Welcome to The Brook Waimārama Sanctuary – an extraordinary part of New Zealand.
Just minutes from Nelson’s city centre, the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary is the South Island’s largest fully fenced eco-sanctuary—690 hectares of protected native forest alive with rare and threatened species. This is a place where you can reconnect with nature, breathe deeply, and experience the mauri (life force) of Aotearoa’s unique environment.
Home to iconic species like the kiwi, tuatara, and kākāriki, the Sanctuary offers self-guided exploration across 15km of walking tracks, as well as guided day and night tours.

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🌙 Kiwi encounters at night
There’s nothing quite like a kiwi in the wild. This moment was captured just after one of our recent night tours — the forest quiet, then suddenly alive with the shuffle of little spotted kiwi (kiwi pukupuku).
Our last kiwi clip went viral (yes, even kiwi poo has star power 💩), and it’s been wonderful welcoming so many new faces to our page. If you’re here for more kiwi content, why not experience it for yourself?
✨ Night tours are the best way to be amongst kiwi pukupuku in their natural habitat. You’ll often hear their distinctive calls echoing through the forest, and along the way you’ll learn more about these remarkable taonga and the conservation work that helps protect them. Every booking supports the Sanctuary’s mission to restore and protect our forest ecosystem.
📅 Tours run weekly
➡️ Link in our bio!
#KiwiEncounter #BrookSanctuary #NightTours #BrookWaimāramaSanctuary #NelsonNZ #WildlifeExperience #ConservationInAction
Aug 26

Ngahere Neighbourhood 🌿🦋 Mānuka moth - Forest semilooper | Declana floccosa
This highly variable moth — sometimes called the mānuka moth — can wear anything from mottled browns to soft greys in impressively varied patterns, making it a true fashion chameleon of the ngahere. With a wingspan of 27–35 mm, its subtle patterns help it melt into bark, leaves, and lichen.
The caterpillars are not picky eaters, feeding on a wide range of native and exotic plants — from Muehlenbeckia to pines, eucalypts, and Douglas fir.
A decline of this species was observed during the 1980s, coinciding with the accidental introduction and establishment of common wasps from Europe. Forest semilooper numbers have bounced back. The forest semilooper had switched its emergence time from spring-summer to winter, possibly to avoid predation from wasps.
Photos by @chellikesplaaants and @henry.__.hart
#NgahereNeighbourhood #BrookSanctuary #ForestSemilooper #DeclanaFloccosa #NZMoths #NZWildlife #NativeMothsNZ
Aug 26

🟠 What’s the Difference Between Kākāriki Karaka and Other Kākāriki? 💚💛❤️
It’s easy to confuse kākāriki karaka (orange-fronted parakeet) with their yellow- or red-crowned cousins — especially at a distance. But once you know what to look (and listen) for, the differences are striking.
👀 Spot the difference
Kākāriki karaka have a lemon-yellow crown and a bright orange band just above the beak — not red like yellow-crowned or red-crowned kākāriki or a golden yellow in yellow-crowned kakariki.
They also have azure blue on their wings and rump patches that are orange (not crimson).
Juveniles are duller and slightly bluer in colour, and IDing them can be tricky — even experts struggle!
👂 Heard more than seen
These birds are famously hard to spot, often giving away their presence only with a soft chatter or squeak. They spend much of their time high in the beech canopy, only sometimes dropping low to feed on invertebrates or drink from a stream.
🌿 Rare and range-restricted
Once widespread, kākāriki karaka are now confined to just a few valleys in Canterbury and a handful of predator-free sites — including the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary. They rely heavily on the pest-free beech forest habitat, like here at the Sanctuary.
🌟 Smallest and rarest
Of Aotearoa’s kākāriki species, kākāriki karaka are the smallest — and also the most endangered. Every vote helps raise awareness for their protection!
📸 Photos by Sean McGrath
🧡 Vote kākāriki karaka for Bird of the Year
#KākārikiKaraka #BirdOfTheYear2025 #KnowYourKākāriki #EndangeredSpecies #BrookSanctuary #BOTY2025 #BackFromTheBrink #NativeBirdsNZ
Aug 23

🦎 One of the world’s most unique lizards lives here at the Sanctuary
We might be a little late for World Lizard Day (14 August), but the Nelson green gecko (Naultinus stellatus) is worth celebrating any day!
Unlike their tropical relatives overseas, New Zealand geckos are unique. They can live for decades (some species into their 60s), give birth to live young, and stay active in chilly conditions where most lizards elsewhere would be dormant.
The Nelson green gecko, also known as the starred gecko, is especially striking. The population found here at the Sanctuary often shows plus-or star-like patterns across their bright green bodies. Their pink mouth and red tongue are key identification features to distinguish between other members of the genus— a brilliant flash of colour if you’re lucky enough to glimpse one.
Sadly, this taonga is classified as Threatened – Nationally Vulnerable, with predation, habitat loss and even poaching among the pressures it faces. Secretive and canopy-dwelling, they are rarely seen, making Henry’s photographs a real treasure.
🦎 Next time you walk our tracks, look up — you might be near one of the world’s most unique lizards, a reminder of why protecting and restoring our ngahere matters.
📸 Photos by @henry.__.hart, right here at the Sanctuary
#WorldLizardDay #NelsonGreenGecko #StarredGecko #NaultinusStellatus #NZGecko #NativeWildlife #ConservationNZ #ProtectOurTaonga #Biodiversity #PredatorFreeNZ #Ngahere #BrookSanctuary #NelsonNZ
Aug 21

Ngahere Neighbourhood 🪞✨ Kāmahi spindle moth | Tatosoma tipulata
A master of disguise in the ngahere, the kāmahi spindle moth blends so well with mossy trunks and lichen that you could walk right past without noticing it. By night, these olive-green moths take to the air — most often from September to March — in search of sugary nectar and mates.
The larvae feed on the leaves of kāmahi, beech, and tōtara. They rest curled along leaf edges during the day, perfectly camouflaged from hungry birds. When it’s time to pupate, they retreat to the forest floor, weaving a thin silk cocoon among the leaf litter.
Endemic to the North, South and Stewart Islands, the kāmahi spindle moth is a reminder of the many small, hidden lives that make our ecosystems so rich.
📸 Photos by @henry.__.hart taken right here at the Sanctuary
#NgahereNeighbourhood #BrookSanctuary #NativeMothsNZ #KāmahiSpindleMoth #TatosomaTipulata #BeechForest #NZWildlife
Aug 20

🟠 Why Do Kākāriki Karaka Need a Pest-Free Habitat — and What Threats Do They Face? 🌿
Kākāriki karaka may be bright, bold, and full of personality — but they’re also incredibly vulnerable.
🔸 These tiny forest dwellers nest in tree hollows, which makes their eggs and chicks easy targets for ship rats, stoats and possums. When beech forests` mast and predator numbers explode, entire populations can be wiped out.
🔸 Their beaks and feathers can also be affected by Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease (PBFD), a virus that has recently spread into parts of the South Island.
🔸 Habitat degradation from browsing deer and possums, together with competition for nest sites from invasive species like starlings, makes survival even harder. Competition with wasps and chaffinches for food is another challenge, though this has less impact where predation is the main threat.
That’s why predator control and pest-free sanctuaries like ours are so important. Our secure beech forest habitat, combined with careful monitoring and translocation efforts, gives these manu the best chance at survival — and a future.
📸 Photos by @aptenodytes42 Sean McGrath taken right here at the Sanctuary
💛 Back the kākāriki karaka! - Head to our Bird of the Year page for FAQs, our translocation story, and a sign-up link in our bio
🧡 Vote kākāriki karaka for Bird of the Year 2025
#BirdOfTheYear2025 #KākārikiKaraka #BackFromTheBrink #PredatorFreeNZ #BOTY2025 #BrookSanctuary #SaveOurNatives #NgahereWhānau
Aug 16
