The Ashes live: Australia v England – fourth test, day two

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action, as the fourth in the five-test series between archrivals Australia and England continues at the MCG in Melbourne.

Australia swept to an 82-run win in the third Ashes test at Adelaide Oval to retain the urn with two matches to spare.

After eight-wicket defeats in Perth and Brisbane, England have lost the Ashes in three matches for the fourth consecutive tour, while losing 16 of their last 18 tests in Australia.

First ball is scheduled for 12.30pm NZT.

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Philip Brown

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

NZ’s best public events to celebrate the New Year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Christchurch will welcome 2025 with live music and fireworks. AFP / MATIAS DELACROIX

A rundown on some of the biggest public events to ring in 2026 – and where to catch the best fireworks displays.

Northland

A fireworks display launched at the stroke of midnight from a barge moored in the channel between Paihia and Russell will be seen in the skies at midnight.

The best viewing areas include Paihia Wharf and Maiki Hill lookout, and along the town’s waterfront. The fireworks can also be seen from Waitangi, Ōpua and Russell.

Auckland’s Sky Tower will be the fireworks focus on New Year’s Eve. Screenshot

Auckland

New Year’s Eve celebrations in the city centre will include a collection of ‘special moments’ that will shine on the Sky Tower from 9pm, leading up to the midnight fireworks display from the tower. Auckland Harbour Bridge will also come to life from 9pm with Vector Lights, with promises of a “brand-new dynamic light and sound show”, starting in the minutes before midnight.

Many roads in the central city and Wynyard Quarter will be reserved for pedestrians from 10pm on 31 December to 1am on 1 January. Auckland Council says nearby maunga – Maungawhau / Mt Eden, Maungauika / North Head and Takarunga / Mt Victoria – will remain open until after midnight with security in place. Buses and ferries will be running on a Saturday timetable, with extra buses operating after midnight.

TVNZ will broadcast the countdown and NYE midnight moment live on TVNZ 1 and 2.

Napier

This annual council-run extravaganza at the Soundshell promises an “unforgettable night of music, community, and fireworks”.

The celebrations kick off at 7pm with live music, and there will be two fireworks displays – an early show at 9:45pm for the young ones and the main event at midnight.

Taupō

Fireworks will be launched from a barge on the lake as part of Taupō’s annual Big Bang event, with the main show at midnight and a Mini Bang fireworks event at 9.30pm. There will also be family-friendly activities and entertainment, with Roberts Street closed from 7am on 31 December to 2am on 1 January 2026.

The Festival of Lights in New Plymouth © Charlotte Curd

New Plymouth

The Festival of Lights at Pukekura Park runs all summer, and this free council event is wheelchair accessible and very family-friendly – including an 8pm “countdown to midnight”. From 8.30pm live music and DJs take to two stages around the park in the run-up to midnight.

Palmerston North

The council’s free New Year’s Eve event kicks off in The Square from 5pm, with live music, as well as bouncy castles, face painting and other activities. There will be fireworks displays at 9.30pm and midnight.

Wellington

Head to Wairepo Lagoon on the capital’s waterfront for a free council-run New Year’s Eve party. It will start at 3pm with food trucks opening at Odlin’s Plaza, before the live music kicks off at 8pm with Orchestra Wellington taking the stage at 10 pm until midnight.

Celebrations will also include a kids’ countdown and fireworks at 9.30pm and the midnight fireworks display to welcome 2026,

Last year’s event in Picton. Supplied to LDR

Picton

Thousands head to the Picton foreshore every New Year’s for the Marlborough District Council event, with free performances and fireworks. From 6.30pm there’ll be bands and kids’ entertainers, before the midnight fireworks display.

Nelson

Head to 1903 Square at the top of Trafalgar Street from 6pm for Nelson’s New Year’s Eve Countdown, with kids activities, bands, DJs, a kids countdown at 9pm and fireworks at midnight.

Christchurch

Christchurch’s free NYE party in North Hagley Park is being headlined by Kora on the last night of the year, backed up by Kiwi talents Dillastrate, Brad Staley and DJ Sambora.

Organisers are also promising an ‘epic’ fireworks display at midnight, but make sure you are there early – entry into the event will close at 11.45pm.

Last year’s fireworks in Timaru. Robert Smith/RNZ

Timaru

The annual Caroline Bay Carnival in Timaru will feature live music from 7pm, as well as the usual games and rides operating into the New Year, with the fireworks display down on the beach at midnight.

Queenstown

The waterfront in New Zealand’s tourism capital is a beautiful setting for the council-run New Year celebrations. Kicking off at 2pm, the event includes live bands, DJs, a family-friendly vibe and fireworks from the lake to usher in 2025.

Dunedin

The Golden Block on George Street in central Dunedin will be alive with family-friendly entertainment, face painting, workshops, and more from 5pm. A Kids’ Countdown with confetti cannons kicks off at 8pm, followed by a short parade leading families down to the Octagon accompanied by live musicians.

Live music will be played in the Octagon after that, and while there will be no fireworks display in Dunedin again this year, there will be light installations in

the Upper Octagon and the countdown at midnight will be accompanied by a piper.

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Three rescued fishermen ‘did everything right’

Source: New Zealand Police

Police successfully coordinated a water rescue of three people in the Manukau Harbour last night after their boat started taking on water.

Three fishermen set off from the Mangere Bridge Boat ramp and were approximately two kilometres away from Puketutu Island when their boat sunk. They managed to call Police just after midnight but did not know exactly where they were.

A search and rescue operation immediately commenced, coordinated by Police Maritime Unit from the Marine Rescue Centre. Units were on the ground, Police Eagle in the sky and the Auckland Airport Crash Fire Hovercraft was tasked on the water.

All three were located by Eagle not long after and were safely taken aboard the rescue hovercraft around 1.30am.

Sergeant Jesse Jenden from the Auckland Police Maritime Unit said the fishermen did everything right and helped their own rescue.

“We’re happy these fishermen did all the right things when heading out on the water. Anything can happen and you really need to be prepared for that.

“They ticked all the boxes by having waterproof communication devices, were wearing life jackets, listened to the instructions from the rescuers and kept hold of some chilly bins for extra floatation if needed,” said Sergeant Jenden.

Family of the fishermen said they were in good spirits once they were back on shore.

For any water related emergencies, always call 111.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

How a father saved his kids and friend after boat capsize on notorious sandbar

Source: Radio New Zealand

Darren Teague and his boat that capsized on the Raglan Bar on 1 November. Supplied

A father, his two kids, and a friend were flung into treacherous waters when their boat capsized on a notorious west coast sandbar last month.

Maritime safety experts say it shows that even when boaties do everything right, things can still go wrong.

Reporter Mary Argue speaks to the skipper, credited with saving multiple lives that day.

Sunrise is still hours away when Darren Teague wakes his kids.

The 12 -and 14-year-old are bundled into the car, along with one of his mates, and they hit the road heading west from Waikato, his late-model fishing boat in tow.

They roll into Raglan and as daylight breaks on 1 November, launch the game fisher with Teague at the helm.

In a little over four hours’ time, all four will be in the water – their boat upside down in the surge and wash of the infamous Raglan Bar.

“I remember looking at just two waves standing up in front of me,” Teague says.

“[It was] like trying to put your seatbelt on halfway through a car crash. I couldn’t have done anything at the time.

“I can’t emphasise how fast it happened. It was seconds.”

Weeks later, he can clearly recall the panic on his kids’ faces.

A deadly and dangerous feature

According to Maritime NZ, bars are the most dangerous feature on New Zealand’s coast – costing five people their lives in 2024, and necessitating the rescue of more than twice as many.

The build up of sand at the entrance to a harbour, or river, can dramatically reduce the depth of the water and increase the height of waves – especially at low tide.

The Raglan Bar is one of about 100 in the country, and Teague, a keen fisherman – mostly in the Gulf and off the east coast of the North Island – is the first to say he’s no Raglan boatie.

But the Morrinsville father isn’t a novice either. He’s had a couple of boats and his fair share of dingies, and runabouts.

Over the years he’s made a point of ticking off as many boating courses as he could – skippers, radio, and one on bar crossings.

Teague checked the weather before embarking on his fourth Raglan outing. Conditions were pretty good, but as the boat approached the edge of the harbour, he pocketed his personal locator beacon (PLB), just in case.

“The bar was good at that stage,” he recalls, noting another boat was also biding its time for a break in the waves.

Both of them crossed without issue, and Teague and his crew headed to deeper water.

“We were looking forward to a good day’s fishing,” he says, but what began well, didn’t last.

“There was just a big swell coming through, and every now and again I get seasick … that day was just particularly bad, I started spewing.”

He says when the kids started feeling crook too, they called it. With a dozen snapper on board – “a few good feeds, more than enough” – the day’s fishing had wrapped before 10am, hours ahead of schedule.

Darren Teague and his boat that capsized on the Raglan Bar on 1 November. Supplied

Teague says the bar was rougher than anticipated as they headed to the harbour, but heard two boats confirm a successful crossing over the radio.

His locator beacon went back in his pocket and a crossing report was logged with Coastguard.

“I thought, ‘People are going in, it’s obviously okay.’ In hindsight, I probably should have sat there and watched it a bit longer.

“[But given] how I was feeling at the time, I was just bee-lining it back in.

“So, I just carried on, went over the bar, which was fine – my friend was standing behind me spotting waves out the back – and it was in the joggle where we came unstuck.”

‘I could see the panic’

The crew hit the frothing water on the harbour-side of the bar, and within seconds it was chaos, with two waves bearing down, Teague says there was nowhere to go, but directly into them.

The boat fell into a trough, spinning sideways as it nose-dived and waves crashed over the windscreen and side of the boat.

“One of them came straight over the side and just washed the kids straight out into the water – all in one hit.

“It was pretty surreal, but I knew it was happening and I looked at them and I could see the panic.”

Within seconds the boat had rolled.

“I only had enough time to tell them – they were trying to scramble back on the boat – and I just said, ‘Get out of it,’ and then I ripped it [the motor] out of gear.”

He tried to grab his mate, who’d become trapped in the back corner of the boat, and then it all went quiet.

At 10:12am, Coastguard Raglan was alerted to a report of a capsized boat on the Raglan Bar. The first rescue jetski hit the water within 10 minutes, followed by a second jetski and a rescue boat.

Around the same time, two senior Raglan lifeguards – who’d just arrived at the club for patrol – got a call about an overturned vessel.

A couple of minutes later, their Inflatable Rescue Boat (IRB) was on the water speeding towards the bar.

Darren Teague and his boat that capsized on the Raglan Bar on 1 November. Supplied

The underwater calm didn’t last long.

As he came to the surface, Teague clocked his kids but not his friend.

He tried desperately to get back under the boat, but couldn’t, and admits feeling a huge sense of relief when his mate finally popped up.

However, he was without a lifejacket – he’d been forced to unclip it to get out.

Teague grabbed the children and the four of them clung to the hull of the upturned boat.

“I’ve said it to a few people, but it turns out there’s not too much to hold on to on the bottom side of a boat … we ended up back in the water.”

A floating squab became their refuge, and it was around this time that his locator beacon floated out of his pocket – he grabbed it.

“I was trying to hold on to the kids – I didn’t want to let them go – I couldn’t set it off [immediately] but a boat had gone past us then, and I knew that they were going to radio for help.”

In between the onslaught of waves and reassuring the children, Teague managed to set the beacon off.

“I could see it flashing, it was going and then it was just a waiting game, I knew that people would be coming.”

Crew ‘did everything right’

Raglan Surf Lifesaving director, Fletcher Harnish had launched a jetski upon hearing about the distressed vessel and was in hot pursuit of his colleagues in the rescue boat.

Boaties inside the harbour directed the rescuers to where the stricken boat was last seen.

The Coastguard and surf lifesavers linked up and just beyond the surf zone, they saw them – four people and a capsized boat.

“The two children were picked up and put into the IRB and the adults on the back of the Coastguard jetskis,” Harnish says.

Back on shore the four patients were assessed by Hato Hone St John.

“They were in quite a good position, they’d done everything right. They were calm, just a little bit cold and shaken up.”

Coastguard Raglan volunteer and jetski Master, Harry Series agrees – Teague and his crew “did everything right” – logging a bar crossing trip report with Coastguard, wearing lifejackets, and activating their personal locator beacon.

“But unfortunately things can still go wrong,” he says.

Maritime NZ’s principal advisor recreational craft Matt Wood has investigated many fatal incidents and knows the “fine line between fatal and non-fatal”.

He’s unequivocal in his assessment.

“Darren’s actions have saved the lives of his children, his friend and himself. Many people don’t survive these things, and he has, as the result of the preparation and things he did.”

Wood says the majority of boaties get into trouble and die close to shore, with bars particularly deadly.

“They’re extremely hazardous and there’s a lot you need to do to cross safely – you need to make sure your boat’s seaworthy, and you’ve got the right safety equipment and knowledge.

“Be sure before you leave the shore.”

He says Teague did that.

He’d done a bar crossing course, his boat was fit-for-purpose, and maintained. He also had the right safety equipment, two forms of satellite-based emergency beacons – one on him and one on the boat – and the crew was wearing correctly fitted lifejackets, Wood says.

Despite that, things can still go pear-shaped.

Darren Teague and his boat that capsized on the Raglan Bar on 1 November. Supplied

Teague’s driver to get back to shore – seasickness – played a role in the accident, Wood says, but says once things had started to unravel and they were in the water, Teague made decisions that made a difference.

“They’ve got the ability to call for help and they stuck to the boat as long as they could – this increases your chances of being found and survival.

“Once they were separated from the boat they found some floating squabs. They huddled, he calmed the kids, they didn’t panic, which is just fantastic actions that he took.

“Undoubtedly, if he hadn’t done those things … I think this would have ended differently.”

Prepare, because accidents can happen

Speaking to RNZ about that day, weeks later, isn’t easy.

“I’m not really one to do this,” Teague says, “but if I can help someone else, I will”.

The capsize hasn’t put him off fishing – he’s been out since and plans to get another boat – but it’s in the back of his mind, and his advice for others is simple.

Take a personal locator beacon, wear a lifejacket and do up the crutch strap (because “hanging in the water for over half-an-hour by your neck” is pretty uncomfortable). Be aware of your surroundings.

“I don’t really know how I would have done it different today, other than manage the time of the tide when I was coming in.

“It was just one of those things eh, you run off the road in a car too, it was just an accident. It was lucky we had everything in place, I guess, to get away with it.”

*Information on how to stay safe in the water can be found on the Maritime NZ and Coastguard websites, which also includes a range of boating courses.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

‘It’s a wonderful life’: Inside NZ’s only Trappist monastery

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nestled in farmland near Takapau in Central Hawke’s Bay, you’ll find New Zealand’s only Trappist monastery.

A mossy tree lined driveway leads through fields of grazing dairy cows and up to Kopua Monastery, which sits among 900 acres of paddocks and native bush that was donated to the Church by Tom and Rosalie Prescott.

The monastery was founded in 1954, and the pioneering monks lived in shearers quarters and worked the land – milking cows, making honey, growing potatoes and farming pigs.

Kopua Monastery is part of a 900 acre dairy farm that was gifted to the Church by Tom and Rosalie Prescott in 1954.

Supplied

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Body found in search for person missing after Port Waikato jet ski incident

Source: Radio New Zealand

Port Waikato (file image). Google Maps

A search on Saturday morning for a person missing in the sea after a jet ski incident near Port Waikato has found a body.

Police said they believed the body, spotted by the Eagle helicopter, belonged to the missing man.

Three people were reported to be in distress after the incident on Christmas Day.

Two were later rescued, including a 5-year-old child.

Police said the death would be referred to the coroner.

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Watch: This is what a rip looks like and how to avoid getting caught in one

Source: Radio New Zealand

Do you know what to do if you get caught in a rip? Or how to respond if you see someone else in trouble in the water?

“Only about a third of New Zealanders can actually identify a rip,” surf lifeguard Phoebe Havill says. “We don’t want people hopping into the water in an unsafe place.”

She suggests looking for discoloured water “heading out to sea, often the rip current will churn up the water and it will be a bit sandy. There will be a calm patch with waves breaking either side”.

“Sometimes people mistake that for the safest place, but the safest place is actually where the waves are breaking nicely in sets.”

If you find yourself caught in a rip, it’s important to know the “three Rs”, Havill says.

  • Relax: Stay calm and don’t panic.
  • Raise your hand: Signal for help
  • Ride the rip out to a place where you’re comfortable to swim into shore, or someone can come and get you.

If you see someone stuck in a rip when you’re on shore, unless you’re on a patrolled/lifeguarded beach, you should call 111.

RNZ / Nathan Mckinnon

“Let them handle it, don’t go in there yourself,” Havill said.

“We’ve got such an awesome, amazing environment and coming into summer we want as many people getting home safe at the end of the day as possible after their time at the beach.

“Keep an eye out for your friends and family. Pick a lifeguarded beach. And stay sunsmart – hat, sunglasses and sunscreen – that’s really important.”

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Rāhui enacted after death at Tongariro National Park

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ/Carol Stiles

A rāhui is in place in part of the Tongariro National Park after a death on Friday.

Police said a man became unresponsive while walking the Taranaki Falls Track.

“Despite efforts from those who were walking with the man and a passerby, he sadly died at the scene,” a spokesperson said.

“The death is not being treated as suspicious and has been referred to the coroner.”

The local hapū, Ngāti Hikairo ki Tongariro, has placed a rāhui on the Taranaki Falls and Tama Lakes tracks until 6am on Tuesday 30 December.

To show respect, all hikers in the area were asked to consider using alternative tracks during the rāhui.

This rāhui will also affect those wishing to hike the Tongariro Northern Circuit between Whakapapa Village and Waihohonu Hut.

“With deep respect and sadness, we acknowledge a recent passing within Tongariro National Park,” the hapū said in a statement shared by the Department of Conservation.

“Ngāti Hikairo ki Tongariro offers aroha to the whānau and recognises the significance of this loss within our rohe.”

Guiding and transport operators for the Taranaki Falls and Tama Lakes tracks have also been made aware of the rāhui.

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Body located – Port Waikato

Source: New Zealand Police

Police Eagle has sadly located a body at Port Waikato, which is believed to be the man who went missing while jet skiing on Christmas Day.

Police will be referring the matter to the Coroner.

Our deepest thoughts and sympathies are with the man’s family at this extremely difficult time.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

The most popular recipe we served up this year

Source: Radio New Zealand

A traditional Christmas cake “with a lovely golden crumb” is RNZ’s most-viewed recipe for 2025.

Gray, the ‘Destitute Gourmet’ foodwriter who is also operations manager for the Good Works Trust Food Bank, discussed the recipe and the history of Christmas cake on RNZ’s Sunday Morning show with Stacey Morrison in late November.

She says the recipe was given to her by a friend and that she has used it for “years”.

“I don’t know where this recipe actually even originated. And everybody makes their own little adjustments and adaptations. But I like this one because it’s really easy to assemble and keeps really well.”

Gray’s cake is made to a “melt and mix” recipe and she says it’s sweet enough to not require icing, though she does include instructions on how to make a nutty toffee crust.

“Particularly for gifting or if you want a Christmas cake that really looks like a showstopper, the toffee nut crust looks amazing. It will break into toffee encrusted shards when you try and cut it, but that also is part of the joy.”

Dame Alison Holst’s Lemon Yoghurt Cake was the second most-viewed recipe. Holst shared this recipe during a regular on-air chat with Kim Hill in 2004, and it has been a favourite with RNZ audiences ever since.

That’s not surprising to son Simon, who worked with his mother on many cookbooks. “I’ve had lots of people tell me how much they love it [the lemon yoghurt cake], which is interesting because it’s not often that people specifically remember a recipe.”

The version on rnz.co.nz contains a cup of canola oil, but Holst says his mother also made it with half the amount of oil.

“Halving the oil doesn’t make that much difference to the cake at all,” he says. “I don’t think it keeps as long, but it’s not the sort of cake that you’d expect to keep anyway.”

A hearty winter recipe for Curried Sausages by Auckland foodwriter Kelly Gibney is the third-most viewed recipe.

Gibney says that initially she wasn’t sure whether to share the recipe.

“It’s not the coolest or most innovative of dishes, but it is one I personally really love. It’s so comforting and yum.”

Two of her other recipes – Red Lentil, Spinach and Tomato Dhal, and Creamy Leeks with Mushrooms and Butter Beans, took fourth and fifth place respectively.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand