Avsnitt
-
New Zealand qualifies for their third appearance at a FIFA men's football World Cup after a 3-0 win over New Caledonia in Auckland. Could Liam Lawson be axed before the Japanese Grand Prix next month, and Glen remembers one of the great characters in New Zealand rugby coaching - Alex 'Grizz' Wylie.
-
Mushroom season is upon us but how do you know what to look for? Ecologist Ruben Mita has written a guide to all of the typical mushrooms you will find in various parts of the country. The guide includes edible favourites like porcini, the good old white field mushroom - but also the psychedelics and the poisonous. There are also the weird ones - the stinkhorns like a red claw coming out of the ground - and the bird's nest fungi. Ruben has degrees in Ecology, English and Music from Victoria University.
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
The Government is moving to standardised zoning as part of its Resource Management reform to simplify more than 1000 different zones used by various councils. How do we define a recession? It is the question economists are juggling with consumer confidence low as GDP ticked upwards. Dan also discusses the Prime Minister's visit to India to get a trade deal over the line. Dan Brunskill is an economic policy reporter for Interest NZ
-
Tess discusses updates on the Queenstown Shotover Wastewater Treatment Plant, Dunedin's mayor has expressed frustration with the slow progress of the hospital upgrade, and a new bylaw for freedom campers in Queenstown Lakes is being pursued.
-
Sally Wenley reviews Invisible Boys TV Tie-in edition by Holden Sheppard published by Fremantle Press
-
Sarah Anderson is a writer, painter and the founder of the Travel Bookshop in London which featured in the film Notting Hill.
-
The Department of Homeland Security is cutting back its civil rights and oversight offices after it revoked parole status from half a million people.
-
Auckland Councillors are due to vote on two competing projects to be Auckland's main stadium today - but advice from Council staff is that neither is a viable option without significant public funding.
-
A Hawke's Bay biotech company is using cutting edge technology to turn waste from the dairy industry into high value protein.
-
A retired accountant says Primary Health Organisations have become overly corporatised and top-heavy, taking too much of the health spend compared to GP's.
-
Kennedy discusses a new home-grown climate-change musical that debuts in Auckland this coming Friday.
-
Pepler's makes a range of dressings, chutneys and sauces from its base in Te Kauwhata in northern Waikato.
-
Political commentators Lianne Dalziel and Liam Hehir discuss the Prime Minister's 'full court press' during the India trade trip, Winston Peter's Washington DC trip, and continued public service cuts.
-
A group of teenage drivers have been terrorizing rural road users, dwindling numbers have forced the final members of Waipawa St Peter's Anglican Church Sunday congregation to seek a new place of worship, and the National Aquarium is leaking more than $2 million of Napier ratepayer money every year.
-
Airini Beautrais reviews Makeshift Seasons by Kate Camp published by Te Herenga Waka University Press.
-
The plan was to turn an isolated rundown farm into a profitable business and sell it on.
-
EU nations want to snap up US researchers sidelined by Trump, Poland and Baltic states to pull out of global landmine treaty, and Finland named happiest country for 8th year in a row.
-
A vet finding plastic netting in the stomach of a cow was the spur for Southland farmer, Grant Lightfoot, to try to find a better sort of wrapping hay bales.
-
Lawyers are grappling with what to do about an increasing number of Asian parties in court, who won't settle, and insist on going to court.
-
An Australia-based energy expert says the government here should be underwriting major power generation projects to help drive investment in the sector and mitigate energy shortages.
- Visa fler