▻ Arranging a Funeral
▻ Choosing the Venue ▻ Celebrant or Clergy ▻ Casket or Urn Selection ▻ Flowers ▻ Service Sheets ▻ Visual Presentation ▻ Catering ▻ Visiting your Loved one ▻ Clothing and Dressing ▻ Select a Vehicle ▻ Newspaper Notices |
Everyone has things that are unique and special about them. Their funeral is the opportunity to celebrate those things. Let us help you plan a way to honour their memory that reflects who they are.
Little things mean a lot and we have been told it’s those small personal touches that make us stand out. We go the extra mile to make the service you have arranged go according to plan. |
Making it PersonalYou can choose to personalise some or all of the components on our website or bring us your ideas and we’ll help you to make them work.
To get you started on thinking about ways to make the funeral you are organising a true reflection of your loved one, here are some of the ways other people have found to make the funeral as unique and individual as the person they were honouring |
Aunty Helen loved to bake and people were always after her secret recipes. She left instructions in her funeral plan that copies of all of her recipes were to be handed out to everyone at her funeral so that her baking would live on for generations. Her chocolate cake was divine! Friends and family would ask her to bake for a special celebration and they would travel all over from Twizel to Dunsandel. She never charged them - she loved to make people happy with her baking. |
Rebecca was passionate about dogs and had already decided she wanted to be a vet when she grew up but she was only fourteen when she died. Her pet Husky, 5-year-old Koda, came to her funeral and sat in the front row with the rest of the family. Her friends brought tiny little statues of dogs to put in her casket and there was a collection box for the SPCA just outside the Aoraki Chapel. It was a lovely way to honour Rebecca's love of dogs. |
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160 Mountain View Road, Timaru
11 John Street, Waimate
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