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<title>ngatipukenga.co.nz</title>
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<link>http://ngatipukenga.co.nz/modules.php?name=News&amp;file=article&amp;sid=1</link>
<description>&amp;nbsp;  
    &lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; align=&quot;left&quot; src=&quot;images/ngatipukenga/tga.gif&quot; alt=&quot;Pukenga te tangata&quot;&gt;
    &lt;strong&gt;Origins of Pukenga &lt;/strong&gt;- Ng&amp;#257;ti Pukenga descend from the
 original inhabitants of Tauranga and the pre-waka people who  traversed
 and occupied the entire Bay of Plenty (Te Moana &amp;#257; Toi te Huatahi). 
Principally, Ng&amp;#257;ti Pukenga descend from the ancestors of the Mataatua 
waka. The genarally accepted version of Ng&amp;#257;ti Pukenga history is that 
they were formerly centred around Waiau and Omarumutu in the Eastern 
Bay of Plenty, before Pukenga and his brother Te Ahuru arrived in 
Tauranga at the place known as the Kaimai ranges. The naming of the 
Kaimai is especially significant to Pukenga due to the fact that upon 
their arrival at the summit, Pukenga instructed Te Ahuru to sit and 
partake in a meal with him by saying - &amp;quot; kia kai mai taua i k&amp;#333;nei &amp;quot;. It 
is from this very 
  instruction the name Kaimai originates. Following this, Pukenga then 
instructed Te Ahuru to continue travelling west towards Waikato, while 
Pukenga stayed on the eastern 
  side of the Kaimai. This is the beginning of the occupation of Pukenga
 in Tauranga. 
  
  
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