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September 14, 2018

Turangi museum project?

Thank you for all the feedback to TRM’s Daily Report yesterday. 

The most encouraging response was a welcome surprise visit from Toe-paw Council’s John Ridd (Council’s Development Manager) and DGLT’s Damian Coutts (General Manager of Destination Great Lake Taupo – which is Council’s tourism promotion team).  These are the two key people to turn the dream into a reality.  Hopefully their visit, for a quick update and briefing before the main meeting, indicates how these TRM reports are considered and monitored by Council.

Yesterday a meeting of Turangi tourism operators considered the aim of identifying growth areas for the future in the Turangi-Tongariro region.  To help their decision, TRM suggested the T2T – a proposed bike trail north from Turangi along the lake edge to link with Toe-paw – should be the first priority.  They confirmed the T2T is still firmly in their focus although progress to gain access approval around the lake has been painfully slow.  They even suggested $$$ are not the issue.  Wow!  So now you know.

Many TRM Daily Report readers own holiday homes in Turangi or have been staying at TRM for many years and are very interested in any future prospects for the village.  There are so many unrealised scenic and tourist attractions locally that deserves more exposure to the world – although one could suspect some of it is deliberately hidden?  It is strange that they have only ever been promoted on TRM Daily Reports.  I wonder why that is…

Today TRM Daily Report explains the “Second Priority” suggested to maximise tourism opportunities in this region – the Turangi Museum.

This should be so easy to develop in the Turangi mall where there are plenty of empty shops waiting for tenants.  This also requires an explanation as so many associate empty shops with a declining local economy.  The town centre was originally designed in the 1960’s to serve a population of about ten thousand. 

But after the hydro electric project was completed the houses were sold off as holiday homes, rather than to residents.  The resident population steadily declined over the last forty years to less than three thousand.   The museum project is to attract more pedestrian traffic into the mall.

(And before you remind us the ANZ is closing – what they have not told you is that KiwiBank is located at Naylors Bookshop – which also serves as Turangi’s Post Office where the customer service is superb and staff are wonderful – much better than the usual bank.  So ANZ is no loss to most.)

The following is TRM’s Daily Report from December 19th 2017 – with our Christmas wish-list last year (same as the year before, and the year before…)

What happened to the Turangi Museum?

The second lost treasure waiting to be rediscovered is the Turangi Museum.  Unlike the underground power station which has never been opened, the Turangi museum once was open as an extension of the original visitors centre.  Indeed some 45 years ago it was regarded as a national treasure and reportedly attracted 250,000 visitors in 1970.  The parking area had to be extended to accommodate six buses at a time. So where is it now?

Amazingly the original museum is still there.  Parked off to one side of State Highway 41 on the southern fringe of residential development among industrial factory development the original building still stands waiting for an enterprising imaginative council to re-open it.

Sadly, when it comes to Turangi, there is no such thing as an imaginative Taupo Council…

The photo above shows the front entry to the building featuring a section of one of the pipes from the tail race of Tokaanu Power Station.  Below are some other historic relics rotting and rusting away – surely they should be on display at the Visitors Centre?

The pre-maori artefacts and other historical exhibits, were arguably the most extensive collection of pre-maori moa hunter period artefacts in NZ.  Te Papa pinched most of them about 40 years ago but will not return them.  They probably consider they are too valuable for public display?

The prize exhibit should be the 45 cm ceremonial adze found by local schoolboy, Ray Parker, in the Poutu River.  The Dominion National Museum rewarded him with a crown ($1).  They carbon dated it around 400 AD.  It was carved from stone/marble from the Nelson region – confirming they were trading 1700 years ago.  It was considered so valuable they made a replica for display.  So where is it now?

How ridiculous is that?.  Here is a quaint little tourist town struggling economically hiding a world class collection of pre-Maori artefacts that attracted so many tourists over 40 years ago.  But Taupo Council closed it.  How can the council allow that to happen?  Perhaps they have another agenda to hide the early history or do not want to attract more tourists away from Taupo to Turangi!

The collection was unearthed from the excavations for the Tokaanu tail race below the power station.  Briefly, back in the 1960’s for several years under the watchful eye of Trevor Hosking, the MOW archaeologist, they carefully excavated 16 villages, found 246 dwellings, 20 burial sites, moved 71 bodies (now re-buried above Tokaanu – see graves on right), and collected all manner of artefacts from around 400AD.

That was about 800 years before the first Maori fleet was claimed to have arrived from the Pacific Islands.  Fascinating stuff…

Trevor Hosking recorded it in his autobiography – “A Museum Underfoot”.  There is heaps of local evidence – i.e. A well know Turangi local, whose last job for the MOW – Ministry of Works – prepared an inventory of all the exhibits for the Dominion Museum in Wellington – as it was back then.  So where is it now?  Turangians want it back please…  Requests to Te Papa in the past have not been answered.  Smell something fishy?

Investiture:

In 2009 Trevor Hosking, of Taupō, received the Queen’s Service Medal for services to the conservation of historic places.  Mr Hosking had been actively involved in the restoration and protection of historic places in the Taupō area for more than 50 years.  He worked to ensure the protection and restoration of local sites of significance, including the Armed Constabulary Hall, burial caves on Motutaiko Island, Rauhoata Cave, the Napier/Taupō Armed Constabulary Redoubts, the Te Porere Redoubt, the Tarawera rock drawings, and the Opepe Canoe.

He also worked with Ngati Tūwharetoa to undertake excavations and record several early Māori occupation sites, including the caves at Whakamoenga Point and the shelter at Waihora Bay.  Mr Hosking was also involved with the Taupō-nui-a-Tia Māori Youth Club.

The image above on right is an old photo of Trevor building the displays for the museum about 45-50 years ago.

Image on right  – Remains of pre-European maori canoes at Turangi.  Any where else they would be on display and protected in a temperature controlled environment – like Taupo Museum (where they charge to view them) or at Te Papa…  In Turangi such national treasures are neglected.

Based on previous interest, if the museum was reopened, it could easily generate enough tourist traffic to pay for the management of the iSite.  No other town in NZ has such a valuable collection locked away.  Almost as ridiculous as hiding the only underground power station in the North Island… (more on that tomorrow)

But that is Turangi.

Much of the early pre-maori history of NZ is finally being exposed internationally through videos like the “Skeletons in the Cupboard”.
The first is about the “Redheads” which are discussed in more detail Trevor Hosking’s account and described as the Korako people who had their main population base at Orakei Korako.
If this is of interest or if you are sceptical enough to imagine this is all a bit too radical to believe and accept (?) then we strongly recommend viewing the video which has been displayed on facebook:
New Zealand Skeletons in the Cupboard Episode 1. The Red Heads
For HD viewing, Renting or Downloading on Vimeo on Demand, go to https://vimeo.com/ondemand/nzskeletonsredheads ‘New Zealand – Skeletons In…
youtube.com
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28oxMNyeup4&t=2s
 
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