Weka hitches a 300 kilometre ride to Christchurch
Ranger the weka at the end of his 300km drive.
Photo:
Supplied / Kim Ranger
A weka nicknamed Ranger has been returned to the West Coast, after climbing into a ute and hitching a 300 kilometre ride to Christchurch.
The Department of Conservation says it is a reminder to people to check their vehicles for any wildlife when camping or in the outdoors, after two wētā recently made a similar trip inside a wetsuit and also had to be returned to the West Coast.
DOC Mahaanui Biodiversity Supervisor Craig Alexander removes Ranger from its temporary home.
Photo:
Supplied / Kim Ranger
Kim Ranger and her partner Ian stopped at Berlins campsite near Inangahua over Easter weekend, where it is thought the weka took advantage of an open door and climbed into their ute, hiding among dog blankets while they were packing up.
Ranger said Ian then drove home without realised he had a feathered stowaway in the back.
"He didn't hear it, didn't see it, nothing. He got home to Christchurch and hopped out and didn't notice the weka," she said.
At home, she opened the rear door of the ute and saw the weka in the footwell.
"I couldn't stop laughing and then I came the realisation, what on earth do you do with a weka in Christchurch?"
She nicknamed the bird "Ranger", given its temporary home in their ute and her last name.
She called the after hours vets, SPCA and the Department of Conservation, who all advised them to leave it in the ute and wait until the next morning.
"The weka didn't show any signs of being distressed, when you opened the door he just stood on the centre console and pooped - though he did set off the car alarm at 7 in the morning. The inside of the ute was literally covered in weka poop."
DOC staff took the weka to the South Island Wildlife Hospital in Christchurch for a check up, where it was given fluids for dehydration.
DOC biodiversity supervisor Craig Alexander said it was a reminder to people to check their vehicles for any wildlife when camping or in the outdoors.
"We were able to get [the weka] back over to the West Coast in a small carrier cage on a bus and it was released near the area it had hitched a ride from.
"There are no wild weka in Christchurch so we wouldn't want to see them accidentally introduced here. It's a good reminder for people to be mindful about unintentionally transporting animals in their equipment."
Ranger the weka left behind plenty of mess in the ute.
Photo:
Supplied / Kim Ranger
Alexander said the two wētā accidentally brought to Christchurch inside a wetsuit from the West Coast were also taken back to the coast for release.
"Our native species are unique but, in many places, they're doing it tough because of things like introduced predators and habitat loss. We don't want to accidentally introduce new species - even native ones - into places they don't belong as they could have unexpected impacts on our ecosystems."
He said anyone who found a native animal that had hitched a ride somewhere it should not have should contact DOC on 0800 DOC HOT (0800 362 468) for advice on what to do next.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
21 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
QEII National Trust set to dramatically scale back work
The Remarkables Station near Queenstown is protected with a QEII covenant - having been gifted to the QEII National Trust in 2022. Photo: Supplied Landowners are being told their requests for help conserving precious native land may have to wait, as the QEII National Trust faces a funding crunch. The conservation organisation said it would have to dramatically reduce the number of new covenants it was protecting across the motu from next month, when the Department of Conservation's Jobs for Nature funding ran out. Makarora resident Gary Charteris was among the thousands of landowners who have protected pieces of wetland, grassland or forest under a QEII covenant since 1977, to prevent it ever being developed, cleared or subdivided. Charteris said he wanted to ensure his beloved 30 hectares of pasture, beech forest and native mistletoe would never be sliced up or sold. "At some stage in the future, someone, some property developer, might decide to develop it and subdivide it and build little houses all over it. And I wanted to prevent that," he said. He said the process was straightforward and - with the addition of a walking track last month - gave everyone a chance to enjoy the land. "I've lived here for 40 years and I've had a lot of enjoyment out of just wandering through the bush, and I can't see why other people can't," he said. For each covenant, the Trust helped out with the legal paperwork, survey costs and boundary fencing, and offered advice for pest control, weeding and long-term land care. Despite strong demand for new covenants - with waitlists in some regions - QEII National Trust chief executive Dan Coup said the Trust was preparing to dramatically scale back its work. The Trust relied largely on government funding, and its budget was set to shrink. It protected 141 new covenants in 2024, 153 in 2023, and 170 in 2022 - but next year could look a little different, Coup said. "Next year we will be lucky to be able to do a quarter to a third of the number of covenants we have done over the last few years. So it does mean that there's going to be quite a number of more people that we're going to be turning away or at least saying we can't afford to help you right now," he said. The Trust received annual funding of just over $4.27 million. In February, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka announced a new $4.5 million funding package over three years. But that coincided with another key funding source coming to an end - the Jobs for Nature programme, funded by the government and administered by the Department of Conservation. It gave the Trust $8 million over four years, from 2021. Coup said the Trust would soon have just a little more than it needed to cover its core operations and support existing landowners. Environmental Defence Society chief executive Gary Taylor - a former QEII National Trust director - was appalled. "I think I think it's ridiculous that QEII is struggling on around about $5 million a year. It should be on $25 million a year and then it would be able to do proportionately a lot more and and do it in a way that's consistent with the government's overall political philosophy and direction," he said. Coup said the Trust had been looking at ways to avoid cutting back on new covenants. "We're obviously talking to officials and politicians as much as we can, and crowdfunding," he said. "We think this is a really effective investment of Crown money to improve both biodiversity but also ecosystems service outcomes for communities." Taylor believed crowdfunding and bequests wouldn't cut it. "I think there's a lot of demand on philanthropic and private investment in conservation at the moment. DOC itself is looking to bulk up its revenue sources with philanthropic support. There's only so much that philanthropy can do," he said. "This is something that requires so little additional funding to make it really roll that we should look to government to support. We could take $25 million out of Shane Jones's $200 million for oil and gas and that would give us something meaningful." In a statement, Potaka reiterated his support for the trust and its important mahi protecting landscapes and ecosystems. Asked if the government would consider additional funding for QEII, he said like with many other important conservation projects, further budget investments would be "considered in due course".

RNZ News
21 hours ago
- RNZ News
QEII National Trust prepares to dramatically scale back work
The Remarkables Station near Queenstown is protected with a QEII covenant - having been gifted to the QEII National Trust in 2022. Photo: Supplied Landowners are being told their requests for help conserving precious native land may have to wait, as the QEII National Trust faces a funding crunch. The conservation organisation said it would have to dramatically reduce the number of new covenants it was protecting across the motu from next month, when the Department of Conservation's Jobs for Nature funding ran out. Makarora resident Gary Charteris was among the thousands of landowners who have protected pieces of wetland, grassland or forest under a QEII covenant since 1977, to prevent it ever being developed, cleared or subdivided. Charteris said he wanted to ensure his beloved 30 hectares of pasture, beech forest and native mistletoe would never be sliced up or sold. "At some stage in the future, someone, some property developer, might decide to develop it and subdivide it and build little houses all over it. And I wanted to prevent that," he said. He said the process was straight-forward and - with the addition of a walking track last month - gave everyone a chance to enjoy the land. "I've lived here for 40 years and I've had a lot of enjoyment out of just wandering through the bush, and I can't see why other people can't," he said. For each covenant, the Trust helped out with the legal paperwork, survey costs and boundary fencing, and offered advice for pest control, weeding and long-term land care. Despite strong demand for new covenants - with waitlists in some regions - QEII National Trust chief executive Dan Coup said the Trust was preparing to dramatically scale back its work. The Trust relied largely on government funding, and its budget was set to shrink. It protected 141 new covenants in 2024, 153 in 2023, and 170 in 2022 - but next year could look a little different, Coup said. "Next year we will be lucky to be able to do a quarter to a third of the number of covenants we have done over the last few years. So it does mean that there's going to be quite a number of more people that we're going to be turning away or at least saying we can't afford to help you right now," he said. The Trust received annual funding of just over $4.27 million. In February, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka announced a new $4.5 million funding package over three years. But that coincided with another key funding source coming to an end - the Jobs for Nature programme, funded by the government and administered by the Department of Conservation. It gave the Trust $8 million over four years, from 2021. Coup said the Trust would soon have just a little more than it needed to cover its core operations and support existing landowners. Environmental Defence Society chief executive Gary Taylor - a former QEII National Trust director - was appalled. "I think I think it's ridiculous that QEII is struggling on around about $5 million a year. It should be on $25 million a year and then it would be able to do proportionately a lot more and and do it in a way that's consistent with the government's overall political philosophy and direction," he said. Coup said the Trust had been looking at ways to avoid cutting back on new covenants. "We're obviously talking to officials and politicians as much as we can, and crowdfunding," he said. "We think this is a really effective investment of Crown money to improve both biodiversity but also ecosystems service outcomes for communities." Taylor believed crowdfunding and bequests wouldn't cut it. "I think there's a lot of demand on philanthropic and private investment in conservation at the moment. DOC itself is looking to bulk up its revenue sources with philanthropic support. There's only so much that philanthropy can do," he said. "This is something that requires so little additional funding to make it really roll that we should look to government to support. We could take $25 million out of Shane Jones's $200 million for oil and gas and that would give us something meaningful." In a statement, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka reiterated his support for the trust and its important mahi protecting landscapes and ecosystems. Asked if the government would consider additional funding for QEII, he said like with many other important conservation projects, further budget investments would be "considered in due course."


Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Kākā spread their wings, trade sanctuary for urban living
A kākā makes itself at home in a Dunedin garden, near the Kensington Oval yesterday. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Telling people you have seen a flying pig is probably not a good idea. But if you have seen an endangered kākā flying around the Dunedin CBD lately, you are not going crazy. A Dunedin resident living near the Kensington Oval said she got a hell of a fright a couple of days ago when the native parrot flew into her lounge window. "It was spread-eagled against the window. "And the dog went crazy. "Then it flew into the tree and sat there for a while, like right outside our window. "It was amazing. And then it flew away." She said it returned again yesterday. "It was sitting in the apple tree, just having a big munch on a Granny Smith. It loved it. "It didn't seem to be bothered that we were there." It had also been eating wild banana passionfruit from a vine in the area. She had since notified the Department of Conservation and the Orokonui Ecosanctuary of the sighting, and the ecosanctuary had advised her not to feed it, or even give it sugar water. "They said if we gave it sugar water, we were in danger of giving it a bacterial infection, and we should just leave it be." Kākā are skilled at finding food in spaces that are healthy for them, but they are curious and can be harmed by encounters with foreign foods, objects and predatory species. Ecosanctuary staff urged Dunedin residents to support the parrots by not offering food or sugar water; avoiding socialising with them; keeping pets inside; engaging in habitat regeneration of native plants; and improving predator control such as traps for rats, stoats, ferrets and weasels. Ecosanctuary operations manager Elton Smith said her report was one of many about kākā flying around the greater Dunedin area in recent weeks. "We have been aware of at least one kākā flying around in the city for the past three weeks or so. "There's also been kākā seen in Mosgiel, Warrington, Waitati — those sort of areas." The kākā was "guaranteed" to be from the Orokonui Ecosanctuary. They could fly up to 20km in a day, and he believed it was part of a natural dispersal, where the birds left the ecosanctuary to find their own space. "At Orokonui, we're probably reaching our capacity in terms of kākā," Mr Smith said. "So the ones we do have are now establishing themselves outside the sanctuary — they're getting around, looking for new territory. "There's only so many kākā we can have inside, and in order to have a large, robust kākā population, they do need to establish outside the sanctuary. "There are more and more observations from the general public that would suggest that's what's happening. "And there's been good evidence to show that they have been breeding on the outside, too." Mr Smith was delighted to see they were surviving on their own, outside the boundaries of the ecosanctuary. "It is really good news. It's a sign that the population is increasing." He believed they would become a much more frequent sight around the Dunedin area in coming years, as the outside population grew. "It should be like what's happened in Wellington. "They started off in a sanctuary, and now they're very common, all throughout Wellington and beyond."