Wairarapa’s locally owned community newspaper
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2019
INSIDE: A train ride of random chats and a tribute to Helen Dew P10
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ichmond Funeral Home Warmly invite you, your family and your friends to a
CHRISTMAS SERVICE OF REMEMBRANCE
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Sunday 8th December 2019 at 3pm
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Her name says it all Hayley Gastmeier Some may say that Destiny Ranger has more on her plate than your average teenager. At 19, she’s a mother, a partner, and a fulltime student with many interests and enthusiasm to burn. She holds down a job as well – and it seems she is excelling under each of her many hats. Destiny is gaining her NCEA credits as a student at the Teen Parent Unit (TPU). And in the weekends, she works as a tour guide at Pukaha National Wildlife Centre, sharing the cultural history of the reserve and stories about the tangata whenua of the area. But the path Destiny was on a short while ago wasn’t necessarily one to success. “I was just too free,” she admits. “I didn’t really have any cares.” She said she was “in a dead zone” and took living as her “own boss” to a whole new level. It was only when she fell pregnant with her now three-month old son, Ahurei Waaka, that she decided to really make a go of things. “Becoming pregnant pretty much bucked my
ideas up. “I had another life to raise and had the responsibility of making sure my son grows up with everything he needs.” Destiny, of Masterton, left school when she was 15 and went into full time work, including as a cleaner and in supermarkets and cafes. She was working in a factory when she found out she was pregnant at 18, following an earlier miscarriage. Almost a year after starting at the TPU, Destiny said she was pleased she decided to finish her education and be a role model for her son. “I want him to see that education is important. It gets you places.” Destiny wants to continue her education when she leaves the TPU at Te Wānanga o Raukawa, a Māori university. She and her partner, Heremaiah, both speak to their son in te reo and she is passionate about sharing the Maori culture with others. That’s one of the reasons she’s loving her job at Pukaha. Destiny said Pukaha general manager Emily Court, who works as a mentor with TPU students, approached them about a
potential job as tour guide on the new cultural tour – Te Hīkoi o Pūkaha. “She understands how hard it is to get your foot in the door after having a baby, Destiny said. “So then I applied for the job when my son was a week old. “The next week they got me in for an interview and they had offered me the job even before I’d left.” Destiny said she then worked hard to learn all the knowledge she needed to be able to lead the tour. She said being one of four tour guides meant she had flexibility for her family’s needs. “It’s really good, if my son’s sick I can just take the day off. “But I work pretty much every weekend and it’s been awesome because I love being outdoors and involving tikanga Maori Continued on page 3
Destiny Ranger and her son, Ahurei Waaka. PHOTO/HAYLEY GASTMEIER
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