Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Nga heihei/The chickens

Meet Owairaka's newest heihei!

With Turbo and Butter Chicken having a little holiday while the chicken coop is being renovated, Holly, Ethan, Mahalia and Dylan took some time out from Garden to Table to try their feathers on for size...




Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Te Wiki Kakariki - Green Week!

Happy Green Week everyone!

We've been investigating the health benefits of kawakawa and other plants in our Rongoa garden. After giving our garden a clean earlier this week, we've been doing some research...


We have been wondering about two things:

1. Could we make a kawakawa ointment using coconut oil instead of olive oil?

2. Could we make a healing ointment from other plants in our Rongoa garden?

We have decided that, yes, we can make a kawakawa ointment with coconut oil, and next week we will be trying out some recipes to see if we're right! If we are, you should expect to see R23's original Coco-Kawa cream for sale at the office very soon!






Thursday, March 17, 2016

Race Relations Day

What an ataahua bunch we are! An awesome day was had by all - some fantastic outfits, and delicious kai. Tino pai koutou!

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Memoir poetry

Last week we were learning to describe a place and a moment in time, using as our inspiration this poem by James K Baxter:

The town was usual enough; it had
A creek, a bridge, a beach, a sky
Over it, and even a small tin church
I never went to. My brother, my cousins and I
Did what boys do - dozed in the hot
Schoolroom, made bows and arrows, dodged the mad
Boatbuilder, crept like rabbits through the black
Under-runners with a weak torch,
Burnt dry rushes, wrestled or swam

Doing nothing important.

Check out some of our great versions!

Owairaka Park was awesome enough 
It had a playground, a field with goal posts at both ends 
and a basket ball court.  
It also had skate board ramps, 
a vege garden and best of all, a lake at the bottom. 
My friends and I did what kids do 
Balancing on the pole across the lake, sliding in the slippery mud,  
running around playing tag on the playground, basket ball 
and riding our scooters and bikes on the path ways…..  
Doing nothing naughty.

By Berlin 

Omokoroa was usual enough
It had a beach, a lawn, Big soft beds
And even a swing that hung on a tree outside.
My sister and I did what girls do
Built sand castles on the beach,
Read side by side,
Swung high on the swing,
Dressed up in dresses and wigs,
Danced across the lawn in the twilight
Following no one's rules but ours.

By Mahalia

The farm was usual enough
It had a creek, trees, sheds, paddocks, big hills 
and an old house
My family and I did what families do
building a birdhouse,
shooting the slug gun,
playing in the creek,
climbing trees,
playing with the lego
Doing nothing special at all.

By Darrien Cossey 

Titirangi is usual enough
It has my house, a creek in a forest that I always go to,
A dairy that we walk to in summer,
And some ducks which do not leave us alone.
My siblings and I do what kids do,
Paddle in the creek, bounce on our trampoline,
Play hide and seek
In the long grass that dad does not cut,
Following no one rules but ours.
                                             
Alexis Greenfield

Owairaka was usual enough.
It had a park,school,dairy,skate park and a playground.
It even had a rugby goal attached to a soccer goal.
My friends and I did what boys do
Played soccer in the muddy puddles,
Laid down on the two coloured rocks,
Rode our scooters and bikes on the skate park,
Played on the playground and
Sped down on the flying fox.
Doing nothing important at all.

By Hammaam

Grandad’s garden was usual enough.
It had peas, carrots, potatoes, strawberries and even parsnips.
Grandad and I did what people with lush gardens did.
Heaved potato plants out of the garden,
picked and ate sweet, fresh peas,
eating strawberries straight from the bush,
stuffed an overlarge pumpkin plant back in the right place,
sowed capsicum seeds in yoghurt pots,
fashioned bird nets over the blueberries,
Collected the fresh produce.
Doing nothing important.

By Natalia