default-output-block.skip-main
Regional | Hawke's Bay

Māhia pou swallowed by the sea: Locals call for help before Tangaroa takes it for good

The pou in Mahia at Opoutama after swells eroded the bank it stood on. Photo: NZME

A pou that once stood strong against the elements has been swallowed by the sea after strong swells battered the bank in Māhia where it rests.

Locals were on Thursday morning asking for support to get the pou from the shoreline at Blue Bay Beach in Opoutama before the sea dragged the carving away for good.

Local woman Ngaromoana Raureti, who was one of the drivers behind the pou’s installation about four years ago, said the harsh southerly swell brought intense and fast-moving water that had eroded the bank.

When Hawke’s Bay Today spoke to Raureti on Wednesday afternoon about 3.30pm the pou was close to being washed into the water.

Overnight on Wednesday it was carried away by the high tide and found about 20 metres away on the beach.

“When there are big events like that the storm will pull the inland water out and it heaves it back in again.”

Ocean waves lashed at the bank where the pou stood. Photo: NZME

When Raureti checked the pou on Thursday morning the sand was about two metres higher than the night before.

She said big weather events meant that change to the landscape was unavoidable.

“We have a few kaumatua in the village and they have seen the changes and it’s quite difficult because you are holding space for your family who come and go, but this place does not look like it did when they grew up.”

Raureti said the pou represented the lifecycle of mankind and the earth, and was carved using kahikatea driftwood that had once blocked a nearby bridge.

“At the time it was pulled up we had the military at the school and they towed it across - that pou is a quarter of the log that arrived.”

She said other parts of the log were used to make smaller pou and another section was placed on the reserve.

“The pou tells the story of this whenua - Poutama - and it means stairway to heaven.”

The pou was washed from its place on the shore by intense swells. Photo / Ngaromoana Raureti

She said it was shaped to look like a taurapa (canoe sternpost), which looked like a sharkfin, on a waka and represented travel across the sea.

“The attachment is huge for us with whakapapa here.”

The pou represents the "stairway to heaven". Photo / Ngaromoana Raureti

Raureti said it was important for people to “measure and monitor” the environment and “feel the changes and be responsive”.

“The pou is well loved and speaks about environmental change and these weather events are significant.”

For Raureti losing the pou “is not a big deal”, rather she said it was more important to teach children about the importance of what it symbolised rather than its materialistic value.

Michaela Gower joined Hawke’s Bay Today in 2023 and is based out of the Hastings and Central Hawke’s Bay newsrooms. She covers Dannevirke and Hawke’s Bay news and has a love for sharing stories about farming and rural communities.

- NZ Herald