These learn-by-doing
webpages, and their on-location access by tiny QR signs,
can be used for any forest, ecosystem or natural feature
in NZ, but they were originally designed for Tongariro
National Park to promote the ecotourism industry that
expected to attract 50,000 visitors annually.
The heart of this mountainous area was made sacrosanct in 1887, with the intent that the Crown would stand alongside Ngāti Tūwharetoa to ensure the continued protection of Tongariro. This led to the establishment of the Tongariro National Park in 1894, a first for New Zealand, and fourth in the world. In 1991, it was made a UN Educational Scientific & Cultural Organisation world heritage scientific site for its multitude of unique ecosystems, and in 1993, it became the first to be made a world heritage cultural site because the mountains at the heart of the park symbolize the spiritual links between this community and its environment. These draft examples of QR signs demonstrate
an inexpensive, editable, on-the-spot and learn-by-doing
way of educating
visitors who walk or bike along its tracks with a hundred
examples why it is such a scientific
& cultural gem, when these small unobtrusive
signs are placed along the tracks and scanned with
cellphones. The quirky headings are
designed to catch youngsters' attention, so they can then
be led on to serious science. Try scanning
one now.Large coloured information
signs are expensive, obtrusive, static, and very limited
in the information they give, while very few casual
visitors carry books with facts about the park's plants,
animals, rocks, history, weather, Maori culture etc.
Experts in many different fields could provide interesting
material about trees, bushes, ferns, orchids, mosses,
epiphytes, communities, zonation, evolution, birds,
insects, bats, pests, how plants avoided being eaten,
geography, use of different geographic features by both
Maori and Europeans, geology, vulcanology, climate change,
logging and railway stories, Maori foods, medicines,
stories,myths, LOTR filming locations. Can you suggest any
more?Retired schoolteachers like yours truly could introduce topics by breaking them down to digestible lu mps;
then the students in the computer clubs at Ruapehu College
and Turangi School could make the webpages. Different
colours on the QR signs could indicate each field of
interest.The signs could be printed on plastic A6 size (7x10cm, $5) and mounted almost horizontally close to the ground on short stakes ($2.50) These would be cheap to make, light to carry and quick'n'easy to install. Waitonga Falls Walk This is walked by many people and has a wide range of habitats. If local tourism businesses finally show some interest, I will get around to making pages for the kawaka cedar with twisted trunk, the Dendroligotrichum moss with a stem and conducting tissue, the raukawa bushes that united east and west coast iwi, old track to Blyth Hut, the coral fungus, Gleichenia swamp fern, the carnivorous sundews, Che's Ruapehu waiata, Waitonga falls used as a food chiller by iwi in pre-contact times. Mangawhero Loop
Walk
This could be an option for cold wet days or school outdoor education rambles. I have info for short stops every 50 to 100 metres: various trees, ferns, mosses, liverworts, fungi and habitats, Ohakune Fault Line, tramway, the maths of measuring tree heights and volumes of dirt removed for tramway cuttings, glow-worms, hydro dam, crater, and Mollie's tutu feast! QR Orienteering Competitions The QR codes could be also used as target location recorders for competitive adult orienteering with maps on cellphone apps to guide competitors to each target location. Each competitor would scan the QR code and take a selfie of her/himself beside the QR sign, and text it to the competition organiser, thus recording where and when she/he was there. Money, Money, Money And
of cour$e, like one of Baldrick'$ cunning plan$, thi$
web$ite can be $een a$ a cunning plan to get vi$itors to
the Ruapehu di$trict $pending more time on each of their
walk$, and finding them more intere$ting, $o that they
$tay longer, come back more often, and $pend more money on
meal$, bike$ and bed$, to compen$ate for the average 12%
le$$ $now Tongariro is getting each winter. John Archer
SAMPLE PAGESFeb 2026 Ferngate
- Learn your ferns - built 3-5 Oct 2025 The Seaweed Tree - seaweed origins of the name Rimu - 6 Nov Eat Rimu cones - cones you can eat - 7 Nov Ponga - it is dark, or pōnga in a grove of ponga- 9 Nov Ponga origins -
dark sea depths were called bo.
Bellbird Trees - a
grove of Kaikomako - 19 Dec
Tramway Bridge - the
timber millers' bridge - 22 Dec
Steam Hauler - find location by log lines - 25 Dec Tramway Junction - tracks NW of cycle trail - 25 Dec How High ? - find the height of any tree - 15 Jan 2026 A Fishy Tree! - how the totara got its name - 4 Feb 2026 And
I would have all these made by now, but no one I spoke
to seemed interested in promoting ecotourism here, so
I have moved to getting Maori mō-te-ātea
into prisons.
Kafika
(Malay tree with red "apples" brought to S Pacific
Islands)
- Kahika - rata vine - and Pohutukawa? flower
- Kahikatoa - manuka - fighting staffs - red blood
- Kahikatea - white pine - red berries - no odour - butter boxes - Kahikawaka —> ka'waka - cedar No
Moa Bites 1
- divaricating twigs - to do
No
Moa Bites 2
- poisonous plants - to doNo Moa Bites 3 - leaves too tough, lancewood - to do The Bushman's Friend - to leave a message or mark a trail. A Stream of Milk - Mangaturuturu, SiO2 dissolves in hot water
- Te Ua o Te Ika o Maui
Out Of America
- Koromiko - Hebe salicifolia - from Chile
Out Of America 2 - Hebes
smaller going up the mountain
Out Of America 3 - Tawhai
- Chile to NZ & New Guinea
Raukawa
- its scent
- united
Waikato and East Coast iwi
Shapeshifter
- lancewood Giant Liverwort -
Schistochila append. - a metre long
Anti-Cancer Liverwort - -
Schistochila glauc
Evolutionary
Link 1
- Moss
10cm high has water-conducting veins
Evolutionary
Link 2
-
Equisetum
Evolutionary Link 3 -
Peripatus, an earthworm with legs
Pre-contact Fridge - cooked
birds stored at Waitonga Falls
Make more or even better suggestions, and send me the text and images to make some more. Email me, John Archer. Page made 6 Nov 2025 |