All Events

Pearl of the North (Sanctioned).

Venue:

Tapuaetahi Beach, Northland

Date:

Sat 26th Oct 2019

Distance:

10-24km

Host:

Kaihoe o Ngati Rehia Trust

Contact Details

Name: Daniel Kaiawe

Online Entries

Description

Ngati Rehia mata momoe

Ngati Rehia mata kakaa

Titiro ki nga awa, nga maunga, me nga whenua tapu o Ngati Rehia

One thousand years ago our great ancestor Puhi came here with his family in the Mataatua canoe. Entering the Hokianga Harbour, they were in danger of sinking on the treacherous sand bar: someone called out "hokianga whakapau karakia" - use every prayer you have.

When up the Mangamuka River they decided to take their waka apart in order to carry it over the Puketi hill. But there they lost the canoe bailer - "te puke tiheru o te Mataatua." Finally the family settled down at Takou Bay, planting kumara, taro and gourds; harvesting the soil, the forest and the moana in a cycle of the seasons. They prospered and expanded into the great tribe called Nga Puhi Nui Tonu.

After thirty generations the Nga Puhi dominated the mid-North from the Hokianga to the Bay of Islands. Our paramount chief Te Pahi set up the first trading post in 1802 at Woolshed Bay to supply the demands of whalers, sealers, and returning convict transports. Te Pahi's son, Ruatara, travelled to England in 1807, returning with seeds of wheat and corn to establish the first export of grain to Australia.

On Christmas Day 1814 Samuel Marsden was invited to establish the first Christian Church here. A month later came the first school, then the first plough, the first blacksmith, the first flour mill and the first crop of potatoes.

Twenty years later Ngati Rehia hosted the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi. From Takou in the North to Puketona in the South we are the Ngati Rehia of Kerikeri-"number one" in Aotearoa!


Pearl of the North 2019 will be our 6th year in existence, and we hope we’ve  provided you with an authentic experience every time.

We the haukainga are privileged to be handed down land and water accessible only through this land, which is steep in our Maori history.

Furthermore , we can once again engage with you, to bring together the wairua, aroha and manaaki that we all share within our waka community.

Na reira he panui tenei ki nga mata waka o te motu, nau mai pikimai, i raro i te maru o to tatou tupuna maunga a Tokerau, kia mihia koutou me o koutou tini aitua, kua wehea atu ra ki te rerenga wairua.


Tena ra koutou katoa.


4,823 paddlers have looked at this page