We value your privacy

We use cookies and other technologies to enhance your experience, analyse site usage, help with reporting, and assist in other ways to improve the website. You can choose to allow cookies and other technologies or decline. Your choice will not affect site functionality.

Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Hoheria angustifolia. Narrow-leafed lacebark. Houhi.

Name document
Fibre

Click to collapse Māori names Info

Click to collapse Common names Info

Click to collapse Fibre Info

The bark can be scraped, dried, beaten in to material suitable for making cloaks, kete, poi balls, belts, head adornments, piupiu. Belts sometimes made of houi, but more commonly of whītau "One of my informants deplored the fact that houi (ribbonwood) was now so scarce that the New Zealand Government would not permit "Tihore te rakau" (barking the trees). The bark ... was not dyed in olden days but is coloured now to make fancy articles for modern use on a small scale." Southern informants recorded by Beattie in 1920. (Beattie 1994)

Click to collapse Notes Info

For uses see Hoheria populnea

Click to collapse Metadata Info

d220c06a-4e69-415d-9e58-300c4d56b44d
name
14 June 2010
30 October 2023
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top