Of Cats and Birds – #141

Of Cats and Birds – #141

Here’s a tale for Gareth Morgan’s anti-cat file. In the Russell Museum we have on display a small bird called a Putopu. A member of the rail family, it is now extinct, but we have a remarkable story about the bird and how we came to have it in our...

Bye-bye Big Tree – #142

Big Tree – it’s an advertisement for benzine. You can only just make out the words on the roof of the wharf shed. They were on the other side too for a few years. This “new” Government wharf  opened in 1927. Several years later Lord Bledisloe,...
Our First Flag – Te Kara – #143

Our First Flag – Te Kara – #143

On certain dates you will see this flag flying from the Russell Museum and Maiki Hill flag staffs. It is Te Wakaminenga o Ngā Hapū o Nu Tireni – the Flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand. In November 1830, with owners Patuone and Taonui on board, the...
An Endangered Habit – #144

An Endangered Habit – #144

You’ll never see these sights again. They are part of our history. Kororāreka has long been a favoured location for re-fitting vessels, from whaleships to launches to racing yachts, but those days are almost over. Only one slipway remains in Matauwhi Bay today...
Quiet and Unhurried – #145

Quiet and Unhurried – #145

Two men, two dogs and a sunny spot out of the wind on the Russell wharf. If he’d been there, my Dad might have said “I wouldn’t call the King my Uncle.” He used to come out with that whenever he was feeling especially content with his lot....