Our electricity is generated from Solar panels, we are grid tied and we generate more electricity then we use, which is fed back into the grid.
We are careful with our creation of waste. Shop with cloth bags, reduce plastic packaging. Recycle and reuse items multiple times don’t throw away, repurpose. Buy secondhand products- clothes, yoga equipment, books for example. All our food waste is composted on site.
We are climate change aware and eat food that has low carbon emissions.
We are very thoughtful about long distance air travel.
We grow a lot of our own vegetables from seed that we collect, we don’t use chemical sprays.
We support companies who also demonstrate earth stewardship.
We conserve water and repurposed our grey water for drought stricken plants in the garden.
We encourage car pooling to our classes. Reduces carbon emissions. Creates community.
We discourage the use of single use products and use environmentally safe cleaning products.
We share abundant produce from our garden and in turn our lovely community does the same with us.
3 Māori Concepts and How You Can Use Them Today
Māori people have a special way of connecting with the world around them. A concept known as Tikanga dictates the traditional rules, customs or laws for overseeing life as Māori. Tikanga is derived from the word Tika – which can be interpreted as the truth, correctness or fairness. Here are just a few of the beautiful concepts Māori live by and what they mean.
Manaakitanga
Manakitanga means to extend aroha (love and compassion) to others. It is found in acts such as helping a loved one, encouraging one another or even supporting a complete stranger. Manaakitanga is one of the most important concepts to Māori people as it secures the strength of our whānau (families) and communities.
How to extend Manaakitanga:
- Send a message to a loved one
- Cook someone a meal
- Take over someone’s job or chore
Māori have a special connection and respect to the natural world
Kaitiakitanga
In Te Reo Māori (the Māori language), a kaitiaki is a guardian. Offering kaitiakitangi is offering guardianship to the sky, land and sea. Māori believe that the earth is a taonga (gift) from our ancestors, and should be protected as such. You can extend kaitiakitangi by respecting and conserving the earth, being mindful of the impact of your behaviours and giving back to the land.
How to extend Kaitiakitanga:
- Reduce, reuse, recycle
- Walk or bike to work
- Plant a tree
Kotahitanga
Kotahitanga is the concept of togetherness. Māori are a small yet unified race, and it’s important to lift each other up. Kotahitanga is identifying as one – sharing the earth, extending our āwhina (support) to everyone, and receiving the same back.
This concept is very important to us at Tamaki Māori Village, as our company whakatauki (proverb) is “Kia Kotahi Tātou | We are One” which is inclusive of the many guests we have through our village.
How to extend Kotahitanga:
- Join a local sports team
- Donate to a charity
- Say hello to a stranger
How will you extend Manaakitanga, Kaitiakitanga or Kotahitanga in your day today?