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PWGT3 Pātaka and Pounamu (Westport) Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Geocaching HQ Admin: We hope you enjoyed exploring this region of the South Island. The Pōkai Whenua GeoTour: Toru has now ended. Thank you to the community for all the great logs, photos, and Favorite Points the last 2 years. It has been so fun!

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Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


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The Tuia Mātauranga Pōkai Whenua GeoTour follows the footsteps of early explorers of Aotearoa New Zealand taking you to places where leaders of the past searched for food, resources and ways to adapt and survive in this new land.

Use the Pōkai Whenua GeoTour as your classroom to explore the stories of the past, in the present, to preserve what is unique in Aotearoa New Zealand for the future.

Collect the codewords to get the Geocoin puzzle pieces

To be able to complete this GeoTour and receive your special Geocoin collectable, remember to take a note of the codeword placed in the cache. This will need to be recorded in your passport which can be downloaded here.

 

63 of the 150 Pōkai Whenua GeoTour caches will contain a randomly placed special FTF token (a replica of the Tuia Mātauranga GeoTour commemorative coin). This is yours to keep! If you find more than one, you might consider leaving it for the next person who finds the cache.

 

On a coastal journey in 1846 with Māori guides, Thomas Brunner and Charles Heaphy recorded a Māori potato garden near here.  Further remarks suggested that the place was not yielding a good harvest. Heaphy, the artist of the expedition, revealed in his journal that one purpose of the garden was land speculation.

In 1862 James Crowe Richmond visited Westport and painted the scene below. It looks across forested Martins Island to distant Mt Rochfort. Although the exact site of the pātaka is unknown, we are able to roughly line up the painting with today’s view of Mt Rochfort. It is possible potatoes were stored in the pātaka, especially as the lower Kawatiri River was prone to flood. Poutini Ngāi Tahu had their own species of potatoes, and following European arrival grew newly-introduced varieties. They were skilled gardeners and produce traders, with established inter-island and international trade relationships.

Kawatiri was a key stopping place on the well-travelled pounamu trail between the Arahura River and Golden Bay, and beyond to other parts of New Zealand. The food bounty of the river and estuary was well known to those who plied the trade routes. The mouth of the Whakapoāi/Heaphy River, to the north of here, was another key stopping place. For over 500 years, Māori paddled and sailed along the West Coast to trade, gather food and socialise.

Pātaka were essential to store food in a dry, dark place, away from rodents, ground-dwelling birds and floodwaters. Typically stored were weka, kākā and kererū, preserved in fat within harakeke/flax baskets. Māori paddled up river to the inland seasonal campsites of Orikaka and Oweka (the lower Inangahua River), returning loaded with preserved birds. Dried fish and tuna/eel were also stored in pātaka.

Due to the bounty of nature here at the Kawatiri, trading fleets who, paddled their waka into the shelter of the river mouth lagoon, were guaranteed a well-catered rest and recuperation.

The Cache
A 15 minute walk along the newly opened Kawatiri Coastal Trail from the Buller Bridge to Carters Beach

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Fvta fvqr, urnq urvtug jura ba genpx

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)