The Old Coach Road

The Old Coach Road - Tahakopa Bay

The Old Coach Road

Tahakopa Bay

1 Rankers Review

0 Face-to-Face

Your Nature Guide

Marios Gavalas's avatar

Marios Gavalas

Author And Researcher

Nau mai, haere mai

Nau mai, haere mai

I'm Marios, delivering the best of Aotearoa's nature walks to your device.

I've personally walked hundreds of New Zealand's tracks and spent months in libraries uncovering interesting information on New Zealand/Aotearoa. And you'll find a slice of that research on this page - enjoy!

Maps

FREE Header

Deep Nature NEW

Author Marios Gavalas, Rankers and hundreds of contributors bring you a free web map to help you get lost (and find yourself) in Aotearoa's nature.

FREE Header

Camping NZ NEW

Welcome to New Zealand's most comprehensive database of freely available camping information. This is the only travel map of its kind in NZ.

Photos

Information

The Old Coach Road

2 km return | 40 minutes return

The track follows the estuary margin through corridors of silver beech, fuchsia and kamahi forest to an archaeological site once inhabited by moa hunters.

Walking Track

Access

The start of the track is signposted from the parking area on the eastern side of the bridge over the Tahakopa River.

Track

The even track follows the estuary margin through corridors of silver beech, fuchsia and kamahi forest to an archaeological site once inhabited by moa hunters.

Polynesian History

Les Lockerbie, a local archaeologist, first aroused the interest of the Otago Museum into conducting archaeological investigations in the area. The middens have been scoured by archaeologists, who have ascertained through radiocarbon dating, that this camp was a seasonal location for Polynesian settlers between 1000 and 1700 AD. Remains in the midden show that shellfish, fish, penguins, birds and several species of moa formed their diet. Oven stones and shells are still visible in the bank where the estuary has cut away a cross-section.

Archaeologists have determined the Maori inhabitants of the region lived to an average age of 30, were short in stature and often malnourished. Some died of exposure, evidently not suited to the harsher conditions of the southern climate. Shelters were often rudimentary, consisting of small tree trunks and branches lashed together and thatched with wiwi or bush grass.

Details

Feature Value Info

Organisation

DOC Otago

Central government organisation

Location

South IslandSouthlandOwaka

Categories

  • Activity__walking_and_trekkingWalking
  • Free

Directions

To Coordinates

Coordinates

-46.5606902661964

169.468967819214

Latitude
-46.5606902661964
Longitude
169.468967819214

Nearby

Reviews