after my quick stop while entering whangarei, it was time to get down to business. i had just this one stop before my last. i was hoping that i wouldn't need to hit auckland though, and this would be the end of my quest...
it was here at the whangarei museum and kiwi house i hoped to get rid of the last kete o te wananga basket.now as far as museums go whangarei's is one of the most interesting i've come across. its not so much one building, but rather feels more like an old town's worth of them.
it even has old railway tracks running through the grounds making it feel like it is kind of a hype happening place.
though it is populated by an odd population. not people, but peacocks. this was one of many i ran into. as i'd been trying to learn bird speak before i left for the quest (and had a chance to practise a bit along the way) i figured it won't hurt to try and strike up a conversation with some of these guys.sadly it turns out peacock is a LOT different than ostrich or parrot... so i didn't get anything out of this other than something to work on... if i ever got this quest done that is.
anyways again whangarei's museum has a couple of "streets" worth of buildings where they have different displays. displays after a fashion anyways.turns out most of these old buildings are run by local clubs that collect old stuff, and restore and/or maintain it all.
here is an example (one of the better) of the engine clubs building. you couldn't fully enter any of the buildings but most had a tiny wired off bit you could look into their collection from.
after checking out a few of these i pushed on to the main museum building at the top of the museum "town"s hill.
inside the first exhibit one hits are the fossils of northern new zealand. given the extremely volcanic nature of this section of the country it wasn't much of a surprise that there wasn't a whole lot of fossils to be found. most were very "modernish" too, only a few million years old. all invertebrates too. so apart from the 3 ammonites i didn't take too much notice.

the rest of their natural history gallery was a bit better. including a cool stuffed albatross hanging from the ceiling.
my favourite display was the kiwi exhibit. they were placed in such a life like environment. it would turn out though i was going to get one better than this exhibit shortly though.
like almost every museum in new zealand these guys had a whale skeleton. only theirs was set up funny, and the head and jaws weren't place anywhere near correctly. i wasn't sure why, and there was no sign explaining. so don't go expecting the best whale mount you've ever seen...
this museum really felt like an old home run operation. just look at this under the sea exhibit to see what i mean. don't get me wrong there's nothing wrong with museums like this. if anything in my mind they earn points for doing something with nothing.
there's a lot of operations like this in the small towns of alberta, and there's usually something worth seeing in all of them.
whangarei's was still a notch above these, but compared to many of the other amazing institutions of new zealand it just didn't come out as a gem is all.
the specimens like in this sea bird display were all good. just their presentation wasn't as glitzy as the other (probably better funded) museums.
so don't not visit the whangarei museum. just don't expect a te papa or canterbury when you go. also be sure to leave a donation so that they have some capital to make improvements... i did!
anyways their maori artifacts were impressive. they had a whole display on normal non-magical ketes that was neat.
i also liked their selection of maori fishing hooks. i might have to look into buying one next time i go fishing.
i'm now going to say there must be an official law in new zealand that all museums must have a greenstone tiki display! seriously i haven't been to a museum that doesn't have one!
the real attraction of the whangarei museum though is the kiwi house. where you actually get to see a LIVING kiwi!that ladies and gentlemen of the web wide world is a picture of the only living example of new zealand's national animal i've seen!
kiwis are massively endangered down here. all the introduced land predatory mammals have just demoed the flightless kiwi population. so houses like this are one of the only places you can see them!
now kiwis are nocturnal so that's why my photo didn't turn out so great. also neat fact i didn't know. their massively territorial, and thus there was only one on display. anymore than that and they'd fight!
sadly at the end of my visit i still had the last basket left. meaning i was going to have to push on to the final stop on ms. rhonwyn's list...

i had planned to only stop for a couple minutes... but stayed for 15. which considering everything isn't so long. what i was surprised by was that the trail the city has put around the waterfall is so good and easy to follow you can see this waterfall from pretty much EVERY angle imaginable.
they claim it is new 
initially it reminded me a bit of
the marae, te whare runanga. a marae is a traditional maori building that comboed city hall, church, community centre, and parliment. this was one of the most iconic and still important such maraes left in new zealand (it rivals 
i just had to let the basket catch on to where it was. so wandered around examining the carvings closer.

the different styles of the various iwi was also clear after looking around.
in the corner i noticed a chair with a sign on it not to go anywhere near it. i didn't find out exactly why. if i had to guess it was reserved for either chiefs or very important and special visitors.
after spending an hour (a very enjoyable use of time i'll note) i started to get angry at the basket... why hadn't it dissappeared yet?!?
bummed out by this failure i continued to wander the waitangi grounds. next i came to the flag pole.
wandering further i came across the edge of
a bit further along i came across the storage hut for the largest waka (maori war canoe) i'd ever seen... it was 30 metres long!
in the same way everything is famous here at waitangi, everything is amazingly decorated by maori art. i'm thinking that the these two similarities feed each other...
anyways just the hut that ngatokimatawhaorua was stored in was impressive...


again it was unbelievably big. especially for a wooden canoe. look at tiny me in comparison (which i guess would just make it bigger...).
remember how nicely done up the front of the waka was. this was the front end. look at how much detail went into that carving!
than i realized that the roof was lined with nothing but oars! which makes sense considering how many paddlers it takes to get this boat moving in the water...
wandering the rest of the grounds i came across the last huge iconic site of waitangi. james busby's house sometimes called the treaty house.
it was here that a bunch of really important documents to do with new zealand being new zealand were written and agreed to.
getting inside i was startled by a small girl standing there. turns out she was a kinda spooky statue...
there was also a statue at a table writing something.

This new image of 