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Paddon revved up for triple-header
Paddon revved up for triple-header

Otago Daily Times

time12-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • Otago Daily Times

Paddon revved up for triple-header

Hayden Paddon and co-driver John Kennard have a busy schedule ahead. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Life is flat-tack for New Zealand rally star Hayden Paddon. The Cromwell-based ace is about to contest three very different rallies over three consecutive weekends in three countries with three different co-drivers. Rally Queensland, running July 4-6 near Gympie, north of Brisbane, has been booked in all year. Paddon is set to continue his bid to win his first Australian Rally Championship title with longtime co-driver John Kennard alongside in the PRG-run Hyundai i20 Rally 2 car. Paddon and Kennard took the lead of their respective drivers' and co-drivers' championships at the previous ARC round in Western Australia and know they face a challenge in Queensland as most of the frontrunners have considerable experience on the rally's gravel, forestry plantation roads. Two more dates unexpectedly popped up on the calendar. Paddon received an invitation to compete in the Ypres Rally in Belgium, June 28-29, an event he contested in 2013 at the start of his international career. One of the longest-running rallies in Europe, Ypres is a high-speed, all-tarmac rally that regularly attracts top international drivers. Paddon will be joined by New Zealand co-driver Jared Hudson in a Hyundai i20N Rally2 car prepared by last year's Belgian champions, BMA. Finally, just this week, a late change in the entry list for Ireland's most competitive motorsport rally, the Donegal Rally, provided Paddon with the opportunity to drive another Hyundai i20N Rally2 with co-driver Dave Moynihan. The car will be run by C&M Motorsport and the event takes place on June 20-22. Described as the ultimate three-day tarmac rally, Donegal attracts over 70,000 spectators and close to 400,000 viewers on television and online. Being the only three-day tarmac rally in Ireland and the United Kingdom, it attracts the best Irish, British and international drivers from around the globe every year. Paddon is understandably excited. "It's fantastic to be heading back to Europe for some rally action again during what will be one of the busiest three-week windows of my life," he said. "There's certainly a challenge ahead with three different cars, three different co-drivers and teams across the three events that span halfway round the globe. "Donegal and Ypres are very famous events where the locals are extremely fast on demanding stages. "Then, on our return to Australia, we are going into a rally where most of the ARC competitors are familiar with the stages from last year. "We are going to have to prepare and push hard at all three events. It's a challenge I'm definitely up for. "The dream is to try and challenge for victories across all three events, but the challenge to do that is huge. "Together with my three co-drivers and teams, I know we'll give it everything we have and try our best to keep up with the locals. "It's a unique and exciting privilege, to get outside your comfort zone and try new challenges, and for me, that is motivation to push us to try even harder." — APL

High hopes for early childhood centre
High hopes for early childhood centre

Otago Daily Times

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • Otago Daily Times

High hopes for early childhood centre

It is hoped a newly opened early childhood centre in Cromwell's fast-growing Wooing Tree Estate will offer much-needed relief to local families, easing pressure on waiting lists at other centres bursting at the seams. BestStart Wooing Tree opened at the end of April on the edge of the new neighbourhood, beside State Highway 8B and close to the entrance of the pedestrian tunnel under the highway, linking it to the town centre. "Interest from local families has been very strong, which reflects the growing need for early childhood education in the Cromwell area," centre manager Emma Stone told The News. "We've had a steady stream of inquiries and are now taking enrolments." For months — if not years — some parents were enrolling their children as soon as they learned they were pregnant, desperate to secure a spot in a town where demand for childcare for under-5s vastly outstripped supply. Cromwell-based mothers support group Mums4Mums co-ordinator Kylie Murdoch said the shortage had placed enormous stress on working households, particularly those dependent on two incomes to manage the region's higher-than-average housing costs. Ms Murdoch said it was still too early to know the impact of the opening of the new centre, but feedback from young families suggested demand was "levelling out". Parents had told other media in the area that the lack of childcare availability had made it difficult — if not impossible — for some to return to work after parental leave, with women disproportionately affected. Some had jobs lined up or contracts signed, only to be forced to delay or abandon their return to the workforce because they could not secure the hours they needed in care. Ms Murdoch said, with the changing job market, she just hoped enough work opportunities would be available for parents that needed them as childcare became more available. Ms Murdoch said there was one upside to the childcare squeeze, "it's created a sense of community with the mums". "They've worked together and found other ways [to support each other]." Meanwhile, Ms Stone advised families interested in enrolling children at the Wooing Tree preschool to "get in touch as soon as possible". BestStart Wooing Tree can cater for up to 80 children, aged three months to 6 years. Soon-to-be-4-year-old Tyson Browne told The News his favourite thing about the centre was its slide.

Rescue chopper has special place in one rider's heart
Rescue chopper has special place in one rider's heart

Otago Daily Times

time08-05-2025

  • Health
  • Otago Daily Times

Rescue chopper has special place in one rider's heart

Southland's Bruce Winter, whose wife and son have both needed to use the Otago Southland Rescue Helicopter following heart attacks, is pictured before today's Chopper Bike Ride, an annual fundraiser for Lakes District Air Rescue Trust (LDART). He is with (from left) Gemma and Richie McCaw, LDART chairman Jules Tapper, broadcaster Paddy Gower and Westpac NZ Otago Southland regional manager Phil Taylor. PHOTO: TRACEY ROXBURGH You can bet Southlander Bruce Winter's wife and eldest son will not be too far from his thoughts during a gruelling 230km bike ride today. Mr Winter, 69, is one of about 100 cyclists — including at least four former Olympians — taking part in this year's Chopper Bike Ride from Queenstown to Invercargill, a fundraiser for the annual Westpac Chopper Appeal. The riders are aiming to raise a record $150,000 for the Lakes District Air Rescue Trust to support the Otago Southland Rescue Helicopter Service, which last year flew 2097 missions. Mr Winter, who was a road cyclist for 10 years and a keen mountain biker, said this would be his sixth edition of the Chopper Bike Ride, an event to which he had previously donated but began participating in after his wife, Catherine, needed the rescue helicopter in 2016. Sheep farming at the time at Spar Bush, Mrs Winter, then aged 54, had spent a morning winding up electric fences. By 3pm that afternoon she complained of a sore arm, believing she had pulled a muscle. "She was actually starting to have a heart attack then," he said. Unaware, Mr Winter headed out again and returned home just before 6pm and immediately knew "something wasn't right". She was taken by ambulance to Southland Hospital — a rescue helicopter happened to be there, having been brought in for another patient. "But Catherine took precedence, so they flew her to Dunedin ... it's only a 48-minute flight from Invercargill to the top of Dunedin Hospital. She landed on the roof, they took her down and [put a stent in] straight away." Then last July, their son Andrew, then aged 36, also needed a life-saving flight to Dunedin after he confused a heart attack for pneumonia. The Cromwell-based diesel mechanic thought about driving to Clyde Hospital, but his boss encouraged him to go to the medical centre instead. "So he rang the medical centre and they sent an ambulance." After a couple of hours in Clyde, the call was made to the rescue helicopter, which had to land south of Alexandra due to an inversion layer. By the time his parents got to Dunedin, Andrew had a stent inserted and was "good as gold". Now living near Forest Hill, Mr Winter said one of the helicopter flight paths from Queenstown passed directly overhead. Noting the regularity with which that happened, he said he was acutely aware of the service's importance. Riders in today's event include former All Blacks captain and Westpac NZ ambassador Richie McCaw, 2012 Olympic gold medal-winning rower Nathan Cohen, Black Sticks great Gemma McCaw and her former team-mate, Diana Te Awa, Paralympic tandem sighted pilot Laura Thompson, former Olympic cyclist Glenn McLeay and broadcaster Paddy Gower. While they would spend 12 hours in the saddle, stopping at local schools along the route, a smaller group of riders including Westpac NZ institutional and business banking managing director Reuben Tucker, have taken the fundraising to a new level — riding 800km from Nelson to join the start of the Chopper Bike Ride in Queenstown. By last night, just over $75,000 had been donated through the Westpac Chopper Appeal Givealittle page.

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