WalkingAgnatha's Blitz Across the South Island

WalkingAgnatha

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
Bit late starting this thread considering I'm 2 days into my trip, but better late than never!

This trip's been building up for a while now, it's been so long since I've gone on a plane, let alone get out and travel that far, so it's great to finally get a trip somewhere. I'd been planning on going to the South Island this January, but that plan fell through, but I'm finally here now! (Probably for the best, the original rushed 1 week itinerary I had created wasn't all that good).
The itinerary so far, is me and my dad, driving a hire-car around, starting off in Christchurch, the heading up for Kaikoura for a day (currently on the way out!), then heading into Arthur's Pass today. Which is probably the main factor for me wanting this trip so bad, as Piwauwau(Rock Wren) is just such a mega-bird that I really could not pass up on. Then we'll either head to the West Coast (the rowi tours are out of season now, and not sure if my dad would allow me to wander around at night so those are probably out of the equation), or just head back to Christchurch for a day or two, before catching a flight to Invercargill, staying on Rakiura(Stewart Island) for a bit, then hire-car driving to Dunedin, and then fly out back to Christchurch, would be the current plan. But as always I'll see how it goes.
I'll be posting write-ups here and think I'll just post my list in the big-year thread, sorry if my writing becomes a slog or is very irregular, I'll try keep up to date from now on haha.

Although trip's just had a really nice upturn, hit 100 birds on my lifelist!
 
Day 1 (Ellesmere to Kaikoura)

A beautifully scenic 1 hour flight from Auckland to Christchurch, and we finally landed in the South Island at 7:30 am for the second time of my life(first was when I was like 8 so I hardly remember anything from it). Also the first time I've flown in like 3 and a half years, so all very exciting.

After wasting a bit of time at the airport, getting a hire-car and so on, and then topping up on some supplies, including a $20 pair of gumboots, we headed off for Lake Ellesmere. Arriving on Embankment Road, I armed myself with a bucket and put on the new pair of gumboots and headed off. Now for some background, I’d heard that the lake was quite boggy to walk around, and there were probably multiple sections of deep-ish water, so I thought a pair of gumboots would serve me good, and the bucket, well, originally the goal was to try and get a cheap dip-net as to try and find triops/tadpole-shrimp (native!), but because I didn’t want to spend too much time on buying things, we just bought a cheap bucket, which maybe I could use to try and scoop up some triops. So, I headed on off the expansive flat, with a few targets in mind. Those being waders, as the lakeshore really just acts as a giant mudflat, and attracts a lot of waders, or so I believe, as well as a few 'plastics' ie. introduced birds that we don't really get in Auckland (dunnock and redpoll).

Now for a quick tangent, on my musings of the scenery from all the road travel and the like I’ve had, I must say it still feels distinctly like NZ/the North Island (well duh), but it really does, even the conspicuous lack of mynas doesn’t feel that weird, the lone big looking starlings on the powerlines feel a bit unique although, with the big scruffy beards they have on. But the scenery of rolling hills and vast stretches of farmland all feel very familiar.

The landscape of Ellesmere, reviewing from a ‘clearer’ mind, wasn’t actually all that bad, the gumboots were probably my best decision the whole day, felt great being able to just walk across the wide open flats of mud. It was that, broken up by wide stretches of reddish-green low growing bog plants? (not sure what they’re called I won’t lie) and then thick-stands of tall grass every now and then. The day felt alright at first, the trilling of skylarks filled the air, as I wandered around. Bit later on, I came across a massive flock of goldfinch, and thought it’d be the perfect opportunity to pick out a redpoll, which I did! Well, I thought at first, but I wasn’t actually sure if I can’t the head in enough detail, and a particularly convincing goldfinch made me cross it off the list. Didn’t see much for the rest of the time, found a blue-damselfly, then I had to ford a small channel which unfortunately drenched into my boots. Finally got to a wide expanse of mud, with a massive flock of banded dotties, so I diligently started scanning as not only have I only seen them once before (on Manakapua), and honestly the ones in breeding plumage are very attractive little birds, but stints would be around the same size and congregate with them. After nearly going insane scanning through the dotterels on the field, (convinced this was some secret ploy birders made up to fill their lists), I scanned another dotterel flock, this time right on the margins of a fairly large pool, seeming like probably better habitat for a stint to feed around. Immediately I found quite a few wrybill feeding, another great bird, and after diligently scanning, finally!! Red-necked stint, a small grey tiny little thing darting on the margins of the pond. Funny how perspective makes you think differently of size, back on Manakapua with NZ. Dotterels being common, the bandies felt like wee little things around the bulking mass of the larger ones. But now with them being the only real thing to compare to, they feel like an average sized bird, the stint although is quite noticeably smaller (I wonder how those’d compare to the northerners!). And that was basically it for Ellesmere, no more new birds(scanned the vast flocks of pied-stilts for the marsh but even tough they look slightly simillar don't think that was the strat), and I trudged my way back to the car. Back cross the channel and with swarms of midges flying into my face. (There was also a couch just lying around on the lake-side..[Yeah I sat down on it :p]), also yeah no triops, never bothered to try and scoop any, and don't think I would've found any anyways.-(Not sure if it's the right season and I doubt I would be dipping in the right habitat, the water seemed really foul).
And that was mostly it for the day, drove back out of Ellesmere, with a glimpse of a nice male plumage ring-necked pheasant slinking off into the hedges placing it on my life-list, and a stopover at Ashley Estuary revealing only a mute swan and it’s cygnets, as well as a fly agaric [The classic fairytale shroom]. (Believe I also saw a black-morph fantail entering the site, and pretty sure I mistook a shag for a grebe..). Saw a flock of peahens by the side of the road, but fat chance I’m counting that. Finally arriving in Kaikoura at night, I saw gut-wrenching news that the Albatross Boat scheduled for the next morning had been cancelled due to lack of people…
 
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as well as a few 'plastics' ie. introduced birds that we don't really get in Auckland (dunnock and redpoll).
If you didn't see Dunnock yet they are common and easy to see in the Chch Botanic Gardens. That used to be where I would go to see Redpoll too when I lived in Chch, but they aren't guaranteed able to be found there.

broken up by wide stretches of reddish-green low growing bog plants? (not sure what they’re called I won’t lie)
Probably glasswort Sarcocornia quinqueflora.

Finally arriving in Kaikoura at night, I saw gut-wrenching news that the Albatross Boat scheduled for the next morning had been cancelled due to lack of people…
Make sure you actually go check tomorrow morning, and if you are in town the whole day then check for the next sailing time as well, because people do often randomly turn up on the day. [Edit: re-reading, I guess you already left Kaikoura now?]

Unrelated note, St Anne's Lagoon near Cheviot (between Kaikoura and Chch) has tickable Cape Barren Geese.
 
Make sure you actually go check tomorrow morning, and if you are in town the whole day then check for the next sailing time as well, because people do often randomly turn up on the day.
This post happened yesterday and today's just happened so we'll get to that :p
Unrelated note, St Anne's Lagoon near Cheviot (between Kaikoura and Chch) has tickable Cape Barren Geese
Yeah saw it about them, I don't think they're that reliable anymore (or at least I'm gonna try cover up my complete incompetence at birding), but yeah I tried for like 20 minutes or so today and dipped haha.

Also yeah, looks like glasswort, thanks.
 
Day 2 (Kaikoura to Otira)

Hectic start, as we had only just gotten the message, the boat was not cancelled!! It had gone through!(They’d received the okay to operate just a 2 person tour, super grateful on them for doing so, as well as considering I had somehow missed all their prior attempts at contact) I must say, I cannot encourage the Encounter Boat enough, even though it seems to have gotten quite a lot more expensive, (80 NZD to 160 NZD in a 15 year span, although this should probably be expected after what’s happened to the economy and all), it is unbelievably amazing and I could not say praises of the experience enough, will definitely be a highlight that’ll be hard to beat.
Now for those who don’t know, Kaikoura is arguably one of if not the best place for seabirding, with an underwater canyon very close to shore, with all those oceanic nutrients, it serves as a great place for fishing and paua, and of course whales, seabirds and the like.

We left for sea at 7am, on behalf of only rushing there when my phone rang. Instantly it was feeling nice, right out the harbour a pair of dusky dolphins rose and fell as we headed off to the canyon. As we started to get further off shore I was finally confident to count my first bird, my first petrel as well, a trio of cape pigeons doggedly chasing the boat, the Kaikoura seaward slopes serving as a backdrop to the trio. Beautiful little things, such pretty splotching and calling them ‘pigeons’ feels strangely apt, in a charming and endearing way. As the boat finally came to rest the big-shots immediately came swarming in, first up a giant petrel, northern id’d through the smudged hue on its bill tip, with a small black-fronted tern zooming above the boat. And the ‘big guns’, 2 large wandering albatrosses, my first of this incredulous family. Immediately one of them made themselves clear as to who was the ‘boss’ of the bait, shoving its face in and screaming at the other birds. It was a really pretty adult, non visible cutting edge, light rosy pink on the sides of its head, and beautiful delicate scalloping on its upper wing. With the other one being a younger bird, still having a brown cap on its head. Soon, commotion filled the water, as the cape pigeon’s numbers had expanded in size, now a swarm of 21 floated on the peripheries of the chum bait, a trio of giant petrels crowded the bait, with two of them viciously going at each other, locked in ‘beak to beak’ combat, as the other petrel took quick nibbles at the bait, with the albatross hogging it. After a while, a pair of northern royal-albatross flew in, the black cutting edge actually being quite notable in life, as well as of course the pure black wings. After a bit we headed off to a different location, picking up a Salvin’s mollymawk, which the skipper said were quite rare at this time which is nice.
When we landed at the next location, it really felt absurdly lucky with just how close the birds came, letting me identify the birds as the skipper spoon-fed me how to id them, (forgot to brush up on them, so I’d even forgotten there were multiple mollymawk species…), with white-capped mollymawks now flying up close to the boat, as well as white-chinned and westland petrels coming into land, allowing me to appreciate the bill differences. A short-tailed shearwater also quickly zoomed over, followed by a sooty, which the guide said were clearly different in size, and which I saw, the short-tailed being a grey blurb around the size of a cape pigeon, and the sooty being obviously larger. There also happened to be a faint rainbow on the horizon as we enjoyed the birds that had all come to recongregate around the boat. Finally as we started to head out another albatross came in, which the skipper immediately called out as southern royal!! Luckily the bird landed quite close, and the black cutting edge and white upper wings were obvious, again apparently not something to be all that expected, so another nice find! And finally as we’d headed out a bit further, a mollymawk swooped in up ahead, the skipper pointed it out, which I trained on with my binocs, noting a yellow ‘nose-bridge’ and black ‘lips’, the skipper moved up some more, and id’d it as Buller’s Mollymawk. Another really beautiful bird, really stunning bill, with it rather conveniently swimming up to the boat allowing for better viewing, also what I didn’t realise at the time, the 100th bird on my life-list! Glad that it landed on an absolute stunner like that, (and no offence) a plastic or a more ‘boring’ bird. Coming back into harbour, the dusky dolphins surrounded the boat, cruising amongst us, with pods further out doing their characteristic backflips, beyond cool. And finally a few juvenile spotted shags as we came out back ashore, (the guide had also seen hutton’s shear and common diving petrels, but i won’t count them on my list because, a) I didn’t see the hutton, sadly but it would’ve been nothing more than a flash either way, and b) whilst I did ‘see’ the diving petrels, they were such small blips and I have plans to see them nesting on Tiritiri anyways later on in the year that I won’t count them. Would’ve loved to add breeding plumage spotted shags, but I clearly saw them, no denying it, so I may as well add them).

Back out, we had a quick stop at the seal rookery, where I glimpsed a lone individual looking more log than mammalian, but on the list it goes. Nothing much else happened, drove all the way up to Arthur’s Pass, had a stop at St. Anne’s dipped on the cape-barren, driving into the mountains was fantastic although. Clearly felt different, rolling clouds of fog and rain, crisp golden large hills surrounding the highway, stopped at Castle Hill, (but only stayed in the carpark for a minute or two because we were rushing… amazing scenery although, will probably see if I can squeeze in some time to give it a proper visit. Think I may have heard kea calling whilst in Arthur’s Pass but not sure, everywhere was booked up there though so I’m writing this from Otira but we’ll be heading back down tomorrow morning and with any luck see rock-wren!
 
Arthur's Pass, Am I doing this right? (Days 3-6)

Although I haven't been having the most success with Arthur's Pass, and a lot of thoughts and insecurities have poked up and risen, I must say being in alpine country is beyond amazing, definitely highly recommend people visiting here.

The walking track's felt great, the forest there is amazing! Huge stands of temperate rainforest, moss and patches leaf litter carpeting the ground, and a sense of seasonality that one doesn't get in the North Island, with leaves flowing off the trees (It's the austral autumn currently). First morning even though I wasn't up the earliest was still quite nice, got my first taste of the ever present tomtits. I'd only had a good view of them once before on Rangitoto, so it was really nice seeing them basically all the time, black and white blorbs, which would come real close, showing off the yellowy-wash on their bellies [a trait which they share w. the chatham ssp., but not the north (white belly) or snares (all black!)]. The avifauna of the southern forests, feels a bit strange from an Aucklander's perspective, complete lack of tui and basically never see any invasives (think I may've seen blackbirds once or twice but they instantly flushed), yet replaced by the constant cacophony of korimakos (bellbirds), also feeding flocks! Haven't really experienced those before, I'd been brushing them off as constant flocks of silvereyes, but pretty sure I spotted a pipipi in one of them (believe I caught a glimpse of brown and grey on the nape), but I didn't get all that good of a look, didn't see them in the Hawdon, though I'm sure I'll be able to tick them off on Ulva... But I'm really not too sure with this forest-birding, like I've been trying to pinpoint calls but I just struggle, and I'm still trying to scan for movement with just my eyes, but I'm not sure if I could catch said movements without optics, but then I worry about not seeing the full picture/aiming wrong with optics.. Really feel like I'm contesting for that worst birder record rn... Also makes me a bit worried about birding elsewhere, since it feels like the only things I can find are robins and the like, but with those jobs it's more like they're finding you! I still try although of course, and the scenery is pretty enough that it soothes the nerves a lot of the times, titipounamu (riflemen) as well! So glad that they felt quite common in the forest around Arthur's Pass, with me running into a flock or pair every now and then (with pairs distracting me from possible pipipi twice..), but even though I've seen them before but they're just the cutest wee little things, I simply can't get enough of them.

Of course I also hiked up the Otira Valley track every chance I got, and whilst I saw hardly any birds, it was beyond worth it. The scenery there, especially above the bridge, (the track, at least before avalanche season I assume, is actually quite manageable, ran into birders up there on both occasions, and it wasn't all that hard to hike, and the route was very straightforward, [far more than the Hawdon!!]) The first hour or so up the track is rather simple, with it being the 'most birdy' (ie, saw the greatest amounts of birds, but I wouldn't say it was the best part of the track!), with me semi-regularly seeing tomtits around the track, as well as picking up my first good views of dunnock, (glad to have gotten it on the Otira, in the mountains like where a true accentor should be! :p) and going up the track at 7, and a run in with a fellow birder, allowed me to see a very confiding pair of fernbirds, who due to the thick shrubbery of the track would've been no more than maybe a ruler's length apart from us (I'd heard them and didn't know the call, and the man pointed out the birds and the call haha), was not expecting those at all! Past the bridge and the track feels like genuine rock-wren country, scree fields, vast expanses of rocks with boulders abound, and after a squeeze next to the river, rolling hills of tussock gold and emerald shrubbery, with boulders interspersed everywhere, and the mountains! Rocky gorges enveloped you, glints of snow hanging on in the foreground, sun on the right, and the one on the left enveloped in vegetation and the occasional waterfall. But of course even being in this country doesn't seem to guarantee finding rock-wren anymore(I'd ran into a lady who said she's tried 7 times up here and found none! Though another birder said they were rather common, not sure if he found them or not) .. Unfortunately I dipped :(, also dipped on chamois as well (a hunter pair had seen a herd of six when I was there! Of course when I went up to ask if they'd seen any apparently they'd already hightailed it out of there, even though I was already there for probably an hour..). But even with the lack of wildlife the scenery, and the feeling of scrambling up and down boulder fields made up with it, and of course it wasn't devoid of life! Up on the track there was a stunning amount of alpine short-horned grasshoppers which had red-flanks, also found a nice alpine jumping spider whilst scrambling around for wrens. Best bird (only thinking about it!), was a distant flock of 5 kea which would screech and flap around on the opposite mountain-side.

And then there was the Hawdon...
Now this valley is one of the only places where you can find orange-fronted kakariki in the wild (and even then they had to be reintroduced again this year.. [Believe probably went locally extinct around 2019? earlier?]) As well as one of the last mainland strongholds for mohua and meant to be good for great-spotted kiwi. The trek is 3 hours from the car-park to the Hawdon Hut, where I would be staying as I'd assumed the further into the Hawdon, the more likely I'll find one of my targets, and I had been told it had been an 'easy' hike by the DOC office, and the other birder had told me there was a few river crossings, so I wasn't thinking it'd be too bad.

But I'd still managed to goof up, firstly I set off rather late (around 2pm, but still definetley managable before nightfall), until I wasted an hour climbing up a hill for half an hour and then backtracking.. (The hill was brutal by the way! It was an old track and most likely not in use too much, and was just inclines on inclines on inclines, up muddy slopes, tree roots and stream-beds.), Though I did see a black-morph fantail, they must be more common down south, as I've already seen 2 of them when I've never seen any of them before up north. The river crossings were also way larger then I expected, it was all quite draining, along with me wanting to not be trapped in the forest at night, led to no birding on my part. I'd been following the track quite well, also picked up hare along the way as I flushed one off the track, and then there was a particularly rough bit of track, where combined with the evening light, I lost track of the orange markers... But I had at least some indication of where I was along the valley, (screenshotted the map under the suggestion of someone I passed going back down the hill track), so then I just started fording the river upwards and hoping that I'd be able to make it to the Hut before nightfall, stumbling, falling, just trying to make it out. I did not make it to the Hawdon that night, instead I tuckered into a bunch of vegetation, changed into dry clothes, put on all the clothing that I had in my hiking bag (thankfully I had brought quite a bit, expecting no blankets at the hut), shoved my shivering feet into my hiking bag and had a fitful night of sleep hoping to make it out. Thankfully I refound the orange markers and finally made it to the hut, (10 minutes away.. but I wouldn't have found the way without daylight). I tried birding for around an hour around the hut but only found robins, wanting to make my way out, I decided to head back, a much more leisurely 2hrs30min walk out, although there were still some parts where the track-markers felt evil!! Finally stopping for a break at the last river crossing (first coming in, where I believe I may've seen black-shag and falcon the evening before) came across my first lifer, a pipit. Quite nice little bird, the white outer-tail primaries are startlingly clear! And that was my experience of the Hawdon, I feel with an earlier start, and maybe packing more to stay at the hut for a day or two would've been nice, but in my personal experience, after what I'd gone through I had just kind of wanted out... And that was my time at Arthur's Pass, not the most birdy per-say but still amazing!! Heading out, we stopped at Lake Pearson, where after initially mistaking a little-shag for a grebe on the car (2 for 2...), after around 5 minutes finally had a crested grebe pop-out, good bird that one is!

Haven't done much since, milled around Christchurch today and visited the 2 zoos (may write reviews, but personally I enjoyed Willowbanks more, with all it's 'hodgepodge' charm, though skipped out on the left-side, which I now regret knowing there was a citron-crested cockatoo). Dipped on the frogs at Orana too..

I've still been enjoying this trip though!! Heading down to Dunedin by bus tomorrow, where my bird-list should finally pick up again!
 
Is the story going to be continuing?
Ah yeah I've gotten far too lazy on my updates, currently in prep. for exam-week (week away but I need to study loads), but have the write-up for the very short Dunedin leg basically finished (don't like how it's written that much so I'll still need to edit it), I'll try and get out that post as soon as possible, and the rest (ie. the only other interesting bit, Rakiura), should follow in due time, sorry for not updating.
 

Dunedin Layover (Days 7-8)


Not too sure why I added Dunedin to this bit of the leg, I won't lie, my itinerary wasn't planned the best, but we went there and stayed a night. It is a quite nice city, also felt pretty small, in terms of area. Unfortunately for whatever reason there'd been a quirk or something with the Penguin Place website and I was unable to book tickets, which eventually led us on missing out on them and Hoiho (Yellow-Eyed Penguin)-[the tours all had spaces it seemed, we'd just gotten up there too late for the one on that day, and would be cutting the time too thin on the trip on the next day, as we still had to catch the bus, return the rental, etc]. We continued up to Taiaroa Head, where I decided may as well do the fairy-penguin tour, as by then it was too late to go on the beach and have a look (couldn't see any anyways) and too late to look at the albatross colony (Though I still saw one flying above the reception, couldn't see any shags though). And the tour was really cheap, as it was the Wild Dunedin festival, although being aimed towards I assume, a rather young audience, being touristy and all, it was still neat, they talked about the cultural history of the region and the like which I found quite interesting, and it was nice to finally get a new bird for that day, and the 100th on my year-list, a nice achievement. :]
The next day we first headed over to a small lagoon at the base of the peninsula, where it sounded like it would’ve been an easy twitch for marsh-crake. From the comments it seemed to be just hanging out in a small stand of raupo (cattails), but it seemed so small, and as I didn't have all that much time that day, I dipped, (as well as there just being a cloud of smoke!). [Of course when I check ebird a few days later, some lucky plucker sees a pair! of them a couple hours after I left!!]. After that dip we headed up to Allen's Beach for the sealions, with me praying for not yet another dip.. Thankfully the moment I walk off the beach I immediately find two, with one doing a rather silly thing, where it would rise, waddle a metre or two, and plonk right back down flat on the sand. Visited the museum after that, a very nice establishment. Unfortunately I only had time for the natural history stuffs, as we only had an hour, but even that wasn't enough to fully see/appreciate the Nature Hall, I’ll definitely be back! So quite a nice place, but better scheduling/planning will have to be done on my next trip, (ie. either staying longer or not staying at Dunedin, and wasted the last 2 days of my trip doing nothing in Christchurch & Invercargill because I booked tickets rather stupidly).



(Was originally planning on getting this and the Rakiura/Stewart post out tonight, but I need an earlier start because I'll be heading to Tiritiri tomorrow (staying overnight, so hope luck'll be on my side), so this will have to do for now, I have made more progress on that post and it'll be the last for this trip-thread unless I add reviews for the Christchurch zoos, which I may or may not..).
 
Dunedin Layover (Days 7-8)

Not too sure why I added Dunedin to this bit of the leg, I won't lie, my itinerary wasn't planned the best, but we went there and stayed a night. It is a quite nice city, also felt pretty small, in terms of area. Unfortunately for whatever reason there'd been a quirk or something with the Penguin Place website and I was unable to book tickets, which eventually led us on missing out on them and Hoiho (Yellow-Eyed Penguin)-[the tours all had spaces it seemed, we'd just gotten up there too late for the one on that day, and would be cutting the time too thin on the trip on the next day, as we still had to catch the bus, return the rental, etc]. We continued up to Taiaroa Head, where I decided may as well do the fairy-penguin tour, as by then it was too late to go on the beach and have a look (couldn't see any anyways) and too late to look at the albatross colony (Though I still saw one flying above the reception, couldn't see any shags though). And the tour was really cheap, as it was the Wild Dunedin festival, although being aimed towards I assume, a rather young audience, being touristy and all, it was still neat, they talked about the cultural history of the region and the like which I found quite interesting, and it was nice to finally get a new bird for that day, and the 100th on my year-list, a nice achievement. :]
The next day we first headed over to a small lagoon at the base of the peninsula, where it sounded like it would’ve been an easy twitch for marsh-crake. From the comments it seemed to be just hanging out in a small stand of raupo (cattails), but it seemed so small, and as I didn't have all that much time that day, I dipped, (as well as there just being a cloud of smoke!). [Of course when I check ebird a few days later, some lucky plucker sees a pair! of them a couple hours after I left!!]. After that dip we headed up to Allen's Beach for the sealions, with me praying for not yet another dip.. Thankfully the moment I walk off the beach I immediately find two, with one doing a rather silly thing, where it would rise, waddle a metre or two, and plonk right back down flat on the sand. Visited the museum after that, a very nice establishment. Unfortunately I only had time for the natural history stuffs, as we only had an hour, but even that wasn't enough to fully see/appreciate the Nature Hall, I’ll definitely be back! So quite a nice place, but better scheduling/planning will have to be done on my next trip, (ie. either staying longer or not staying at Dunedin, and wasted the last 2 days of my trip doing nothing in Christchurch & Invercargill because I booked tickets rather stupidly).



(Was originally planning on getting this and the Rakiura/Stewart post out tonight, but I need an earlier start because I'll be heading to Tiritiri tomorrow (staying overnight, so hope luck'll be on my side), so this will have to do for now, I have made more progress on that post and it'll be the last for this trip-thread unless I add reviews for the Christchurch zoos, which I may or may not..).

Rakiura (Stewart Island) ; Final Frontier (Days 9-11)

The rest of day 8 was spent travelling from Dunedin to Invercargill, finally heading off to Rakiura on the morning of day 9. We’d arrived at Bluff quite early, so I had around an hour spare to wait around till the ferry came. I used that hour to do some birding around the harbour, which ended up quite nicely, just looking across the water, at a different part of the harbour from where I was standing, spied out a Foveaux Shag (I think Southern-King would be a rather fitting name for them, depending on whether the 2 populations should be split or not, [the other population being the ones further up north in Otago, and which I dipped on at Taiaroa Head]). Unfortunately they were roosting quite a ways back from my vantage point on land, but I could make out the clear clean black and white contrast, really pretty birds. It felt nice just birding like that, finding a Black-fronted Tern as well, just a grey blip darting between the gull flocks, and finally whilst boarding a ferry there was a nice full-plumage Spotted Shag hunting so that was also really neat.

Ferry was alright, thinking back, it was probably quite good conditions on that day, basically having no spray compared to the journey back where you had to huddle right next to the cabin or get blasted by huge jets of spray. Didn’t get any new ticks sadly, saw Sooty Shearwaters well and also a few Buller’s Mollymawk quite well, believe I saw a pair of prions on the return, but well,I don't even know where to start to id them, and on a rocking, spraying ferry.. those will remain off the list, and sadly no penguins.
Didn’t do all that much on the first-day, first stopped by the DOC Office to enquire about long-tailed bats & kiwi, where I got some nice information on sites, from what I remember the bats were occasionally seen hawking around the lamps along the school, and a small grove of eucalypts on the road to Acker’s Point (along Lonneker’s Beach? Very close to Oban anyways), and kiwi were reported at Traill Park, as well as on Horseshoe Bay Rd.
After that, I headed to Ulva Island in the late-afternoon, which, like a myriad of the smaller islands around NZ, had been declared pest-free a while back and now once again is bustling with birdlife. But even though late-afternoon should be quite a good time for bird activity, I somehow always struggle birding then, this day was no different with me locating none of my target birds,(think the only passerines I saw were robins and a gerygone!), although the parrots were abundant, I was practically kicking red-fronted kakarikis out of my way, which really like to forage on the ground around here, and I’d finally seen my first kaka, beautifully sharp contrast between the crown and body, just ambling up a tree-trunk, though yellow-crowneds had eluded me that day. Only other year-bird I saw were a few weka. Heading back to Oban, with the night encroaching I thought it’d be the perfect time to try and find a kiwi, unfortunately it seems a lot of people had that idea of the ‘easy kiwi’, and thus there was an entire family group all searching Traill Park and needless to say I didn’t find them that night. Although I did learn something new about ruru, that one of their calls sounds way too similar to kiwi to my ears!! Which led to me chasing one up and down a hill wondering why I wasn’t hearing the characteristic sounds of the undergrowth being bashed apart which kiwis make when they move, until later on after looking for bats I find another one making the same call. The next night, as I saw on eBird that some yank had actually found the buggers, just way later on at 12, I decided to have a really early night, as to wake up as early as possible to see if that would boost my chances of kiwi. Which led to me just waiting at ~4am for an hour waiting to see if any kiwi would come bounding across the field like they’d been reported. But I dipped, although I had a super unexpected encounter with a white-tailed deer on the side of the road as I was heading back (as I had no idea that they could be found, practically inside Oban), allowing me to get quite close to it, before bouncing up and off into shrubbery.
The day before was very good, I had my early start on Ulva and connected with all of my targets. Firstly a tieke (saddleback) [meaning I’ve seen all extant wattlebirds if one treats the SI Kokako as extinct], followed right after by a yellow-crowned kakariki foraging right next to a larger red-crowned on the forest floor. They felt ridiculously cute, being obviously smaller than the red-crowneds, as well as having a ridiculous almost bobble-head esque head shape. Later I came across a feeding flock of mohua, stunning yellow birds and probably the best find, so glad to have connected with that target, with a brief glimpse of a pair of pipipi (brown creepers) on a stump wrapping up my target list, as well as meaning I’ve seen all extant NZ creepers, (these whole family achievements really aren’t all that impressive when you account for the fact that there’s only 3-4 species in each lol). Arriving back at Oban didn’t have much in the way of targets left, except for a recently reported vagrant little-egret, which I had given a try for on the first day, but now with a whole day left I decided to give a longer try for them. So I made my way to the spot, a quite small stretch of estuary on the side of a road, where it was supposed to have been a regular at, for at least, a few days by then. Of course after an hour's wait in light drizzle there was not a hint of an egret to be found. So dejected I headed back to my accommodation, finally passing a flock of redpoll on the way back. I’m still not too sure what’s the consensus on the taxonomy of them here or even in general! It seems that the ones in NZ are lesser-redpolls? But I’m still unsure whether they’re valid species/ssp.s distinctions for redpolls or not, I’ll keep them lumped on my list for now (wouldn’t matter for the list anyways as it was a single ‘species’ flock). Back, I just doom scrolled the internet for a bit, had a peek at eBird, and seeing the reports (and getting quite jealous!), decided to have another crack at the egret, it was also nearing 5pm, which was around the period which others had seen it, so I thought it’d probably be good for another attempt. After around 10 minutes in heavy rain, and on the verge of heading back, a glimpse of white caught my eye, it was heading directly towards me. Finally! A little egret!! Thus I spent a few minutes watching it, just slowly foraging before I made my way back.

Didn’t do anything else sadly, the last two days were wasted just moping around Invercargill and Christchurch before heading back to Auckland. I still hold some regrets about the trip, mostly in just luck, lack of effort etc. But I must say it, it still went pretty damn well, although I do hold a strong urge to head back to Arthur’s Pass and settle a score, still haven’t been down the West Coast either.. We’ll see when those eventuate though. (As well as maybe solo-travelling in Marlborough when the school holiday hits..)
 
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