<h2>Of kauri, kahikatea and kiwi</h2><p>Known more commonly now as just Kauri, Kaurihohore means &quot;kauri tree with the bark stripped off&quot;, likely reminiscent of the general forest stripping of the area in its early days.</p><p>When it was being settled in the mid 1800s, Kaurihohore was a hive of industry.  Hikurangi swamp at the time was covered in ti-tree and kahikatea and &quot;Kauri&quot; itself seen as limiting wth its forest cover.  Clearing this was a slow and painful business as axes and slashers were the only tools.  Kiwi were often flushed out of the bush during the &quot;burns&quot; which were instituted to hasten the heavy work of clearing the land.</p><p>As the land was opened up, more settlers arrived.  By the 1870s peach trees grew wild everywhere, the fruit being so plentiful to be hardly saleable and fed to stock instead!</p><p>Kaurihohore may be a small settlement these days but it boasts interesting residents and their activities from the past.  Two local men, Carter and Myers, were in Alaska during the Yukon gold rush.  A Mrs Peat was one of the first women in the Whangarei district to gain her driver's licence.  J McCarten was in the rowing team at Karapiro Dam in the Empire Games of 1950.</p><p>What are the people of Kauri doing in the 21st century?  Tell us your stories here! </p><p> </p>