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Opinion: a time to pause, reflect and connect with whānau

Opinion: a time to pause, reflect and connect with whānau

Rebecca Swindells. Photo: supplied
Matariki is the rising of the star cluster that marks the Māori New Year.
It gives us a chance to slow down, come together and ground our mahi in te ao Māori.
For those of us working in education, it is a powerful reminder that learning is not just about deadlines and assessments, it is about people, purpose and connection.
Matariki invites us to pause and prioritise our wellbeing.
We use this time to gather, share kai, reflect and plan.
It is about remembering those who have passed, celebrating what has been achieved and setting intentions for the future.
Not just in study, but in life.
This week at Otago Polytechnic, we have been celebrating Matariki and Puaka with a full lineup of events.
Some of our highlights have included creative activities such as mahi toi (arts) and tukutuku weaving, alongside daily reflection through Matariki huka nui and kapa haka performances.
We have also shared kai throughout the week, including "Hangī in the Hub" (prepared onsite), bringing together ākonga (students), kaimahi (staff) and our hāpori (community).
Matariki is a time to centre Māori knowledge and values such as kotahitanga (unity), manaakitanga (care) and wānanga (deep learning).
It reminds us that success looks different for everyone and that sometimes, taking a breath is just as important as pushing forward.
On a personal level, Matariki brings a gentle sense of peace.
I think of my tīpuna and those I have lost.
I share memories with my whānau and we reflect together on where we come from.
Sometimes we visit a memorial, sometimes we just sit and talk, but always, I feel that quiet connection across generations.
Matariki is not just a Māori version of the new year's celebrations.
It is a time to pause, reconnect and dream.
Whether you are in a classroom, at work or with whānau, I hope you find space to breathe, to remember and to look forward.
That is what Matariki is about.

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Another year in the life
Another year in the life

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Orokonui's takahē whānau is spreading its wings, Madison Kelly writes. The emergence of Puaka and Matariki in the night sky mark a period of change. Indicators of seasonal shifts and the incoming Māori new year, they compel us to look back, in preparation for the future. While colder months encourage us towards rest and reflection, our native birdlife is increasingly busy securing territories, mates and kai. The winter hustling of manu can be deceptively subtle. Peeping calls of kakaruai in the distance. A miromiro flitting past, beak full of nest-insulating lichen. Elsewhere in the sanctuary, certain pre-nesting agendas are more blatant. Throughout the grasslands, large clumps of disrupted earth pepper the ground. Neatly snipped toetoe lies in mysterious piles. Tussocks seem to bend at strange angles, compressed into miniature archways and domes. These industrious interventions are the work of takahē, who live under the care of Orokonui and the Department of Conservation's National Takahē Recovery Programme. Noticing signs of takahē browsing and nesting is an ecological treat. For many visitors, a journey in the valley may be their first and only chance to observe a wild environment complete with these mighty endemic swamp hens. Presumed extinct until their 1948 rediscovery in the Murchison Mountains, the resilient manu now number about 500 birds. These taoka live across a sparse but growing selection of sanctuary and wild sites throughout Aotearoa, first arriving at Orokonui in 2012. Recovery work begun 75 years ago saved the species from demise. Luckily, recent milestones at Orokonui point towards a more hopeful future for takahē. In the upper grasslands, a whānau of four are thriving. A recent visit from Doc saw positive health checks for both the breeding pair, Waimarie and Bennett, and their two juveniles, who also received their bands. The unique band combinations will act as visual identifiers for the rest of the juveniles' lives. The title for most surprising health check was undoubtedly claimed by the older of the two siblings, who weighed in at a hefty 2.8kg, already heavier than their mother Waimarie. Such results speak to Waimarie and Bennett's remarkable parenting, having successfully hatched nine chicks since their 2020 Orokonui translocation. Their capacity for chick-raising has been boosted by older offspring like Ihaka, one of three chicks from Summer 2023. Ihaka lived at Orokonui for a full year to help feed and care for his younger siblings. This year, he became the first Orokonui-born takahē to move directly into the wild. While many young takahē spend time honing their wild skills at Doc's Burwood Bush before release elsewhere, Ihaka graduated straight from the upper grasslands and joined a cohort in the Rees Valley, one of two wild sites on Ngāi Tahu land established in the past two years. Fitted with GPS tracking, information about Ihaka's movements and life in his new home will contribute to our growing understanding of wild takahē and their conservation. At Orokonui, supplementary plantings of haumata (tussock) — protected from browsing beaks by chicken wire cages — are now filling out open sections of pasture grass, getting ready to sustain incoming chicks and prepare them with vital foraging skills for their future departures. Of course, with departures come arrivals. At the valley floor, a new pair are finding their feet. Jessie, hailing from Burwood Bush, and Bounty, from Wairakei Golf + Sanctuary, bring the Orokonui population to six. While there's hope this young duo may one day raise their own chicks, their present task is adjusting to life on the east coast. Visitors walking the Robin Valley track are asked to give the young couple plenty of space while they take their time to settle. In many ways, Jessie and Bounty's arrival is perfectly timed for this turn in the year. Among new plans and new wishes for takahē we find a moment to reflect on their legacy in the sanctuary. Most recently, the lower valley site functioned as a retirement block for Orokonui's oldest takahē, Paku and Quammen. The pair lived the last 11 years of their lives at Orokonui and were impressive foster parents. Their first foster chick, Kotahi, later fathered our upper grassland's own Bennett. With each new season, the whakapapa and stories of these charismatic taoka become more richly woven. Ongoing work focused on takahē advocacy, sanctuary biosecurity, and developing our takahē friendly habitat are vital parts of the story. With the help of mana whenua, Orokonui staff, volunteers, and local supporters, together we can look forward to discovering how (and where) future takahē may roam. Madison Kelly is head kaiārahi/guide at Te Korowai o Mihiwaka Orokonui Ecosanctuary.

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Photo: konart/123RF An annual count of whales and dolphins is underway, with people across the motu keeping an eye out for sea mammals - big and small - from humpbacks to Hector's dolphins - this Matariki. The Countrywide Whale and Dolphin Count started on Friday and will run through to Sunday. Organiser Christine Rose said late June was "peak whale" time. Previous cetacean censuses had seen participants send in sightings of humpback and rare beaked whales, orca, and Hector's dolphins. She said the land-based survey, which was in its sixth year, helped raise awareness of our oceans. "It's important to encourage people to appreciate and celebrate the wonder of our oceans, and how precious they are, and also as part of citizen science to roughly track how many whales and dolphins are around our waters." Rose said the count also celebrated the vulnerable sea mammals while highlighting the need to still protect them. "[It gives people] the chance of seeing humpbacks and Southern Right [whales], which were almost driven to extinction, and celebrates the opportunity for resilience and recovery of species which are so majestic but were almost wiped out." Rose said it was "exciting and a privilege" to see these creatures from land, and in some of the country's biggest and busiest ports. "Those Southern Right Whales were taken to the brink of extinction, so it's an indelible experience for people to see a whale, especially so close to shore. It feels like we're being trusted by whales again. These animals are incredibly long lived, they're on epic journeys and every time you see one it feels special." "I've seen whales and dolphins thousands of times, yet every time it's a reminder of our special role as stewards of the oceans that we share." People can report sightings to Whale and Dolphin Watch's Facebook page . Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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