A series of traditional wānaka toi (art workshops) facilitated by Ngāi Tahu writer and musician Ariana Tikao have been held in Okains Bay. Matiu Calman (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Toa) attended the final hui to connect with the techniques and tools of our tīpuna.
A heavy overnight deluge of pātītī rain has broken to clearer skies over Te Pātaka o Rākaihautū (Banks Peninsula). We arrive at the Okains Bay Museum for the third in a series of wānaka hosted there and organised by Ariana with funding support from Creative Communities. The museum houses a compound of heritage buildings which hold an extensive collection of early Pākehā settler and Māori artefacts. The attendees arrive: several members of the Haumanu Collective; other makers and players of taonga pūoro; weavers; and other creatives. One wahine has come from Hawkes Bay. Many have brought over their own taonga pūoro (traditional Māori instruments). They fill the air with pūatatangi – chorus of morning birdcall – as we wait for the wānaka to commence. Then we gather in the internal courtyard to mihimihi to each other.