As the summer draws to a close it�s a time for remembering and having one last road trip with your mates. The warmth of fire, good food, laughs song & good friends. b Jesus looks forward to the cross, the doorway to the new exodus, the new creation. Jesus tortured with anguish, dripping sweat as blood, fights to accept what was always known. He goes to the cross as no one�s victim. He goes with the fire of a relentless love that cannot be put out. Jesus raises, the time has come. Sudden detention. Do as you're told. Like sheep to the slaughter. Into the dark. Peter knew that horrible feeling of letting down a friend... & it's a feeling not too far from the experience of any of us. Consider the triptych images above you & see if any of these paint a picture you have been part of. what if you could see what your words do? �..experiment with your voice into mic. Watch effect. A poisoned chalice, no respect for the dead, body functions used to degrade . Urinating abject disrespect. Hibernating adjectives cut. Compare it. Kiwi�s doing the right thing, recycling, but what are we recycling? part A:The unavoidable images that sear us in the dark. Jesus had a lot of baggage to deal with. Not even his. Part B:When the road is long & difficult it's easy for a man to feel isolated. Sometimes knowing there's a friend on your side can make all the difference, even if can't change what's got to happen. Grieving, distraught women Veil of tears Images lifted from Picasso's 'Guernica' Woman is an endless giving Fidelity until death. MATE. Jesus is stripped of his clothes. So God allows God, in the form of Jesus, to be nailed to a cross. And Jesus loses all his religious support. Would we understand better if we surrendered all our sacred stuff? Jesus had a mother. Grew in a womb, was breastfed, nurtured, cherished, protected. Reflective of a mother�s love. Mary's baby crucified. Moving image: ACTORS: Adam Helliwell, Matty Joils, Brenz Mcgillan, Sean Hewitt, Hannah Millar. CAMERA: Brooke Baker EDITOR: Andy Crowe SCRIPT: Ross Millar This point symbolises the high point of your life; you get to this point and then you stand up here and you survey where you've been. It is a restful garden because there is a lot of green and not many flowers, just some shade. And at the end of the path, you find yourself back where you began. The statue here is Hoturoa and he was the captain of the Tainui waka. He is carved in a Tahitian style to represent the fact that there was no kind of indigenous New Zealand art; they were all from the islands. And so all these plants are the plants that we here natively when the waka began arriving. Lots of these native plants were used as foods or textiles, or other kinds of useful things by the early Maori. They discovered that these plants had medicinal uses or you could eat them. This is the Italian Renaissance garden; so obviously it comes from the Renaissance period, a rebirth of culture, coming out of the dark ages in Europe, and specifically in Italy where it starts in Florence. So you had a coming together of lots of different historical forces. You had this concentration of extreme wealth firstly, and that was partially because of the Catholic church had its headquarters, and it was taking a lot of money from the rest of Europe. You had an increased scientific knowledge and increased humanistic rationalism coming along, and with that there was a huge opening up of trades. This is quite a big garden by our standards. It is based on this small private side garden of a much, much bigger garden complex in Italy. The Italian merchants were quite wealthy and they spent money on their gardens. At the same time there's an increased interest in antiquity; so part of their Roman heritage and kind of the Roman Empire and so on. So there's a really interesting congruent here between a new rationalistic, scientific view of the world and a Christian catholic view of the world, and a pagan classical view of the world; all that is coming together there. For example, the water feature is a pagan Romulus and Remus statue. This is the realm of the cultivated food crops. They were brought here on the waka; they're not native to New Zealand, and there's actually just recently been a really important archaeological discovery on the west coast of the South American continent of a chicken bone that proves contact between Polynesians and south Americans. The Polynesians came to south America. When Columbus got to South America and discovered that there were chickens there. They didn't know why and at the same time Polynesians have got kumara, and kumara is native to south America. It doesn't appear in Europe; it's a new world crop. So there are theories that Polynesians came from Taiwan or they came from the old world. It leaves that question: Where did they get the kumara from? The kumara we've got growing in this area was the most important crop for Maori. It was the number one source of carbohydrate for them. All other the native plants together did not provide any productive capacity of this kind; the ease of its cultivation and so on. Kumara doesn't set seed in New Zealand because it is too cold. So every season they have to sort out the tubas that they're going to keep for the next year's planting and the tubas they're going to eat. The maori accumulated a vast knowledge on this problem of how to make sure that they have got enough kumara for the next crop. When the European explorers got here they had this huge plantation of really well organized plantations of kumara. So this entire garden is now set up for kumara planting in a central position. All kumara in this garden gets harvested and the first bit gets presented to the Maori King and then the rest of it gets eaten in a big hangi. The Hamilton Gardens grow at least two of the original four varieties from pre-European times. When Europeans got here and brought bigger, better kumara from South America, the Maori gardeners started using those as they yield bigger tubers. The old types of kumara got lost and then in the 1960s or 1970s the Crown science people were looking for the old varieties but could not find them anywhere. They had to go to a Japanese scientist who had been out here in New Zealand and got tubers to store them in Japan. So these old types that we have growing here owe their existence to a Japanese scientist. You will see that each plant is planted in a mound. The mound is there for lots of reasons. It increases the amount of sunlight that hits the ground, to keep it warmer for longer; especially when the sun gets low. You can't plant kumara until November and so it's really crucial to keep the end of the season as far away as possible. April, May; and the sun is getting quite low in the sky. Another aspect is increased drainage so the tubas don't rock. It also provides soil improvement and Maori gardening sites are usually discovered by the existence of borough pits, basically big holes in the ground where good soil; which is usually very, very sandy; very pumicey, would be dug up and watered. So the soil you see here is full of rocks and pumice and sand to make it much better draining than it otherwise would be. So we find very advanced soil improvement techniques that are certainly far beyond hunter gatherer type societies. The long border is just simply what it says, it's just a big long path with flowers either side; mostly annuals and some perennials and mixed border, as they say. The warm colours are in the middle and the cool colours are at the end. It has the reds and the oranges and the yellows around the middle, and then at the end all the blues and the more pastely, pinky, bluey things. It's actually quite carefully put together. This is the Medici court; fantastic for outdoor theatre and so on, and the Medici gallery out there which is a little patio area. The cave holds a littel statue of a monk. This is paper mulberry which can be used to make a type of cloth out of it. During the summer it grows like a weed. In the winter time it just dies down. In Northland it grows for the whole year but where there's a frost, it will die back. There's two kinds of key overall layout aspects. One is just the fact that there are three areas. So there's the outside bosco area beyond the garden in the forest, the untamed wilderness from which only the beasts live, and humans came from there but we don't live there anymore. The second area is the orchards, the prater with its fruit trees and grapevines, and then the third one is the bottom part, which is the formal part of the garden. Cicero talks about the fear of nature. There is the first nature, which is the untamed wilderness. The second nature, which is the farming, and then the third nature which is the garden. Third nature is nature plus art; whereas farming and gardening for food is nature plus science or functional behaviour. This is our newest garden and its consequently the one that we feel most proud of. It's called Te Parapara. Te Parapara is a traditional Maori garden of a kind. It's not a recreation of existing or historical Maori gardens as much as the Paradise gardens are, but it is much more of a narrative garden. It basically tells a story of the establishment of cultivated food crops in New Zealand. The story begins at the gate; which represents the landing of Tainui waka in New Zealand in a kind of landfall. On the right hand side after the gate there is a pomaderris Tainui tree, big and tall. On the left is a little Pohutekawa tree. The Pohutukawa represents the tree that the Tainui waka was tied to when it first was landed at Tawhia. The Pomaderris represents the floor boards, and in the story of the landing of Tainui, the floor boards took root. We know that this is mythical because pomaderris was native. This one is a Taro plant. You can eat the leaves and its root. You can see three structures here. They are really interesting and the main focus point. All three of them are storage buildings. When the European missionaries arrived, they reported that the most elaborate sanctuary buildings in the village were not the chief's houses; they were the store rooms. There's an entirely alternative approach to property compared to the European approach. The rua goes down underground so it keeps the kumara's cool and dry. The patika and the whatarangi are raised up, to give security from feeding kids and rats. Storage house design varied depending on the tribe... some reports would say a whatarangi was 10 metres in the air with one single pole, and it was for dead people; they would put skeletons up there. If you look at the bottom panel of teh largest structure - that's a replica of a piece of wood that was found buried in a garden in Chartwell in the 1970s; this original piece of wood now belongs to the Waikato museum. So every effort has been made in this garden to make sure that the carvings are accurate, to pre-European carving style. Because of course, like any art form, there's changes in style and changes in technique, so where practical they have used traditional stone tools and traditional patterns . The rock in the enclosure there came from the bottom of Lake Taihu in China. It got shipped over here. The gardeners putt a different bonsai three there every month. The bridge is not straight to stop the dragons coming across it. They're also dragon shapes represented on the top of those walls. In this garden you can see plants native to china. For the Chinese certain plants had strong associations. For example, the bamboo represented uprightness and strength. Another layout aspect is the progression of water. There are actually little nozzles in the wall next to the grotto and they make this lovely little mist and this is a grotto that represents the female and fertile. Beyond that there's some little fountains that go down underneath it and then there's the big fountain in the middle; it spurts up, and it's a much more masculine. And then beyond that there's the mighty river. Obviously, it is a highly symmetrical garden area. You may notice that from each garden you can't see any of the other gardens. This garden and the Indian garden are really good examples of what garden designers do; which is that they borrow scenery, they borrow the landscape from outside. So, if your neighbour has a really big, lovely oak tree; you can build that into your design. And so here's a great example. The river is not part of Hamilton gardens but it certainly makes a good impact when you come out here and see it. There's not just white flowers in here; there is also silver foliage like one the big trees.