The magazine is based in the Mahurangi, but aimed also at the harbour’s regional audience, most of which resides farther south, in
the Makaurau metropolis.
Founding editor, Cimino Cole, conceived the
Mahurangi Magazine as a means of helping restore the sense of Mahurangi community that existed when the harbour was the local highway, and to give expression to the aspiration held by all who love her—to see the outstanding natural beauty of this landscape endure.
As production editor, Cimino has helped two important publications see the light of day:
Jade River: A History of the Mahurangi by Ronald Locker and
Changing Times by Kit de Latour.
But if Cimino has a preoccupation with history, it is with how its children’s children will judge the baby boomer generation. Did it have the vision and courage do more than business as usual, while the time to drastically reduce human impact on the planet was frittered away?
The use of the magazine metaphor for the
Mahurangi Magazine is a deliberate signal that the articles are intended to be enjoyable, not just informative, and definitely not preachy—to be devoured as a printed magazine article is devoured, in one sitting.
It is no longer sustainable to publish periodicals on paper—it borders on the irrational, post proof of anthropogenic global warming.
The E word’s here and the E word’s
good*.
*Apologies to Babybird, The F-Word
Part of a hope-based network restoring and enjoying the Mahurangi
Editor Cimino Cole