The Far NorthSights

Sights in The Far North

  1. Gumdiggers Park

    Kauri forests covered this area for over 100,000 years, leaving ancient logs and the much-prized gum (used for making varnish and linoleum) buried beneath. xxx covers a major gumdigging site – the region’s main industry from the 1870s to the 1920s. In 1900, some 7000 gumdiggers (wearing gumboots – the NZ name for Wellingtons) were digging holes all over Northland. Start with the 15-minute video telling the story of the trees, their mysterious destruction and the gum industry. Rope paths head through the bush, leading past reproductions of gumdiggers’ huts, ancient kauri stumps and holes left by the diggers. It was a hard life for the workers, who used jute sacks for their…

    reviewed

  2. Whaling Museum

    At Hihi, 15km northeast of Mangonui, is Butler Point, where you can take a guided tour around the small Whaling Museum, housed in a Victorian homestead (1843) with lovely gardens. Its first owner, Captain Butler, left Dorset when he was 14 and at 24 was captain of a whaling ship. He settled here in 1839, had 13 children and became a trader, farmer, magistrate and Member of Parliament.

    reviewed

  3. Ancient Kauri Kingdom

    It’s tacky and overpriced, but Ancient Kauri Kingdom is still worth a stop. Here 50,000-year-old kauri stumps, dragged up from swamps, are fashioned into furniture, woodcraft products and a fair bit of tourist tat. The large complex includes a cafe, gift shop and workshop. A huge kauri log has an impressive spiral staircase carved into it that takes you to the mezzanine level.

    reviewed

  4. Ratana Temple

    Beside the highway at Te Kao, 46km south of Cape Reinga, stands a Ratana Temple known as Nga-Tapuwae-Ote-Mangai (the Sacred Steps of the Mouthpiece). Ratana is a Maori Christian sect with more than 50,000 adherents, formed in 1925 by Tahupotiki Wiremu Ratana, who was known as ‘the mouthpiece of God’. This temple is built on land where Ratana once stood. It resembles a mosque, with its two domed towers (Arepa and Omeka, alpha and omega) and the Ratana emblem of the star and crescent moon.

    reviewed