Tags

Search / “most reliable fc 26 coins Visit Buyfc26coins.com for latest FC 26 coins news..Hg5s”

Matching Newsitems

    • Women in Leadership Programme 2022
      • Congratulations to Gillian Patterson on completion of Capital Football’s Women in Leadership Programme! Well done and we can’t wait to hear about you learned What a great initiative to help women in the football community make the most out of their involvement and make a difference- get in touch if you would like to learn […] The post Women in Leadership Programme 2022 appeared first on Upper Hutt City Football.
      • Accepted from Upper Hutt City Football feed by feedreader
      • Tagged as:
      • upper-hutt
      • Upper Hutt, Upper Hutt City, Wellington, 5218, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • A sporting site
      • Submissions on the Draft Waterfront Development Plan close on Friday, and while my opinion on most of it is just "get on with it", there's one area where I'll be promoting a specific change. While the ground floors of Sites 8, 9 and 10 have been designated simply as "retail", I think that Site 10 should be explicitly set aside as an indoor sports facility to replace Sheds 1 and 6.
      • Tagged as:
      • indoor-sports-centre
      • waterfront
      • ASB Sports Centre, Kemp Street, Kilbirnie, Wellington, Wellington Region, 6022, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Khandallah Arts Theatre Newsletter - March 2008
      • Princess Kate and the Dragon. This was a most successful production! Special congratulations to Lisa who had the inspiration and led the music and to Mary who interpreted the script. Congratulations to everyone else involved too. Approximately eighteen hundred people came to see Princess Kate and we were thrilled to receive an email from someone new to the area saying how much he and his family had enjoyed the show.
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • khandallah
      • theatre
      • wcn-hosted
      • Cochran Hall, Cashmere Avenue, Cashmere, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6035, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • More masking tape
      • Colin McCahon, Mondrian's last chrysanthemum, 1976 Mondrian’s last chrysanthemum, the Colin McCahon painting we bought at the end of last year, arrived at Te Papa recently. It’s great to see it again. Like most paintings, there’s a lot about this work that you don’t get until you see it in the flesh. There’s beauty of the painting itself, its amazing combination of subtlety and urgency.
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • blogs
      • te-papa

    • Skin deep differences don’t matter in Katipo
      • Skin Deep Differences Don’t Matter in Katipo Katipo female and eggsacs. Image ©Te Papa Having spent my last two postings dealing with butterflies and moths, it’s time to move on to the animals I love the most – spiders! The subject of this posting is the katipo spider (Latrodectus katipo), New Zealand’s only endemic spider known to be dangerous to humans. Katipo is a Maori word meaning ‘night stin
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • blogs
      • te-papa

    • HVH Consolation Races/Turkey Trot 2017
      • HVH Consolation Races/Turkey Trot 7-Oct-17 Under 14s – 2km Name Race Time Estimated Time Turkey Trot Placing Tyler Rollo 8:42 9:30 Aidan Jackson 8:44 7:10 Bailey Rollo 9:12 9:35 2nd – 23 secs Gwen McGrath 9:24 9:50 3rd – 26 secs Lachlan Mather 10:06 10:00 1st – 6 secs Olivia Wong 10:35 12:30 Katherine Jamieson 11:30 12:10 Olivia Jamieson 12:29 15:00 Stefania Butler 12:31 11:10 Under 20s – 5km Name Race Time Estimated Time Turkey Trot Placing Marian Goodwin 23:27 24:00 2nd – 33 secs Anton Wilson 25:05 Liz Gibson 25:40 25:47 1st – 7 secs Glenn Perkinson 27:01 30:04 Claire Wong 32:02 35:00 Keith Holmes 34:54 45:00 Walkers – 5km Tony McKone 34:36 40:00 Mark Growcott 41:50 45:00 Dave Moore 42:24 44:30 3rd – 2:06 Seniors/Masters – 10km Name Race Time Estimated Time Turkey Trot Placing Jayme Maxwell 39:30 40:27 Bill Trompetter 43:56 45:00 Karl van Polanen 43:56 45:12 Peter Sparks 48:31 49:19 3rd – 48 secs Gary Maxwell 51:40 54:40 Kristi Perkinson 52:18 54:13 Isobel Franklin 55:37 56:50 Paul Strickland 56:12 57:39 George Wong 57:20 1:05:00 Keryn Morgan 57:53 57:32 1st – 21 secs Martyn Cherry 59:05 59:34 2nd – 29 secs Albert van Veen 59:22 1:01:00
      • Accepted from HVH news
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • athletics
      • hutt-valley
      • wcn-hosted

    • Review: blackpill
      • Content Warning: Misogyny, sexual content Before I watched this show I was warned it would ‘challenge me.' Naturally, a show about incel culture should not be easy to digest. However, as the show unfolded, I found myself facing a different kind of challenge than I had expected—one that tested my empathy and ability to connect with others. As expected from the topic, the show's title, blackpill, is derived from the incel community, and its definition is essentially what the show presents. In short, the ‘blackpill ideology’ maintains that physical attractiveness is the most important factor in attracting women, and that certain physical and social factors are necessary for success.
      • Accepted from Salient 2024 by tonytw1
      • Tagged as:
      • reviews
      • theatre
      • BATS Theatre, 1, Kent Terrace, Mount Victoria, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • P2 Men Vs Hutt 23/06/07 Lost 2 - 5
      • Yet another game where we showed that we can match it with the best teams in the grade. The game started with us with most of the ball, however Hutt got the first goal of the game. We responded with a goal from Jason Eade to even it up at 1-1 in the 2nd half. Hutt then got a couple quick goals, due to us not marking well enough. Jason eade finished off the scoring with another goal from a good team attacking move. The game also included a strong first up appearance from Paul Gardiner filling in for an absent Chad at the back.
      • Tagged as:
      • hockey

    • October 2012: Trust’s sculptures valued at $7.5 million
      • Extract from an address to the Joint Annual Dinner of the Karori Rotary and Lions Clubs, 31 October 2012 by Neil Plimmer, Chairman of the Wellington Sculpture Trust. “We get much favourable feedback from the public about the 25 sculptures that we have provided for Wellington over our lifetime, but the proof that holds the most sway is that Wellingtonians keep funding them. We thrive on the support and benefaction of the people of Wellington. “The total cost of the 25 sculptures is $4.5 million which inflation-adjusted yields about $7.5 million. The overwhelming bulk of this is raised privately, from companies, family trusts, individuals, grant-giving bodies and other sources.
      • Accepted from WST news
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • sculpture

    • Does Harbour Quays suck?
      • I must admit I was a little wary of the opposing campaign, since it seems to be driven by a group of property developers and commercial landlords worried that cheap competition might undercut the soaring office rents that they're currently enjoying. But last Thursday's "open letter to the city of Wellington" was also signed by retailers, restaurateurs and three of Wellington's most prominent architects, so clearly there's a broader base to the opposition.
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • blogs

    • Car-o drive
      • As I said I would, I took a walk along the bypass on Saturday. I was too late to see the protests, but some of the protestors were still there chalking slogans on the pavements, and there a certain tension remained in the air.There's a lot of things I don't like about the bypass, but the thing that struck me the most about it on the weekend is that it just doesn't look like Wellington.
      • Tagged as:
      • bypass

    • Ohtel by the Park
      • Wellington’s buildings continue to surprise and delight me, relative newcomer as I am to this small, perfectly-formed city. It’s not a place that you could say has great traditions of anything in particular - it has demolished most, but not all of its Victorian heritage, has a fine collection of post-modern eighties buildings that have firmly gone out of style, with the remaining collection being eclectic at best, and motley at worst.
      • Tagged as:
      • architecture
      • oriental-bay
      • Oriental Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Cinephilia: Opening This Week
      • With most Wellington screens growning under the weight of Oscar-bait, only Readings (and Sky City Queensgate if you are so inclined) is opening anything new this week. My Bloody Valentine 3D was well attended at sneak previews last week but sadly isn't much of a film. It's a remake of a beloved horror of the same early-80s (same vintage as last week's Friday the 13th). Apart from the title th
      • Tagged as:
      • cinema

    • Cinephilia: Opening This Week
      • At last I get some time to preview this week's new releases and, frankly, it hardly seems worth it. I've just got in from two of the most dispiriting experiences I've had in a cinema in some time. Full reviews will come when I've had a chance to find the right kind of language to describe precisely how unambitious Fast & Furious and 17 Again are, a challenge I must rise to before Capital Times
      • Tagged as:
      • cinema

    • Womens B v North Wellington 17/5/2009
      • BNU lose at a blustery Wakefield (BNU 0 – North Wellington 3) Oh dear… BNU ladies’ second team were runners up this weekend, coming off a blustery pitch on the wrong end of a 3-0 score line.  But, in our defence, we were playing against the most experienced team in the division and they are definitely the team to beat (maybe next time???). So, where did it all go wrong?  Apparently North Wellingto
      • Tagged as:
      • soccer

    • Novices/Annie Huggan/Presidents races
      • Novices Race – 1 Lap Place Name Time 1 Ashton Tietjens 6:45 2 Amelia Adams 6:58 3 Katherine Jamieson 7:37 4 Joseph Mellor 8:24 5 Annabel England 8:31 6 Liam Carson 8:33 7 Daniel O’Sullivan 11:15 8 Jessie O’Sullivan 11:18 8 Stephania 12:00 Novices Race – 2 Laps Place Name Time 1 Nathaniel Graham 11:01 2 Logan Stoupe 11:17 3 Lucas Hughes 11:48 4 Nicholas Green 11:49 5 Henry Mellor 11:52 6 Luke Stoupe 13:05 7 Jonathan Green 13:37 8 Aidan Daines 13:44 9 Oscar Strickland 13:52 10 Thomas Pritchard 14:04 11 Lily Trompetter 14:05 12 Una Strickland 14:36 13 Gemma Gordon 14:46 14 Madelaine Bailey 15:19 15 Jordie 15:22 16 Michael O’Sullivan 15:24 17 Harvey Franklin 15:25 18 David Gordon 15:30 19 Harrison 15:40 20 Nicholas England 15:40 21 Maisie 15:58 22 Reardon Franklin 22:41 Novices Race/Annie Huggan Race – 3 Laps Place Name Time 1 Phoebe McKnight 15:44 2 Julie Johnson 17:32 3 Lars van Beusekom 17:32 4 Maria Cramp 18:10 5 Kristi Perkinson 18:48 6 Jayme Maxwell 18:54 7 Marian 19:08 8 Molly Heath 19:12 9 Jorja Watt 20:15 10 Keryn Morgan 20:43 11 Breanna Carson 20:56 12 Rylee Watt 21:01 13 Cassandra Trompetter 21:09 14 Liz Gibson 21:57 15 Trish Coley 23:14 16 Brig Murdoch 23:14 17 Chloe Thorne 23:38 18 Isabelle Franklin 23:40 19 Alex Noonan 23:51 20 Cathy Gordon (Walker) 30:05 Presidents Cup Place Name Clock Time Handicap Run Time 1 Paul Newom 20:17 2:00 18:17 2 Peter Roberts 20:52 4:53 15:59 3 Grant Pritchard 21:24 5:36 15:48 4 Neil Sargisson 21:43 4.00 17:43 5 Paul Strickland 21:52 2:00 19:52 6 Bill Trompetter 21:57 5:02 16:55 7 Marcus Smith 21:57 5:24 16:33 8 Reuben Goldingham-Newsom 22:07 7:48 14:19 9 Myles Carson 22:17 5:36 16:41 10 Mat Rogers 22:17 8:24 13:53 11 Graeme Burr 22:28 4:53 17:35 12 Paul Cavie 22:29 1:12 21:17 13 Mark O’Sullivan 22:30 0:36 21:54 14 Mathew Roberts 22:37 4:53 17:44 15 Keith Holmes 22:38 1:24 21:14 16 Tony Plowman 22:46 5:24 17:22 17 Joel Carman 22:51 8:24 14:33 18 Tim Johnson 22:52 7:48 15:04 19 Brendan Quirke 23:02 5:43 17:19 20 Darren Gordon 23:06 7:43 15:23 21 Steve Robertson 23:09 3:50 19:19 22 Albert van Veen 23:13 0:00 23:13 23 Simon England 23:21 5:12 18:09 24 Tony McKone 23:24 4:00 19:24 25 Donald Coley 24:09 4:24 19:45 26 Jay Waters 24:22 2:00 22:22 27 Peter Sparks 24:26 4:36 19:50 28 Peter Pritchard 24:28 4:24 20:04 29 Glenn Perkinson 24:30 4:00 20:30 30 Jonathan Roberts 24:30 4:00 20:30 31 Gary Maxwell 24:34 3:54 21:40
      • Accepted from HVH news
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • athletics
      • hutt-valley
      • wcn-hosted

    • Weekly Bulletin: Staying connected as a church - 16 June 2024
      • Kia ora St John’s whānau, This Sunday Martyn Day will preach on the Bible passage Luke 1:26-38 – which is about the birth of Jesus being announced to Mary! We would normally hear this part of the Gospel story just before Christmas – what will Martyn draw out of this passage for us this Sunday? Students, staff and families from Aitken House at Scots College will join us for worship, with students leading parts of our worship. The burning bush is a symbol of Aitken House. Our children have their peer group time, going out part-way through the service (after the Sung Blessing). Our youth will stay in for the full service this Sunday. If you can’t gather in the city, and you want to join the worship service via Zoom, here are the details to access the live-stream: Zoom Meeting ID: 370 260 759 Passcode: worship The link to join the Zoom worship service is below. If using your phone: dial 04 886 0026 (Meeting ID: 370 260 759#, Passcode: 1560107#) This is the link to the printable Service Sheet: Order of Service Link to Zoom Service OTHER THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT... UNDERSTANDING THE BIBLE This series of evening workshops with Martyn Day will give you a ‘toolkit’ to read the Bible, SO THAT you can know Jesus better. Sun 16th June - Can we trust the Gospels? Mon 17th June - Taking God’s Word for it Tue 18th June - Get into the Gospels! Wed 19th June - Lifting the lid on the book of Revelation 6:30 – 8:30pm in the St John’s Centre, on the corner of Dixon and Willis Streets Martyn Day pastors the South Harbour Vineyard Church in Auckland. A British export to NZ, Martyn is passionate about helping people to love, learn and live God’s Word. He is an outstanding communicator and this series will be of great interest to anyone curious about useful tools for reading the Bible. This series offers fresh understanding of the rich meaning in God’s Word available through classic interpretive techniques that ‘connect the dots’! Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1417153395671117/ Eventfinda: https://www.eventfinda.co.nz/2024/understanding-the-bible-with-martyn-day/wellington ST JOHN’S QUIZ NIGHT – FRIDAY 14th JUNE FELLOWSHIP GROUP Kay Webster, who was our guest Minister last October, will be the guest speaker at the next Fellowship Group meeting on Tuesday 25 June 2024 at 11.00am in the Hall. In her role as the Advanced Care Planning Coordinator with Age Concern, Kay has some insights for us on how to plan for our own later days to keep it simple for ourselves, our caregivers and our near and dear. DUTY ROSTERS – SERVING OTHERS It’s time to prepare the rosters for serving in July - October. Please let Linda van Milligan know your availability for this season by 20 June. UPDATE ON CAFÉ All the residents of the Dixon Street Flats have been moved out – so what has happened to the regular Café St John’s has been part of…? Read all about the next phase of the Café here: St John's Café FOLLOW ME SERIES – CARE FOR CREATION How can we practice the care of creation as an act of worship? Over four weeks we will explore the practice of Care for Creation. This continues our emphasis of putting our faith into practice, and will focus on our desire for knowing God more through intentional practices, relationships, and experiences. We will be doing this as a community of all generations, starting with an intergenerational service on Sunday 23rd June. STUDENT STUDY SPACE A massive thank you to the big team of volunteers who were the ‘friendly face’ of us as a Church for students wanting a warm quiet space to study. Making this space available for the students in our city preparing for their exams was an experiment for us as part of our Vision to connect more with our neighbourhood – creating safe spaces to be, to belong, and to navigate the tough stuff. We continue to pray for those with exams, and that they may know the support of our community throughout the year, and for ‘all of life’. CHURCH CAMP We’re excited to let you know there's a church camp happening this year! It's at Paekakariki Holiday Park from Fri evening 20 Sept till Sunday 22 Sept. We’ll be aiming to keep costs down and you can choose to sleep in the lodge, pitch a tent or stay in an onsite cabin (more details will be available at a later stage.) (FYI - El Rancho/Forest Lakes and Kaitoke were booked for this date.) CROSS CULTURAL ENCOUNTER TRIP TO INDONESIA MESSENGER NEWSLETTER Read our latest St John’s newsletter here: Messenger ‘Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.’ - Mary Allister
      • Accepted from News - St John's in the City Presbyterian Church by feedreader
      • Tagged as:
      • paekakariki
      • St John's, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • PLT Newsletter - May 2025
      • 2025 is our 75th anniversary This month in our history ~ May 1968 Roots In our production of Roots Jenny Frost had to take an on-stage bath. During one performance the tub of water was accidentality overturned by an overzealous stage hand. Jenny was not the only one who wore the bath water that night. Director Bob Cater was not amused. It was noted in the Kapi Mana News that "As part of the society's policy of making theatre available to as wide an audience as possible, the admission price is only 45 cents."
      • Submitted by tonytw1
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • porirua
      • theatre
      • titahi-bay

    • No water privatisation in wellington -yeah right!
      • On Thursday, 17 June 2010, the Wellington City Council Strategy and Policy Committee met to finalise Council's submission on the Local Government Act 2002 Amendment Bill. Radio New Zealand's response this morning was misleading to say the least in that it stated that Wellington City Council had backed down on water privatisation through public pressure. It was one of the more misleading news items that I have ever heard. Council was not changing its policy but was making a weasel worded submission on the Local Government Act 2002 Amendment Bill.
      • Submitted by tonytw1
      • Tagged as:
      • water

    • Doc Edge
      • Prepare to be transported into a realm where reality transcends imagination, where storytelling takes an awe-inspiring leap into the future. We are thrilled to extend an exclusive invitation to you and your family to embark on an unforgettable journey at the Doc Edge XR Exhibition, New Zealand's most captivating showcase of Augmented Reality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), breath taking installations, and mesmerizing digital immersive stories. Get ready to witness the birth of a new era in storytelling!
      • Submitted by tonytw1
      • Tagged as:
      • exhibitions

    • The fun police
      • "Graffiti Alley" between the Left Bank and Ghuznee St may have just been edged out in the Wellingtonista Best Public Art awards, but it's still the most dynamic and democratic site of all. There were some particularly interesting goings-on a couple of weekends ago, and when I walked past early one the evening the masked artists were hard at work; later that evening they were still there, but being sternly spoken to by the boys in blue.
      • Tagged as:
      • art
      • cuba-street
      • Cuba Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Tonka needs a special home
      • Tonka was seized by Whangarei SPCA as a 9 month old puppy who had spent most of his life chained up and being regularly beaten. His owner pled guilty to ill treating him in October 2008 and the courts awarded him to Whangarei SPCA. He was named Tonka as he was obsessed with toys, probably because he had never had any, but this has eased with time and training. While in the care of Whangarei SPCA,
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • animals

    • Support DCM this World Homeless Day
      • We often ask ourselves, what can I do to help those in my own city who are experiencing homelessness? One practical way you can help is by giving or encouraging people to give to DCM. - Each year DCM works with over 800 people in Wellington. - Most will have experienced homelessness. - Over 100 will have slept rough. Many dream of a place to call home. $25,000 will enable DCM to support 25 Wellingtonians to move from homelessness to housed.
      • Accepted from DCM alerts archive
      • Automatically tagged as:
      • religious-groups

    • Option X
      • Following on from the usual tired old grumpy pro-road editorial in the Dom Post, which came to the conclusion that pursuing Option X would be a waste of time, perhaps it is time for a less jaded eye to look at the arguments for, and against. First up, and to some, most importantly, i guess that we have to address the question of cost. The DomPost identifies that Option X may cost up to $165m, which does sound like a heck of a lot of money, and says that the “agency’s preferred option” would only cost $75m. Well, that’s a slam dunk right there, isn’t it? One option more than twice as much as the other? Those damn pesky architects proposing being profligate with the public purse? Except that, no, i reckon that the Dom Post figures are wrong.
      • Accepted from Eye of the Fish feed
      • Tagged as:
      • basin-reserve-flyover
      • Basin Reserve, Dufferin Street, Mount Victoria, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Weekly Club Roundup - 1st September 2014 2014
      • What a day for our Junior teams on Saturday with two teams heading into the last round unbeaten. We have been following our top Junior side all season but our magnificent U8s’ well coached by Dave “Postie” Douglas were sitting on a perfect record and kept it that way in brilliant conditions at Polo and then following that a comprehensive win for our U13s’ against a North’s’ side that had probably tested our U13s’ more than any other team in there earlier clash at Elsdon Park in terrible conditions. Most of these U13 players are off to college next year with a good many going to Rongotai – under Dave Meaclem, Justin Grey and the rest of the Rugby team at RC these players will enjoy a new environment thanks to the partnership with our friends at Poneke – watch this space!
      • Accepted from Ories news
      • Tagged as:
      • match-reports

    • Hataitai Past 2021 Calendar
      • <figure data-test="image-block-v2-outer-wrapper" class=" sqs-block-image-figure image-block-outer-wrapper image-block-v2 design-layout-poster combination-animation-none individual-animation-none individual-text-animation-none image-position-left " data-scrolled > On Sunday 18 October, we launched our Hataitai Past 2021 Calendar. What a journey it has been! The process of creating the calendar started in March during Covid-19 Lockdown - not that we were bored! The idea came about as we felt that fundraising events were not going to happen for quite some time.  Quotes and samples from national printers were sourced, then onto the mammoth task of selecting photographs by committee approval.  So many great photos to choose from. We spent hours pouring over wonderful pieces of our community’s history. What a business!  We decided that our very own local Smith Print was the best designer and printer to use for the job.  What an amazing product they’ve delivered for us. The Wellington Libraries Recollect collection, and the Alexander Turnbull Library had wonderful photographs available - some at a small fee. Their librarians were very helpful. As was Russell Jenkins of the Wellington Tramway Museum.  What a wonderful Tram photograph they sourced for our cover page..  As Hataitai has a unique heritage, we have ensured that photos were included of the old Patent Slip, the Tram Tunnel and the Flying Boat, as well as a variety of others. You may not have known that there was a commercial Flying Boat service operating in Evans Bay from 1938 to 1954, where passengers boarded a small passenger terminal near Hataitai’s current changing rooms and flew to Sydney. The proceeds are going towards the Hataitai Community House. As with many small and nonprofit businesses, our income has been greatly impacted by Covid 19. If we achieve high sales we hope to also support the redevelopment of the Hataitai Centre (previously known as the Bowling Club).  The calendar is sponsored by many local businesses and for that we are very grateful. We could not have done it without you. We are now thrilled to be able to launch this wonderful calendar. Buy one for yourself or as a Christmas present for your friends and family, only $20 each, or 3 for $50. It fits into an A4 envelope for easy postage. Check out NZ Post for Christmas sending cut-off dates.    Ways to purchase;  Buy online now Email hataitaievents@gmail.com to order and arrange payment by internet banking Pop into one of our stockists - Hataitai Pharmacy, Coolsville, Waitoa Social Club or the Hataitai Community House, at 112 Waipapa Road.  We can arrange free delivery within Hataitai or postage at your cost.  We will also be selling the calendar at our up and coming community markets.  Keep an eye on our Latest News for details. To view a sample of the calendar click here
      • Accepted from Hataitai Community website posts by feedreader
      • Tagged as:
      • hataitai
      • covid-19
      • libraries
      • Hataitai, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Metlink On Demand trial extended to the end of 2024
      • Good news for Tawa and Porirua public transport users: the Metlink On Demand trial has been extended to the end of the year. Metlink On Demand is an app-based service introduced to Tawa in May 2022, and extended to the Porirua CBD in June 2023. Passengers can order rides from small buses operating without set routes between around 600 flexible pick up and drop off locations or ‘virtual stops’. Greater Wellington Transport Committee chair Thomas Nash says the regional council’s public transport wing knows the service is well-used and loved by locals. “Metlink On Demand was born out of our commitment to connecting more passengers with public transport,” Cr Nash says. “We knew the Tawa hills and central Porirua were underserviced areas and that Metlink On Demand could help fill this gap.
      • Accepted from Metlink news by feedreader
      • Tagged as:
      • porirua
      • tawa
      • Tawa, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)


    • Weekly Clubroundup - 12th April
      • Wins, draws and losses! The results didn’t all go our way on Saturday but good wins by our Women’s and Premiers saw a happy crowd at Saturday’s aftermatch celebrations. A few changes in our team entries this year. Due to a lack of teams entering the there will be no Senior 3rd this year with only four clubs applying. The grade is no more and those teams that entered will now play in Reserve One. Despite a lot of effort the famous Ories J8s are no more after 34 seasons as father time has crept up on a number of the stalwarts. The good news is that those left will either play for The Pressies or in the new Reserve One team which is mainly the players from last season’s S3rds and a few recruits.
      • Accepted from Ories news
      • Tagged as:
      • match-reports


7981 - 8010 of 10000


Matching websites

Latest Newsitems

The latest newslog items.