Dedicated to bringing birdsong back

PDC are a community led conservation charity, set up by a small group of passionate residents with the vision of re-wilding Kaipūpū Sanctuary and Waitohi Picton.

In 2023 Picton Dawn Chorus Inc. and the Kaipūpū Point Mainland Island Society merged with a new joint vision.

The journey so far

To protect biodiversity, many of New Zealand’s rarest species have been moved to offshore islands. Here they are able to escape habitat loss, predation and competition with introduced mammals. These islands have become an integral part of New Zealand’s conservation effort.

In the early 1900’s, the New Zealand Refrigerating Company selected a site at the neck of Kaipūpū Point for a freezing works and areas of bush were cleared to be used for sheep grazing. In 1973, part of Kaipūpū Point was gifted to the Crown as a scenic reserve by the NZ Refrigerating Company and until 1987, the land was managed by the Marlborough Sounds Maritime Park at which point the Department of Conservation began management.

​In 1999, the conservation model of ‘mainland islands’ was conceived, using water as a barrier to pest species, with a specially designed fence. Consequently, there are now a number of mainland islands throughout New Zealand that have been created to help protect native plant and animal species. Kaipūpū Sanctuary is one such sanctuary.

In 2005, the land which was now owned by Port Marlborough and the Department of Conservation was ‘loaned’ to the Waitohi Picton community to create a nature sanctuary. This resulted in the establishment the Kaipūpū Point Mainland Island Society. Managed entirely by volunteers and with the support of local businesses, a 600 metre long predator proof fence was installed in 2008 and this created the first line of defence against mammalian pest species. The circular walking track was completed in February 2013 and Kaipūpū Sanctuary was officially opened to the public in March 2013.