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About This Template Your journey starts here Abel Tasman National Park New Zealand’s favourite Great Walk 3 Day Guided Walk from $1350*pp all inclusive ESCAPE, REVIVE, RECONECT ROOM RATES / FEATURES • We take care of the details so you can • Exclusive Beachfront Lodges - share reconnect with what’s important in life. twin/double with ensuite • Find time on your own or share stories • All Meals with fellow travellers. Expert guides • Use of Day Pack introduce a landscape full of stories. • Lodge luggage bag & transfer. You • You choose how active or relaxed you walk with only a day pack want to be. Take the Vista Cruise to the lodges, or take a guided or self- • Launch Cruise/s guided walk. For the ultimate Abel • Guide Tasman experience, combine walking with guided kayaking. • Kayak & equipment on Kayaking trip • Coach Transfers from and to Nelson Conditions apply. We reserve the right to alter itineraries, timetables and vessel types. All travel is subject to weather and tides which may cause delay or cancellation. To find out more call Rachel McGinn your personal travel manager 0402 603 528 [email protected] facebook.com/TMRachelMcGinn travelmanagers.com.au/rachelmcginn Part of the House of Travel Group ACN: 113 085 626 Member: IATA, AFTA, CLIA Wilsons Abel Tasman 3 Day Guided Walk Your Hike and relax in style at our to our two beachfront lodges. Itinerary route: Nelson – Motueka – Kaiteriteri – Abel Tasman itinerary National Park - Motueka – Nelson. Day 1: Nelson/Motueka to Awaroa Day 2: Awaroa to Torrent Bay Day 3:.Torrent Bay to via Totaranui Kaiteriteri/Motueka/Nelson Your walk today follows the coastal Board our comfortable Vista Cruise to track through cool native forest and Wake up to golden light over the travel the length of the golden Abel reaches golden sand beaches, water and perhaps a coffee on the Tasman coast from Kaiteriteri north to perfect for swimming. deck before breakfast. Today’s walk Totaranui. follows the easiest section of the Wake up to a relaxing breakfast in coastal track from Torrent Bay to From Totaranui, walk through mature Meadowbank’s lovely surrounds then Marahau, with panoramic views native forest and along secluded choose how much walking you want across Tasman Bay to Nelson. This is beaches to the breathtaking expanse to do; your guide will arrange boat a day rich in history, too, as your of Awaroa Inlet where you’ll reach transfers to suit your needs. guide recount stories of how major Meadowbank Homestead – a faithful Approximate times landmarks were named by early recreation of the Wilson family's * Walk in 3 sections of 2 hours each explorers. original home on the ‘finest site in the Awaroa to Onetahuti and Tonga bay’. Approximate times Quarry –6km/3.5 miles; maximum * Walk 4–5 hours (depending on Approximate times: Scenic drive to elevation 85m/280ft tides) – 13– 6km/8–10 miles; Kaiteriteri – 1 hour from Nelson, or 20 Tonga Quarry to Bark Bay (Medlands maximum elevation 110m/360ft mins from Motueka Beach) – 4km/2.5 miles; maximum Scenic drive from Kaiteriteri – 20 elevation 120m/400ft Cruise Kaiteriteri to Totaranui – 1 mins to Motueka or 1 hour to Nelson Bark Bay to Torrent Bay – 7km/4.4 hour 40 mins miles; maximum elevation 105m/340ft * Walk Totaranui to Awaroa – 2.5 Meals included: breakfast, morning hours (7km/4.5 miles) including tidal tea, lunch Accommodation: Torrent Bay Lodge crossing; maximum elevation Note: Our 3 Day Guided Walk runs at 100m/340ft the same time as our 3 Day Kayak & Meals included: breakfast, morning Accommodation: Meadowbank Walk, so members of your travelling & afternoon tea, lunch, dinner Homestead at Awaroa party can book different options, meeting up at the lodges in the Meals included: lunch, afternoon evening. tea, dinner To find out more call Rachel McGinn your personal travel manager 0402 603 528 [email protected] facebook.com/TMRachelMcGinn travelmanagers.com.au/rachelmcginn Part of the House of Travel Group ACN: 113 085 626 Member: IATA, AFTA, CLIA.
Recommended publications
  • Abel Tasman.Indd
    DAYOUT. IN TASMAN BAY WALKS The relaxed lifestyle, excellent climate, beautiful beaches, picnic Walks in the Motueka - Kaiteriteri - Abel Tasman spots and very popular walks have always attracted New Zealand National Park area: holidaymakers to this area, especially at the end of December and throughout January when the population soars. 1 The Motueka Walkway - 2.5 hours If you want to be sure of your trip, you’ll need to book Pick up a free map at the Motueka Information Centre (well accommodation in advance. Outside those months, there are signposted, just off the High Street). more vacancies There are motels, campsites, backpackers lodges On this track you’ll see some splendid views of Tasman Bay and bed ‘n breakfasts to cater for all budgets in the towns and with glimpses of small-town New Zealand without the tourist surrounding areas. trappings. Interesting features include: Abel Tasman National Park • The Port - the centre of one of Motueka’s main industries If you want to walk the Abel Tasman Track, you’ll need to reserve - fishing. Evidence lies in the rusting hulk of the Janie Seddon, a in advance with the Department of Conservation, as numbers large vessel that lies in the estuary sand near the walkway. of walkers have had to be limited. But using water taxis, it’s • The track leads you beside a tidal estuary that changes possible to do sections of the track on a dayout without worrying from mud flats with wading birds to a beautiful seascape at full about bookings. tide. MOTUEKA • A wide variety of NZ houses from small, older baches Motueka is a small town at the mouth of the Motueka River, (holiday houses) to large, modern homes owned by Motueka’s which flows into Tasman Bay.
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  • Moutere Gravels
    LAND USE ON THE MOUTERE GRAVELS, I\TELSON, AND THE DilPORTANOE OF PHYSIC.AL AND EOONMIC FACTORS IN DEVJt~LOPHTG THE F'T:?ESE:NT PATTERN. THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS ( Honours ) GEOGRAPHY UNIVERSITY OF NEW ZEALAND 1953 H. B. BOURNE-WEBB.- - TABLE OF CONTENTS. CRAFTER 1. INTRODUCTION. Page i. Terminology. Location. Maps. General Description. CH.AFTER 11. HISTORY OF LAND USE. Page 1. Natural Vegetation 1840. Land use in 1860. Land use in 1905. Land use in 1915. Land use in 1930. CHA.PrER 111. PRESENT DAY LAND USE. Page 17. Intensively farmed areas. Forestry in the region. Reversion in the region. CHA.PrER l V. A NOTE ON TEE GEOLOGY OF THE REGION Page 48. Geological History. Composition of the gravels. Structure and surface forms. Slope. Effect on land use. CHA.mm v. CLIMATE OF THE REGION. Page 55. Effect on land use. CRAFTER Vl. SOILS ON Tlffi: MGm'ERE GRAVELS. Page 59. Soil.tYJDes. Effect on land use. CHAPrER Vll. ECONOMIC FACTORS WrIICH HAVE INFLUENCED TEE LAND USE PATTERN. Page 66. ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS. ~- After page. l. Location. ii. 2. Natu.ral Vegetation. i2. 3. Land use in 1905. 6. Land use regions and generalized land use. 5. Terraces and sub-regions at Motupiko. 27a. 6. Slope Map. Folder at back. 7. Rainfall Distribution. 55. 8. Soils. 59. PLATES. Page. 1. Lower Moutere 20. 2. Tapawera. 29. 3. View of Orcharding Arf;;a. 34a. 4. Contoured Orchard. 37. 5. Reversion and Orchards. 38a. 6. Golden Downs State Forest. 39a. 7. Japanese Larch. 40a. B.
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  • MUSIC MAN Community 3-7
    October 2017 Inside this issue: MUSIC MAN Community 3-7 Recreation 9-11 Arts and Crafts 13 Moutere Youth 15 Food 17 Animals 19-21 Gardening 22 Health & Wellbeing 23 Trade & Services 26 directory Recycled materials are a perfect basis for Lawrie Feely’s stringed instruments Special points of interest: and stored for 30 years, and I’ve used it in a lot of my L O C A L L I V E S instruments. Each wood has a different sound.” His favourite is the strum stick—a portable version of Every Friday Sharing table the dulcimer that can be played like a guitar instead of MHCC Eight-string island ukuleles, strum sticks and mountain on a table. “Backpackers love them,” he says. Also dulcimers are everywhere to be seen in Lawrie Feely’s popular is a stringed instrument that can be played by workshop. Created from recycled venetian blinds, fruit anyone who’s capable of a single finger tune on the 14 October: The Andrew bowls, tabletops and bedheads, each one looks and piano. “You can make music out of anything,” says London Trio—page 11 sounds unique. Lawrie, pulling out a ‘tin-canjo’ with a decorative biscuit- Lawrie has been making instruments since going to a tin body to prove his point. 70th birthday party down South and playing along with a 20 October: Musical When he’s not making instruments, Lawrie can be found group of ladies from the marae on the ukulele. “Next repairing horse gear, such as covers, bridles and saddle bingo—page 10 day, I took some photos and measurements and made strapping.
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  • Janszoon Toolbox
    Problem weeds in the Abel Tasman While 113 different weed species have been found in the Abel Tasman, Project Janszoon, DOC and the Abel Tasman Birdsong Trust are particularly interested in what we call the “filthy fourteen”. Each of these plants poses a different threat to the Park. If you see or suspect any of these species in or around the Park, please let us know. You can report sightings on [email protected] or through the “Have You Seen This” section of the Abel Tasman smartphone app. If you wish to control any of these plants yourself, please ask us or DOC for advice on the best means of control. For more information about these weeds you can also go to www.weedbusters.org.nz Grevillea (Grevillea rosmarinifolia) is a classic example Grevillea of the right plant in the wrong place. Originally from Australia, it is commonly found in gardens in Marahau, Nelson and Kaiteriteri, where it is prized for its pink flowers and long flowering period. It is likely to have been brought into Torrent Bay village as a garden plant, but instead found the Park’s dry ridges more to its liking. The seeds are dispersed by wind and at Torrent Bay it has spread up to 2 km back into the bush, colonising bare ridges in particular. The Birdsong Trust has spent $40,000 controlling it in this area, with years of work still to do to bring this Aussie invader under control. Please don’t select any Grevillea species to plant at your bach or near the Park’s boundaries.
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  • Te Tau Ihu Claims Settlement Bill
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  • Conservation Campsites South Island 2019-20 Nelson
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  • Abel Tasman Coast Track Brochure
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  • The Signature of an Extreme Erosion Event on Suspended Sediment Loads: Motueka River Catchment, South Island, New Zealand
    184 Sediment Dynamics in Changing Environments (Proceedings of a symposium held in Christchurch, New Zealand, December 2008). IAHS Publ. 325, 2008. The signature of an extreme erosion event on suspended sediment loads: Motueka River catchment, South Island, New Zealand D. M. HICKS1 & L. R. BASHER2 1 National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, PO Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand [email protected] 2 Landcare Research, Private Bag 6, Nelson Mail Centre, Nelson 7042, New Zealand Abstract Five years of continuously monitoring turbidity and suspended sediment (SS) at four sites in the Motueka River catchment, northern South Island, New Zealand, has characterised the downstream and temporal dispersion of high SS inputs from an extreme rainfall event. The rainstorm, of >50 year recurrence interval, was concentrated in the upper Motueka and Motupiko tributaries and delivered high sediment outputs from re-activated gully complexes and landslides. These only appear to activate when a rainfall threshold is exceeded. Monitoring stations in these tributaries captured a ~20- to 30-fold increase in SS concentrations and event sediment yields, whereas the monitoring station at the coast recorded only a 2- to 5-fold increase. The high concentrations and event yields decayed exponentially back towards normal levels over ~2–3 years at both upstream and downstream sites. Field observations suggest that this erosion recovery trend relates more to the exhaustion/stabilisation of transient riparian sediment storage than to “healing” of the primary erosion sites by surface-armouring and/or re-vegetation. The downstream decay relates both to dilution (from other tributaries carrying lower SS concentrations) and dispersion processes.
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  • Motueka River 1
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  • Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve and Kaka Point Historic Reserve Management Plan 2015
    December 2015 Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve and Kaka Point Historic Reserve Management Plan 1 Adopted version Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve and Kaka Point Historic Reserve Management Plan Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve and Kaka Point Historic Reserve Management Plan 2 Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve and Kaka Point Historic Reserve Management Plan December 2015 Published by : Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve Board 5 Sandy Bay Road RD2 Kaiteriteri Motueka 7197 Recent management plan history: 1992 plan approved by Minister of Conservation 2006 major revision prepared by Helen Campbell and approved by Minister in 2008 2015 major revision prepared by Rob Greenaway Publication Date : January 2016 ISBN : 978-0-473-34783-3 (printed) ISBN : 978-0-473-34784-0 (electronic) Acknowledgements Contemporary reserve management plans should reflect national best practice, which means they should unashamedly borrow and interpret good tested policy, where it exists. This plan relies on some text from the 2006 Kaiteriteri Recreation Reserve Management Plan, but includes a mix of original and modified policies and interpretations of law from many other management plans prepared under the Reserves Act. There has been a deliberate aim to reflect the structure of the Abel Tasman Foreshore Scenic Reserve Management Plan, prepared by the Department of Conservation, as this may be locally familiar. Policy alignment with that plan, where relevant, has been an aim. Mana whenua iwi (see section 6) provided a considered submission on the draft management plan and included a useful update of the reserve history in section 4. Internal review for the Department of Conservation was completed by Cathie Brumley. The project was managed for the Department by Martin Rodd.
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  • Grapevine-2014-04.Pdf
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  • Moutere Catchment Stream Restoration Framework
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