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Park Point coastal walkway
Introduction
| Walkway guide and map
| Additional information
 |
| Poisonous mushrooms! |
|
Walkway guide and map
Guide yourself around the track.
Beginning at the end of Cable Bay Lane, walk down the track to Cable Bay.
Follow the track around the coast through Park Point, Matarahui Bay, Matarahui
Point and on to Te Wharau Bay. The track from Te Wharau Bay to Walter Frank
Drive completes the loop back to Cable Bay Lane. The entire route should take
about two hours to complete.
Look out for the numbered yellow disks around the walkway. The information
below corresponds with the discs and tells you about each of these places.
| 1 |
Greater Te Huruhi, including all land west of Surfdale,
was one of the last areas of Māori (Ngati Paoa) land on Waiheke, not
being subdivided until 1914. Park Point was part of this area and was
used mainly for grazing.
When it did come into Pakeha ownership, subdivision was hindered due to
lack of road access. As privately owned farmland there was no formal
public access, but recent subdivision and development has led to the
creation of a right-of-way. For the first time, walkers can now discover
this coastline. |
| 2 |
Rhamnus is a particularly invasive weed on the Waiheke
coastline. Spread by birds, it competes with native trees and can grow
rapidly into medium-sized trees. It has holly-shaped leaves. |
| 3 |
The Park Point peninsula extends so far into the
Sergeant Channel that you almost feel like your could reach out and
touch Motuihe Island.
Motuihe Island has been a quarantine station, a health camp and where
infamous World War I captain Count Felix von Luckner was detained. It is
now being transformed, thanks to replanting by the Department of
Conservation. |
| 4 |
Keep an eye out for mushrooms particularly from May to
August. These are poisonous, so please don't touch! |
| 5 |
From August to October, the beautiful large flowers of
the kowhai tree and the clematis vine are on display. Clematis are white
and kowhai are bright yellow. |
| 6 |
An old pohutukawa with drooping heavy branches welcomes
you into Matarahui Bay. Walk respectfully as you keep an eye out for the
rare New Zealand dotterel (they are shy birds that nest along the
shoreline). See if you can spot wild chives growing in a creek. |
| 7 |
Look over to Matarahui Point from the track and see if
you can find midden (historic māori waste site) in the soil. The trench
would have been a Māori defence fortification during times of battle
post-1800s - there are earthworks evident throughout this area. See if
you can identify them. |
| 8 |
Here you will find a remnant of mature native forest.
Trees such as kowhai, kanuka, puriri, kohekohe and of course the
granddaddy pohutukawas. |
| 9 |
Peering from Te Wharau Bay reveals Maunganui Point on
the other side. In the early 1900s a small pa (māori settlement) was
situated here.
After the First World War, many of the 20 Māori in the area suffered from
the flu epidemic. The Parris family living in the bay helped nurse the
sick and bury the dead. |
| 10 |
As you enter Te Wharau Bay and look to the right of the
beach, you will see strange shapes in the sand. Let your imagination run
wild… could it be the bones of a large whale, or maybe the skeleton of
an old abandoned boat? |
| 11 |
In the early 1900s, sand and shingle boat
owner/operator JJ Craig owned Te Wharau Bay. He had teams of draught
horses hauling heavy loads off his boats in Auckland. What better place
for a bit of rest and recuperation than Waiheke Island?
Horses would be brought over on the scows and could roam free over the
hills before returning to their heavy labour in the big city. William
Parris managed the land here from 1916 to 1922 and was an important part
of the community assisting the local Māori in the area, particularly on
the Te Wharau Point (assumed to be Maunganui Point). |
| 12 |
From left to right you can see Kennedy Point headland,
over to the east coast of Auckland - Duder Regional Park, Maraetai and
Beachlands, through to the eastern beaches in Howick. |

Updated September 2008