Great Walks

FLATS, FALLS & FABLES

THE last person to claim to have seen NZ’s famed giant moa was a seven-year-old girl who lived on Fiordland’s west coast in the late 1800s. Alice McKenzie kept a diary of life in one of NZ’s most remote settlements and in her 1947 memoir she says in 1887 she saw a large blue bird unlike anything she’d seen before.

Alice examined its curved feathers and noted it had no tail. When she tried to tie it up the bird grunted, and when it stood up Alice claims it was taller than her. The bird left footprints 28cm long, far too big for any known living bird in NZ.

There’s been much doubt about Alice’s sighting but standing on the wind-swept bay, at the end of the Hollyford Track where Alice lived, if there was anywhere on earth where a bird thought to be extinct

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Great Walks

Great Walks10 min read
Show Me The Way
WHAT’S it like to take on a long-distance pilgrim walk? How do you cope on cold wet days? What’s it like meeting other pilgrims? There are so many questions people ask before they take on their first Camino and it would be easy to disappear down an o
Great Walks1 min read
A Right Royal Walk
Three hour’s drive from world-famous Uluru is Watarrka NP, home to the mighty Kings Canyon – a majestic destination featuring 300m high sandstone walls, palm-filled crevices, and views that stretch across the desert. Lace up your hiking boots and exp
Great Walks7 min read
Paradise Found
K’GARI (Fraser Island) means ‘Paradise’ to the Butchulla people. But the first colonial settlers to arrive didn’t see the Island with the same vision as the traditional owners. Their vision was a paradise for exploitation. The tall trees of blackbutt

Related Books & Audiobooks