Rakiura Track Stewart Island and Ulva Island

Rakiura Track (Stewart Island Great Walk) + Ulva Island

Rakiura Track is currently the shortest Great Walk in New Zealand, located on Stewart Island, the third largest island in New Zealand. With a distance of a 32km loop and the highest elevation of 200m, it can be easily completed in a couple days, or even in one day, but it’s always good to spend a little more time on the track to enjoy nature and to spot wildlife.

Rakiura Track Elevation

You can start your Rakiura Track hike at either trailhead. I started mine at Lee Bay road end in the afternoon, slept at Port William Campsite, and completed the track in 1.5 days. However, I would recommend you to at least have a night at North Arm Hut / Campsite for the biggest chance of spotting wild kiwi birds in that area.

How To Get To Stewart Island

There are two ways to get to Stewart Island: By taking a small plane from Queenstown or Invercargill, by helicopter from Bluff, or by taking a ferry from Bluff.

I took the ferry (there is only one ferry provider for Stewart Island, passengers only, not for cars) from Bluff ferry terminal and it took about 30 minutes to arrive at Stewart Island. There is a paid car park facility near the ferry terminal, but because I stayed at The Eagle’s, the owner let me park my car at the free car park in front of the hotel.

Rakiura Track Great Walk Booking

All Great Walks in New Zealand require booking in advance for the huts and campsites. Off-site camping is not allowed on the Great Walk tracks. Here is the online booking site for all Great Walk accommodations. Lookout for the opening dates of bookings for each season as the popular great walks tend to get fully booked pretty fast.

If the slots are fully booked and you are flexible with your dates, you can run through the site’s booking calendar regularly to lookout for any new slots, as people often cancel their booking days/weeks/months before the trip. Don’t simply book and cancel though, here are the cancellation fees in detail.

Things I packed for Rakiura Track

Tip: Get your trekking food supply ready before arriving at Stewart Island, as there is only a limited variety of supplies you can get from the small stores in the island.

Before you go, check the weather forecast for Rakiura National Park. Without other landmass as a barrier, Stewart Island, located in the ‘roaring forties’, is very exposed to the strong Westerlies, and the freezing Southerlies coming from Antartica. Weather on the island can be extreme when these winds occur.

Rakiura Track - Day 1

Ferry Terminal / Oban Town to Lee Bay Trailhead - 5km

Oban to Lee Bay

11.10am: The walk to Lee Bay trailhead from the ferry terminal or the town is around 5km. It takes about 1 hour+ on foot.

Rakiura Track Lee Bay Road End Trailhead

(+66)12.16pm: Arrived at Lee Bay trailhead.

Lee Bay to Maori Beach Campsite - 4.1km

Rakiura Track Lee Bay

(+5)12.21pm: Trees sculptured by the strong winds.

Rakiura Track Lee Bay

(+6)12.27pm: Flat to mild elevation along the shaded coast track.

(+14)12.41pm

Rakiura Track Lee Bay

(+2)12.43pm

(+3)12.46pm: At low tide, it is possible to walk around the beach and join back to the track further up. I took the high tide route.

Rakiura Track Lee Bay Viewpoint

(+24)1.10pm

(+18)1.28pm: Another high/low tide route option just before Maori Beach Campsite. I took the low tide route, crossing the creek to head directly to Maori Beach.

Rakiura Track Maori Beach Campsite

(+4)1.32pm: Maori Beach Campsite

Rakiura Track Maori Beach Campsite Sawmill Relics
Rakiura Track Maori Beach Campsite Sawmill Relics

(+3)1.35pm: A short few minutes side trip from the campsite to some historic sawmill relics.

Maori Beach Campsite to Port William Hut / Campsite - 4km

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Maori Beach

(+11)1.46pm: Since it was low tide, I took the sandy beach route towards the foot bridge of Rakiura Track.etur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Seal Maori Beach

(+10)1.56pm: And then, I saw a wiggling sausage in the distance.

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Seal Maori Beach
Rakiura Track Stewart Island Maori Beach Seal

It’s a giant sea sausage! (a big seal resting on the beach)

Maori Beach Foot Bridge
Rakiura Track Stewart Island Great Walk

(+2)1.58pm: Arrived at the foot bridge, crossing a tidal stream into the hill forest.

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Great Walk

(+10)2.08pm: Trees weirdly mended together, with more small trees growing on top of them.

Rakiura National Park Stewart Island

2.08pm: A small hill to climb, about 100-ish of elevation.

(+8)2.16pm: A lump of rock with trees growing around it?

(+8)2.24pm: At the junction to Port William Hut / Campsite, where I will stay for a night. I had to backtrack to this junction for my onward trek to the rest of the Rakiura Track.

Rakiura National Park Stewart Island

(+3)2.27pm

(+5)2.32pm: It’s a downhill from the small hill I’ve just climbed (and uphill for tomorrow’s walk back to the junction point).

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Great Walk Port William Campsite

(+24)2.56pm: Arrived at Port William Campsite, where I set up my tent for the night.

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Great Walk Port William Hut

Port William Hut is a few minutes further away from the campsite.

Port William Wharf

A wharf between the hut and the campsite.

At night, I did not hear any kiwi calls. My guess is due to the sandy beach area, it is not a preferred place for kiwis to find food (earthworms). However, I got woken up by loud footsteps from a deer (non-native pest) running at the campsite among the tents.

Rakiura Track - Day 2

Port William Hut / Campsite to North Arm Hut - 13km

7.59am: Packed up and left the campsite after breakfast.

(+25)8.24am: Backtracked to the junction and headed towards North Arm Hut.

Rakiura National Park Historic Log Haulers
Rakiura National Park Historic Log Haulers

(+17)8.41am: The track passed by remnants of milling activities along the old tramlines.

Rakiura Track Mud Bog
Rakiura Track Muddy Bog

(+22)9.03am: The start of the well-known muddy sections between Port William and North Arm Hut. It got muddier and deeper as I hiked further in the next hour, even though it was a dry week. Imagine hiking here during wet periods, I’ve seen photos of people waist-deep in mud!

Rakiura National Park Stewart Island

(+5)9.08am

(+4)9.12am

Rakiura Track Stewart Island
Rakiura Track Stewart Island

(+12)9.24am

Rakiura Track Dear

(+40)8.04am: Suddenly, I spotted a deer standing right on the track. I think we spotted each other at the same time.

(+2h18m)10.22am: The halfway point between the two huts.

Rakiura Track Great Walk North Arm Campsite

(+1h54m)12.16pm: Arrived at North Arm Campsite shelter.

Rakiura Track Great Walk North Arm Campsite Kiwi Spotting Times

This place would be a great spot to encounter kiwi birds when it gets dark. I met a group of hikers coming from North Arm, and they saw six kiwis the night before!

Rakiura Track Stewart Island Feral Cat

I was very disappointed to find a feral kitten. Cute, but these ferocious feral cats brought in and left by humans are very bad for the ecosystem in New Zealand. A single feral cat can and will hunt many endangered native birds (including kiwi) on a daily basis. I heard that feral cats have been an ongoing problem on the island for quite some time.

Rakiura Track Great Walk North Arm Campsite

Tenting spots around North Arm Campsite.

Rakiura Track Great Walk North Arm Hut

North Arm Hut is a few minutes further away from the main track.

North Arm Hut / Campsite to Fern Gully Trailhead Exit

Rakiura Track Great Walk

12.46pm: Back to the main track after lunch break to continue the hike.

Stewart Island Sawdust Bay Campsite
Rakiura National Park Sawbdust Bay Campsite

(+41)1.27pm: The basic Sawdust Bay Campsite.

Rakiura Track Gallons Sawmill
Rakiura Track Gallon Sawmill

(+60)2.27pm: A quick side trip to Gallon’s Sawmill historic site. Nothing much to see here except for a stream where you could find a trace of a small man-made earth dam if you look hard enough. There are some sawmill relics further away but it seems that the track has been closed off from the public.

Stewart Island Kaipipi Bay

(+20)2.47pm: Side trip to Kaipipi Bay.

(+33)3.20pm

(+16)3.36pm: P.s. Halfmoon Bay refers to Stewart Island’s main settlement area (Oban), so it’s the right way if you are heading to the Fern Gully road end exit.

Rakiura Track Great Walk Fern Gully Trailhead

(+7)3.43pm: Exited Rakiura Track via Fern Gully Trailhead.

Still some distance to walk to the town.

Fern Gully Trailhead to Oban Township - 2km

Oban Halfmoon Bay Stewart Island

(+28)4.11pm: About half an hour later, I arrived at Oban, which then I checked in at Stewart Island Backpackers to have a night’s rest after celebrating New Year’s Eve dancing outside a hotel bar near the beach with a few people I met at the backpackers and a bunch of stranger.

Usually, it is quite possible to spot kiwi birds roaming around the township, especially around the rugby field looking for worms. However, probably due to the New Year’s Eve fireworks scaring them away, I did not encounter any kiwi.

Stewart Island Tui

A little epilogue: A bit disappointed with the quietness of the forest as Stewart Island was heavily marketed as a predator-free birds’ paradise. It was said to be an island filled with deafening songs of the native birds, but during my time on Rakiura Track, it was dreadly lacking in bird life. New Zealand’s native wildlife population really got hit hard by the introduced pests and predators.

[Photo above is a Tūī, New Zealand native bird with its signature white throat tuft and dynamic vocal range]

Ulva Island (An Open Island Sanctuary)

Fortunately, Ulva Island presented me hope for the conservation efforts. It is a small island close to Stewart Island, and a nature sanctuary open to the public. The island offers a predator-free environment for native birds and flora to thrive in its habitat. There was a brief re-invasion by Norway rats in 2010, and another one recently around August 2023 (probably swam in from Stewart Island). The Department of Conservation worked hard and brought in pest detection dogs, and they did a great job to prevent mass losses of native habitats, but events like this show us the vulnerabilities and how easily biosecurity standards can be breached. The least we can do is to check our bags, items and footwears for weed seeds, rodents and other invasive species, before departing to the sanctuary.

You can travel to Ulva Island by taking a water taxi, around $30 (return) per person. You can enquire and check the water taxi schedule at Oban Visitor Center. The water taxi departs from Golden Bay Wharf and it takes about 10 minutes to arrive at Ulva Island.

Ulva Island is full of birdlife. It is a great place to have a taste of how a recovering predator-free New Zealand would look like.

Ulva Island Kakariki Red Crowned Parakeet
Ulva Island Kakariki Red Crowned Parakeet

Red-crowned parakeet / Kākāriki

Ulva Island Kaka

A Kākā – large New Zealand native parrot

Ulva Island Cheeky Weka

The cheeky Weka! A New Zealand native flightless bird known for its feisty and curious personality. This one wasn’t afraid of humans and casually digging the ground around me for food.

Ulva Island Oyster Catcher

Oystercatchers along the shore.

Ulva Island Sleeping Seal

A seal sleeping on the beach.

Ulva Island Cheeky Weka
Ulva Island Cheeky Weka

More cheeky Wekas!

Ulva Island Kereru

Kererū – New Zealand’s plum pigeons, who often feed on fermented fruit until they are drunk and fall off the trees.

Ulva Island South Island Robin

A curious South Island Robin.

Good Food On Stewart Island

Stewart Island Fish and Chips Kai Cart
Stewart Island Food Fin and Feather Eatery

Being an isolated island with limited supplies, Stewart Island surprisingly contains some pretty excellent eateries. Check out Kai Kart for New Zealand’s best fish & chips, and Fin & Feather Eatery for its island famous boozy donuts and unique gourmet menu!

Have this guide helped you? Tag @meowtainpeople in your hiking stories & posts!

*Captain Planet passing by* Remember, please take care of our environment, and please don’t destroy the Nature. Leave no trash behind and take back only photos and memories (and also some trash if you can). Walk on the designated path and stay in the middle as much as you can, so that the exposed soil doesn’t spread/corrode further. BE ONE WITH NATURE *flies away*

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