The Wairarapa (; ) is an unofficial region of New Zealand located in the south-eastern corner of the North Island, east of the cities of Wellington, Lower Hutt, Upper Hutt, and Palmerston North. The Wairarapa's northern boundary approximately matches the southern border of the former Hawke's Bay Province. Its eastern boundary is the coast from a location near Cape Turnagain, southward to Cape Palliser. The southern boundary is Palliser Bay, which sweeps from Cape Palliser to Turakirae Head. To the west, the region is bordered by the peaks of the Remutaka and Tararua Ranges.

thumb|500x500px|The view of the Wairarapa from Mt Dick, Carterton

The Wairarapa is one of New Zealand's more thinly populated areas. Its largest town, Masterton has an urban population (June 2025) of about 22,600 people. The region is named after its largest lake, Lake Wairarapa.

Etymology

The name Wairarapa means "glistening waters" in the Māori language. According to some oral histories, the legendary Polynesian explorer Kupe named the wetlands after touching down in the area several times. According to other oral histories, explorer Haunui named the wetlands after the way the lake appeared to glisten from the Remutaka Ranges to the west.

In English, the name Wairarapa is sometimes used with a definite article: "the Wairarapa".

During British colonial times the region was sometimes called Wyderop, Wydrop, or Waidrop.

History

Rangitāne and Ngāti Kahungunu were the resident Māori tribes (iwi) when European explorers arrived in the area in the 1770s.

In 1841 Robert Stokes and several companions travelled over the Remutaka Range, returning to Wellington via the coastal route around Turakirae Head. Stokes noted the agricultural potential of the Wairarapa plains and spread word of such in Wellington.

On 23 January 1855 the region was shaken by the strongest earthquake recorded in New Zealand, with an estimated magnitude of 8.2. In the Wairarapa, several people (variously reported as two, four, five or six) were killed when a building collapsed during the shaking.

In World War II United States Marine Corps soldiers were stationed in the Wairarapa with two battalions in Masterton.

Geography

The Wairarapa region has several geographic zones. The Remutaka, Tararua, and Ruahine Ranges form the region's western boundary.

The Remutaka Range extends from Turakirae Head to the Remutaka Pass, reaching its highest point at Mount Matthews, a peak near the southern end of the range.

The Tararua Range extends from the Remutaka Pass to the Manawatū Gorge. There are 15 peaks of or higher along the Tararuas. The tallest is the Pukeamoamo / Mitre (not to be confused with Mitre Peak).

Most of the population is concentrated in three central zones (from south to north): the Wairarapa Basin, the Masterton Basin, and the Pahiatua Basin.

Parks and reserves

The Wairarapa region includes a wide range of protected areas, including several conservation parks that provide opportunities for outdoor and backcountry recreation and hunting. The Tararua and Remutaka Ranges are major geographic features in the west of the Wairarapa region, and occupy around 14% of the land area. Most of the area of these two ranges is protected within the Tararua and Remutaka Forest Parks. The Tararua Forest Park was gazetted in 1954 as New Zealand's first forest park, and with an area of is the largest forest park in the North Island. Between 120,000 and 150,000 people visit Tararua Forest Park each year, with the majority of those coming from Wellington.

Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre is a captive breeding facility and visitor centre located in a protected forest area of , adjacent to State Highway 2 around north of Masterton. Pūkaha has been described by the Mayor of Masterton as "one of the region’s most important conservation and tourism attractions”.

Wairarapa Moana Wetlands is the largest wetland in the lower North Island, one of the largest in New Zealand, and was recognised as a wetland of international significance under the Ramsar Convention in August 2020. It covers an area of , with the largest part being Lake Wairarapa at .

One of the notable urban parks in the region is Queen Elizabeth Park in Masterton.

The Wairarapa Dark Sky Reserve is an area of , certified by the International Dark-Sky Association in January 2023. It was the second dark sky reserve to be certified in New Zealand (after the Aoraki Mackenzie International Dark Sky Reserve in 2012). The area covered by the reserve includes the Aorangi Forest Park, and the entire South Wairarapa and Carterton Districts.

Politics

The Wairarapa is represented in the New Zealand Parliament by two overlapping electorates. Voters on the General Roll vote in the Wairarapa Electorate, which also includes southern Hawke's Bay. Voters on the Māori Roll vote in the Ikaroa-Rāwhiti Electorate, which also includes Hawke's Bay and the East Coast.

The Wairarapa includes the local government districts of South Wairarapa, Carterton, Masterton, and part of Tararua District.

The southern and central parts of the Wairarapa (including South Wairarapa, Carterton, and Masterton Districts, together with a small triangle in the south-east of Tararua district) are in Wellington Region. The remainder is in the Manawatū-Whanganui Region.

Economy

The agricultural industries, including forestry, cropping, sheep, beef and dairy farming, are major land users. The area around Martinborough, in the south, is notable for its vineyards and wine, as are the outskirts of Masterton and Carterton. Beer has been brewed at Mangatainoka, near Pahiatua, since 1889. There are over 60 wineries in the region since the weather is very similar to Burgundy. Deer farming is growing in importance.

Transport

Roads

Westbound highway connections are constrained by the Remutaka and Tararua Ranges. To the southwest, State Highway 2 (SH 2 ) connects the region with the Hutt Valley and Wellington via the Remutaka Pass.

Road connections to the Manawatū are provided by SH 2 (via State Highway 3 and by a local road called the Pahiatua Track, from Pahiatua over the Tararuas to Palmerston North. SH 2 also provides road connection with the Hawke's Bay.

SH 2 is the region's main highway between Featherston and Pahiatua. State Highway 53 runs from SH 2 at Featherston to the town of Martinborough.

Route 52 runs from SH 2 at Masterton, via the eastern uplands and Pongaroa to SH 2 at Waipukurau (Hawke's Bay).

A network of local roads connect the Wairarapa's many rural localities. Some of these local roads are not sealed.

Railway

The Wairarapa railway line connects the region via the Remutaka Tunnel to Wellington. A commuter rail passenger service, the Wairarapa Connection from Masterton to Wellington is operated by Metlink Wellington for Metlink. Before 2016, it was operated by Tranz Metro.

Commuting

Many residents, especially in the southern towns such as Featherston and Greytown, commute to work in Wellington, either by train or over the Remutaka Range by car or motorcycle.

Notable people

  • Max Abbott, psychologist, Pro-Vice Chancellor of Auckland University of Technology, and former president of the World Federation for Mental Health, born Featherston
  • Pip Brown – singer/songwriter Ladyhawke, born Masterton
  • James Cameron, film director
  • Bob Charles, champion golfer and winner of the 1963 British Open, at Carterton.
  • Jemaine Clement, one half of the comedy band/TV series "Flight of the Conchords"
  • Marcus Daniell Masterton-born professional tennis player
  • Geoffrey Fisken, highest scoring NZ fighter ace at Pacific in the WW2
  • Katie Gold, potter
  • Murray Halberg, middle-distance runner and Olympic gold medalist, at Eketāhuna
  • Keith Holyoake, former Prime Minister of New Zealand, at Pahiatua.
  • Raybon Kan, Comedian, at Masterton
  • Moana Leota, singer-songwriter
  • Brian Lochore, All Black captain and World Cup-winning coach, at Masterton
  • Alan Graham MacDiarmid, Nobel Prize-winning chemist, born in Masterton
  • Cathy Penney, helicopter pilot and founder (with Laurie Bargh) of Heli-Flight Wairarapa
  • Arthur Prior, Masterton-born logician and philosopher. Professor of Philosophy at the University of Manchester, fellow and tutor at Balliol College, Oxford, and founder of Temporal logic.
  • Jesse Ryder, International cricketer, at Masterton
  • Ross Taylor, International cricketer
  • Te Hiko Pīata Tama-i-hikoia, 19th-century Māori tribal leader
  • Vincent Ward, Film director, at Greytown (What dreams may come, The Navigator, Vigil, River Queen)
  • Maurice Wilkins, Nobel Prize-winning scientist, whose work led to the discovery of the structure of DNA, at Pongaroa.

See also

  • Georgina Beyer, Ex MP for Wairarapa, ex Mayor of Carterton.
  • Grant Batty, Greytown, Ex *All Black*
  • Geoffrey Fisken, Grazier, Fighter Pilot
  • Zac Guildford, Masterton, All Black
  • List of regions in New Zealand
  • List of rivers of Wellington Region
  • List of rivers of the Manawatū-Whanganui_Region
  • Seventy Mile Bush
  • New Zealand wine

Notes

References

Bibliography

  • Wairarapa Times-Age newspaper
  • Destination Wairarapa (Regional Tourism Organisation)
  • Wairarapa Dark Sky Reserve Association website