logo
More space for oyster fans at this year's festival

More space for oyster fans at this year's festival

Lindsay Beer. PHOTO: NINA TAPU
It will be a full floor when the Bluff Oyster & Food Festival takes place today.
The festival returned last year — the first time since 2021 — after a break of a few years because of Covid and health and safety issues.
But today's festival will be bigger and better, as the entire space originally planned for the festival will be available for the first time.
The trust bought the rundown Club Hotel, a Category 2 heritage building, and the land in 2014.
However, there were health and safety concerns associated with the hotel on the festival site.
The trust then attempted to sell it but failed to attract a buyer, so it applied to the Invercargill City Council in 2019 for resource consent to demolish the building.
The festival organisers finally gained consent to demolish the old hotel building in January last year after a previous attempt.
A year on from the demolition, there is another 800sq m of floor being used and it will give the sold-out crowd plenty of room to roam.
Bluff promotions officer Lindsay Beer said more space would be great for those attending.
Tickets for the event had sold out weeks ago and 4000 punters would be rolling up to enjoy the food and refreshments on offer.
About 60% of the people who attend come from outside Southland. A plane of 180 grab-a-seat passengers is flying into Invercargill from Auckland this morning and they are set to head back to Auckland later today.
Mr Beer said people from all round the world turned up for the day.
The weather in Bluff had been a bit rough earlier this week but a decent day was forecast for today.
Mr Beer confirmed the oysters arrived yesterday and were all set to be eaten by the masses today.
One of the highlights of the day are the races, which involve professional oyster openers racing each other with events for men, women, novices, factory relay teams and a blindfold race.
Xavier Fife, of Calders Oysters, won the Men's Open last year, opening 50 oysters in a time of 3min 9sec. Mr Fife is back to defend the title this year while a two-time champion, Ricci Grant, is confirmed to be in the field as well.
Vic Pearsey had won 10 titles in a row in the Women's Open before standing aside last year when Peg Bishop took over the mantle getting through 50 oysters in 3min 34sec. Ms Bishop is not competing this year, so the title race is wide open.
Team Barnes won the Factory Relay race in 2024 but face tough competition this year from a Calders Oysters team of previous men's champions.
After the openers have demonstrated their skills, volunteers from the crowd are invited on stage to find the fastest competitor to down a dozen of Bluff's finest.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Uni back in top 200 in worldranking
Uni back in top 200 in worldranking

Otago Daily Times

time2 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Uni back in top 200 in worldranking

The University of Otago is back in the top 200 of world-ranked institutions in a major rankings table — and the vice-chancellor credits the work of staff and students. The QS World University Rankings, released yesterday, showed Otago had jumped from 214th to 197th-equal, making it the second-highest ranked university in the country, although it is still some way behind the University of Auckland which was steady at 65th. Otago University vice-chancellor Grant Robertson said this reiterated Otago's reputation as a world-class university. "I want to acknowledge the hard work of our staff that sits behind this result, who day in, day out are producing world class research and providing world class teaching." Otago leaped 17 places from last year, marking its best performance since it was ranked 194th in 2022. Part of this improvement was due to an increase in its academic reputation and citations-per-faculty scores, Mr Robertson said. "These gains are hard won through the efforts of our kaimahi [staff] and tauira [students]. We will look to build on these results into the future as we strive for excellence in all that we do." The rankings come at a time when universities in New Zealand are looking to rebuild rolls after Covid-19, largely through attracting more international students. QS vice-president Ben Sowter said New Zealand was one of the few places worldwide where all universities featured among the global top 500 in the 2026 QS World University Rankings. "The breadth of excellence shown across the country's eight universities is testament to the work of students, outstanding staff and brilliant research carried out across New Zealand. With the University of Otago returning to the top 200 for the first time since 2022, the country once again has two institutions ranked among the very top tier of universities worldwide." Mr Sowter said among key English-speaking study destinations, New Zealand ranked lowest among global employers for its reputation but was highest in terms of employment outcomes. "This suggests a need for New Zealand universities to build closer relationships with employers worldwide to ensure a match between the skills and knowledge their graduates are entering the workforce with and those that are sought, and that the providers of those graduates are recognised." The ranking placed Massachusetts Institute of Technology first for the 14th consecutive year followed by Imperial College London and Stanford University.

There's an upside to this painfully slow economic recovery
There's an upside to this painfully slow economic recovery

NZ Herald

timea day ago

  • NZ Herald

There's an upside to this painfully slow economic recovery

There's a lesson there, and it's one you might think a 50-something-year-old bloke should have learned already. There are no shortcuts in life. Or at least none that don't have consequences and complications of their own. So no prizes for guessing where this analogy is headed ... These days, we're talking a lot about the state of the economic recovery. We're frustrated because it is taking longer than we'd like. And yes, New Zealand took an almighty dose of over-the-counter stimulus to deal with the economic fallout from Covid-19. For a time, it felt like we'd avoided the worst of the symptoms, but then we overheated, and then we crashed. Now we're in recovery. And it's a hard-fought one. It's making us sweat. It's the kind of recovery we have to earn, and I think that, as painful as it feels now, it might be good for us in the long run. It's so hard precisely because it isn't pumped up by Government stimulus, it isn't pumped up by immigration, and it isn't pumped up by rising house prices making us richer than we are. We've relied on those three drivers to inflate our sense of economic progress for a long time. The disappearance of a 'wealth effect' based on house prices has been a shock to New Zealand's economic system I think it probably accounts for the slower pace of recovery as much as anything else in the myriad puzzle pieces. Gareth Kiernan, chief forecaster at Infometrics, said last week that his forecasts were for house price inflation to average 3.1% a year over the five years to June 2030. In nominal terms, prices would pass their 2021 peak in mid-2029, he said. But adjusted for inflation, prices in mid-2030 would still be a fifth below the peak. That would represent a bigger drop than we saw in the global financial crisis (GFC), when prices fell 14% in real terms. Long-term forecasts are notoriously unreliable and other economists aren't so downbeat. But if Kiernan is right and the days of the wild housing booms are over, then it would represent a huge cultural shift that could reshape our economy. We have dealt with many of the big supply constraints that were limiting the amount of house building a decade ago. There's also a demographic shift under way. A large bubble of boomers (is that the collective noun?) will be looking to sell down in the next few years. And, of course, migration has been subdued with a net population gain of just 21,000 in the year to May – down from a staggering peak of 138,000 in the year to October 2023. Perhaps this Government or the next will panic about house prices and start enacting policies to push them higher. But the politics of housing are shifting, and a growing number of non-home-owning voters is likely to keep the pressure on to keep supply open. Creating new demand isn't as simple as throwing open the borders either; we need an economy that is creating jobs to attract more migrants. I'm not convinced house price growth will stay as subdued for as long as Kiernan suggests. But I agree that there is no sign of another boom on the horizon to turbo-charge this economic cycle. So what's the good news? Where's the payoff for the economy? The early 20th-century Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter had a thing or two to say about the value of difficult economic cycles. He is famous for a concept called 'creative destruction'. He argued that downturns weeded out inefficient parts of the economy and ultimately made economies more innovative and efficient. His views can sound pretty hard-hearted when you consider the human cost of business failures and job losses. But he had a point about tough conditions driving new innovation and efficiencies in an economy. Faced with squeezed margins and slow revenue growth, businesses have to think creatively about what they do. They have to look at improving productivity, whether that is through cost-cutting or investing in new technology and exploring new products or new markets. Without property sitting there as an easy investment option, Kiwis will also have to get smarter about where they put their money. Capital is more likely to flow to the productive parts of the economy. It is a great relief that our agricultural export sector is humming this year. Without that, there may have been no recovery at all. Economies can and do get trapped in recessionary feedback cycles that are no good for anyone. But we have some momentum, and we have a central bank that has regained control of inflation. It may need to pause its interest rate cuts in July, to make sure it still has that control. But with plenty of spare capacity in the economy, the medium-term outlook for inflation remains subdued. The RBNZ still has scope to go lower if required. Yes, this recovery is a slow and painful process. We're being forced to sweat it out for every small gain in an uphill slog. I'm hopeful that it will see us emerge leaner and fitter. We'll be better placed for the period of sustained growth we'll need to start solving our fiscal woes and the social challenges we're facing in the coming decades. Liam Dann is business editor-at-large for the New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003.

Games to operate out of Edgar Centre
Games to operate out of Edgar Centre

Otago Daily Times

time2 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Games to operate out of Edgar Centre

Next year's Masters Games in Dunedin will focus operations at the Edgar Centre, as organisers look to shore up the event's viability. A games and entertainment hub featuring live music at the University Union has been dropped — a move expected to reduce costs by about $100,000. A streamlined check-in and administrative centre would be set up instead, and there would be a major shift in event operations to the Edgar Centre indoor sports complex, a report for the Dunedin City Council said. Other changes would include the Masters Games Trust asking sports partners to take on more responsibility for marketing and organising social events. The national event features more than 50 sports and games, attracting thousands of participants. Dunedin has hosted it every second year. The 2022 games were cancelled because of Covid-19 and last year's event made a $193,350.84 loss, leading to the city council writing off debt of $148,364.03, excluding GST. The council has agreed to underwrite the games until 2036. Participant registrations were budgeted at 5500 for the February 2024 games but finished well short on 3801. After the financial loss, an evaluation was carried out and the trust and council worked on an events plan. The games hub had served as a central venue for participant check-ins, social gatherings and nightly entertainment throughout the nine-day event. Feedback indicated attendance at the hub was inconsistent, particularly on weekdays, the council report said. Nightly entertainment was cut by the trust for 2026, reduced to selected nights, "ensuring a more vibrant atmosphere while reducing overhead costs associated with maintaining a dedicated entertainment space for the entire duration of the games", the council said. The Edgar Centre would host opening and closing ceremonies and costly temporary structures would not be needed there. "Additionally, this shift allows for integrated catering services, with food trucks stationed at both the Edgar Centre and key sporting venues like Logan Park and Hancock Park, providing a more cohesive experience for participants while reducing logistical costs." Sports bodies would have a bigger role in promoting their own sports ahead of the games. The trust would look to encourage teams to register well in advance. "These strategic changes are designed to reduce costs, improve financial sustainability and enhance participant engagement, ensuring the long-term success of the New Zealand Masters Games in Dunedin," the council report said. A break-even budget would be based on 2024 participant numbers, "ensuring financial viability without assuming significant growth".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store