NZ Life & Leisure

OUT OF THE WILD

THIS SPECTACULA­R PART OF FIORDLAND NATIONAL PARK WAS ONCE THE SITE OF EARLY EUROPEAN CONTACT, EXPLORATIO­N AND SETTLEMENT. THOSE EARLY PIONEERS, AND THE SUCCESSFUL ENDEAVOURS OF MORE RECENT CONSERVATI­ONISTS, HAVE INSPIRED A BOOK

- WORDS PETA CAREY

Welcome to a remote but spectacula­r part of Fiordland National Park, Dusky Sound

THERE ARE NO ROADS in this remote part of New Zealand. The only way in, other than by boat or helicopter, is on foot via the Dusky Track, a 10-day ordeal through mud and challengin­g terrain. Tamatea/Dusky Sound in southwest Fiordland is about as remote as it is possible to get in New Zealand.

It’s also, however, the country’s most fascinatin­g and beautiful region, as I found when researchin­g my book Tamatea Dusky, which covers 250 years of the area’s history.

Captain James Cook and the crew of the Resolution spent six weeks in Dusky Sound in 1773; the first and only meeting in Fiordland between Europeans and Fiordland Māori. This was followed swiftly by New Zealand’s first European settlement (long before the Bay of Islands in the north), its first shipwreck, first commercial trade and, 100 years later, New Zealand’s first ranger.

The present-day story is equally compelling. In the greater Dusky archipelag­o (Dusky, Acheron Passage, Wet Jacket Arm and Breaksea Sound), DOC is committed to one of the most significan­t restoratio­n and conservati­on projects in the world. Its ambitious plan for what is thought to be one of the most intact ecosystems on Earth aims to eradicate pests, re-introduce missing species and collect informatio­n about the area’s biodiversi­ty.

Since the 1970s, scientists, wildlife rangers and enthusiast­s have achieved what many said was impossible; restoring predatorfr­ee islands and conserving many of Aotearoa’s endangered birds. Many of the islands here are becoming a Noah’s ark for a biobank of several native species at risk, including the little spotted kiwi, tīeke/saddleback, mōhua, south island robin, the fiordland skink and, of course, the kākāpō.

Dusky is not an easy nor affordable travel destinatio­n. Several charter boats operate here, including the Pembroke and the Flightless, whose Pure Salt crew donate a massive amount of time and resources to much of the conservati­on work achieved. (Read about Pure Salt in NZ Life & Leisure, January/February 2019). Real Journeys also offers multi-day discovery cruises on the Milford Wanderer. Each of these operations has access to historical landmarks and many of the predator-free islands where endangered and threatened species thrive.

The research and writing of Tamatea Dusky took nearly two years. I was enormously fortunate to traverse many of the islands and mainland peninsulas and to be included in the conservati­on work. The highlight? Crossing the massive Resolution Island, to check stoat traps in typical Fiordland storm conditions was memorable, but perhaps for all the wrong reasons. Keeping my feet warm in unseasonal snow while searching for tokoeka (kiwi) was also challengin­g. When the weather did clear, I had to pinch myself at how lucky I was to see a view few people can experience - looking down onto Breaksea Sound from a remote 900-metre ridge. I saw kākāpō chicks hatch and heard the males boom through the night forest. There was the day we climbed Tamatea Peak above the Dusky Track; the view out over 100 alpine lakes and down to Dusky Sound only equalled by the fascinatio­n we had with the tiny and utterly beautiful rock wren we were searching for.

But perhaps the most memorable times have been to sit on a ship’s deck of an evening in the hazy fading light. Most people speak of more than just the beauty of the landscape. Be they Māori or Pākehā, they tell of a sense of wairua or spirituali­ty. Perhaps it’s because there are no roads riven over the past here; that visitors step ashore and touch the very trees that were standing 250 years ago, or quietly motor into a cove once used only by waka.

Tamatea/Dusky Sound casts a spell, a profound and enduring sense of what has come before, and what can yet be saved and protected for the future.

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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: The Seal Islands looking east along Dusky Sound; a female kākāpō nicknamed Atareta by DOC staff in her nest on predator-free Pukenui/Anchor Island. OPPOSITE: Fiordland Conservati­on Trust member Heather Barnes and the late Ron Bull, from Ōraka Aparima Rūnaka, released tīeke (saddleback) on the east coast of Five Fingers Peninsula in 2018.
THIS PAGE: The Seal Islands looking east along Dusky Sound; a female kākāpō nicknamed Atareta by DOC staff in her nest on predator-free Pukenui/Anchor Island. OPPOSITE: Fiordland Conservati­on Trust member Heather Barnes and the late Ron Bull, from Ōraka Aparima Rūnaka, released tīeke (saddleback) on the east coast of Five Fingers Peninsula in 2018.
 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: The mōhua, once known as the yellowhead and now classified as endangered, has a safe home on the archipelag­o; the rock wren is one of Aotearoa’s two surviving wrens and its only true alpine bird; once reduced to a population of just 36, the tīeke population now numbers more than 3000 thanks to conservati­on efforts; DOC ranger Tim Raemaekers with an adult southern fiordland tokoeka near Shy Lake on the mainland peninsula between Breaksea and Wet Jacket Arm; DOC scientist Graeme Taylor carefully extracts a tītī (sooty shearwater) from its nest on the Petrel Islands: Anchor Island looking towards Resolution Island with the island’s DOC hut in the foreground.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: The mōhua, once known as the yellowhead and now classified as endangered, has a safe home on the archipelag­o; the rock wren is one of Aotearoa’s two surviving wrens and its only true alpine bird; once reduced to a population of just 36, the tīeke population now numbers more than 3000 thanks to conservati­on efforts; DOC ranger Tim Raemaekers with an adult southern fiordland tokoeka near Shy Lake on the mainland peninsula between Breaksea and Wet Jacket Arm; DOC scientist Graeme Taylor carefully extracts a tītī (sooty shearwater) from its nest on the Petrel Islands: Anchor Island looking towards Resolution Island with the island’s DOC hut in the foreground.
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 ??  ?? The Milford Wanderer leaves
Wet Jacket Arm.
HOW TO GET THERE:
Charter boat companies include
Pure Salt (puresalt.co.nz), Fiordland Charters (fiordlandc­harter.co.nz) and Real Journeys (realjourne­ys.co.nz).
Fiordland Helicopter­s, Southern Lakes Helicopter­s and Alpine Helicopter­s also fly into the area.
HOW TO DONATE:
See puresalt.co.nz for ways to contribute time and/or resources to conservati­on efforts, or donate at fiordlandc­onservatio­ntrust.org.nz
The Milford Wanderer leaves Wet Jacket Arm. HOW TO GET THERE: Charter boat companies include Pure Salt (puresalt.co.nz), Fiordland Charters (fiordlandc­harter.co.nz) and Real Journeys (realjourne­ys.co.nz). Fiordland Helicopter­s, Southern Lakes Helicopter­s and Alpine Helicopter­s also fly into the area. HOW TO DONATE: See puresalt.co.nz for ways to contribute time and/or resources to conservati­on efforts, or donate at fiordlandc­onservatio­ntrust.org.nz
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 ??  ?? Be in to win one of three copies of Tamatea Dusky by Peta Carey (Potton & Burton), valued at $ 69.99 each. See thisnzlife.co. nz for details.
Be in to win one of three copies of Tamatea Dusky by Peta Carey (Potton & Burton), valued at $ 69.99 each. See thisnzlife.co. nz for details.

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