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There are 740 glyphs in C, which could indicate we should count with 2 glyphs for each day. If we assume 2 glyphs per day and count from Ca1-1, we will discover that what we have read as the last glyph of Saturday (Ca3-20) appears not to belong there, at the end of the week. It may instead be the 1st glyph in a group of 10:

Ca3-18 Ca3-19 Ca3-20 Ca3-21 (72) Ca3-22 Ca3-23
35 36 37
Ca3-24 Ca3-25 Ca4-1 Ca4-2 (78) Ca4-3 Ca4-4
38 39 40

Honu in Ca3-21, at the end of day 36, has 'legs' in contrast to Rogo in Ca3-25. The end of the calendar of the week merges with the end of the year.

In day 42 the 3 tagata (who is only one) could be 'making a king' (hakaariki as Metoro explained it):

Ca4-5 Ca4-6 Ca4-7 Ca4-8 (84) Ca4-9 Ca4-10
41 42 43

The unusual manu rere in Ca4-8 maybe could be such a 'king', he has the same type of strange 'member in front' as the Rogo 'caught in strings' - a haati sign of leaving:

   
Ca3-25 Ca4-8 Cb5-16

Metoro commented Ca4-8 with manu (without the normally following rere), i.e. he underlined it was an immobile 'bird'. Dead birds do not move, but their carcasses will soon teem with life.