Showing posts with label Waitangi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waitangi. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 February 2010

The Great Adventure: Day Four: Waitangi: Wakas

A waka is a Maori canoe.  On Hobson's Beach the waka house shelters the 35 metre long Ngatokimatawaorua.  A minimum of 76 paddlers are required to handle it safely on the water.   Ngatokimatawaorua was launched as part of the Centenary Celebrations in 1940.  It bears the name of the voyaging waka in which the explorer Kupe visited Aotearoa (The Land of the Long White Cloud, New Zealand) after it was enlarged with adzes in Hawaiki and sailed back to Aotearoa by Kupe's grandson, Nukutawhiti.


  
  







Wakas gathering on Hobson's Beach for the Waitangi Day celebrations.

Tuesday, 16 February 2010

The Great Adventure: Day Four: Waitangi

On 6 February 2008 I blogged on Waitangi Day.  Waitangi is a place of considerable significance to New Zealand because it is the place where the Treaty of Waitangi received its first signing (by 46 Maori Chiefs).  I have learned in my relatively short time here that the whole issue of the Treaty is exceptionally complex.  But what is not in dispute is the significance of Waitangi and the beauty of the Treaty Grounds.  We arrived on a dull, wet day and I am already looking forward to my next visit when the sun will shine and the whole place will look very different.


The new entrance to the Treaty Grounds is beautiful and well thought out (and has probably the most elegant public washroom in New Zealand - probably one of the most elegant anywhere for that matter!).

 
 

The Beach will feature in the next posting

 

 The Treaty House which consists of the original Brittish Residency erected in 1833-34, an added South Wing and a replacement North Wing built in 1933.  It has had an interesting an chequered history.

  
 The naval flagstaff where the Treaty was first signed.  Across the Bay through the mist and rain is Russell (and more blogging!).

 

 Te Whare Runanga - This meeting house was opened during the Treaty celebrations in 1940

   

 The rear of the Treaty House

     

 The parlour of the Treaty House

 

The Bedroom - originally the only bedroom in the house.