Latest news with #TheLizard
Yahoo
05-08-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Major changes could be coming to 18 Cornish churches
A public consultation has been launched on the reorganisation of the Kerrier Deanery. The Church Commissioners of the Church of England have initiated the process, which could see significant changes to the current structure. The Kerrier Deanery encompasses 23 churches across six groups, stretching from Constantine to Germoe and from Wendron to The Lizard. St Michael's Church in Helston, the largest in the area, is also part of this deanery. Traditionally, each of these benefices has had a resident vicar or rector. However, the proposed changes aim to consolidate all the parishes and benefices into one single Kerrier benefice. Under this new plan, none of the 18 parishes will have a designated vicar. Instead, the Truro Diocese will appoint two stipendiary priests, a team rector and a team vicar, to oversee the entire deanery. These changes require approval from the Church Commissioners, who are now inviting residents in the deanery to voice their opinions. The consultation details are available at with representations being accepted via email at The deadline for submissions is midnight on September 15, 2025. In a statement, St Michael's Parochial Church Council [[Helston]] urged locals to participate in the consultation, stating: "We urge anyone with an interest in the future of the Church of England in this area of Cornwall to contribute their views and opinions. "You do not have to be a practising member of the Church to participate in this consultation." The statement was signed by church wardens John Boase and Melanie Uren, deanery synod representative Michael Thorn, and lay vice chair of the PCC Michael Thomas.


The Spinoff
31-07-2025
- Entertainment
- The Spinoff
Event noticeboard: A jug band, tiny boats and a baroness
The Spinoff's top picks of events from around the motu. Being an adult can be pretty boring and relentless. The to-do list never abates – the washing gets dirty, more dishes stack up and each week at work brings fresh new horrors. We get stuck in a holding pattern of trying to get through all this muck before rewarding ourselves with actually enjoying life. What has become increasingly apparent to me that the muck is ever-growing and untameable, and I don't want to spend the rest of my life polishing a turd. This weekend, I am boycotting chores, and will instead be trying to be happy. Elma Turner Library, 27 Halifax Street, Nelson 2pm Saturday, August 2 Free Writers speak publicly surprisingly often, and it is often surprising good, considering their chosen mode is technically silent. The Nelson Historical Society has asked the authors of a new beautiful book about one of New Zealand's important but overlooked botanical artists, Groundwork: The Art and Writing of Emily Cumming Harris, to speak at the Elma Turner Library on Saturday. The book was over a decade in the making, and involved the authors Michele Leggott and Catherine Field-Dodgson fossicking around historical archives to read her letters and diaries, and encounter the paintings in the flesh. For Leggott this is not so straight forward – she is blind. And so working together also included Field-Dodgson as a sort of visual audio translator. How did this process result in the shifting ground between biography and imagineered monograph that the book inhabits? Whangārei Music: Railway Pie & Emily Joy ONEONESIX, 116a Bank Street, Whangārei 7pm Friday, August 1 $20 Railway Pie is our only remaining 1960s jug band – yes, one of the instruments is a glass jug. Leigh Hear, and feel, a new and long-awaited body of work called 'The Lizard'. Tāmaki Makaurau Film: FAM: Film Festival Edition Karangahape Road, Auckland 2pm Saturday, August 2 Free K' Road will transform into a living, breathing cinema with films popping up in arcades, alleyways, shopfronts and all kinds of unexpected corners. A feature-length documentary on a retired cardiac surgeon from New Zealand leading 40 medical missions to Gaza and the West Bank to operate on children with heart disease. Hamilton Grey Street Gallery, 718 Grey Street, Hamilton East 9am – 3pm daily, until August 7 Free Peter Dornauf paints the Waikato and a series of symbolic motifs. Tauranga Timaru Theatre: Hello, Dolly! the Musical The Playhouse Drama League Inc, 198 Church St, Timaru Wednesday – Sunday evenings until August 9 $45-$55 A charming story about second chances at love. Ōtautahi Workshop: Bookmaking for Beginners Risingholme Learning, 22 Cholmondeley Ave, Christchurch 10am Saturday, August 2 $110 Learn to make lovely little books! Lyttelton Wunderbar, 14 Canterbury Street, Lyttelton 8pm Friday, August 1 $25-$30 Tāmaki Makaurau post-punks Ringlets are celebrating the release of their sophomore album 'The Lord Is My German Shepherd (Time for Walkies)'. The Crown Hotel, 179 Rattray Street, Dunedin 8pm Friday, August 1 $10-$15 If you feel like some alt-indie-rock or alt-punk for your Friday evening. Cromwell To me it looks lovely and peaceful; the description, however, says 'as thrilling as the America's Cup.' Invercargill Exhibition: Play 4 He Waka Tuia, 2 Kelvin Street, Invercargill 10am – 5pm Monday – Friday, 11am – 2.30pm Saturday – Sunday until August 3 Free Nine vibrant and interactive zones to ignite creativity, imagination and joy in tamariki (and tamariki at heart). Escape the screens and stress of life. Arts Murihiku (Whare Taupua), 34 Forth Street, Invercargill 10am – 4pm Tuesday – Saturday until August 31 Free A powerful art exhibition showcasing creativity, strength and healing journeys.