Amongst the pomp and ceremony of official Armistice Day celebrations around New Zealand, a small, very special ceremony in rural Dannevirke is likely to have been one of the most unique.
At Umutaoroa, in the shadow of the Ruahine Ranges, at 11am on Sunday, November 11, a moment of remembrance took place, with the Last Post played on a cellphone, followed by the planting of five kahikatea trees on farmland to commemorate the five men from the district who lost their lives in World War 1.
Umutaoroa was settled in 1886 and 27 sons of those original settlers went on to serve in World War I, with their sacrifices remembered on Armistice Day.
"We've planted kahikatea trees in an area where it is wet and swampy, they like that environment and it's very appropriate as most of the five died on the Somme in the wet and mud," Umutaoroa resident Ray Black said.
"This was just a very small district, but it made a big sacrifice."