Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talk sed B
follow this and our Wide Ranger podcasts now on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Hello you great New Zealanders, and welcome to Matt and
Tyler Afternoon's full Show podcast number sixty.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Yeah, massive show today. I've got a lot of stick
for not wanting to pay seven dollars fifty to go
to Corney's Bush.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
You're on the back foot around Corney's Bush for about
a hour. There also got some terrifying ghost stories coming up,
so stay tuned for the next couple of hours. I've
Mett and Tyler Afternoons and subscribe and set to download
and such and give a taste a Kiwi love you.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
Your new home for insightful and entertaining talk. It's Mattie
and Tyler Adams Afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety on
News Talk sedvase.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
Talk zedby Welcome in some Monday, just having a week
letter about some of the things Matt's done in his
past life.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
We were just reminiscing about the time I was involved
in shutting down the Auckland Harbor Bridge to explode a
car for a movie. It's exciting times. I bet you
couldn't do it now it's so shut down everything in
the process. To try and get anything done in Auckland
City is so difficult now even to do any kind
of filming as an absolute they make it as hard
as they possibly can. I'm not sure why they are
(01:31):
so anty things being done in our city. I think
it's a whole lot of made up safety stuff. But yeah,
back then, in two thousand and seven, you could, if
you hassled for long enough, get the Auckland Harbor Bridge
shut down for thirty seconds so you can explode a
car again. It was so good. They came to the party,
(01:51):
they organized everything, they thought. They thought it was an
exciting project to be involved in. They counseled it, yeah,
and didn't Auckland Transport, and it didn't really interrupt the people.
It's just that no one they didn't want people driving
across the bridge and seeing a giant explosion and freaking
out and crashing.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Which is fair enough. I get that side of it. Yeah,
they can do attitude. Bring it back, Yeah, bring it
back right on to the show too.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Things up.
Speaker 3 (02:11):
I think we love a good explosion in New Zealand
after three o'clock. Would you buy a property with a
bit of a sordid pass. So Philip Polkinghorn's remu wear
a mansion is up for sale. His sister is selling
that on their behalf. It's valued at six million dollars.
But as we all know, being a very public trial,
(02:32):
that they someone did pass away in that time.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Do you think, and you know there's been quite a
lot of myth in various places in the house. I
don't affects it. The pokon mentioned six millimeters are now
owned by his sister. So five point there's two. We've
got two prices here, five point four and six. Does
the price come down because there's something like that. I've
(02:56):
be interesting to hear from a real estate agent eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty whether you lower the price.
What are the rules about? I mean this one, everyone
knows everything about it. It's and you know you're buying
the polking Horn mansion if you by it, so you're
walking into a whole lot of history. But generally speaking,
would you would you care? Tyler, would you care if
(03:17):
there'd been Let's let's move it out of this situation here,
because this situation is kind of complex and very famous.
But what say you moved into a different house where
a crime had been committed, so crime had been committed
in the.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
House, definitely would freak me out because the whole idea
of buying a property, I mean, we looked for ages
for our first time that we've still got down in
christ Church, and if the real estate and came to
me and said, hey, just before you make an offer,
there was a there was a murder in this house,
I'd be like, I'm out, I'm sorry. Ut least you
cut the price in half. Even then I would just
(03:50):
feel a bit weird about it, And that might not
be logical, but I just I don't know. The idea
of your home is your castle, it's your safe haven.
And just knowing something dodgy or weird it happened.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Do you believe in ghosts?
Speaker 4 (04:07):
I'm not.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
What are you talking about?
Speaker 3 (04:09):
Then? What about you? Would you ask for a discount though.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
I definitely screw them for a discount, screw them right
down if I could.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
But you wouldn't have any issue with it. If there
was a murder in a house you're going to buy,
you'd be like.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Yeah, sweet, I mean I probably wouldn't move into the
bay house. I know, that's been burnt down on every street.
That's probably a bit too much for me.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
Yeah, but there's going to be a good discussion after
three o'clock, and I guarantee there'll be a lot of
you listening right now that did buy a house with
a bit of a crazy past. After two o'clock. Campgrounds
charging for visitors to go have a wee look scene Now.
This while was on the back of a woman and
she went to visit her family and friends at a
(04:45):
Northland campground. This was Totong Bay Holiday Park, so she
was dropping her child off. She jumped into the campground
and said she spent approximately thirty minutes in the particular campsite.
The owners or manager. It is co owned by former
All Black Eric Rush. But one of the managers tracked
(05:06):
her down and said, hey, we see that you are
a visitor here and you've been here for thirty minutes.
We're going to have to ask you to pay twenty dollars.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
Yeah, fair enough. I cannot see what the problem is here.
So me and Tyler, have we already had a heated
discussion about this off yet because he says anyone should
be able to rock up and hang around because You've
got to think about these campsite people, right, they don't know.
You know, everyone's going to come up and say that
they're dropping off their son and they're just doing that,
but then they're using the facilities. Tyler, you don't know
(05:34):
who's in the campground. People that run campgrounds, they have
to know the amount of people that are in there
for various reasons. What if there's some kind of disaster,
They need to know who's in there. So you need
to go through the proper process. You can't just be
rocking in there. That's insane. Get out. Well, I pay
twenty bucks.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
A point of view. I hear your argument, but I
have never been asked to pay money. And I've visited
various campgrounds where friends have been staying over New Years.
For example, we went staying there, we were down the road,
we went to come see them on New Year's Day,
and not one point did one of the owners come
up and say, Hey, you shouldn't be here. You didn't
stay here, you want to pay us twenty bucks? Did
If I think at that stage, I'd be like, oh,
(06:10):
well we'll just shoot off hey the beach.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Yeah, but that's their rules, you know. Eric Rush he
owns this campsite that we're talking about, and they just
have decided that it's that they need to do that
for the rules of their place. You just pay the
rules of the place, of the rules of the place.
I mean, I remember one night, Yes I shouldn't talk
about this, one night when I was the university stand
and I met a young lady and ended up staying
the night at Unicole, the hostel.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
All right, and she charged her.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
She didn't charge me. It wasn't one of those kind
of things. When I was leaving in the morning, one
of the people that round the place try to charge
me for the staying over all right, Yeah, I thought,
fair cop. Yeah, I have stayed to night.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
You know it was a good night. Money. Well spin
here you go. Right, that's a discussion. Half to two o'clock.
So I ran away and right now, did you have
a massive change of lifestyle later in life? Bit of
a seed change for the simple life. It's on the
back of a good story and the Herald and talked
about the story of Dallas and Donna Gurney. So Dallas
(07:08):
formerly had a bit to do with this particular radio station,
as well as many others. Donna Gurney had a high
powered role in media as well, but both of them
swapped the Auckland corporate life for owning and running the
Fananaki General store in the tiny Northland town. It was
on the back of a bit of a major health
scare that Dallas experience, so that caused him to resign
(07:31):
from the role he was in at that time, and
then decided both the couple him and his partner wife
rather Donna, to upstix Auckland and go for the simple
beach life in Farak. It sounds nice, but they have
said in the story they've never worked harder in their life.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
And I know them both, and particularly no Dallas quite well,
and he's a hard working man, certainly is yea. So
if he's never worked harder, that's pretty hard. So you're
kind of moving to the beach for a simpler life
or a small town for simpler life. Often these simpler
jobs and these simpler ideas of life are actually incredibly
hard work. I mean, I've talked to people that have
(08:09):
started vineyards because they wanted a simple life and they
had this beautiful dream and then it is just the
most hard work you could possibly imagine. Yeah, because you're going,
especially if you're going into the primary industries. Oh my goodness,
they work hard. So but have you done it?
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Have you?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Because I often think about it, as I say to you, Tyler,
I every time I go to a small town, I
go like, a we can move here. Yeah, I don't know,
start up a little business.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
This is beautiful life.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
That's just beautiful.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
It's upsticks and just have the simple life here.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
But I haven't done it, and I'm sure it wouldn't
be as simple as you think it would be.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
My parents did it right, and they well, Dad still
had a job as an electrician, ran a company and
he had a sizable workforce. At that point. Mum decided
to step back from teaching a little bit. But they
bought a thirteen acre Kiwi fruit orchard and hope just
outside of Nelson. And as you say, it was great
for us kids. I freaking loved it because I had
this thirteen acre property that I could just roam around in,
(09:06):
had the dog, had this sort of semi country life.
But it turned out for my parents. I only found
out later down the track it was a massive pain
in the art, you know, having to deal with the
contractors to pick the Kiwi fruit. They didn't know really
what they were doing. It was a massive learning.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
Yeah, this beautiful paradisical life, it just becomes back breaking,
hard punishing work and you might have been better just
in your horrific corporate office job.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
So dad was running the business during the weekdays and
then working the whole weekend and it was just absolutely stressful.
But keen to hear from you. Have you upsticks given
up the corporate life in the city to move to
what you considered to be the simple life as.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
It worked, or have you done it and it's blown
up in your face and you realize that A you're
really bored immediately and want to go to a bunch
of bars and restaurants and see a working your ass
off in a much harder job. Or are you thinking
about it and what are the opportunities out there for people?
Like when you go into work and you're drive into
work in the morning, what's your fantasy of moving to
(10:10):
a small, simpler life. Share it with us?
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Oh right, one hundred eighty ten eighty eighteen number call
This is going to be a great discussion. Nine two
ninety two is the text number. It is sixteen past
one bag very shortly here on news talks 'b.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends, and
everything in between.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
Matt and Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
XC ninety, attention to detail and a commitment to comfort.
Speaker 6 (10:36):
News Talks that'd.
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Be good afternoon nineteen pass one, and we're talking about
those who have upsticks from the corporate life or the
city life too. Undertake what many would consider this simple life.
It sounds beautiful, it sounds lovely, it sounds bliss. If
you've done it, love to hear from you, oh eight
one hundred and eighty ten eighty. And if you've tried
(10:58):
it and just got soblin board that you went back
to the city life, love to hear from you as well.
Nine two ninety two is the text number. Steve, How
are you this afternoon?
Speaker 4 (11:08):
Not too bad at all?
Speaker 3 (11:09):
Now you've done it? You had a beach place.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
Yes, I've still I still got the beach place, and
that's basically that's where I'm staying. I live there. Basically
I had, I still got my house in Auckland, and
I rent that out and I it's to build like
a granny flat type of situation. So when I had
to come back to organ to visit my parents and
had something to stay. But and then yeah, just livered
(11:36):
the dream down and want a matar, got my boat
there fishing and just yeah, so you three life right?
Speaker 2 (11:44):
So and so do you ever get bored down there
and less the excitement and the tension of the big city.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
No, I don't actually, because I don't know if you
know Wangamatar. It's very sort of active on the weekends
and it's big with the beach hot and there's lots
of things. That's very much a car orientatter place. I've
got some old cars, so I sort of slide onto
the grid of Plus they've got good restaurants, plenty of ours,
that's true.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
Yeah, I mean ye, yeah, right, but are you working?
Are you still working down there? If you retired now?
Speaker 4 (12:19):
I'm sure I don't really need to work and I
can live off the money I get off my bench
and from Auckland. It's pretty cheap to live down there, relatively,
because you've already got a house there.
Speaker 3 (12:32):
Yeah, And there's no part of you, Steve that wants
to move back to Auckland full time.
Speaker 4 (12:37):
Well, I do come back to Akland, which I have
to because I've got elderly parents. It's just the stress
levels got through the roof and you get on the
southern modewise, it's just people everywhere that half of can't
right and yeah, so it's just like, oh, just get back.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
Do you think it as a certain type of person
to do what you've done there, Steve, And granted that
you know you've retired, you don't need to work now,
but would you consider you're more of an introverted type personality?
Is that you can be pretty happy without too many
people around?
Speaker 4 (13:11):
Well, yes, I definitely could be, but there is plenty
of people around. There's lots of sort of community things happen,
you know, like there's coffee groups. You're going to have
coffee of all the people in the morning and different things.
It's quite good. That's sort of very sociable.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
It be realistic for someone that was to you know,
give up what they were doing in the big city
and move there and start a business and survive that way.
Is that is that realistic? And if so, what kind
of businesses can you do in a place like Banga Mata.
Speaker 4 (13:46):
Well, yeah, there is lots of things. Instantly, when you
say a business, the one that comes to mourn for
me is being an outboard mechanic or something like that
that don't seem to have those sort of services down there.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Well, you go think there's an opportunity for someone who's listening.
If you if you have, you're get decent with an
outboard motor here down there for the for the for
the paradise life.
Speaker 4 (14:08):
Well, it's just the lifestyle. You know, you're they're fishing
and catch from fish and just live in the dream.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
How many how many outdoor motives do you have to
fix a day though? To cover? So how long ago?
I guess I guess my question for you is how
long ago did you get by your house and fun
a matara? If you don't mind my asking.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
I bought it in about six years ago recently. Yeah,
I paid a ship ton of money for it, which
was ridiculous, But I look at it, it's quite a
steady investment. It's not really depreciating, it's only sort of
growing and venue. Yeah, that's a good misstigue for your
(14:48):
kids probably so they will get the benefit of it.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
So essentially, though, I guess what I'm trying to say
is that you're done. Okay, you had the money, so
you sort of had the money to invest to move,
so you kind of you if you want to do
the city to small town move for lifestyle, it's definitely
and it's helpful everywhere in the country, country or any
part of life. But it's good to have a little
(15:10):
bit of capital to back you up to make that
dream come true.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Certainly is yeah, but I think if you've got property
in awkward and it's a freehole, you'll be fine.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
Yeah, Steve, thank you very much. Good to chat to you.
Well therein, I think is why a vast majority of
people love the idea, but very few would do it.
Because if you're on a half decent salary in a
city and you want a little bit less stress in
your life and somethink a little bit more simple, chances
are you're going to have to take a pay cut, right,
(15:44):
And that's what people very rarely are willing to do.
That they've got a life that they somewhat enjoy to
the best of their ability in a big city. But
then to take a job like I mean, maybe an
outboard motor technician gets paid pretty well, but I would
assume you'd take a pay cup from being a corporate
worker and a big bank to work it on outwood motors,
(16:05):
and that I think is the hurdle for a lot
of people.
Speaker 7 (16:07):
Right.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
Well, yeah, you talk about your parents stating the Kiwi
fruit farm or buying one, and he good text here
on nine two nine two. Hey boys, what's the old saying?
How do you make a million dollars growing something? Start
with five million and buy a vineyard?
Speaker 3 (16:20):
Cheers John exactly, yeah, nicely said eight hundred eighty ten
eighty is and umber to call some great text coimings
through on nine two nine to two is well, it
is twenty four past one.
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Speaker 1 (17:41):
Putting the tough questions to the newspeakers, the mic asking
breakfast you wes.
Speaker 8 (17:45):
Tariffs are underway from Mexico, Canada and China, with more
to come. Former trade negotiated Charles finneedback with US.
Speaker 9 (17:50):
I think it is more extreme than what we saw
during the first Trump presidency.
Speaker 8 (17:55):
Where do we fit in irony being it's announced that
suddenly they're the second biggest trading partner.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
We've got beating out Australia now and we don't even
have a deal.
Speaker 9 (18:02):
Luckily, there's big mode talk of tariff's being composed on
New Zealand. There is still talk about globe or tariff,
but that would be very problematic in the US law.
I don't think it can be implemented by.
Speaker 6 (18:13):
Executive order at the breast for us.
Speaker 9 (18:15):
And the short term is that there's going to be
a whole lot of trade cloaths disrupted, but there'll be
some opportunities there as well.
Speaker 8 (18:21):
Back tomorrow at six am the Mike Hosking Breakfast with
Mayley's Real Estate News Talk ZB.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Good afternoon, twenty eight past one, and we're talking about
giving up the corporate life for a simple life at
the beach or the country. Great story in the Herold
about one couple who did that. Dallas and Donna Gurney,
both had high powered jobs within the media industry. After
a bit of a health scare from Dallas, both of
the couple decided to pack it all in by the
(18:48):
general store and far Naki and live the good life.
But they've never had to work as hard as they
do right now.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Yeah, Well, it sounds like it's kind of working out
for them, or it is working out for them. But
would it work out for you? Or has it worked
out for you?
Speaker 3 (19:01):
Crystal? How are you this afternoon?
Speaker 10 (19:03):
I'm fine, Thank you and I'm good to talk to
you guys. Haven't spoken before.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
Nice to do to you.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
Thanks for calling. Yeah, so you left on the world,
you left the corporate road.
Speaker 10 (19:14):
Yes, yes, I lived at London. I'm Kiwi born Raisingbourne
and I left the UK in ninety seven and I
spent twenty two years there. And I started off I
lived in an apprenticeship as a fisher and turner. However
I worked my way up the corporate latter until I
became a very senior member of the facilities management company.
And I was in charge of one hundred and twenty staff. Wow,
(19:35):
whereas I can say one hundred and twenty problems and
I got and basically I had a goal. It's important
to have a goal. I wanted a mortgage free house
for five point fifty and I achieved it by the
time I was forty eight. But I couldn't achieve that
in London, obviously, I couldn't achieve that in Artland. But
I had enough money to buy two houses of one
anois and I got burnt out. I worked sixty seven
(19:58):
hours a week over the twenty odd years, on average,
but I earned. But I worked my way up from
driving a van and fixing lightbulbs and fixing punk some
stuff and buildings to you know. I went back to university,
did night school and studied engineering. I've got a degree
degree as well as an apprenticeship. And then I came
(20:19):
Then I said, right, that's it. One night I was
on the train there eight sixteen hundred trained to you know, chess,
and there's been canceled with the snow blizzard and undre
and I start bugged this.
Speaker 7 (20:28):
I've had enough.
Speaker 10 (20:29):
I've had enough, you know in the constant emails and
phone call. Yeah, And I moved back to New Zealand
and I said, I'm not going to swap London for
Auckland and no way, even though I'm from there. And
it came to one million, and we don't really have
the traffic jam down here, don't have sort of what
you call peak hour traffic. So and that's where I
am at the moment.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
As I thought.
Speaker 10 (20:48):
I've watched two houses. One of the other houses, I've
since sold it and I'm living off the proceeds of
that because I paid one hundred and ninety five for
it and sold it for four fifty. And I also
teach professional I'm a professional DJ, so I also teach
how the mixed music fountains and stuff like that. My
studio in the back, and I love I teach young
(21:09):
students how to mixed house music and stuff as premiant
and I and the stresses can all go on.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
But do you miss miss? Do you miss any of
the vibrancy and the cultural intensity that you get in
a massive international city like London.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
Yes, yes I do.
Speaker 11 (21:27):
I do.
Speaker 10 (21:27):
I missed a professionalism, I missed the respect. It was
very all respected over there.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (21:35):
I just found that New Zealand a little bit backwards
in some ways in terms of what I used to do,
facilities management, you know. But at the end of the day,
I do miss And I missed the set the Friday
nights out when the boss got the credit card out. Yeah, yeah,
I remember someone gave you got the credit card and
someone who got eighty one hundred and twenty eight misters
or something.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
So and with your with your so, did you say
that you've got your your little your DJ school. I
shouldn't say little. I don't know what big it as
in your shed?
Speaker 5 (22:04):
Is it?
Speaker 4 (22:06):
Yes?
Speaker 10 (22:06):
I so, as I learned to mix music on technics,
turntables the old fashioned way, and then now that everything's
got digital.
Speaker 12 (22:13):
But however I teach it.
Speaker 10 (22:14):
I teach one to one I have a little ad
and I teach students one to one and I charge
about thirty dollars an hour and it takes about ten
ten lessons to get the basics right and then the
students can go on from there and I'm always available
on the phone if they need extra support. I mean
a lot of people think the James around pushing buttons
is a lot more involved than that, I can tell you.
And one of the jobs used to have in London,
but I used to work to Simon Cow used to.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Be my boss. Oh yeah, so yeah, yeah, so.
Speaker 10 (22:41):
Yeah, yes, I've been out with West Life and Boy
George and all those kind of people. I've met all
them with Simon. Simon was a good person to work
for actually, but he I left him mark about four
years because there was no percussion with Simon over he
is a company called Psycho Record.
Speaker 4 (22:53):
So I worked on I.
Speaker 10 (22:55):
Looked after his houses and his cars and as a
facilities manager. I've always worked in facilities, but hard FM,
you know, pumped boilers, heating systems, all that kind of stuff, you.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
Know, And does that translate that kind of technical way
of thinking translation over to DJing and beat matching on that.
Speaker 10 (23:11):
Yes, absolutely, absolutely, because I've always been very hands on
fixing things, so I keep myself busy, like I like
to help people. It's one of the things I really enjoy.
Like I got a car scanner here, come over and
bring a car over and I'll scan it, see what
the fault is and I have and I'll fix it
where because I'm done engines and all sorts of stuff
and heating systems on you know, your infinity unit, I
(23:32):
can fix those. And a lot of plumbers and zelemone
even bother to try and fix them. Those tell you
need a new one, but I can actually fix them.
So you know, I like to try and expand my skills,
and I keep myself pretty busy, pretty busy. I have
a daughter as well, so if she keeps me on
my toes as well, So yeah, no, I don't. The
only thing I regret, the main thing I missed my
(23:54):
is my social circle. It was very I find it
very difficult to integrate into one and earlier it's a
very clicking small society. It's very hard to get into
the click, if you know what I mean. And kivs
don't really want to let you in because they've gone
to school with the same clip group for people want
to know, you know, and we're going to use a
bit of a redncktown. I would say that, but I do.
It's been good to me because I've managed to buy
(24:15):
two houses for cash and I achieved what I wanted
to do. I don't regret it, not at all, not
at all.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
Now on you, and so I've got a question you
for your Crystal with your your beat matching, how do
you feel about people just using automated beat matching? Because obviously,
if you started with the two technic turntables, you did
it the old school way with pitch shifting and such.
So how do you feel about the fact that you
can just stand there and just make it automatically do that?
These days?
Speaker 10 (24:40):
Well, it's a sign of the time, isn't it. Really?
I suppose it's technology, you know, how we need to
do things years ago, There's lots of trade and skills
have been lost. You know, I don't considering turner as
an apprenticeship anymore because everything's computerized. However, to answer your question,
there's a simple answer is this. They can push the
think button on the units and the computer will beat
match them to a point However, the beats can still drift.
(25:03):
And if you want to elevate yourself as a not
just a good day DJ, but superior DJ, you know,
put yourself together, you need to learn to beat match.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
Yeah, well good answer.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
So Crystal, how can people get hold of you? If
they if they want to go to your DJ store?
Speaker 10 (25:19):
Just look look me up on Facebook, Crystal Edwards.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
It is a picture of me.
Speaker 10 (25:24):
Yeah, see a picture of me mixing the records.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Brilliant. All right, thank you so much for your call, Chrystal.
I'm glad everything's worked out for you. What a life.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
She's fantastic and she knew what she was talking about. Well,
I assume it's sound a look A good answer. I've
never been a djail in my life, but I go it.
Speaker 2 (25:37):
What do you think I was testing you?
Speaker 13 (25:38):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (25:39):
Eight eight? I'd love to hear from you. I mean,
that was fascinating that a big, clearly big corporate lifestyle
in London to come back to Wanging and we buy
a couple of houses and become a DJ teacher.
Speaker 4 (25:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
I forgot to ask her about Simon Cal's v NEIX
shirts and the shaving of his chest, but that's an
issue for another day. Also menoplastic surgery.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
His head done, we'll bring it back another day. It's two.
Speaker 14 (26:02):
You talk, said the headlines with Blue Bubble taxis. It's
no trouble with a blue bubble. The Prime Minister says
he's heading to a place special to him for White
Tangy Day, attending commemorations at Gaikahu's All Nukumadai on Bank's Peninsula,
near where he grew up. Other government ministers will attend
events at the White Tangi Grounds in Northland. A website's
(26:24):
been launched to help victims of abuse and care access
personal records, offering information about different state and faith based
institutions and how to contact them. Lowerhart's Windway Marta Hill
is closed after a crash involving a car and a
motorbike that's left a person seriously injured. Ashburton Intermediate says
(26:44):
it will rectify its uniform code after people have raised
cultural issues over children needing a pass to wear incorrect
non uniform items. Principal Brent Gray says the school's never
denied wearing thonga. The second annual far Out four x
four off road capable Convoy is traveling from Auckland to Queenstown,
(27:04):
giving potential local and offshore investors and insight into New Zealand.
Why the Prime Minister's Economic Growth Ministry may as well
be ministry of silly walks. Read the full column that
ends in here will premium back to matt Eth and
Tymer Adams.
Speaker 3 (27:19):
Thank you very much, ray Lean, and we're talking about
those who have made the lips leap rather to the
simple life. You may have held high powered corporate jobs
or been operating in the city with some good salaries
and decided it's all a bit stressful. I'd prefer to
move to a beach and buy a general store and
just live the good life.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
Yeah thing for me that I like the idea of it,
But I feel like if I moved to a really
small town, I'd immediately get bored. I want to come home. Yeah,
but you know I could be wrong. I mean, I
grew up on a farm not far from Dunedin and
all I ever wanted growing up was to be able
to walk to a dairy. That was the most important
thing in my life. That I could just go to
a dairy and get our ice cream and get a
(27:59):
fizzy drink.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
The small things when you're a kid, though, imagine to
walk to the local dairy at the farm. That would
have taken you a couple of days.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
And when I got an apartment in Auckland above a dairy,
I have made it. I can go to that dry
anytime I want. Yeah, hey, guys, I'm twenty seven. Moved
out of Auckland three years ago to the Central Hawks
Bay with two with my wife and two kids. Bought
our first house, which we would never have been able
to do in Auckland. Absolutely loving the simpler life out
(28:26):
of the big city, making the most money I have
ever made in my current job. And couldn't change a thing.
There you go, guys, could wouldn't change things? Probably what
I mean so them, couldn't change a thing, couldn't change
a thing. It sounds like you're trapped.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
Good text, this one says, guys. I grew up on
a life sentence block way back before they were a thing.
My mother used to put a list of jobs on
the fridge door every Saturday morning, which had to be
done before I could head off into town with my mates.
Often my mates would come out and help me with
the jobs, as Mum would put on a great home
baked the afternoon tea when when But I wouldn't buy
(28:59):
a lifestyle block myself too much Edmond and maintenance.
Speaker 15 (29:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (29:03):
See, too many people I've seen have dreamed their whole
life about a lifestyle block and then it becomes a
death style bock. And then they become completely beholden to
this plot of land that they've got, and then they're
still having to work another job to pay for the land,
so it's not enough land to pay for their life.
So they basically become just backbreaking, hard work every weekend
(29:23):
and no holidays.
Speaker 3 (29:24):
Yeah, good to the kids, not so much for the owners.
Speaker 2 (29:27):
I mean that's what I've witnessed a lot. And then
you go out there and they go, it's amazing out here,
and it's like, yeah, it looks like hard with mate. Yeah,
all right, a lot of texts coming through on this
on nine two ninety two, but we go to the phones.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
Oh, we'll take a quick break and then come back
with Neil. He's got a great story this year. Very shortly,
it is eighteen to two. You listen to Matt and
Tyler Good Afternoon.
Speaker 6 (29:49):
Record It your new home of afternoon Talk.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
Matt and Taylor Afternoon with the Volvo XC ninety turn
every journey into something special.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
Call eight news Talk said be two say that again.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
A lot of texts coming through on there. So many
dreamers think they can run a cafe and live the
good life, but most go broke and marriage's end if
the dream goes bad. Yeah, cafe, that's a dream for
a lot of people. But that is an incredible that's
a risky business because it can go wrong so quickly.
The margins are so tight and also a hal of
(30:27):
a lot of work. So you know the idea of
moving to a small town and opening a cafe. I've
watched a few documentaries on this.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
I haven't seen too many happy cafe owners right now.
It's pretty tough out there. And not to say, hey,
I take my head off to your well done, but
they are always looking.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
I mean there's definitely ones that succeed, and you know,
they come up a great idea for cafe, hit the
right end of the market, become very popular and then
sell it and move on. And then the Neuanders don't
understand the cafe and the culture that was around it,
and it gets rubbish and everyone complains about it. But
you know, there's some people that do pull it off. Yeah,
but yeah, the idea that that's going to be a
simpler life, I think cafe is a very hard way
(31:07):
to do it. Anyway, one hundred and eighty and eighty.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
If you've managed to apsticks from the city or the
corporate life and gone into the simple life, and it's
work for you, love to hear from you. Nine two
nine to us the ticks number. Neil, how are you
this afternoon?
Speaker 7 (31:20):
I've all right, sir. Well, I've got a week story
which on your subject make me of interest. Well, I
remember the war and after the war we were very
very poor, and large family very poor, and I had
(31:44):
an ambition in my life and it was a driving force,
and that was to make money and not be poor.
And I worked on all sorts of things. I ended
up with three retail shops, a warehouse and an import export.
Is the same point twenty seven people, I think. And
(32:05):
I became quite wealthy.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Where was this We're new yean, no holl in Yorkshire, Okay, yeah.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (32:14):
And then.
Speaker 7 (32:17):
As I got quite wealthy, I was spending more and
more time with people I didn't like very much, like
accountants and those sorts of folks, you know. And anyway,
I made a decision. I took early retirement. I sold
all my businesses and you know, got all my money together.
(32:40):
And there was a very old boat built in eighteen
ninety four in Frederick's Harben in Denmark, and I went
across there and bought it and brought it back to
holland spent a year doing each other sort of thing.
Then I set off and sailed around the world for
seven years. And of course I've got loads of stories.
(33:04):
I don't want to bore you with everything.
Speaker 11 (33:06):
But.
Speaker 7 (33:09):
Just a small side. When I sold all up and
bought this boat. A friend of mine who was very
wealthy under glass business, and he thought I'd gone crackers.
But when I explained, he says, Tea on Mel, I've
always wanted to be a postman. So I found out
(33:31):
that what I strove for and achieved, that's being financially
well off with a big Victorian house and a couple
of cars and all this business, it wasn't satisfying. It
would great disappointment to me. It didn't fulfill they. So
I did that and sold everything up and bought this
(33:54):
very old boat built in eighteen ninety four. There was
only three left in the world.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
For seven years. Did you end up in New Zealand
at the end of it, Yes, sir and yeah. And
if you, did you retire or did you start businesses here?
Speaker 6 (34:08):
No?
Speaker 7 (34:09):
No, no, I was well retired edge And when I
called in at Caribous, the Republic of Caribous Islands, I
met my wife, Wow, and I spoke to for about
fifteen minutes, and I wanted to marry. It took me
a long time to persuade her, but it was the
(34:30):
best thing I ever did. In Middle Afe. All the
money's gone. I live in it's mine. It's old tad
for Amotis house in Way Louis or Marta, and I'm
very very happy.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Oh we can tell that, Neil. Generally though, before you
meet your your wife, Neil, and you see you had
that kind of empty feeling with all these cars and
this beautiful Victorian home, and yet you throw it all
under by this beautiful boat. Did when you bought the boat,
did that fix what you were feeling? Or did it
take for you to find your wife before that? Was
that was fixed and you found that happiness?
Speaker 7 (35:04):
Well, I had no thoughts of finding your way was
very independent driven, driven to make money and did you
start the AMC now? And eventually when I got to
Caurobus after maybe four years on the boat, that that's
when we ate became fulfilled. She's my best friend as
(35:26):
the world.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
That's lovely, Neil.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
Great story. Thank you for sharing that, Neil.
Speaker 3 (35:29):
Great story, great accent. I enjoyed it.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
Exture eccllent.
Speaker 3 (35:32):
Yeah, yeah, beautiful.
Speaker 2 (35:33):
Seven years on a boat, met his wife on a
small Pacific island and then ended up in New Zealand.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
Why knew your mother? Lovely spoil you go? Oh, eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number called? Nineteen
ninety two is the ticks number. Got some great ticks
coming through to it, so we'll get to a few
of those very shortly.
Speaker 16 (35:51):
It is nine to two, Mattie Tyler Adams taking your
calls on eight hundred and eighty ten eighty Madden Tyler
Afternoon with the Volvo XC ninety tick every box.
Speaker 6 (36:03):
A seamless experience awaits news talks.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
In Bell News Talks here. But it is six to two.
A couple of techs to wrap this one up. Guys,
lifestyle blocks are easy. People make them hard because they
get a bunch of different animals. Just run beef one
head per acre, so you don't run out of feet
easy piecy.
Speaker 2 (36:25):
Yeah, that's true. I mean people have these dreams and
then then and then they end up, yeah, drenching a
whole lot of sheep in the weekend.
Speaker 4 (36:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
That the whole lifestyle, the whole lifestyle block can really
blow up in your face. I mean, why can't you
just have a lifestyle block and just have some chickens
on it.
Speaker 3 (36:41):
Yeah, just just when you get one of each that
does sound like a whole bunch of admon At that point,
you've got two cows two perre.
Speaker 2 (36:47):
Running a whole Noah's Ark out there in your lifestyle
like it becomes a death style.
Speaker 4 (36:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
This whole thing just makes me think that this whole
conversation remind it makes me think of the Businessman and
the Fisherman story. Do you know that story?
Speaker 3 (36:58):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
Have I got time to tell it?
Speaker 4 (37:00):
Yep?
Speaker 9 (37:01):
You do?
Speaker 3 (37:01):
Doing how long can you tell it? In two and
a half minutes?
Speaker 2 (37:03):
I could definitely tell it in two and a half minutes.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
That's too.
Speaker 2 (37:06):
It's a basic thing is there's a guy invocations businessman
on vacation, and he runs into a fisherman and he
compliments the fisherman on his fish, and then he asked
the fisherman about how he does his day. And then
the businessman goes, oh, well, you're doing it all wrong.
You could you need to put more money in here,
more hours here, get more working people working on it.
You can bring more fish, and you get more people
involved in the business, and then you can maximize your profits.
(37:30):
And then and then the fisherman says, oh, how long
would I do that? For about twenty years, just grow
your business. And then by the end the fisherman said
what are you doing now? In the ed to the
businessman and he said, well, I've just come down here
in a fishing trip. And he said, so you've been
a successful businessman and as a result, you're on a
fishing trip. And he goes, well, and the fisherman goes, well,
I'm already doing that, so why would I do anything else.
I'm already doing your I'm already living your dream. That's
(37:51):
probably the most terrible telling of that story ever, But
the idea, it's nice. The idea of it is that
the if you're going to work your entire whole life,
so you can live a simple life. You could just
cut out the middle light, middleman and start living the
simple life straight away.
Speaker 3 (38:04):
Yeah. Good discussion. I'm just going to say to wrap
this one up because Down and Donna talk about it
in the story that they've traded one particular stress for
another type of stress, and surely that's what it comes
down to, right, is whether you wanted the stress of
the corporate life like they had. Clearly they didn't want
that anymore, and what they had to do versus the
stress of running a general store still stressful, just different types.
Speaker 2 (38:25):
Of stress, right, Yeah, well, I mean I think the
different type of stress that they were facing reading the
story as having to restructure and lay a lot of people.
Speaker 3 (38:34):
Off, Yeah, that would suck.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Yeah that you know, if a lot of your day
is firing people as it was becoming for or that
was what they were looking down the barrel life. Yeah,
I think making sure you've got enough cans of baked
beans in your general store may be stressful, but maybe
not on the same level.
Speaker 3 (38:49):
Yeah, right, good discussion. After two o'clock, let's have a
chat about campgrounds charging visitor fees. It all kicked off
at totong Abay Holiday Park in Northland will take you
more very shortly. But if you've got some thoughts about
where the campground should charge visitors to have a wee
look see love to hear from you one hundred and
eighty ten eighty. The TEX number is nine two ninety
(39:12):
two News Sport and whether or on it's way great
to have your company is always. Hope you having a
good afternoon. We can out two close so.
Speaker 4 (39:22):
I get.
Speaker 17 (39:24):
Week the house.
Speaker 2 (39:27):
We can love of things that we know about. We
can go forever till you lasten it out.
Speaker 6 (39:38):
Talking with you all afternoon.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
It's mad Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons with the Volvo
XC ninety news Talk ZIB.
Speaker 3 (39:47):
News Talks. They'd be very good afternoon. Hope you're doing
well on this Monday.
Speaker 2 (39:52):
I centainly am. I'm taking a little bit of heat
because I said, if you get a lifestyle block, what
you want to do is just get chickens and not
get too involved in complicated lifestyles. Livestock. Livestock, sorry, like sheep.
There's actually quite a lot of work to be done
with the sheep. And someone was saying, just get yourself,
just get yourself. Beef, Just go beef. Nothing else. But
I see chickens, and seriously, chickens do not do not
(40:12):
keep the grass down? What are you talking about on
a lifestyle block. Yeah, I wasn't saying chickens skip the
grass down, But I reckon the only reason that I
would ever retire to a lifestyle block would be to
get a right on lawnmower and spend my day's forest
gumping the grass.
Speaker 3 (40:27):
Oh, yes, I would look forward to that.
Speaker 2 (40:30):
I wouldn't want my livestock greedily taking the best part
of the lifestyle block, which was mowing the lawns.
Speaker 3 (40:35):
Yeah. How fast do they go these days? I mean
we had a ride on Lawmarer on the orchard. We
used to get the grass board behind it, but it
only to be honest, it only went about ten k
an hour. I think I could jog faster than top speed.
Speaker 2 (40:48):
I used to have to mow on my parents' farm,
out the front and out the back. It was about
I reckon, it was about an acre entirety of just
general you know, around the house. Nice mowing. Yeah, my
dad never ever bought a right on lawnmow, and he
would criticize my lawn mowing. So I do I just
a whole day. We'll take so long to do it. Well, actually,
(41:09):
you know it take me hours to get around to
doing it. And the end at the dinner tape, you're
going so the verges Nicola, Diami after mowing all that.
Speaker 3 (41:19):
That's stuff, man.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
Yeah, and don't be started on moving the cabbage tree leaves.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
But if you haven't experienced a ride on lawmower, you're
missing out. That is one of life's joys. As you said,
Forrest Cup, he knew, he knew, but it's just a
beautiful thing.
Speaker 2 (41:32):
Yeah, that's what. That's how I envisaged my retirement, just
waiting for two weeks to mow the lawns skiinting out
there on the right on lawnmut.
Speaker 3 (41:41):
Love it right. Moving on to this discussion, and this
will be a doozy. Already had quite a few texts
with their opinion on what happened in this scenario. So
to give you a bit of a background, and what happened.
A family's annual sojourned to their favorite north word, Yeah
it's a beautiful word, to their favorite Northland campground, sow Ward.
(42:01):
When a relative was asked to pay a twenty dollar
fee for a brief visit. So the relative, who didn't
want to be named a rhyme at todong Obay Holiday
Park one evening rather to drop her child off for
an overnight state. The woman said she only intended to
remain on the site for less than an hour her
child settled in. She believed been asking to pay the
(42:22):
fee within thirty minutes of being there was unreasonable in
the circumstance. So Todonga Bay Holiday Park is co owned
by former All Black Eric rush Great All Black and
his wife Rana, but not managed by them. Rana told
The New Zealand Herald the park's visit of v policy
was stated on booking confirmation letters and park entrants and
(42:42):
office kate signs, and she said the park has in
the past been used and abused, which I think is
a fair argument. If there's been a whole truckload of
people that have just taken the absolute mick at toroong
Obay Holiday Park rocked on in saying hey I'm just
having a look or I'm just visiting. Then they used
(43:03):
the showers they used that. Well, I think there is
a distinction by what I'm about to say after that.
So if you use an abuse a place like toatong
Abay Holiday Park, and I imagine some of those people
were using the shower, spending the whole day, they're using
the facilities, then yeah, you should absolutely pay. But if
you're just going for a wee look see or dropping
(43:24):
somebody off, there's got to be an element there that
you can you know, there's context is important there. She
was dropping her kit off and if what she says
is true, she was there for less than thirty minutes,
then just give a leeway.
Speaker 2 (43:39):
Yeah, but that's the rules of the park, and it's
advertised around the park. So that's tough tough biscuits. I mean,
you may not, she may think the rule's unfair, but
the rules the rule. They own the park, they can
make their own rules. It's private property. Just because it's
a holiday park and it's kind of a loosey goosey
attitude and you're not actually staying in rooms. You're building
your own house with your tenth there or whatever. There's
(44:00):
still got to be there's still businesses have got to
make money, so they still have to they still have
to they have to have things in place such that
they're not getting ripped off all the time. So if
every time you go up to someone and say, hey,
you s twenty dollars for being the part that go
I'm just here for half an hour, then your rife
for people to go just book for three people to
stay the night, and then you've just got a bunch
of guests sneaking in.
Speaker 3 (44:20):
All right. Another example for you. Last Eastil we stayed
at Kai Terry Terry Beautiful Beach near Nelson, right, but
we were staying in the campground. We were staying in
a little airbnb not too far away from the king ground.
We would quite often walk through the campground because it
was shorter to get to the beach rather than go
around the road. Should I have paid a couple of
bucks to walk through? Sometimes I use the toilet.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
Well, mate, Like if you needed to get from you know,
I've got a restaurant on one side of my house
and you want to and it's probably easier for people
to go straight through my house. Yeah, but it's my house.
Speaker 3 (44:53):
You charge them. I think they'll probably be fair enough.
Speaker 2 (44:55):
Actually, I mean, no one's going to pay that. But
you see my point, right, it's you know, you own
the places, your freaking rules, as the woman says, he
had no intention of using the campground facilities and had
set out her relative's campavan the whole time while she
was there. She said, within because if you'd gone, and
if you'd gone into the campavan, I guess that means
(45:16):
you're doing some kind of stay over, she said. Within
half an hour, one of the park's managements phoned her
relative and assisted on they pay twenty dollars or leave.
She said, she's a solo mum and twenty dollars was
a lot of money, so she left. Well, yeah, I mean,
you know, there's always things that you can't afford if
you don't have the money. That's the way that works.
Speaker 4 (45:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:32):
Yeah, that's not a strong argument, that one.
Speaker 2 (45:34):
I can assure you. There are many people who take
full advantage of all although they are only visiting. Said
that the person running the plank I can see their
point of view.
Speaker 12 (45:42):
Right.
Speaker 3 (45:43):
Oh wait, one hundred eighty ten eighty. How do you
feel about this? Do you think it's a bit miserly
of the campground to charge a visitor this mum dropping
a kit off twenty bucks? Or do you think fair enough?
It's not a charity it's a business and if they're
coming and using the facilities, or even just having a
wee luki loop, they should be charged a bit of money.
Speaker 2 (46:02):
She probably came in and made of disgustingness in the
toilets and then gapped.
Speaker 3 (46:05):
It seems like the type, doesn't she. Oh wait, one
hundred eight eighty is a number of cool. Nine two
ninety two is the text number. It is thirteen past two.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
Wow your new home of afternoon talk Matt and Taylor
afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety turn every journey into
something special.
Speaker 6 (46:24):
Call oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty news Talk.
Speaker 3 (46:27):
Sai'd be good afternoon. It's all kicked off up in
Northland Totongabay Holiday Park. A woman who's dropping her kit
off at the park outrage that they dare charge her
twenty dollars for dropping her kid off at the park.
You say, Matt, that it's a business. They are running
the park, they've got to maintain the facilities.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
It's fair enough, as does this textra in ninet two
nine two Hi guys, campgrounds are a business. The Tasma
one at Papamoa is fantastic with great pool and facilities.
Maybe if there was a deposit, and if you did
leave with in the hour, then you get your deposit back.
It'd be a nightmare if all the people had extra
friends and family hanging out at the Great Pool, for example.
Otherwise it diminishes the experience of paying guests. That says,
(47:08):
that's true. See you know someone has their little their
tent there, that's great, it's a good time. And then
they invite the whole family up for the day to
use the pool and the facilities, and then the whole
place is rammed and it's annoying. So if you're going
to use a place, you got to pay, right.
Speaker 3 (47:25):
What emened a good behavior in New Zealand. Look, I
get it if it's being used and abused, but I've
never been asked to pay a visit of fee in
any campground in the South Island. The South Island people
just better than those up in Northland.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
Yeah, guys knock on the office door, say desperate for
a leak, here's five bucks. If they say no, say fine,
I'll pee outside your front gate for free. It's from Chris.
That's sort of the trick or treat kind of approach
to it.
Speaker 3 (47:49):
Yeah, but a blackmail there almost.
Speaker 2 (47:51):
I wonder what people will think of this text on
nine to two nine two. Oh, here we go. So
that the woman who didn't want to pay the twenty
dollars for the half hour drop off of his son
at this camp site in Northland, she said, as a
solo mum, twenty dollars was a lot of money, so
she left. This person says, and I read out. I
(48:14):
read this out just second with a gone. It's so
controversial if someone someone deleted it. So I don't read
this one out.
Speaker 3 (48:19):
No, surely not. Oh uh, what how does it start?
Speaker 2 (48:23):
It starts off with it's her fault.
Speaker 3 (48:28):
We've got to find this is like you've teased everybody, now,
don't Yeah, there's just a whole bunch of ticks that
have come through.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
On the fly.
Speaker 2 (48:35):
Come on, I gotta find this one because it was it.
Speaker 3 (48:37):
Was all right, you find that one. I've got another
one for you.
Speaker 7 (48:41):
Here.
Speaker 3 (48:41):
Get a guys. I run a holiday park on the
West coast and have vanloads of people drive and thinking
it's all right to use our toilet. We had to
put a co padlock on it to stop it happening,
and they still come and ask for the code.
Speaker 4 (48:55):
To get in.
Speaker 3 (48:56):
They have paid nothing, so it's no code for them.
Speaker 2 (49:00):
M Well, I get yep, yeap out at this text
that was so controversial that it's somehow been deleted. Have
you are you censoring me?
Speaker 3 (49:09):
No, I haven't taken any text away. I'll tell you
what we're gonna We're gonna get to the bottom of
this missing controversial text. It was Matters so worked up.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
It was a shocking take that I wanted to share it,
and it's disappeared. Right, I'm calling foul play.
Speaker 3 (49:22):
This is a good tease. I wite hundred eighty ten
eighty the censorship of foot where we're going to find
that there's nineteen bars too back in the mole. You
listening to that? Entyler?
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Good afternoon, Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons call oh
eight hundred eighty ten eighty on us Talks EDB.
Speaker 3 (49:45):
News Talks EDB. Right, I think you've got to the
bottom of the missing text.
Speaker 2 (49:50):
Yeah, yeah, that's right. I have got to the bottom
of this missing text. Tyler was trying to hide it
from me, but I've managed to find it out because look,
I'm open to all opinions, Okay, even ones like this here,
that are going to be shocking, and then people.
Speaker 3 (50:01):
You had to get the texts in and then the
text said Tyler, why did you delete that? And I thought, look,
I've just upset too many people, so I had to
get it away before Matt he saw it.
Speaker 2 (50:09):
Censorship and mainstream media is terrible, especially when it's from
my co host. It's her fault for not trying harder
in her marriage. Wow, then she wouldn't be single and
she could afford the twenty bucks. I think these camps
have had trouble with freedom campers camping outside then sneaking
in for a pool and a shower. So there's two
points there. I think the second point people would probably
feel a little bit more symphony through her.
Speaker 3 (50:30):
Yeah, I think it's.
Speaker 2 (50:31):
Her fault for not trying harder in her marriage. That's
that's that's that's a tough take. That's a harsh take.
Speaker 3 (50:36):
It's a hell of a grenade to throw out there.
Speaker 2 (50:39):
Yeah, we're angle, but where's the dad on this?
Speaker 4 (50:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (50:43):
Maybe he should be paying half of the ten dollars
for the for the drop off of the kid.
Speaker 3 (50:47):
One hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call.
We might try and get a hold of Eric Rush
actually a great all black and boy all accounts a
pretty good feller as well, so we might try and
get a hold of him to see if we can
have a chat about the twenty dollar fee.
Speaker 2 (51:00):
The camper could have met her friend outside the camping ground.
Problem solved. I mean, that's that's a good point, you know,
you know she's yeah, I'm.
Speaker 3 (51:08):
Gonna pap on that in a minute. But let's go
to Tessa.
Speaker 12 (51:10):
Hey, you Tess, Hi, Hi, guys, listen, I'm a great
believer that you should pay. The reason being is if
you start making rules for one, then you can have
to start making other rules as you go along. Do
you get around talking about I mean, okay, this woman
couldn't afford the twenty right, but then if you say, okay,
well let that go, then it'll be another rule for
somebody else. But this is a business and people are
(51:31):
quite aware of that. And I've actually been on a
campground when I've actually seen people going through that don't
even belong to the campground, and I've actually used even showers.
Speaker 3 (51:41):
I hear what you're saying, Ties, I mean, I suppose
at the end of the day, it just makes me
a bit said that what happened to us is a
country where now we can't trust people just to drop
a kit off or go in just for what we
look to say, Hey, this might be a lovely camp
like niet Summer because of those other people who have
used and abused and taken the mick.
Speaker 12 (51:59):
Yeah, I agree with what you're saying, but the thing
is that sort of society's done with a lot of
things as well. I mean, it's like even paying now
to go and see Tipapa, and now you've got to
be honest to say it's a visitor. See, people are
just not honest anymore. And also the other problem could
be if they were going to pick up a child,
why couldn't that person actually go to the office or
go to the front and pick up a child. It
(52:20):
could have been something like that. It's just ways of
doing it. But it's just a business. It's quite a weird.
But things have changed a lot, as you well know,
things are not it's what you pay for what you
get these days. It's nothing, nothing's free.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (52:31):
And also and also Tessa, it's it's harder to make
money now in a in a business. So back in
the day, maybe in some dream time you could have
had there and family members could come and visit for
the day and it was all fine. Then they'd go
away and it was all casual and a certain amount
of people paid and some people just going through it.
You should know that, but but now it doesn't exist.
(52:51):
So what happens is these people are saying they've got
to pay for the upcare of all the facilities, they've
got to run the place. They've also got to account
for how many people are in the ground, because there'll
be there'll be there'll be some Sorry you go, Tisa.
Speaker 12 (53:03):
No, that could be another health and safety issue as well.
I don't forget. Yeah, how do you know how many
if you were going to stop the night? She was
quite honest and she said she was dropping the chart.
But then that's her word. It could have been she
might have stopped the night. I'm not saying she would,
but you just.
Speaker 4 (53:16):
Don't know, all right, A lot more things to it.
Speaker 3 (53:19):
Look, you're making a sound argument, both of you. But
I'll just just throw this at you. So what if
I walk into Totong Bay Holiday Park. I haven't stayed there,
but then I buy something from the camp shop. You know,
I spend a bit of money there at the business.
Is that do I get to avoid the fee if
I've bought a couple of ice.
Speaker 2 (53:36):
Blocks, well negotiate it with a person at the door,
to be.
Speaker 12 (53:41):
Quite honest, to be, I think that makes no difference
if you if you want too to buy it, that's fine.
You can go buy elsewhere. That's your choice I'm talking about.
Speaker 3 (53:51):
I was just going to say, I just you know,
I'm busting and i want to use the bathroom facilities.
But I've done the right thing, and I'm like, hey,
I'm going to buy a couple of ice blocks and
buy purchasing something from your camp shop that entitles me
to use the toilet?
Speaker 18 (54:04):
Does it not?
Speaker 12 (54:05):
Oh, so that you're making another doll now, so if
you buy something from the shop, you can actually use
the toilet.
Speaker 5 (54:11):
That one.
Speaker 2 (54:13):
It's not up to you, tyler, And you're a weak
bladder to to make the rules for this person's camping ground.
Your camping ground is like if it's twenty bucks to
visit someone in the campra ground, as twenty bucks to
visit someone in the camper.
Speaker 12 (54:26):
Ground, you've got it on the contract when they come in,
when you go to.
Speaker 2 (54:30):
The movies, Tyler, Do you just go in and say,
you know, I want to use the bathroom? Here's but
that my makes up?
Speaker 3 (54:35):
Going to buy some popcorn?
Speaker 2 (54:36):
Can I just use Can I just watch twenty minutes?
Can I just watch twenty minutes of the movie.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
But Tears a Man where you've tried to do the
right thing? Where am I going to go to the toilet?
Because I'm not one of those people. It's just going
to go on the bush, you know, somewhere on the
side of the road, because that's a bit grotty. I
want to do the right thing here. Twenty bucks to
use the toilet as a bit.
Speaker 2 (54:56):
Steve, you need to do some Pelbert floor exercises, mate.
You seem to have to go to the bathroom constantly,
do you know?
Speaker 12 (55:01):
Well done, you lot. I think you've come up with
a very good solution on that one.
Speaker 3 (55:04):
Well done, all right, thank you, thank you for your call.
All right, that was good, That was good. I mean,
Tessa definitely told me what's what? And I think that's
fair enough. But oh a hundreds at ten eighty do
you agree with Tess and Matt's is fair enough to
charge someone twenty bucks to come and never look at
your campground. Another example Queney's Bush just outside of Nelson.
(55:25):
But Queney's Bush, Quey's Quey's Bush. Okay, yeah, yeah, it's place,
it's campground. Okay, it's a beautiful campground so pretty close
to the river. It's got a flying fox I believe,
or it used to have flying fox, but they and
this would have been about two years ago, and I
see that they still have that charge at the gate,
but at seven bucks fifty just to have a wee look. Now,
(55:45):
when me and may Have were driving to Nelson, and
I had some memories of Queeney's bushes as a young child,
and I thought, hey, let's just swing in here because
I want to have a wee look to see if
this was going to be a good spot for for me,
Mayve and our friends one summer. You know, yeah, I
can take some photos and say, hey, guys, this is
a great place to go and spend a couple of weeks.
But then when I saw the five dollar sign, I thought,
(56:07):
you know what, I just don't want to pay five
bucks just to have a look. Because I was being honest,
I'm not going to use the flying fox or jump
in the river I just wanted to we drive around.
Is that wrong?
Speaker 2 (56:16):
Well, it's the rule. If you don't own the place,
then the people that own the place get to make
the rules. That's well, the world works, not just any
concessions here. Just because you want to do that. You
want to show you your girlfriend flying fox that's you know,
that's that's not that's beautiful.
Speaker 3 (56:32):
She didn't care. At the end of the day anyway.
Speaker 2 (56:35):
Flying foxes are so lame. Now we need to make
flying foxes great again that we do that. The angle
on a flying fox is just pathetic. There's no danger
at all anymore.
Speaker 3 (56:43):
Love to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (56:45):
Some hot takes coming through here. As if she couldn't
afford twenty bucks. What a liar bit She spent twenty
bucks on smokes and bottles of wine in her time.
What a slacker?
Speaker 3 (56:54):
Well that is a hot taking. Nine nine two is
the text number. But love to hear your thoughts on
this one. I wait, hundred and eighty ten eighty if
you've been charged to go and visit your friends at
a campground over summer, really keen to check with you?
Speaker 2 (57:09):
It's textier tyler. Are you so tight you would rather
soil yourself than pay twenty bucks. That's a good question
from Bill.
Speaker 3 (57:14):
Well, that's the principal bill. That's all I'll say. Right,
headlines is railingk governor.
Speaker 6 (57:21):
Deuce talks.
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It'd be headlines with blue bubble taxis. It's no trouble
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(57:45):
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(58:07):
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(58:31):
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Speaker 2 (58:33):
Back to matt Ethan Tyler Adams.
Speaker 3 (58:34):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (58:35):
Ray Lean, Hey, so you're talking about the flying fox
at Quiney's Bush. When I was asking what I mean,
a whole lot of people abusing me, saying for in
poor taste talking about the flying fox at Queney's Bush.
I don't know anything about the flying fox at Quey's Bush.
I was just asking is it an intense one or
is it one of the ones we have now that
hardly move. But there was a major accident at the
(58:57):
Quey's Bush flying fox just on the twentieth of jan
this year.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
I'm just reading that and to the text, A, yes,
I didn't know about that particular story, but there you go.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
So one patient was access to the scene and transported
to Nelson Hospital. So wow, Well, I mean that must
be quite a flying fox, because you'd be hard pressed
in yourself on any of the flying foxes that they're
putting up in parks and there's a great flying fox
near my house that they've just muted completely.
Speaker 3 (59:20):
There you go, but there you go.
Speaker 1 (59:22):
Ye.
Speaker 2 (59:23):
Queney's Bush.
Speaker 3 (59:23):
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty is a number call?
Is it fear enough for campgrounds to charge people coming
for a visit or dropping somebody off or just saying
get aid of friends and family love to hear from
you on Oh, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty Hannah,
how are you this afternoon?
Speaker 6 (59:40):
Hi?
Speaker 12 (59:40):
I'm good.
Speaker 4 (59:40):
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (59:41):
Now you've stayed at Queeney's Bush yourself?
Speaker 14 (59:45):
I have.
Speaker 18 (59:45):
It's becoming a bit of a tradition. It's actually, yeah,
really really cool site for locals to come for the day,
and we managed to open visitors that are staying at
local bnbs and things just fun.
Speaker 2 (59:58):
Right, and so so you're staying there as a legit
camper Queney's Bush, is that right?
Speaker 6 (01:00:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 18 (01:00:04):
Yeah, we're into site.
Speaker 6 (01:00:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:00:06):
And then you have a bunch of guests that come
through on any given day. Are they paying to go?
Speaker 11 (01:00:12):
Yes?
Speaker 18 (01:00:12):
So they are coming for like day trips from Melton
and things, just to enjoy all the amusements and to
catch up with us. Yeah, I think it's totally fair
that they pay and have a day of fun. They're
not to know that you're passing through.
Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Yeah, exact? And how much do they pay at Corney's Bush? Hannah?
Speaker 18 (01:00:28):
Still, seven fifty fifty.
Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
Seven fifty is pretty good for a day at Corney's Bush.
Speaker 18 (01:00:33):
Absolutely, there are a lot of affection so long list
flying Fox.
Speaker 3 (01:00:37):
Now, Hannah, if I was going to go with Maven
to Quiney's Bush and spend the whole day there swimming
in the river and undertaking the various activities and lounging
on their beautiful little little riverside beach that they've got,
absolutely seven dollars fifty is a bargain. But I generally
just wanted to have a wee look to see if
this was going to be a good spot for us
and our friends one summer. So we come back and
(01:00:58):
generally going to spend money. But you think you know
that to me to just have a quick drive around
for five minutes, how do they know that that you
just got this? You got to take me out my
word that I'm a good person. I'm not going to
make you around just to quick drive through and cheap.
Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
Are you pay seven to fifty.
Speaker 18 (01:01:15):
On the flip side to that, I'm actually I mean,
I'm so in love with Corney's Bush. I'm actually looking
at purchasing a campground and we're doing our due diligence
and times where it's a capacity, so it makes sense
that you would try and draw in the locals who
don't have any to stay there, to come and hang
out for the day and you want to clip the
ticket there. Yeah, so it's a little revenue for them.
Speaker 4 (01:01:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:01:37):
And if you so, have you looked into your properties
and what do you have to do to start a
camp site? Do you just have to find the land
and then.
Speaker 3 (01:01:47):
Register it starting one?
Speaker 18 (01:01:49):
There is actually one in hand the Springs that's piqued
our interest. Okay, right, it's a long standing, beautiful spot.
If we're at the mercy of the banks at the moment,
they're just jumping through from hoops, right. But when it's
the capacity, how do you bring in more money? If
you push the passes up and everyone's got options, then
it's a hard one to make it in nicol spots are.
Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Locals, so Hannah, so you're let's hope that you get
this camping ground. If you do I'll come and stay
and if I have friends, I'll pay the money. But
what would you say to Tyler who wants to come
in and buy one lemonade popsicle so we can use
the facilities then and then leave.
Speaker 18 (01:02:26):
Maybe we'll look at putting a portlo near the gate.
Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
All right, deal deal, yeah, but I mean yeah, so
you yeah, it's their businesses. So people have to make money,
right and so you know, like you maybe you're walking
through or maybe people maybe this woman was just dropping
her kid off for the night, and people that are
asking she had paid for the kid to stay the night,
so she was dropping off. Maybe they are. But Hannah's
(01:02:50):
got to make her money, and so she has to
have a blanket rule. Otherwise, every time that Hannah goes
around and there's twenty people sitting out the front of
a tent that and they go, I'm just dropping someone off,
I'm just visiting for half an hour meanwhile using the
facilities and cramping up the site and making it more
full on for the other people. Then she just has
to have Hannah, you have to have a rule, don't you, Hannah,
(01:03:11):
Or else you're never going to bout any money.
Speaker 18 (01:03:14):
There's that or you could just jump the spens or
I'm wanker based and I've got people to visit every
day at the campgrounds down here, so you can't be
showing out every day.
Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
Right yeah, okay, but but you're gonna have to have
people on sniper tower towers that you're camping ground, Hannah,
to stop people jumping the fences.
Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
Just employed the local local children, holl monitors, and if
someone comes for a week, LOOKI loo, and then you
just send a child with them to make sure that
they're only going before we look around. And if they
stay for any length of time, then you wake up
the charge.
Speaker 2 (01:03:47):
Well, well, Hannah hand at the front gate. Oh Hannah,
I hope you do become a campground owner, because it
sounds like that you've got a lot of love for
the industry and you've got a love a lot of
love for Quinny's Bush. So bring us back if you
get it, and and we'll give it a little plug
once you've got the name for it and it's going.
We don't give it a plug now, we'll get a
plug when you own it.
Speaker 18 (01:04:05):
A can I'll keep your posted.
Speaker 2 (01:04:07):
Please appreciate that. Thank you so much.
Speaker 3 (01:04:09):
Oh one hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number
to call. Now here's a text that I think kind
of sums up where I'm coming from here, Guys or
Matt specifically, what's the difference between visiting friends and staying
in a motel versus visiting visiting them in a campsite? None?
And I think you can do the former without any charge.
Where's the hospitality in hospitality? Gone?
Speaker 4 (01:04:31):
Thank you?
Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
Yeah, that's right. I mean I can kind of see
that because even the first time you and me ever met,
Tyler yep, I was staying up at an upmarket hotel
in christ Church.
Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
Yeah, yeah, that's right, and I used your bathroom and
it was a lovely bathroom.
Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
You came and met me in the baryep and yeah,
like if someone had come tapped you on the shoulder
and said, that's thirty bucks visit this guy at the hotel. No, No,
that's different. It was a hotel bar, totally different, and
it's designed for that.
Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
And I was paying good money for the drinks, or
in fact, you were paying good money for the drinks,
and thank you for that.
Speaker 2 (01:05:03):
Met But yeah, it was a successful job interview.
Speaker 3 (01:05:07):
But yes, and that's an ario Okay, So and it
didn't happen, folks. But if I came up to your
room and use the bathroom, and that very nice hotel
in christ Church, we're going to mention what hotel was.
Speaker 2 (01:05:18):
Well, hotel wasn't I can't remember.
Speaker 3 (01:05:19):
It was the George, The George, and the George is
a lovely hotel. It looks out over Hagley Park, beautiful,
we pay place.
Speaker 2 (01:05:25):
I can't believe they let you in to visit me
if I took the elevator, if I took the elevator
up to the Penthouse, sweet where you were staying, and
then used the very lush bathroom in there, and then
stepped out, and all of a sudden the hotel.
Speaker 3 (01:05:37):
Managers say, hey, that's forty bucks please.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Yeah that that is different for some reason. I'm not
sure exactly why, And hey, am minute, I don't know,
but say, okay, let's there's an example. Say you're staying
at a hotel, right and you go out on the
town and you're a single guy and you meet someone
and they come back and stay in the hotel with him.
Do you have to pay an extra or do you
just do you just have the rent for the room
(01:06:03):
or is it the number of people in the room's
people are, so that person should ideally, well they're leaving
in the morning, go and pay it the desk.
Speaker 3 (01:06:11):
Surely that is that something you have to sort out
between yourselves. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If you're a hotel manager,
give us a barz oh one hundred eight ten eighty
nine two nine two is the text number. It is
twenty to three back re surely.
Speaker 6 (01:06:26):
The issues that affect you and if it, have fun
along the way.
Speaker 1 (01:06:29):
Matt and Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo xc N eighty
innovation style and design.
Speaker 6 (01:06:34):
Have it all youth talk said.
Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
Be good afternoon. Is it fair enough for campgrounds to
charge visitors a bit of cash if they drop somebody
off or they just want to say get a to
a family member or friends.
Speaker 7 (01:06:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:06:46):
The sexer on nine two nine two says, maybe the
visit of the campground could have reported at the office
and explained that they were dropping the child off and
telling them that they'd be staying just thirty minutes to
settle the child. That would have been polite and perhaps
would have prevented the anks. That's a very good point. Yeah,
you could just say at the office, is it cool
that you know, and she said she came in a
different way so she didn't see the signage, because apparently
it's quite clear on the website that visits have to pay.
(01:07:09):
But yeah, if you could just go and say, look,
I'm dropping the kid off, I'll be in and out.
Is that call? And imagine mostly they would be cool
about it, you know, because the kid, the kids night,
the kids stay had been sorted, had been paid for.
Someone was saying, here the difference between there's there's quite
It's not the same for hotels typically don't have big playgrounds,
(01:07:31):
easy parking, big swimming pools, river access. I think a
charge is acceptable. And yeah, when you do visit a hotel,
because we're talking about what's the difference is between why
you don't have to pay when you visit someone at
a hotel. I think you do have to pay extra
if you stay the night, but you know, if you
bring someone in late enough and whatever, that's why. But yeah,
(01:07:52):
because you meet you meet at the bar, and the
bar is sort of a public thing, so the bar
is open. Generally at a hotel, the bar is open
to the public because it'll work as a bar as well. Right,
So you meet down there, you have a few drinks.
It's fine. It's a little bit different than coming and
dropping the kids off and then dropping the kids off
at the pool and then having it, you know, and
then hanging out and using the flying Fox.
Speaker 3 (01:08:13):
Insuch, maybe one hundred and eighty ten eighty is a
number to call Tim.
Speaker 15 (01:08:17):
What do you reckon, kay, gentlemen? Well, I reckonmens to
stroke your genius from Quinney's, Because, if you think about it, Tyler,
if you're too mean to chip seven bucks to escape
us two week color for all of your friends, you're
not exactly You're not exactly going to be coughing up
large vine trumpets and beeds of ice or secturated of
you every day. You're probably gonna be that in the
(01:08:38):
toilet paper.
Speaker 3 (01:08:39):
It depends on what they charge at Tweeny's Busch. It's
pretty isolated each so you've got to go far to
find a good ice cream from Quiney's. Think Moderwiker is
about forty minutes away. I'm not driving forty minutes for
an ice cream.
Speaker 2 (01:08:49):
Look, look, Tyler, I mean I don't know the state
of your contract here at news Stik sed B, but
you've got a national radio show mate. Your name's on it.
You can pay seven to fifty they have a look around,
have a geez at Queney's Bush.
Speaker 3 (01:09:06):
Term. I don't I hear what both of you guys
are saying. But to your point before when so hang on,
hang on? Here it goes. So there seems to be
a sense of entitlement with this woman at tron Abay
campground right that she didn't ask. She just waltzed on
and thought, oh, you know, I'm in the right here.
I'm just dropping my kid off. The difference with me
is I would say to whoever's at the window when
(01:09:26):
he's pushed and say, good eh, I just want a
quick look around, because you know, this used to be
a lovely spot I enjoyed when I was a kid,
and me and my friends. I'm gonna make the pitch
that we all come back.
Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
Kid.
Speaker 3 (01:09:39):
It's twenty of us, so that's some good money for you.
Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
You might have.
Speaker 3 (01:09:41):
I just have a two minute look around, in and out,
in and out.
Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
I reckon, you should get charged ten bucks for forcing
people to listen to listen to your life story like that.
Speaker 3 (01:09:51):
Gentlemen, Yeah, yeah, I'll just play that. Pay the bloody
seven dollars fifty. Then I mean that the Flying Fox
has shut down at the moment as you read out.
You know, so fair enough, mate, don't be so tight
you reckon.
Speaker 15 (01:10:07):
Ah, you're there, Yeah, yeah, I've actually been. I've been
to that page. My sixth sense tells me that I
mightn't be right, that I think it's incredibly unlikely. She
went said hey, could I drop my kid off? And
I said, we're going to nail you for twenty bucks.
Speaker 7 (01:10:22):
Love.
Speaker 15 (01:10:23):
My sixth sense tells me they were probably taking the
liberties and a bit long. And I think to supply
the facilities they've got and do it so well and
keep toilets and god knows what cleaning the costs, I
think they're well within their rights. And I bet you
you can get fifty people who ring up and said
I dropped myst son or my nephew off at Tafa
(01:10:45):
Bay and never had the slightest for the trouble. It
just doesn't quite sing. And I'm sure anybody could drop
their kid happily there and head on their way bake
up feeling there's a few liberties. She suddenly didn't realize
the website. She went in a different way that just
got a little bit of a stuff about it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:04):
She refused to play pay when she was asked, I'm
with you, Term, I think see.
Speaker 3 (01:11:13):
I can't be associated with this from the car, from civilization.
Speaker 13 (01:11:19):
In the car?
Speaker 15 (01:11:20):
What are slides under the gate and crawls around? Quinny's
looking for a bloody broken down right more old needs
there thinking from nowhere in the natives are going to
get me right.
Speaker 3 (01:11:34):
You're a good man, Thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (01:11:36):
Yeah, I'm with him on that. Wow, yeah, Tyler, you
didn't realize the whole thing was going to become the
issue was becoming you.
Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
I thought it was fair enough to stay a week,
lucky little Quiney's pushed without paying my seven dollars fifty tiler.
What made you think you could use the toilet? Quite terry,
Terry man, I'm getting punished today as you walk through.
This is exactly the problem. People just do whatever they
want to read the rules. It's private property. You can't
buy something and then use the toilet that only exists
in your head. Get your act together. Maybe I'll bring
(01:12:08):
a wheely binon.
Speaker 4 (01:12:09):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:12:09):
Does that give me the right to use your toilet
at your house without your permission? Well? Textra if you
bring my wheely bin and you can absolutely use my
loup any time you want. I've got a messive driveway.
It to pain dragging that thing in.
Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
Okay, you're willing to give out your address for that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Yeah, I'll give you a ranger in the air brake.
Oh eight, one hundred eighty ten eighty is number to call.
Is it fair enough for campgrounds to charge twenty dollars
for visitors? I think overwhelmingly it's say yes at this point.
But if you think it's known, it's just a bit
miserly and we've lost our way as a society. I'd
love to hear from you as well. Nine two is
the text number. It's eleven to three.
Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
The issues that affect you.
Speaker 6 (01:12:47):
And a bit of fun along the way.
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
Matten Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo xc N eighty Innovation,
style and design.
Speaker 6 (01:12:54):
Have it all news talgs.
Speaker 3 (01:12:55):
He'd be news talks, he'd be good afternoon. There's some
well I think they're very funny texts.
Speaker 2 (01:13:02):
Yeah. Yeah, we're just talking about how you don't think
you should pay when you visit someone at a camping ground,
or even if you go and look through Quinny's bush.
You don't think you should have to pay the seven
fifty This texture on nineteen nine two says I thought
there was something wrong with my forklift. I could hear
a periodic squeaking sound. They don't realize it was just
Tyler's tight are seeking squeaking as he moved around the studio.
It's from Henry.
Speaker 3 (01:13:23):
When did it become a problem to be financially sensible?
Speaker 2 (01:13:26):
Okay, hey here, we've got a call here that's on
your side. Finally, Liam, you don't think visitors should have
to pay at camp sites?
Speaker 4 (01:13:33):
No, not at all.
Speaker 19 (01:13:35):
I think if they're visiting someone that's staying there, you
know that they're going to be going to the whatever
shop or dairy that's at the campground. They're going to
be putting money into the revenue. As long as they're
not staying overnight, you know, they should be able to
come and see their friends that are paying to stay there.
Like because I used to go and camp sort of
out the way where I live in Tartanuki, and you know,
(01:13:58):
even for the non powered sites where we would be
camping in our tent, you know, we were paying a
substantial amount of money and my parents would do will
their friends. It would be a bunch of a sort
of next to each other, and you know, would have
Nana and some of her mates come out with the
kids at nighttime to use the beach or the river
or whatever, and then they would leave. And I didn't
(01:14:20):
think and you know, I would have thought it was
a bit weird if they, you know, were asked to pay.
Speaker 2 (01:14:27):
Well, and that's a's a it's a beautiful story and
you're paint an idyllic picture and I'm glad you got
to experience that.
Speaker 3 (01:14:33):
But I sold medium.
Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
But someone has to clean and pay for the toilets
and the facilities, and someone owns the land. And if
you're you know, some people have paid for to stay
the night and some people come and visit. Surely just
a little bit. I mean, it doesn't sound like a
lot twenty bucks to have that incredible experience.
Speaker 19 (01:14:52):
One that paid got the key, got a key for
the proper facilities. There were a couple of public bathrooms,
but all the rest were locked, and the only people
that paid got the key.
Speaker 5 (01:15:03):
So you couldn't just waltz on ear and then use it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
So so if you had it, is you know, in
this situation where you're saying you came up and visited,
or people came up and visited. You're telling me that
they never the key never got handed to them.
Speaker 19 (01:15:18):
If no, not, if they weren't you know, staying, and
they weren't staying, if they didn't need to use the showers,
they would just need to use the bathroom. There's always
going to be a public bathroom wherever you are, just
so here we can relieve themselves and not be doing
it on the bush.
Speaker 5 (01:15:32):
To the side.
Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
Oh yeah, I think there are probably if they're sort
of public public campgrounds. But this is a private campground.
This is like, this is our business, just the one
where particular one we're talking about, sorry, Liam, as a business,
you know, as opposed to one that has public public facilities.
Speaker 19 (01:15:50):
Well this was a business as well. You bought your
plot where you put your tents, so in SyRI, you're
paying to lease that patch of lands for the time
you're staying there. So shouldn't you be able to have
who you wanted it obviously not taking liberties by having
them there the entire time you're there and taking the mickey,
but just just just just to experience.
Speaker 4 (01:16:11):
It a little bit.
Speaker 2 (01:16:12):
Well, I guess. I guess in the ideal world.
Speaker 19 (01:16:14):
I mean, this was fifteen years ago, or even more
than that, twenty years ago, so again changed.
Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
Yeah, harder to make, harder for businesses to make money now,
and they're a bit more stretched.
Speaker 4 (01:16:25):
But I guess they were always bulked up year to
year to year.
Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Yeah. Oh, I hate thank you so much for this
spot think No, no, I was just going to say,
thanks so much for you call them. I appreciate it. Yeah,
I mean, I guess. I guess my only point is
what I keep saying. I guess I've just started. It's
a new thing. I guess I guess that The point is,
it's your business, so how you want to how you
want to run it. And if you if you think
(01:16:50):
that you're losing money because a lot of people are
coming in and just visiting and enjoying the place but
not paying any money towards it, because only the people
that are staying the night are paying money, then you
charge it and maybe your camp site will get less
popular because you do it. But it's your business, so
you make the rules.
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
Yep. Fair enough critiques to you, guys. If I'm paying
twenty bucks to visit a cat I am bringing my
washing and having a shower and cooking dinner there. That
is a hefty price to pay, and I will take
advantage for twenty bucks. What do you say to that one?
Speaker 4 (01:17:18):
Um?
Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
Okay, this is this interesting text here. Hey there, One
of the two mail presenters at at quarter to two
today quarter to three today was complaining about bringing as
willipins up as long driveway, track weld and Alpham manufactures
and sells a special attachment that goes onto your toilet
(01:17:41):
which allows you to occupans on for ease of relocation.
Could you not?
Speaker 15 (01:17:45):
There?
Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
You go?
Speaker 2 (01:17:46):
So there's a.
Speaker 3 (01:17:47):
Track, weld, track weld and Alpham a special attachment on
my toba.
Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
Yeah, okay, so you can turn them up.
Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
When I said a long driveway, you know it's only
only fifty meters. Okay, right, good.
Speaker 2 (01:17:58):
Discussion, yep, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
I don't know. I don't know how I felt about that,
the punishment I got from the tics machine, but fair
enough to I'll just pay my seven dollars fifty next
time I go to Quinny'sbush and also buy a nice
blocket if I'll be happy. News Sport and where they're
coming up after three o'clock would you buy a house
with a sworded history, and would you expect the discount.
Speaker 6 (01:18:24):
Your new home.
Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
For insightful and entertaining talk, it's Mattie and Taylor Adams
Afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety on News Talk SEV.
Speaker 3 (01:18:35):
Good afternoon, Welcome into Monday, seven past three. I hope
you having a great afternoon. I am pretty sure you are.
Speaker 2 (01:18:41):
I'm having a fantastic time, Tyler. And I've got a
question for you. Yep, would you buy the Polkinghorn Mansion
in Remuera. It's got about a six million dollar value?
Would you buy that? Considering its history?
Speaker 3 (01:18:56):
If they knocked the mill off the price and I
had five mil, Yeah, maybe it's a beautiful one.
Speaker 2 (01:19:01):
Yeah, it's a beautiful home. But of course there's it's
been beset by tragedy and scandal and been the focus
of a lot of attention. But I mean this is
a lot of attention. As I say, this one with
one of the biggest cases probably in New Zealand history.
In terms of the coverage there was fantastically covered by
Steve Braunius in the Herald, and look, everyone knows so
(01:19:26):
many details about that house, but a lot of houses
have history, and do we believe that the walls have memories?
Would you consider it a problem to move into a
house where something tragic had happened in it? So in
this case, let's put the Pulkinghorn house to the side,
and let's just say there's another house and on another street,
(01:19:49):
let's say in Mount Wellington for example. Yep, because that's
where you live. Isn't it a house in Mount Dwellington?
You're gonna buy it, Tyler? And you find out that
there's been a murder in it? Okay?
Speaker 1 (01:20:02):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:20:03):
Would that change your decision to buy it?
Speaker 3 (01:20:05):
What was the original asking price?
Speaker 2 (01:20:08):
Let's say it was going for two mil okay? Would
you expect a discount?
Speaker 3 (01:20:12):
And the real estate agent said that. So, so we
walk in to the open home. All looks good. What
three bedroom?
Speaker 6 (01:20:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:20:21):
I just got to round it off before I make
my decision. Here, what's the backyard like? So it's got
a decent section on it. We're eight hundred square meters yep? Okay,
two bathrooms, three bedroom.
Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
I think you're getting off topic.
Speaker 3 (01:20:32):
And then the real estate agency and so, yep, so
I sent beautiful home. Love this just dream home, dream home.
It's the dream home. It's the one you've been looking for,
it's in your price range. And then the real estate
agent says, I have to disclose this piece of information
about the place. Something terrible happened there that Does that
change your mind? Definitely? Yep, one hundred percent. I mean,
(01:20:54):
do I then ask questions about what actually happened in
that scenario. Maybe, But even with my dream home, if
they said now it's it's at a discount price because
something sordid and the furious happened at this house not
too long ago, I'd probably say I'm out.
Speaker 9 (01:21:11):
Ye.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
Yeah, I mean, every house has got a history, that's
for sure. So I own a house in Mount Eden,
and when we first moved in, I kept on feeding
like there was someone walking down one of the hallways.
I kept on saying there was a certain time someone
kept walking down the hallway and I'd get up and
look and there wouldn't be someone there, spooky, and it
would happen over and over again, And for some reason
(01:21:33):
I envisioned this person as being an old man walking
down the hallway. And then I found out that the
previous owner of the house had lived in that house
since he was born. In the house and he'd lived
untill he was eighty five and then died in the house.
And then I think then there'd been one owner before
us in between. Wow, And I thought that that's kind
(01:21:56):
of freaky. This was the guy's house for eighty five years.
It was his entire life, and now there's me just
swarming around in there. And I'm real brave. So I
didn't get scared, but maybe.
Speaker 3 (01:22:08):
Good it sounds like you got a little bit scared.
To be honest, No, man, I don't care about ghosts.
Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
No, it was a bit weird, you know, And that's
just a happy story in the house.
Speaker 3 (01:22:19):
Maybe I've seen too many movies. I mean, very famous movie,
the Amityville Horror where they did get a discount right
that family went to go purchase this house, and it
turned out that's something bad had happened to that house.
And I know it's a bit of a movie, but
that was based on a true story. So in that instance,
I look at that what happened to that movie and say,
(01:22:40):
no way in hell, man, Even if I don't believe
in ghost and all that sort of stuff, I'm not
taking any chances.
Speaker 2 (01:22:45):
Okay, well o waighte hundred eighty ten eighty nine two
nine two is the text number. Give us a call
if you've moved into a house and found an odd
history in it that's made you a little bit concerned
or known the history of the house and moved in
and not care yep. Yeah, And I'd also like to
hear from a real estate agent how you go about
(01:23:06):
managing that situation because you have to share that information.
Don't you what the rules are around that?
Speaker 3 (01:23:10):
Absolutely love to hear from you on this one. I
eatee hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call
if you want to text through. More than welcome to
do that. Nine two ninety two is the text number.
It is bang on twelve pars three bag very shortly
here on news Talk ZEDB News Talks EDB. Would you
buy a property with a bit of a sordid history
or an interesting history or have you and you want
(01:23:32):
to share your story? Oh eight one hundred eighty ten
eighty is the number two call text here from Dave
says get our guys. Parents purchased a house in the
early nineties and weren't told about the murder that happened
in nineteen eighty five. The murder had been in the
papers recently looking for the killer. The guy murdered with
was Arthur Easton, if you wish to google it. I mean,
(01:23:52):
that's a very famous story far out.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
Arthur Easton, Arthur Easton. Ah, Okay, what's the story?
Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Yeah, I have to google it to get the actual details.
But I've certainly heard that name before. Jenny, how are you?
Speaker 20 (01:24:08):
I am great?
Speaker 17 (01:24:09):
How about you?
Speaker 3 (01:24:10):
Very good? So you've got a couple of house stories
for us.
Speaker 20 (01:24:15):
The first time I still live at It's rural Auckland.
A wee boy drowned on the property. Very sad, but
we do.
Speaker 14 (01:24:28):
I do.
Speaker 20 (01:24:28):
I have seen his ghosts once, and he does this
weird little things around the place.
Speaker 2 (01:24:35):
Did you know about the story before you moved before?
Speaker 14 (01:24:38):
So?
Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
Sorry, I must have started that. So you've you bought
the bought the house?
Speaker 6 (01:24:41):
Have you?
Speaker 4 (01:24:42):
Well?
Speaker 5 (01:24:43):
I read and so did you?
Speaker 2 (01:24:45):
Did you know the story before you moved in?
Speaker 3 (01:24:49):
No?
Speaker 20 (01:24:50):
No I didn't, But I mean I'm not too worried
about it. He's not a problem. He just hides keys
and cell phones. But but yeah, but he's sweet and
there's no problem. And like we've we've tried to bless
the place, you know, stage and all that kind of stuff,
and a little his high jinks has slowed down, Louis.
(01:25:11):
But apparently ghosts mess with water and electricity, and we
do have lots of water is shoes and electricity. A
light bulb in particular, we replaced three times and it
still used to flicker on and off.
Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
But anyway, so you moved to the house and you
didn't know the story, and then you saw the little boy,
and then you found out about the story afterwards. Is
that the order of things?
Speaker 20 (01:25:36):
Well, I only saw him when his mother was visiting.
She came to in the middle of the night. She
came to lay flowers for and it wasn't anywhere near
the time that he had passed. And it was just
weird because she wanted to come back and rent the property,
and she came at eleven o'clock at night, which was
also really weird.
Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
But anyway, does it creep your friends out if they
want to come and visit you and you tell them
about the history of the house.
Speaker 20 (01:26:06):
My child, one of my children still lives here, but
my daughter she won't come and visit. Whenever she does,
she just like, yep, third of it.
Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
Yeah, I will thank you so much for your call Jenny.
Speaker 3 (01:26:19):
Interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:26:20):
It's interesting that the little boy it's messing with light bulbs. Yeah,
and water strange technically.
Speaker 3 (01:26:27):
Water and electricity. Ghosts have a real problem with that.
Speaker 2 (01:26:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:26:30):
Oh, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty. If you've bought
a house with a bit of a colorful history, we'd
love to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (01:26:36):
I mean, my cell phone and keys go missing all
the time, but I don't know if I've got a
ghost in my house doing it. I think I just
need to find better places to put my keys and stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:26:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
Text to you guys, why would you buy a converted
campavan ambulance? Question mark? Obviously a lot of traumorous happened
in one of these over its history. You see a
lot of people buy converted ambulances. Some look to bless them.
But to me, that's just a little bit too far.
It's a fair point. If you buy a converted ambulance,
there are Look, I've got a friend actually who ought one,
(01:27:09):
and she did sort of ask the wider community and friends,
do I need to get this thing blessed? And a
lot of people said, absolutely you should. But she felt
just a little bit odd about owning that ambulance because
of what probably happened with a net ambulance over the years.
Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
I've never heard of. Look, I don't know how ghosts
work and I haven't had much experience with them. But
what I would, I don't know how that works because
they don't seem do they. Do they haunt vehicles?
Speaker 3 (01:27:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:27:37):
I don't mean Christine. Is that situation obviously the Stephen
King novel. Yeah, terrifying, But I don't know, do they?
They seem to mainly haunt houses, don't they? But yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:27:48):
Yeah, But whether you're yeah or is it just a
vibe thing? So when vibe things?
Speaker 2 (01:27:53):
So when people worry about the blessing, because we were
capable of having superstitions, like, for example, you know, if
I do something in my favorite team Losers, Yeah, it's
like I start to believe I've got magical powers to
control how the team operates. So I won't do that
the next game or if they are winning, or wear
the same shirt, things like that. You know, but if
(01:28:13):
you actually got drilled down in a room and were asked,
do you actually believe that the fact that you're wearing
that particular warrior's shirt on that particular game is actually
affecting a team being played in Sydney. A game being
played in Sydney. You'd go, no, I don't actually believe that,
But we are. We kind of do, don't we. So
on one level we believe. In one level we don't.
So if you buy the ambulance, on one level you're
(01:28:35):
not going for someone just say, oh, so you think
there's one hundred ghosts living here. They'd go because the
certain amount of people died and this, They'd go no,
But I feel.
Speaker 3 (01:28:42):
Yeah, there's a part of this. They doesn't believe that's true.
Speaker 2 (01:28:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call.
It is twenty past three and some great stories coming
through via the phone line. Nine two nine two is
the text number as well.
Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
Matd Heathen Tyler Adams afternoons call oh eight hundred eighty
ten eighty on yoused talks'd.
Speaker 2 (01:29:05):
Be so we're talking about houses with past. The Polkinghall
mansion is up for sale and we're wondering, you know,
how you feel moving into places that have got a
tragic past, whether you should get a discount on them.
We were talking abou an ambulance. Your a friend who
bought an ambulances worried about it, and I see it
as I got Are they worried? There's one hundred ghosts
in there? This ambulance driver says, hey, guys, ambulance officer here. Well,
(01:29:30):
it does happen. It's not actually that often that people
die in ambulances. Generally they have either passed away before transport,
or we can keep them alive long enough to get
them to the hospital and then they die there. Also,
as a general rule, if someone does die in the ambulance,
it gets blessed before going back into operation.
Speaker 3 (01:29:45):
Thanks sewn.
Speaker 4 (01:29:46):
There you go.
Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
So she's sweeters and her little ghostbusters going to get
the facts.
Speaker 3 (01:29:50):
Yeah, gayl, how are you this afternoon?
Speaker 12 (01:29:52):
Yes, hello, I'm fine, Thank you.
Speaker 3 (01:29:55):
Now what happened in your line?
Speaker 20 (01:29:58):
Well, I let the.
Speaker 12 (01:29:59):
Two land agent sees no in the town that I
wanted to move.
Speaker 13 (01:30:02):
To, exactly what I was looking for, and they are
came across to the town and one of them didn't
have anything to show me. The other one, the man said,
oh yes, I've got three to show you, and took
me and they were terrible. They didn't measure up to.
Speaker 4 (01:30:18):
What I'd asked for.
Speaker 13 (01:30:20):
So he took me back to the office to get
a few more details, and a woman, an older, mature woman,
said to him.
Speaker 12 (01:30:27):
Oh did you show her? And he only she only
got that far and he said, oh, no, no, and
she said, oh, well, I'll take her and shower. And
so I said, well, what's this about. She says, I've
got one I can show you. So I went with her,
and the moment that she pulled up outside, I just
felt that that was the right place for me. So
(01:30:47):
he walked down the drive and I could see it
had exactly what I wanted, a truck house and free range.
Shook her down the back and roses growing, fruit trees grow.
So came and met the owners.
Speaker 13 (01:31:00):
They were packing to move already, and I thought, gosh,
it needs a lot of work. So I told my
family and I said, look, it's exactly what I want,
but it's needing a lot of repair work done and upgrading.
They said, well, okay, we'll do that just for the
cost of materials. Because one was a builder and one
(01:31:20):
was working in another construction area and another was a
house painter. So it just worked out fine. So I
went to sign on the dotted line and at that
point the man said, oh, well, I'll be handling the sale.
Speaker 12 (01:31:36):
And I said, well, it was a lady that showed
me the house. And he said, well, there's something that
you need to know about the house before you sign
the line. He said there was a man murdered there
and it was a particularly gruesome murder with a he
was tortured.
Speaker 3 (01:31:50):
Wow.
Speaker 13 (01:31:51):
And I said, ah, I remember seeing it on the news.
And although it was I don't know, about two years
before that, I remembered I was in a little pouncil
unit at that stage, retirement one, and.
Speaker 12 (01:32:09):
I though this news and I thought, oh, that's a
bit close to home. That's just the next town over
through the gorge.
Speaker 13 (01:32:17):
Oh, how awful. And so when he said yes, well
it was that murder, and I said, oh, I feel
so sorry for the families. But I said, doesn't worry me.
I'm a Christian and I believe what the Bible says,
that says that the dead know nothing at all until
the resurrection.
Speaker 12 (01:32:35):
So I'm okay with it.
Speaker 4 (01:32:37):
And you were so surprised you signed.
Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
I think that you signed on the line.
Speaker 12 (01:32:42):
Yes, of course I did.
Speaker 2 (01:32:43):
And your feelings because you said when you first came
to the house that seemed perfect for you. It had
everything you want. You had a great vibe for that.
And after you knew that information, Gail, did that that
good feeling towards the house continue?
Speaker 4 (01:32:56):
Oh?
Speaker 12 (01:32:56):
Absolutely, I loved it.
Speaker 13 (01:32:58):
It was just what I wanted. Yes, and I have
had no problems with imaginary ghosts because I believe the Bible?
Do you not?
Speaker 3 (01:33:08):
Did you ask for a discount goal at that point
you think I've got them, I've got them here.
Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
It was already low, very.
Speaker 13 (01:33:16):
Low priced, and I got a tiny bit more, not
because of that, but because I've worked out the budget
and what needed to be done.
Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
It's interesting that they sort of told you the story
just before the signing, because that's a lot of work.
That's a lot of work that they've done. I mean,
if I was real that agent, I might they start
off with that. Maybe not, because maybe you want the
piece and to fall in love with the house.
Speaker 3 (01:33:38):
You want to wrope them in a little bit before
you dropped the bombshell.
Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
You have to drop the bombshell at the end because
because well, you see.
Speaker 13 (01:33:44):
The woman probably didn't want to tell me. Yeah, maybe
she felt awkward about it until I'd deck out of
the sale. But the man definitely didn't want to tell me,
but he knew that legally he had to. So yeah,
so that's why it was. Just before he said, we
can't sell it to you without your knowing this, they
still wanted.
Speaker 12 (01:34:03):
I said, of course I do.
Speaker 3 (01:34:04):
Yeah, well that's interesting. Legally you have to sh year
that information. How far do you go back? You know
there's some homes that are relatively old in New Zealand.
Is that true, Gale, that you legally have to tell
I don't know.
Speaker 13 (01:34:17):
I never checked it out. Yeah, but you know, it's
made as no way to know at all. And they
were very surprised and very pleased.
Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
Gail, Thank you very much, thank you for giving us
a buzz. Very interesting. Oh eight hundred and eighty ten
eighty is the number to.
Speaker 2 (01:34:33):
Call this Texas is what a load of mumbo jumbo
you guys are talking. There is no such thing as ghosts.
It's all fantasy from bears. Well when I say there
are such a thing as ghosts, but where there's definitely
such a thing as people being concerned at what's happened
in the history of their house. Yeah, I think you know,
even if you don't buy into ghosts, then you probably
still buy them into vibes and how you feel about
(01:34:54):
a house.
Speaker 3 (01:34:54):
Yeah, it's all about the vibe.
Speaker 2 (01:34:55):
Yeah, it's all about the vibe.
Speaker 3 (01:34:58):
Nine ninety two is the text number. It's twenty eight
past three headlines with Raylen coming up. Then we'll get
to more of your stories. You're listening to Matt Entyler
good afternoon.
Speaker 14 (01:35:09):
Youth Talks at the headlines with Blue Bubble Taxis, it's
no trouble with a Blue bubble. A twenty one year
old New Zealander could face life behind bars in Australia,
accused of importing twenty kilograms of cocaine and to Sydney
from the US on Saturday.
Speaker 3 (01:35:25):
He'll face court today.
Speaker 14 (01:35:27):
AX leaders gearing up for difficult conversations at Waigtangi on Thursday,
despite his hapoo advising him to stay away in light
of the upset over his Treaty Principles bill. The Prime
Ministers going to the South Island for commemorations at Banks
Peninsula at Naikahu's or Nukumari. Smoke's billowing from a scrub
(01:35:48):
fire in Auckland's Uremoera, with fire crews working to put
it out. Heavy flooding continues in northern Queensland and Australia,
while at the same time, two thousand kilometers away in Victoria,
a three day heat wave has caused raging fires. Far
Mak is proposing to fund a new oral contraceptive pill.
(01:36:08):
Dere's a gestreal from April which has a twelve hour
window for preventing pregnancy. A one hundred year old's advice
on how to find meaning at all stages of life.
You can see the story at NZ Herald Premium. Now
back to Matt Eath and Tyler Adams.
Speaker 3 (01:36:24):
Thank you very much, Rayleen, and we're talking about homes
that have had a bird of a history to them.
Did you purchase them? Did you get a discount on
the back of Philip Polkinhorn's mansion currently for sale with
an estimate of value of five point four million dollars,
certainly has a history that home.
Speaker 2 (01:36:39):
This text on nine two ninety two. We had got
a call before from a woman who believes is a
ghost of a toddler who drowned in Paul at the house.
Speaker 3 (01:36:49):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (01:36:50):
This Texas says that poor Lessie who's convinced he has
a ghost, should know that a flickering light isn't caused
by a ghost like it is in the movies. It's
a dodgy bulb surges of faulty wiring, which is dangerous.
Don't call the ghostbusters, call a sparking. There's this text
and has another texta that has the exact opposite opinion.
There are energy fields where all sparks of energy. Maori
breathing is a palvery and a blessing within the Roman
(01:37:13):
Catholic faith. I quietly say prayers regards Christine, so she
believes that there are energy fields. It makes me think
of the Marston House in the Stephen King book Salem's Lot,
and that writer has gone to town because Stephen King
always puts a writer in there because he's a writer
who believes that the walls have energies and memories. And
in that case, the Marston House, well, it calls a
(01:37:36):
vampire to the town. Spoiler.
Speaker 3 (01:37:38):
Did he write Poultergeist as well? It's a movie I've
been seen in a long time that was pretty terrifying
as a kid in this texture here, okiday, guys, my
mother used to say, it's not the dead you should
be afraid of.
Speaker 2 (01:37:50):
Yeah, it's the living.
Speaker 12 (01:37:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:37:51):
Yeah, Well that's a very good point because I was
thinking about this topic when I was driving into work
today and I used to live in a barn that
was my house. My room on the farm was in
a barn on the opposite side of the field from
the house. And one night the dogs started going to kicker,
and being like a fourteen year old boy, I assumed
it was a ghost.
Speaker 3 (01:38:10):
So I was in the wind it was like someone
was shaking again.
Speaker 2 (01:38:13):
Well, yeah, I thought there's a ghost trying to get Yeah.
I should have actually been way more scared that it
was a person getting it.
Speaker 3 (01:38:18):
Just a stranger off the side of the road.
Speaker 2 (01:38:20):
And you don't need to make up a ghost in
that situation to be scared. It was probably one of
my sisters scare me.
Speaker 3 (01:38:26):
Hey you Lauren, Bhye, how's it going very good? So
have you purchased a spooky house or a house with
a history?
Speaker 17 (01:38:33):
Well, we were going to buy a house with a
with a with a with a slight history with a slart.
Speaker 11 (01:38:40):
History attached to it when we were living in South Africa.
Speaker 17 (01:38:44):
And mine now twenty four years old, was like nine
months old, hobby baby, and I we need to look
at a house beautiful house into a huge oak tree
in the front with a swing. You could see potential. Anyway,
We're walking through the house, through the passage or down
the passage, and next second Hobby bolts through the door,
through the front door and goes to the car. Now
(01:39:05):
I'm sitting there, what does.
Speaker 9 (01:39:08):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:39:09):
What ran past you?
Speaker 9 (01:39:10):
So?
Speaker 2 (01:39:10):
What could you just repeat that? Less?
Speaker 17 (01:39:11):
My husband ran out the front door and went to
and went straight to the car. So I'm standing there
in the passage with the estate agent with her, and
then I said, well, let me just find out exactly
what's going on anyway, So Hobe, he says, getting to
the car where we're we're going home? And I said, okay,
we get home. I said, listen, what what the hell
(01:39:33):
you know? And he says, no, here's he got. He's
getting very very.
Speaker 18 (01:39:37):
Very weird vibes coming from coming from that house.
Speaker 17 (01:39:40):
So I did a bit of research.
Speaker 20 (01:39:43):
I was a journalist there.
Speaker 17 (01:39:43):
I did a bit of research and I discovered that
there in nineteen thirty seven, there was a couple that
were murdered in that house.
Speaker 3 (01:39:50):
Wow, and the murder was.
Speaker 17 (01:39:52):
Unsolved, so needed to stay. A couple of months later,
we drivet Ofst. Again and the house was demolished for
an apartment block cheapers.
Speaker 3 (01:40:02):
So why would your husband just scream out without you know,
at some point it just taped me on the shoulder
of Saint Laurent kind of getting some weird vibes of
this house. He must have seen something terrifying and just
bold out of the house and say this.
Speaker 17 (01:40:15):
He just had a sense feeling that something didn't gell
well in this house and he just bolted. So, needless
to say, we've been married for twenty five years and
I saw continue asking him, why the hell did you
leave me in a ghost house?
Speaker 7 (01:40:28):
Well?
Speaker 2 (01:40:28):
Yeah, it's kind of like have you seen that movie
Force Majeur, that French film where there's an avalanche coming down.
There's a family at a the skiing in the Swiss
helps and an avalanche is coming down and the dad
bolts and leaves the kids. The rest of the movie
is that the mum looking going, well, you you looked
after yourself and abandoned the family. Is there a bit
(01:40:50):
of that in your.
Speaker 17 (01:40:51):
Situation running for the Hill?
Speaker 3 (01:40:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 17 (01:40:55):
So, needles to say, he didn't buy that house.
Speaker 18 (01:40:57):
We bought some other.
Speaker 2 (01:40:57):
House, okay, And yeah, and the other house was ghost free?
Speaker 17 (01:41:02):
Was it the house was ghost for?
Speaker 13 (01:41:05):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
That's good.
Speaker 3 (01:41:06):
Does he still get just quickly, Lauren? Does he still
get those feelings every now and again? Is he has
he been in another situation where he said, nah, don't
like this.
Speaker 21 (01:41:13):
Luckily not?
Speaker 17 (01:41:14):
Luckily not everything is ghost for that?
Speaker 2 (01:41:18):
Well, thank you so much for sharing your story with us, Lauren,
that was really interesting. Hey, we've got a text here.
Hey X real estate agent here. You definitely have to
tell prospective clients if you are selling a house that
something has happened in the house, if you know, that's
why we're listening property. You have to do your homework.
Always a tricky situation. Cheers your thanks for that text.
So is this if you're a real estate agent, you
(01:41:40):
might if you have to tell them if you know.
I mean, you can't say you can't tell people what
you don't know, but there might be a situation where
you don't want.
Speaker 9 (01:41:48):
To know.
Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
The real estate agent doesn't do the homework. Yeah, so
just so fine. Yeah, and how do you approve that
someone new? So just after they sign, then a vampire
jumps out and bites you on the neck and you're like,
I didn't know about the vampires.
Speaker 3 (01:42:00):
And no idea here, I had no idea. Oh eight,
one hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to
cool love to hear your stories. It is twenty three
to four begg Very shortly, you're listening to Matt.
Speaker 7 (01:42:11):
And Tyler.
Speaker 1 (01:42:13):
Mattie Taylor Adams with you as your afternoon rolls on
Matt and Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety attention
to details and a commitment to comfort News talk Z.
Speaker 2 (01:42:25):
Twenty four Hey, Matt Murder's violent deaths must be disclosed
and writing before a buyer becomes engaged in the purchase.
If not, agent is breaching RIA rules, especially if it's
a notorious crime that most people would be aware of.
This includes suicide as well. And if you find out
during marketing, you have to disclose at any stage of
the process.
Speaker 3 (01:42:45):
That is interesting. So when they advertise Philip Pulkinhorn's property
on one roof, for example, that have to specify in
the advert that this had happened.
Speaker 2 (01:42:58):
Including it if you find out during marketing. No, no,
if you find out during marketing.
Speaker 3 (01:43:01):
On oh right, okay, because that's a hard sound, right,
And yeah, I don't know how you write that one.
Speaker 2 (01:43:06):
I don't think to put it on the sign out
the front a couple of murders, beautiful views north facing
a couple of murders dream home.
Speaker 3 (01:43:16):
When you put it like that, yeah it makes sense.
Oh one hundred and eighteen eighty is number to call.
Hey you jil hy.
Speaker 21 (01:43:24):
My husband and I bought our present house or my
present house, several years ago. I don't think there are
any ghosts then, but since he died like probably eighteen
months ago in the house, I didn't get it blessed
or anything. And electricity and water were both things that
(01:43:47):
when I heard the other lady mention and I thought,
oh boy, that's here now electricity wise. When I went
on a holiday with a girlfriend, I bought a keyholder
that was very heavy metal that.
Speaker 10 (01:44:02):
Needed hammering on the wall.
Speaker 21 (01:44:05):
Now, I didn't know that was something that we saw
on our holiday when he got sick. Now, I went
back there to the shop and bought this keyholder that
we didn't get around to buying then. And when I
was hammering it on the wall, I didn't realize it
was very hard to hammer un But I actually hit
the back of the power box for the house. Then
(01:44:28):
I took out all the electricity. And I was also
told by a friend the electrician, that I could have
killed myself quite easily. So that was wondering whether that's connected.
I have had flickering lights out of the blue, just
different things to do with electricity. The other thing was water. Now,
(01:44:49):
I came home one day and the flat out the
back was absolutely full of water from the ceiling. The
rats to choose through the water pipes. Now, we've never
had rats there before. So whether that's I mean, that's
electricy and that's water, Whether that's contesting me, I don't know.
Speaker 10 (01:45:08):
Doesn't worry mate, But I saw I mentioned what happened.
Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
Imagine he'd be a pleasant presence, being your ex husband,
but you know it might you know the rats, I mean,
why would you why would you X husband be bringing
in rats?
Speaker 21 (01:45:27):
Well, the water thing contacted me through the water, through
through the water pipes.
Speaker 2 (01:45:33):
Through rats. Yeah, I think you think it wasn't rats,
You think.
Speaker 21 (01:45:37):
It was red through the water.
Speaker 4 (01:45:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:45:41):
And after after accidentally nailed the power box, did you
get an electrician in just to check everything over?
Speaker 11 (01:45:48):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (01:45:49):
And did you mention? Did you sorry?
Speaker 12 (01:45:51):
You go?
Speaker 21 (01:45:52):
I just said that's poor contacting me?
Speaker 6 (01:45:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:45:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:45:55):
And what did he say to that?
Speaker 21 (01:45:58):
He said yeah, and my grandson also said yeah, right.
Speaker 3 (01:46:03):
Well very interesting, Jill. And the electrics are right now
though you've sorted out.
Speaker 21 (01:46:08):
The they have been sicked and I've been told not
to him at anywhere near good.
Speaker 3 (01:46:12):
Advice that one.
Speaker 2 (01:46:14):
I think that's the lesson in this Jim, Thank you,
you cool, Jill.
Speaker 3 (01:46:18):
Thank you very much. Lorraine, how are you this afternoon?
Speaker 2 (01:46:21):
There's someone here said, oh, sorry, you go, Lorraine, hie,
you're good.
Speaker 3 (01:46:26):
Now you've got a story about old ambulances.
Speaker 11 (01:46:29):
Well, yeah, actually I've seen I've heard that another ambulance
driver has given you a call. But look, I run
a Facebook group that's got over three hundred and fifty
ambulance owners that have converted to mobiles, and not one
of them on the Facebook group has ever said they've
had a here BGV. So I just thought that was
quite interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
So can you say that against you've got you run
a Facebook book and you've got what over three hundred
and fifty what sorry.
Speaker 11 (01:46:52):
Members, are ambulance really convert to mobile home?
Speaker 3 (01:46:56):
What's the name of the page if you don't mind
us asking?
Speaker 11 (01:46:59):
Oh, so, it's it's Ambulance Conversion New Zealand.
Speaker 3 (01:47:03):
Good name ambulance conversion. Yeah, I'll just see if we
can try that down.
Speaker 2 (01:47:08):
Oh, here we go.
Speaker 3 (01:47:09):
Oh it's private, so I won't be able to see
the post. But that is interesting there me in.
Speaker 14 (01:47:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:47:14):
So we have a lot of ambulance drivers on our
page as well, yep, and we just all share, you know,
like you know, renovation stuff and what have you. So
most of them are empty ambulances when we buy them,
but yeah, we all share stories and tips and what
have you. And we've never and I think it's been
running about three years now, maybe twenty nineteen, twenty twenty
(01:47:37):
we started the group, and never once had anybody say
they had any bad feelings.
Speaker 4 (01:47:42):
So I just thought that was quite interesting.
Speaker 3 (01:47:44):
Very interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:47:44):
Yeah, so there's no one that's come through and see it.
I bought an ambulance and then woke up in the
midle of the night and there was one hundred ghosts
in here from everyone that had died.
Speaker 11 (01:47:52):
No, in fact, because I actually let other people borrow
my one, and everybody say that they sleep better in
that than they do at home, because I see it
as a place where lives were saved or maintained from
an accident. Sight into the hospital like the other ambulance
iver said. You know, if somebody has already died on
the scene, they go with the undertaker, not in an ambulance.
(01:48:14):
So yeah, right, but I just hate I didn't know
that they were blessed after a death and I learned something.
Speaker 2 (01:48:21):
Are people sleeping on gurney's or are they putting their
own beds in there?
Speaker 6 (01:48:25):
No?
Speaker 11 (01:48:25):
Actually, when they do commission, everything is taken off.
Speaker 2 (01:48:29):
There's no Yeah, I was I was picturing this totally wrong.
I don't know, you know, when things coming to me,
I was like people sleeping the back of the ambulance.
Speaker 3 (01:48:39):
Company though, aren't they If you ever injured yourself that lovely?
Speaker 2 (01:48:42):
Yeah, well you can. You could sunbathe out out the
back and then push the gurney in.
Speaker 4 (01:48:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:48:47):
Look, to be honest, I think most of us have
probably got that. It's a lot more comfortable than journey.
Speaker 2 (01:48:52):
Well, I've asked to join you your ambulance conversions and
zed so so all right, friendship, thank you, all right,
I'm looking forward to looking at some of these. Thank
you for your call.
Speaker 3 (01:49:04):
Thanks to Rain. What you're gonna buy an old ambulance?
Speaker 2 (01:49:07):
Maybe that's not ghosts? It's all the things her husband
used to take care of around the house.
Speaker 3 (01:49:11):
Is this text?
Speaker 2 (01:49:13):
Yeah, good point.
Speaker 3 (01:49:15):
I mean Jill was lovely, but yeah, hammering and nail
through the power boxes, that's that's bare by anyone's book.
Speaker 1 (01:49:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:49:21):
Yeah, I'm going to going to look for the simplest
and the simplest answer first. Ockham's razor.
Speaker 3 (01:49:26):
Yeah, very good. We've got time for me. Yes, we
do before the break in our metes.
Speaker 5 (01:49:31):
Ooh, this might be after the break sort of stuff,
because I'm about to give you, well, I guess I'm
going to give you something that'll have you, guys thinking
quite quite hard and be pretty convinced after what I
tell you.
Speaker 2 (01:49:43):
Wally, Okay, so let's just look at our timing. See, Tyler,
we've got we've got two minutes for.
Speaker 3 (01:49:48):
This, all right, stand by, change our worldview in two minutes.
Speaker 5 (01:49:54):
Right right in Auckland, there is a white house on
on our eyes and it's right at the top there
Alan keats the old takeaway joint. Yes, spare across from it,
and it's a it's a pretty well known is that the.
Speaker 2 (01:50:07):
Famous house where that's I've got lots of rooms and
people have flattered in it.
Speaker 4 (01:50:11):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:50:12):
I've had a brother in law that flattered in there. Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:50:15):
Right.
Speaker 5 (01:50:15):
A lot of people in there have been strangled by
a ghost, and I have in that property. I stayed
there for a little while back in about nineteen ninety six,
I think, and I came in on the last night
that I was staying with a friendship told me to
watch out for this entity. And I didn't believe it.
And on the very last night I was there, I
(01:50:37):
got a visitation. And there has been other people that
have had this. I met one in a supermarket who
said it a run off when I mentioned that I
had had encountered this for one of a bit description,
I guess it's a ghost. But the entity, you know,
it just came up at about four in the morning.
(01:50:57):
The room went cold. It was a green shadow. It
came over my bed. It strangled me and it sucked
me dry, and I, you know, as far as energy goes,
and I just I had to go back to sleep.
And and as I woke, I came and sat in
the kitchen at the place I was staying in. The
woman that I was staying with said, oh, you had
(01:51:18):
a visit last night, did you? And I just sat
there and apparently it happened a lot. There are quite
a few people out there that have had this, So
I would suggest, because it's so local to you guys
and it isn't part now, I don't see a problem
with you guys going in with some some paranormal experts
and checking this.
Speaker 2 (01:51:35):
Out because true, man, I've actually been in that house
because I played a gig there once in the main
and my band played in that house. It was a
big party there. It was fantastic and the dick outside
still steer well outside collapsed on someone when we were
playing at the goal because it was so pass right.
Speaker 3 (01:51:52):
Yeah, someone's house now, sorry to jump in. I'm just
trying to find it. Find it.
Speaker 2 (01:51:56):
So the white that one that's got the driveway out
the front like you drive in and well.
Speaker 5 (01:52:01):
It's very obvious. Yeah, yeah, just down from the big church. Yeah,
the big white house's two stories, got a big vern
and I was probably built in the late taking.
Speaker 6 (01:52:11):
Hundreds and then Brandon I believe.
Speaker 5 (01:52:15):
I believe from the legend around this, which you know
I've encountered it. It's true a lady in the early
days of it had hung herself from that balcony or
something of that type, or she had been murdered. No
one really knows, but there is a sort of evidence
I guess it points to that type of thing happening there.
(01:52:36):
And apparently that spirit is still within the house. And
like a lot of people who have told you, and
a few ladies that have called you, you know, I
come from the persuasion of you know, theistic God and Christianity,
and I see that as yeah, it's supernatural from the
other side, and it's probably sorcery, but it does happen.
Speaker 2 (01:52:59):
All right, Well, thank you so much for cool man.
Speaker 5 (01:53:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:53:02):
Interesting, Yeah, I mean there was there was that thing,
because you know, I've woken up with the ghost strangling
me before and that same barn I was talking about.
But there is a thing called no hallucination. Anyway, when
you first wake up, when you've been asleep right then,
that is when your prefrontal cortex hasn't come on yet,
So it's just your ancient parts of your brain, like
(01:53:24):
you're Amgdaler firing up. So you have a lot of fears.
So without the prefrontal cortex, you're just living in a
state of fear. That's the primitive part of your brain
is just fears and panic and so often, and when
you wake up, you are in the state of looking
to be as scared as you possibly can be. So
I'm not sure if Matt woke up to this. I
(01:53:44):
didn't hear that part of it. But if you feel
like you've woken up, and it's often someone screaming in
your face when you wake.
Speaker 3 (01:53:50):
Up as a sleep psychosis. But I've had that once
before where I woke up but I couldn't move any
part of my body and clearly I was still in
the dream state that I saw something pretty terrifying. Could
not move a muscle and it was like that for
a good ninety seconds before finally I started to come down.
Speaker 2 (01:54:08):
That's a slightly different thing, but yeah, when you get
paralyzed in your sleep, that's it. Yeah. So I'm talking
about hYP no pompic hallucinations, which is hallucinations that you
have when you wake up because you wake up in
a state of fair So the same reason why you
wake up and worry about your taxes three in the morning,
but not quite as fright.
Speaker 3 (01:54:24):
Now, I learned a lot on the show. Oh, one
hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call.
Speaker 1 (01:54:27):
It's eight to four, the big stories, the big issues,
the big trends, and everything in between.
Speaker 6 (01:54:35):
Matt and Tayler Afternoons with.
Speaker 1 (01:54:37):
The Volvo XC ninety attention to detail and a commitment
to comfort.
Speaker 6 (01:54:41):
News Dog ZEDB News Dog z EDB.
Speaker 2 (01:54:45):
So we've got a few texts here on that previous call.
I lived at that Pamel property for years. Never had
a visit from the screaming lady at the big white
house and four flats. I used to be the property
manager there until eighteen months ago. There you go, never
had an issue and I ordered my tenants.
Speaker 3 (01:54:59):
I believe you at way, as you mentioned before, you
did have a gig there.
Speaker 2 (01:55:03):
Yeah, but we went in there and played there at
a house party and then the balcony collapsed on someone.
Speaker 3 (01:55:08):
They were fine, Yeah, And that wasn't because it ghost.
You just had far too many people on the bell.
Speaker 2 (01:55:12):
Which just too popular. If we were really popular, we're
playing spark Arena or not a flat buddy, quick, couple.
Speaker 3 (01:55:19):
Of teks to wrap this up, guys, you'd be surprised
how many houses have had someone die in them. It's
quite common, as not everyone dies in hospital, which is
fair enough. If the house has existed for long enough,
chances are someone probably might have.
Speaker 2 (01:55:33):
Passed awayness, Well, there we go. You've convinced me over
a great hour of talkback. Thanks for you were calling. Text.
I'll be making an offer on the Polkinghorn mention right now. Yeah,
there you go. Six million dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:55:42):
How much are you gonna offer?
Speaker 2 (01:55:43):
Wow, I'll screw them down about a mill I reckon.
Speaker 3 (01:55:47):
Thank you very much for today. We'll do it all
again tomorrow and give them a taste of Kiwi till
we're out.
Speaker 6 (01:56:08):
And can you go?
Speaker 1 (01:56:12):
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