Underneath a pohutukawa tree at Hohi Bay on Christmas Eve in 1814, Ruatara and Samuel Marsden established the first Christian Mission in Aotearoa.
The pohutukawa is now the symbolic Christmas tree for Aotearoa. It provides great shade, bursts of red along the northern coastline and also provides healing properties in its bark for deep bruises, fractures and scarring.
Not all native plants however have healing properties. I learned this at the Kahutia wānanga at Morere hot springs last week, organised by Michelle McIlroy and Robert McGowan, who most people know as Pa McGowan, and hosted by Ngati Rakaipaaka.
We learnt that kawakawa was the most used plant for skin infections, respiratory ailments, heart and blood pressure and so on.
However, the most often used for rongoa was karamu, or karamura, or kara ngunu or kawariki which was used for diabetes prevention, blood disorders, menstrual pains and more. It was the number one healer.