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rakiura
You are invited to visit New
Zealands southernmost sanctuary and newest national park.
It occupies the greater part of our third largest island.
Rakiura National Park on Stewart Island is 30 km south of Bluff.
Its position at 47 degrees south in the Southern Ocean,
gives it an environment which is a world apart.
The isolation, and extremes of climate and topography, give
Rakiura a special character and charm. This is a land untouched
and unchanged for millennia, which has 400 residents in a small
village called Oban, in Half Moon Bay. Some 93% of this land,
including 170 islands and rock stacks in Foveaux Strait, are
administered as conservation estate. There is unlimited access to
most of the park on 250 km of tramping tracks. Transport is by
air from Invercargill Airport or by passenger ferry from Bluff -
a one hour crossing.
Rakiura means Glowing Skies in Maori, referring to
the Southern Lights (Aurora Australis) and the spectacular
blood-red sunsets often seen here. The islands coast is
deeply indented with harbours such as Paterson Inlet, Port
Adventure and Port Pegasus. Fishing and diving are popular
activities, as well as hunting for both red and whitetail deer.
Plan to spend a few days on Rakiura. A good starting point would
be a gentle beach walk, to catch a glimpse of Fiordland crested
penguins, yellow-eyed penguins or little blue penguins in the
bay. You may even see fur seals on the headland. A short boat
ride to Ulva Island, a bird sanctuary, can reward you with close
up views of tui, bellbirds, kaka, and kakariki and perhaps kiwi
and weka foraging in the seaweed along the shore. Overnight
tramps on the 3 day Rakiura Track and 10 day North West Circuit,
will reveal New Zealands southernmost forest giants - rimu,
totara and kaihikatea, along with a great variety of vegetation
in shrub land, wetland, and alpine herb fields.
Go the extra mile to visit this southern outpost of New Zealand.
Its a naturalists dream and ornithologists
delight. The tramping aint half-bad either.
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