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Mākaro / Ward Island

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Mākaro/Ward
Mākaro (Māori)
Mākaro/Ward is located in New Zealand Wellington
Mākaro/Ward
Mākaro/Ward
Mākaro / Ward Island (Wellington, New Zealand)
Geography
LocationWellington Harbour
Coordinates41°17′38″S 174°52′17″E / 41.293849°S 174.871514°E / -41.293849; 174.871514
Length250 m (820 ft)
Width80 m (260 ft)
Highest elevation20 m (70 ft)
Administration
New Zealand

Mākaro / Ward island is one of the three small islands in Wellington Harbour, at the southern end of the North Island, New Zealand.

Ward Island is on the eastern side of the harbour, about 1.7 kilometres (1.1 mi) west of the town of Eastbourne. It is about 250 metres (270 yd) long and 80 metres (87 yd) wide, with the long axis aligned north–south. The significantly larger Matiu / Somes Island lies about 5 km (3.1 mi) northwest.

Māori tradition is that both of these islands received their original Māori names from Kupe, the semi-legendary first navigator to reach New Zealand and get home again with reports of the new land, but this cannot be verified. He purportedly named them after his two daughters (or, in some versions of the tale, nieces) when he first entered the harbour about 1000 years ago. In 1997 the New Zealand Geographic Board assigned the official bilingual name of Mākaro/Ward island.[1] Formatting was later changed to include a space on each side of the slash: Mākaro / Ward island.

The bulk of Ward Island consists of a steep sided block of yellowy/brown argilite, with a more or less flat top. There is a beach of greywacke shingle along the east side of the island. The rest of the coastline is rocky except for a pair of smaller beaches on the western side, backed by cliffs about 20m high. Numerous small reefs surround the island, particularly at the southern end. The main shipping channel to the ports of Wellington and Seaview passes to the west of Ward Island. The passage between Ward and Eastbourne is too shallow for vessels of any size.

The island has been used as a defence work in both ancient and modern times. A Ngāti Ira of refuge (which as such was not usually inhabited) existed on the island in the early 19th century. There was no construction there – the island itself, with its sheer cliffs, served as the refuge.[2] During the Second World War a 1.8 km (1.1 mi) wooden piled anti-submarine barrier was built between Robinson Bay and the eastern shore of the island, and a net suspended from buoys extended from the western side of the island to Kau Point on the western harbour shore.[3][4] Other than a few concrete blocks on the western side of the island there are no remains of these extensive structures to be seen today.[4]

The island is a popular destination for recreational watercraft of all kinds. The reefs and the rocky coast provide good fishing and snorkelling opportunities. Off the southern end, beds of seaweed provide shelter for abundant fish life and opportunities for collecting edible shellfish such as pāua and green lipped mussels.

Makaro Street in Eastbourne is named after the island, which can be seen at the seaward end of its short east–west length.

The island ecosystem

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Ward Island is a designated DOC scientific reserve and as such, camping, fires and dogs are not permitted there.[5]

The island is home to a small population of seagulls and other seabirds, which nest on the steep slopes of the island. The island is otherwise uninhabited.

As an ongoing measure to ensure that a rodent population does not become established, DOC has been maintaining bait stations filled with pellets containing Brodifacoum poison on the island since 2005.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "New names for islands". Evening Post. 26 February 1997. ProQuest 314490910.
  2. ^ David Hamer and Roberta Nicholls,"The making of Wellington, 1800-1914-ll essays",Victoria university press,(1990)
  3. ^ Ann Carew and Allison Carew," Eastbourne, a history of the eastern bays of Wellington harbour", Eastbourne historical society inc.,(2001)
  4. ^ a b Peter Cooke,"Defending New Zealand – ramparts on the sea 1840 – 1950s",Defence of New Zealand Study Group,(2000)
  5. ^ Other harbour islands. Department of Conservation. Retrieved 18 December 2012.