The Tauweru River, sometimes called the Taueru River, is a river in the Wairarapa region of New Zealand's North Island. It drains from the pastoral eastern highlands of the Wairarapa and joins the Ruamahanga River just north of the Gladstone Road bridge into Gladstone, southeast of Carterton. The river's name is Māori for "hanging in clusters" and named after it is the town of Tauweru, located along the middle reaches of the river east of Masterton.
The river itself is slow and sluggish, flowing in a willow-lined, restricted and gravel-less channel. A group of local farmers, the Mid-Tauweru Landcare Group, was established in 2000 to facilitate sound management of the river's riparian zone by replacing willows with native plants to enhance the river's flow and biodiversity. Its catchment east of Masterton is extensive and fishing conditions in the lower three kilometres of the river are considered to be excellent, especially in summer.
References
- 1966 Encyclopaedia Of New Zealand: Ruamahanga River
- Map depicting the Gladstone Road bridge just south of the confluence of the Ruamahanga and Tauweru Rivers
- Sharpe, Marty, 6 July 2002, "Tauweru Spelling Stays a Hot Issue" Archived 2007-08-15 at archive.today, Wairarapa Times-Age.
- Heather, B. D., September 1973, "The Black-Fronted Dotterel (Charadrius Melanops) in the Wairarapa" Archived 2007-10-29 at the Wayback Machine, Notornis: Journal of the Ornithological Society of New Zealand 20(3), pg. 252.
- Transpower Grants - Mid-Tauweru Landcare Group
- Fish and Game New Zealand: Wellington - Fishing - Access Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
41°04′05″S 175°38′01″E / 41.0681°S 175.6337°E / -41.0681; 175.6337
This article about a river in the Wellington Region is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |