Kerri Anne Hancock
Pukehangi
Kauri shows the way
Sixty years ago a young student at the then FRI (Forest Research Institute) arrived at my door with a bucket containing the most tired kauri plant I had ever seen.
It was a stunted dwarf. He explained it was a castoff from the institute's kauri planting programme and would I like it.
It sat there for a week, sitting in clay.
I will never forget the bucket - one of those with an attachment to wring out a mop.
On a misty, wet, miserable day I planted out the runt. Today it is a magnificent tree dwarfing most trees in Lynmore.
As I sat in my garden chair this evening admiring the kauri I just thought: That's all our young people today need - a chance.
Alf Hoyle
Rotorua
Māori weren't strapped for te reo
Letters to the editor January 8 refered to children being caned or strapped for speaking Māori at school, and being forced to speak English. Is this convenient history.
I do not recall any strapping happening during the time that I was at school and I am nearly 100 years old. I attended a number of country schools during my childhood and this is where one would expect to see this happen, if ever. Corporal punishment ceased in New Zealand schools in 1987.
What I did see when visiting my Māori mates during my school years was a couple of Māori mothers say quite forcefully to their children. "Do not speak Maori here English is the future for you."
Those days Māori and Caucasian people were friendly to each other, but over the past 25 or so years one sees that some people are working hard to drive a wedge between the races. Let us hope that they never succeed.
John Smale
Rotorua
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