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NZNO members striking outside Tauranga Hospital

NZNO members striking outside Tauranga Hospital

NZ Herald6 days ago
Talented 8-year-old gymnast Azaria's big dreams
Azaria Tai is 8 years old and showing a lot of potential in her gymnastics. She hopes to one day go to the Olympics and represent New Zealand. Video / Ayla Yeoman
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Dame Lisa Carrington to the rescue for World Champs
Dame Lisa Carrington to the rescue for World Champs

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • RNZ News

Dame Lisa Carrington to the rescue for World Champs

Photo: Iain McGregor / New Zealand kayak legend Dame Lisa Carrington will race internationally this year. Earlier this year Dame Lisa confirmed that she would skip the 2025 international season to prepare herself for an attempt to compete at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. However the eight-time Olympic champion will return to international competition at the Canoe Sprint World Championships in Milan, Italy later this month. With only 18 days to go until the flagship event begins, Dame Lisa will replace fellow Paris 2024 gold medallist Olivia Brett in the women's kayak four, after the latter sustained an injury in training. Dame Lisa did not race the first two World Cups of the season in Szeged and Poznan. The 36-year-old has already joined the team in Italy. "This is a really tough situation for Olivia, and our thoughts are with her as she begins her recovery," said Canoe Racing New Zealand's general manager of performance Nathan Luce. "We're fortunate to have someone of Lisa's calibre available to step in. While she hasn't competed internationally this year, she's maintained full-time training and is in race-ready form." The new K4 team for New Zealand will feature Dame Lisa, Alicia Hoskin, Tara Vaughan, and Lucy Matehaere, as they aim to clinch gold at the Idroscalo Regatta Course. Dame Lisa led Brett, Hoskin, and Vaughan to the gold medal at the Olympic Games Paris 2024 in the K4 500m. The victory saw her equal the record title tally of Germany's Birgit Fischer, which had stood for 20 years. The K4 500m title in Paris was New Zealand's first, ending a 40-year domination by Germany and Hungary in the event at the Games. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

‘Son of Queenstown' remembered
‘Son of Queenstown' remembered

Otago Daily Times

time3 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

‘Son of Queenstown' remembered

The late Bruce Grant. PHOTO: SUPPLIED If Queenstown's the world's adventure capital, no-one epitomised that better than Bruce Grant. That even applied to the tragic end of his life — succumbing to "the mother of storms" after becoming the first Kiwi to summit the world's second highest mountain, K2, without oxygen. Only 31, this 'son of Queenstown' — as he's described on a plaque in the Gardens — had already packed in a lifetime of adventures. Born in the Sydney St maternity home his family once lived opposite, Bruce's mum Ros, who's 93, was a teacher and his dad, the late John, a builder. The youngest of four siblings, he started skiing earlier than the others — "he sort of got dragged along", sister Christine, one year his elder, says. He attended primary and secondary school on Ballarat St, finishing at the latter's new Fryer St campus. Christine says then-skifield owner Mount Cook provided schools with ex-rental gear which Bruce started with. The pair would later miss a lot of school as they ascended the ranks to national ski team selection. New Zealand downhill champ for five years, he and Christine skied that discipline, under the influence of a Canadian coach, at the 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics. Bruce finished 31st and was also chosen for the '88 Calgary Olympics, but an injured leg didn't recover in time for him to compete. He got into parapenting soon after it was introduced to Queenstown, first flying solo before becoming a commercial tandem pilot for eight years. After summiting many mountains, including Mt Cook seven times, he'd often ski or parapente off them, sometimes for films he starred in. One was The Leading Edge, for which Queenstowner Mathurin Molgat hired him after watching him ski The Remarkables. "He was an exceptional athlete, and he never said 'no'. "If you said, 'you want to do this, Bruce?' it didn't matter what the adventure was, he was in it." They even tried, before crashing, to mountain bike down The Remarkables' 'Elevator' chute. Mathurin found him the strong, silent type. "We drove up to Mt Cook and I think there were about four words exchanged. "He was a very content, self-contained character." Christine says he also meditated — "he was contemplative". A sculpture in his memory in the Queenstown Gardens. PHOTO: PHILIP CHANDLER In terms of extreme adventure, skiing down Austria's long and difficult Hahnenkamm run put him in elite company. His main mountaineering buddy was then-Queenstowner Kim Logan, who marvelled at some of his amazing Fiordland climbs. Although about 10 years his senior and more experienced, he says Bruce was mentally and physically the better mountaineer. "His safety margin was higher than mine." The pair were among rescuers who saved the life of a German backpacker on the Routeburn Track in extreme conditions, winning them all Royal Humane Society bravery medals. Kim recalls the police afterwards shouted them breakfast at Queenstown's then Gourmet Express and they got "absolutely smashed" on Irish coffees — "forget about the coffee, just bring us the Irish [whiskey]". The pair's '95 assault on K2, considered the world's most dangerous mountain, was preceded by a major community fundraising effort. Kim says he turned around just after Camp 4 —"it was my own condition and the weather" — and a few hours later expedition leader Peter Hillary did, too. Bruce and five others subsequently reached the summit, but all perished soon after when "the mother of storms" blew through, Kim says. Christine's sure if they'd had an inkling they wouldn't have summitted. "There was a very strong wind which was unforeseen really, in my understanding it came from the bottom up." Ironically, at the same time his brother Andrew, nicknamed 'Buzz', was experiencing a huge storm after summiting Mt Cook. When Kim returned to Queenstown, a memorial service was held in the Anglican church, after which hardy souls ventured in very wild weather to the Gardens where Christine's husband Dan Kelly's sculpture of a hand grasping an ice axe, in Bruce's memory, had been installed that day. At the time, Christine told Mountain Scene: "Bruce achieved a majority of his goals, there's not many people who could ski off Mt Cook, let alone fly. "He was aware of the fragility of human life in nature, he understood the reputation of K2 fully. "He achieved this goal, who knows what he would have achieved next?" Bruce Grant won every Dash for Cash he entered. Thirty years after his death, Sunday's Dash for Cash on Queenstown's Coronet Peak — a fundraiser for the Bruce Grant Youth Trust — is being held in his honour, from 2pm.

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