Sunday, November 15, 2015

Kiwi birds - notes from Cindy



I (Cindy) have been volunteering at Willowbank Wildlife Reserve in Christchurch every Monday, and because of my work with eagles, I was assigned to help with the kiwi (yeay!).   I thought I would share what I have been doing and some things I’ve learned about kiwi.



The kiwi is the national bird of New Zealand.  There are several species of kiwi and they all are endemic to New Zealand, meaning they are found exclusively in New Zealand.  All kiwi are nocturnal, except those found on Stewart Island, the small island off the bottom of the south island.
Willowbank has 12 resident kiwi (6 in a nocturnal house and 6 in outdoor areas).  Sometimes when the kiwi have to be weighed or have health checks, the public is lucky enough to be shown a kiwi in the daylight.
Nocturnal house entrance

Many kiwi are killed in the wild in their first 3 months by dogs, cats, stoats and possums.  Willowbank serves as a temporary home for young kiwi who are removed from their nests.  The young kiwi are raised until they are large enough to fend for themselves against predators.  At that point they are returned to the wild.  The young kiwi are housed in indoor pens at first and then placed in outdoor pens. 

Indoor box pens

An adult kiwi weighs about 3-7 pounds, with the female larger than the male.  The female lays 1 egg and the male sits on the egg which hatches in 70-80 days.  A kiwi has one of the largest egg-to-body weight ratios in relation to the size of the bird.  When the egg hatches, the chick already has feathers and it's eyes are open.  It survives on the egg yolk for about 5 days.

Kiwi eggs next to a U.S. dollar for size comparison
Kiwi have some unusual features.  Their feathers are downy in appearance, they have small eyes (and poor vision), they do not have a tail, they have whiskers at the base of their bill, and nostrils at the end of their long bill. They have a strong sense of smell and poke their bills into the ground when they smell worms, grubs and insects.  They also eat fruits.  Kiwi have small wings but cannot fly.  


Note the nostril at the end of the bill, right by the handler's fingertip
The kiwi at Willowbank are named:  Whenua, Shauny, Lala, Frickleton, Pehl, Tinkey, Matangl, Elvis, Mere, Kenza, Matt and Mohua.  They are fed a diet developed by Massey University.  The diet consists of a mix of lean beef, ox heart, wheat germ, fruit, vegetables, dry pet food, oil and vitamins.  I helped weigh out the food for each bird and place the food dishes into the nocturnal house.  I also collect the dishes from the previous day, weigh the leftover food and record the amount each animal has eaten.  Leftover food is fed to the weka, a chicken sized New Zealand bird.  The kiwi are also given mealworms on logs to give them some enrichment time and I gave them their mealworms last week.  I also help remove and scrub the wooden burrows, clean up poo, wash dishes and use a magnet to find metal pieces in the dirt.  Kiwi will eat metal bits which then need to be surgically removed from their stomachs.



Mealworms and wood I placed in the nocturnal house
It’s been fun having kiwi babies arrive.  They are small enough to be held in one hand - slightly larger than a softball. More will be coming in the next month, but unfortunately I won't be there to see them.


Thursday, November 12, 2015

Manapouri, Invercargill, Stewart Island and the Catlins



After returning from Doubtful Sound, we stayed at the Freestone BBH Backpackers just outside of the town of Manapouri.  It was a different and rustic place to stay, as each room is its own building, with a kitchen, living area, and bed - like bungalows, but set in the hillside bush overlooking Lake Manapouri and the mountains.  Nice place to stay!

Tui Lodge, our room at Freestone Backpackers
View from  Freestone
We then wound our way south with a few stops along the way.  Paul got to explore at Clifden Caves, and we visited Yesteryears Museum/Cafe and the interesting Cwtch gallery (with psychology-inspired art) in the small Southland town of Tuatapere.  After reconnecting with the coast and the windswept trees of Southland, we drove on to Invercargill where we stayed overnight.  Invercargill was larger and had more to see than we remembered from a brief stop four years ago – we enjoyed seeing Henry the tuatara lizard at the Invercargill Museum, and also saw the World’s Fastest Indian motorcycle (raced by Burt Munro to a number of New Zealand and US speed records) at E. Hayes, a combination hardware/department/auto parts store and motorcycle/automobile museum.

Clifden Caves
Helen, the owner of Yesteryears Museum/Cafe in Tuatapere
Yesteryears - old kitchen utensils cover one wall
Cwtch Gallery
We promise we didn't prospect here!
The trees in Southland are definitely windswept
Henry, the 115 year old tuatara lizard, at Invercargill Museum-
he was a father for the first time at 108
The World's Fastest Indian motorcycle, on display at E. Hayes in Invercargill
Paul, going for the new world record in the replica shell at the museum
The next day we flew out to Stewart Island in an 8-seater prop plane.  Stewart Island is one of our favorite places in New Zealand – it’s mostly national park, has many walking tracks, has a permanent population of only 400 and not that many tourists at this time of year.  We spent one day observing birds and nature on the predator-cleared Ulva Island inside the main bay of Stewart Island, and were able to see two kiwis (birds, not persons) in the wild, a sea lion (very close), as well as a good variety of ferns and other native plants.  We also saw Gadget, the rat dog, and her trainer Sandy King - Gadget was trying to find a single island rat that had recently been seen on island trail cameras.  The second day we did a four-hour hiking loop piecing together parts of five of the local tracks on Stewart Island.

Up close and personal with Vlad, the pilot
Gadget (down low) and Sandy
Sea lion flipping sand on itself
View from Ulva Island back to Stewart Island


New Zealand Robin - they're very tame, and often come near your feet to investigate what you've stirred up as you walk
The main transport around Stewart Island
A Tui - the R2D2 sound-alike in the New Zealand bird world
A Silvereye
Our kind of KFC on Stewart Island
Stewart Island wharf
We had one more stop on our trip – the Catlins, which is at the southeast end of the South Island.  We stayed for two nights near Curio Bay, an amazing place that has fossilized trees and stumps set into the rocks of the bay, huge waves (good surfing on the nearby beaches), and yellow-eyed penguins that come in at night.  We also had a day hike to Waipohatu Falls – though the track was steep and slippery in places, the view of the falls and the overall experience was well worth it.

Slope Point, the southernmost land point on the South Island
Petrified tree trunks at Curio Bay
Petrified tree stump

Yellow-Eyed Penguin coming out of the sea at dusk
Fern tree on track to Waipohatu Falls
Deep in the fern forest

Waipohatu Falls
We wanted to do a little more on our last day in the Catlins.  We stopped at the Lost GypsyGallery, Brett Somerville's intriguing bus and grounds consisting of homemade "rustic automata" that you wind up or otherwise activate.   Our last stop was at Nugget Point, where we viewed the Nuggets (the collection of rocks that mark this point jutting out into the sea) and the accompanying lighthouse that has long kept sea travelers safe.  We’d been fortunate to have very good weather overall on this trip, and were happy to end with a good day before heading back to Dunedin and on to Christchurch.
The Lost Gypsy Gallery's "indoor" display space
Brett Somerville, creator of Lost Gypsy Gallery
Water feature involving a boot, paua shells, and other mechanical parts
Nugget Point lighthouse

The Nuggets