Ngā Ka Kai Au (Robinsons Bay)
Horomaka or Te Pataka o Rakaihautū - Banks Peninsula

Ngā Ka Kai Au (Robinsons Bay)
Information on the places of Horomaka or Te Pataka o Rakaihautū - Banks Peninsula
The old name for Robinsons Bay (after Charles Barrington Robinson) derives its meaning from an old fishing practice.
The bay with its mudflats was one of the best bays in the harbour for catching flounders (pātiki).
Once the fish were caught they were threaded with a bone needle to keep them together for transporting back to the pā.
The bone needle used is called an “au” hence the name Ngā ka kai au.
Sources
- Ogilvie, Gordon. Banks Peninsula – Cradle of Canterbury, Government Printer 2007
- Vangioni, Louis. Māori Names & Traditions – Points of Interest Around Akaroa Harbour, The Akaroa Mail, 1970









