Nga Hikoi O Hokianga
Unbound collection of cards and maps in a folder describing and showing 25 walks around the Hokianga Harbour and beyond. The locations of these walks are widely scattered, but in the past they were not. They were closer together, connected by the artery and offshoots of the Hokianga, where streams and inlets reached like tentacles far inland, navigable much further than they are today.
The felling of vast forests for timber, and land clearance for farming, caused erosion and the silting up of estuaries, which in turn encouraged the spread of mangroves and further restricted navigation. These walks therefore, or most of them, are historically all part of the Hokianga, even if today they involve long road journeys.
Unbound collection of cards and maps in a folder describing and showing 25 walks around the Hokianga Harbour and beyond. The locations of these walks are widely scattered, but in the past they were not. They were closer together, connected by the artery and offshoots of the Hokianga, where streams and inlets reached like tentacles far inland, navigable much further than they are today.
The felling of vast forests for timber, and land clearance for farming, caused erosion and the silting up of estuaries, which in turn encouraged the spread of mangroves and further restricted navigation. These walks therefore, or most of them, are historically all part of the Hokianga, even if today they involve long road journeys.
Unbound collection of cards and maps in a folder describing and showing 25 walks around the Hokianga Harbour and beyond. The locations of these walks are widely scattered, but in the past they were not. They were closer together, connected by the artery and offshoots of the Hokianga, where streams and inlets reached like tentacles far inland, navigable much further than they are today.
The felling of vast forests for timber, and land clearance for farming, caused erosion and the silting up of estuaries, which in turn encouraged the spread of mangroves and further restricted navigation. These walks therefore, or most of them, are historically all part of the Hokianga, even if today they involve long road journeys.
If you would like to enquire about wholesale pricing, please contact Janine Mc Veigh on 021 187 1492.