I wish i went to school here...

> 10 years ago
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Rhys McClintock
Rhys McClintock
NSW
995 posts
NSW, 995 posts
20 Sep 2010 3:55pm
Lol my Dad found this while roaming about in New Zealand lol
Thought it might cheer up a few people on this sucky rainy day in Brisbane...


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SMG
SMG
QLD
208 posts
SMG SMG
QLD, 208 posts
20 Sep 2010 4:20pm
NZ seem to have a niche for interesting school names.

This is a school that used to visit us on field trips - for correct pronunciation replace the "WHA" with "FUC"..... you crazy NZ folk!


tatkins
tatkins
QLD
344 posts
QLD, 344 posts
20 Sep 2010 8:57pm
sweet az bro

I went to Diss High School....No Sh1t (UK not NZ)
sir ROWDY
sir ROWDY
WA
5378 posts
WA, 5378 posts
20 Sep 2010 7:25pm
Puck u miss!
flano
flano
WA
113 posts
WA, 113 posts
20 Sep 2010 9:22pm
rusty7
rusty7
QLD
504 posts
QLD, 504 posts
21 Sep 2010 9:26am
history lesson
Kite flying was actually a big deal to the Moari people way back before cook started coming our way . abit of history for the real kite enthusist attached.
(it is an extract from a historical account)

Of all the games in vogue amongst the Maori(s)”, says Archdeacon Walsh in the Transactions of the NZ Institute, 1912, “that of kite-flying was one of the most popular.”

“It may seem strange that neither in the writings of Captain Cook nor in those of any of his companions do we find any mention of the kite. The same absence of mention of the kite is noticeable in Crozet, the historian of the ill-fated Marion expedition, which took place in 1772. Crozet was a very accurate observer, and his account of the Maori and their customs is one of the most exact and graphic that we possess. But it must be remembered that his visit was confined to a very small part of the country — a hilly, forest covered, and sparsely populated region on the coast of the Bay of Islands where kite-flying would scarcely have been practised.

“According to the universal Polynesian tradition, Maui, the hero-god, was himself a kite-flyer, and wherever his adventurous descendants have settled they have brought the practice with them; while in most places they have introduced the material of which tradition states his kite was originally made — viz., the aute or paper-mulberry, which gives the New Zealand kite its generic name — the term manuaute meaning “the bird (made of) the aute.”

“This plant, a small tree, with rough trilobed leaves, known to botanists as the Broussonetia papyrifera, is common to most of the Pacific Islands, where to this day its bark is used for the manufacture of tapa, or Native cloth. Together with the kumara or sweet potato, the hua or calabash, the ti pore or Cordyline terminalis, and probably the karaka or native laurel, it was introduced into New Zealand by the Maori(s) in some of their earlier migrations. Though specimens of the tree, as well as of the cloth which was made from it, were seen by Cook and others of the early navigators, it never seems to have been very abundant. Being a tropical plant, it would no doubt need a good deal of care in cultivation; and as soon as the Maori(s) were able to obtain a supply of cotton and linen cloth it was neglected, and became the prey of wandering cattle, and gradually died out.

“It is probable that the first kites made in New Zealand were constructed on the Polynesian model, in which the aute was used in the form of tapa, or paper cloth, stretched on a frame; but the difficulty of obtaining a sufficient quantity of the bark, and perhaps the unsuitability of the climate for the manufacture of tapa, necessitated the adoption of another material, especially for the larger kites, and a substitute was found in the leaves of the raupo (a kind of giant sedge — Typha latifolia), a coarse tussock-grass named upoko tangata, or in the flower stems of the kakaho (Arundo conspicua). Even after the plant had become scarce the connection with the aute was kept up, the heads of the kites being sometimes made of that material while the body and wings were of commoner stuff.

“All the larger kites consisted of a light frame of twigs or reeds to which were sewn the raupo, upoko tangata, or whatever other material might be used to hold the wind. Even when the aute was used it was employed — at least in later times — in the form of strips of the inner bark; in any case, there is no record of its use in the form of tapa for this purpose in New Zealand.

“The maori kite was known under several names, and probably each name described some special variety, differing from others in size, shape, or material of which it was made. Thus there is the manu or bird, the kaahu or hawk, the paakau or wing, and the manuwhara or kite of the canoe sail. Still, the term manuaute seems to have been retained as a general name, and might be used loosely for any variety.

“It appears to have been customary both in New Zealand and throughout Polynesia for the kite-flyer to chant a kind of song as the kite went up. These songs were a variety of karakia called turu manu, or kite charm, and were believed to make the kite fly properly. A number of these have been preserved. They are often full of poetic fancy; but the archaic language in which they are composed, while denoting their great antiquity, makes them extremely difficult of translation.

“...probably the finest account of the kites and kite-flying is given by Te Rangi in the manuscript held in the Auckland Public Library. He commences with a description of the manuaute, which he says was a comparatively unimportant kite, but was nevertheless a very good flier, requiring from 150 to 200 yards of string of dressed flax, muka, for one of moderate size, and from 300 to 700 yards for a larger one.

“But this was apparently only a toy compared with the manukaahu and the manuwhara of which he waxes picturesque. Unfortunately he does not give dimensions, but they must have been immense machines, even allowing for exaggeration in the statement it took “from five to ten men, to twenty to thirty men” to send them up, and, including the men holding the line it took no less than seventy men to manipulate a kite.

“But the Maori kite was not always a mere plaything. It often had a religious significance. Maui compelled the winds with his kite, and in the hands of a powerful tohunga the manuaute could do wonderful things. As an instrument of divination it could tell whether it would be wise for a war-party to attack a fortfied position, as a means of seeking land for settlement and for communication between tribes.”
bjw
bjw
QLD
3691 posts
bjw bjw
QLD, 3691 posts
21 Sep 2010 1:07pm
I cant read more than a paragraph on a forum.

Can you summarize that in 7 words or less?
rusty7
rusty7
QLD
504 posts
QLD, 504 posts
21 Sep 2010 2:00pm
Sorry .....I just saw the school bit and couldn't help it. It would seem it wasn't just chinese history that can claim to be at the origins kite flying. The worry about this story for Kiwi's that the Waitangi tribunal could probibly get a tax on kiting approved on this basis....lol.

Just for BJW

"Maori's used to have big kites once"

There.....fixed it!!!
rusty7
rusty7
QLD
504 posts
QLD, 504 posts
21 Sep 2010 2:03pm
Sorry .....I just saw the school bit and couldn't help it. It would seem it wasn't just chinese history that can claim to be at the origins kite flying. The worry about this story for Kiwi's that the Waitangi tribunal could probibly get a tax on kiting approved on this basis....lol.

Just for BJW

"Maori's used to have big kites once"

There.....fixed it!!!........wanna a chip!
bjw
bjw
QLD
3691 posts
bjw bjw
QLD, 3691 posts
21 Sep 2010 2:18pm
Rusty,

Fankx bru. Kiter's aren't real smart eh?

But I guess it is a school day.

Grab a beer from da chilli bin 4 u bru.
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