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Westland - Greymouth
Haast Pass | Fox Glacier | Okarito | Gold & Greenstone | Greymouth | Punakaiki Pancakes | Karamea

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Because Westland was forested for much longer than many other areas, it attracted the attentions of the early bird collectors, who sometimes took birds in large numbers. Of one collector on the Coast, Potts commented:

You are not expected to speak out on this subject of bird slaughter; you are numbered with the Philistines if you murmur at the wounding and maiming in the interests of museums; mortal offence was said to have been given by an indiscreet individual who recorded the fact that one collector alone collected and disposed of above two thousand specimens of the harmless kiwi.

It is as a result of collectors such as these that kiwi are so common in museum collections worldwide. The first exhibit I saw in the Natural History Museum in Montevideo in Uruguay was a kiwi far from home.

Because the West Coast faces Australia more rare birds have arrived here than in any other part of the country, and recent arrivals include the Nankeen night heron, Australian darter, glossy ibis, and the Australian barn owl.

Butterflies, too, arrive in Westland, some annually. The blue moon, one of the most striking species, turns up each year as does the Australian painted lady and the Australian blue tiger. What is amazing is that so many of these delicate creatures survive the rigours of a stormy Tasman Sea crossing. However, Westland does have butterflies of its own. The forest ringlet, one of the most attractive but least known endemics, was first discovered in its forests in 1881.

With a population of around 8000, Greymouth is the largest town on the West Coast. It also has much of interest to the naturalist. Hector’s dolphin occurs offshore along with a large variety of seabirds and by using Greymouth as a base much can be seen in the surrounding countryside.

From Greymouth there are two routes north. The first is inland along State Highways 7 and 69 to Inangahua Junction and from there either north to Nelson or back to the coast by way of State Highway 6. The alternative route is the coastal road to Westport along State Highway 6.

For those with an interest in history the inland route is recommended as it takes in many of the sites of the Coast's once frenetic gold-mining activity. Here, the land was devastated by mines whose wealth, as the explorer Charles Douglas cynically observed, 'goes directly home to the shareholders who never saw the land and who never intend to'. The forest is now gradually covering the scars of the worst excesses of this endeavour but it will be many generations before the land is completely healed.

Reefton, 79 kilometres inland from Greymouth, is one of the few surviving mining towns, although with a population of 1200 it is now a mere shadow of its former self. It does, however, provide access to the Victoria Forest Park. At almost 210,000 hectares, this is one of our largest forest parks and despite some logging still has good stands of beech as well as mixed beech and podocarp forest. It also has roa, the great spotted kiwi, weka, kaka and whio along with such introduced species as red and fallow deer, pigs and chamois. Some yellowheads are also still found here and it was near here that the naturalist William Walter Smith observed them moving through the bush in company with saddlebacks:

On reaching near the top of the gully, I heard the shrill ringing notes of a flock of yellowheads... 7hey numbered about two hundred, and were in rich plumage ... before the yellowheads had quite disappeared I heard the rich flute-notes of a flock of saddlebacks advancing ... probably no scene in bird life is more attractive or beautiful ....

For the naturalist, though, the coastal route offers more. The Port Elizabeth Walkway, seven kilometres north of Greymouth, offers a walk through typical coastal vegetation whose 'shaven’ appearance is due to the prevailing salt-laden winds. Also of interest are the limestone bluffs that have been pushed by uplift to an impressive 300 metres above sea level.

 



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