Whangamata
Whangamata | |
---|---|
Whangamata | |
Coordinates: 37°12′50″S 175°52′19″E / 37.21389°S 175.87194°E | |
Country | New Zealand |
Region | Waikato |
District | Thames-Coromandel District |
Population (2006) | |
• Total | 3,471 |
The town of Whangamata is sited on the southeast coast of the Coromandel Peninsula in the North Island of New Zealand. It is located 30 kilometres north of Waihi, to the north of the western extremity of the Bay of Plenty.
The population of Whangamata was 3471 in the 2013 Census, a decrease of 84 from 3555 in the 2006 Census, and a decrease of 492 from 2001.[1] In holiday times the population swells considerably: New Year's celebrations fill the town to over 25,000 though this falls soon after New Year's Day.[2]
A number of off-shore islands can be seen from the beach. Hauturu or Clark Island is accessible by wading at low tide and is popular in summer months for rock-pool fossickers and kayakers. Whenuakura, sometimes known as Donut Island, sits about a kilometre east of the southern part of Whangamata beach (Otahu Beach). Tuatara roamed on Whenuakura until fairly recently. Whenuakura Island has a large collapsed blow hole which has formed a small beach inside the island - hence the alternative name.
The town has two ocean beaches, both of which are extremely safe for swimming and surfing. There is a safe boating harbour at the North end of the town and another estuary at the South end. Both the harbour and estuary provide good swimming for families. 15 minutes drive south of Whangamata is the quietly popular beach Whiritoa. Other beaches just north of Whangamata are Onemana and Opoutere.
There are a number of clubs, restaurants and hotels, which are able to provide meals, refreshments and entertainment for visitors.
Whangamata is the traditional home of the Ngāti Puu iwi.[citation needed] The greater area of Whangamata including Whiritoa and Onemana are rich with the history of the Ngati Puu people including kainga (houses), pa (villages), urupa (cemeteries) and waahi tapu (sacred sites).
Ngāti Puu are the tangata whenua of Whangamata.
Place name
Shibboleth: People aware of other place names of Māori origin might expect "Whangamata" to be pronounced in a similar way to such names as Waitemata and Matamata, where more stress is placed on the penultimate syllable than the final one, leaving the last 'a' as a schwa. These place names rhyme, roughly, with the English word matter. "Whangamata" goes against this rule, and the stress is placed firmly on the final 'a'. The ending thus rhymes (roughly) with the English word guitar.
The name of Whangamata comes from the mata stones (obsidian) which washed up on the beach. Whanga = bay, mata = a hard stone.
Education
Whangamata Area School is a coeducational composite (years 1-13) school with a decile rating of 4 and a roll of 420.[3]
Marina
A controversial marina has been constructed on the Whangamata Estuary. The Whangamata estuary is the shallowest on the North Island, with approximately 75% of the estuary’s water volume leaving on the low tide. The new marina basin at low tide is below sea level. Since the consent was granted, many new, and non-notified consents have been granted, including that the boat channel no longer has to be rock walled, meaning that a great deal more marine material is to be permanently removed from the estuary's sedimentary cycle. Surfers, environmentalists and Māori have opposed the marina due to the effects upon a major wetland area and the risk to a world-class left hand surf break. An Environment Court hearing stipulated that the marina could go ahead as long as certain conditions were met. Chris Carter, a former Minister of Conservation, blocked the development but his decision was judicially reviewed by the marina developers.
The decision was sent back to Conservation Minister Chris Carter, who stated that in the interests of transparency he would then give the final decision to Environment Minister David Benson-Pope, who allowed the marina to go ahead provided that strict conditions were met regarding containment of dredged materials during construction and monitoring of the world famous surf break at the estuary's entrance. Several rare species were displaced or exterminated for the development, including the rare Oligosoma moco skink. The marina opened in November 2009.
In May 2012 a meeting of local surfers and Coastal processes scientists concluded that the Whangamata Bar had degraded for the sport of surfing, soon after the Surfbreak Protection Society released a Report citing that the Bar monitoring plan enlisted by the council was not capable of detecting changes to the Whangamata Bar, because Maintenance dredging events were not correlated with The Bar monitoring surveys.
Even so, the surveys were showing a degraded surfing quality on the Bar. The Whangamata Bar is Protected under the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement 2010, yet to date the Local Authority, Waikato Regional Council (WRC)state that there is not enough science to prove that the degradation is caused by the marina or some other natural phenomena.
However, while WRC acknowledges that the Whangamata Bar has degraded, WRC appear unwilling to enforce the Marina developers to conduct the appropriate science to ascertain the cause.
The Environmental Defence Society has offered to host a workshop (without prejudice)to find positive outcomes. To date, the Waikato regional Council have not taken up this offer, which may mean that further court action could follow.[4]
See also
References
- ↑ Quickstats about Whangamata
- ↑ Mathew Grocott (4 February 2008). "Whangamata loses its swell". Hauraki Herald. Archived from the original on 2008-02-14.
- ↑ "Te Kete Ipurangi - Whangamata Area School". Ministry of Education.
- ↑ "Controversial Whangamata marina opens". Stuff.co.nz. NZPA. 22 November 2009. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Whangamata. |
Coordinates: 37°12′S 175°52′E / 37.200°S 175.867°E