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![[Marahau flag]](../images/n/nz-marah.gif) image by James 
Dignan, 2 June 2024
 image by James 
Dignan, 2 June 2024See also:
From
  
  https://www.stuff.co.nz/nelson-mail/news/117812535/marahaus-flag-flies-proudly-over-independent-community 
  (Dec 05 2019):
Marahau's new flag, named Te Hau, flies along the foreshore 
  of the Abel Tasman township. It was designed by local artist Tim Wraight and 
  spearheaded by vexillophile Wally Bruce. Flags to mark Marahau's "independent" 
  character are flying over the beachside village thanks to a collaboration 
  between an artist and a flag enthusiast. The flag named Te Hau was designed by 
  local sculptor Tim Wraight in 2012 during an exhibition focused on the 
  "autonomous enclave" of Marahau and its neighbouring inlet, Otuwhero. Wraight 
  said the flag was created after input from the seaside community and 
  inspiration from the surrounding environment.
The blue represents the sea 
  and sky, the green triangle for Takaka Hill, the golden sand bay is depicted 
  in the crescent moon and the two stars are the two islands, Adele and 
  Fisherman. 
The gateway to the popular tourist destination deserved its own 
  flag, he said, because Marahau and Otuwhero locals felt "very separate from 
  the rest of the region. We kind of feel a little bit independent."
Despite 
  being the flag's creator, Wraight said it was Marahau vexillophile Wally Bruce 
  who spearheaded the idea of making the flag official. Bruce said he had been 
  passionate about flags for "years and years and years". When he arrived in 
  Marahau in 2010 to run a business, Bruce was keen to set up a flag. "I found 
  out before too long there was already one but it had been developed a number 
  of years ago and been shelved."
John Moody, 1 February 2020
A tiny bit of information about Marahau. It's a small settlement close to the 
top of the South Island, and is the gateway to Abel Tasman National Park. It 
lies on the northwestern coast of Tasman Bay, 50 kilometres northwest of the 
nearest city, Nelson.
The area's landscape is dominated by two large bays, 
Golden Bay and Tasman Bay, and by the limestone hills of Abel Tasman and 
Kahurangi National Parks. These hills contain many of New Zealand's most famous 
caves, and are also significant in that they act as a natural filter for local 
groundwater systems, producing some of the country's clearest lakes and rivers. 
Among these hills is the (somewhat notorious) Takaka Hill, which is crossed by 
the area's main highway in a series of sharply winding turns.
Marahau itself 
is little more than a service town for the national park, with many tourists 
passing through on the way. It has a population of about 600. The nearest town 
of any significant size is Motueka, 10 kilometres to the south.
James 
Dignan, 2 February 2020
The flag's design - which is unusual as it is vertical - represents the local 
landmark of Takaka Hill, the crescent form of the bay on which Mārahau is 
located, and its two offshore islands, Motuareronui (Adele) Island and Fisherman 
Island.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/nelson-mail/news/117812535/marahaus-flag-flies-proudly-over-independent-community
James Dignan, 2 June 2024