A first for Toyota Heartland Rugby and possibly Air New Zealand NPC, Poverty Bay’s Kahu Tamatea looked into the lens of the camera and proposed to his long-time partner Brodie during the filming at Rugby Park, Gisborne.
The filming was a well-guarded secret with Kahu proposing last Saturday and Heartland Rugby screening five days later on Wednesday night.
Waiting in agonising anticipation for the screening on SKY Sport, Kahu received a shocked and excited ‘YES!’ to his proposal, much to his delight.
Heartland Rugby returns to Gisborne this weekend for the 2nd division Air New Zealand NPC when Poverty Bay battles it out with Nelson Bays. The couple will be interviewed and a screening of Brodie’s reaction will be shown
Source: scoop.co.nz
Related Travel Information
TO HELL with neutrality and objectivity, I'm barracking this afternoon. Barracking for the story, and the story is the Swans.
Yeah, yeah, I know, people true to their role in the media should be neutral and objective, and I like to think most of us are most of the time.
Occasionally, though, the romance of a particular story is irresistible. It dwarfs everything else, as romance can do.
Like 1990, when, for the first and perhaps only time in my life, I adopted Collingwood in the Grand Final.
Watching the outpouring of emotion on the ground immediately after the final siren when the Magpies
The bride wore a curvy, strapless, white satin gown sprinkled with sequins.
She also had on tights, sweat pants, rain pants and a pair of hefty hiking boots fitted with spikes.
The groom was charmed. "That's the way she is," said Ken Rose, "although the dress was a surprise."
Ken and Dagmar Rose of Warrington, Pa., tied the knot two summers ago on an Alaskan glacier. In doing so, they joined a small but growing number of people who plan their summer nuptials on the Juneau ice field, a 1,500-square-mile expanse of jagged ice and rock
At the Stadium/Armory Metro stop a few hours before the Nationals play the Mets on the Fourth of July, "Little Christopher" Howland demonstrates how he's planning to position his glove to catch a foul ball. The 10-year-old from Fairfax, who's played a little outfield himself, plants his feet and turns the glove up, opening it slightly. "I'll be getting under the ball, " he explains. Nearby, 6-year-old Ben, a brother of few words, just grins, opens and shuts his catcher's mitt and stands behind his mother, Cecilia.
It's the family's first Nationals game and it feels like the start of something
The Union Minister for Civil Aviation, Mr Praful Patel, today brushed aside the resentment over the stalled construction of the terminal of Sri Guru Ramdass International Airport and assured the public that a bigger and modern complex would be built.
Addressing a gathering during the flag-off ceremony of the inaugural Air-India’s Delhi-Amritsar-Birmingham-Toronto flight here today, Mr Patel said top priority was being given to restart the construction of the ultra-modern airport. He, however, said the project could be delayed by another six months as the Ministry of Civil Aviation, in consultation with the Airport Authority of India (AAI), was preparing a
In a novel effort aimed at creating awareness about preservation of ecological balance and promoting tourism, a private sector hospitality company has ventured into the field of wildlife and adventure tourism.
Country Club India Limited, a Hyderabad based company with an assets base of Rs 500 crore, has acquired its first wildlife property and launched the "Country Club Bush Betta Resort" spread over 20 acres next to National Park at Bandipur in Karnataka.
A prototype of the jungle resort was launched by Union Tourism Minister Renuka Choudhary here last night.
The company proposed to invest about Rs 20 crore in acquiring and