Under the Whenua Kura programme, full fee scholarships and practical farm training are now on offer to Māori, from any iwi, who wish to begin a rewarding career in farming.
Te Tumu Paeroa recently secured a $100,000 grant for a Wellington trust to spend on a feasibility study into affordable housing.
On World Wetlands Day (Sunday 2 February), thirty people gathered in Coastal Taranaki to acknowledge Pipiriki.
Wiremu Reid has been announced winner of the Ahuwhenua Young Māori Dairy Farmer of the Year Award 2014, at the Ahuwhenua Trophy Awards, held in Tauranga on Friday night.
On Saturday a Northland trust gathered in Kaikohe to celebrate the opening of a dairy farm which will bring benefits to an economy in need, and greater returns to 3,000 Maori landowners.
On Friday, a dairy venture outside of Hawera opened the gates to over 200 people who came to view and learn from Te Rua o Te Moko Ltd - a model farm built across five Māori land blocks.
Yesterday owners of Māori land in Waihi agreed to the next stage of farm upgrades, committing all trust income towards the dairy farm’s development.
Te Tumu Paeroa has partnered with four other organisations to deliver New Zealand’s largest affordable housing development which will become home to nearly 300 families in Waimahia , Auckland.
In August 2013 Te Tumu Paeroa Portfolio Manager, Beverley Murray, received notification about farming activity that was severely threatening wetlands near the Kopuawhara Stream on Mahia peninsular.
Young Māori farmers urged to fast-track career via Ahuwhenua awards. We speak to Tangaroa Walker, winner of 2012 Young Māori Dairy Farmer of the Year Award.
Te Tumu Paeroa has managed the upgrade of 12 self-contained flats in upmarket Parnell, so that extra rental income can be earned and set towards other Māori community housing projects.
Ōmāpere Taraire E & Rangihamama X3A Trust is converting underutilised Northland land to run a 500 cow dairy operation with its joint venture partner Te Tumu Paeroa.
The winner of a Māori farming competition says he enjoys farming so much it doesn’t seem like work.
Two Māori organisations have come together in a dairy venture that will benefit generations of Māori pursuing education.
Landowners in a Taranaki block have halved the cost of protecting their waterway with a $2,000 grant.
Miraka signed a Memorandum of Understanding in Shanghai today, signalling the intention to secure milk supply from Shanghai Pengxin’s New Zealand farms.
Rimuerena Tiakiwai’s cultural curiosity recently led her from Whakatane to Beijing, to partake in a 12 day global engagement course.
After owning his own car yard for six years, Jay Ross McCarthy sold up shop and set his sights on study. “I was 44 years old and realising that I needed a degree to secure a good job,” says Jay.
A training venture on Māori land near Hawera is now sending its first trainees into the workforce, and, says the training director, they are in demand.
After 12 years of living in London, Jess Paul (Ngāti Maniapoto) returned to Aotearoa and received a scholarship to help her begin her Bachelor of Māori Media Studies and Communication at AUT.
In June, the Te Tumu Paeroa team met with over 2000 land owners in 12 different locations across Aotearoa at the first ever Regional Roadshow.