It's the best time of year apart from Halloween, Victoria Ransom says.
Highcliff Rd on Otago Peninsula, which was closed by slips last June, has reopened to the public.
The South Dunedin Police Station remains closed to the public almost nine months after its doors were shut because of flood damage.
An American tourist has escaped charges for a Valentine's Day theft.
A high-risk Dunedin Facebook predator may be subject to an extended supervision order following his release from prison later this year.
The Dunedin City Council will spend $580,000 shoring up the St Clair sea wall and sand dunes before this winter.
A $39,000 pier will be built at the Dunedin Botanic Garden duck pond after eliciting only a single quack in debate.
The Dunedin City Council is righting the wrongs of street names past and agreed to drop the erroneous "e'' from Ayreshire Dr in Mosgiel.
The Trans Pacific Partnership Roadshow rolled through Dunedin yesterday, attracting attention and the odd spot of indignation.
For the skinny on ultimate biking freedom, look no further than the Southern Free Beaches naturist club.
The Dunedin City Council will soon tender about $1 million in outstanding roadworks, more than nine months after last June's torrential downpour.
Overloading was to blame for the collapse of a balcony in North Dunedin last week which injured 18 people, a structural engineer investigating for the Dunedin City Council says.
Dunedin's food-service sector is well placed to cope with new regulations which came into effect on March 1.
The much-awaited Bluff oyster season began yesterday and if professional oyster shucker Harley Batchelor's opinion is anything to go by, a bumper season awaits.
New Zealand's new food safety regime will come with costs to customers, the Hospitality Association says.
After almost 300 assaults at Otago Corrections Facility during the past five years, it has emerged a specialist threat response team will be established at the prison within months.
The family of Jim Hansen are reeling as his death at sea marks the second tragedy to strike the family this year.
Police were kept busy yesterday again responding to threats made against schools.
An 11-year-old boy set out for Dunedin from Invercargill on his 80cc motorcycle on Monday night, pyjama-clad and with a can of petrol, police say.
A trainee worker was taken to hospital after being thrown 8m down a bank at the Dunedin Botanic Garden yesterday.