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Home / Northern Advocate / Sport

Overseas paddler drove birth of waka ama

Northern Advocate
5 Oct, 2011 03:00 AM4 mins to read

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SPORT NORTHLAND, organisers of Northland's premier sporting excellence awards, the Konica Minolta Northland Sports Awards, have teamed up with the Northern Advocate to establish a new category - the People's Choice Award.

The award has been established to recognise those individuals who have achieved something special, but who will not be recognised in any of the categories in the Konica Minolta Northland Sports Awards. The basis for this award is that the public will be asked to vote for the person they consider has achieved the highest from the finalists nominated.

It is not for the best individual performance or the highest individual achievement of the year, as this will be recognised in the naming of the Northland Sportsperson of the Year.

Instead, the finalists were selected by a panel for their achievements as a sports personality - not in line for the administrator, coach, official or service to sport awards - or an achievement/performance that has, for example, been undertaken in the face of adversity, in a sport that very few others participate in or where there is no regional body, or at a ripe old age.

Over the coming weeks, the Northern Advocate will profile and highlight the achievements of this year's finalists for the People's Choice Award, after which the public will be able to vote through the Northern Advocate's website or through the completion of a form published in this paper.

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The final result will be announced at the Konica Minolta Northland Sports Awards function to be held at Kensington Stadium on December 2.

The second finalist for the Northern Advocate People's Choice Award is Kris Kjeldsen - the man dubbed the father of waka ama in Te Tai Tokerau.

The late Kris Kjeldsen will be remembered for his craftsmanship and dedication to establishing, and growing, waka ama in Northland and New Zealand.

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Kjeldsen was one of the founders of the sport in the country, and from his base on the Tutukaka Coast he crafted thousands of waka, now used on lakes and coasts around New Zealand and the world.

Before moving to New Zealand, he paddled for Kai Nulu Canoe Club in southern California and was involved in the sport in Hawaii, before settling in the small Maori community of Pawarenga in the Far North, where he lived for 15 years.

While at Pawarenga Kjeldsen wondered why there was no traditional Maori canoe racing. So he met with master waka builder Matahi Whakataka during the 1980s, and told him of his plans to start waka ama paddling and building waka in the north. Whakataka agreed with the plan, and said he wanted to do the same thing in the Gisborne/East Cape area.

With the high unemployment in both areas, especially among Maori, the pair took advantage of training schemes funded by the Government to start these projects. The people of Pawarenga got behind the project wholeheartedly.

By early 1987 they had a work-training scheme; building canoes and paddles and learning the art of paddling. Ocean knowledge, surf skills and swimming were very much a part of the programme.

The training scheme in Pawarenga eventually evolved into Nga Hoe Horo O Pawarenga (the fast paddles of Pawarenga) while Whakataka's group in Gisborne became Mare Kura Canoe Club.

Kjeldsen had met Pili Muaulu who lived at Ngunguru during this time, and as a result, the waka building trainees and Muaulu's family built the first traditional Samoan canoe in New Zealand. Muaulu's extended family formed a club called Mitamitaga Ole Pasefica Va'a Alo (pride of the Pacific canoe club) of Ngunguru.

These three clubs along with one other in Okahu, Auckland, represented the original four clubs of New Zealand and were founding members of the national outrigger canoe association Tatou Hoe o Aotearoa (all the paddlers of Aotearoa) in 1987.

The association began planning to compete at world events and building racing waka.

Since the early 90s, outrigger canoe sport in New Zealand has enjoyed phenomenal growth and competitors have experienced outstanding success.

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There are around 10 waka ama clubs in Northland, and much of this growth can be attributed to Kjeldsen and his commitment to a sport he was so passionate about.

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