banner
Club Information
Welcome to Rotary Cambridge
Service Above Self
Thursdays at 5:30 PM
Staff Room Cambridge High School
25 Swayne Rd
Cambridge, Waikato 3434
New Zealand
Thursdays 5.30pm for 6pm start
DistrictSiteIcon
District Site
VenueMap
Venue Map
Stories

 

Next Meeting 18th February 2021
Subject:  Hamilton Gardens
 
   Venue: Hamilton Gardens outside information centre
 
Time:    5:00pm
.
 
 
 
    
Read more...

THIS WEEK'S NOTICES

President’s message ….
…. Good turnout for Committee meeting night – new ideas for projects being made and progress plans for those already in place.
 
We welcomed those Rotarians returning for the first time in 2021 and also Michael Ryan, Margaret Nicholson and Chris Smiley.
 
Hamilton Gardens Tour and Dinner – 18 February 5.00pm
Thank you to Jan Bilton for organizing our next vocational visit together with Te Awamutu Club Rotarians.  We have had a very good response and I look forward to a great night out.
 
Charity Dinner – 16 April – fundraiser for Pet Refuge
We have the Charity Dinner coming up on 16 April with the major beneficiary being Pet Refuge. New Zealand has a shamefully high rate of domestic violence. But the victims aren’t just people – they are pets too.  Perpetrators of violence will often threaten, injure or even kill a pet to control family members.
 
Most people can’t take their pets with them when seeking refuge, so are having to choose between their safety and the safety of their pets. Pet Refuge New Zealand is currently building a shelter that will remove that barrier to leaving, by providing a safe haven for pets while their owners escape abuse.  Every pet cared for will enable a family to escape domestic violence.
 
Referrals will be from Women’s Refuge, Shine and other agencies. Pets from throughout New Zealand will be transported to the Auckland shelter and once their family has a safe, violence-free home, they will be reunited.
 
The 2018 Women’s Refuge survey of women whose pets were abused as part of domestic violence found:
 
  • 23% had an animal killed by their partner
  • 53% delayed leaving family violence out of fear for their pet’s safety
  • 73% would have found it easier to leave if there was a shelter offering temporary accommodation for their pets.
 
Our Charity Dinner on 16 April with guest speaker Greg Murphy will provide much needed funds for the Pet Refuge New Zealand Charitable Trust.  As President and as a pet owner I urge you to support this very worthwhile cause.  So ---
 
  • Purchase tickets (you can buy a table)
  • Donate auction items.
  • Sponsor – do you know of, or have a local business who would provide sponsorship?
 
Project team leader is Laurie Graham.  Any questions or suggestions are welcome so please contact Laurie.
 
Meeting Notes 11 February 2021
 
Guests for the evening were Margaret Nicholson, Chris Smiley and Michael Ryan (Jan Bilton’s partner)
The meeting was conducted in committee groups, with Committee Chairs reporting at the conclusion of Committee meetings:-
Club (John Bishop)
  1. An alternative arrangement or venue for 2021 Christmas party to be investigated to assist President Elect Ian.
  2. Cambridge High School to be advised available dates for fundraising for their Sports teams to provide catering for our Club meetings.
  3.  Club Almoner duties now being shared by John Bishop, Richard Seabrook and Richard Johnstone
  4. Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner – dates still to be organized.
  5. A new site for the Club’s storage container has to be found as it has to be removed from the old Jointwood Products site.
Community (David Partis)
  1. Heart Foundation appeal volunteers still required to respond to Gretchen’s email.
  2. Waipa Fun Run. Sunday  March 7 – volunteers required for marshalling duties.
  3. Charity Dinner. Friday April 16 – Laurie Graham & Pres Bev organizing. No half tables to be sold only full tables.
Vocational (Jan Bilton)
  1.  Hamilton Gardens visit is next Thursday 18 February. Meet at entrance adjacent to the Café at 5 pm. for tour of the gardens.
  2. Matakana weekend March 19. Six participants.
  3. Visit to J.Swap Contractors. Thursday March 25. Ken Leatham organizing.
  4. APL visit. Thursday 29 April. Richard Seabrook organizing.
  5. Movie night fundraiser under investigation for May.
  6. Sanctuary Mountain visit arranging for October 29.
  7. A night at Gaslight Repertory to be investigated.
International (Ken Leatham)
  1. Firewood working bees being arranged for Saturdays Feb 20 and 27. Volunteers required.
  2. Fundraising raffles to be organized for a load of firewood and a donated chainsaw.
  3. Funds raised for ‘Give Every Child a Future’ and ‘Shelter Box’
Youth (Kim Prichard)
  1. Interact Clubs to be promoted through schools.
  2. Science Technology Forum – speakers to be arranged for Rotary programme.
  3. Debate ‘tournaments’ for High Schools under investigation.
  4. Membership drive to be organized for Club meeting on Thursday May 6.
  5. Several RYLA applicants being considered by Directors at next Board meeting.
 
Notices:
District Conference Hastings May 21-23
Ian announced 18 registrations so far. Early Bird discounted fees available only until March 1.
GO TO WEBSITE TO REGISTER
IAN NEEDS TO KNOW ASAP TO ARRANGE MOTEL/HOTEL BOOKINGS.
 
E.Waste
Mark reported regular collections are being organized for the 3rd Sunday each month at the High School. Car batteries to be added for collection.
Te Awamutu Rotary to make arrangements for sending E.waste to Cambridge.
Lions Club also to send unsaleable electrical items from their shed. A reciprocal arrangement to send any saleable items from our collection to the Lion’s shed.
 
Adventure Club
David Blewden reported on events being organized for this year:-
  • Waihou river blue springs 28 March.
  • Timber Trail
  • Pinnacles Hut.
  • Rotorua mountain bike park – July.
  • Next year a Tongariro Crossing fundraiser.
 
President Bev closed the meeting at 7.50 pm.

How we can implement climate change

(presented by John Windle)

Well done parents.....

After our daughter of fifteen years of age was moved to tears by the speech of Greta Thunberg at the UN the other day, she became angry with our generation “who had been doing nothing for thirty years”.

So, we decided to help her prevent what the girl on TV announced as “massive eradication and the disappearance of entire ecosystems”.

We are now committed to giving our daughter a future again, by doing our part to help cool the planet four degrees.

From now on she will go to school on a bicycle, because driving her by car costs fuel, and fuel puts emissions into the atmosphere. Of course it will be winter soon and then she will want to go by bus, but only as long as it is a diesel bus.

Somehow, that does not seem to be conducive to ‘helping the Climate’.

Of course, she is now asking for an electric bicycle, but we have shown her the devastation caused to the areas of the planet as a result of mining for the extraction of Lithium and other minerals used to make batteries for electric bicycles, so she will be pedaling, or walking. Which will not harm her, or the planet. We used to cycle and walk to school too.

Since the girl on TV demanded “we need to get rid of our dependency on fossil fuels” and our daughter agreed with her, we have disconnected the heat vent in her room. The temperature is now dropping to twelve degrees in the evening, and will drop below freezing in the winter, we have promised to buy her an extra sweater, hat, tights, gloves and a blanket.

For the same reason we have decided that from now on she only takes a cold shower. She will wash her clothes by hand, with a wooden washboard, because the washing machine is simply a power consumer and since the dryer uses natural gas, she will hang her clothes on the clothes line to dry.

Speaking of clothes, the ones that she currently has are all synthetic, so made from petroleum. Therefore on Monday, we will bring all her designer clothing to the secondhand shop.

We have found an eco store where the only clothing they sell is made from undyed and unbleached linen, wool and jute.

It shouldn’t matter that it looks good on her, or that she is going to be laughed at, dressing in colorless, bland clothes and without a wireless bra, but that is the price she has to pay for the benefit of The Climate.

Cotton is out of the question, as it comes from distant lands and pesticides are used for it. Very bad for the environment.

We just saw on her Instagram that she’s pretty angry with us. This was not our intention.

From now on, at 7 p.m. we will turn off the WiFi and we will only switch it on again the next day after dinner for two hours. In this way we will save on electricity, so she is not bothered by electro-stress and will be totally isolated from the outside world. This way, she can concentrate solely on her homework. At eleven o’clock in the evening we will pull the breaker to shut the power off to her room, so she knows that dark is really dark. That will save a lot of CO2.

She will no longer be participating in winter sports to ski lodges and resorts, nor will she be going on anymore vacations with us, because our vacation destinations are practically inaccessible by bicycle.

Since our daughter fully agrees with the girl on TV that the CO2 emissions and footprints of her great-grandparents are to blame for ‘killing our planet’, what all this simply means, is that she also has to live like her great-grandparents and they never had a holiday, a car or even a bicycle.

We haven’t talked about the carbon footprint of food yet.

Zero CO2 footprint means no meat, no fish and no poultry, but also no meat substitutes that are based on soy (after all, that grows in farmers fields, that use machinery to harvest the beans, trucks to transport to the processing plants, where more energy is used, then trucked to the packaging/canning plants, and trucked once again to the stores) and also no imported food, because that has a negative ecological effect. And absolutely no chocolate from Africa, no coffee from South America and no tea from Asia.

Only homegrown potatoes, vegetables and fruit that have been grown in local cold soil, because greenhouses run on boilers, piped in CO2 and artificial light. Apparently, these things are also bad for The Climate. We will teach her how to grow her own food.

Bread is still possible, but butter, milk, cheese and yogurt, cottage cheese and cream come from cows and they emit CO2. No more margarine and no oils will be used for the frying pan, because that fat is palm oil from plantations in Borneo where rain forests first grew.

No ice cream in the summer. No soft drinks and no energy drinks, as the bubbles are CO2. She wanted to lose some pounds, well, this will help her achieve that goal too.

We will also ban all plastic, because it comes from chemical factories. Everything made of steel and aluminum must also be removed. Have you ever seen the amount of energy a blast furnace consumes or an aluminum smelter? Uber bad for the climate!

We will replace her 9600 coil, memory foam pillow top mattress, with a jute bag filled with straw,with a horse hair pillow.

And finally, she will no longer be using makeup, soap, shampoo, cream, lotion, conditioner, toothpaste and medication. Her sanitary napkins will be replaced with pads made of linen, that she can wash by hand, with her wooden washboard, just like her female ancestors did before climate change made her angry at us for destroying her future.

.

In this way we will help her to do her part to prevent mass extinction, water levels rising and the disappearance of entire ecosystems.

If she truly believes she wants to walk the talk of the girl on TV, she will gladly accept and happily embrace her new way of life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Committee Membership

2020-21                                                   President Beverley Maul-Rogers
CLUBINTERNATIONALYOUTH/NEW GENERATIONCOMMUNITYVOCATIONAL
John Bishop (D/PN)Ken Leatham (D)John Bullick (D)David Partis (D)Jan Bilton (D)
Andrew BatemanBill WilsonCarey ChurchAndy NewmanAlan van Niekirk
Bev Heron (Trs)Chris CrickettDennis FinnBrian PalmerBronwen Byers
Bill MacMillan Elaine RuisDavid BlewdenDenis White
Bill RobinsonDoug Lang  Gavin LevesqueDon Harris
Colin DavisGreg GascoigneKim PrichardGordon CalderDon Wilson
David SmithJono GibsonRoger GordonGretchen BosackerLesleyAnn Thomas
Ian Grant (PE)Jeremy IrwinRon GeckLaurie GrahamNigel Salter
Ian RogersJohn WindleShirley HaycockMark HanlonRichard Seabrook
John TarbuttRichard JohnstoneSilvio RibeiroMaurice MarshmentRobyn Crickett (IPP)
Peter FisherShona DevoyTom PickeringRay MilnerRoger Hill
   Ted Mason 
Active members as at 08.06.20  - 57       

 
 
Read more...

 

ROSTER

Please take note of the Duty Roster and be in good time for your duties. 

If you are unable to attend on the date you are rostered, please swap or arrange a substitute. Please also advise the President and Sargent of the change.
 
Should you wish to download ere is a link to the duty responsibilities  
 
 Please Text Apologies and extras including names and the related date to 021 0267 8742 (or phone) or email rotarycambridgenz@gmail.com  BY end of day ON Tuesday
 
To send apologies or extras, do not press reply from this bulletin email
  
 
Week 3
Week 4
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 1
Week 2
 
Feb 18
Feb 25
Mar 4
Mar 11
Mar 18
Mar 25
 
Apr 1
Apr 8
 
Voc Visit
Ham Gardens
Speaker
Speaker
Speaker
Committee Meetings
Voc visit
Speaker
Speaker
Attendance
 
Colin Davis
Doug Lang
Ian Rogers
David Smith
Colin Davis
Jeremy Irwin
Laurie Graham
Ian Rogers
 
Sean Brady
David Smith
Ted Mason
Colin Davis
Welcomer
 
Maurie Marshment
Bill Macmillan
Bronwen Byers
LesleyAnn Thomas
 
Shirley Haycock
Silvio Ribeiro
Intro
 
Richard Johnstone
Silvio Ribeiro
 
Chris Crickett
 
 
Alan Van Niekerk
Andrew Bateman
Thanks
 
Richard Seabrook
Ted Mason
Carey Church
 
 
Bill Robinson
Bill Wilson
Did You Know…?
 
Nigel Salter
Alan Van Niekerk
Dennis Finn
Roger Hill
 
Brian Palmer
David Blewden
Bar
 
Gordon Calder
Gavin Levesque
John Bullick
Brian Palmer
David Blewden
Don Wilson
Mark Hanlon
John Tarbutt
 
Bev Heron
John Bullick
Don Wilson
Gavin Levesque
Kitchen
 
Roger Gordon
Sean Brady
Andrew Bateman
Bill Robinson
John Windle
Jono Gibson
Nigel Salter
Richard Johnstone
 
Andy Newman
Carey Church
Don Harris
Dennis Finn
Equipment
 
Roger Hill
Shirley Haycock
Bill Wilson
Andy Newman
Don Harris
Greg Gascoigne
Richard Seabrook
Roger Gordon
 
Bronwen Byers
Chris Crickett
Doug Lang
Gordon Calder
                                                                     
 
 
Read more...

I'VE BEEN ROSTERED A DUTY- WHAT DO I DO?

If you have been rostered to a duty then see the following. Remember if you are rostered and you are not going to be attending, as well as apologising, it is your duty to find a replacement
 
 
Club Meetings 
Attendance Duty
Time:
5.20pm in time to welcome people as they arrive at venue – currently at Don Rowlands Centre
 
 
Duty:
Welcome members and visitors alike.
 
 
How:
Record attendance and apologies on attendance sheet.
Complete name cards for all visitors to wear and record names.
Record make ups and receive attendance cards.
Provide attendance cards to visiting Rotarians. Charge $23.50 for meal unless guest of a member.
Encourage members to buy raffle tickets.
Give President list of all visitors including members partners and visiting Rotarians. 
Prepare summary of attendance numbers.
Hand attendance sheet to treasurer for charging of meals.
 
 
Materials:
 
Members Badges stored in room by meeting venue.
Raffle tickets and cash box stored in black metal cupboard in equipment room Key to cupboard attached to inside of lectern.
Attendance sheet received from attendance officer any time after midday on Wednesday. 
Cash box stored in black cupboard in equipment room.
 
 
 
 
Welcome Duty
Time:
5.20pm in time to welcome people as they arrive.
 
 
Duty:
Welcome members and visitors alike.
 
 
How:
Stand by the entrance and greet everyone as they arrive (a great way to learn members’ names).
Introduce any visitor to the President if possible (he/she may be otherwise engaged).
Introduce the speaker to the person rostered to introduce them later in the evening. You will need to know who the speaker is and who is introducing them.
Introduce other visitors to one or more members and ask them to host the visitor for the evening.
 
 
Materials:
A handshake and a welcoming smile.
 
 
 
 
Equipment Duty 
Time:
5.15pm in time to set up before regular meeting.
Plus after the close of the meeting
 
 
Duty:
Set up attendance table.
Put out plates, utensils, etc on catering table in hallway (2 crates from store cupboard).
Set up 2 tables for dining (if not already done) in hallway
Set up lectern and check IT equipment is out (we will be using the band’s sound system and mic, as well as data projector  from venue as well as our own laptop).  Data projector turned on by top right button, then hook up working computer.
Return equipment to storage after meeting.
Leave tables and chairs in place as on arrival
 
 
 
 
How:
Place name badges so members can recover them as they arrive.
Placemats on each table - these may need rearranging to suit our meeting.
Place lectern by top table, at front. Could be 2 oblong tables to side (set for 6).
Place sergeant’s paraphernalia on top table (shrapnel box, fines box, raffle numbers, bell and hammer). Microphone to be placed by lectern.
Place Presidents paraphernalia on top table (chain of office, collar microphone, flags).
Place roll out banner(s) by top table behind lectern.
Put out tear drop banner in hallway (leave assembled in cupboard after meeting )
After the meeting return all equipment, including name badge box where you found it in cupboard. Venue should be left as according to Don Rowlands requirements.
 
                                        
Materials:
 
Large items are stored as provided by Don Rowlands Centre
Table ware is stored in the crate in equipment room. 
 
 
Turn as many lights off as possible, turn off heating.
Locking up:
No need to lock up building – security will arrange this. TEXT Liz when leaving 027 5716206
 
 
Bar Duty
Time:
5-5.15pm in time to assist with set up before regular meeting.
 
 
Duty:
Set up bar - sell drinks - clear up afterwards. Don Rowlands Bar Manager will co-ordinate.
 
 
How:
Key to Bar fridge is under the lectern
Glassware as appropriate.
We use Don Rowlands alcohol stocks.
Glassware to use: Don Rowlands glasses
Serve at bar before meeting from 5.30pm (as directed by Don Rowlands bar manager)
Serve members after business sessions and before meal.
Place empty bottles in recycling bins or receptacle as advised by Bar Manager.
Bottle tops (as advised by Bar Manager.
Return unused and part used bottles to fridge.
Don Rowlands Bar Manager will handle takings or just leave at end on counter.
 
 
Materials:
 
Glassware (wineglasses) 
Locking up:
No need at Don Rowlands.
 
 
 
Speaker Introduction
Time:
Before meeting.
 
 
Duty:
Welcome speaker - introduce to President and Club.
 
 
How:
Be in time to welcome the evening's speaker.
Introduce to President.
Ensure they are set up for any PowerPoint presentation they have with them - ask if they have a USB to use (IT duty person will take over setting up IT equipment).
Confirm that talk should be about 20 minutes with 10 minutes for questions.
Provide with drink from bar (Club pays for this).
Help guest socialise with members once set up.
Sit with guest for the meeting at the top table.
Introduce the speaker to the club with brevity.
If you have looked them up on Dr Google before the meeting make sure you have the right person.
   
 
 
Thanking Speaker
Time:
After Speaker
 
 
Duty:
Thank speaker and present with small token of appreciation (if there is one). Sit with guest for the meeting at top table.
 
 
How:
Obtain thank you gift from Sergeant.
Thanks should be extremely brief and ask the club to show its appreciation.
 
 
 
Did you know …
Time:
During Meeting (most likely at end)
 
 
Duty:
3 minutes to talk to the club on a Rotary topic – or other general topic that you know of and is interesting and/or informative. Something that you know about or have experienced – something unique if possible. Please keep this talk positive.
 
 
How:
While “Did you know ……” comment is the choice of the individual member, it is important to remember: 
Article 16 Community, National, and International affairs
Section 1 — Proper Subjects. The merits of any public question involving the general welfare of the community, the nation, and the world are of concern to the members of this club and shall be proper subjects of fair and informed study and discussion at a club meeting for the enlightenment of its members in forming their individual opinions. 
However, this club shall not express an opinion on any pending controversial public measure.
Section 2 — No Endorsements. This club shall not endorse or recommend any candidate for public office and shall not discuss at any club meeting the merits or demerits of any such candidate.
Section 3 — Non-Political.
(a) Resolutions and Opinions. This club shall neither adopt nor circulate resolutions or opinions and shall not take action dealing with world affairs or international policies of a political nature.
(b) Appeals. This club shall not direct appeals to clubs, peoples, or governments, or circulate letters, speeches, or proposed plans for the solution of specific international problems of a political nature.
 
 
 
Kitchen Duty
Time:
Follows regular meeting.
 
 
Duty:
Wash, (put in sanitiser) and dry bar glassware or leave in sterilizer. 
 
 
How:
Tables should clear glassware into kitchen.
Clear tables of crockery and utensils.
If caterers do not clean/wash plates and utensils undertake as necessary
Hand wash glasses and load into sanitiser. This has a fast cycle of 2 minutes. 
Dry glasses store wineglasses.
Hang tea towels to dry. 
Return plate/ cutlery crates to store cupboard.
 
 
 
Materials:
 
Provided in kitchen
 
 
Locking up:
Leave with those on equipment
 
Speakers
Feb 18, 2021
Hamilton Gardens Visit
Feb 25, 2021
Cambridge High School Update
Feb 28, 2021
President's breakfast- Give Every Child a Future
Mar 04, 2021
Rotary Public Image
Mar 11, 2021
interplast
View entire list
Upcoming Events
Club Meeting - vocational visit
Feb 18, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Heart Foundation collection
Feb 19, 2021 – Feb 20, 2021
 
Matakana Weekend Away
Feb 19, 2021 – Mar 21, 2021
 
Club meeting - formal
Feb 25, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Club meeting - formal
Mar 04, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Waipa Fun Run marshalling
Mar 07, 2021
 
Club meeting - formal
Mar 11, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Club meeting - Committee meetings
Mar 18, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Matakana Weekend
Mar 19, 2021 – Mar 21, 2021
 
Club Meeting - vocational visit
Mar 25, 2021 5:30 PM
 
Charity Dinner
Apr 16, 2021
 
Club meeting - formal - new member event
May 06, 2021 5:30 PM
 
D9930 Conference
May 21, 2021 – May 23, 2021
 
View entire list
Executives & Directors
President
 
President Elect
 
Immediate Past President
 
Secretary
 
Treasurer
 
Rotary Foundation
 
Club Service
 
Community Service
 
Vocational Services
 
International Service
 
Youth
 
Public Image
 
Executive Secretary/Director
 
Rotary Links
Rotary International
RI President Home
Rotary Global Rewards
Joining Rotary
Rotary History
Rotary Foundation
For New Members
Photo Albums
Rotary 20-21 pics
changeover 20-21