirohia School, Hauraki
•  Waikuka School, Waimakariri
•  Westmere School, Wanganui



Rural school road safety initiatives welcomed

Friday, January 25, 2013

School bus safety Rural Women New Zealand has cause to celebrate ‘Back to School’  this year as two rural safety initiatives it’s been promoting get the green light. Read More

Long Island model searchLong Island, with Rural Women New Zealand, is searching for the next plus size model. Whether blonde, brunette, tall, short, size 14 or 30, send your head shot to tracy.thompson@longisland.co.nz by 20 May 2013 to be entered to be the next top Plus Size Model for Long Island.


The winner will be flown to a Long Island photoshoot in Christchurch. She will have professional hair and makeup done by a stylist and be featured on the cover of the next catalogue. Winner will also receive a $400 Long Island wardrobe!


The winner will be announced at the Rural Women New Zealand National Conference on Saturday 25 May 2013. Good luck!

Long Island Model Search

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Long Island model searchLong Island, with Rural Women New Zealand, is searching for the next plus size model. Whether blonde, brunette, tall, short, size 14 or 30, send your head shot to tracy.thompson@longisland.co.nz by 20 May 2013 to be entered to be the next top Plus Size Model for Long Island. Read More

Rural Women New Zealand held a very popular cheese making demonstration at Tamahere Community Centre in the Waikato on Monday 12 November, with 45 women learning to make ricotta, mozzarella and halloumi cheeses.

“There is a growing interest in learning traditional skills such as cheese making, and we were thrilled with the success of the evening,” said Rural Women NZ member Janet Williams, who organised the demonstration with the new Tamahere Rural Women NZ group.

The demonstration was run by Neil Willman of The New Zealand Cheese School and Sue Arthur of Over the Moon Dairy Ltd in Putaruru.

Sue and Neil and also brought along a selection of top-shelf gourmet cheeses to taste.  These were complemented with wine tastings of four different wines from The Hamilton Wine Company.

Rural Women New Zealand had their book “A Good Harvest” on sale, with samples of pickles made from the book. 

Following the success of the event, more cheese making classes are planned for next year, beginning with three demonstrations in Taranaki in February.

Say Cheese!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Rural Women New Zealand held a very popular cheese making demonstration at Tamahere Community Centre in the Waikato on Monday 12 November, with 45 women learning to make ricotta, mozzarella and halloumi cheeses. Read More