Mount Peel Explained

Mount Peel is a mountain located in South Canterbury, New Zealand. It consists of three peaks, Mount Peel (often referred to as Big Mt Peel), Middle Mt Peel (1583m (5,194feet)) and Little Mt Peel/Huatekerekere (1311m (4,301feet)). Mt Peel is tall and is owned by the Department of Conservation and Mt Peel Station. It lies just south of the Rangitata river and is north-west of Geraldine.

The Peel Forest Park Scenic Reserve is the largest in the Geraldine area, covering around Little Mount Peel / Huatekerekere.[1]

Etymology

The nearby forest was named by Francis Jollie, who settled in the area in late 1853. Jollie had named the forest after Sir Robert Peel, the British Prime Minister of the United Kingdom who had died in 1850, the year that Canterbury was founded. The mountain and the nearby community of Peel Forest also took Peel's name.[2]

Access

Mt Peel and the surrounding Peel Forest contain many well maintained and popular walking tracks. There is also a small, less maintained track, heading from Little Mt Peel to Middle Mt Peel and then to Mt Peel. Different tracks cater to different climbing abilities, ranging from short 30 minute walks, to full day/overnight tramps.[3] Just below the summit of Little Mt Peel/Huatekerekere is the small Tristram Harper Memorial hut. Complete with rain water storage, two beds and long drop. A trig station is located on top of Little Mt Peel, while a cell tower and communication hut are found at the top of Mt Peel.

Flora and fauna

There is much unique flora and fauna in Peel Forest. The three largest trees in Peel Forest belong to the family Podocarpaceae, a very ancient family going back in time more than 100 million years. The three large trees are kahikatea (white pine), tōtara, and mataī (black pine).[4]

The native birds in the forest include bellbird, silvereye, tomtit, rifleman, grey warbler, kererū, fantail, silvereye, shining cuckoo and longtailed cuckoo. There are also many lizards including the jeweled gecko and McCann's skink.[4]

References

-43.8467°N 171.1567°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Data Table - Protected Areas - LINZ Data Service. Land Information New Zealand. 2017-10-18.
  2. Book: Reed, A. W. . Alexander Wyclif Reed

    . Alexander Wyclif Reed . Place Names of New Zealand . 2010 . Raupo . Rosedale, North Shore . 9780143204107 . Peter Dowling . 310.

  3. Web site: Peel Forest area . 24 June 2017 . Department of Conservation.
  4. Web site: Peel Forest Park Scenic Reserve: Places to go in Canterbury. . 18 May 2017. This article contains quotations from this source, which is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) licence.