Friday, April 24, 2009

Weed spot: Tobacco weed


One man's weed is anothers prize plant. Suprisingly half the plant species growing in NZ are not native. In addition 70% of invasive weeds start of as introduced garden ornamentals. Tobacco weed is a good example being introduced in the late 19th Cent. as a garden plant. It is a fast growing plant, produces many seeds and produces a cover dense enough to prevent other plants from growing beneath it. Environment Waikato have a list of weeds that landowners are required to destroy. There are 38 species in this category and also a number of plants that may cause problems in the future. Actually you can knock one of that total. The Coromandel has been given a free pass for Mexican Devil Weed. It would be an imposible task to eradicate it now as it is so widespread. The full list can be found on http://www.ew.govt.nz/

Control of Tobacco weed is fairly straight forward. Small plants can be pulled up by hand. Chopping larger plants down does not work as they will regrow. The following method comes from Environment Bay of Plenty-- http://www.envbop.govt.nz/ .

Make a downward slash totally around the trunk of your tobacco weed. Do it within 5-10 cm of the ground. Then pour in undiluted weedkiller to the point of runoff. Glyphosate (Roundup), Tordon Gold or Amitrole are effective. If you do this on a standing bush, rather than chopping it down, it will not clutter the ground up below. Access will be easier when you visit the site later to pull up any seedlings that may have germinated.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Plant spot: Kohurangi.


Just about every time I visit Tuateawa I find something new. This find was on the way up to the Trig on the track that starts at the end of Waiherire Drive. It is not an uncommon shrub and was not uncommon on the track either. If it hadn't been flowering it would probably still be un noticed and unidentified! Senecio kirkii.

What couldn't be missed however, were the great quantity of pig rootings in the upper part of the track. There doesn't seem to be a lot of information about the damage they might cause but there is some suggestion that they can interfere with regeneration processes. Unlike cows they have only a single stomach and so can only manage softer plant material, grasses and bulbs. They are omnivorous and do eat quite large quantities of native earthworms which could explain some of the rootings.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Bird Spot: Blue Penguin


It is unusual to see blue penguins come ashore in the day. It was a mistake for this wee fellow, or perhaps felless as it was getting some heavy attention from a couple of black backed gulls. Rightly or wrongly we made it a temporary shelter on the beach at Tuateawa landing and the gulls lost interest. Hopefully it survived. It is not unusual to see dead penguins washed up on the beach but the numbers seem to be a little higher this year.

Blue penguins do nest all around the coast of New Zealand and have a near threatened status. They are predated by rats,cats, mustelids and dogs but thrive when protected. They often make a daily round trip, seeking food, of about 75 km. Mostly they find food in the top two m. of the sea but commonly dive 10 to 20m. They produce two eggs which both parents incubate. They hatch after 36 days and, eight weeks later, are fully grown and independent. Some live for 25 years but the average is around 5-6 years. Much of the mortality is early in the life cycle, frequently from starvation.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Kennedy Bay Clams


Easter is a great time to visit Kennedy Bay at low tide, enjoy the walk across the mudflats and find fifty clams each for a good feed. Every one calls them cockles but it seems that they are Southern Little Neck Clams I guess they sound a bit more upmarket as NZ now exports them all over the world. They have a real advantage over tuatuas as they don't need to be kept until they spit out any sand. You can eat them straight away or give them a scrub. Then put them, without water, into the fridge where they will keep for quite a while. Southern clams Ltd has a great website at http://www.nzclams.com/ It has some good recipes and lots of detail about the southern little neck clam.

If those recipes have no appeal try this Linguine con volgone, it is quick and tasty.

In olive oil fry some chopped garlic until soft and then add some finely chopped chilli or perhaps chilli flakes to give a gentle heat. Then add a few chopped skinned tomatoes and gently simmer for a few minutes. At this stage tip in the washed and scrubbed clams and continue to heat. Remove clams as they open and throw away any that remain closed after a few minutes of heating. The clams will have released a fair bit of water so there will be a thin sauce. Check the seasoning. It shouldn't need any salt. While this has been happening you will have cooked some linguine or other pasta to the stage you prefer and drained it and set it aside. Remove the clam flesh from the shells into a bowl. Then add the clams and the pasta to the sauce and heat for a minute or two. The pasta will absorb much of the water from the sauce and you will have made yourself a real gourmet meal! If you prefer it a little saltier then, next time you can add an anchovy at the garlic frying stage. This works just as well with mussels and you could add basil or oregano as well. Great served in a bowl with some warm crusty bread to mop up any juices!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Two websites that may be of interest.


This first website is really old news but some may have missed it. There has been quite a lot of work along Tuateawa road on the part of Telecom. On the 11th June 2008 they posted a comment explaining just what it was all about. Go to www.chorus.co.nz/n310 to read the detail.


The next is really quite informative. It includes a lot of good pictures of the area and some of it's wildlife, including a great shot of a pair of dolphins. It is largely concerned with marketing the Tokeroa subdivision which is coastal and much of which overlooks Tokaroa Rock. It is an active site with the indication that new details will soon be available relating to the subdivision work currently under way. The site is http://www.tokeroacoromandel.com/


Easter is close so this might be the last post. The weather forecast is looking promising for a great break!

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Tuateawa Baked Figs.


Fill a shallow dish with fresh figs, stem upmost. Make two vertical cuts almost to the bottom of each fig so that they open. Put half a teaspoon of brown sugar or, better still, some local honey into the opening of each fig. On top of the sugar place a small knob of butter. Bake at 200 celcius for 20 minutes. Serve with cream or icecream. Extra indulgence drizzle over a little rum or brandy before baking.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Tuateawa in time.


What follows is a personal interpretation not entirely supported by facts! There are many people out there who have had a real part in the history of Tuateawa and carry with them stories from the past that they heard, in their youth or from those no longer with us. Please, if you can inform this conjecture with a little bit of reality it would be most welcome.


The settlement of Tuateawa exists between the bush the sea and the sky.. To the north it is enclosed by the slopes of Whanake. To the south it is limited by the spectacular Kahutara peninsula. It's population exists in dwellings scattered through the regenerating bush. Exposed to the east it suffers from dramatic storms and high winds. To balance this there are long periods of superb weather and some of the most incredible seascapes in New Zealand.


In recent years people have been attracted by the many possibilities for both relaxation and recreation.


It's story is probably not too dissimilar to that of other remote coastal areas. In some ways it is a place out of time. There are traces of its past to be found all about. There are many sites of previous Maori occupation. Many appear to have been defensible. Middens from the past have been exposed by more recent activities. We can see there the shellfish that were eaten and that still exist along the coastline. Artefacts were found by early farmers and these collections still exist. Areas are known as Maori gardens and were probably used well into the 20th. century. Taro plants are still to be found in some stream beds and there are pit areas in some presumably fortified sites where root crops would have been stored. If you are very lucky you may find fragments of obsidian, probably from Mayor Island. The sea was the major means of long distance transport and Tuateawa may have been a convenient stop off point on the way to points north. All the features of the landscape that we know have Maori, not European names. How good it would be to understand how those names came to be. Most of us pass over the Tokatea on the way to Tuateawa and the origin of that name is known. Toka is a rock, just like our Tokaroa, and tea means white. It is related that a white rock was placed on Tokatea when a Colville chief's son heard of his fathers death. Place names tell stories. The next point up the coast from Whanake Point is Titimiri Point. A titi is a muttonbird so we can imagine that those cliffs and slopes were the homes of muttonbirds and that they were harvested for food. Having searched and asked Maori from the Waikato some possible interpretations of some place names have arisen. Tuateawa as "the hidden place" has real appeal. As for Kahutara with its wonderful cliffs, "the beautiful cloak" seems so perfect. This is just conjecture however and the true meanings may only now be in the minds of a few local people. Let us hope so.


Closer to the present our guesses may be more accurate. Until the 1960's Tuateawa seems to have been literally, the end of the road. Farm tracks exist in the bush, some have been obscured by subsequent development. The present bridge over the Tuateawa Stream, near the boat ramp, is dated 1968. It was part of a road that completed a loop through Waikawau to Colville. It probably sparked the process of subdivision. I recall Jim Rabarts mentioning that he had to pay for that nice bit of tarseal just before Waiherire Drive ,when seeking the right to subdivide.


Before this time much of the coastal land became involved in farming. Here and there the remains of burned puriri can be found, left behind by the clearing process. When did this farming start? Certainly land grants to soldiers returning from the second World War would have moved things along. Farming was incredibly profitable after the war. Those areas currently in kanuka bush would have been pasture. Europe needed cheese and butter and New Zealand could provide it. An airstrip then used for aerial topdressing of the pastures now hosts a collection of beehives. Cheese and butter presupposes milking sheds and cream separators. There are no obvious signs today. There are a few indications of previous habitation, the odd clump of naked ladies were a dairy worker may have lived. How would the cream have left the area though with the roading being so bad? Was their a coastal cream trip as in other parts of New Zealand? There are bits of metal cemented in rocks at various coastal locations like Little Bay that might have been suitable sites for small wharves. There is also a building that used to be a dairy factory on a wharf in Whitianga. Did it receive cream from Tuateawa? These are questions that will have answers as the period is within living memory.


The agricultural era is passed for Tuateawa. There are a few dry stock now but much of the grassland is regenerating bush. Farming profitability was in decline when the loop road went in. Fertilizer stopped being applied,stocking levels fell and blackberry started to appear along with the start of regeneration. Goats provided a temporary solution but they are now gone from the pastures and also from the forest park. The regeneration of farmland is now well underway. The completion of the loop road also coincided with a wealthier population. People were looking for a patch of land and Tuateawa was well placed to provide it and enter the next stage of its existence.


Forty years have passed since the loop road was completed. There are a significant number of permanent residents and even greater numbers of people who rest and relax here. The environment has improved. Conservation activities by both residents and D.O.C. started just as the possums arrived here from further down the peninsula. Regeneration is moving apace. Rats and mustelids are being held down and the benefits are beginning to accrue. Wonderful flowerings of pohutakawa, more skinks, more tuis and bellbirds and kakas are always present. It is this way because people in the past have cared and they continue to do so. Long may it continue.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Why a Tuateawa blog?


Blogs are usually about the daily happenings of individuals. This is different. It is about a place. Our place. Tuateawa.
It is hoped that this blog will be a site where Tuateawans can meet and exchange views and insights. We do have a sense of community, but, we do not have a community hall to meet at, nor do we have a noticeboard or newspaper to tell us of local happenings. This could be our community hall, our noticeboard and newspaper all in one.
A blog also has the benefit of being free! Certainly no work bees or fundraising required. Well, it is almost free. It is there for all of us. We just have to use it from time to time and perhaps contribute some insight or special knowledge by way of a comment or article. Our residents already make major contributions to keeping Tuateawa a magic place. The great majority of us however live elsewhere for most of the time. Amongst us there are many skills and talents. We could all add a stick or two to this community hall in cyberspace!

Tuateawa is facing a challenge at the moment. Subdivision increases, new people arrive and the older of us depart. Maybe the sense of community is a little diluted. Perhaps this blog could help these new arrivals feel welcome and give them a speedy introduction to the community and wonderful environment that we all share.

What kind of things would be in this blog? Just about anything that relates to Tuateawa and its inhabitants, human and otherwise. Some of the older residents, and those that have farmed the land, have a wealth of knowledge of it's past. It would be great if they felt they could share this knowledge with us. Tuateawa Kiwicare have a deserved place. Updates on their activities with the bait lines, weed control and kiwi introductions would be invaluable.
Whatever you have seen, be it a whale or a the first shining cuckoo, it is newsworthy. Comments from the successful gardeners, recipes from the great cooks the possibilities are endless. This blog is meant to be inclusive not divisive. It belongs to all of us.

Digital photos fit easily into a blog and most of us have cameras. Impress with a picture of that big snapper, some local event or scenic shot.

As to contributing, I believe the comment section of the blog is the place. Alternatively, send an email to AnnandRay@gmail.com .
As this is just getting started there may be a need for patience. So far it all looks fairly simple but appearances can be deceptive! However, over time I am sure things will settle in and we will have a resource that will be of great value to us all.