OHURA, BOAR HUNT AND HANGI
Barry and Margaret
Williamson
August 2005
This is an account of a week's visit to the Taranaki town of Ohura, on the North
Island of New Zealand. We were fortunate to be able to stay with
Charley and Janet, and to do so when they and their son John were busy
organising a boar hunt and a hangi.
Ohura will b e found on a good map near the large bulge in the south-west of the North Island. The bulge was produced by the formerly very active 9,000 ft-high Mount Taranaki (also known as Mount Egmont).
The town is out on its own, among hills of volcanic lava, now covered
by the greenest of grass and the happiest of sheep. Go west from
Taumarunui, east from New Plymouth, south from Te Kuiti or north from Wanganui, keep asking passers-by and you will finally reach Ohura.
To know where it is you have arrived, read on . . . . . . .
OHURA is typical of many small New Zealand
towns, which once had a prosperity based on mineral extraction but now
lie quietly in the bush, among remote mountains and rivers. Ohura had a
coal mine and there are still rich deposits in the area, waiting the
right economic moment for their exploitation. Meanwhile, the town (a
hamlet, really) awaits the closure in November of its other employer –
the prison.
Originally called Mangaroa ( = long stream in Maori), after the Mangaroa River
on which it stands, the name was changed to Ohura in 1913 to avoid
confusion with other Mangaroas. In Maori, 'O' corresponds to 'Of' and
'Hura' was an ancestor of the local Ngati Ruru tribe. There is an Ohura
River in the next valley and the Mangaroa River joins it a few kilometres away. The Ohura River goes on to join the Whanganui River at Marae Kowhai, flowing on through Taumarunui and eventually reaching the Tasman Sea at Wanganui.
The population of Ohura is now about 200 and it has been falling
steadily in recent years – for example, it fell by 40% in the 5 years
preceding the 2001 census! What was once a bustling town with shops,
clubs, service station and churches is now quiet and peaceful. One
small store remains and the garage has given up selling fuel. The St John's
Ambulance stationed in the town lacks both a driver and mechanical
reliability and the one fire engine relies on local volunteers. A
doctor visits for half a day, once a week.
There is no signal for the mobile phone,
but a repeater station supplies the basic diet of New Zealand
Television. People wanting a speedier internet connection put up a
satellite dish!
According to the 2001 census,
the average income of the people of Ohura is only 60% of the national
average and unemployment is twice the national average. See Ohura Information for more census detail and maps of the area.
All this
information points to a town in decline, but it also points to a way of
life that is enviable. Little money is needed to live in Ohura and
everything is within walking distance. Wood is plentiful for the stove,
there is a great spirit of mutual help and support among the people, Maori and European. House prices are among the lowest in New Zealand.
There is plenty of space in the town and everyone (except Paul) lives
in a detached timber-framed house on its own plot. The town lies at
around 500 ft and it is surrounded in every direction by hundreds of
grassy hills and ridges rising to over 1,000 ft (300 m), the uneroded
record of snow-capped Mount Egmont's volcanic past.
Ohura is not on a through route for either tourists or trucks – SH43, the Forgotten World Highway (it used to be called the Lost World Highway), passes by 10 km away, linking Stratford
with Taumarunui and forgetting (or losing) Ohura. With the nearest town
(Taumarunui) over 50 mountainous kilometres away, there is little to
disturb or pollute the air of Ohura!
The centre of life
in the town is the Cosmopolitan Club, a non-profit-making centre,
managed and staffed by the community itself. The club provides
refreshment, food on certain nights, snooker, TV and, above all, a
meeting ground for townspeople and local farmers. The club also puts on
special events and we were lucky enough to be there for their very
first annual Boar Hunt and Hangi.
On Saturday mornings an otherwise-empty
shop is used for coffee and a bring-and-buy sale with quite a few
items, including books, being given away free. Again, this enterprise
gives people a chance to meet and gossip.
Our hosts for ne arly a week in Ohura were Charley and Janet Hedges whose house, grounds and shops (now storerooms and workshops!) front the bro ad main street. Charley, brought out as a child from Yorkshire,
is a fluent speaker of Maori with a love and fascination for Maori
culture and history. He is also a keen cyclist with a splendid
collection of bikes, some of which he built or modified himself. He is
also working on the restoration of a number of vintage motorbikes. And
this is only a small part of his range of social and practical skills –
not least, he is an excellent host!
Janet has relatives high in New Zealand's
Maori hierarchy and is greatly respected by both communities, in Ohura
and beyond. She plays a key role in the management and running of the
Cosmopolitan Club, just across the road from their house. She plans to
take over the bring-and-buy shop in the near future.
We first met Charley and Janet in
Maryborough on Queensland's Pacific coast. They were on holiday, while
we were just completing a 16,500-mile campervan circuit of Australia.
Charley saw our English touring bicycles and immediately came over to
talk. We have been good friends ever since and met again in Ohura in
2002 when we were on a 1,500-mile cycle ride through the North Island.
Our other friends in Ohura include John,
the son of Janet and Charley, a big man in every sense of the word!
Initially intimidating in appearance, he soon comes through as kind,
patient and hard working. In addition to long days tree and
scrub-cutting in the forest, he helps to run the Cosmopolitan Club and
works behind the bar till late most evenings.
Jack lives in the former Bank of New Zealand building on the main street, complete with vault. He has a fund of stories from his days as a pilot in the RNZAF and as a civilian pilot with Air New Zealand. He obviously loves Ohura but his V8 Jaguar easily transports him to other parts of the North Island (and sometimes the South Island, too).
Paul lives in a pair of 'house buses' which he has built himself, utilising his skill s
as a carpenter. He is very fit, cycling the 100-km round trip to
Taumarunui to collect his weekly groceries and the 160-km required for
a regular visit to relatives in Wanganui. He has also made several
successful attempts at the annual round-Lake-Taupo bicycle race of
about 160 km.
Along with this fitness, his
main interest in life lies in striving to increase the efficiency of
his bicycles on two fronts: streamlining to reduce air drag (the main
absorber of the cyclist's energy and therefore the final limiter of a
bicycle's speed), and reducing the mass of the bicycle wheels. His
efforts have taken many forms: streamlining different parts of the
bicycle; making a windscreen for the rider to get behind; removing
spokes; drilling holes in rims; removing tread from tyres; designing
new mudguards.
He is also skilled and keen enough to use
his chain saw to bring down the most challenging tree, his
specially-built trailer being used to tow the ladder behind his
bicycle.
Roger is an English farmer transposed to
several hundred acres of good New Zealand hill land. He runs cattle,
sheep and chickens on an 'organic' basis, one reason being that it
raises more income for less work! For example, the sheep require less
drenching and no tail docking! He is also a website developer, with
over 20 to his name, and a keen photographer. People live a full life,
in and around Ohura.
Jack took us to the 10 am Sunday Morning Service at Ohura's Methodist Church, with refreshments in the church hall afterwards. The wooden church was built in 1912 and inmates of Ohura Prison h ave
recently repainted the outside walls, but only as high as they could
reach (they are not allowed ladders!) Inside the church, the
woodcarving of the Last Supper was also done by prisoners and signed by
them all on the back: this was a 'thank you' to Hazel, who runs the
church services and acts as Prison Chaplain. Not least, she always
visits accompanied by her excellent baking!
The service was taken by her son, Dave. In
the congregation were Hazel, Jack, ourselves, Natalie & daughter
Keitlyn, Barbara & 3 of her 6 children (Sarah, Mitchell and baby
Rosemary) and Carol from the garage. The singing was unaccompanied,
with requests from the congregation including favourites such as
'Amazing Grace'.
Later on the Sunday, we were invited to the end of the Wild Boar Hunt and the
ensuing Hangi feast. The Hangi pit fire was lit by John and his mates
before dawn and used to heat up bricks, stones and metal pieces. The
cooking began about noon, when the fire was raked away and the
pre-prepared meat and vegetable meals stacked on top of the hot stones
in foil containers. These were covered in wet cloths, more water was
poured on and the whole thing covered in a plastic shee t and lots of earth until it looked like a freshly-filled grave!
Janet and helpers had prepared the 100
hangi baskets and 100 individual trifles and was later to supervise
their distribution within the Cosmopolitan Club! What a labour of love.
Cooking (by steaming) took from noon until
4.30 pm, during which time hunters appeared with their dead boars, eels
and rabbits. Each and every item was weighed against the later awarding
of prizes. We learned that the boar is usually killed by dogs – 2 or
more trained to go for the rear
legs, one to go for the head. Hunters may use a knife and also carry
rifles, though it would be seen as poor sport to actually fire them!
As evening approached, prizes were awarded,
including special ones for children who had brought in eels and
rabbits. Finally, all the hunters and hangers-on (that should be
hangis-on) were right royally fed and 'watered'.
At times throughout our week, we enjoyed the other attractions of Ohura – talking,
reading, emailing, dhobi, riding a variety of bicycles, visiting
Taumarunui to collect post and have lunch in Ruddies Café, walking,
photographing, getting the motorhome unstuck from its hole in the mud,
watching a DVD of Part 3 of the Lord of the Rings (filmed locally!) and
more talking.
TAUMARUNUI (in Maori big screen or shade) lies at a height of about 500 ft, in a green and pleasant valley at the confluence of the Ongarue and Whanganui Rivers.
A small town, it is nevertheless the commercial centre for a large
surrounding area with a hospital, cafes, a good supermarket, shops of
all kinds, and agricultural equipment suppliers. It is on the main
railway line that runs from Auckland to Wellington, has a good holiday
park (4 km east of town) and a couple of motels – we highly recommend
Kelly's Motel by the river at the northern end of town. For more on the
area, visit www.tourism.net.nz/region/ruapehu
Travelling to Taumarunui from Ohura, four of us in Charley's car, we went out via highway SH43 (the last section of the Forgotten World Highway)
over Nevins Lookout and past Herlihy's Bluffs (mudstone which causes
landslips on the road). The highest point on the road is 1,060 ft at
Tunnel Hill. _Ohakuhura_Saddle.JPG)
Returning to Ohura, we drove north up the
SH4, then left along 9 km of winding gravel road, steeply up and down
over the Ohakuhura Saddle, the highest point on the road at 1,260 ft. A
good road then wound its way to Ohura via the small settlement of
Matiere. The total distance, there and back, was about 110 km.
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