Auckland Council website.
This website has changed
This is the former Auckland Regional Council website, which has some of the information and services you need if you live or do business in the area. Go to the main Auckland Council website to access the complete range of council services.
View parks A - Z

Park activities

Bird watching
close

Bird watching

Birds you can expect to see include Whiteface heron, oystercatchers, Pied Shag, Black Shag, Tui, Kereru, Fantail and Kingfisher.

Find other parks with bird watching

Boating
Camping - vehicle based
Dog walking with restrictions
close

Dog walking with restrictions

Dogs are permitted on a leash but prohibited from 1 July – 30 November for lambing.

Find other parks with dog walking with restrictions

Farm Animals - Viewing
close

Farm Animals - Viewing

Tapapakanga is a coastal farm park with sheep and cows.

Find other parks with farm animals - viewing

Fishing
Mountain biking
Picnics
close

Picnics

There are designated picnic sites behind the beach. Groups of 15 or more should book.

Find other parks with picnics

Sightseeing
Swimming
close

Swimming

Tapapakanga has a family swimming beach.

Find other parks with swimming

Volunteering
close

Volunteering

Please contact 09 536 7012 if you are interested in volunteering on our southern parks.

Find other parks with volunteering

Walks (1 hour or more)
Walks (less than 1 hour)
Wedding / civil union
close

Wedding / civil union

Ceremonies are able to be held on the park. A permit is required, contact the Senior Ranger Recreation on 09 366 2044.

Find other parks with wedding / civil union

Search for activities

Tracks

Coastal Walk
2 hours / 7.4 km
Farm Walk
2 hours / 5.9 km
Historic Loop Track
 ½ hour / 1.4 km
Mountain Bike Track
1 hour / 6.9 km

Tapapakanga

Located just south of Ōrere Point, beside the Firth of Thames, Tapapakanga takes you back to the world of the early settlers with its isolated beachfront homestead and pohutukawa-fringed coast.

As well as its rich Maori and European history this beautiful park offers rolling farmland, a winding stream and expansive coastal view, all within easy reach of Auckland.

The beach is ideal for swimming. Other recreational activities at Tapapakanga include picnics, barbecues, camping, fishing, kayaking, family walks and mountain biking.

Tapapakanga - a Puku takes its name from a time when the kumara propagation bed belonging to a local chief, Puku, failed.

Park facilities

Camping - view details
BBQ
There are wood BBQs available for use near the foreshore. Please bring your own supply of wood. Note: There are no BBQ's available at the Sea View campground. In extreme weather conditions BBQ's may be unavailable for use.
Beaches
The beach is white sand – and a short walk from the car park.
Campervan access
Summer and Winter: Self contained campervans can stay for a maximum of 1 night in the SCC parking area, if the Tapapakanga Stream and Kaparanui Stream SCC campgrounds are open. Winter Special: Maximum of 3 nights stay at the SCC parking area, if the Tapapakanga Stream and Kaparanui Stream SCC campgrounds are closed. The Tapapakanga Stream and Kaparanui Stream SCC campgrounds offer up to 7 nights stay for SCC campervans.
Cellphone coverage
Historic homesteads
The Ashby homestead is down near the beach front dating from 1900.
Interpretation
Long drop / vault toilet
Notice board
Parking
Additional parking available for 2000 in top paddocks.
Ranger contact phone
Ranger office
Security gates
Toilet block
Unsealed access road

History

For many centuries Tāpapakanga was an important dwelling place for Marutūahu iwi, especially Ngāti Pāoa and Ngāti Whanaunga.

In those days Tāpapakanga supported several large kāinga (villages) each with extensive kūmara and taro cultivation.

Archaeological sites on the park, mainly concentrated around the Tāpapakanga Stream and along the coastal strip, include three Māori pā, storage pits (rua), terraces(tūāpapa), shell middens (ahu ota ota) and ovens (umu) as well as stone heaps indicating extensive riverside gardens.

The Māori relationship to this land is commemorated by two pou whenua (carved posts) at the park entrance. An interesting feature of these carvings is the representation of an European, James Ashby, depicted carrying an axe.

Ashby settled on the land in 1899 and enjoyed a lifelong friendship with the local chief Tukumana Te Taniwha. James and his wife Rebecca built the existing homestead beside the beach in 1900. They raised 14 children on the property, which remained a family ownership until 1990.

The Auckland Regional Council purchased the last block of land in 1990 and officially opened the park in 1995.

Wildlife

The most common coastal birds are black (tōrea pango) and South Island (tōrea) pied oystercatchers, black shags (kawau), pied (kāruhiruhi) and little (kawau paka) shags, white-faced herons, black-backed  and red-billed gulls (tarapunga) and kingfishers (kōtare).

Further inland look for paradise and mallard ducks (pūtangitangi), pūkeko, pheasants, kererū (wood pidgeon), fantails (piwaiwaka), grey warblers (riroriro) and tūi. Campers will hear the mellow sound of the morepork (rūrū) at night.

Native bush

Large spreading pōhutukawa are a highlight of this park's coastline. Inland, much of the park is pasture but many of the steeper slopers have been fenced from stock and mānuka and kānuka planted to act as a nursery crop for other native trees as part of a restoration programme for the park.

The best example of remnant native forest on the park is at the northwestern end, where you will discover pūriri, taraire, rewarewa, māhoe, tawa and tarata.

Tanguru (Olearia albida), a rare tree daisy up to five metres tall, grows along this part of the coast. Its sweet scented flower heads appear around autumn.

Volunteering

We would love to have your help with work in regional parks. Age and physical ability is no barrier, as there are tasks and projects to suit all individuals or groups. For information on volunteering phone 09 366 2000.

 

Picture of Tapapakanga
You can experience some great beaches and a good work out up to the trig point with its stunning views.

Park opening hours

Pedestrian access
 
Open 24 hours
Gate opening hours
 
Daylight savings (summer):
8:00am - 9:00pm
Non daylight savings (winter):
8:00am - 7:00pm
Download map
 
Open map of this park in ARC-GIS
(our mapping application)

How to get to Tapapakanga

Drive south on Highway 1, take the Manurewa off ramp and head for Clevedon. From Clevedon follow the signs to Kawakawa Bay and on towards Orere Point. Just past Orere Point turn off the East Coast Rd down Deery Rd to the park.

Distance from Auckland CBD: 70 km

  
Get directions with Google Maps