The Northland Age

Oruru Valley a site worth saving

Archaeolog­y student did the groundwork for ongoing preservati­on of precious national history

- Noel Garcia

In the late 1970s, the Oruru Valley was noted as a place of national, even internatio­nal significan­ce because of its exceptiona­lly intact archaeolog­ical landscape.

The 1980s fieldwork of a curious young archaeolog­y PhD student confirmed the valley as a place where people came not just to live, but to thrive.

Leigh Johnson was born in Kaitaia to parents of third and fifthgener­ation status in the Far North.

Johnson describes driving through the valley with them and seeing countless pa sites, which are today covered by revegetati­on.

“My own experience as a boy led me to this research,” Johnson said. “There’s nothing quite like Oruru in terms of a valley system.

“It’s far enough north to be warm and opens directly out to the coast. That’s why it was so intensivel­y settled.”

Johnson said the work being done today aims to enable a wider appreciati­on for the cultural value of the valley.

“Knowledge of what exists in Oruru Valley will allow people living there now to consider the impacts of what they do with their land.”

According to Bill Edwards of Heritage NZ, Johnson’s fieldwork looked at the valley’s history and how it worked, as well as producing a map informed by many miles of groundwork to record all pa and other sites in the archaeolog­ical landscape.

An archaeolog­ical site is anything associated with human activity prior to 1900, and in this case includes things like small villages, kumara pits, terraces and remains of gardens.

Edwards said the informatio­n being captured now hasn’t previously been officially recorded.

“If it weren’t for Leigh’s thesis research, this work wouldn’t be happening now,” said Edwards. “It was a remarkable piece of work.”

Edwards said the Oruru Valley is currently seen as an isolated rural area, but people living there were very productive thanks to the rich soil which was ideal for horticultu­re.

“People thrive where there is good soil. Those in the Oruru Valley didn’t just survive, they thrived,” Edwards said.

“The valley could easily be damaged or even destroyed. We’re trying to get good informatio­n recorded, so people know what’s there and how significan­t it is.”

Johnson’s work recorded more

than 50 pa sites in the valley, and it’s now known there are more than 80.

According to Tina Latimer of Te Paatu ki Kauhanga Trust Board, there are more pa sites in the Oruru Valley than in the whole of the South Island.

“It’s hugely significan­t and it’s been overlooked for a very, very long time,” Latimer said.

Today, a collaborat­ive effort between Te Paatu ki Kauhanga Trust Board, Far North District Council (FNDC) and Heritage NZ seeks to protect the Oruru Valley as a cultural landscape.

“This would stop developmen­t and protect pa sites from being desecrated,” Latimer said.

Latimer is part of the small team at Te Paatu ki Kauhanga Trust Board working to conduct interviews with whānau and hapū of Te Paatu, to

gather traditiona­l stories and histories at Te Ahu Museum. These stories will represent and showcase the cultural history of surroundin­g land and sites.

The goal is to preserve invaluable intergener­ational knowledge surroundin­g Māori land history so that stories can continue to be told and showcased for future generation­s, particular­ly as the older generation Māori begin to pass away.

A recent $42,080 grant from the Lotteries Environmen­t and Heritage Committee funds the work of interviews and supports the broader work of protecting the valley.

“It’s a big grant for us,” Latimer said.

“It supports us to help inform Māori cultural values to the sites of significan­ce in the Oruru Valley, which supports its protection.

“Protecting cultural landscapes

and pa sites in Ngati Kahu is something I’ve been wanting to do for quite a long time, probably since 1990.”

The grant comes from Te Tari Taiwhenua (Department of Internal Affairs), which according to Clare Toufexis, general manager of community operations, distribute­s funding from the Lottery Grants Board to support communitie­s across New Zealand.

“They are working towards some invaluable mahi that will be of great benefit to iwi and hapū , ensuring the continuati­on of important intergener­ational knowledge for Mā ori,” Toufexis said.

From the perspectiv­e of FNDC, Te Paatu ki Kauhanga Trust Board’s initiative to collect informatio­n about Oruru Valley will help inform council processes on how to best protect its historic heritage, including sites of cultural significan­ce.

According to Darren Edwards, general manager – strategic planning and policy, FNDC, the Far North District contains some of the nation’s richest heritage resources.

“Ensuring appropriat­e protection­s for our historic heritage is an important goal for council,” Edwards said.

“A proposed District Plan will be notified in 2022 and I encourage tangata whenua, communitie­s and individual­s to participat­e in this vital plan-making process.”

As for the future of the Oruru Valley, Leigh Johnson reckons classifyin­g it as a Heritage Precinct would be effective and not unpreceden­ted.

“Classifica­tion as a Heritage Precinct would further protect it, and I think that status is warranted,” Johnson said. “There are other sites in Northland given this status, so it’s definitely justified.”

 ?? ?? There are more than 80 pa sites in the Oruru Valley. Pictured is the lower part of the valley.
There are more than 80 pa sites in the Oruru Valley. Pictured is the lower part of the valley.

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