Wow awesome. My father and I found 3 pigeon troughs in one day in the parahaki stream just down from whites clearing in the 70s. One was by itself and the other 2 were stashed leaned up against and inside a hollow tree trunk We had basically the whole Waiau valley as our possum block in the 70s. I was only 16 at the time and decided to carry one of them down to the river as we were skinning out a poison line and would not be back up there. 6 hours later I got that blasted thing down to the creek with much swearing and abuse from my dad who was not keen on the idea lol. I found what I thought was a safe place to leave it for when we would be heading into Ruatahuna for supplies. These were the only ones we found in over 30 years of hunting in the Ureweras. When the time came to take it into town I was excited but when we got to my spot the trough had bullet holes through it (no kidding) and was half burned in a campfire. I vowed to myself I would never shift something precious like that from where I found it again but I never did find another one. I love your videos as I now live in Northern Ireland ( 2 years now) and such a long way from home. I consider Te Urewera as my spiritual home. At 65 I've seen the park changed so much over the years and I can still remember the feeling of looking up the Wairoa toward rogers hut wondering what it was like up there but all those blocks belonged to the Manganui crowd. In those days meat hunting was a great adventure and possums was a way of life. Thanks for bringing back some fond memories.
Awesome! I enjoyed reading your message as it's the main reason for sharing videos. We are very fortunate to have such an incredible backyard! Hope Ireland is treating you well. Cheers Jacob
Awesome glad the bird life is good. Keep the camera clicking 😊 my wife Brooke is keen on her photography and mentioned she has seen a few of your bird photos.
Thanks mate. A few years back a good friend Shaun introduced the family and I to your music. Love it! Enjoy the hunting content you create, especially out hunting with young fullas and giving them a good head start. Cheers Jacob
Found one almost identical to your one while doing an RTC around the Arohaki Lagoon in 2014, the fork it had been sitting in had come down in a storm, was pretty rotten from being full of leaf litter and sitting on the ground. Bloody cool alright bro!
Hi Kobey whereami here, hope life is treating you well and your getting in heaps of bush therapy. Never found one off the six foot but I was always looking.I always thought if there was ever a place to find one again it would be that area.
Witnessed the disappearance of Mistletoe & Yellowheads as possums colonised an area and the interaction happened. Was partially reversed by extensive aerial poisoning. Plenty of other species of plants & animals affected also, some are recovering. Still have to search for mistletoe where it was a sea of red, like rataa in bloom pre possums. Later was interesting to see mistletoe in a possum/TB area that had had intensive control for a few years. Possums would have been post peak for decades there, so it's possible seed does persist for a few decades. Or some just get overlooked.
Have been there over the last 40yrs or so originally family camping and fishing then guiding fishermen from overseas. One fisherman from Sweden wanted to go back to the exact pool that he caught a good rainbow and caught an identical fish to relive his dreams. Those tall trees on the main track are like nothing else I've seen in this country. A truly beautiful place good video.
Massive brother they also filled them with seeds and set up noose around the feed bowl out of harakeke so birds would poke their heads through and as they flew away the noose would tighten. Defo let the local iwi know 👌🏽
Waka Kererū we call it e hoa, he tino rawe tērā, what i got told by my koroua they would leave it leaned against the rakau as manu season was over, an was never to be bought out of the ngahere as he taonga tapu tērā nē that waka is sacred aye, other hapū may have diffrent kōrero, but awsome bro. Keep up the good content mahi
Cheers brutha, it was pretty special sitting up there having a wee daydream thinking about life back in the day. Glad I left it leaning back up against the tree.
Not that far back. Plenty around the fringe country. The 1080 knocks them back in the main block. But yep where there has been no 1080 there's plenty of them. Been finding fair few dead ones while out hunting at the moment. Cold weather getting em
Wow awesome.
My father and I found 3 pigeon troughs in one day in the parahaki stream just down from whites clearing in the 70s. One was by itself and the other 2 were stashed leaned up against and inside a hollow tree trunk We had basically the whole Waiau valley as our possum block in the 70s.
I was only 16 at the time and decided to carry one of them down to the river as we were skinning out a poison line and would not be back up there. 6 hours later I got that blasted thing down to the creek with much swearing and abuse from my dad who was not keen on the idea lol. I found what I thought was a safe place to leave it for when we would be heading into Ruatahuna for supplies. These were the only ones we found in over 30 years of hunting in the Ureweras. When the time came to take it into town I was excited but when we got to my spot the trough had bullet holes through it (no kidding) and was half burned in a campfire. I vowed to myself I would never shift something precious like that from where I found it again but I never did find another one.
I love your videos as I now live in Northern Ireland ( 2 years now) and such a long way from home. I consider Te Urewera as my spiritual home. At 65 I've seen the park changed so much over the years and I can still remember the feeling of looking up the Wairoa toward rogers hut wondering what it was like up there but all those blocks belonged to the Manganui crowd.
In those days meat hunting was a great adventure and possums was a way of life.
Thanks for bringing back some fond memories.
Awesome! I enjoyed reading your message as it's the main reason for sharing videos. We are very fortunate to have such an incredible backyard! Hope Ireland is treating you well. Cheers Jacob
@@jbwild its wet and wild is Ireland.
It's really beautiful and has incredible bird life. Im getting used to it but I do miss the bush.
Awesome glad the bird life is good. Keep the camera clicking 😊 my wife Brooke is keen on her photography and mentioned she has seen a few of your bird photos.
An incredible find mate. I enjoyed that.
Thanks mate. A few years back a good friend Shaun introduced the family and I to your music. Love it! Enjoy the hunting content you create, especially out hunting with young fullas and giving them a good head start. Cheers Jacob
Nice story of mahi in the bush with a great find on top. Well done thanks for sharing!
Cheers mate
Great to see the NZ bush again mate, thanks for sharing this.
All good, glad you enjoyed it. Cheers
Found one almost identical to your one while doing an RTC around the Arohaki Lagoon in 2014, the fork it had been sitting in had come down in a storm, was pretty rotten from being full of leaf litter and sitting on the ground. Bloody cool alright bro!
Hi Kobey whereami here, hope life is treating you well and your getting in heaps of bush therapy.
Never found one off the six foot but I was always looking.I always thought if there was ever a place to find one again it would be that area.
Cheers Kobey, yeah I was stoked. This one is about 6km south of lagoon. Probably same hunter/ gatherers 😊
Witnessed the disappearance of Mistletoe & Yellowheads as possums colonised an area and the interaction happened. Was partially reversed by extensive aerial poisoning. Plenty of other species of plants & animals affected also, some are recovering.
Still have to search for mistletoe where it was a sea of red, like rataa in bloom pre possums.
Later was interesting to see mistletoe in a possum/TB area that had had intensive control for a few years. Possums would have been post peak for decades there, so it's possible seed does persist for a few decades. Or some just get overlooked.
Fffking love your vids , mate, time and effort you put in , is that private land and huts
Thanks, all public land, the 2 small huts are used by doc staff, contractors and volunteers for pest control and species monitoring work
Have been there over the last 40yrs or so originally family camping and fishing then guiding fishermen from overseas. One fisherman from Sweden wanted to go back to the exact pool that he caught a good rainbow and caught an identical fish to relive his dreams. Those tall trees on the main track are like nothing else I've seen in this country. A truly beautiful place good video.
Thanks mate, yes definitely an awesome forest. So.e great fish up there at the moment
Massive brother they also filled them with seeds and set up noose around the feed bowl out of harakeke so birds would poke their heads through and as they flew away the noose would tighten. Defo let the local iwi know 👌🏽
Cheers bro, thats cook and will do
Cool find I found one with a mate still in the tree twenty years ago often wonder if it is still standing.
Def an old bird trap
Thanks, pretty awesome thing to find!
Watch last of the redheads and under the carpet by Gabi Plumm. Some very interesting history on NZs past. Bit of an eye opener
Awesome will have a watch. Cheers
cool video what part of nz is that
Central North Island
thought it might have been whirinaki forest i helped build the whirinaki track in the 80s
@@jbwild
Yeah bro that's the one. Beautiful forest
Amazing find.
Yo, Is this Jacob?
Cheers bro, yep it is.
Love your work brother that’s awesome
Cheers brutha!
That’s wicked, I think you’d be right about the tōtara cause what else would last that long.
Tanalised pine .
Cheers bro
Wicked bro!!! Beautiful piece
Cheers brutha
The old doc 200.. cool video bro. Churr
Hang on your absolute right, exactly bro bird trough water, beautiful place JB.
Thanks 👍
Waka Kererū we call it e hoa, he tino rawe tērā, what i got told by my koroua they would leave it leaned against the rakau as manu season was over, an was never to be bought out of the ngahere as he taonga tapu tērā nē that waka is sacred aye, other hapū may have diffrent kōrero, but awsome bro. Keep up the good content mahi
Cheers brutha, it was pretty special sitting up there having a wee daydream thinking about life back in the day. Glad I left it leaning back up against the tree.
Awesome find bro
Thanks 👍
That's awesome 👌
Mean find brotha
Cheers bo
Awesome
cool find
Chur bro is this your job?
Yeah bro it was. On a mish with the whanau down south at the moment though. Was an awesome job in an epic place
who were ya working for mate? doc?
@@jbwild
Yes, contracting to DoC - self employed
a nice find ..if only it could talk
What bread is fern
Not 100% sure. Black lab, cattle, bitz n bobs x 😅
Come across any hedgehogs up their.
Not that far back. Plenty around the fringe country. The 1080 knocks them back in the main block. But yep where there has been no 1080 there's plenty of them. Been finding fair few dead ones while out hunting at the moment. Cold weather getting em
Mean budda 🤙🤙🤙
Chur buda
Mauri Ora bro.
Cheers bro
Mean vids cuzz
Thanks bro
Mean bro
Cheers
Awesome