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Nau Mai, Haere Mai

Welcome to The Brook Waimārama Sanctuary – an extraordinary part of New Zealand.

Just minutes from Nelson’s city centre, the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary is the South Island’s largest fully fenced eco-sanctuary—690 hectares of protected native forest alive with rare and threatened species. This is a place where you can reconnect with nature, breathe deeply, and experience the mauri (life force) of Aotearoa’s unique environment. 

Home to iconic species like the kiwi, tuatara, and kākāriki, the Sanctuary offers self-guided exploration across 15km of walking tracks, as well as guided day and night tours.

Kākāriki Karaka

Vote Kākāriki karaka for Bird of the Year

Glow Up for the Kākāriki Karaka: Bright, Bold, and Back from the Brink!

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SANCTUARY WALKS & FACILITIES

Be inspired by our 690-ha protected ecosystem just 6km from Nelson’s central city.

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Glowworms; Bush; Brook Sanctuary; Wildlife; Tours; Glowworm Tour A Special Experience

Night in the Forest - Sanctuary Guided Tour

Discover the magic of the ngahere at night on this unforgettable 75-minute guided experience at the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary.

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Brook Waimārama Sanctuary; Children: Students; Education Inspiring The Next Generation; Learning; Rick Field

EDUCATION AT THE SANCTUARY

It’s never too late to learn about how we can care for and interact with nature.

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Sanctuary Volunteers; Get Involved With The Brook Waimarama Sanctuary

Become a Sanctuary volunteer

Get involved in this community project

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Photography Competition

Submit your entry to win!

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Find us on Instagram

@brooksanctuary

Share your photos with #brooksanctuary

🟠🌿✨ Voting is OPEN! ✨🌿🟠

It’s here — Bird of the Year 2025 has begun! We’re backing the kākāriki karaka (orange-fronted parakeet), one of Aotearoa’s most precious taonga species.

Once found across the motu, kākāriki karaka now survive only in small, fragile populations. They are taonga because they carry the mauri (life force) of our beech forests — feeding on seeds, flowers, and insects, and spreading the ngahere’s abundance as they move. Their survival is woven into the health of the forest itself.

Less than a few hundred remain in the wild, but thanks to translocations, captive breeding, and predator-free sanctuaries like ours, there is hope.

💚 Cast your vote for the kākāriki karaka — the rarest parakeet with the biggest fight.

💚 Share this post to spread the word.

👉 Vote: Link in our bio
👉 Search for kākāriki karaka and click “click here to vote for me”

Together, we can give this taonga a future.
#KākārikiKaraka #BirdOfTheYear #BOTY2025 #BrookSanctuary
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🚨💥BREAKING NEWS💥🚨

Remember Floyd — the kākāriki karaka poster boy of summer 2021/22? 🦜✨

After a storm wrecked his nest and his trail went cold, he vanished… whispers spread, hope faded… many thought we’d never see him again. 😱

But guess what? In a jaw-dropping comeback worthy of a wildlife soap opera…
 
FLOYD. IS. BACK. 💛🌿

Older. Wiser. Hotter. And living proof that predator-free forests = survival + surprise comebacks. 🌳🔥

Read the full story here on Sean McGrath's blog: Link in our bio

#FloydLives #KākārikiMystery #KakarikiForBirdOfTheYear
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💚 Aotearoa Icons: Kererū keep the ngahere growing

Kererū are more than forest gardeners — they’re essential to the health and regeneration of the Sanctuary. As the only birds in Aotearoa able to swallow large fruits whole, they disperse the seeds of tawa, miro, mataī, nīkau and many broadleaf plants like Coprosma species. Without them, many of these trees would struggle to thrive.

But kererū do more than spread seeds. Alongside extinct moa and now-rare kōkākō and parrots, they are also native browsers. Here at the Sanctuary, they feed on leaves and buds of kōwhai in late winter and spring, as well as browsing on introduced species like brooms and lucerne.

This work is vital for the one-third of the Sanctuary that was historically felled and is now regenerating. Kererū play a key role in shaping these young forests back into rich, resilient ngahere for future generations. 🌿

📸 Photo by @henry.__.hart, taken here at the Sanctuary.

 🌿 Aotearoa Icons — celebrating the beloved species that shape our identity, from the backyard to the Sanctuary.
#AotearoaIcons #Kererū #BrookSanctuary #Conservation #ForestGardeners
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STRATEGIC SUPPORTERS

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MAJOR SUPPORTERS

Sponsors; J&E Reuhl; logos
Sponsors; kumanu; logos
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