Waiatiu Falls Track

Waiatiu Falls Track

Whirinaki Te Pua-a-Tane Conservation Park

1 Rankers Review

1 Face-to-Face

2 Galatea

Your Nature Guide

Marios Gavalas's avatar

Marios Gavalas

Author And Researcher

Nau mai, haere mai

Nau mai, haere mai

I'm Marios, delivering the best of Aotearoa's nature walks to your device.

I've personally walked hundreds of New Zealand's tracks and spent months in libraries uncovering interesting information on New Zealand/Aotearoa. And you'll find a slice of that research on this page - enjoy!

Maps

FREE Header

Deep Nature NEW

Author Marios Gavalas, Rankers and hundreds of contributors bring you a free web map to help you get lost (and find yourself) in Aotearoa's nature.

FREE Header

Camping NZ NEW

Welcome to New Zealand's most comprehensive database of freely available camping information. This is the only travel map of its kind in NZ.

Information

Waiatiu Falls Track

3.2 km return | 1 hour 30 minutes return

The small but impressive waterfall tumbles in two stages over a narrow notch in the bluff. The rocks are scoured by the force of water to a variety of forest colours, while dark green mosses encrust those out of the line of fire. Near the base, the water hits a small platform, which sprays it to a final burst of foam, before its continuation over a natural weir downstream.

Walking Track

Access

Whirinaki Te Pua-a-Tane Conservation Park is signposted from SH38, 20 km from Murupara and 77 km from Waikaremoana. Turn into Minginui Road, just after Te Whaiti (coming from Murupara). A DoC campsite is situated at Mangamate Waterfall, 6.7 km from the junction on the right. The self-registration camp has toilets and tent sites by a small creek and waterfall. Minginui Village is a further 7.5 km, from where roads to most tracks depart. After Minginui all roads are unsealed and some are in a poor state of repair.

The start of the track is signposted from the River Road Carpark.

Track

The wide, well-formed and even track gently undulates through magnificent podocarp forest to a footbridge over the Waiatiu Stream. The sound of the falls becomes more audible as you approach the viewing platform.

Feature

“Whirinaki is one of the great forests of the world. Such a global comparison is needed to put it in its deserved ranking. It is the finest of all New Zealand’s remaining giant podocarp forests”.

This is the opening paragraph of To Save a Forest, a quality book published by David Bateman in 1984, authored by John Morton, John Ogden and Tony Hughes. This fine volume was written in response to the New Zealand Forest Service’s 1979 Management Plan for Whirinaki Forest Park, which proposed: “Some 19,740 hectares of indigenous forest are particularly suited to timber production of which 13, 590 hectares have been zoned for short and long term management”.

The Government of the time saw Whirinaki as a resource to be ‘managed’, a way to keep the nearby logging settlement of Minginui in employment. No regard was given to the magnificence of the podocarp giants and their place as a showcase of New Zealand’s botanical heritage.

The podocarps are a family of trees, whose lineage stretches back over 200 million years. They evolved before the appearance of flowering plants and are distinguished by a succulent foot like appendage on the seed. The antiquity, complexity and grandeur of the Whirinaki Forest makes it virtually unique in the New Zealand and global contexts. Nowhere else is there such density of massive rimu, matai, miro, totara, northern rata and kahikatea. These species were flourishing on Gondwanaland, the supercontinent that existed as an amalgamation of today’s Southern hemisphere landmasses. Dinosaurs roamed through a forest with a very similar make up.

There are a combination of factors contributing to Whirinaki’s uniqueness. The climate is superhumid, therefore there is low loss of moisture through evapotranspiration. The abundant rainfall nourishes a high species diversity in a localised area. Eight ash showers in the last 10,000 years have formed light, freely drained pumiceous loam soils, which can support high densities of vegetation. Volcanic activity has also levelled forests, creating new soil for vigorous recolonisation.

Some kahikatea reach over 60 metres in height, many with a massive girths. “These giants thrust up like swords to the light of the open sky”, writes Morton. The primary canopy is complete, old and virtually closed. The foliage of the sub-canopy also shades the forest floor, so the interior is devoid of substantial seasonal fluctuations. Empires of epiphytes and twisted liana bejewel the branches and trunks of their hosts. The evergreen leaves and honey-green of the dominant tawa sub-canopy filter through a sublime light.

The altitudinal range of Whirinaki displays a textbook succession of forest types. Dense podocarp forest to gives way to medium density podocarp forest and hardwood species. At higher altitudes, mixed podocarp-beech then merges to beech forest at the tops of the hills.

It was this priceless forest that the government of the 1970s decided should be logged for the short-term economic gains of a small community. The plans for destruction came as part of a wholesale policy to exploit the native timber resources of the entire country. Colin Moyle, the then Minister of Forests, proposed an international tender for logging, chipping and pulping of South Island beech forests. These ludicrous ideas prompted the Native Forests Action Council to submit a petition with 341,160 signatures to the government in 1976 – the largest petition New Zealand has ever witnessed. In 1978, nearby Pureora Forest was saved from loggers by activists sitting in the branch clefts of similarly massive podocarps to Whirinaki. A strong campaign waged by the Native Forest Action Council was unsuccessful in turning the minds of the New Zealand Forest Service, whose 1981 plan only designated 19% of Whirinaki’s area free from the loggers axe and saw.

In 1984 Whirinaki was reclassified as a Forest Park. This was seen by conservationists as a veiled bureaucratic facade with the potential for conservation minded management, but little in the way of concrete measures for protection. The conservationists contented the nearby mill at Minginui could easily be converted to processing the massive crops of exotic pines from nearby Kaingaroa Forest, thus ensuring Minginui’s employment for a generation.

In To Save a Forest, the authors concluded there were no real arguments to continue native logging, relating to either employment, export of domestic needs. “A successful campaign must see Whirinaki removed totally from the orbit of timber production and administered with entirely different non-exploitative aims in mind.”

Fortunately their vision and dedicated battling through stubborn bureaucracy has won through. “Few other places in the world could better provide this quality and variety of outdoor experience, remote from the affluence and artificiality of the conventional tourist round,” they contend. And rightly so.

“Whirinaki has no parallel of its kind on earth today. By its antiquity, in its great height and density, but more than all – by its sheer beauty, it inspires us with reverence and awe.” After a visit, you will surely agree.

Details

Feature Value Info

Organisation

DOC East Coast

Central government organisation

Location

North IslandBay of PlentyGalatea

Categories

  • Activity__walking_and_trekkingWalking
  • Free

Directions

To Coordinates

Coordinates

-38.6771014571132

176.69479598999

Latitude
-38.6771014571132
Longitude
176.69479598999

Nearby

Reviews

  • 4.5/5

    Well maintained tracks with the most spectacular native trees that we have ever seen in NZ

    Reviewed over 14 years ago and experienced in November 2008