Wednesday, March 5, 2025

New Zealand Part 2

New Zealand Trip Report Part 2

Sunday Feb 9th

We left the hotel at 7 after breakfast and drove down to the marina. There was a bit of time before boarding the boat for our first pelagic so we had a look at the marsh and saw another Buff-banded Rail along with several flocks of waders including our first South Island Oystercatchers.

Buff-banded Rail



We clambered aboard our boat and left the harbour at 8am, heading out to sea. The weather was perfect with good visibility and just a gentle breeze. We saw a Pacific Reef-Egret roosting on the rocks as we headed out and it didn’t take long until we encountered our first penguin – a Little Penguin and we then saw quite a few more close inshore. Once into open water we didn’t run into any more.

Pacific Reef-Egret

Little Penguin


As we progressed further out to sea we started seeing our first shearwaters, firstly Fluttering and then Buller’s and Flesh-footed. One or two White-faced Storm-Petrels began to appear and then we had our first Cook’s and Black Petrels. A small pod of Short-beaked Common Dolphins swam around us for a while before heading off.

Fluttering Shearwaters


The skipper started chucking out fish and spread a nice slick of chum which we stayed around for a few hours as more birds came in to investigate. Several shearwaters just hung around the back of the boat waiting for handouts while other birds flew in and around us. 


Buller's Shearwater

Flesh-footed Shearwater


Black Petrel

Cook's Petrel


It didn’t take long before our main target arrived: New Zealand Storm-Petrel. Just over 20 years ago they were presumed to be extinct but they were rediscovered in this area and are now known to be breeding on some of the islets in this area. We had at least eight birds around the boat at any one time, they flew a lot faster than the White-faced Petrels and only occasionally put their feet down on the surface while the White-faced habitually bounced on the surface of the sea.

NZ Storm-Petrel (centre) with White-faced Stormies



NZ Storm-Petrel




White-faced Storm-Petrels


We also picked up a few other birds, the best being a single Black-winged Petrel as well as one Salvin’s Albatross and a Sooty Shearwater. 

Australasian Gannets

Salvin's Albatross


Sooty Shearwater




A few cetaceans were seen on the way back – a Bryde’s Whale and a mixed pod of dolphins with Common and Bottlenose. We docked late afternoon and went back to our motel to rest. One of the reasons for me booking on this trip was the number of pelagic trips and our first one had been a resounding success.

Monday Feb 10th

We checked out of our motel at 7.30 and headed for the Pearson Estuary, seeing a few Wild Turkeys in a roadside field, one of only a few introduced species from North America. There were a few wetland birds here including Sacred Kingfisher, Pied Stilt, White-faced Herons and both species of Pied Cormorant. A Monarch butterfly flew past, a species that has seemingly self-colonised from America.

Pied Cormorant


White-faced Heron


Next stop was at Te Arai Beach North. Along the track down to the beach was our first NZ Pipit (probably the first time I've seen a pipit walking on a sandy beach) and a couple of Brown Quail scurried across. 

NZ Pipit


On the beach were a few waders with Wrybill, Variable Oystercatcher (so named as they could be all black or have some white on the belly), NZ Dotterel and Barwits while out to sea a Buller’s Shearwater flew past. Driving back we encountered another introduced species from the Americas – California Quail.

NZ Dotterel



Variable Oystercatchers

Our first Wrybill, better views would come later

Caspian Tern

Kelp Gull


We returned to the estuary as the tide had dropped allowing us to see a few more waders including Banded Dotterel, South Island Oystercatcher and our main target for the area: Fairy Tern.

Fairy Tern (the equivalent to our Little Tern)

Silver Gull


In the afternoon we stopped by a pond where there were two species of small grebe: NZ Dabchick and Australasian Grebe. There were also Australasian Shoveler and a few Brown Teal.


Australasian Grebe

Australasian Shoveler & Brown Teal

Brown Teal

Masked Lapwing

A pair of Paradise Shelduck

Female Paradise Shelduck


After dinner we went for a walk in the forest and had great views of six Northern Brown Kiwi. They were larger than I had initially expected, around the size of a domestic cat and we watched them feeding at close range, sometimes in the forest, while others were out on the wide grassy tracks. We also saw or heard four Morepork. 

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