Hiraka Hiku, 19, and Nataleah Taratoa, 18, met nearly 14 years ago in primary school, now they run Ringside Cafe.
Hiraka Hiku, 19, and Nataleah Taratoa, 18, met nearly 14 years ago in primary school, now they run Ringside Cafe.
Hiraka Hiku and Nataleah Taratoa, supported by the Bay of Plenty Youth Development Trust, started Ringside Cafe.
The Imagine Believe Achieve programme helps them with work readiness, mentoring, and holistic development.
The duo, once considered at-risk, now serve 30 customers daily and plan to expand their menu.
Before Hiraka Hiku, 19, and Nataleah Taratoa, 18, started Ringside Cafe, they did not like coffee. Now, they are passionate about it.
“We have been converted,” Hiku said.
Bay of Plenty Youth Development Trust operations manager Mark Inman said the organisation was supporting the duo under its Imagine Believe Achieve programme.
The programme combines tikanga Māori, te reo, and holistic youth development.
Grounded in the Māori healthcare model Te Whare Tapa Whā, it offers work readiness training, fitness, guest mentoring, psychological support, and post-programme guidance to empower taiohi (youth) towards employment, further study, and resilient futures.
“The two young women, who were once considered at-risk youth, have turned their lives around,” he said.
Hiraka Hiku takes the orders and Nataleah Taratoa makes the coffee.
Hiku and Taratoa, friends for 14 years, opened their cafe seven weeks ago outside the Tauranga Central Baptist Church at 640 Cameron Rd.
Outside of catering, the duo would like to take the coffee cart on the road and attend more significant festivals, but they would need generators and transportation, Inman said.