Te Kuri Farm Walkway

Walking Trail
-
Gisborne

Walking:
3 hrs, easy difficulty

About the trail
5.6 km loop. Enjoy panoramic views from various points on this track, as well as from a lookout point at the top (290 m).


Dog friendly: No

Things to know

No dogs. The track is closed each year for the lambing season from 1 August until the start of Labour Weekend (late October). Wear good quality walking shoes or boots. There is no drinkable water available on the walk.The track crosses private farmland

Te Kuri Farm Walkway is located on a private farm on the northern outskirts of Gisborne. The walkway has a well-defined track that is suitable for people with average physical fitness. It is a 2-3 hour loop that can be walked in either direction.

The walkway initially passes through areas of flat farmland before steadily climbing 230 metres to a lookout point (Town Hill, 290 metres). There is a steady climb up to this lookout, and the view it gives of the Poverty Bay flats is well worth the effort. A special feature of the walk is the panoramic views which can be seen from various points along the route.

There is one notable area of remnant, semi-coastal forest of a type once common on the foothills of the Poverty Bay Flats. The bush in the gullies is dominated by puriri, kohekohe and mahoe, while the ridges and slopes are clothed in kanuka, forest and blackwood plantations. Elsewhere radiata pine is the dominant species.

The bush provides a home for a number of forest birds such as tui, kereru (native wood pigeon), owl (ruru), grey warbler (riroriro) and fantails (piwakawaka).

On a clear day from the Town Hill lookout, visitors can see as far south as Mahia Peninsula and as far west as Maungapohatu on the eastern fringes of Te Urewera.

Getting there

The walkway is signposted from the Ballance Street/Ormond Road corner of Gisborne City. Visitors can drive straight to the start of the walkway at the end of Shelley Road, where there is a large carpark and a picnic area.

History and culture

In earlier times there was a great deal of Maori settlement on the coast and inland to the hills around the Poverty Bay flats. A number of iwi (tribes) and hapu (sub tribes) are associated with the area, tracing their original settlement back to around the 12th century.

Another period of settlement was initiated following Captain Cook's 1769 landfall in the bay and the city of Gisborne has developed out of this meeting of cultures.

In the 1880's the majority of buildings were in what is now the central business district and along Gladstone Road. There were very few buildings on the northern side of the Taruheru River although Ormond Road was partially formed.

Know before you go

  • Wear good quality walking shoes or boots
  • There is no drinkable water available on the walk
  • The track crosses private farmland - be aware of stock and leave gates as you find them
  • No dogs, horses or mountain bikes are allowed on the walkway

Source: Department of Conservation

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