
Reserve Force Soldiers Hone Their Combat Skills In Annual Waiouru Exercise
They joined more than 70 Regular Force personnel in the Waiouru Military Training Area for Exercise Tauwharenīkau, which wound up recently.
The nine-day combined arms collective training exercise includes intelligence-driven and action-based missions based on a simulated conflict scenario centred on unrest on a fictional island in the South Pacific.
The lead unit for the exercise was New Zealand Army Reserve unit 5th/7th Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment.
Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Shaun O'Connor, said the exercise prepared Army Reserve personnel to surge and embed seamlessly into 1st (New Zealand) Brigade when required.
'The work that goes into maintaining combat readiness is at the heart of what we do as an organisation, giving us the skills, tools and resilience to respond to any situation when called upon,' Lieutenant Colonel O'Connor said.
'Reservists are trained to the same standard and meet the same operational levels as their Regular Force peers, and bring a valuable diverse mix of backgrounds, expertise and skillsets to the Army.'
Currently, more than 2,000 Reserve Force soldiers stand ready to support the Regular Force.
Assistant Chief of Army for Reserves, Colonel Brendon Jull said the exercise proved the Reserve Force doesn't just contribute high-quality personnel to Army but was integral to delivering its operational outputs - both at home and abroad.
'The fact that the NZ Army can run this exercise while concurrently deploying close to 700 New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) personnel to a major Australian exercise (Exercise Talisman Sabre) highlights the NZDF's ability to deliver large-scale, integrated operations across domains, services and nations.'
Lieutenant Colonel O'Connor said the Reserve Force was hoping to deploy a company-sized group to the next iteration of Talisman Sabre in 2027.
'This year's Exercise Tauwharenīkau was intended to replicate the scale and complexity of the kinds of operations soldiers would be likely to encounter once deployed overseas.'
The exercise operated under a combat framework that includes a command-and-control centre, a light infantry rifle company made up of three 33-soldier platoons, and combat support units including engineers, signallers, mounted armoured capability, intelligence specialists, medics and dental specialists.
The exercise also incorporated operational support from the Royal New Zealand Air Force's (RNZAF) No. 3 Squadron NH90 helicopters and No. 40 Squadron C-130J Hercules aircraft.
The exercise also featured an Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) detachment from both the Army's 16th Field Regiment and the RNZAF, as well as infantry support dogs, explosive detection dogs and a mounted reconnaissance section – the Waikato Mounted Rifles.
Reserve Force training typically occurs once a fortnight or monthly.
Reserve Force soldiers can also take part in all NZDF exercises, both nationally and internationally, based on time availability and skills required.
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Scoop
2 days ago
- Scoop
Reserve Force Soldiers Hone Their Combat Skills In Annual Waiouru Exercise
More than 300 New Zealand Army Reserve Force soldiers from around the country have tackled sub-zero temperatures at Waiouru for a crucial annual activity to ensure they are combat-ready and can integrate seamlessly into the Regular Force. They joined more than 70 Regular Force personnel in the Waiouru Military Training Area for Exercise Tauwharenīkau, which wound up recently. The nine-day combined arms collective training exercise includes intelligence-driven and action-based missions based on a simulated conflict scenario centred on unrest on a fictional island in the South Pacific. The lead unit for the exercise was New Zealand Army Reserve unit 5th/7th Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment. Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Shaun O'Connor, said the exercise prepared Army Reserve personnel to surge and embed seamlessly into 1st (New Zealand) Brigade when required. 'The work that goes into maintaining combat readiness is at the heart of what we do as an organisation, giving us the skills, tools and resilience to respond to any situation when called upon,' Lieutenant Colonel O'Connor said. 'Reservists are trained to the same standard and meet the same operational levels as their Regular Force peers, and bring a valuable diverse mix of backgrounds, expertise and skillsets to the Army.' Currently, more than 2,000 Reserve Force soldiers stand ready to support the Regular Force. Assistant Chief of Army for Reserves, Colonel Brendon Jull said the exercise proved the Reserve Force doesn't just contribute high-quality personnel to Army but was integral to delivering its operational outputs - both at home and abroad. 'The fact that the NZ Army can run this exercise while concurrently deploying close to 700 New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) personnel to a major Australian exercise (Exercise Talisman Sabre) highlights the NZDF's ability to deliver large-scale, integrated operations across domains, services and nations.' Lieutenant Colonel O'Connor said the Reserve Force was hoping to deploy a company-sized group to the next iteration of Talisman Sabre in 2027. 'This year's Exercise Tauwharenīkau was intended to replicate the scale and complexity of the kinds of operations soldiers would be likely to encounter once deployed overseas.' The exercise operated under a combat framework that includes a command-and-control centre, a light infantry rifle company made up of three 33-soldier platoons, and combat support units including engineers, signallers, mounted armoured capability, intelligence specialists, medics and dental specialists. The exercise also incorporated operational support from the Royal New Zealand Air Force's (RNZAF) No. 3 Squadron NH90 helicopters and No. 40 Squadron C-130J Hercules aircraft. The exercise also featured an Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) detachment from both the Army's 16th Field Regiment and the RNZAF, as well as infantry support dogs, explosive detection dogs and a mounted reconnaissance section – the Waikato Mounted Rifles. Reserve Force training typically occurs once a fortnight or monthly. Reserve Force soldiers can also take part in all NZDF exercises, both nationally and internationally, based on time availability and skills required.


Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Confrontations with the Stone of Destiny
When I was a child, I was an avid collector — of stamps, coins, stickers, shells, and precious gemstones. I loved collecting gemstones in particular, scouring car boot sales for gleaming tiger's eyes and slices of agate, visiting incense-scented hippie shops on holiday to purchase polished turquoise nuggets, and pocketing smooth quartz pebbles pulled from rivers. I loved how the stones glinted in the sunlight, how they glowed when wet, how the colours complemented each other when nestled together in my sweaty palm. Recently I was reminded of another stone — one far less glitzy and glamorous — that is nevertheless very important to Scotland, and indeed the United Kingdom as a whole. This stone came to my attention because a silly kilt-wearing Australian tried to smash through a glass case to get to it. What he intended on doing with it is anyone's guess. I am, of course, talking about the Stone of Scone (Gaelic: An Lia Fail). When I first heard about this stone, I imagined it as a giant fluffy scone, perhaps drenched in butter or topped with jam and cream. The reality is a little less exciting, although the Stone is scone-coloured. The Stone of Scone is a rather dull, rough-hewn block of red sandstone. It measures 66cm × 42cm × 27cm, and at 152kg, it's rather heavy. There's a cross incised on one side and an iron ring at each end to aid with transport. All in all, the Stone is weathered, cracked, and unremarkable. And yet this simple slab has played an important role in the coronations of countless kings and queens. According to legend, the Stone once bore a piece of metal inscribed with a prophecy later rendered by Sir Walter Scott — a key architect of modern Scottish identity himself — as "Unless the fates be faulty grown / And prophet's voice be vain / Where'er is found this sacred stone / The Scottish race shall reign." I suspect Scott was just being fanciful; he did have a love of romantic nationalism and a certain flair for myth-making after all. As with most famous old relics, the origins of the Stone are highly contested. According to one legend, the Stone was originally Jacob's pillow — the very stone upon which he dreamed of a ladder to heaven — which was then hauled from the Holy Land through Egypt, Sicily, and Spain to Ireland, and finally on to Scotland. I don't really buy this though; with the dimensions the Stone has, Jacob would surely have woken with a crook neck. Another myth holds that it came from the Irish Hill of Tara, where ancient High Kings were crowned. These myths weren't merely fanciful however; they created a divine genealogy for Scottish monarchy, enabling the Stone's owner to claim heirship to a sacred and ancient tradition. The first definite historical mention of the Stone itself is hard to pin down, but tradition associates it with the ninth century coronation of Kenneth MacAlpin, the first King of Scots. It was housed at Scone Abbey (sadly not a towering cathedral of pastry and butter, although to be fair, this would have rendered it even more likely to be sacked), near Perth, and used in the enthronement of Scottish monarchs. The Stone became a conduit for kingship; to rule Scotland, one's bum had to come into contact with the holy rock. In 1296, Edward I of England invaded Scotland and nicked the Stone of Scone, stealing it down to London where he had a special throne (the Coronation Chair) built so that the stone fit under it. In doing so, he effectively subjugated this powerful Scottish symbol into English royal pageantry; Scotland's sovereignty was (quite literally) under English rule. By sitting over the Stone, English monarchs laid claim to the Scottish crown as well as their own. The ascension of King James VI of Scotland, aka James I of England, to the throne ostensibly fulfilled the ancient prophecy later popularised by Scott however; patriotic Scots liked to point out that a Scotsman indeed ruled where the Stone of Scone was. The Stone has had a long history of being attacked and stolen. On June 11, 1914, for example, suffragettes from the Women's Social and Political Union planted a bomb loaded with metal bolts and nuts next to the Coronation Chair. The subsequent explosion thankfully did not injure anyone, but it did blow off a corner of the Coronation Chair and may have cracked the Stone down the middle (although this was not discovered until decades later). In World War 2, there was great anxiety about the Coronation Chair being potentially damaged or destroyed by German air raids. The chair therefore was moved to Gloucester Cathedral for the duration of the war, while the Stone was hidden within Westminster Abbey behind ancient lead coffins. Only a handful of people knew its location. To safeguard this secret, Charles Peers, the abbey's Surveyor of the Fabric, drew three maps: two were sealed and sent to Canada — one to Prime Minister William King in Ottawa, the other to Ontario's Lieutenant Governor in Toronto — before Peers destroyed the third once he confirmed their receipt. The Germans, of course, never invaded Britain; the Stone was safe. But in the 1950s it fell into a rather different set of hands. On Christmas Day 1950, a group of Scottish students — Ian Hamilton, Gavin Vernon, Kay Matheson, and Alan Stuart — surreptitiously snuck the Stone out of Westminster Abbey, intending to return it to its true home — Scotland. Using a mackintosh coat to drag it over the tiled floor, Hamilton and co deposited it in the boot of a car waiting outside, whereupon they discovered the Stone had broken into two pieces (thanks, suffragettes). After burying the bigger portion in a Kent field, where they camped for a few days, the students dug it back up and returned to Scotland, along with a new accomplice, John Josselyn. At some point, this piece was briefly hidden at the home of a US consulate staff member in Glasgow. The smaller chunk was brought up north at a later time. The two pieces were then passed on to nationalist politician Robert Gray, who arranged for a Glasgow stonemason to repair it. Naturally, the British government were desperate to find the Stone, but were unsuccessful in their search efforts. On April 11 1951, the Stone was finally discovered — carefully wrapped in a Saltire on the altar of Arbroath Abbey. This location was meaningful; the abbey was the site of the signing of the 1320 Declaration of Arbroath, a famous assertion of Scottish independence addressed to the Pope. The Stone was promptly transported back to Westminster Abbey, where it lay until on November 30 1996, when it was returned to Scotland to reside at Edinburgh Castle alongside the Scottish Crown Jewels. The Stone of Destiny reached its final home (kilt-wearing Aussies be damned) on March 30 2024, when it was moved to Perth Museum. I first saw the Stone of Scone when I arrived in Edinburgh for the first time in September 2014. I was, I must admit, more enamoured by the sparkling royal jewellery. The Stone of Destiny remains the property of the Crown and is transported to London for use at coronations. In a sense this arrangement — part compromise, part custody battle — reflects the ongoing tension between tradition and modern national identity, and between "Scottishness" and "Britishness". There's something faintly absurd about investing so much meaning in a slab of sandstone. But then again, so much of our politics, culture, and nationhood is absurd — both in New Zealand and the United Kingdom. There's the powdered wigs some barristers wear, and the fact Scotland's national animal is a unicorn. There are the giant vegetables and animals so beloved of little Kiwi towns like Taihape (Big Gumboot) and Ohakune (Big Carrot), and the annual cheese-rolling race in Gloucestershire, where dozens of people hurl themselves down a near-vertical hill, chasing a wheel of Double Gloucester cheese. All considered, a lump of sandstone feels no more improbable than the other odd emblems we choose to carry our deepest loyalties, and perhaps that's exactly why it works. — Jean Balchin is an ODT columnist who has started a new life in Edinburgh.


Otago Daily Times
17-07-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Girl who died in Fiordland drowning missed 'every moment, every day'
By Liu Chen of RNZ The mother of a 10-year-old Australian girl who drowned during a visit to New Zealand says a coroner's report into her daughter's death has spurred feelings of overwhelming sadness as well as some comfort. Tegan Chen, of Lindfield, New South Wales, drowned in the fast-flowing Marian Creek in Fiordland National Park in January last year after she fell in and was swept downstream. In findings released July 9, Coroner Mary-Anne Borrowdale described Tegan as "a very active and happy girl". Tegan's mother, Deb Fung, said she missed her daughter "every moment, every day". Fung said pictures in the coroner's report showed how easy it was to walk out onto the rocks from the track. The Department of Conservation installed warning signs immediately after the incident, with permanent signs installed later. A viewing platform that had been planned prior to Tegan's death had also been completed in June, covering the rocks that were previously accessible. Barriers had been constructed on all sides of the platform. "I'm glad that they've done that and, gosh, if that had been in place before ... which, when you think about it," Fung said, tapering off as she considered other outcomes of their visit to the national park. She said the family had been processing their grief and were grateful for the support of their family and friends. "Holding the memories of her very closely ... building memories with her in spirit differently," Fung said. "I guess facing the pain rather than trying to escape and trying to forget has been ... our approach ... and that's really helped." Fung said her daughter's passing had changed the family's perspective on life. "Just learning to try and embrace whatever days we have ahead of us and projects or things that have meaning and purpose rather than just going about life like nothing has changed or nothing really matters," she said. Tegan's father, Adrian Chen, said the family were constantly reminded of what they had lost, but they were also looking at opportunities to make a difference to other people with what they had experienced. "There is a lot of grief and a lot of traumas out there, not just for us, ... that a lot of people are going through," he said. "If we can be an encouragement to others ... and I guess almost helping people to see difficult circumstances is not just something to mourn and grief, but something that can also reshape us. "Like there's strength and resolve even amidst the tears and grief." Adrian Chen said it could be difficult for men to open up if they encountered difficult situations, but it was important for them to "take time out and to reflect and to face those emotions". "I think without the chance to do that, then ... I think what often happens is that we will bottle it up and then we'll have an eruption, like a volcano exploding," he said. The couple were planning to build a memorial garden outside of Sydney in which people could plant trees to mark the birth and passing of loved ones, which, at the same time, would be a reforestation project that helped the environment, Fung said. Aaron Fleming, director of operations in Southern South Island at the Department of Conservation, said the department looked closely at its facilities, systems and processes following a tragedy like this to identify room for improvement and ensure steps were taken to reduce the likelihood of similar things happening. "On behalf of the Department of Conservation I would like to extend our deepest sympathies to Tegan's family and acknowledge the terrible loss they have suffered," Fleming said. "We have an ongoing programme of reviewing of similar sites across public conservation lands to identify any that need further hazard warnings in place."