The Tararua Range serves as a popular
tramping location for the greater Wellington district. It is one of the most frequently entered ranges in the country, with between 120,000 and 150,000 people visiting each year. Among the many tramping tracks is the well-known
Southern Crossing running from Ōtaki Forks in the west, over Mount Hector and exiting via
Kaitoke. They are accessible by car, although visitors may need to travel over gravel roads that contain occasional fords, and are often narrow, especially Waiohine and Ōtaki Forks entrance roads. Campsites are generally located within the foothills of the range, alongside a river or stream.
Tramping The Tararua Range is significant in the history of tramping in New Zealand, due to its accessibility for people in Wellington and nearby towns. Two of the most popular tracks are the
Northern Crossing from
Levin to the
Wairarapa, and the Southern Crossing from
Ōtaki Forks to near
Masterton.
The Sutch Search In April 1933, the Tararua Range was the focus of what later came to be known as
The Sutch Search when Mr. Eric Hill, Miss Morva Williams, Mr. Bert O’Keefe and Dr.
Bill Sutch went missing for more than two weeks during an attempt to traverse from Te Matawai Hut to Mount Holdsworth during winter. An accident while sidling the Broken Axe Pinnacles prevented the group getting to Mt Holdsworth in a day as planned. Then bad weather forced them off the ridge tops. It took more than two weeks for them to find a route down the untracked
Waiohine River. The group was noticed to be missing after a week, at which time a search developed that eventually involved roughly 200 people and solicited many donations from members of the public. The search was the first in New Zealand to involve radio communications and aircraft, and is generally considered to be one of the major contributing events towards the formation of New Zealand's voluntary Land Search and Rescue service (
LSAR). It was covered intensely by media at the time, and when the group finally returned they sparked strong public debate regarding the responsibilities of those who enter the wilderness.
Tramping fatalities A combination of steep terrain, dense bush, difficult river crossings and changeable winter weather conditions has caused over twenty-two tramping deaths in the Tararua Range since 1970, most recently one in January 2023. Other deaths included those of the Chief Executive of the
National Museum of New Zealand Te Papa: Dr
Seddon Bennington and a friend Marcella Jackson, who died of hypothermia in June 2009. It frequently encounters adverse weather and is not regarded as a suitable event for inexperienced participants. ==See also==