Showing posts with label Eketahuna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eketahuna. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 June 2014

I’ve Got A Chicken

Brazil World Cup  2014 results being predicted on the nightly local TV news channel has been a bit of a disaster, to the point where they decided it might be a good idea to “axe” Prediction Chicken 2.

chick
(Above): Prediction Chicken 2 unmistakeably pecking, re-pecking and continuously pecking at the red ball to indicate that England would beat Uruguay. Oops.

So, without a TV chicken around any longer, Ma Nature decided, at 7:46 this morning to give us an alternative: Eketahuna (colloquially “I have a Chicken”) at Magnitude 4.9 followed by a series of milder tremors, which we did not feel.

eket
(Above): Geonet data at 8:00 am this morning.

Mail Online has reported: “…A magnitude 4.9 earthquake has struck near Eketahuna. According to GeoNet figures, the quake was centred 10 kilometres east of Eketahuna at 7.46am on Thursday.

It had a depth of 32km and its intensity has been described as moderate, with more than 1500 people reporting they had felt the quake. Many took to Twitter to say they had been rattled by the morning quake.

Palmerston North resident Michael Gemmell said he experienced a strong tremor. "Sharp solid earthquake felt in palmy #eqnz," he tweeted.

Wairarapa-based coffee roasters Machiatto NZ said Tauweru was also shaken."Wooaah!! sharp jolt here just now in Tauweru! #eqnz".

A magnitude 6.2 quake rattled the area on 20 January 2014, prompting more than 400 claims to the Earthquake Commission after damaging buildings…”

Wednesday, 26 February 2014

I Have A Rooster!

A recent blog mentioned the 20 January 2014 provincial holiday earthquake, which was centred near Eketahuna. Although this town is not a major centre, its location has always drawn attention – “the middle of nowhere.” 

hotel eketahuna
Eketahuna Hotel in Main Road Eketahuna (GPS: 40º38’37’’ S , 175º42’13’’ E)

Eketahuna is a small rural service town, the most southerly in the Tararua District in the Manawatu-Wanganui region of the North island, but is considered to be in northern Wairarapa. It was originally called Mellenskov, but was renamed soon after its founding.

The town is located at the foot of the Tararua Ranges which lie to the west. It is 35 kilometres north of Masterton and a similar distance south of Palmerston North. It is situated on SH2 and the eastern bank of the Makakahi River.

Map

Eketahuna is considered by some to be the stereotypical rural New Zealand town, and is occasionally used in conversation to represent "the real New Zealand". The 2013 census recorded Eketahuna's population at 441; down from 456 in 2006.

New Zealanders colloquially refer to the town of Eketahuna the way other English speakers refer to Timbuktu, i.e., the middle of nowhere, "the sticks", the end of the world. Likewise, Eketahuna is a booming metropolis compared to the mythical town of Waikikamukau (pronounced "Why-kick-a-moo-cow").

The name of the town, when spoken, sounds like a sentence in Afrikaans (“Ek het ‘n hoender”) which translates to "I have a rooster". This is a source of amusement to immigrant Afrikaans-speaking South Africans in New Zealand.