SightSinging

By SightSinging

Mt Pirongia in Waikato .

 This is the view over Waikato dairy farms from our house. 
This is a young country , yet today I was able to listen to a simply exquisite programme of
Baroque Italian Love Cantatas
, on early instruments, presented at St Andrew's church in Cambridge by Rita Paxcian, harpsichord and mezzo, John Paxcian-Green ,baroque oboe and Polly Sussex,baroque cello. Such a delight touched the heart and lifted the spirit. I do hope they return with another programme in the future.


PIRONGIA MOUNTAIN
Pirongia (3,156 ft) is a prominent, rugged mountain standing high above the surrounding hill country west of Waipa River. It is the highest and most extensive of a series of ancient volcanic vents that erupted along a line that runs south-east from Karioi Mountain to Tokanui Hill. The precipitous bush-clad slopes of Pirongia are deeply eroded remnants of a much larger volcano that spread its basalt and olivine-andesite lava flows as far as Kawhia Harbour. King Tawhiao's Maori supporters used the eastern foothills of the mountain as a retreat between skirmishes during the Waikato Wars. Pirongia (the name means “like a bad smell”) and the neighbouring, distinctively shaped, lesser peak of Kakepuku (1,478 ft) figure in Maori folklore.
Pirongia is one of the mountains associated in Maori lore with the patupairehe who were white-skinned “little people” (fairies), usually feared, for they were dangerous to mortals. The patupairehe were supposed to inhabit large fortified villages in the cloudy summits of the hills, and frequented certain localities throughout New Zealand, even as far south as Foveaux Strait. At times their presence was revealed in the ghostly piping of flutes and the sound of fairy songs heard in the misty forest heights.
by Leslie Owen Kermode, B.A., Geological Survey Station, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Otahuhu.
Treasury of Maori Folklore, Reed, A. W. (1963).

'PIRONGIA MOUNTAIN', from An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, edited by A. H. McLintock, originally published in 1966.
Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 22-Apr-09
URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/1966/pirongia-mountain

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