Taranaki Pioneer Village

July 10, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Life in New Zealand, Things to do 

We headed off today – still unable to see anything of Mount Taranaki – to Stratford – home of a 10-acre re-creation of a pioneer village.

The buildings have been moved onto site from various places round the area, donated by families. It’s $10 each for adults to go in – plus $2 each for a train ride around the site. Which I recommend – just because.

Even with intermittent sun it was a lovely morning out. And a nice change because in all honestly we have never really been able to take the time to stop and look at much of the history of the land we moved to. With all our efforts of the past 6 years taken with immigration and jobs, taking some time to look around and admire the country is long overdue.

 

The “Main Street”

 

An old village church.

 

A view of the village with the Mountain in the background – what you can see of it through the clouds :)

 

 

The Village Express

 

The water wheel - provides 50 watts of power a day - which was enough to power the village. Now it would power a lightbulb.
The water wheel – provides 50 watts of power a day – which was enough to power the village. Now it would power a lightbulb.

 

One Land.

December 16, 2009 by · 2 Comments
Filed under: Life in New Zealand, Things to do 

This weekend was the first episode of a TV series on New Zealand TV called One Land. It follows 3 families as they try to live in 1850′s New Zealand.

Its great!

The Pa (Settlement) where the Maori Families live.The Pa (Settlement) where the Maori Families live.

I normally have no time at all for NZ TV – as its basically rubbish (which seems to be the consensus from just about everyone). Our personal taste is for Sci Fi, and we are years behind on most things – so the ability to download is pretty essential to avoid going nuts.

In this case – we missed the first episode – but caught it on TVNZ’s On Demand Service. (Hopefully this is viewable from outside New Zealand).

Of the 3 families: one is a Maori Family who are what is know as “Total Immersion” – that is they not only speak fluent Maori, but also live fully in their culture, and while they can speak English – choose not to in their daily lives. The second family has Maori roots, but does not speak Te Reo Maori or have any connection to the Maori culture or history. Both these families live together on a Pa (Settlement).

The third family are “Pakeha” – white settlers – sourced from Christchurch – and have almost no prior contact with the Maori Culture. They will be living on a separate piece of land, in a “house”.

For a start, watching it gave me a pang of homesickness for summers going to Medieval fairs – but that aside – it is a truly interesting show – and I can’t wait for the next episode. The two cultures have to learn to trade with each other and survive.

One thing that really struck me is that 160 years on – some things haven’t changed. There were some classic comments made by both the participants and the historian – which shows me that no matter where in history you are – emigrating throws up some interesting dilemmas:

“Many People came here to make some money, go home and buy land.” (From the Historian narating the show).

(Now – you leave New Zealand to make money, come home and buy land!)

“One of the inducements we  used to get settlers to New Zealand, was offering them parcels of land. These were purchased in Britain or Ireland. And when Migrants came out and saw those places for the first time, they found they were very inaccessible or quite different from what they were led to believe they were.”

(Aka, come to New Zealand, the property is cheap, ( you can tell – look at it on the Internet) – and you wont need a decent wage because the cost of living is so cheap!)

And the very best quote:

“That’s not a house – it’s a shack, mate!”

(The call of many a recent immigrants on seeing the state of new Zealand housing!)

There’s also a really good explanation of what the word Pakeha means: Pa (To come upon) Ke (something strange) Ha (a presence), so the word actually means To come upon a strange presence. Hmm – I didn’t know that.

I really hope you can watch this from outside New Zealand – it’s a fascinating look at how this land became what it is today. I know very little New Zealand history – I think this is not a bad way to start.

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