Here
I am back after a longish absence. We have the boat out of the water, and what
was to be a brief interlude ashore has turned into a major refit - and I have
rather gotten out of the habit of writing the Blog because it seems odd when
we're up on stilts. But by public demand I've steeled myself to the task. A
rather small public perhaps, but real enough.
So
much time having passed I am starting with Waitangi Day, 6 Feb. This is the
Public Holiday to celebrate the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 when
the UK took over New Zealand - somewhat surprisingly with the agreement of the
indigenous Maori. We went to Waitangi, about 50km north of here, to see the
day's events.
The
day starts with a gathering of traditional wakas (war canoes) on the beach.
There were ten this year; the biggest, 'Ngatokimatawhaorua' (remember that the
initial 'N' is silent, and 'wh' = 'f'; after that it's easy) seen
below, has 80 paddlers plus chiefs standing up.

Ngatoki
is made of three hollowed-out Kauri tree trunks lashed together, and is 70 years
old. Maori canoes were of much greater variety and size than those in the rest
of Polynesia because of the wide range of trees available here. Kauri is the
second largest tree species in the world.
The
sternposts are elaborately carved, with each one unique, often inlaid with
mother of pearl as here:

The crews are not all male, but few
look as fierce as this lot decked out in warpaint. Facial tattoos, once
commonplace, are an unusual sight nowadays.
Having disembarked, hakas
are performed on the beach. Even when done ritually and ceremonially this is an
exciting spectacle if viewed up close and personal. Done for real, with
weapons wielded by people who mean business, it would be simply terrifying.
The facial expressions are quite amazing:

This event is not merely a
tourist attraction; it is a real gathering of the tribes performed for their own
benefit and is of course much the better for it.
The Treaty of Waitangi is
an amazing thing, and interestingly is a live topic here in NZ at present
after more than a hundred years of neglect. The history is fascinating, if you
like this sort of thing. When the Europeans arrived Maori were living in a state
of near perpetual Stone Age warfare like the rest of Polynesia. In the early
nineteenth century some enterprising Maoris went to Sydney and bought muskets.
They returned home and the internecine Musket Wars started. More than 500
battles were fought between 1800 and 1830; 18 000 Maori were killed out of a
total population of about 100 000. This, and a threatened French
annexation, led the Chiefs to petition Queen Victoria for protection. A
British Resident, James Busby, was appointed in 1832. He encouraged the
Maoris to unite, and in 1835 they proclaimed their independence - which was
recognised by the UK government. Further French threats and a further request
from the Chiefs led to a Lieutenant Governor, RN Captain William
Hobson, being appointed in 1839 with instructions to negotiate a treaty
to cede sovereignty to the UK. The Treaty of Waitangi was written in
English over four days by Busby and Hobson in Busby's Residence. Neither Busby
nor Hobson had received training in the writing of treaties. They had no
model to follow, and it shows. The treaty was then translated into Maori
overnight (!) by the local missionary and his son. Both were fluent Maori
speakers but had no training as interpreters. Their task was made harder by the
fact that hey had to invent a number of new Maori words to cover European
concepts in the draft Treaty that had no equivalent in Maori - important
ideas like government and sovereignty. They failed to do so adequately,
and perhaps not surprisingly in the circumstances
the Treaty reads very differently in the two languages. This has led
to an often acrimonious debate about the exact terms of the Treaty which
continues to this day. Waitangi Day is now an occasion for all New
Zealanders to celebrate the founding of modern New Zealand and also, sadly
but understandably, a time to protest the legion of Treaty breaches by the
Europeans.
Here is Busby's original
house from 1835, now restored as a museum. It was prefabricated in New South
Wales and shipped over because there was no means of building a local house at
the time - no roads, no sawmills, no bricks, no nails, no mortar!

Nearby is a modern Maori
meeting house in traditional style, erected in 1940 to celebrate the Treaty's
centennary. It is in constant use, here with a top class local group
performing a more gentile style of haka before going to the national competition
later this month:
And finally here is the
national flagstaff, located on the lawn outside Busby's house on the site of the
marquee in which the Treaty was signed on 6 February 1840. Note the
February weather!

The large flag is the white
ensign of the Royal New Zealand Navy (like a UK white ensign, but with the four
stars of the Southern Cross in red). This signifies the important role played by
the RN at Waitangi. The flag lower left is that of the United Tribes of New
Zealand, used as the national flag following the Declaration of Independence in
1835. The Union Flag flies lower right, and the modern NZ flag from the top of
the pole. The view from the flagstaff is truly lovely, looking out over a wide
expanse of the Bay of Islands where we arrived in NZ last November. A beautiful
spot.