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Passing mātauranga Māori on to the next generation in Southland

Tuesday, 21 June 2022

Hokonui Rūnanga has started a Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira Programme to train the next generation of kaitiaki to safegaurd for Murihiku.

It’s a crisp autumn morning and the sun has just risen over the Mataura River in Southland.

The distant sound of grazing cows fills the air while a group of young lads are unpacking and setting up their gear.

Someone cracks a joke while they’re pulling on their waders, readying themselves for today’s classroom.

And in being here, they’re helping to preserve the mātauranga Māori of their takiwā (district) for another generation.

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Cadets Josh Aitken, left, and Kaloni Taylor set up gear before getting stuck in for a morning of fish monitoring on the Mataura River. The two are among the first intake for Hokonui Rūnanga’s Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira Programme.
Cadets Josh Aitken, left, and Kaloni Taylor set up gear before getting stuck in for a morning of fish monitoring on the Mataura River. The two are among the first intake for Hokonui Rūnanga’s Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira Programme.

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The teens are the first cadets to be a part of Hokonui Rūnanga Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira Programme.

Cadets Sentre Harden, left, and Kaloni Taylor check nets for tuna (eel) at the Mataura River before carefully measuring them.
Cadets Sentre Harden, left, and Kaloni Taylor check nets for tuna (eel) at the Mataura River before carefully measuring them.

The three-year programme was created in partnership with Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand to bring practical conservation skills and mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) together under one qualification.

The cadets are learning how to be kaitiaki (guardians) of the land while also learning about their spiritual connection to the whenua.

They are working with freshwater ecologist Matt Dale who’s guiding them through monitoring methods.

Freshwater ecologist Matt Dale, right, teaches cadet Josh Aitken how to safely use electro fishing equipment. The machine lightly stuns fish and is one of multiple monitoring methods the Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira cadets are learning.
Freshwater ecologist Matt Dale, right, teaches cadet Josh Aitken how to safely use electro fishing equipment. The machine lightly stuns fish and is one of multiple monitoring methods the Kaitiaki Taiao Tauira cadets are learning.

He’s set some hināki (eel traps) the night before to catch tuna (eels) and the cadets start their morning with collecting the nets and measuring their contents.

This is a delicate process. The tuna must be mildly sedated and carefully handled to avoid hurting them.

Dale takes the lead and the cadets follow.

Hokonui Rūnanga Kaitiaki Taiao training coordinator Abby Evans says the programme is a great opportunity for young Māori and that the rūnanga have been lucky with the passionate cadets they’ve employed this year.
Hokonui Rūnanga Kaitiaki Taiao training coordinator Abby Evans says the programme is a great opportunity for young Māori and that the rūnanga have been lucky with the passionate cadets they’ve employed this year.

Their size and weight measurements are being collated for use by researchers, and to inform future mahi to restore the Mataura River.

“You can get a good idea of the health of a river based on the fish,” Dale says.

The Mataura has historically been an important source of mahinga kai for Ngāi Tahu iwi, but now, with industry on either side of the awa (river), Hokonui Rūnanga’s Taiao team are working hard to restore balance.

There’s much more to te ao tūroa (the natural world) than just wai and the cadets have been learning about pest control and land management, and in the spring they’ll be spending time at Te Tapu o Tāne – a native nursery co-owned by four Papatipu Rūnanga.

Here they’ll learn about seed collecting, growing indigenous ngāi tipu (flora) and catchment rehabilitation.

At the end of the programme, the cadets will be able to specialise or take their skills into other fields with NZQA accreditation.

“It’s pretty mean,” 17-year-old Kaloni Taylor says. “We get to do heaps of different stuff every day.”

He’d usually “do stuff like this” with his mates, so he reckoned the programme would be a good fit for him.

Taylor plans to go into pest control, because he enjoys getting out into the bush.

The cadets are also getting numeracy and literacy training to prepare them for tertiary study, while a cultural advisor is helping them individually learn about their whakapapa.

Kaitiaki Taiao Training Coordinator Abby Evans says not all the six cadets whakapapa to Te Whānau O Hokonui Rūnanga.

“Everybody is at different levels, and they have their own interests,” she says.

The programme is open to students older than 16 and cadets are chosen based on their willingness to learn and desire to work in environmental conservation.

“It gives our rangatahi the opportunity to work in the taiao space and to build capability in the Rūnanga’s Kaupapa Taiao programme,” Evans says.