Talk:Fiordland

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this sound is found in fiordland, answer starts with a D, can anyone help?

Drip.

Doubtful sound is one of the two commercially visited fiords... Doubtful Sound is the deepest of all the fiords at 420 metres, and is the second longest fiord at 40 km long. There are three distinct arms. Several outstanding waterfalls including the Browne Falls (619 metres) and the Helena Falls at Deep Cove. The soaring 900m sea cliff of Commander Peak is an imposing sight at the entrance to Hall Arm. Doubtful Sound is home to Bottlenose dolphins, New Zealand fur seals and the Fiordland crested penguin. At the most eastern end of Doubtful is Deep cove, outlet to New Zealands biggest hydro-station, Real Journeys and fishermen use the cove as well, also there is a lodge cattering to school groups and large partys. Thorney 21:25, 1 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Reo Māori Etymology note[edit]

I reached out to Ngāi Tahu to see if there was a Ngāi Tahu source for the etymology of Te Rua-o-te-Moko, as it didn't seem to be on the Kā Huru Manu site. They pointed me to the Beattie source as the best recording of the tradition, but if there are sources in the future that come directly from Ngāi Tahu (such as a citable cultural heritage report, Kā Huru Manu, or another good source, it would be good to update the citations. --Prosperosity (talk) 22:46, 28 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]