


Latest commission Acrylic on box canvas
Aramoana Surfer Paddle Out from Nic Reeves on Vimeo.


Tangled Waters documents the five attacks in Dunedin, between 1964 and 1973, which included three fatalities, and the decision to install shark nets in Dunedin waters.
Film-makers and University of Otago science communication students Nicole Schafer and Andrew Scott (both 27) said it was an important film to make.
"It's a great local story that's never been fully told before," Ms Schafer said.
"It was a unique situation having shark netting. No-one else in New Zealand has had shark nets.
"It's also a great story, because we got the ending we wanted. It's a positive environmental story, which is very unusual."
The 25-minute documentary includes interviews with Dunedin city councillors during the voting decision to remove the nets.
The DCC, led by Crs Richard Thomson, Lee Vandervis and Kate Wilson, began investigating the shark net programme after anOtago Daily Times feature in January condemned the practice of net-setting.
The article revealed the nets had caught no great white sharks in 40 years, but had killed more than 700 non-target species.
Councillors subsequently voted 9-3 in favour of removing the $38,000 annual funding for the nets in the 2011-12 annual plan.
Ms Schafer and Mr Scott also interviewed shark attack survivor Barry Watkins, who was attacked at St Clair Beach in 1971, surfers and beach-goers, and filmed great white sharks in their natural habitat at Stewart Island.
The former St Kilda Surf Life Saving Club members said they wanted to make the film "because we're conservationists and the shark nets were wrong".
"It was the St Kilda Surf Life Saving Club that raised the funds for the original nets after the first two attacks in the 1960s, before they were later taken over by the DCC," Mr Scott said.
"I hope the film teaches people something about the history of a neglected wildlife in New Zealand.
We should be proud, like we are with kiwis and albatross, of sharks as well. We should take them to our hearts. They are so important to the environment. We need them for the eco-system to operate."
The students also gathered thousands of signatures at the Otago Farmers Market for a petition opposing the shark nets.
"Once people got all the facts, they were agreeing with us," Ms Schafer said.
"Everyone responded really well and was reasonable and wanted to discuss it. People think great whites are in Australia or South Africa, but New Zealand is a global hot spot for these animals."
There had already been interest in the film from Australia, she said.
Tangled Waters will premiere at the 2011 Science Teller festival, at 6.30pm today at the Regent Theatre.

Article at Otago Daily TimesTue, 11 Oct 2011Surf's up for swell forecastsSurfers hoping to catch big waves this summer will be able to check out video forecasts and up-to-date swell information using a new online service.
MetService's surf, beach and boating section, launched this week, draws on swell forecasts from specialist provider MetOcean Solutions.
The site will also feature weekend surf video forecasts during summer, which will be hosted by expert forecasters who are also regular surfers themselves.
MetOcean managing director Peter McComb said partnering with MetService - the country's sixth most visited website - was an exciting opportunity.
"With a fantastic reach and growing community of users, we are delighted to provide the public with high-quality data for planning their marine activities,'' he said.
| Location | Hydro Boardroom 165 George St Dunedin (opp Farmers) |
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| More info | Massive Surf Hardware sale at Hydro Boardroom 165 george st opposite Farmers. over $50,000 worth of stock slashed to half price. Everything else except surfboards will be 20% off on the night aswell. |

Shots from Google Earth from 2005 to 2011, a large high res file, so might take a bit of time to load.


Closes: 25/11/2011
In 2008, the Council appointed a Project Team to gather data and consider management options for Ocean Beach. This followed significant erosion on the beach in June/July 2007, the DCC’s replenishment of sand on the beach and other remedial works as part of a now established ‘holding pattern’, and a comprehensive consultation process. Since then the Project Team has gathered and analysed that data and completed a risk assessment process. It has now identified proposed management options for Ocean Beach, taking into account the existing processes and risks.
A report from Tonkin & Taylor dated October 2011 entitled: ‘Ocean Beach, Coastal Issues and Options’, sets out preferred options for managing the area using an adaptive management approach. The report is available for inspection at the DCC’s Customer Services Centre and Libraries from Tuesday 25 October during their ordinary opening hours. A summary of intent and submission forms are also available. The information, plus background material on erosion at Ocean Beach, can be found at www.dunedin.govt.nz/consultation.
Submissions must be received by 5.00 pm on Friday 25 November. Hearing dates have been scheduled for Tuesday 31 January to Thursday 2 February 2012. Please state in your submission whether or not you wish to be heard.
| Closing date | 25/11/2011 |
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| Contact person | Business Development Team Leader |
| Public feedback |
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| Public meetings | The public meeting is to be held on Monday 7 November 2011 at 7.00 pm. The venue is the Port Otago Room, first floor, Edgar Centre, corner Portsmouth Drive and Teviot Street. All interested members of the public are cordially invited to attend. A summary of the options and submission forms will also be available at the meeting . |

This will be a meeting of the minds to discuss how to protect surfing coastlines worldwide from the effects of climate changeand the impacts of increasing populations flocking to the coast.
What Is The Value Of Waves?
Various initiatives for the preservation of the waves are conducted internationally. Therefore NGOs Surfers Against Sewage, Surfrider Foundation, Save the Waves Coalition, Salvem O Surf, with scientific support of Dr Tony Butt, organize a major international conference on the recognition of the value of the waves and their protection in the world.
While the coasts are attracting more and more people and territories seek to protect against the effects of climatic disorder, conservation of surfing waves is becoming a major issue on many coastlines.
The genesis of the waves comes from the alignment of multiple environmental factors, themselves relatively uncertain. This feature is responsible for vulnerability to any change in the environment that characterizes the waves.
This is why many surf spots have now been altered. Some even disappeared. There are several types of threats that can cause the disappearance of a wave.
Against this backdrop, the challenge for the surfing community is to highlight the fact that the presence of a wave exceeds the notion of pleasure it can bring to surfers. The objective is to characterize what are the economic, social and environmental values of a surf zone to a coastal area.
1. How Do You Define The Value of a Wave, and by Extension, of Nature?
2. What Are the Threats Facing the Waves?
3. Which Strategies Can Be Put into Place to Protect them?
These three questions will be at the centre of the conferences that take place on the two days.
To answer them, Surfers Against Sewage from the United Kingdom, Save the Waves Coalition based in Northern California, WiLDCOAST from Mexico,
Surfbreak Protection Society coming from New Zealand,National Surfing Reserves from Australia, Portugal'sSalvem O Surf (…) and of course branches of the international Surfrider network (Australia, Argentina, Europe, Japan, Morocco, United States…) will all come together.
Representatives of the political and scientific worlds, joined by engineers specializing in coastal development, will discuss the issues surrounding waves within their respective areas of expertise.
Through a series of lectures and roundtable discussions, during which various experts will attempt to answer these questions, this event is the first major opportunity to offer the public an international panorama of reflections made in this area. This event will be considered as a success if:
We manage to use this exchange as a platform to discuss our larger goals as a global community of activists dedicated to wave protection. As such, we would like to introduce the idea of a global network of wave protection.
We are able to demonstrate a shared vision and how to continue the collaboration of all stakeholders in the future.
Potentially develop a joint conference statement on wave protection to set the stage for work plan for a future wave conference. Other ideas or initiatives can emerge, for instance to have the waves and surfing recognized as a worldwide natural heritage for mankind.
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