Dogs No Dogs
Features
Birding · River/Creek · Views
Kauri trees grow along these trails. Please use the gear cleaning stations at the start and end of your hike to prevent the spread of Kauri dieback.
Description
From the
Long Road Track, the Whakatiri Track starts through a gate and heads along a doubletrack downhill to start. The trail here runs between two electric fences and is easy to follow at this point. There is a small stream crossing that can be a bit boggy after rain.
You'll then come to another gate and, surprisingly, a frisbee golf course in the middle of a large pasture. The trail here becomes vague, and you'll want to look for orange-blazed posts, keeping to the top (south) end of the pasture. If you end up following the yellow-blazed frisbee golf posts or the white equestrian blazes, you may find yourself downhill from the enclosed Pae O Te Rangi Campsite - a sign that you are no longer on the trail (not that I would know this from personal experience. Some days, I just enjoy wandering around in a cow field).
The trail exits the the southeast corner of the pasture and heads on a rolling and wide grass downhill surrounded by thick underbrush. At the bottom of this hill, you'll continue east, skirting a small stream. There are sections that can be muddy.
Near the end of the track, you'll eventually come to a creek crossing where you'll have to ford the stream. You'll probably end up with wet shoes here unless you are a talented rock hopper. From here, the trail cuts across the base of a golf course green to end back at the parking lot.
Flora & Fauna
Lowland podocarp and broadleaf forest. Fantails and tuīs in the woods; paradise ducks and pūkeko in the pasture/frisbee golf course.
Contacts
Shared By:
Kristen McGlynn
0 Comments