A year of note for Broad Bay

The Broad Bay Gala Day yesterday provided a range activities while highlighting the heritage of...
The Broad Bay Gala Day yesterday provided a range activities while highlighting the heritage of the area. PHOTOS: GERARD O’BRIEN
Yesterday's Broad Bay Gala Day could be the prelude to a larger music and arts festival, its organiser says.

Live music, boats, bunting and children’s activities all contributed to the community event, which also emphasised local history.

Organising committee head Amber Sharma said the gala was testing the waters for a larger music and arts festival she hoped could happen in future.

Jackson Brown, 6, and stepsister Saskiia Fallows, 5, play together at the Broad Bay Gala Day...
Jackson Brown, 6, and stepsister Saskiia Fallows, 5, play together at the Broad Bay Gala Day yesterday.
She also aimed to make the gala day a yearly event, as it was a great way to bring the community together.

"This community has got so many beautiful people who want to help and donate and work together — there’s lots of aroha today."

Proceeds from the $2 entry fee would go towards youth events at the community centre, and the day was "all about the kids and the youth", she said.

She had recently started a community singing group, Choir! Choir!, who were also among the day’s performers.

She came from a long line of musicians and singers and the death of her father, Pita Kotorewai Smith, had moved her to start the group.

They needed an event to perform at, which helped spark the idea for a community gala.

The event was also a way to celebrate 175 years of European settlement in Broad Bay, 100 years since the boat club was founded and 75 years since the Polish church was moved there.

An exhibition is being held until Sunday at the Broad Bay Community Centre to highlight the heritage of the area.

Arianna Mills, 8, meets stilt-walker "Miggles" (Miguel Weaver) at the Broad Bay Gala Day.
Arianna Mills, 8, meets stilt-walker "Miggles" (Miguel Weaver) at the Broad Bay Gala Day.
Volunteer Kate Oktay said Ms Sharma was "amazing", as the work she had put in to organising the event had amounted to a fulltime job for the past three weeks.

Dunedin’s Tayla Masson was among those who took their children to the gala.

Signs for the event piqued her interest, and as it was a lovely day it was a good chance to see what was happening, she said.

fiona.ellis@odt.co.nz

 

 

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