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Te Ara ki Uta ki Tai (the path of land and sea)

This weekend the weather was quite windy (40-50 km/h) and cloudy. So we decided to stay around the city and explore one of its newest additions: Te Ara ki Uta ki Tai. We walked the track from Orakei to Colin Maiden Park.

The path is a shared use track for both pedestrians and cyclists. It is an exquisite build, a wide path winding through nature in the middle of the city! And has exits toward various roads, some look highway grade.

We started next to Orakei
Close to Kohimarama Rd. exit
Around Glen Innes

It crosses Orakei Basin as a bridge and you walk over water with unencumbered views of the bay.

Orakei Basin

After that, it becomes a concrete path through native plants, next to Pourewa Creek, and horse farms. What surprised us most was how quiet it is: we expected a lot more people to take advantage of it. In addition, we were fortunate enough that the Eastern train line is undergoing maintenance (they are replacing the tracks!) so for the next few months there are no trains running to disturb the peace.

Birds, horses, and lush vegetation dot the landscape.

Heron
Kāruhiruhi (pied shag)
Glen Innes to Point England: pampas grass in the wind

And Maori pouwhenua protect the path.

Track end at Colin Maiden Park: Maori art

In the end, a really enjoyable 10 km walk.

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