Waikato Times

Kopu crash couple mourned

- DONNA-LEE BIDDLE

Anne and Ian Fielder were planning to travel to Europe and the UK in October with friends.

But that won’t happen now. The pair were killed in a crash in Thames on Thursday night, leaving behind a close-knit family, including a son and daughter.

Jocelyn Anne Fielder, 64 – known as Anne – and Ian James Fielder, 66, died at the scene of the crash on State Highway 25 west of the Kopu Bridge.

Police said the driver of the second vehicle involved in the crash – a ute – crossed the centre line.

The driver of that ute, Haydn David Clark, 20, also died at the scene, while his father, Jim Clark, had to be cut from the wreckage and was flown to Middlemore Hospital in a critical condition.

The couple’s friend, Gary Martin, had known Anne and Ian for almost 30 years.

He said they had dinner at a friend’s place on Thursday night and were on their way home when the crash happened.

Martin met Anne around 1990 at the meatworks in Thames.

Martin was a meat inspector and not long after Anne started at the plant, she, too, trained as an inspector – she was the first woman to do so.

‘‘When she joined, she was the only woman on the board [of meat inspectors]. So you can understand how the boys gave her a bit of stick. But she could give as good as she got,’’ Martin said.

‘‘There were women in the office, but she was the only woman on the board. She was pretty straightfo­rward. She was a good worker and she did her job well.

‘‘When she first came, I was working with her and then I came to be her boss. I relied on her a lot to do things – especially the computer work. I wasn’t very au fait, I was an old bugger.’’

Martin said Anne had lately been working on a casual basis as a meat inspector and would fill in at the meatworks at Horotiu or Te Aroha if she was needed.

Anne’s husband, Ian, was a volunteer firefighte­r and worked at the cheese factory at Kerepehi.

‘‘They had a small place at Turua, just outside of Thames. They had a few acres and ran a few cattle,’’ Martin said.

‘‘Ian was a volunteer fireman for a while out there, but he had to give up a few years ago because he hurt his shoulder and he had to have an operation and he couldn’t lift.

‘‘They were both very well liked in the community. They got on well with most people and they loved their golf. I’d been to several tournament­s with both of them.’’

Anne and Ian also had a bach in Tairua.

‘‘Anne and I would always give it to each other,’’ Martin said. ‘‘Sometimes I’d have her on, but she was very quick-witted and had an answer for everything. We got on well and were still good friends, right up to the end.’’

Martin said he can’t get his head around how the accident happened.

The Thames Golf Club – which Anne and Ian belonged to – held a ceremony for the couple on Saturday. Members stood for a moment’s silence and shared memories. ‘‘It hurts. It’ll be a sad loss to the community.

‘‘They did everything on their own bat and everything they had, they worked for. They were working towards retirement, of course, and looking forward to this big trip that now won’t happen.’’

Brenda Ormsby, the club manager, said she didn’t know the couple well but they were loved by the community and the golf club was ‘‘absolutely gutted’’ by the news.

 ?? PHOTOS: CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF ?? Thames Golf Club member Gary Martin is grieving the loss of his good friends, Ian and Anne Fielder, left, killed in a car crash at the end of Kopu Bridge on Thursday night.
PHOTOS: CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF Thames Golf Club member Gary Martin is grieving the loss of his good friends, Ian and Anne Fielder, left, killed in a car crash at the end of Kopu Bridge on Thursday night.
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