Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
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24 Cods & Crayfish A1
25 R&R Sport A2
26 Surf Kaikoura A1
History
In Maori legend, Kaikoura Peninsula (Taumanu o Te Waka a Maui) was the seat where
the demigod Maui placed his feet when he fished the North Island up from the depths.
The area was heavily settled by Maori, with excavations showing that the area was a
moa-hunter settlement about 800 to 1000 years ago. The name Kaikoura comes from
'Kai' (food) and 'koura' (crayfish).
James Cook sailed past the peninsula in 1770, but didn't land. His journal states that
57 Maori in four double-hulled canoes came towards the Endeavour, but 'would not be
prevail'd upon to put along side'.
In 1828 Kaikoura's beachfront was the scene of a tremendous battle. A northern Ngati
Toa war party, led by chief Te Rauparaha, bore down on Kaikoura, killing or capturing
several hundred of the local Ngai Tahu tribe.
Europeans established a whaling station here in 1842, and the town remained a whal-
ing centre until 1922 after which arming and fishing sustained the community. It was in
the 1980s that wildlife tours began to transform the town into the tourist mecca it is
today.
Sights
Point Kean Seal Colony WILDLIFE RESERVE
OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP
At the end of the peninsula seals laze around in the grass and on the rocks, lapping up all
the attention. Give them a wide berth (10m), and never get between them and the sea -
they will attack if they feel cornered and can move surprisingly fast.
Fyffe House HISTORIC BUILDING
OFFLINE MAP
GOOGLE MAP
 
 
 
 
 
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