A 
waka is a Maori sea-going vessel of yore. A 
haka is the traditional Maori greeting/challenge. Perhaps the most famous 
haka is the 
All Blacks' numerous instances preceding their rugby matches. Our favorite was by a New Zealand military band at the Edinburgh Tattoo some years ago. Anyhow, the biennial New Zealand Festival was set to kick-off, so to speak, as several 
waka arrived in Wellington harbor, outside Te Papa, the national museum. They were to be welcomed by a thousand-voice 
haka. We'd arrived just in time...
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| But first, dinner at a favorite northern Thai restaurant | 
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There were some thousands there for the ceremony, and the best we could do, 
mostly, was in font of a big screen | 
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| Main guy | 
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I think this may have been the waka we saw from the ferry that afternoon... 
anyhow, there were seven waka hourua, double- hulled vessels that were  
completing a months-long voyage from Samoa, the Cook Islands, etc; a 
reminder that these folks' navigational exploits, centuries ago, made the 
Vikings and Portuguese, and Columbus, look like veritable pikers | 
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| Main gal | 
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| Part of the throng, and harbor-side Welly | 
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Coverage by drone; interestingly, NZ drone laws are extremely fussy (must 
have explicit  permission from land-owners, individuals over-flown) | 
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| A huge traditional canoe arrives | 
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| More throng and a bit of Te Papa | 
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| More arrivals | 
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| A bit of Wellington harbor as the sun sets | 
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| The haka | 
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Other main gal; the whole thing scored, scripted, choreographed, 
etc. | 
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And we were there, understanding little, but enjoying the pageantry 
and the moment |