Know what’s happening
Access the private noticeboard for verified neighbours near you. Keep informed about any suspicious activity, send urgent updates to your neighbours when required and discuss emergency planning.
Get to know your neighbours
Browse the directory and start getting to know your neighbours. Don’t want to post to the whole neighbourhood? Send a private message.
Buy, sell and give away
Want to declutter your garage? Buy some used household items? Give away some garden stuff? Become a verified neighbour to browse and post items for sale. Trading is simple when everyone lives nearby.
Got a question about your lawn or backyard?
Ask a Crewcut Lawn & Garden expert (and an ex-Black Caps coach!) now. Head here.
Does your organisation need new flooring?
Apply for up to $2,000 and also be in to win a $20,000 makeover.
Thank you for using Neighbourly
You may receive an email confirmation for any offer you selected. The associated companies will contact you directly to activate your requests.
Corinne Morris from
Hello Everyone,
How are you doing today?
Take a moment and have a look at this week's newsletter, it has lots of information and upcoming events for you. mailchi.mp...
This Sunday is National Grandparents Day. Will you be celebrating the day?
Reporter The Press
Hi Neighbours,
Get ready for the South Island's only leader’s debate as Labour Leader Jacinda Ardern and National Leader Judith Collins prepare to go head to head in Christchurch.
Watch the debate live on Stuff, Tuesday, October 6 at 7pm.
The Team from Destination Wairarapa
Yarns in Barns: Wairarapa Festival of Reading kicks off this Friday 9th October! Don't miss a terrific line up of authors including Monique Fiso, Stacy Gregg, Dr Hinemoa Elder, Jim Bolger and Rose Carlyle and many more ! Take a look and make a plan to head to to the Wairarapa.
Reporter Community News
The Wellington City Mission is getting some support from an unlikely source.
A hundred Yu Mei handbags are on sale for reduced prices at the Wellington City Mission, as the luxury leather goods label partners with the mission for a new campaign.
For the campaign, Bags for All, Yu Mei has acquired … View moreThe Wellington City Mission is getting some support from an unlikely source.
A hundred Yu Mei handbags are on sale for reduced prices at the Wellington City Mission, as the luxury leather goods label partners with the mission for a new campaign.
For the campaign, Bags for All, Yu Mei has acquired sponsorship for 100 handbags, crafted by hand in their Wellington studio.
The bags will be donated to the Wellington City Mission’s Taranaki Street store and sold at a cheaper price than usual on Saturday, October 10
Reporter Community News
Otis Prescott-Mason from Wellington has been named the winner of the 2020 New Zealand Junior Piano Competition.
Otis is currently a Year 13 student at St Patrick's College in Wellington and studies piano at Victoria University from Dr Jian Liu and Emma Sayers.
As the first prize winner, Otis… View moreOtis Prescott-Mason from Wellington has been named the winner of the 2020 New Zealand Junior Piano Competition.
Otis is currently a Year 13 student at St Patrick's College in Wellington and studies piano at Victoria University from Dr Jian Liu and Emma Sayers.
As the first prize winner, Otis receives $2,000 and a string of performance engagements in 202.
Simone Borgstede from Wellington City Council
We are strengthening and stabilising the Ngaio Gorge slope to make this key transport route stronger and more resilient.
The road will be down to one lane during construction from 12 October 2020 – October 2022.
Crews will be working between 7am – 6pm, Monday to Saturday.
We thank you for … View moreWe are strengthening and stabilising the Ngaio Gorge slope to make this key transport route stronger and more resilient.
The road will be down to one lane during construction from 12 October 2020 – October 2022.
Crews will be working between 7am – 6pm, Monday to Saturday.
We thank you for your patience during this time.
To find out more about this project and its timeline, visit: wellington.govt.nz...
Reporter Community News
Andy Leslie is perhaps best known as the captain of the All Blacks that controversially toured South Africa in 1976.
A proud member of the Petone Rugby Club, he was a friend and colleague of the legendary fullback Bob Scott. Here a few facts that you might not know about Leslie.
- His father, … View moreAndy Leslie is perhaps best known as the captain of the All Blacks that controversially toured South Africa in 1976.
A proud member of the Petone Rugby Club, he was a friend and colleague of the legendary fullback Bob Scott. Here a few facts that you might not know about Leslie.
- His father, Andy, was a professional footballer in Scotland and later became a life member of the Petone Football Club.
- As well as rugby, he represented New Zealand at softball and was also a good basketballer and excelled at waterpolo.
- He lived for sport at school and liked to joke about his success at School Certificate. "I went to school to eat my lunch and play sport. I got 55 in School Cert, 11 for each subject."
- In 2017, he was inducted into the Hutt Valley Sports Awards Hall of Fame by All Black coach Steve Hansen.
- Leslie played 144 games for Wellington, captaining them to a win in the Ranfurly Shield in 1974.
- His wife is Lesley Leslie. Their children, John and Marty, were both talented rugby players.
- In 2007, he was elected President of the New Zealand Rugby Football Union.
- He has had a long association with the New Zealand Rugby Foundation, which helps players who have suffered a spinal injury.
What are your memories of Andy and his career?
Antonela from Te Aro
Hello neighbours!
I have been living in NZ all this year and I would like to improve my English faster. To do this, I am looking for someone who can be my English mentor or coach with whom I can regularly practice both conversation and writing skills. If you are available, please send me your … View moreHello neighbours!
I have been living in NZ all this year and I would like to improve my English faster. To do this, I am looking for someone who can be my English mentor or coach with whom I can regularly practice both conversation and writing skills. If you are available, please send me your proposal to see if it suits my budget.
Thank you very much.
Kylie Klein Nixon Reporter from Homed
Hi! I'm so excited to finally be sharing a project our team has been working on for a while now: First Rung, our first podcast!
First Rung is packed with tips, advice and anecdotes from experts and home owners on every aspect of buying your first home - it also comes with a chance to win a … View moreHi! I'm so excited to finally be sharing a project our team has been working on for a while now: First Rung, our first podcast!
First Rung is packed with tips, advice and anecdotes from experts and home owners on every aspect of buying your first home - it also comes with a chance to win a $500 Resene prize pack.
Over six, bite sized episodes, we cover everything from saving that deposit, to sunset clauses, to how to get your newly purchased home ready to move into.
We'll also introduce you to ordinary Kiwis, just like you, who have navigated the choppy waters of home buying in NZ and made it onto that first rung - and pick their brains for how they did it.
We all know buying a home is one of the toughest, most daunting things we might ever do as adults, so it doesn't hurt to get some expert advice and support. That's what we wanted to give you with First Rung.
So give it a listen and let us know what you think - and be in to win that mint Resene prize pack. I can't enter and I'm well jealous!
Corinne Morris from
Hello everyone,
It is National Grandparents Day today. Share your stories about your grandparents and we might publish it in our next newsletter.
Have you been celebrating the day in a special way?
Weng from Kelburn
Saw these posters at Linden Community Center. Pretty awesome and heart warming to see humanity at work. Keep up with the good work.
Craig from Newtown
Pick up today in Newtown.
Price: $100
Today is the International Day of Older Persons! It's an important day for everyone to recognize and say thank you to older people for their amazing contributions to the world, from mentoring and volunteering, to sharing experience, being in paid work and much more.
To acknowledge the … View moreToday is the International Day of Older Persons! It's an important day for everyone to recognize and say thank you to older people for their amazing contributions to the world, from mentoring and volunteering, to sharing experience, being in paid work and much more.
To acknowledge the occasion, we have just released our October SuperSeniors Newsletter, you can read it here: bit.ly...
The day is also special as it marks the start of the WHO’s Decade of Healthy Ageing 2020 to 2030, you can find out more about it here: bit.ly...
62 replies (Members only)
Reporter Community News
Politicians have been been talking about a second Mt Victoria tunnel since the 1950s.
A second tunnel is a key component in Lets Gets Wellington Moving, although progress on that is at a snail's pace.
This week the Green Party came up with a new idea - two new additional tunnels. The Greens … View morePoliticians have been been talking about a second Mt Victoria tunnel since the 1950s.
A second tunnel is a key component in Lets Gets Wellington Moving, although progress on that is at a snail's pace.
This week the Green Party came up with a new idea - two new additional tunnels. The Greens would not block the proposed car tunnel but would like to see two more built.
One would be a dedicated walking and cycling tunnel parallel to the existing Mt Victoria car tunnel, the second would be a light rail tunnel in Newtown, near Wellington Zoo.
What do you think?
31 replies (Members only)
Robert Anderson from
The thickest and most resistant of all commercial natural fibres, coir is a coarse, short fibre extracted from the outer shell of coconuts.
Coconut coir or, “Coco coir”, is a very versatile resource that is harvested from a fibrous layer underneath the exterior shell of the coconut. Since… View moreThe thickest and most resistant of all commercial natural fibres, coir is a coarse, short fibre extracted from the outer shell of coconuts.
Coconut coir or, “Coco coir”, is a very versatile resource that is harvested from a fibrous layer underneath the exterior shell of the coconut. Since coconut growers consider it a waste product, its utilization is highly sustainable. You may have heard of coco coir being used in gardening, but there are many applications for it across multiple industries, beyond horticulture. Here are 10 interesting facts about coco coir that you probably didn’t know!
• Coco coir has many uses including in textiles, upholstery, making rope/fishing nets, environmental cleanup and horticulture, floor mats, doormats, brushes and mattresses.
• There is brown coco coir & white coco coir, each with different properties. When coconuts are ripe, they produce brown coir which is used in gardening and horticulture. White coir is harvested from unripe coconuts, and is much finer and lighter, it even floats on water. This makes it ideal for fishing nets, brushes, and finer textiles.
• Coco coir works well as a snail deterrent when used in the garden.
• Coco coir is highly absorbent and can hold up to 10x the water as peat moss. Some use it as a sustainable alternative to peat moss
• People often use coco coir as bedding in terrariums for snakes, lizards, turtles, and spiders.
• When used for gardening, coco coir is usually packed in a compressed brick. You need to soak the brick with water which allows it to expand substantially. You can then use it as a growing medium or potting mix additive.
• Coco coir contains very low levels of nutrients, so you can’t normally use it as the sole growing medium for plants, EXCEPT, you can use it for microgreens due to their extremely short grow cycle. This is because they don’t require soil nutrients. You also use coco coir in hydroponics since you add the nutrients directly into the water.
• You can re-use coco coir several times in gardening as it retains its properties over time.
• Because of its highly absorptive properties, people sometimes use coco coir to help clean up oil spills and other caustic fluids.
• People use coco coir in litter boxes and animal bedding because of its highly absorptive capabilities. It is much more sustainable than traditional clay cat litter pellets, which don’t break down. Coco coir also absorbs much more liquid than hay, straw, or newspaper which people often use as animal bedding.
These are just a few of the many interesting characteristics and applications of coco coir. In the spirit of sustainability, the utilization of coco coir is a sound environmental practice. Spread the word and take a step in a more sustainable direction.
Loading…
Are you sure? Deleting this message permanently removes it from the Neighbourly website.
Loading…
© Neighbourly 2024