Nick's Head Station is a 661 hectare property consisting of the headland and its surrounding coastal, wetland and farming areas. It was listed for sale in November 2000 and in January 2002 New York
financier John Griffin entered into a contract to purchase it for $4 million after an attempt by the
Ngāi Tāmanuhiri iwi failed through lack of finance. Protesting against foreign ownership of the culturally and historically significant land, a group of local Māori led by
Tu Wyllie occupied Young Nick's Head and staged protests at Parliament. After negotiations with iwi took place, Finance Minister
Michael Cullen announced in August 2002 that "Young Nick's Head will be protected and the cliffs, pā site and peak of Te Kuri gifted into public ownership as part of a purchase deal for Young Nick's Station". Griffin also agreed upon purchasing the land to establish an open covenant through the
Queen Elizabeth II National Trust to protect the remainder of the headland area from commercial development. More than 600,000 trees were planted, 26 hectares of wetlands were restored, and a 2-metre-high predator-proof fence was constructed as native species such as
tuatara,
blue penguin and
wētā were reintroduced. In 2005 Ecoworks, an
ecological restoration company in Gisborne, successfully used solar-powered, acoustic-attraction methods and artificial burrows to establish breeding colonies of six
pelagic seabird species at Young Nick's Head which had previously been severely affected by human colonisation and the introduction of new predators. Under the Ngai Tāmanuhiri Claims Settlement Act 2012, Young Nick's Head/Te Kuri a Paoa Historic Reserve became a
national reserve per section 13 of the
Reserves Act 1977 and was renamed Te Kuri a Paoa/Young Nick's Head National Historic Reserve. ==References==