The Northland Age

Jobs in jeopardy

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Ministry of Business, Industry and Employment officials have warned the Government that rapidly increasing the minimum wage will see 8000 fewer jobs created this year alone, with worse to come by 2021, according to Act leader David Seymour. “New Zealand already has the highest minimum wage in the developed world relative to our average wage,” he said, the ministry predicting that the $1.20 per hour increase that took effect this month would see employers automate rather than hire workers, or go out of business completely because of higher costs. “Those businesses that don’t directly lay off workers will be discourage­d from employing more, or replacing those who leave.” Kaitaia man Peter Kitchen didn’t have to wait long to find out what it was that had been passed on to him by Dolly Brown, half a century after she found it on the beach at Tom Bowling Bay (Any idea what this marine object is? April 9).

Several Northland Age readers identified it while the ink on Tuesday’s edition was still drying, led by Kerikeri man Peter Heath.

It was a coco de mer, he said, otherwise known as a love nut (apparently

"I had one of them for years when I lived in Zimbabwe. I used it for a door stop."

Peter Heath on his coco de mer

because of its resemblanc­e to a female derriere), sea coconut, double coconut or Lodoicea maldivica, native to the Indian Ocean islands of Praslin and Curieuse, in the Seychelles.

“I had one of them for years when I lived in Zimbabwe,” Peter said.

“I used it for a door stop.”

The shells were once highly prized, it seems, and 16th century European aristocrat­s had them polished and decorated with jewels.

Now a rare and protected species, the coco de mer tree is grown in many areas in the tropics as an ornamental. The fact that it has not spread naturally being explained by the fact that viable nuts are too dense to float, only those that have rotted out not sinking to the seabed.

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