28 October 2008
24 October 2008
Field Work
08 September 2008
Tu Tangata - 30th Anniversary
05 September 2008
Solomon Island Dancers
Here is a short video of one of my favourite groups - the Solomon Island dancers. The Solomon Islands will host the next Pacific Arts Festival in 2012, in case you would like to start planning your trip!
Samoan Dancers
I bought a video camera just before going to the Pacific Arts Festival and just figured out how to downsize the video from high density to a windows media file which can be posted on the blog (this means relatively poor quality, but you can get the idea). This is a dance troop from Samoa, and they are doing a slap dance called the "sasa". You may notice some of the movements represent fishing and other activities related to food preparation and survival. These dances were used to pass stories from one generation to the next.
04 August 2008
Samoa - 10 years later

26 July 2008
10th Pacific Arts Festival





Malo le fa'amalosi! (to your strength). I just returned from the 10th Pacific Arts Festival in Pagopago, American Samoa. While checking in for my flight from Samoa to American Samoa, I was asked to step on the scale (along with my my bags)! Presumably, they do this for each passenger to make sure that the net weight of the 12-passenger plane doesn't exceed the limit. To me, this was a clear sign of the beginning of a new adventure....
The festival was wonderful. Although it was not well organised, it was brilliantly executed thanks to the groups from Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, Kiribati, Niue, Wallis and Futuna, New Zealand, Hawaii, Papua New Guinea, New Caledonia, the Cook Islands, Tahiti, the Solomon Islands, and other Pacific Island countries. The photos posted here are of the performers from Papua New Guinea, the Cook Islands, Kiribati, and Fiji. For more photos, click here.
17 July 2008
Returning to Samoa
13 July 2008
Beautiful Day

10 July 2008
water treatment facility tour
One of the audits I am working on requires me to travel around New Zealand to see whether the local government entities are sufficiently planning for future water demand. This can be done either through tapping into new sources of water and increasing treatment and reticulation capacity or by managing demand through encouraging conservation. Today marked my first visit (to the Te Marua water treatment plant in Wellington). On this visit, I saw coagulation, flocculation, separation, filtration and chlorination. Here are just a couple photos of the process.
06 July 2008
Where The Hell is Matt?
Where the Hell is Matt? (2008) from Matthew Harding on Vimeo.
21 June 2008
Winter Solstice
In the Northern Hemisphere, most consider the solstices to mark the first day of a new season. In New Zealand (and some other countries of the Southern Hemisphere), however, the first day of the new season is generally considered to be the first day of the months of the Solstice (e.g., June 1st for winter). I was initially mistaken when I assumed the 21st to mark the first day of winter, as you will notice from blog comments. At any rate, I'm looking forward to days getting longer over the coming months.
Interestingly, Wellington is 42 degrees south of the equator and Boston (my home town) is 42 degrees north of the equator. Despite that, Wellington's maritime climate is remarkably mild with temperatures generally between 40 - 80 Fahrenheit.
18 June 2008
Ka Mate, Ka Mate!
I went to Auckland for the weekend to watch the All Blacks play against England. The event started with a re-enactment of a battle which looked something like the Battle of Hastings, followed by the All Blacks' famous haka. The final score was the All Blacks 37 - England 20.
If you would like to try the haka at home, you better learn the words (NB: vowels are just like English long vowels, and the letters "wh" sound like a soft "f"):
Ringa pakia! (Slap the hands against the thighs!)
Uma tiraha! (Puff out the chest!)
Turi whatia! (Bend the knees!)
Hope whai ake! (Let the hip follow!)
Waewae takahia kia kino! (Stamp the feet as hard as you can!)
A, ka mate! Ka mate! ('Tis death! 'Tis death!)
Ka ora! Ka ora! ('Tis life! 'Tis life!)
Ka mate! Ka mate! ('Tis death! 'Tis death!)
Ka ora! Ka ora! ('Tis life! 'Tis life!)
Tēnei te tangata puhuruhuru (Behold! There stands the hairy man)
Nāna nei i tiki mai whakawhiti te ra! (Who will cause the sun to shine!)
A upane! Ka upane! (One step upwards, another step upwards!)
A upane! Ka upane! (One step upwards, another step upwards!)
Whiti te rā! (The sun shines!)
Note: If you are looking for the Gingerbread Haka, watch this:
07 June 2008
Matariki - Māori New Year
For the Māori, the rising of Matariki signaled a time to celebrate and prepare the grounds for the next growing season. In the 21st century, New Zealanders celebrate in a variety of ways, including dances, songs, and plenty of hangi (food cooked in a ground oven).
Yesterday, I went to Te Papa museum to watch Torotoro, a dance troup from Auckland, perform
01 June 2008
Soweto Gospel Choir
22 May 2008
14 May 2008
How Big is Your Footprint?
On a more positive not, I found inside of a box of breakfast cereal a paper showing the cereal company's CO2 emissions per Kg of production, broken down by emissions source (electric, gas, land and air travel). This paper also contained a list of ideas for the consumer to make his or her home more sustainable.
02 May 2008
Catching Up, Ten Years Later
Over the past 10 years, Petelo lived in Los Angeles, Seattle and Wellington. I lived in Boston, Indiana, and Washington DC. Meanwhile, a lot has changed in Samoa (some positive and some negative). Over dinner, we talked about those changes and laughed at some of the things that haven't changed. We also talked about the people and places we both knew. I'm looking forward to returning to the islands this July.
05 April 2008
Oxfam Trailwalker
Here are photos of the start of the walk, dawn, dusk and the morning after (when we finished). The final photo is of our support team, without whom we would not have finished!
We completed the 103-KM track in under 30 hours, and we raised $4347 - more than twice our original goal. Thanks to the following friends and family members who donated (in addition to several anonymous donations):
Angela An, Christian and Jennifer Bolanos, Gina Bonifacino, Victoria Dew, Nina Dillon, Andy Evans, Anne Marie Healey (Mom), David Healey and family, Susan Welch (sister) and family, Joe Healey and family, Mark Healey and family, Evan and Jenny Haas, Josh Hall and Joanna Kind, Jennifer Jansen (in Australia), Katie Kaku, Robert Mann-Thompson, Caryn Muellerleile, Ernesto Muñoz(in Ecuador), Enrique Paulin, Andrea Salzburg, Fatai Shieh, Jeremy Shuman, Tricia Gorland Siaso, Phillippa Smith, Bruce Taylor, Lola Toppin, Jimmy Valentine's Lonely Hearts Club (neighborhood bar in Washington DC), Jessie Watrous, Ryan Wells, and Anita Williams.
To give an idea of what your donations may have accomplished for people in need:
(1) nutritional meals for 21,735 children (at $1 per group of 5 children)
(2) 725 chickens (at $6 each)
(3) 869 ducks (at $5 each)
(4) 4,347 planted trees (at $1 each)
(5) safe water for 2,717 people (at $1.60 per person)
Thanks for being a part of this fundraiser!


