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CountryWide CONNECT

CountryWide CONNECT

By: CountryWide Media
Listen for free

CountryWide CONNECT is the latest innovative daily livestreamed rural video/radio show broadcast at lunchtime 11am – 1pm Monday-Friday from Christchurch, New Zealand.


The show is hosted by respected award-winning agribusiness broadcasters, Sarah Perriam-Lampp (formerly Sarah’s Country & Rural Exchange) and Andy Thompson (formerly The Rural Round-Up).


Over two hours, Sarah & Andy cover the latest in New Zealand rural news, views, politics but most importantly in-depth technical farming advice to help improve farmers bottom lines!

For more information & to subscribe to CountryWide, visit www.country-wide.co.nz

Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Karen Williams - 'Inconsistent' to deny water significant infrastructure status
    Jun 29 2026

    This episode features Karen Williams, CEO, Irrigation New Zealand discussing Irrigation New Zealand's call for a National Water Strategy.

    WANT TO LISTEN TO THE SHOW LIVE (11am-1pm NZST) ON THE GO? Download CountryWide Connect mobile app to stream the show via Apple Car Play or Android Auto. Or try the voice command ‘Play CountryWide Connect’ on Amazon Alexa or Google Home.

    Apple: https://apps.apple.com/nz/app/countrywide-connect/id6761033881

    Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nz.co.countrywide&hl=en_NZ

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    13 mins
  • Kate Scott - What HortNZ's regional reps will mean for growers
    Jun 29 2026

    This episode features Kate Scott, CEO, Horticulture NZ discussing Horticulture New Zealand's new regional representative structure, and the upcoming conference.

    WANT TO LISTEN TO THE SHOW LIVE (11am-1pm NZST) ON THE GO? Download CountryWide Connect mobile app to stream the show via Apple Car Play or Android Auto. Or try the voice command ‘Play CountryWide Connect’ on Amazon Alexa or Google Home.

    Apple: https://apps.apple.com/nz/app/countrywide-connect/id6761033881

    Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nz.co.countrywide&hl=en_NZ

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    10 mins
  • 29th June 2026 // Rural News in partnership with Farmlands
    Jun 29 2026
    • Wairarapa farmers and communities cut off after catastrophic flooding

    • Wool season closes at historic highs

    • HortNZ board directors re-elected uncontested

    Rural News is in partnership with Farmlands as part of CountryWide CONNECT with Andy Thompson & Sarah Perriam-Lampp - our daily rural show livestreamed from 11am-1pm. Visit country-wide.co.nz on how to watch / listen.

    Wairarapa farmers and communities cut off after catastrophic flooding

    Sheep and beef farmers in coastal Wairarapa are among those hardest hit after catastrophic flooding washed out the Tūranganui Bridge on Friday, cutting off around four-hundred-and-sixty homes across Ngāwi, Lake Ferry, Whāngaimoana and Cape Palliser.

    Floodwaters broke through a riverbank onto farmland along the Tūranganui River, with farmers using quad bikes across neighbouring properties in difficult conditions to reach their stock. A local general store has been getting supplies through via quad bike and utes across private farmland — a trip that takes twenty minutes instead of the usual five.

    The community of Ngāwi is completely isolated with around a hundred people stuck. Aid including urgently needed infant formula is being helicoptered in, with council crews having worked seventy-two hours straight since Friday.

    South Wairarapa deputy mayor Rob Taylor says it could be nearly two weeks before full access is restored. The region hasn't seen flooding damage of this scale since the 1970s, with three-hundred millimetres falling overnight north of Ngāwi.

    Nearly a thousand properties across the North Island remain without power.

    Wool season closes at historic highs

    New Zealand's wool season has closed on a remarkable note, with the final auction of the year recording another round of price gains across all wool types and styles — capping what auction manager Dave Burridge describes as an exceptional season.

    The national strong wool indicator rose twenty cents, with crossbred fleece in good style reaching seven-dollars-seventy per kilogram clean, while crossbred second shear lifted five percent to seven-dollars-thirty-five. Crossbred lambs wool continued its strong run, with thirty-two micron returning seven-sixty per kilogram clean.

    Mid-micron wools also performed strongly, with halfbred fleece at twenty-eight micron jumping seven percent to eleven dollars per kilogram clean, and halfbred hog holding at twenty-ten.

    The new season gets underway with high-quality pre-lamb shorn clips expected at the first auction back on July eighth.

    HortNZ board directors re-elected uncontested

    Horticulture New Zealand has re-elected grower directors Alistair Petrie and Doug Brown to its board, both returning uncontested for a further three-year term beginning after the annual general meeting on July twenty-eighth.

    HortNZ chair Bernadine Guilleux says both directors bring valuable grower perspective and governance experience built over three years on the board.

    The re-elections come as the horticulture sector continues to perform strongly, with export revenue forecast to reach nine-point-five billion dollars in the year to June — up seven percent — and grow further to more than nine-point-seven billion the following year.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    3 mins
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