For close to 30 years, Whanganui couple Marilyn and Marty Vreede have been making paper from leftover harakeke from the district's many weavers, while also helping to revitalise te reo Māori.
Volunteers from Save Our River Trust, Māori Women's Welfare League and others rolled up their sleeves to harvest harakeke (flax). On Sunday, March 17 a community-driven effort took place to honour a ...
Left to right back: Alroy Walker, Faye Blossom, Janet Taiatini, Ada Te Huia, Rosemary Murray, and De Cleaver. Left to right front: Wintec Midwifery ākonga Sarah Richards and Hinemoa Mills.
Rene Orchiston of Gisborne started a harakeke (flax) collection in the 1950s, after observing that many fine craftswomen in her area were using inferior material for their weaving. There was an ...
Second of two parts on New Zealand plants in the Bay Area.Few Californians are aware of it, but plants from New Zealand have deep roots in our state's horticultural history. Some were sold in Bay Area ...
The early issues of the Journal contain a rich repository of indigenous texts and traditions contributed by Pacific peoples, as well as by missionaries and other sojourners, often published in local ...
Concept designs show how a more than $20 million new regional park in Hawke’s Bay could look if it comes to fruition. The plans include a visitor hub, discovery and learning park, manuka plantation, ...
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