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Cape Kidnappers

Hawke's Bay  >  New Zealand

This rugged headland with towering cliffs is home to the largest mainland colony of Australasian Gannet.

Added* by Ron Wilson
Most recent update 29 septembra 2025

Description

Cape Kidnappers is located at the southern tip of Hawke Bay on New Zealand’s North Island. The rugged headland is home to a huge colony of Australasian Gannet. Over 6,500 breeding pairs nest here. From mid-September to mid-December, you can witness thousands of gannets nesting, courting, and rearing their young, with the juvenile chicks staying as late as May, before migrating to Australia. The site is enclosed by a predator-proof fence, part of the Cape Sanctuary conservation project.

The journey to the colony offers stunning views of the Pacific Ocean and the dramatic cliffs of the Hawke’s Bay coastline and the possibility to observe many other birds. Besides Australasian Gannet, birds you might spot Paradise Shelduck, Brown Teal, Kelp Gull, Silver Gull, Black-billed Gull, White-fronted Tern, New Zealand Pigeon, Australasian Swamphen, Great Cormorant, White-faced Heron, Eurasian Skylark, New Zealand Pipit and Swamp Harrier.

Details

Access

Cape Kidnappers is located at the southern tip of Hawke Bay on New Zealand’s North Island. It is at the end of an 8 km peninsula that protrudes into the Pacific Ocean, and 20 kilometres south-east of the city of Napier. Road access ends at Clifton, which is the departure point for visiting the colony.

Visitors can reach the cape and gannet colony by private minibus tours via an inland road. Tours run from 1 September – 30 April, starting off at our Te Awanga base. See the link below for more info on times and prices.

Walking along the coast is also possible, but it’s a serious undertaking. The Cape Kidnappers Walking Track is a 19 km return beach route that is only safe during low tide and a round trips takes about 5 hours. Note that the track has seasonal closures: the track to the plateau gannet colony is closed July to mid-October to protect nesting birds.

Terrain and Habitat

Canyon/cliff , Sea

Conditions

Rocky , Open landscape

Circular trail

No

Is a telescope useful?

Can be useful

Good birding season

Spring , Summer

Best time to visit

Spring

Route

Narrow trail

Difficulty walking trail

Strenuous

Accessible by

Foot , Car

Birdwatching hide / platform

No

Links

View other birding spots in the area that are published on Birdingplaces

Map

Top 5 birds

Other birds you can see here

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