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TMGT Historic Moeraki (North Otago) Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Geocaching HQ Admin: We hope you enjoyed exploring and discovering the local history in the communities of Aoetearoa New Zealand. The Tuia Mātauranga GeoTour has now ended. Thank you to the community for all the great logs, photos, and Favorite Points over the last 30 months. It has been so fun!

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Hidden : 9/3/2019
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


Tuia Education website...

The Tuia Mātauranga GeoTour is about having fun discovering the history of Aotearoa New Zealand by finding sites of significance in local communities from early Pacific voyaging and migration, European settlement to present day. The interaction between people, and people and the land have provided a rich history that the GeoTour invites you to explore.

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The 175th anniversary of the establishment of the seaside settlement of Moeraki by whalers in 1836 was celebrated on Boxing Day 2011.

Moeraki was originally a Māori settlement and became a whaling port when European whalers arrived to set up a base on Boxing Day 1836. Māori were also subsequently involved in whaling.

While whaling at Moeraki had declined by the 1860s, the village had the best natural harbour between Otago Harbour and Akaroa, and with Oamaru badly needing a sheltered port, for a time it looked as if Moeraki would fill that role for North Otago.

A railway line was built from Oamaru to Moeraki by 1877, before the South Island main trunk was completed to Dunedin, but a pattern of landslips at Moeraki resulted in extensive repairs to the line and closure in 1879 of the section between Hillgrove and Moeraki.

The iron wharf at Moeraki received little use after the railway closed and the decking was eventually removed.

Fishing and tourism became the mainstays of Moeraki and today Fleur's Place restaurant, the Moeraki Tavern, the Moeraki holiday park and motels cater for large numbers of visitors throughout the year.

Walking tracks have been developed around Moeraki, including the Millennium track, built by the Otago Regional Council as a year 2000 project along part of the former railway formation.

It is possible, except at high tide, to walk from Moeraki to the Moeraki boulders along the beach.

Three earlier Moeraki anniversaries have been celebrated with a major projects to benefit the community.

In 1986, the lookout on the hill to the east of Moeraki was opened.

In 1961, the Moeraki church Kotahitanga, which means "one people", was shifted from the Kaik to the waterfront in Moeraki village and rebuilt.

It was later shifted to its present site further west in Haven St.

In 1937, Centennial Park on the Moeraki waterfront was developed, but celebrations were delayed a year by an outbreak of polio in 1936 that restricted many public gatherings.

This cache is a small screw capped container with logbook only. Bring our own pen/pencil to sign the logbook. 

To be able to complete this Geotour and receive your special geocoin, remember to take a note of the codeword on the log book of the cache. This will need to be recorded in your passport which can be downloaded from here. If the passport is unavailable for any reason just keep a note of the codeword and try again later.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

haqre

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)