North Shore (Auckland)
Background Information
Te Araroa traverses 10 cities en-route. The North Shore Coastal Walk was Te Araroa’s first fully marked up urban section.
Signage: Te Araroa logos, markers on posts, and small Council-Te Araroa fingerboards on poles mark the all-tide route.
Terrain: A mix of suburban footpath, steep paths and steps, with some slippery and uneven surfaces and unstable rocks.
Equipment: Wear comfortable clothes and strong walking shoes, carry water, snacks, raincoat, sunscreen and hat
General Information
Long Bay Regional Park, 2000 Beach Road, Long Bay. Duty Ranger 24/7. Pedestrain access - Open 24 hours,
Summer gate opening times: 6am - 9pm (Daylight saving), Winter gate opening times: 6am - 9pm (Non daylight savings)
For further information contact Auckland Council on P: 09 301 0101
For local assistance (in/around Campbells Bay), please contact Rob Howe 027 6922674.
Rob has walked most of the Trail between Cape reinga and Hamilton and is happy to advise/assist as he can.
Local transport
For bus transport to/from Long Bay Regional Park
Fullers Ferries - passenger ferry runs between Devonport Wharf and Auckland CBD. The trip takes 12 mins and generally departs every half hour - check the timetable. P: 09 367 9111
Accommodation en route
Also, throughout this section there is a wide range of a variety of accommodation available.
B&B accommodation with free internet and laundry.
Short detour to Browns Bay Village
A range of shops including supermarket, cafes, banks and a pharmacy
Short detour to Mairangi Bay Village
A range of shops including supermarket, cafes, banks and a pharmacy
Short detour to Milford township
A range of shops including supermarket, cafes, banks and a pharmacy
Short detour to Takapuna township
A range of shops including supermarkets, cafes, banks and pharmacy's.
Short detour to Devonport township
A range of shops including supermarkets, cafes, banks and pharmacy's.
Devonport i-SITE Visitor Information Centre - Devonport Wharf, Devonport P: 09 3659906
Resupply
Auckland
Background Information
Auckland with its 65 island in the Hauraki Gulf, is governed by Auckland City Council, which has within its jurisdiction the largest population of any local authority in the country. Auckland is ethnically diverse, containing some 181 ethnic groups, in marked contrast to other parts of New Zealand.
Auckland boasts landscapes shaped by a volcanic field, its two harbours, 600 years of Maori occupation, and some farsighted colonists.
The Auckland isthmus is New Zealand's narrowest neck of land, never more than nine kilometres from north to south and less than 2 kilometres east to west. Given the distance, Maori used these as canoe portages, from the Waitemata Harbour and Pacific Ocean on one side, to the Manukau Harbour and Tasman Sea on the other.
in 1840, New Zealand's first Governor, Captain William Hobson, acquired some 3000 acres of Isthmus land from the Nagti Whatua chiefs, a triangle whose base stretched some 12 kilometres along the Waitemata southern shore and whose apex was the summit of Maungawhau (Mt Eden).
Aside from the colonial governors, the best known early Aucklander was the Scot, John Logan Campbell. An adventurer and one of the first Auckland settlers, he became the city's most prominent businessman and mayor. He gifted Cornwall Park to the people of Auckland, with the park still run by a trust he helped to establish. Te Araroa passes by a statue of Campbell in that park. His grave, with the Latin inscription - si monumentum requires circumspice - "if you want a memorial, look about you" - is on the summit of Maungakiekie/One Tree Hill.