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Here comes the hard part

The regatta press gang

Cimino 13 January 2008
Updated 20 January, with gratitude

Spike in sack race Flying High: Spike at speed in one of the many sack races, Mahurangi Regatta 2006, Scotts Landing Photographer Max Cumming
In truth, most who toil at the Mahurangi Regatta are regulars in the spirit of Clive Dunn’s Dad’s Army character: ‘I should like to be the one that volunteers, Suh!’

But the difference between it being a breeze or a bother, for those who do volunteer, is down to the legwork that regatta director Michael Gordon puts in to ensure we are not too few in number.

The volunteers, of course, invariably have much more fun, and a great deal more satisfaction than the hoi polloi. So in asking folk for their assistance, the regatta organisers should feel they are distributing largesse.

The reality: it is something of an imposition because we all have busy lives and other responsibilities. And the families of the stalwarts do tend to take a back seat—family regatta picnics where the absence of said stalwart can wear thin, year after year.

Because, while it is ‘just one day’, it is Mahurangi’s big day, and serving prolonged watch on a hot and sandy finishing line, or in ‘Catering Corps’, can leave bruises, and a certain reticence to emulate the irrepressible Lance Corporal Jones, next year.

Venerable roll of volunteer roles


All offers of assistance, please contact the regatta director, Michael Gordon:
Phone +64 9 422 0703 or email jamgordon@ezysurf.co.nz

or phone 0800 mahurangi (0800 624 870)


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