
Roanga Planet was created to honor this very philosophy – blending nature’s rarest gifts with cutting-edge research to support vitality, resilience, and elegant aging. Because every stage of life deserves to be lived beautifully.
In Traditional Chinese Medicine, deer antler has been used for centuries as a rejuvenating tonic, especially for seniors—to support joint function, blood health, cholesterol balance, tissue regeneration, and overall vitality.
Deer velvet may help:
While we can’t stop the aging process, we can choose how we experience it—with more ease, energy, and quality of life. Deer velvet offers a natural path to thriving in your later years—gently, effectively, and without compromise.

In traditional Māori understanding, long-term vitality arises from harmony between the individual, nature, and community. When this relationship is balanced, mauri — the life force — flows freely and without obstruction.








In Māori philosophy, this type of progression reflects the gradual “clarifying” of mauri — the life force — which begins to flow more freely once obstacles are removed and the body is given space to reset its natural rhythm.
Modern science now confirms what the Māori have understood for generations the state of one system always influences the others. When immunity is strengthened, energy rises. When regeneration improves, performance follows. When metabolic balance is restored, the whole body functions with greater ease.
This commitment echoes Māori values, where the relationship with the land (whenua) is defined by responsibility, respect, and balance. What nature provides must be used with gratitude — and with awareness of its impact on future generations.
Today, modern research confirms many of these traditional insights: marine bioactives, plant extracts, and animal-derived compounds can influence cellular processes, regeneration, and metabolic balance.
This philosophy aligns with Māori principles, where health is understood as a unity of body, mind, spirit, and relationships (te whare tapa whā). When one pillar weakens, the whole structure loses strength — but when it is supported, mauri (the life force) flows freely.












