Waikato Times

Civilised fun at Hamilton Gardens

- MIKE MATHER

They could not have had a more perfect day for a garden party if they had ordered it.

Hundreds of Hamiltonia­ns – many dressed in their best 1920s fashions and with plenty of scones and flasks of tea tucked away in their picnic baskets – gathered in the hot sunshine at the Rogers Rose Gardens on Sunday for the third annual Katherine Mansfield Garden Party.

Held in honour of the revered New Zealand author whose works contribute­d to the thenrevolu­tionary modernist literary movement, the event has become a staple of the annual Hamilton Gardens Arts Festival.

Live music, Charleston dance lessons, vintage cars and bestdresse­d competitio­ns were held. Stalls sold retro fashion items and assorted cheeses and other culinary delights.

‘‘It’s a nice, chilled out, cruisy event,’’ said attendee Sandra Jensen, employing terminolog­y that was only slightly at odds with her 1920s safari outfit, evoking the British Raj.

Jensen and her partner Mark Vuletich are mainstays of the Kirikiriro­a Society of Velocipede and Tweed Enthusiast­s and, equipped with their vintage bicycles and authentic pith helmets, cut striking figures amid the crowds.

Standing out in this crowd was no small achievemen­t. Everywhere women were dressed in their best flapper dresses and boater hats, beads and high heels while the men were kitted out in dinner suits and plaid jackets – and in one case a World War I fighter pilot’s flight suit.

The event was a fundraiser for the new Mansfield Garden, now under constructi­on at the gardens.

‘‘It’s recreating the setting from one of her most famous short stories, The Garden Party,’’ said Virginia Graham, president of the Friends of the Hamilton Gardens.

Elements from Mansfield’s descriptio­n will be constructe­d, including a tent on a tennis court, in front of a karaka hedge; a lily pond; and long tables covered in crisp white table cloths with 15 kinds of sandwiches and cream puffs.

‘‘We have aimed to raise $150,000 for it and we are well on the way to our target.

‘‘Our group have been propagatin­g and selling many of the rose bushes here, and we have been selling numerous other things too like cheese platters and preserves. It is going wonderfull­y.’’ A man and his daughter who failed to return from a fishing trip have been found, a day later. The 73-year-old man and his 46-year-old daughter set off for a day-long trip on the western side of the Firth of Thames, north of Miranda, at 10.30am on Friday. They were found tired and hungry, Coastguard duty officer Mark Leevers said on Saturday morning. ‘‘They had been out all night in a very small vessel and they hadn’t expected to be out overnight … This could have been resolved quickly had they been able to tell someone they were in trouble.’’ The man’s wife had reported the pair missing about 2.30am on Saturday, police said.

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