258 258
Ab1-1 Ab1-2 Ab4-17 Ab4-18 Ab7-25 Ab7-26
1 2 261 1 260 261

Looking at the glyphs surrounding Ab7-25 we can find an allusion to a hole in the internal parallel Aa5-6 which is a tagata - in other words very close to a honui glyph:

Ab7-24 Ab7-25 Ab7-26
Aa5-4 Aa5-5 Aa5-6 Aa5-7

The time for Aa5-6, according to our viri investigations, seems to be the beginning of the 2nd cycle of the sun (just after midsummer). Hau tea in Aa5-5 shows the 'spreading out' ('multiplying', spring) season is at left (in the past). 14 glyphs earlier an important honui glyph (Aa4-72) indicates a gap in time:

15 270
Aa4-71 Aa4-72 Aa5-6 Aa5-7 Aa8-26
290 = 10 * 29

To count the ordinal numbers of the glyphs we should presumably beging not at Aa1-1 but from the earlier pito glyph (Ab8-43), we have found earlier (at vae kore).

With 2 glyphs per day (the assumption we have used for locating kuhane stations in Tahua) ordinal number 365 for Aa4-72 is to be read as half that number in days:

Aa4-70 Aa4-71 Aa4-72 Aa4-73 Aa4-74 Aa4-75
363 364 365 366 367 368
182 183 184

If we reduce 183 days with the 3 weeks from pito at Ab8-43 to the end of side b, we will have 183 - 21 = 162 days left, equal to 9 * 18, which could be a way to say that sun (18 as in 180) has reached his limit (9). Furthermore, 4-72 can be read as 4 * 72 = 288, and with 2 glyphs per day that means 144 = 12 * 12 - a sun square is finished.