Showing posts with label 10th Matariki Month - Poutu-te-rangi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 10th Matariki Month - Poutu-te-rangi. Show all posts

Friday, March 11, 2011

10th Matariki Month - Poutū-te-rangi (2nd Year)




Te Marama o Matariki He Maramataka Māori - Poutū-te-rangi
10th Month of the Māori Year - March/April

Ki te kitea a Poutū-te-Rangi e maranga mai ana i te Rāwhiti, he tohu tēnei mo te wā Hauhake. Tïmata i te wā o te maranga o Whānui e kitea ana ki te tahatū o te rangi o te Raki ki te Rāwhiti. Kei te whai huarākau te Kaikōmako te Māhoe me te Karaka. He wā ngahuru ka taka ngā huruhuru o ngā manu. He wā rerenga atu o te Koekoeā, ka timata tōnā haere ki te whenua o Papua New Guinea, me te rere hoki o te Pīpīwharauroa ki ngā moutere te taha Rāwhiti o Fiji. 

When Altair is seen rising in the east, prepare for the harvest. It is time to begin when Vega is seen rising in the northeast. White Wood, Kaikōmako and NZ Laurel are fruiting. Birds lose their feathers. Long-tailed Cuckoo leave for Papua New Guinea and the Shining Cuckoo fly to the islands east of Fiji.


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Te Tohu o Kaupeka - 
Whānui
Sign of the Season -  Vega
Alpha Lyrae




'Ko Whānui e! Ko Whānui!’ 

‘Here is Vega! Here is Vega!’

This karanga (call) was heard when Whānui was first seen rising before dawn on the horizon.


When Whānui appears before dawn on the north eastern horizon at the time of fullmoon during Poutū-te-rangi (10th Matariki month), kūmara are lifted.

Whānui, known also as Alpha Lyrae, is a rapidly rotating navigational star 25.3ly from Earth in the constellation of Lyra and the 5th brightest star of the heavens. Whānui served as the North Celestial Pole Star from between 12’000 to 10’000 B.C. and will do so again in another 10’000 years.

Whānui descended from Rangi and Papa through Urutengangana (the God of Stars) and is the celestial parent of Kūmara (sweet potato), Ānuhe (caterpillar), Tūpoupou, Hīhue (kūmara moth), Toronū (caterpillar) and Moko (caterpillar). Kūmara was brought to the world as a food source by Rongo-māui, younger brother of Whānui, who concealed some kōpura (kūmara tubers) in his maro (loin cloth) after visiting Whānui in the celestial realms. On returning to the world he impregnated Pani-tinaku his wife who gave birth to kūmara on earth. Whānui was so angered by the deception of Rongo-māui he sent forth Ānuhe, Toronū and Moko to the world where they continue to ravage and wreak havoc on kūmara leaves to this day. Pani-tinaku was so disturbed by the infestation of caterpillars on her offspring she fled underground to cultivate the plants from below.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

10th Matariki Month - Poutu-te-Rangi




Te Marama o Matariki He Maramataka Māori -

Poutū-te-rangi

10th Month of the Māori Year - February/March



Ki te kitea a Poutū-te-rangi e maranga mai ana i te Rāwhiti, he tohu tēnei mo te wā Hauhake. Tïmata i te wā o te maranga o Whānui e kitea ana ki te tahatū o te rangi o te Raki ki te Rāwhiti. Kei te whai huarākau te Kaikōmako te Māhoe me te Karaka. He wā ngahuru ka taka ngā huruhuru o ngā manu. He wā rerenga atu o te Koekoeā, ka timata tōnā haere ki te whenua o Papua New Guinea, me te rere hoki o te Pīpīwharauroa ki ngā moutere te taha Rāwhiti o Fiji.

When Altair is seen rising in the east, prepare for the harvest. It is time to begin when Vega is seen rising in the northeast. White Wood, Kaikōmako and NZ Laurel are fruiting. Birds lose their feathers. Long-tailed Cuckoo leave for Papua New Guinea and the Shining Cuckoo fly to the islands east of Fiji.


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Te Tohu o Kaupeka - Poutū-te-rangi

Sign of the Season - Altair


‘Te ngahuru tikotikoiere, Ko Poutū-te-rangi te matahi o te tau...’
‘Altair carries the first fruits of the year, a bountiful time... ’

The above lines, from an oriori (lullaby) whose main narration relates to the mythical theme of the kūmara, are sung to children when the bright star Poutū-te-rangi appears in the sky.

The oriori is said to have been composed by Enoka Te Pakaru of Te Aitanga-a-mahaki (Taurawhiti/East Coast).

Poutū-te-rangi marks the completion of the growing season. When its light appears before dawn it signals a prosperous time when crops can be lifted and storehouses filled.

Poutū-te-rangi, a navigational star and food-bearer associated with the cultivation of kūmara is located some 15-17 light years from Earth in Aquila, a constellation found in Mangōroa, the Milky Way. Poutū-te-rangi is one of the closest stars visible with the naked eye and is noted for its extremely rapid rotation.

Its appearance heralds a time when Tohunga or Mata Paheru enter the kūmara fields to appraise the maturing tubers. Harvesting takes place over six days from the waning moon-night of Korekore-turua (22), after Whānui (Vega) is sighted, when all signs of mist and dew have left the morning and continues till the Sun reaches its zenith, when harvesting ceases to avoid any dampness affecting the crop.

Poutū-te-rangi is seen as a large hue or gourd in the heavens, its name originates from the Pou or posts that Tāne Mahuta used to lift Rangi the Sky Father from Papatūānuku the Earth Mother so that the light and warmth of the Sun could fall upon Earth.