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11 March 2025
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The President's Notes 
 
From President John Hawke
 
Bother,
 
This recovery lark can be difficult. I was off to RYDA when my blood pressure spiked. Sent home!  Hate that but if I am to recover then i have to do what I am told.
 
Thank you to Warwick Leyland who stepped in on Tuesday night to cover my absence.
 
As I have said the support from the club since my heart attack has been phenomonal.
 
And don't forget the petanque...
 
Thank you, Thank you.
 
President John
 
 
Club News and Notices
Ganesh Raj
 
Our speaker at Tuesday night's meeting at Remuera Golf Club was Ganesh Raj.
 
 
Ganesh who is one of the presenters of the TV show Eat Well for Less, spoke to us about food education, food insecurity (which is not about an absence or shortage of food rather it is not knowing what to do with the food and ingredients that we find in our cubboards and fridges) and "The Humble Yum Yum" which is a social media and teaching enterprise which focus's on one/two pot meats, blending various culinary traditions and using unconventional ingredients.
 
Ganesh took us through his own journey, the Eat Well for Less show.  He spoke about food insecurity and the impact of convienience food on our diets. The effect of convienience foods is that people have stopped learning to cook and that the generation presently at school are not being taught what to do in a kitchen other than press the re-heat button on a micro-wave.  Ganesh made the comment, that now the biggest stress a family faces is making a decision about what to cook for the evening meal.  An odd comment but that is a reality  of life when so much is available.
 
Ganesh also made the comment that dietary requirements, being vegan, being vegetarian, being keotish etc cause mayhem when planning meals for familys. Your editor was told by his parents to eat what was put in front of him. Now things are different.
 
Ganesh told us his biggest lesson from the TV programs he does is that we are missing the knowledge of what to do with the money we have.  While food costs with simple ingredients and condiments food can be delicious. Kitchen and budgeting confidence is important and that is where The Humble Yum Yum which aims to produce food that is cost-effective and simple to prepare.
 
The Humble Yum Yum has been put through pilot programs in Mangere focusing on teaching affordable and healthy cooking techniques. The feed-back has been such he is collaborating with the South Seas Healthcare Trust and MSD to deliver programs.  Ganeshs' aim is to build a free food education program for the country with an emphasis on providing education for young people aged between 12 to 15.
 
Ganesh highlighted the issue of food waste and shared his experience dealing with the Ministry of Education where it seems simple food is not on the menu. Because of the unrealistic nutritional guidelines imposed by the ministry he has stopped dealing with it.
 
Ganesh noted that his classes use a small number of utensils (and two pots) focus on batch cooking, and high intensity high impact classes to get his message accross.
 
Take aways from Ganesh's address were the importance of breaking the cycle of poor nutrition and promoting self sufficiency, he seeks a shift in mindset from charity to education focussing on long term solutions for food insecurity.
 
Ganesh's address was well received by those at the meeting on Tuesday and generated a spirited questions session.
 
Ganesh was thanked by Alaistair MacFarlane.
 
 
Thank you Ganesh.
 
 
 
Petanque
 
Something for you to note in your diary's. 
 
6pm, 18 March at the Epsom Bowling Club.
 
Why?
 
Because it is the Rotary Club of Newmarket's annual petanque tournament.
 
You know you want to be there.
 
It's a great night with the fun and fellowship that DG Vidya mentioned at Remuera GC on the 11th of February.
 
Contact Peter Corner to sign up.
 
$30 per person attending.
 
 
 
Rocket Burn Barrel.
 
We as in the Rotary Club of Newmarket havs made a $2,000.00 donation to this project which is sponsored by the Rotary Club of Savusavu and is intended to impact the amount of plastic pollution in Fiji.
 
A report from Dave Anderson of the Rotary Club of Savusavu is below.
Rocket Burn Barrel
2024 Year-End Report
 
The Rocket Burn Barrel (RBB) was introduced in March of 2024 as a Rotary Club of Savusavu project to help in reducing plastic pollution in Cakaudrove. The intent was and is to serve remote villages and health with no access to recycling or other “clean” disposal methods for the waste plastic they produce or collect from their beaches.
 
Over the course of 2024 we have delivered or have commitments for 38 RBB installations with the ability to destroy over 400,000 plastic bottles and other waste per year.
 
The RBB is able to do this because of its barrel-in-a-barrel design and the high airflow created that delivers a temperature regularly of 800C or more. Normal plastic that is used in drink bottles and food packaging is completely broken down and destroyed at temperature above 500C, and the worst of the potential toxins (furans and dioxins) are broken down above 700C. This results in a virtually smokeless burn with no toxins released or micro/nano-plastics created.
 
The total cost to build one of these is less than F$200 and they will last up to 18months.
  • Barrels (2):         $17 (average) The range has been $0-$80/ set.
  • Labor:               $100
  • Small parts:        $20
  • Tools:                $5 (amortized)
  • Delivery:            $20  
In 2024 we had a total cost of F$6,600 to build 42 RBBs
 
Our goal has been to get these as widely distributed as possible without cost being a barrier for places that can benefit from it. We ask for donations from each recipient to underwrite the costs of building and distributing these. The suggested donation schedule is:
  • Remote health centers:         $0 (free)
  • Villages                              $100
  • Private individuals                $200
  • Businesses                          $300
Donations from these groups totaled F$4,900 for 2024, plus donations from other Rotary Clubs and members of $3,400. This gives total receipts of $8,300.
 
As of year-end, we have F$1,700 remaining in the project account.
 
We have 2 primary challenges: getting empty barrels and “marketing” the finished RBB.
 
For most of the year getting empty drums was hit-and-miss. We would get some donated and purchased a number from local hardware stores but supplies were, and continue to be, unreliable. Dulux corporation, which donated 30 empty drums in 2024, has said it will continue to supply us with these so we are hopeful for 2025 supplies.
 
Getting the word out to villages and individuals has not been as successful as we hoped. Asking $100 from villages, our main target and the biggest opportunity for plastic destruction, has caused hesitation on their part as that is often a big sum for them. They are happy to accept an RBB when donated and have used them to good effect once received. We will revisit the donation structure in 2025 and I will be recommending villages be given them at no cost to encourage greater uptake.   
 
2025 Look Forward
We enter into 2025 with 4 RBBs on-hand and uncommitted. The goal is to deliver/install 50 more RBB’s, or one per week. This is based on Dulux’s continued support with 90+ free empty barrels and real improvements in our marketing/distribution.
 
Depending on the mix of sites, we project an average income of F$70 per RBB and an average cost of F$160, leaving a shortfall of F$90 per RBB or F$4,500 for the year-end goal. Reaching that goal would destroy approximately 50,000 kilos of plastic waste, completely and safely removing from the environment. A total investment of F$ 0.15 or USD0.06 per kilo.
 
This goal is, we believe, conservative and could certainly be overachieved by up to 100% just in our province of Cakaudrove.
 
In the coming months we will be seeking to expand the program by “cloning” it in other Fiji Rotary Clubs and organizations. There is virtually no up-front investment costs, and we can quickly train new people to build the RBBs making this an ”easy win” for many groups. The Youth Council of Cakaudrove has picked this up as one of its focus projects for clubs around the district and beyond. Detailed plans and an instructional video on how to build an RBB are available at the Rotary web-site for free and we know a number of individuals have used those to successfully build their own.
 
With even modest success in these ventures, it is not hard to believe that the RBBs in Fiji could be destroying a million kilos of plastic waste per year, a win for Fiji and the world. 
Read more...
RAP on Radio
 
RAP, the Rotary Apprenticeship Program based at One Tree Hill College has been getting great press recently. Ann Dunphy drew to our attention an interview on iheart radio where Charlotte Mckeon spoke about the program.
 
 
Have a listen.
 
As noted last week the house goes to auction  3 April 2025 at 4pm.
 
Watch this space
Looking through draft stories that didn't make it to publication your editor found one that should have been published so here it is.
 
Walsh Memorial Scout Flying School 2025
 
 
At the recent Walsh Flying School Awards dinner we presented Sion Kim from Mt Albert Grammar School with the Bruce Donnelly Memorial Scholarship.
 
The Award is for $1,000 to assist with future flying expenses and is given to the best Rotary sponsored student at the school.
 
Sion was sponsored to the Walsh by Westhaven Rotary Club, and the Bruce Donnelly Memorial Scholarship is sponsored by Anne Donnelly and RCON. 
Photo Albums
11 March 2025
Upcoming Events
Breakfast at the Salvation Army, Epsom Lodge
Epsom Lodge
Mar 15, 2025
7:00 AM – 9:31 AM
 
Breakfast Meeting: Christine McKnight
One Tree Hill College
Mar 18, 2025
8:15 AM – 9:30 AM
 
Petanque
Epsom Bowling Club
Mar 18, 2025
5:30 PM – 8:30 PM
 
Lunchtime Meeting: District Governor Vidya Nand
Epsom Community Centre
Mar 25, 2025
12:30 PM – 1:30 PM
 
Lunch Meeting
Epsom Community Centre
Apr 01, 2025
12:30 PM – 1:30 PM
 
View entire list
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