Ko te mahitahi kia hura i te pitomata o te whakatupu whenua
Kōkiri
He whiriwhiringa ki te āwhina i a koe ki te whakatupu, ki te whakaahu whakamua i te whenua Māori. Rangahaua te pitomata o tō whenua kia mārama te whānau me pēhea e kotahi ai te haere whakamua.
Te Kaha Gold is a partnership of six ahu whenua trusts on 80 hectares of land in Te Kaha.
The kiwifruit enterprise is bringing whānau home and creating a future for their uri.
Hoani Kerei: I was born on the land right here. This used to be a dairy farm in my young days.
The land was conquered in the old days by whanau Te Hutu and my tipuna, Wharenaio got these two blocks here – 9B and 67 – and he had two son, Te Ahiwaru who signed the Treaty of Waitangi for Te Whānau-ā-Apanui and his brother Te Mangokaitupua. That why we have two blocks side by side.
Haki McRoberts: When we first started you know, a lot of people came in. We looked at it for about 10 years and we said something’s wrong here – they are the bosses, and we are the labourers.
Piripi Jennings: With Te Puni Kokiri the support we’ve received has largely been around development, and sort of design and implementation flows of different projects that we’ve had going. The first one was around our pilot nursery Te Heriko.
Haki: We got our own managers from Te Whānau-ā-Apanui managing our own orchards around here. We’ve got our own supervisors. We’ve got our own leading hands working in our orchards.
Te Ataarangi Parata: It’s a big family, it’s a big whānau with the nursery, the orchards, the spray shed so we’re just a whole family working together as one.
Haki: The other good thing about it we get a lot of money from kiwifruit, but money is not everything. We try to keep our people employed.
Royce Hou: Eleven years ago I brought my family back to Te Kaha. I started off in the kiwifruit as a worker and then as a supervisor and decided to go on the Bay of Plenty Polytech training to upskill myself. Being here and helping our people grow has actually provided an opportunity for my children to have something to come back to.
Ray Karauria: TKG have got that structure in place and are able to facilitate the whole thing going forward and really with that leadership the sky’s the limit with what TKG can achieve going forward.
Hei whiriwhiri i te pitomata o te whenua
Mehemea he tūmanako āu mō tō whenua, he whiriwhiringa ēnei.
Ko te mārama ki te whakahaere whenua
Ko te mahi o ia rā, o ia rā, ko te whakahaere whenua. Whāia kia mārama ki ōna āhuatanga.
Ko ngā rīhi whenua
He aha ngā āhuatanga o te rīhi whenua.
Papakāinga
Ko te whakatū papakāinga ki runga i tō whenua Māori he ara roa, engari he tautoko hei āwhina i a koe ki te whakatutuki i tēnei hiahia.
Ko te whakarite mō te pānga o te āhua o ngā rangi
Me rapu mōhiotanga i ngā mātanga i mua i te whakarite mahere inā tūpono atu i te pānga o te āhua o ngā rangi.
Toro atu ki ngā putunga kōrero mō te whenua
Ko te whakawhanake i tō whenua tētahi whaioranga mō tō whānau. Ka whakarite i te tūranga mahi, i te whakangungu tāngata, i te moni. Mehemea he tūmanako āu ki te whakatupu i tō whenua, kei ā mātou putunga kōrero e pā ana ki ngā ahumahi hei āwhina atu. Ka whakaaturia ngā momo ahumahi angitū ki tō rohe me ngā whakamārama māu hei tīmata i tēnā ahumahi, i tēnā ahumahi.
Ko te tono pūtea, ko te mahi haumi rānei
I mua i te tono tautoko, tono pūtea rānei, me mātua mōhio kua rite te tarahati ki te whiwhi, ki te whakahaere i ngā hoatutanga.
Rapu i te hunga tautoko
Nui atu i te 40 ngā āheinga pūtea, whakawhiwhinga, mahi haumi e taea ana e ngā whānau te tono atu ki te whakatupu, ki te tautoko hoki i tō whenua Māori. Tirohia ngā tautoko ki tō rohe – kōrero atu hoki ki ngā kaiāwhina ā-rohe o TPK ki te pīrangi āwhina ki te whakarite tono.
He aha tēnei hanga te hiranga
Ki te rapu ara koutou ko tō whānau ki te whakawhanake, ki te whakatupu i tō whenua Māori, he mea āwhina e ngā mahinga o ētahi atu. Kua whakahuihuitia ētahi tauira o te hiranga ki konei hei āwhina i a koe ki te koke whakamua me tō whenua.