Jurassic fun for museum kids

Travis Bell, 11, – who is starting Cambridge Middle School this year – gets a photo with Rista the raptor trainer, Rista Theron, and animatronic raptor Tai.

Have you ever panned for gold, dug up fossils or met a raptor called Tai in Te Awamutu?

Those looking for some school holiday fun in town last week found just that at Te Awamutu Museum Education and Research Centre.

Members of the museum’s kids’ club – Tui and Tama Club – were given a first look at a display put on by Legends Unleashed Dinosaurs Aotearoa on Thursday morning, before it was opened to the wider public later in the day.

Dallas Griffin, 6, goes in search of ‘fossils’ at Te Awamutu Museum Education and Research Centre last week. Photo: Jeremy Smith

Te Awamutu Museum Education and Research Centre exhibitions coordinator Henriata Nicholas told The News the morning’s  peek for kids’ club members – of which there are about 600 Waipā wide – was a reward for those who had attended all six of the monthly Tui and Tama activity programmes held at the museum between July and December last year.

Those have included monthly themes such as Matariki, ancestry, Te Reo Māori and myths and legends.

“This is just another way this fantastic space can be used for the kids to have fun,” she said.

For founder Darren Bell – or Dinosaur Darren – the genesis of Legends Unleashed Dinosaurs Aotearoa came from childhood stories of his tupuna  and legends of taniwha recited to him by his grandmother.

Rista the raptor trainer, Rista Theron, left, and Dinosaur Darren – Darren Bell – present to Te Awamutu Museum Education and Research Centre kids club, Tui and Tama Club, members with Kihikihi’s Mayer McCall, 9. Photo: Supplied

Beginning in 2004, Legends Unleashed Dinosaurs Aotearoa takes tamariki on an educational journey back in time, not only to the age of dinosaurs, but the days when Darren’s tupuna encountered the mighty taniwha.

The programme is run in schools and kindergartens Waikato wide.

Joined by Rista Theron, or Rista the raptor trainer, in Te Awamutu – children who attended were given the chance to go gold panning, dig for fossils and meet Tai the animatronic raptor.

“The whole area of science and geology has become a bit of a passion,” Darren said.

“If we care for, steward and respect our whenua well, it has some incredible gifts to give us,” he said.

And, by bringing the world of dinosaurs to life in a way which creates excitement, Darren said, the hope was to inspire passion in Aotearoa’s “little dinosaur hunters”, who could one day work in the industry.

Hudson Griffin, 5, goes in search of ‘fossils’ at Te Awamutu Museum Education and Research Centre last week. Photo: Jeremy Smith

Travis Bell, 11, – who is starting Cambridge Middle School this year – gets a photo with Rista the raptor trainer, Rista Theron, and animatronic raptor Tai. Photo: Jeremy Smith

More Recent News

Charlotte leads board

New Cambridge Community Board chair Charlotte FitzPatrick wants to build a bridge between the community and Waipā District Council. “I have an interest in community relations and engagement. I run my business here, live in…

Election dominates stats

Our online breaking coverage of the local body elections dominated last month’s Cambridge News web statistics with nearly a quarter of all visits going to the constantly updated page. The home page was second followed…

News in brief

Car attraction Organisers of the two-day 125th  jubilee at Cambridge Golf Club next week have secured a new car as a prize for the first golfer to get a hole in one at the par…

It’s your business

Good Local Media’s two monthly business publications in Waikato and Bay of Plenty – out this week – both feature young entrepreneurs making their mark in regional competitions. A bumper 40-page edition of Waikato Business…