eaving
Dunedin take State Highway 1 south to Balclutha and from there
follow State Highway 92 to the Catlins State Forest. As far as
Balclutha the road is through farming country but south of the
town the terrain gets more rugged and one should drive carefully.
A wedge of undulating country running inland
between the Clutha and Mataura rivers as far as the town of Gore,
the Catlins is one of our least-known wilderness regions and certainly
deserves more attention than it currently gets.
Seals were once found along these southern shores
in large numbers and although fur seals are the only ones now
breeding here, it is probable that in the past other species did
as well. The remains of large numbers of Hooker's sea lions together
with numbers of sea elephants and sea leopards have been found
in middens throughout the country These, along with the remains
of the occasional Weddell seal, crabeater seal and Ross seal,
turn up on this southern coast from time to time.
That these animals had Maon names is significant
as lt indicates their regular occurrence on our coastline. Fur
seals are known variously as kekeno, or pakeke; Hooker's sea lion
as wakaha, or whakau; and the sea leopard was called pakaka.
If the seal populations had survived the depredations
of the Maori, their very existence was threatened by the mass
slaughter unleashed by the sealers who arrived in 1810. By 1840,
when settlers arrived in the Catlins area, the seal colonies had
been wiped out.
Also in 1840 the Sydney-based whaling captain
Edward Cattlin arrived to assess the navigable possibilities of
the river which now bears his name. For the equivalent of about
$185 in cash and guns, Cattlin bought from the local Maori the
land stretching for 32 kilometres on each side of the Catlins
River and running 90 kilometres inland. After years of negotiation
that lasted 17 years after the captain's death most of this purchase
was disallowed.
By the 1870s sawmillers were hard at work and
for about a century felling of the beech forests by up to 30 sawmills
at one time continued unabated. When milling ceased very little
high timber was left and most of this was confined to reserves
or inaccessible high areas.
Today Nugget Point is probably the best place
from which to start exploring the Catlins. This long, narrow headland
can be reached through Romahapa and by way of Kaka Point. From
the end of the road take the path to the lighthouse from which
far below the Nuggets can be seen, looking like the eroded fangs
of some defunct taniwha. (Definitely not a place for anyone with
vertigo!) On the rocks below can be seen a wealth of wildlife:
fur seals haul out here and a number of seabirds, including red-billed
gulls, gannets, spotted shags and white-fronted terns, breed here.
At many places along the coast south of the Nuggets
yellow-eyed penguins also breed and, if you should come across
this bird, leave it alone. It is now our rarest penguin and any
unnecessary disturbance could make it abandon its chick.
The first accessible beach in the Catlins is
Cannibal Beach, named for bones found here by the early settlers,
the gruesome relics of a battle between a raiding party of Ngati
Toa from the north under Te Rauparaha and the local Ngai Tahu
under Hone Tuhawaiki. Nearby is the Catlins River and along its
banks not far from the mouth is the Pounawea Reserve with some
significant old trees.
Further along the coast is Jacks Bay with the
island of Tuhawaiki just offshore. Large numbers of little blue
penguins and sooty shearwaters breed on Tuhawaiki, using burrows
dug in the clay cliffs.
Heading inland through Ratanui and Tawanui brings
you into the Catlin State Forest Park proper. This area is thought
to have been one of the last where moa survived and archaeological
evidence of this has been found along the banks of the Tahakopa
River which flows through the park a little further south.
The park itself contains a number of birds, including
kuku, tui, kaka, bellbirds, riflemen and yellowheads. Whio are
also still found here - this is one of the very few places on
the east coast of the South Island where it now occurs.