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iwi | legend | rivers

iwi

Local Iwi support and assist our vision. Waitaha a Hei (Manoeka Marae) and Ngati He (Maungatapu Marae) and Ngai Te Ahi (Hairini Marae) are the tangata whenua. The nearest tangata whenua Whare (communal house) is Te Kokakonui at Kaiawha Rd.

Des Heke-Kaiawha (Ngai Te Ahi and Ngati He) is our local iwi representative and a Trustee. Des' grandfather, kaumatua Dan Heke, was one of our original Trustees.

legend

According to local Maori legend Otanewainuku is a chiefly mountain.

There was once a hill with no name who lived on the edge of the Hautere forest. This nameless was a pononga (slave) to the great chiefly mountain, Otanewainuku. To the southwest was the shapely form of Puwhenua, a beautiful hill, clothed in all the fine greens of the ferns and shrubs and trees of the forest of Tane. The nameless one was desperately in love with Puwhenua, however her heart already belonged to Otanewainuku.

There seemed to be no hope for the lowly slave. In despair the nameless one decided to end it all by drowning himself in the ocean, Te Moananui a Kiwa. Calling on the patupaiarehe (creatures of the mist), pononga asked them to plait the ropes with their magic and then haul him down towards the ocean.

Chanting their song they began to haul the nameless one slowly towards the water, gouging out the valley where the river Waimapu now flows. They followed the channel past Hairini, past Maungatapu and Matapihi and finally past Te Papa to the water's edge.

By this time it was very close to day break. The sun rose fixing the nameless one to that place. Being people of the night the patupaiarehe fled back to the shady depths of the Hautere forests, before the light of the sun descended upon them.

The patupaiarehe gave the name Mauao to this mountain which marks the entrance of Tauranga Moana. Mauao means caught by the morning sun. Mauao is also known as Mt Maunganui.

Des Heke-Kaiawha and Mere Heke photo Moana Bianchin
Des Heke-Kaiawha and Mere Heke

Dan Heke photo Moana Bianchin

The late Dan Heke - a founding Trustee

rivers

The name Otanewainuku means “the many waters that spring forth from the domain of Tane - overseer of the forest." Another definition is "the mountain of the parting waters, where the clouds meet the land, and the rain leaves the sky."

The mountain is the headwater of many streams that initially flow in all directions.
Those to the south and east mostly go underground within a short distance of the base of the mountain, and flow to the Mangatoi Stream, into the Waiari Stream, then the Kaituna River, ending at Maketu Estuary.

Those to the North and West flow to Te Awanui (Tauranga Harbour) and stay mostly on the surface as the Tautau and Waimapu Rivers. The Tautau feeds the treatment plant and large reservoirs in Oropi which supply Tauranga’s water.

waimapu stream
the waimapu stream