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Features

History

Maori called Mount Aspiring, Tititea, meaning steep peak of glistening white. Throughout the year they came from Foveaux Strait and Coastal Otago to the inland lakes to collect kakapo, kaka, kereru (wood pigeon) and tui from the forest. For the first 200 years of Maori settlement there would also have been moa along the forest edges.

Kati Mamoe and Kai Tahu both had named settlements around the shores of Lakes Wanaka and Hawea, including Nehenehe (literally meaning forest), on the north side of the mouth of the Matukituki River. There are several sites on the lake shore with ovens for cooking ti rakau (cabbage tree) roots.

The first European to see Mount Aspiring/Tititea was government surveyor John Turnbull Thompson in 1857. The first European to explore the West Matukituki Valley was James Hector in1862. Farming began in the valley in the 1870s.

Natural history

Most of the Southern Alps/Ka Tiritiri o te Moana started over 220 million years ago as sediment and rock on top of volcanic rocks on the seafloor. Under intense heat and pressure the rock was consolidated, then uplifted to form the Main Divide. The present landscape was shaped by glacial processes during the Ice Ages, when huge glaciers filled and scoured out the valleys.

Alpine vegetation, Cascade Saddle, Mount Aspiring National Park. Photo copyright: Timothy Ensom (DOC USE ONLY).
Alpine vegetation, Cascade Saddle,
Mount Aspiring National Park

Beech is the dominant forest in the Matukituki Valley. Red beech prefers warm valley sites, and is common just below Aspiring Hut. Mountain beech dominates the drier, eastern end of the valley, while silver beech increases towards the wetter, western end. Ferns and mosses are a feature of the usually open forest. Above the tree line, at about 1100 metres, stunted, sub-alpine shrub land gives way to alpine tussock grasslands and fell fields.

The area is also home to the nationally vulnerable Olearia hectorii or Hectors tree daisy.

Insect-eating birds such as fantail/piwakawaka, tomtit/miromiro and rifleman/titipounamu, thrive in beech forest and seed-eating kakariki (parakeet) are common in the red beech. The paradise shelduck/putakitaki is a conspicuous and noisy feature of the river flats, and in summer spur-winged plover and oystercatcher/torea are common on farmland and along the drive from Wanaka.

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Maps

New Zealand topographic maps are available from DOC Visitor Centres

Information
Mount Aspiring National Park
Safety

Safety information

Always contact the nearest visitor centre for the latest information about facilities and conditions.

Contact
Wanaka Area Office
Phone:      +64 3 443 7660
Email:   mtaspiringvc@doc.govt.nz
Full office details

Makarora Field Centre
Phone:      +64 3 443 8365
Email:   makarorafc@doc.govt.nz
Full office details