One of the Waiheke kiwi monitoring volunteers, Hinrich Voges, does regular check-ins with the Te Matuku kiwi. Save The Kiwi’s Tineke Joustra says one pair of kiwi are nesting, likely having laid a pair of eggs, and another kiwi couple seems to have formed judging by how close they stay to each other in monitoring data.

The first generation of Waiheke born kiwi may be born soon, with two of the Te Matuku kiwi appearing to have laid two eggs. Save The Kiwi operations manager Tineke Joustra says kiwi usually lay pairs of eggs, and the kiwi couple are definitely nesting and behaving like they are incubating eggs. But Save The Kiwi can’t confirm without disturbing the nest. “And we want to give them all the space they need.”

Waiheke volunteers have been helping to remotely monitor the kiwi with high-tech trackers, and gather data on how they are settling in. 

Paul Mitchell

Full story in this week’s Gulf News……. On sale now

© Waiheke Gulf News Ltd 2025

Subscribe and read Gulf News and Waiheke Weekender Online