Mangaokewa Gorge Scenic Reserve

Walk #175, 17th November 2025

Mangaokewa means “the stones of Kewa.” This walk is about 3kms from the town of Te Kuiti. It follows the Mangaokewa River.

There’s a small waterfall about 20 minutes along the track. Beyond that is an old road going in the direction of Te Kuiti. The area has a ghost townish feel which I remarked about on the video. I later learned it was the original site of Te Kuiti before the town moved north.

Walk: King Country Walk 31

Rating: 3 out of 5.

Links

Mangaokewa Gorge Walk

Papers Past: Old Te Kuiti (By J.W.E)

Te Kooti

Te Kooti was invited to Te Kūiti, the residence of the Māori King – but only if he came in peace. He responded defiantly that he was coming to ‘assume himself the supreme authority which he coming direct from God was entitled to’. Accompanied by Horonuku and Ngāti Tūwharetoa, and his core group of around 60 whakarau, Te Kooti arrived at Te Kūiti on 10 July 1869. Rewi Maniapoto greeted Te Kooti as a kinsman (they were related through Te Kooti’s father) and Te Kooti, for his part, appeared more conciliatory. He had come not to depose Tāwhiao but ‘to rouse up the Waikato to take up arms’. A feast had been prepared, but at this point Te Kooti declared that ‘he should consider himself the host (tangata whenua) and that the Waikato were his visitors’. His men loaded their weapons and fired over the heads of the bewildered Ngāti Maniapoto.

Te Kooti goes to Te Kūiti

From 1873 to 1883 Te Kooti lived at Te Kūiti. Here he evolved the rituals of his church. In 1883 Te Kooti was formally pardoned, at Rewi Maniapoto’s insistence. Te Kooti left Te Kūiti and in April moved to Ōtewā, where he founded his religious community.

Te Ara: Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Tūruki

Opepe Historic Reserve

Walk 64, 4th April 2021

Opepe is a place on the Napier-Taupo highway where nine Armed Constabulary soldiers from the Bay of Plenty Calvary were killed in 1869 by an advance party of Te Kooti’s troops.

A side track to the right near the car park brings you to the cemetery where they’re buried.

The bush is beautiful here, it escaped the axe and the Taupo eruption of 186 AD.

Walk: Taupo 37

Links

Te Kooti’s last battle was at the Te Porere Redoubt which we visited in Dec 2018.

Opepe Walks

Te Kooti’s war

Te Porere Redoubt

Walk 9: Te Porere Redoubt, 28 Dec 2018

Te Pore Redoubt

Click here for the video

Te Pōrere, in the shadow of Tongariro, is the site of the last major battle of the New Zealand Wars was fought on 4 October 1869 between Te Kooti and a combined force of Armed Constabulary and Māori fighters.

Te Kooti or an ally built this British style redoubt/pa but the angles were poorly sited and the horizontal loopholes prevented the defenders from firing down into the ditch, which the government forces speedily occupied after taking out two small detached positions.

The dead from Te Porere are buried on site.  Te Kooti got away into the bush with other survivors.

Te Kehakeha led him and others ‘in the general direction of Te Rena via an old Ngāti Hotu track’.  Te Rena belonged to the remnant of the Ngati Hotu.  (Source: The National Park District Inquiry Report, Page 173.)

Walk: Central North Island 42


Te Kooti

“Perhaps time will allow us to see this figure in perspective, and help us to decide whether he was murderer, butcher, and slayer of innocent women and children. Or was he really a military genius, a Maori hero, who suffered defeat only twice in the long years of campaigning.  Was he a prophet, a spiritual leader, who could refashion the adherents of a pagan cult into warriors who could fight with rules, who could show mercy to prisoners, who could begin and end the fighting with worship of God. Te Kooti Rikirangi Te Turuki—mystery man of the Maori race—we see him now in a clearer light.”
Article: Did This Change the Course of History?  by Ernest E. Bush

Te Kooti – Wikipedia

*See page on Te Kooti’s war.