Flagstaff Hill, Russell

Walk 6th Sept 2011

While it’s winter time I’m posting some walks we did years ago. The walks on this page were at Russell / Kororareka in the Bay of Islands. We’ve been to Russell twice, the first time was in early spring of 2011 when we took the ferry across from Paihia. The second visit was in the late winter of 2015, and this time I walked from Okiato near the car ferry at Opua. Despite the lawlessness of the area, for a short time in 1845 Okiato was the site of NZ’s first capital.

Russell began life as Kororareka, and it was a wild town full of whalers, grog shops, brothels and a Maori Pa belonging to Ngapuhi chief Hone Heke.

Tensions grew between the Maori and the British over the imposition of duties and tarrifs. Inspired by talk of revolution by the Americans, in 1844 Hone hacked down a flag pole he’d formerly given the British. When it was replaced in 1845 he cut it down again and actually flew the US flag from his waka (canoe).

To provide further context to the issue, according to the 19th century Pakeha Maori F.E. Maning (see links below) the Maoris associated the British flag with the lack of trade and high-prices. When the duties and tarrifs came off after the first flagpole was chopped down, it resulted in goods becoming affordable again. In the Maori mind, stopping the British flag from flying solved the problem.

The fourth time the flagpole was erected in 1845, the lower portion was clad in iron, but that did not stop Hone from cutting it down yet again – and to follow it up he sacked the town, burning down many buildings including the Duke of Marlborough Hotel.

The Duke of Marlborough Hotel was quickly rebuilt after being burned down and the establishment has been running ever since. We had lunch in the historic dining room overlooking the waterfront during our week’s stay at Okiato in 2015.

Christ Church is the oldest surviving church in NZ. It actually has bullet holes from the Battle of Kororareka. Hone Heke told his warriors to leave the church standing but its old timbers still bear the scars from the battle. It has a historic graveyard that we walked through. Among the graves in the churchyard are those of Tamati Waka Nene (a Ngapuhi chief largely responsible for the Maori’s acceptance of the Treaty of Waitangi and who fought for the settlers against Hone Heke), members of the Clendon family (James R Clendon was the first honorary United States Consul), and the men from the HMS Hazard who fell in the battle.

We went to a church service on the Sunday we were there in the winter of 2015. That was special. There was no minister, the parishioners kept the church running by themselves. After qualifiying for a degree in theology from an institution in Melbourne they all took turns at preaching. The hymns were played by MP3 through a sound system. We were impressed at their commitment and quiet ‘can do’ attitude. I met a great-granddaughter of Hone Heke at that church, she was a very elegant and well spoken woman.

On our first trip to Russell in 2011 we visited Flagstaff Hill. We strolled along the historic waterfront and then climbed the path through regenerating bush to the hill overlooking the town. A new flagstaff was erected in 1857 as an act of reconciliation by those involved in cutting down the old flagpole and it still stands today.

Back then on our first visit we were more interested in the panoramic views of Russell, Paihia, Waitangi and the islands of the Bay. Our interest in NZ history came from later walks.

Walk 4th August 2015

This was the walk from Okiato to Russell / Kororareka I did in 2015. The exercise was ruined after eating and drinking decadent chocolate at the Newport Chocolate shop in Russell. The chocolate was worth every calorie!

Orongo Bay on the walk impressed me the most, with its mangrove boardwalk and Mt Tikitikioure, a small mount rising 180m above the bay. The hill once belonged to a local chief named Ure and it meant ‘Ure’s top-knot. The Maori people there used a blue pigment found deep in the mountain for painting their faces. It turned out be be manganese which was mined until 1887.

Walk: Northland 12

Walks relating to Hone Heke:

Hone Heke Memorial Park, Kaikohe Hill

Ruapekepeka Pa, Northland

Links

Doc – Flagstaff Hill Track, Russell

Old New Zealand: A Tale of the Good Old Times by Frederick Edward Maning. This book written by Maning, a Pakeha Maori, gives an insight into the time surrounding the war against Hone Heke in 1845. After the battle the maori were plundering the town “because they believed the fight was over, and the people were only quietly plundering the town which had been left for them, and which they had given fair payment for.”

That custom was called ‘muru,’ to plunder, confiscate, take ritual compensation – an effective form of social control, restorative justice and redistribution of wealth among relatives. The process involved taking all the offending party’s goods. The party that had the muru performed on them did not respond by seeking utu.

“At last, all the town people and soldiers went on board the ships, and then the ship of war fired at the Maori people who were plundering in the town. The noise of the firing of the ship guns was very great, and some of Kawiti’s people were near being hit by the lumps of iron. This was not right, for the fight was over … so in revenge they burnt Kororareka, and there was nothing left but ashes ; and this was the beginning of the war.”

Kai Iwi Lakes

Walk #132, 4th May 2024

Kai Iwi Lakes are three freshwater dune lakes, Lake Taharoa, Lake Kaiiwi, and Lake Waikare. The walk is around Lake Taharoa, the largest lake, where water the colour of sapphire ringed with aquamarine laps at the beaches of fine white sand. It’s a popular place to camp. The jewel in the setting is the lake, while the surrounding land is a bit ho-hum. It was a lovely spot fringed with big trees, but the trees were removed for some reason. It now looks a bit barren.

We got there in late afternoon and it started raining so the lake isn’t shown at it’s best. We got half way around Lake Taharoa when we decided to call it a day and go to the Kaihu Tavern.

Here’s a photo taken on an earlier visit in early spring, 2020 which shows the amazing colour of the lake.

Lake Taharoa, the largest of Kai Iwi Lakes

Walk: Northland 28

Kai Iwi Lakes Coastal Track

I recommend this walk across paddocks to Ripiro Beach, which we did in September 2020. It was more interesting although it’s across farmland so you would have to watch for bulls, cows, bogs and electric fences. We came out at a little waterfall on the beach.

Ripiro Beach

Ripiro Beach is at 107 km (66 miles) long it is the longest driveable beach in New Zealand, longer than the more famous, but erroneously named Ninety Mile Beach further north.

It is called ‘the shipwreck highway.’ The difficulty early mariners had navigating the coastline and finding entrance to the Kaipara Harbour to the south are evident to any visitor; there are no landmarks, and there were no lighthouses until the one at Pouto was built. Studies of a confirmed 113 shipwrecks and other suspected wrecks have brought social information to light with potential impacts on the known history of New Zealand. Some are found in shallow water, some are buried in dunes which are now inland in an area known as ‘Valley of the wrecks’ and “The graveyard”. Vague stories of ships full of white men wrecked and then eaten on this coast before and after the time of Abel Tasman may yet be confirmed. Source: Places NZ, Ripiro Beach – Shipwreck Highway

Mystery 300-year-old shipwreck could rewrite history

Time to Find New Zealand’s Buried Spanish and Portuguese Treasure

Maunganui Bluff

Walk #131, 4th May 2024

This was a solid grind where we had to climb 450 metres to the summit of the bluff. Getting over an old lava flow was interesting.

The view south along Ripiro Beach to Kai Iwi Lakes is worth the climb but I was hoping to see some standing stones that I know used to be on the summit. Waipoua and it’s stone ruins are just up the coast, less than 25 kms away.

Walk: Northland 27

Links

Stone structures

Alex Nathan is an elder from the local Te Roroa iwi (tribe) who have control or guardianship of the area including the Waipoua forest.

He speaks about Maunganui Bluff and goes on to mention the historical structural formations on the summit.

Alex Nathan: Taputapuātea on Maunganui Bluff

Nathan says; ” … our maunga (mountain), Maunganui Bluff is a place that we know as “Taputapuātea.” There’s very little of the original stonework still intact because during the second world war the American forces bulldozed the summit in order to establish a radar station. Today, all that remains of that facility are concrete foundations.

On the outer edges of the area that was bulldozed there are … in one place the remains of a stone facing and at the other edge, on the other side of that area is a stone alignment that is intact – and that’s all that remains of the original stone structures on that place.”

A listener asks, “So those stones that you are talking about, so they’re quite old, they were put there as (indiscernable) or they were created …”

“No, no, they are constructions, similar to some of the structures that we know about in Waipoua for example.”

-Note, I did a walk in Waipoua Forest in 2020 but I was not able to see the structures he was talking about. My research on the stone ruins is here.

It appears there are stone structures in the area from Maunganui Bluff to Waipoua Forest.


Waitapu Valley (Maunganui Bluff) NZ | astronomical observatory


Stone Cairns in the Waitapu Valley

This is from a book by a local man at Kaihu, “From the Sea we came.”

A SOLITARY CAIRN IN A FARM FIELD,IN THE WAITAPU VALLEY: NEAR THE MAUNGANUI BLUFF WAITAPU VALLEY ANCIENT STANDING STONE CIRCLES AND LAND MAPPING TRIG POSITIONS IN THE WAITAPU VALLEY OF NORTHLAND, AOTEA…That whole region, running from north of the Waipoua Forest Southward to Maunganui Bluff and beyond, is a very rich field of megalithic structures, which litter this Coastline in profusion. This is believed to be a purpose placed, very ancient surveying structure used for precisely marking a position. Many cairns like this, distributed over several square miles between the Maunganui Bluff and Waipoua, are not the result of modern farmers gathering together stones from the land and placing them in heaps.

Source: From the Sea we came, page 106, RIPIRO WEST COAST BETWEEN KAIPARA AND HOKIANGA

Buried items dug up at Maunganui Bluff

1894; RipiroCoast, North of Maunganui Bluff, about half way to Kawerua: Gum diggers find old relics at a depth of 7 to 9 feet deep. These included adzes and spears. For these to have been buried so deep they must have been owned by some ancient people. Who did they belong to?

Source: National Library: Gang of Dalmatian gum diggers draining the Aranga swamp, Maunganui Bluff, Northland. Creator of collection unknown: Photographs relating to Dalmatian gum diggers, life on the gumfields, and social events. Ref: PAColl-2144-2-03. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/23109398

Related post

Waipoua Forest, Northland

Te Ara Manawa Walkway, Rawene

Walk #130, 3rd May 2024

This walk was done in two parts over four years. We were visiting Rawene in the Hokianga harbour while holidaying in 2020 between lockdowns and just before my cancer treatment. Unfortunately the Mangrove board walk closed for maintenance. I wasn’t sure I’d ever get there again, but we made it back in 2024 just before sunset.

The video above shows the town, historic buildings, spoonbills feeding in the estuary, and a cat in the shop which is next to the post office boxes. I recommend the Boatshed cafe.

The video below features the Te Ara Manawa Walkway, and a cat. The cats at Rawene are very welcoming.

Te Ara means a path and manawa is the Maori word for mangrove.

Walk: Northland 21

Links

The Clendon Papers have been included in the UNESCO Memory of the World Aotearoa New Zealand programme that recognises significant documentary heritage. Much of the nationally significant collection is still housed at Clendon House in Rawene, Northland.

Cape Reinga

Walk #129, 2nd May 2024

The walk incorporates two coasts and a meeting of the oceans. It’s in the westernmost part of the North Island and northernmost part of New Zealand.

Cape Reinga is a very spiritual place for Maori who believe it’s the place where spirits depart for Reinga, the underworld. The legendary early Polynesian explorer Kupe named the cape “Te Rerenga Wairua” as the point from which his descendants would travel in spirit form back to Hawaiiki-A-Nui.

Here the two oceans meet and they can be different colours. When we last visited in 2011 the Tasman was a lighter green and the Pacific a sapphire blue. It depends how quiet the sea is.

The coast on either side of the Aupouri peninsula is spectacular and wild. An ancient and very tapu pohutukawa tree clings to the rugged point beyond the lighthouse.

Offshore are the Three Kings Islands which can be seen on the horizon depending on how clear it is. The islands were named by Abel Tasman who also named Cape Maria van Diemen.

Cape Maria van Diemen

Walk: Northland 1

Te Paki Sand Hills

This video is from a holiday in 2011. My old Sanyo digital camera did tragic video back then, hence our return to the area for a better video of the walk at Cape Reinga.

No visit to Cape Reinga is complete without a visit to the sand dunes. These massive dunes stretch from the Te Paki stream to Te Werahi Beach, in some places they reach as high as 150 metres.

Bring a board for tobogganing and jandals to wear back to your vehicle. It’s lots of fun but you will get sand everywhere.

Walk: Northland 3

Links

Cape Reinga/Te Rerenga Wairua heritage

The Far North: the tail of the fish

The local iwi (tribe) are Ngati Kuri

Ngāti Kuri are descended from the original inhabitants, the founding peoples of the northernmost peninsula of Aotearoa, in Te Hiku o Te Ika. These peoples, known also as Te Iwi o Te Ngaki, were already occupying Te Hiku o Te Ika before the arrival of the many migratory waka from Polynesia. Their ancestor was Ruatamore.

Ngāti Kuri also trace their whakapapa to the Kurahaupo waka which first made landfall in Ngāti Kuri’s rohe at Rangitahua, the Kermadec Islands.

The Three Kings Islands

Abel Tasman’s ships close to the Three Kings Islands

Tasman’s ships anchored off the islands on 5 January 1643, the eve of Epiphany or Three Kings Day, which commemorates the visit of the three wise men to the infant Jesus, 12 days after Christmas. Source: Te Ara

Isaac Gilsemans, who sailed with Abel Tasman, drew this picture of the Three Kings Islands. The human figures in the background apparently gave rise to a belief amongst Europeans that Māori were giants.

Tasman also noted that “Upon the highest mountain of the island they saw 35 persons, who were very tall, and had staves or clubs . . . When they walked they took very large strides.”

While we’ll never know who these tall people were, here’s a photo I took from my research at Auckland Museum in 2021. This ancient carving was found in 1946, hidden in a cave on Great Island.

The Three Kings vine Tecomanthe speciosa may once have been common on the Three Kings. By the time of its discovery, goats that had been introduced to the islands had reduced the entire population to a single specimen on Great Island, making it one of the world’s most endangered plants. The remaining specimen grew on a cliff that was too steep for the goats to reach. The original specimen still grows in the wild, and has developed more vines through the natural process of layering in the years since its discovery. The vine has been propagated and is now growing in NZ gardens.

And there was a lone Kaikōmako Manawa Tāwhi tree found on Manawa Tāwhi / Three Kings Islands north of Cape Reinga in 1945, but it took more than 40 years for scientists to successfully increase the rare tree’s numbers.

“We picked up the legacy of our grandparents to actually breed them and we have a programme where we have got 140 of those now and we are about a month away from delivering those back to the island,” Waitai said.

The project has also helped restore Bartlett’s rata, a rare shrub located at Cape Reinga.

Ngāti Kuri ancestral knowledge rescues endemic species from extinction

Rangikapiti Pa

Walk #128, 1st May 2024

This walk is an old pa site not too far from Coopers Beach and the Taumarumaru Reserve.

Walk: Northland 5

< Here’s a better view of the pa from the Mangonui side.

Rangikapiti Pā provides panoramic views over Mangōnui Harbour, Coopers Beach and across Doubtless Bay to the Karikari Peninsula. It is a significant site to Ngati Kahu. Source: DOC, Rangikapiti Pā

Doubtless Bay was where this canoe prow and stern were found:

The object was discovered during swamp draining operations at a depth of 5ft. Papers Past: DISCOVERY AT MANGONUI. MYSTERY AS TO ORIGIN. GIFT MADE- TO THE MUSEUM.

For more info click here, Waitaha Artifacts

Links

Ngāti Kahu, Rangikapiti pa

By Berlin-George – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26151592

Taumarumaru Reserve,Coopers Beach, Northland

Walk #127, 1st May 2024

Taumarumaru Reserve is located on the Taumarumaru Scenic Reserve at the western end of Coopers
Beach, between Mangonui and Cable Bay at the south eastern end of Doubtless Bay.

Taumarumaru consists of Taumarumaru Pa itself and two smaller pa sites named Te Homumu and
Otanenui.

Walk: Northland 4

Links

Taumarumaru Scenic Reserve Walk

History Description
Taumarumaru is said to have been originally built by Ngati Awa people before they left
Northland and moved south to Taranaki, Tamaki and Tauranga around 1600 after having come
under pressure from Ngapuhi and Ngati Whatua; their main chiefs in the north were Kauri and
Awanui-O-Te-Rangi . When Europeans arrived the pa was under mature kanuka, kahika, and
pohutakawa, giving it the name Taumarumaru or ‘shady’ Pa.

Source: Taumarumaru Heritage Assessment

St Pauls Rock, Whangaroa, Northland

Walk #126 1st May 2024

We walked up an old volcanic plug above the village of Whangaroa. A chain is needed near the top and we had to forego that part because of a shoulder injury. As you can see the view over Whangaroa harbour was still good.

Walk: Northland 6

Links:

Giants at Whangaroa

Here’s an interesting article from 13th October 1934 where the bones of giant men were found in a large cave at Whangaroa.

Newspaper article


Hongi Hika invaded Whangaroa in 1827. If you want to learn more about Hongi Hika and the start of the Musket Wars, I recommend these videos by Kiwi Codger.

Puketi Forest

Walk #125, 30th April 2024

The Manginangina Kauri walk is a short walk in a big forest with towering Kauri trees along the boardwalk. The Puketi-Omahuta forest is the second largest in Northland, situated 14 kilometres west of Kerikeri.

The forest is undergoing extensive pest control so they can bring back birds like the kokako.

In early 2000 there were only seven male kokako left. In 2013/2014 kokako were finally brought back to Puketi. Kokako have their own dialect which the female birds had to learn prior to release. It’s not clear whether the population has increased since 2020. I hope so.

2017 Puketi Forest Trust’s battle for kokako leads to breeding success

2020 Kokako in Puketi Forest

Walk: Northland 7

Links

Puketi Forest Trust

Manginangina Kauri Walk

Turehu Voices ‘Heard’ in the Puketi Bush, Northern Advocate, 1948

Kerikeri Basin

Walk #124, 30th April 2024

This has everything – history, a river walk and waterfalls. Also a cafe in the historic beekeepers house which is right next door to the oldest house in NZ, the Kemp House. The Kemp house was built in 1822 and the Stone Store was built in 1835. There’s a heritage orchard and cottage garden flowerbeds which the cafe uses. The garden has been in operation for over 200 years.

The Mission (Kemp House) was deliberately established next to Kororipo pa (see below), the home of Hongi Hika. Without his patronage and protection, the mission had little chance of survival. No doubt the people in the pa kept a good eye on the coming and goings of the Pakeha living there and reported back to Hongi.

The heritage park is enchanting, even down to the friendly goose who greeted me waggling his tail feathers. The river walk has a historic power station, rock formations and two waterfalls.

Kerikeri Basin, the old Beekeepers House with Kemp House next door

Link

Kerikeri Mission Station (Kemp House)

Kerikeri stone store

Stone Store

Kerikeri’s Kemp House – the oldest building in NZ – turns 200

Kerikeri’s hidden waterfall trails: The network of tracks linking five spectacular cascades

Kororipo Pa

This site was the pa of Hongi Hika, the paramount chief of the north. From here they could keep an eye on everyone, including the Pakeha at the mission across the inlet.

Walking around Kororipo Pa in the quiet of the Kerikeri Basin, I imagined what it was like in the past. In the early 19th century the Ngapuhi tribe controlled the Bay of Islands, the first point of contact for most Europeans visiting New Zealand.

Looking at the historic Mission (Kemp House) and Stone Store across the inlet, New Zealand’s oldest buildings, I wondered about the two cultures that had existed side by side. How did they do it?

Read more …

Links

Kororipo Pa Historic Walk

Hongi Hika

Picture by By S. Percy Smith – Source: Wikepedia https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12799208

Missionaries and muskets at Kerikeri – Roadside Stories

Kerikeri marks 200 years of bicultural founding

Te Ahurea: Historic Kerikeri

Te Ahurea: The WarLords