21,600-mile bike ride organised by UK GP raises £21,000 for medical care in Myanmar gponline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gponline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Ian Kemp will sell merchandise that is not available in New Zealand. Kemp ran a Facebook page and YouTube channel, but this was his first time selling merchandise. He had imported lots of the merchandise himself and he said people could purchase items that weren’t available in New Zealand at competitive prices. Kemp watched Dragon Ball Z as a teenager, and recently got into the 2015 series Dragon Ball Super. Kemp had been to Armageddon in Auckland a few years ago, and was looking forward to the Palmerston North event. Armageddon Expo founder and director William Geradts said the event would focus on gaming and technology with multiple PC and console gaming stations.
Dr Jim Brockbank from Myanmar UK GP Health Action provides an update on how the military coup is affecting doctors in Myanmar and explains a new fundraising initiative to help support health and education projects in the country.
Ian Kemp was raised on the smell of cinnamon. And clove, chile peppers, cumin and ginger.
His parents, Bill and Beverly Kemp, started a spice company in Manor in 1983 when he was 5 years old.
The younger Kemp had already spent weeks on the road with his “hippie parents” who loved traveling to Mexico and Central America. En route from Nebraska, the Missouri natives passed through Austin enough times that they eventually decided to move here, in part to make that trip shorter.
“We would drive this white whale of a potato truck,” Bill Kemp says. “We put a kitchen and a bed in there, and we’d hop in that thing and spend two or three weeks on the road” buying pottery and exploring the variety of Mexican and Central American cuisines.