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OPENING HOURS TUE - SUN, 9am - 5pm (last entry 4pm)
Nau Mai, Haere Mai

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.

Join our Junior Ranger program

Unlimited entry, special events and awesome welcome pack

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SANCTUARY WALKS & FACILITIES

Be inspired by our 690-ha protected ecosystem just 6km from Nelson’s central city.

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Glowworms; Bush; Brook Sanctuary; Wildlife; Tours; Glowworm Tour A Special Experience

Night in the Forest - Sanctuary Guided Tour

Discover the magic of the ngahere at night on this unforgettable 75-minute guided experience at the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary.

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Brook Waimārama Sanctuary; Children: Students; Education Inspiring The Next Generation; Learning; Rick Field

EDUCATION AT THE SANCTUARY

It’s never too late to learn about how we can care for and interact with nature.

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Sanctuary Volunteers; Get Involved With The Brook Waimarama Sanctuary

Become a Sanctuary volunteer

Get involved in this community project

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Photography Competition

Submit your entry to win!

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@brooksanctuary

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🌸 Ngahere Neighbourhood: spider orchid (Corybas trilobus)

Tiny but extraordinary, the spider orchid is one of Aotearoa’s most species-rich groups of orchids — and one you might miss if you don’t look closely.

This small, ground-dwelling orchid forms dense colonies across the forest floor, its single rounded leaf sitting beneath a delicate, spidery flower that rises just a few centimetres above the moss. The flowers range in colour from deep crimson and pink to pale green or even white, often flecked with purple.

Identifying Corybas trilobus can be tricky — it’s actually a species aggregate, meaning several closely related species are currently grouped under this name and not yet formally described. This makes it difficult to define its exact characteristics or preferred habitats. What unites them all, however, is their small size and the distinctive three-lobed leaf that gives trilobus its name.

Though each individual orchid may be short-lived, spider orchids often grow in dense colonies that spread slowly underground. These colonies can persist for many years, forming quiet, enduring communities that are part of the rich biodiversity beneath our feet — delicate, intricate, and vital to the forest ecosystem.

🔎 Species: Corybas trilobus
 🟢 Conservation status: Not Threatened
 📸 Photo by Rebecca Bowater

#NgahereNeighbourhood #BrookSanctuary #NativePlants #NZOrchid #SpiderOrchid #Corybas #NewZealandNature #Conservation
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Third kiwi pukupuku chick confirmed! 🪶

Our ecologist has now confirmed a third chick in the Sanctuary — from one of the adults we monitor.

These two clips show the chick out foraging on the forest floor — a seriously encouraging sign that kiwi pukupuku are breeding and settling in well here.

Every chick is a milestone for the Sanctuary and for the long-term future of this species on the mainland.

🎥 Two short videos: chick foraging

#kiwipukupuku #kiwi #conservation #predatorfree #BrookWaimāramaSanctuary
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STRATEGIC SUPPORTERS

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CONSERVATION CHAMPIONS

Sponsors; J&E Reuhl; logos
Sponsors; kumanu; logos
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