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Carol Watt from Feilding Spiritual and Awareness Centre
Hi Everyone, this Sunday 7th November we have the pleasure of Lisa Ross as our medium, she will be sharing inspiration and giving a demonstration of clairvoyance. The meeting will be held at the caledonian Hall, 55 Weld St, Feilding at 10.30am. We look forward to seeing you there.
LUNCH, ADVANCE … View moreHi Everyone, this Sunday 7th November we have the pleasure of Lisa Ross as our medium, she will be sharing inspiration and giving a demonstration of clairvoyance. The meeting will be held at the caledonian Hall, 55 Weld St, Feilding at 10.30am. We look forward to seeing you there.
LUNCH, ADVANCE NOTICE FOR SUNDAY 14TH NOVEMBER
Hi Friends and members of the Feilding Spiritual and Awareness Centre,
We are coming to the end of another disrupted year with meetings cancelled and venues changed, hopefully we are settled for a while. Our place of meeting is now the Caledonian Hall, 55 Weld St, Feilding at 10.30am very Sunday.
This is a busy time of the year as it is time to have our Annual General Meeting where we look back over the last year and look forward to the next, part of this process is to endorse a new committee. This year due to changing circumstances for a number of our standing Committee we have had several members leave. so we are asking for people to put their names forward to assist in the running of our Centre. This is a chance for Centre Members to have a say in how our Centre is run and how we move forward in the future. Without more people coming forward to lend a hand the Centre can’t run. It’s not a huge job and of course more people coming forward makes it easier on all involved.
If you aren’t able to come on the committee perhaps you would be able to lend a hand occasionally to help with the running of a meeting, small jobs but important.
On Sunday 14th November we will have Piki Lowe from Feilding as our Medium, following the meeting we will have our AGM, and as a thank-you for your support and friendship, after the meeting the Committee has decided to treat us all to lunch, finger food catered for at the hall.
So Please mark this in your diary, a great opportunity to get together with like minded souls.
Namaste, Valerie
Enquiries 029-902-9555
Carol Watt from Levin Spiritual and Awareness Centre
MEETING SUNDAY 7TH NOVEMBER 10.30AM, THOMPSON HOUSE
4 KENT ST, LEVIN
We look forward to catching up with everyone on Sunday. Our medium is Sue Boyle from Upper Hutt. Come along to experience her spiritual address and clairvoyance which are both delivered via direct channel from her Guides.
… View moreMEETING SUNDAY 7TH NOVEMBER 10.30AM, THOMPSON HOUSE
4 KENT ST, LEVIN
We look forward to catching up with everyone on Sunday. Our medium is Sue Boyle from Upper Hutt. Come along to experience her spiritual address and clairvoyance which are both delivered via direct channel from her Guides.
Healing during the meeting, $1 raffle. Wear a mask if you are more comfortable doing so, the chairs will be distanced and there is a covid tracer QR poster or manual register to fill out. Gold coin collection.
See you all there on Sunday.
Call Sue 021 070 1585 or Carol 027 697 6308 for any queries
Gary Tweddle from Rapid Electrical
For all your electrical power and lighting requirements.
Contact Gary text/call 021-666180
Information from Coast Access Radio 104.7FM
"Conversations" at 9am this Saturday on Coast Access Radio 104.7FM features these two amazing women - Julia Hickton Scott and Juli Hunter are repurposing, restyling, refashioning and breathing new life and style into clothing garments that are second hand, but with so much more life to … View more"Conversations" at 9am this Saturday on Coast Access Radio 104.7FM features these two amazing women - Julia Hickton Scott and Juli Hunter are repurposing, restyling, refashioning and breathing new life and style into clothing garments that are second hand, but with so much more life to give! Especially after they've been funked-up by J & J !
As well as saving the planet from fast-fashion, they're also developing quite a following around the Kapiti Coast and beyond...find out more by tuning in to 104.7FM, online, or listen to the podcast any time from this Saturday morning!
Mei Leng Wong Reporter from NZ Gardener & Get Growing
These Palmerston North green thumbs ensure hospice patients and their families get to enjoy flowers, foliage and fragrance. Read their story, then don't forget to vote for them!
Judith from Levin
Wanting to purchase, borrow or hire an old device we used in photography back in in the 1950/60s. A thing you could examine negatives to see which ones were worth printing. I don't know what they were called. Would love to be instructed. Judith Bryers Holloway Tel 0226704389. I live in Levin.
Colleen from Levin
Hi all! Is anyone interested in quite a large collection of pre recorded cassette tapes? Free of course. A variety of hard rock, soft rock, country and western, etc. I can drop off, if in Levin, or you can pick up. Colleen.
Free
Mei Leng Wong Reporter from NZ Gardener & Get Growing
Trish Allen is giving away her garden harvest -- again! During the 2020 lockdown, she gave away over 140kg in fruit from her home orchard. This year, she didn’t have fruit to swap but her vegetable garden was packed with winter crops. “I had masses of broccoli, cauliflower, kale, silverbeet and… View moreTrish Allen is giving away her garden harvest -- again! During the 2020 lockdown, she gave away over 140kg in fruit from her home orchard. This year, she didn’t have fruit to swap but her vegetable garden was packed with winter crops. “I had masses of broccoli, cauliflower, kale, silverbeet and French sorrel. So I gave out a lot of parcels of those to anyone I knew who needed it.”
Wayne from Levin
There seems to be little or no mention of human overpopulation at COP26. Probably because it's to hard politically for discussion to be allowed. If Earth is to be saved, Governments and politicians, including ours, and we as individuals will have to commit to change many of their and our most… View moreThere seems to be little or no mention of human overpopulation at COP26. Probably because it's to hard politically for discussion to be allowed. If Earth is to be saved, Governments and politicians, including ours, and we as individuals will have to commit to change many of their and our most cherished established beliefs and behaviours. At present Governments and individuals worldwide are wasting their time and resources dealing with the symptoms; not the actual disease. We need to accept the inconvenient truth, that there are far too many of us for our planet to sustain. Our unrestricted population growth is the real problem. There is a general consensus among experts, that the maximum human population that Earth can sustain, without any further degradation of our environment, and further extinction of other species is somewhere between 500 Million and 2 Billion. We are already closing in on 8 Billion with future estimated growth this century to 12 Billion, and up to a million other species at risk of extinction.
Some beliefs and behaviours that do need to become extinct:
1. The belief that universal, free birth control is not essential. Feeding the millions dying of famine is at best only a band aid fix.
2. The belief that an individual or country's consumption, of far more than their fair share of Earth's limited or finite resources, should depend only upon their ability to pay: not upon any consideration of the morality of their choices, or the damage to our environment. We need more cooperation and sharing, not more competition for resources. We cannot keep on allowing conspicuous, unnecessary consumption by the wealthy countries and individuals, like private jets, private yachts, and fossil-fueled international travel and tourism limited only by the ability to pay. The race to space tourism, unnecessary fossil-fueled driving, motor sport, and boy racers are all crimes against our environment. Regulation and rationing of individual entitlements will, in time, be seen as essential to save our planet.
3.The belief that societies cannot survive without continued growth, and that any and all growth, including population growth is good. Earth desperately needs population reduction. Having more than 1 child is a crime against our environment and planet.
4. We will have to ban nearly all plastics and artificial textiles. Plastics, and their offspring microplastics particles are invading and damaging our environment, our food chains, and our bodies. Fashion is another crime against our planet.
I fear that human nature and greed will not allow us to change our beliefs, and sense of entitlement to more than our fair share, and we will not be able to reduce our global overpopulation and overconsumption of resources in time to save our environment and planet. If that is so, in time, nature will do it for us the way it always has, by wars over resources, famines, and pandemics. I am glad that I will not have to see the world that my children and grandchildren will live in.
Madagascar is a horror story, and also an extreme example of what happens when human overpopulation is not addressed.
Why ‘Food Aid’ Won’t Solve Famine in Madagascar
populationnews.wordpress.com...
13 replies (Members only)
Robert Anderson from Curtain Clean Levin
“When selecting the fabric and style of a new lounge suite it is crucial to consider its future environment”
Picture this:
You purchased a brand-new couch this autumn. It has extra wide cushions on the seat. It’s sleek, it’s chic, it takes up one third of your lounge and most … View more“When selecting the fabric and style of a new lounge suite it is crucial to consider its future environment”
Picture this:
You purchased a brand-new couch this autumn. It has extra wide cushions on the seat. It’s sleek, it’s chic, it takes up one third of your lounge and most importantly, you can melt into it on a Friday evening after work.
Fast forward to mid-spring. Sure, you passed all those cold winter’s nights watching movies with the family and you have spent more of the lockdown sitting down than you would like to admit, but now that it’s almost time to pop your bubble your brand-new couch is looking a little… dishevelled.
When selecting the fabric and style of a new lounge suite it is crucial to consider its future environment. To prevent your dream couch from becoming saggy and stretched on the seat cushion after prolonged use, or to remedy the situation, we’ve reached out to James Dunlop Textiles’ Auckland-based Upholstery Specialist, Robert Street, to provide insight into the problem and offer some solutions.
Why does the fabric on a newly upholstered sofa appear stretched and out of shape after only a few months of use?
There are several factors that could come into play here, let’s look at them one by one.
Firstly, it is rare for an upholstery fabric with a synthetic component to stretch as synthetic fibres are very stable. Natural fibres are generally stable but can ‘move’ over time depending on the weave. Twill weaves don’t move (think denim jeans) but basket weaves can move a little. Natural fibres such as cotton and linen can absorb the humidity in the air and ‘relax.’
However, all of James Dunlop Textile’s fabrics undergo the seam slippage test, which is performed as part of the fabric’s evaluation and quality testing process, where any possible issues like the weave stretching are highlighted. Any fabrics with seam slippage test failures are identified and resolved before we manufacture a product for our range.
What is Seam Slippage?
Seam slippage is the separation of yarns in a fabric, usually along a sewn seam or join. Generally, the yarns don’t actually break, they just pull apart leaving an unsightly gap along the fabric join.
So what could be the cause?
With this in mind – we can eliminate fabric stretch as the issue here and look at what the likely cause could be.
1. Foam
Good quality foam loses 5-7% of its loft within the first 3 months of use – this may be a contributing factor here. Some furniture manufacturers use a pre-crushed foam (the Gucci of foams) which prevents this loft loss – while being more expensive, it is worth it as you really do get what you pay for in furniture.
2. The Design
There are two main types of couch designs – cushion seat and fixed seat.
Cushion Seat: The sides of a cushion seat pull upwards, and therefore do not need extra fabric as the cushion flexes to allow the fabric cover to release into the compressed foam in the centre, where you sit.
Fixed Seat: A fixed seat requires an allowance of extra fabric in the back of the base cushion. This extra fabric moves forward, compensating for the foam compressing when you sit on the couch. Once you stand, the foam lofts again and if the extra fabric does not move back to the base of the cushion fast enough it will be trapped, causing a ‘puddled’ saggy look.
Keep reading: www.curtainclean.co.nz...
Catherine McAuliffe from Age Concern Horowhenua
We have upgraded our printer, so these two are Available for new homes for a donation only.
Please call Catherine on (06) 3672181 or call into our office at 14 Durham Street, Levin.
Free
Mei Leng Wong Reporter from NZ Gardener & Get Growing
Dear neighbours,
Alexandria Te Ripeka "Pearl" Lindsay (Te Āti Awa o Taranaki) started gardening to grow her own food -- and now she's growing food for her community too.
Michelle from Linton
Do you love to sing? Do you want to improve your voice or are you a beginner wanting to learn? Check out the link below
letsgetsinging.weebly.com...
For more info PH/TEXT 027 2240 170 😊🎤
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