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Country Life: Nick Roskruge - promoting Māori horticultural knowledge
Country Life: Nick Roskruge - promoting Māori horticultural knowledge

RNZ News

time16 hours ago

  • General
  • RNZ News

Country Life: Nick Roskruge - promoting Māori horticultural knowledge

Nick Rahiri Roskruge Photo: RNZ/Sally Round Nick Rahiri Roskruge has gone from working in a cropping gang to academia, and around the world teaching and learning about indigenous foods, but - as he says - he's never really left the paddock. His PhD in soil science led to a position as Professor of Ethnobotany at Massey University, a Fulbright award, and spending time with indigenous people and their crops in the Americas and the Pacific. Retired from his professorship, he said he was busier than ever and chatted to Country Life at his extensive māra in Manawatū about keeping traditional Māori horticultural knowledge alive. Follow Country Life on Apple Podcasts , Spotify , iHeart or wherever you get your podcasts. Several varieties of kūmara drying after harvest Photo: RNZ/Sally Round Nick Roskruge's collection of Indian corn cobs Photo: RNZ/Sally Round

Groundbreaking storytelling with a sculpture park you can drive through
Groundbreaking storytelling with a sculpture park you can drive through

RNZ News

time6 days ago

  • Automotive
  • RNZ News

Groundbreaking storytelling with a sculpture park you can drive through

Te Ahu a Turanga is a new $824 million 11.5-kilometre four-lane highway connecting the Lower North Island East to West. It opened this week. And not only is it an impressive bit of infrastructure, replacing the old Manawatū Gorge Road, it is, in effect an enormous sculpture park you can drive through. Through art, design, pattern and planting it places a cloak across the land, including references in sculpture to instruments of weaving. Weaving is an apt metaphor because not only is the road a connector but Te Ahu a Turanga has seen five Iwi come together for the first time, and woth Waka Kotahi its involved a roading partnership touted as a benchmark for co-design. The art itself is also a collaboration - between artists Warren Warbrick, Sandy Adsett, and James Molnar. Our Culture 101 guests Warren and Virginia Warbrick collectively call themselves Toi Warbrick. In the rohe or area of iwi Rangitāne, their passion for history and placemaking is conveyed through music, performance, writing about history and significant public art projects.

Iwi partner with NZTA and hope future projects can follow same model
Iwi partner with NZTA and hope future projects can follow same model

RNZ News

time12-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • RNZ News

Iwi partner with NZTA and hope future projects can follow same model

Te Ahu a Turanga Highway iwi lead Kingi Kiriona. Photo: RNZ/Pokere Paewai Iwi in Manawatū are crediting part of the success of the new Te Ahu a Turanga Highway to a partnership between them and the NZ Transport Agency and are hopeful it can be a model for future infrastructure projects. The 11.5 kilometer four-lane highway opened to the public on Wednesday, replacing the old State Highway 3 through the Manawatū Gorge which closed in 2017 due to slips. Kingi Kiriona was the iwi lead when the highway project began five years ago. At the beginning everything was a test and there were some testing times as a result, he said. "Getting five iwi together is hard in and of itself, particularly if you know the iwi from here, and so getting everyone together at Board that was a challenge but I think a further challenge was realised when expectations were brought up at the table and there was no one within the leadership who could understand or even give effect to those expectations." For everyone involved to persevere and see the vision become a reality deserves some recognition, he said. In 2020 a target of a 30 percent Māori workforce on the project was set. "I'm proud to say that actually a year after my appointment we were able to hit that, but of course in order to hit that we needed money, we needed resource, we needed people, so it was like the give that kept on giving. We started out with a Board, then we ended up with a kaiārahi, then we ended up with the first ever iwi outcomes team for any roading project in New Zealand," Kiriona said. Having iwi on board helped to expedite a lot of things particularly when it came to consenting, he said. Kiriona said Te Ahu a Turanga could 'absolutely' be a model for future infrastructure partnerships, but it wouldn't be easy. "Every region, every iwi has their own dynamics but I'd like to think that if it can happen here it can happen in other places as well. And now that an exemplar has been realised I think there is a tauira (example) for the likes of other iwi and Waka Kotahi to follow.' Representatives of five iwi groups from both sides of the Ruahine and Tararua Ranges were involved, Rangitāne ki Manawatū, Rangitāne o Tamaki nui a rua, Ngāti Kauwhata, Ngāti Kahungunu and Ngāti Raukawa. Ngāti Kauwhata spokesperson Meihana Durie was a part of the karakia during the formal opening . It was important for all the iwi to come together to recite the karakia and get the highway off to a good start, he said. "He tauira pai pea tēnā mō ngā ara katoa o te motu nei kia kaua e haere tapatahi ki te mahi engari mē āta kōrero ki ngā iwi, ki ngā hapū. Whakaae katoa ngā iwi, ngā hapū ki te hanga o tēnei rori nō reira mātau katoa e tino harikoa ana i tēnei rā." "This project might be a good example for other roading projects around the country to not go directly into the work but to speak first with the iwi. All the iwi, the hapū (in the region) agreed to the building of this road so we are all very happy today." The Minister of Transport Chris Bishop was also present at the formal opening to cut the ribbon. He said the Government would be taking the learnings from the partnership for future projects. "I think both NZTA and local representatives said it was a bit of an experiment, but it seems to have gone really well and obviously we'll take the learnings out of this for future projects," he said. The Labour MP for Palmerston North, Tangi Utikere backed the partnership, calling it "trailblazing". "It is the first in Aotearoa, New Zealand of this extent. I've been fortunate in my roles to visit on more then a few ocassions and you can really feel the sense of partnership and commitment to what's really important here. And as people travel through this piece of highway they will not just see it but I'm sure they will experience it as well." Echoing the words of Rangitāne o Tamaki nui a rua kaumātua Manahi Paewai at the formal opening on Saturday, Kiriona said the 'true test of partnership has just begun.' "It's easy to apply a five year timeframe to a partnership and see it through in this way, but actually what happens next?"

Ram attack leaves person with serious injuries
Ram attack leaves person with serious injuries

RNZ News

time02-06-2025

  • General
  • RNZ News

Ram attack leaves person with serious injuries

A ram has attacked a person in Manawatū, leaving them seriously injured (generic image). Photo: Mark Boulton / Biosphoto via AFP One person has suffered serious injuries after being attacked by a ram in the lower North Island. Police were called to an animal attack at about 2.15pm on Monday on Makino Road, a rural road in Manawatū, north of Feilding. "The victim has sustained serious injuries and will be transported by ambulance to Hospital. The animal has been destroyed." An officer later told RNZ the animal was a ram. Hato Hone St John confirmed crews responded to a 'farm incident' in Halcombe with one ambulance, one rapid response unit, and one manager. A St John spokesperson said one person in a serious condition was treated and transported to Palmerston North Hospital. Alfred Helge Hansen and Gaye Hansen were killed by a rogue ram at their West Auckland property last year. Photo: Supplied / NZ Herald The attack comes just over a year after the deaths of Helge and Gaye Hansen , who were found dead on their four-hectare lifestyle property after a rogue ram entered their paddock and killed them . At the time, an animal behaviour researcher told RNZ ram attacks were rare but the injuries inflicted could be similar to being hit by a car. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Person suffering from serious injuries after ram attack
Person suffering from serious injuries after ram attack

RNZ News

time02-06-2025

  • General
  • RNZ News

Person suffering from serious injuries after ram attack

A ram has attacked a person in Manawatū, leaving them seriously injured (generic image). Photo: Mark Boulton / Biosphoto via AFP One person has suffered serious injuries after being attacked by a ram in the lower North Island. Police said they were called to an animal attack at about 2.15pm on Monday on Makino Road, a rural road in Manawatū, north of Feilding. "The victim has sustained serious injuries and will be transported by ambulance to Hospital. The animal has been destroyed." An officer later confirmed the animal was a ram. Hato Hone St John confirmed crews responded to a 'farm incident' in Halcombe with one ambulance, one rapid response unit, and one manager. A St John spokesperson said one person in a serious condition was treated and transported to Palmerston North Hospital. 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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