The Hokitika Wildfoods Festival is an annual event held in early March in
Hokitika
Hokitika is a town in the West Coast region of New Zealand's South Island, south of Greymouth, and close to the mouth of the Hokitika River. It is the seat and largest town in the Westland District. The town's estimated population is as of .
...
,
New Zealand
New Zealand ( mi, Aotearoa ) is an island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It consists of two main landmasses—the North Island () and the South Island ()—and over 700 smaller islands. It is the sixth-largest island count ...
. Its main attraction is an array of unusual foods, including
huhu grub
The huhu beetle (''Prionoplus reticularis'') is a longhorn beetle Endemism, endemic to New Zealand. It is the heaviest beetle found in New Zealand.
Māori name
To Māori language, Māori, the Larva, larval form is known as huhu (also tunga hae ...
s, lamb's testicles, and horse semen.
Origin
The Wildfoods festival was started in 1990 by
Hokitika
Hokitika is a town in the West Coast region of New Zealand's South Island, south of Greymouth, and close to the mouth of the Hokitika River. It is the seat and largest town in the Westland District. The town's estimated population is as of .
...
local Claire Bryant, a producer of
gorse
''Ulex'' (commonly known as gorse, furze, or whin) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Fabaceae. The genus comprises about 20 species of thorny evergreen shrubs in the subfamily Faboideae of the pea family Fabaceae. The species are n ...
-flower and rose-petal wine, who wanted to celebrate the flavours and produce of the
West Coast West Coast or west coast may refer to:
Geography Australia
* Western Australia
*Regions of South Australia#Weather forecasting, West Coast of South Australia
* West Coast, Tasmania
**West Coast Range, mountain range in the region
Canada
* Britis ...
.
The first festival in March 1990 coincided with Hokitika's 125th anniversary and was run by Heritage Hokitika.
It took place in a newly-developed heritage area on Gibson Quay in downtown Hokitika.
The first Wildfoods had 30 stalls, and attracted 1800 people.
Alison Holst
Dame Alison Margaret Holst (née Payne, born 1938) is a best-selling New Zealand food writer and television celebrity chef.
Biography
Holst was born in Dunedin, and graduated from the University of Otago, then a constituent college of the Univ ...
was the celebrity judge.
Wildfoods has traditionally been run on the second Saturday in March, the driest time on the West Coast.
The weather has generally been fine, but in the third festival in 1992 a squall blew down the festival tent.
By that year visitor numbers had increased to 3,800, so in 1993 Wildfoods moved to its current venue of Cass Square, which has a capacity of 10,000.
In 1994 for the first time the festival was opened by the West Coast Member of Parliament,
Damien O'Connor
Damien Peter O'Connor (born 16 January 1958) is a New Zealand Labour Party politician who currently serves as Minister of Agriculture, Minister for Biosecurity, Minister for Trade and Export Growth, Minister for Land Information and Minister ...
, rather than the
Mayor of Westland
The mayor of Westland officiates over the Westland District of New Zealand's South Island. It has been administered by Westland District Council since 1989. The current mayor is Helen Lash, who was elected in 2022.
List of mayors
References
...
. One councillor decried the involvement of a "foreigner" as "propaganda by the Labour Party".
Management
The 1991 and 1992 festivals had been run by the South Westland Community Activities Trust, but
Westland District Council
Westland District Council is the territorial authority for the Westland District of New Zealand.
The council is led by the mayor of Westland, who is currently . There are also eight ward councillors.
Composition
Councillors
* Mayor
* Northern ...
took over the operation of the fourth festival in 1993.
Mike Keenan was appointed as festival coordinator, assisted by Lance Rae and a voluntary festival committee (numbering 17 by 2005).
The use of festival currency stopped after 1994, and by 1995 the event, sponsored by
Monteith's
Monteith's Brewery Company was originally a family-owned brewing company until it was bought by DB Breweries. It continued to brew its beers on the West Coast of New Zealand until DB decided that the cost of keeping production there was no lon ...
, had expanded to cover Cass Square.
By the next year the festival had reached its peak number of 90 different stalls.
Westpower, the other major sponsor since 1990, was taken over by
Trustpower
Manawa Energy Limited, formerly Trustpower, is a New Zealand electricity generation company that offers bespoke electricity products to commercial and industrial customers across New Zealand. Manawa Energy has 26 hydro-electricity schemes, with a ...
in 1999.
By 2003, after ten years of steady growth, Wildfoods Festival attendance peaked at 22,500 (Hokitika at the time had a population of just 3,500).
That year over 100 of
whitebait
Whitebait is a collective term for the immature fry of fish, typically between long. Such young fish often travel together in schools along coasts, and move into estuaries and sometimes up rivers where they can be easily caught using fine-m ...
and 19,000 litres of beer were sold. Over half the visitors came from Canterbury (and 81 per cent from the South Island), only 2 per cent from Auckland, and 9 per cent from overseas.
At its height the festival attracted 25,000 under-age revellers, who smashed windows, lit bonfires on the beach, and left litter over central Hokitika; 20 were arrested, and there were calls for Wildfoods to be cancelled. Subsequently ticket sales were capped at 15,000,
and a liquor ban was introduced downtown, with all alcohol being sold in plastic cups.
Sixty-eight arrests were made in 2012 for breaching the liquor ban (although none were at the festival site), but in recent years arrests for disorderly behaviour were lower: fifteen in 2016,
eight in 2017.
In 2005 the Wildfoods Festival received a New Zealand Tourism Award in the Innovation category.
A 2012 study by BERL estimated the benefit of Wildfoods to the West Coast region as $6.5 million a year.
The festival boosted accommodation nights in Hokitika at the end of the summer; before the recent explosion of
Airbnb
Airbnb, Inc. ( ), based in San Francisco, California, operates an online marketplace focused on short-term homestays and experiences. The company acts as a broker and charges a commission from each booking. The company was founded in 2008 b ...
numbers in Hokitika, there was limited hotel/motel accommodation in Hokitika (approximately 600 people in 2003),
and many residents rented out private rooms to host the influx of tourists.
Ten years after the last survey, over a quarter of the festival attendees now came from the North Island, 11 per cent were from Auckland, and 5 per cent from overseas.
Ninety per cent (9,700) were from outside the West Coast region, an unusually high proportion for a national festival.
The largest visitor age group was 21–29 year olds.
Each visitor stayed an average of 2.5 days and spent on average $540.
Around 60 community groups ran stalls or provide services to the festival for fund-raising purposes, raising over $110,000; the kitchen of the
Karamea
Karamea is a town on the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand. It is the northernmost settlement of any real size on the West Coast, and is located northeast by road from Westport. Apart from a narrow coastal strip, the town of Karam ...
Community Hall, for example, was refurbished with the proceeds of their stall.
The festival was estimated to create 47 full-time-equivalent jobs.
In 2016, after five years of losses, the festival again made a profit.
The festival had cut expenses by $120,000, reintroduced a pre-party at Hokitika Beach, and revived the after-party that had been cancelled in the preceding two years.
The Westland District Council had continued to run the festival, despite losses, because of the economic benefit it provided to local businesses and the community.
After being organised by the
Westland District Council
Westland District Council is the territorial authority for the Westland District of New Zealand.
The council is led by the mayor of Westland, who is currently . There are also eight ward councillors.
Composition
Councillors
* Mayor
* Northern ...
for 29 years, Wildfoods was outsourced in 2019 to publicly-owned and Council-controlled organisation
Destination Westland, who after some contention over whether the festival was a good financial risk have continued to run it.
Mike Keenan ran the Wildfoods Festival for 21 years but was made redundant in 2014 when the Council disestablished its events department.
Subsequent managers were Ashley Cassin (2016),
Sarah Brown (2018),
and Amber Popaite of Destination Westland (2019).
Food
The Wildfoods Festival's distinctive identity comes from the range of unusual foods available. Its most notorious offerings include:
*
Huhu grub
The huhu beetle (''Prionoplus reticularis'') is a longhorn beetle Endemism, endemic to New Zealand. It is the heaviest beetle found in New Zealand.
Māori name
To Māori language, Māori, the Larva, larval form is known as huhu (also tunga hae ...
s, the larvae of the large New Zealand beetle ''
Prionoplus reticularis,'' retrieved from rotten logs that are chopped up on site''.'' Sometimes served live to daring or intoxicated attendees,
but usually cooked on a barbecue, these are described as "nutty and meaty" in flavour.
*
Escargots
Snails are considered edible in many areas such as the Mediterranean region, Africa, or Southeast Asia, while in other cultures, snails are seen as a taboo food. In American English, edible land snails are also called escargot, taken from the Fren ...
(or Westcargots)
made from the introduced European snail ''
Cornu aspersum
''Cornu aspersum'' (syn. ''Cryptomphalus aspersus''), known by the common name garden snail, is a species of land snail in the family Helicidae, which includes some of the most familiar land snails. Of all terrestrial molluscs, this species may ...
'', gathered by locals from their gardens, and fed on carrots for three days by
Westland High School
Westland High School is a public high school located in Galloway, Ohio. It is one of 4 high schools in the South-Western City Schools District. SWCS is located in the southwestern portion of Franklin County in Columbus, Ohio. Westland High Sch ...
teachers,
or on flour for a week by the Hokitika Girl Guides and Brownies.
* Sheep testicles or "mountain oysters", not to be confused with
Rocky Mountain oysters
Rocky Mountain oysters or mountain oysters, or meat balls, also known as prairie oysters in Canada (french: animelles), is a dish made of bull testicles as food, testicles. The organs are often deep-fried after being skinned, coated in flour, p ...
(bull testicles)
* Pigs' nipples ("nipples on a stick") and snout on a stick
* Stallion
semen
Semen, also known as seminal fluid, is an organic bodily fluid created to contain spermatozoa. It is secreted by the gonads (sexual glands) and other sexual organs of male or hermaphroditic animals and can fertilize the female ovum. Semen i ...
, squirted from a syringe (a microscope is available to examine the live
spermatozoa
A spermatozoon (; also spelled spermatozoön; ; ) is a motile sperm cell, or moving form of the haploid cell that is the male gamete. A spermatozoon joins an ovum to form a zygote. (A zygote is a single cell, with a complete set of chromosomes, ...
)
* Home-brewed
moonshine
Moonshine is high-proof liquor that is usually produced illegally. The name was derived from a tradition of creating the alcohol during the nighttime, thereby avoiding detection. In the first decades of the 21st century, commercial dist ...
, served one year by the Hokitika Rotary Club with a sheep drenching gun.
Other foods offered at the festival have included chicken feet, jellied fish eye shots, lamb tails,
crocodile
Crocodiles (family (biology), family Crocodylidae) or true crocodiles are large semiaquatic reptiles that live throughout the tropics in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia. The term crocodile is sometimes used even more loosely to inclu ...
and
kangaroo
Kangaroos are four marsupials from the family Macropodidae (macropods, meaning "large foot"). In common use the term is used to describe the largest species from this family, the red kangaroo, as well as the antilopine kangaroo, eastern gre ...
bites, baby
octopus
An octopus ( : octopuses or octopodes, see below for variants) is a soft-bodied, eight- limbed mollusc of the order Octopoda (, ). The order consists of some 300 species and is grouped within the class Cephalopoda with squids, cuttle ...
, fish heads, pig
pizzle
Pizzle is a Middle English word for penis, derived from Low German or Flemish Dutch , diminutive of , meaning 'sinew'. The word is used today to signify the penis of an animal, chiefly in Australia and New Zealand.
Original uses
The word ''piz ...
, sheep brain pâté,
sweetbreads
Sweetbread is a culinary name for the thymus (also called throat, gullet, or neck sweetbread) or pancreas (also called stomach, belly or gut sweetbread), typically from calf (french: ris de veau, es, hígado) or lamb (). Sweetbreads have a rich ...
,
wild pork,
whitebait
Whitebait is a collective term for the immature fry of fish, typically between long. Such young fish often travel together in schools along coasts, and move into estuaries and sometimes up rivers where they can be easily caught using fine-m ...
fritters,
pāua
Pāua is the Māori name given to three New Zealand species of large edible sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs which belong to the family Haliotidae (in which there is only one genus, ''Haliotis''), known in the United States and Austral ...
,
pipi, wasp larvae ice cream, deer and bull semen, gorse-flower wine,
earthworms
An earthworm is a terrestrial invertebrate that belongs to the phylum Annelida. They exhibit a tube-within-a-tube body plan; they are externally segmented with corresponding internal segmentation; and they usually have setae on all segments. Th ...
,
possum,
pig's trotters
A pig's trotter, also known as a pettitoe, or sometimes known as a pig's foot, is the culinary term for the foot of a Domestic pig, pig. The cuts are used in various dishes around the world, and experienced a resurgence in the late 2000s.
Descri ...
,
mussel
Mussel () is the common name used for members of several families of bivalve molluscs, from saltwater and Freshwater bivalve, freshwater habitats. These groups have in common a shell whose outline is elongated and asymmetrical compared with other ...
s,
venison
Venison originally meant the meat of a game animal but now refers primarily to the meat of antlered ungulates such as elk or deer (or antelope in South Africa). Venison can be used to refer to any part of the animal, so long as it is edible, in ...
,
scallop
Scallop () is a common name that encompasses various species of marine bivalve mollusks in the taxonomic family Pectinidae, the scallops. However, the common name "scallop" is also sometimes applied to species in other closely related families ...
s,
hāngi, crispy
tarantulas
Tarantulas comprise a group of large and often hairy spiders of the family Theraphosidae. , 1,040 species have been identified, with 156 genera. The term "tarantula" is usually used to describe members of the family Theraphosidae, although m ...
, bovine
colostrum
Colostrum, also known as beestings or first milk, is the first form of milk produced by the mammary glands of mammals (including humans) immediately following delivery of the newborn. Colostrum powder is rich in high protein and low in sugar and ...
milkshakes, pork-blood casserole, cow udders, seagull eggs, live
grasshoppers
Grasshoppers are a group of insects belonging to the suborder Caelifera. They are among what is possibly the most ancient living group of chewing herbivorous insects, dating back to the early Triassic around 250 million years ago.
Grasshop ...
, and
whisky sausages.
The prizewinning recipe at the first Wildfoods Festival was venison
goulash, prepared by Pierre Esquilat of Hokitika's Cafe de Paris.
There are cooking demonstrations by celebrity chefs such as
Ben Bayly
Benjamin 'Ben' Bayly is a New Zealand chef. Bayly is known for judging My Kitchen Rules NZ alongside Gareth Stewart. He appeared as a VIP guest during a challenge in MasterChef New Zealand season seven, episode 16.
Background
Ben Bayly grew u ...
and
MasterChef NZ 2015 winner Tim Read.
Maggie Beer was the Festival celebrity chef in 1995, and Helen Jackson (who comes from Hokitika) in 1999.
File:Wildfoods 2021 MRD 01.jpg, Splitting wood for huhu grubs
File:Wildfoods 2021 MRD 04.jpg, "Westcargots"
File:Wildfoods 2021 MRD 02.jpg
File:Hokitka Wildfoods Festival 01.jpg, Sheep testicles, also known as mountain oysters
Other events
Dressing up in novelty costumes is common at Wildfoods, and the festival runs a Feral Fashion competition.
Musical entertainment has been provided by the
New Zealand Army Band
The New Zealand Army Band ( mi, Puoro Puoro Ngāti Tūmatauenga) is a brass band that primarily provides musical support for the New Zealand Army at all state and ceremonial occasions. It was founded in 1964 by Captain James Donald Carson (1935 ...
,
the Black Seeds,
Salmonella Dub
Salmonella Dub is a dub/ drum n bass/reggae/ roots band from New Zealand. The band was formed in 1992 by Andrew Penman, Dave Deakins, and Mark Tyler. The band has toured extensively throughout New Zealand, Australia, and Europe, including the UK ...
,
Elemeno P,
and local musicians such as the
West Coast Kokatahi Band, Westland District Brass, and Hokitika Districts Country Music Club.
A
fireworks display ends the festival.
File:Hokitka Wildfoods Festival 10.jpg, "Army Men"
File:Hokitka Wildfoods Festival 11.jpg, "Mortal Kombat"
File:Hokitka Wildfoods Festival 07.jpg, "Barbie and Ken"
In culture
The 1999 New Zealand feature film ''
Magik and Rose'', directed by
Vanessa Alexander, is set before and during the Hokitika Wildfoods Festival. It was partly shot at the 10th festival in 1999 (guest presenter
Gary McCormick makes a cameo).
The film's world premiere was at Hokitika's Regent Theatre at the 2000 festival.
References
Further reading
* Crimp, Daryl. (2000). ''The New Zealand Wildfoods Cookbook''. Reed: Auckland.
* Crimp, Daryl. (2014). ''The New Zealand Wildfoods Cookbook Reloaded''. Halcyon Press: Auckland. {{ISBN, 978-1-877566-61-5
External links
Hokitika Wildfoods Festivalwebsite
Food and drink festivals in New Zealand
Recurring events established in 1990
Wildfoods Festival
Folk festivals in New Zealand
New Zealand cuisine