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Park activities

Bird watching
Camping - vehicle based
Dog walking with restrictions
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Dog walking with restrictions

Dogs are permitted on leash but are prohibited between 1 July to 30 November (lambing season). Dogs are prohibited from all camping and picnic areas.

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Farm Animals - Viewing
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Farm Animals - Viewing

Waharau has sheep grazing in its pastures.

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Kayaking
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Kayaking

Waharau is a popular spot for Kayak fishing.

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Mountain biking
Picnics
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Picnics

There are picnic tables in the main park or find your own favourite spot.

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Sightseeing
Swimming
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Swimming

The beach at Waharau is stony and the water is shallow but pleasant at high tide.

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Volunteering
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Volunteering

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

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Walks (1 hour or more)
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Walks (1 hour or more)

For the more adventurous choose one of the tracks below to explore the regenerating forest at Waharau.

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Walks (less than 1 hour)
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Walks (less than 1 hour)

Take a short walk through the regenerating forest at Waharau.

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Wedding / civil union
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Wedding / civil union

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

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Tracks

Lower Link Track
1 hour / 4 km
Puriri Grove Track
 ¼ hour / 1.2 km
Upper Link Track
1 ½ hours / 5.8 km
Upper Link Track Loop
 ¾ hour / 4 km
Waharau Bush Walk
 ¾ hour / 2.4 km
Waharau Ridge Loop
2 hours / 14 km
Waharau Ridge Track
3 ½ hours / 14 km
Whakatawhi Ridge Route
3 hours / 18 km

Waharau

Waharau extends from the gravelly shore of the Firth of Thames (Tikapa Moana) into the eastern foothills of the Hunua Ranges. The coastal part of this park lies between the Waharau Stream in the north and sandy Waihihi Bay in the south.

The inland section includes two campsites, barbecue areas and information. A series of loop tracks explore the foothills of the Hunua Ranges and link to some of the more rugged tramping tracks in the ranges.

Waharau is the eastern gateway to the Hunua Ranges and a series of loop tracks traverse the foothills and link with some of the more rugged tramping tracks, which cross the Ranges.

Park facilities

Camping - view details
Mobility access (partial)

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BBQ
There are 4 BBQs all wood burning, 2 on the coastal side of road and 2 along the Waihihi stream. Must provide own wood. Large groups must book.
Campervan access
Summer and Winter: Self contained campervans can stay for 1 night in the SCC parking area. Winter Special: Self contained campervans can stay up to 3 nights in the SCC parking area when the vehicle based campground is closed.
Interpretation
Limited mobility toilet
There is a ramp which provides access to the wheelchair accessible toilets. There is 1 male and 1 female.
Long drop / vault toilet
Native bush
Notice board
Parking
Additional parking is available at boundary campsite.
Picnic tables
There are picnic tables in the main park or find your own favourite spot.
Ranger contact phone
Sealed access road
Security gates
Toilet block

History

The Tainui canoe landed on the beach at the southern edge of the park in the 14th century bestowing the name Waihihi. This area was originally known for its sure aute (paper mulberry) grove, imported from the Pacific (planted there by Marama a wife of Hoturoa captain of the Tainui canoe), and for its beautiful karaka groves, one of which still grows on the foreshore.

Ngati Puku, a hapu (sub tribe) of Ngati Whanaunga, occupied the land from the 17th century and still maintains a reserve and urupa (burial ground) on the park.

Waharau was one of the larger Maori settlements along the coast in the late 1800s and was a place selected by Ngati Whanaunga for their inland tribal relatives Ngati Mahuta, the hapu of the Maori King to stay (on a seasonal basis) and exchange kai (food) as well as gain access to the abundant sea food (mussels and snapper) of the Wharekawa area and the Firth of Thames (Tikapa Moana). This connection is maintained with the Tainui campground on the park to this day.

European settlers milled the area's kauri and beech from the 1860s. They shipped the timber to Auckland and across Tikapa Moana to the gold mining settlements on the Coromandel Peninsula. The Auckland Regional Authority purchased the park between 1970 and 1973 to provide access to Hunua water catchment land. It was subsequently developed as a regional park and opened by the Maori Queen in 1979.

Wildlife

Sea and shore birds along the coast include spotted shags (parekareka), New Zealand dotterels (tuturiwhatu) and both species of oystercatchers (torea) while inland, kereru (wood pigeon), tomtits (miromiro), fantails (piwaiwaka), grey warblers (riroriro), tui and bellbird's (kormako) are found in the forest.

Native bush

The regenerating kanuka-dominated forest on the lower slopes is home to a wide variety of plant species, from club mosses (pukohu), filmy ferns (manuka), ground orchids (tutukiwi) and liverworts, to coral lichens (pukoko) that give bushes a magical 'goblin-like' appearance.

Regenerating mixed kauri and hard beech (tawai) forest grows on the higher slopes beside plentiful tanekaha, rewarewa, hinau and towai. The nearby gullies are draped in tawa forest with emerging rimu, northern rata, kahikatea and totara.

Picture of Waharau
A paradise for walkers, you can enjoy some pleasant lowland tracks through bush and up onto grassy knolls and out over the Firth of Thames.

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
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Open map of this park in ARC-GIS
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How to get to Waharau

Drive south on State Highway 1 and to State Highway 2 before turning off on to Mangatangi Road. From there take Kaiaua Road to Kaiaua on the coast, turn left up East Coast Rd and the park is about 1km past Pukekereru Lane.

Distance from Auckland CBD: 90 km

  
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