Maia Outrigger Canoeists Sydney

Maia Outrigger Canoeists Sydney Waka Ama/Outrigger canoe club at Botany Bay. Training location is at Yarra Bay (near La Perouse).

21/01/2025

Paddling into the sunrise this morning was spectacular!

WAITANGI DAY CELEBRATION !!!Saturday 1 Feb, mark it in your calendar!!!Nau Mai haere Mai koutou katoa mo te kaupapa o te...
15/01/2025

WAITANGI DAY CELEBRATION !!!
Saturday 1 Feb, mark it in your calendar!!!
Nau Mai haere Mai koutou katoa mo te kaupapa o tenei ra! Mauri Ora e te whanau.

03/12/2024

04/11/2024
LEGEND ALERT 🚨🚨🚨 Miss Faana, our Junior in the Maia family, won the 2024 NSW Sports Junior category NSW Pacific Awards!!...
04/11/2024

LEGEND ALERT 🚨🚨🚨 Miss Faana, our Junior in the Maia family, won the 2024 NSW Sports Junior category NSW Pacific Awards!!! What a great achievement for her and recognition of our amazing club! Coaches Kano, Benjamin Weekes, and Sammy, her crew and esp Rere Pureau!!! Well done everyone for making the club a safe and happy place for Faana to thrive! Maia spirit! Meitaki Ma'ata!

15/10/2024

Love this! Love it Rere Pureau!

Address

67-69 Yarra Road
Sydney, NSW
2036

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The birth of Maia OCC

By Kei Va'emolo

The day we decided we would create a new outrigger canoe club in January 2011, my sister Marina and I brainstormed ideas on what we would call the new club. One suggestion was “Nawi”, an aboriginal word meaning canoe. Other ideas we played with included “Pineula” and “Mulivai Fagatoloa”, the names of NZ clubs that introduced us to waka ama back in the mid-90s. The names we came up with up to that point didn’t seem right. After failing to find a name while brainstorming amongst ourselves, we reached for a Maori dictionary sitting near the table and randomly chose a page and word out of the dictionary. The first word chosen randomly was “Maia” with the meaning “To be brave, bold and confident”. We both agreed the name was a good one, and from that moment, MAIA outrigger canoe club was born.

We noticed a lack of juniors in the sport of outrigger canoeing at the time Maia was created. One of our main dreams was to increase the number of kids participating in waka ama and use the sport to reach out especially to at risk youth. Noticing a lack of Polynesian paddlers in a sport derived from the pacific, we also wanted to increase Polynesian participation in waka ama. The aim was to use waka ama as a tool to reconnect urban Polynesians to their identity while promoting a healthier lifestyle.

We wanted to differ from many of our competitors who were heavily adult based with a focus mainly on competition. We wanted to create a club that felt more like a family/whanau which allowed people of all ages and paddling abilities to take part either socially or competitively. Our success not only measured in medals and trophies, but rather achieving the core values of whanau, inclusiveness, comradery and personal development.