I'd had to postpone the Napier part of my trip from last week, so I made up for that with a quick overnighter to try and see the Marsh Sandpiper which has been reported there. It wouldn't be a lifer - I have seen the species in four other countries - but it would be new for my New Zealand list. The bus schedule would give me the latter half of the first day and the first half of the second, so I should have time for the sandpiper, the Plumed Whistling Duck which is resident in another part of the city, and also the National Aquarium which I hadn't visited since 2011.
The sandpiper was being reported at the so-called "Southern Marsh" (really more of a small lagoon) at the Ahuriri estuary. There are only a few urban bus routes within Napier, they all only run once an hour, and they all stop running between 5pm and 6pm. They aren't the most convenient of city transports I've ever seen, but there was a route which would take me to Westshore which is right on the estuary and quite close to the Southern Marsh.
From the bus stop it was less than ten minutes walk to and across the train / cycle / pedestrian bridge which runs parallel to the motorway bridge. The motorway is flanked either side by canals, and the Southern Marsh is located on the far side. On maps of the estuary's cycle pathway there are footbridges crossing these two canals, with a path also running under the motorway between. Quick and easy. Except that when I got there I discovered that the path under the motorway was under renovation and hence the footbridges were blocked off with construction fencing. The only way to get to the Southern Marsh now was to continue walking along the path I was on, all the way to the next major road, and then all the way back up on the other side - an extra 3km of walking instead of the 100 metres it should have been! And it was just over 30 degrees that day (that's 86 Fahrenheit for Americans), so it was a tedious walk.
The track at the eastern end of the lagoon was also blocked, so I went down to the western end - the track along the length of the lagoon has zero view of the water due to all the bushes - where I spent two hours not finding the Marsh Sandpiper! There were some other birds added to the year-list but of my target bird not a sign. I suspect it was down the eastern end which was too far away to be able to tell what the smaller birds were. I was waiting for the construction workers to end their day and go home, but at 6pm they were still showing no signs of doing so (!), so I gave up on the sandpiper and headed off to Anderson Park where the whistling duck lived, a distance of about 4km, mostly walking along the edge of the motorway.
In 2011 three Plumed Whistling Ducks turned up at Anderson Park. It was one of those less-common vagrant situations where the birds are in an easily-accessible urban location, everyone (including me) goes to see them as soon as they can before they depart again, but then they just stay put for years. One of the trio disappeared in May 2013, and one of the remaining two also disappeared some years later (it is believed to have been hit by a car in late 2019). The third bird was still reliably present this year.
I checked both the ponds at the park - lots of shovellers and mallards, and even a couple of dabchicks - but no whistling duck. Today wasn't going so well! Fortunately there had been a mention on the NZ birding forum of a "canal" so I went off across the park and found this on the far side. Walking along the channel, I saw a Great White Egret (called White Heron in New Zealand). That was a year-bird at least, so I put up my binoculars to have a look at it - and the whistling duck was standing right in front of it! For a bird over a decade old, it is in remarkably fine health [a quick Google suggests a wild lifespan of seven to ten years, and captive up to fifteen years].
The next morning I was a bit iffy about whether I wanted to go back for the Marsh Sandpiper with the extended walk needed to get there, but that was why I had come up here after all, so I went with it. I took the earliest bus around to Westshore, which got me there at 7am. I was crossing my fingers that the construction workers wouldn't have arrived yet, and fortunately that was the case. I nipped over the first footbridge and hopped the barriers, crossed the motorway, over the second footbridge and over the second set of barriers, and there I was at the eastern end of the Southern Marsh. No sandpiper at this end. Down I went to the western end and, happily, soon spotted the bird I was after. It was not the best of viewing conditions - the sun was rising in the east which was the direction I had to be facing, and the sandpiper was also at just such a distance that I could see it was indeed the Marsh Sandpiper but not really close enough for enjoyable views. Nevertheless, mission accomplished, and I even managed to get back across the bridges before any workers arrived and be back at the bus stop for the next bus back to town, hence giving me plenty of time for a leisurely Aquarium visit before the bus back to Wellington.
73) Royal Spoonbill Platalea regia
74) Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica
75) Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella
76) European Skylark Alauda arvensis
77) Pacific Golden Plover Pluvialis fulva
78) Pectoral Sandpiper Calidris melanotos
79) Wrybill Anarhynchus frontalis
80) Australasian Shoveller Anas rhynchotis
81) Great White Egret Egretta alba
82) Plumed Whistling Duck Dendrocygna eytoni
83) Marsh Sandpiper Tringa stagnatilis