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Festival volunteers running out of steam
Festival volunteers running out of steam

Otago Daily Times

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

Festival volunteers running out of steam

Goggle-festooned top hats, leather corsets and ray guns may have had their last hurrah in the steampunk capital of New Zealand. The volunteers behind Oamaru's five-day Steampunk NZ Festival say they are running out of steam and, without reinforcements, its 16th iteration this month could have been its last. Steampunk NZ Festival organising committee member Carolyn Lewis said the growing popularity of the festival was evident when talking to crowds in Oamaru's Victorian Precinct at the main parade event, held over King's Birthday Weekend, because many first-timers said they had already booked accommodation to come back as full participants next year. "I'm left thinking, we're going to need a bigger precinct. "We're looking at an event which, year-on-year, is getting bigger — 50% more ticket holders this time, not counting the extra people coming to watch, most of whom are from out of town — and a very small core group that actually makes it happen. "We're all getting old and broken. We're getting to that point when we have to sort of work out how it's sustainable going forward. "It's two very different things. We've got ticketed events which pay for everything else and then we've got free community events — and that's what costs us. "It's a big job in the setup and a situation where only people who can take two weeks off work beforehand can do it. "I don't think people realise how much is out-of-towners coming here, putting the money into the town on the backs of a very few local people who are doing hard yards." The event does not receive any outside funding from the government or the Waitaki District Council. The funding that is sometimes labelled for the Steampunk Festival is usually only for promotion, most recently a $10,000 government grant to Tourism Waitaki to promote it. "It doesn't help us at all," Ms Lewis said. "It's like inviting folks to dinner and expecting someone else to feed them." Festival chairwoman Lea Campbell said organising the event was getting more complex and tiring. "Because we do everything. "We do the admin, and the planning, and the making, and the doing, and the setting up, and we take the tickets, and some of us get up on stage as well, and then we pack down and we clean up afterwards. "We're now one week post-festival and we're still packing up and we ache. "I can't do next year the same way." The festival has also outgrown its storage and workshop underneath an Oamaru funeral home, and a permanent steampunk exhibition space is on the wish list. The festival's website now features a "come help" message for Oamaru residents.

Festival mixes spectacle of circus with time travel
Festival mixes spectacle of circus with time travel

Otago Daily Times

time30-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

Festival mixes spectacle of circus with time travel

PHOTO: ODT FILES Oamaru's annual Steampunk Festival goes back in time this weekend, boosting the town's tourism appeal in the process. SteampunkNZ Festival organising committee member Carolyn Lewis says this year's "Circus in Time" theme combines flamboyance and the spectacle of the circus with adventures in time. "Time travel is an iconic Steampunk theme. The Victorian Era is a key time period for Steampunk fans, and the Victorians absolutely loved a circus — it was an accessible form of entertainment, with the sideshows and associated activities being hugely popular across all classes. "Most of the tickets sold thus far for this year's festival have gone to out-of-towners, including a good chunk of North Island folk. We also have overseas visitors from Australia and the US." The Heritage Precinct in Oamaru is a major factor in the success of the festival, she said. The five-day festival began yesterday and continues over the King's Birthday weekend to Monday. Tourism Waitaki consumer and trade marketing manager Jade Harvey says the town is generally booked out, with cafes busy and motels full. "Accommodation is usually fully or almost booked out on Steampunk weekend with approximately 90% of attendees visiting from outside of Waitaki with the post-event survey showing that 80% stay for three nights or more. "Although the festival is concentrated in Oamaru, the majority of attendees are from out of town and are choosing to stay for most, if not all, of the long weekend." — APL

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