The following article has comes from the New Zealand Herald. It has been shortened so you can read the most important parts. You can find the whole article here. |
Read the article and answer the questions to learn about the significance of the Omaru Creek and how it has changed over time.
My Auckland: Glen Innes
5:00 AM Saturday Feb 23, 2013
Tamati Patuwai (Ngati Whatua) tells Elisabeth Easther what he loves about living in Glen Innes, and how much the area has changed since he was a boy
Tamati Patuwai beside the Omaru Creek in Glen Innes. Photo / Dean Purcell
I was born and raised in Fenchurch St, Glen Innes. My whanau had come here as part of the Housing NZ culture. My mum has passed away and my dad moved back to Kaipara, so I now live in my old family home with my wife and four children
There's a proverb that says, "Ko au te awa, Ko te awa ko au", which means "I am the river and the river is me". The Omaru River runs through the centre of GI from the Tamaki River and that proverb explains my connection to the area. When my great-grandmother moved here, back in the 50s or 60s, it was an abundant place.
The volcanic soils were great for growing, and snapper could be caught in the fishing grounds. There used to be mullet and flounder too. We grew up fishing with my dad, floundering in the shallow areas. We used to get oysters and pipi, and puha from the rivers.
The river is really polluted now - we swam in it when I was a kid, but there's no way you'd put a child in it now. There are some planting initiatives to regenerate the area, and because I'm a home boy, my role in all this it to engage the residents, to have them remember what the river is, for us all to become accountable.
We lived in and on the river, so these staged developments will become a lifestyle, igniting the people into action - businesses, council and residents.
There are still some good trails and pathways though, some good walks, from GI town centre through to Tamaki River, or along the Panmure riverside all the way through to Glendowie, all the way to St Heliers. For me, Tahuna Torea Nature Reserve is an example of what can be done. In the 70s or 80s, it was going to be a dump and then a marina, and the locals said no. They made a deal with the council and started regenerative native planting. It's a real treasure for us now.
The River Talks is about our connection with the river and came from our desire to reconnect the community to the river. We're bringing together artists and scientists, and there'll be talks, followed by discussions. We want to stimulate the imaginations of high school students, whether they want to be a scientist about it, or respond with art or music.
Your Task:
Use a Google Doc or Drawing to answer the questions about the article. It will help you understand the significance of the Omaru River and how it has changed over time.
Questions:
The water was clear and pretty much clean. So back them Tamati use to swim in it but now that it is polluted it has become a fifthly place.
Fifthly with dirty water, rubbish all over the place and to much stumps and chopped down tree’s are gathered there.
Because more fishes will die and leave, because it is disturbing to look at and because there are too many rubbish gathered around that place.
Because animals live there and if it is polluted then the fishes would die.
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