Family members and friends carry Logan Gemming's coffin from his farewell service yesterday. Photo / Andrew Warner
"On Sunday we lost a legend."
This was how Logan David Gemming's best friend described the loss of a man known to many as a gentle, caring "hero".
Kitesurfing sails, sea biscuits and paddleboards lined the front of the Tauranga Boys' College gymnasium where hundreds said their goodbyes to a man who loved the water.
Logan, 37, a physical education and health teacher and a Year 11 dean at Tauranga Boys' College, died in a kitesurfing accident at Fergusson Park on Sunday.
Blair Jordan also paid tribute to his best friend.
"On Sunday we lost a legend," he said.
Jordan said Logan always wore a smile, lived life to the fullest and was always "keen for anything". "Logan was a yes man," he said.
He shared memories of growing up with his best mate playing in the Welcome Bay estuary, camping and windsurfing together. "You will be with me in the ocean," he said.
Long-time friend and former colleague Wayne Gribble said he first met Logan "and his cheeky smile" as a Year 12 Tauranga Boys' College student in 1997.
"That smile has become iconic to Logan," he said. "You just become a better person for having Logan Gemming in your life."
Logan's father-in-law Steve Crawford said Logan was a loving husband to their daughter Kylie and a doting father their three young grandchildren.
"We are so proud to have Logan as a son-in-law," he said.
Neil Howard of Tauranga Boys' College and long-time friends Gareth Wood and Cameron Jones also paid tribute to Logan.
Logan's eldest son Fergus Gemming was the youngest to pay tribute.
"I love my dad with all of my might," he said. "You are the coolest dad, we love you forever."
Before Logan's wife Kylie paid the final tribute to her husband, the family danced to the "Gemming family song" I Like to Move It as the audience clapped.
"I stand here not as a grieving wife but as the luckiest woman in the world," she said.
Lucky to have travelled with her husband and to have been part of a team that valued honesty, communication, and to have shared "the most deepest love", she said.
"I am also lucky to have created three mini Logans who have their father's heart, spirit and gentle ways running deep in their bones."
Kylie thanked her husband for teaching her patience, how to share and how to truly love.
"Logan you had an amazing ability to connect with people and to listen," she said.
"Loges, you were my teammate. I am unsure how to enter the playing field without my wingman."
"Words cannot express how much I love you," she said. "You and my boys are my world."
Addressing her three young children Fergus, Fletcher and Eaton, Kylie said she was sorry they had been exposed to the pain of losing their father too soon.
"I hope you will remember your daddy as the most wonderful dad in the world. I look forward to watching you grow and seeing your father in you."
She finished her tribute by telling her husband to "have fun, hun".