Coromind Editorial – Issue 24, 2024
Welcome to the 24th issue of Coromind!We’re stoked you picked up this community and arts magazine, which has been bringing a little extra colour to the Hauraki-Coromandel for two years.
Welcome to the 24th issue of Coromind!We’re stoked you picked up this community and arts magazine, which has been bringing a little extra colour to the Hauraki-Coromandel for two years.
Many homes in Coromandel Town and the surrounding area have a Tony Calsaferri on their wall. After 24 years of painting, Tony’s work has found its place, with him completing 100 paintings annually.
Here’s a question for you: When was the last time you truly listened to your beloved? Not that half-listening we all do while mentally preparing tomorrow’s shopping list or scrolling through social media. I mean really listened – the kind of listening that makes someone feel like they’re the only person in the world?
My French friends, Jacques and Marie and their two young children, who participated in the cricket match mentioned in Part 1, eventually left Aotearoa bound for New Caledonia where they stayed for some months before heading to Fiji. They invited me to join them to sail with them to Vanuatu, so I flew to Nadi and boarded their 40-foot yacht.
Proud to be Local — brought to you by CFM — is our inspirational feature, highlighting home-grown Coromandel Peninsula folks doing wonderful things out in the world.
Welcome to the 24th issue of Coromind!We’re stoked you picked up this community and arts magazine, which has been bringing a little extra colour to the Hauraki-Coromandel for two years.
Many homes in Coromandel Town and the surrounding area have a Tony Calsaferri on their wall. After 24 years of painting, Tony’s work has found its place, with him completing 100 paintings annually.
Here’s a question for you: When was the last time you truly listened to your beloved? Not that half-listening we all do while mentally preparing tomorrow’s shopping list or scrolling through social media. I mean really listened – the kind of listening that makes someone feel like they’re the only person in the world?
My French friends, Jacques and Marie and their two young children, who participated in the cricket match mentioned in Part 1, eventually left Aotearoa bound for New Caledonia where they stayed for some months before heading to Fiji. They invited me to join them to sail with them to Vanuatu, so I flew to Nadi and boarded their 40-foot yacht.
Proud to be Local — brought to you by CFM — is our inspirational feature, highlighting home-grown Coromandel Peninsula folks doing wonderful things out in the world.