![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgU_uL2FGwMQR87QecssBd4CJT8Ijh4jlfeTcjdrVPUEgx0bSzl3YLpBgYVKx8goYzOQbHw6vjr0658KGAJjJ-6ttcf1crXavxTLV-dAVkCA1iDLNJcTXN16fp-o7J16R2rOlKOYg/s400/kaka.jpg)
We also took a very long walk along paths where we hadn't walked before, as well as the same paths we had seen on our evening tour. We managed to spot two tuatara and several weta.
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By releasing them and protecting them, the sanctuary is helping reestablish this species, which was harmed by imported predators. Each one wears a little beaded collar, color coded to identify the individual. Though they are carefully watched and protected, these rare animals are still considered to be living and breeding in the wild.
The weta is a very large insect. They live in various parts of the sanctuary, most impressively within an abandoned gold mining shaft that dates from an unsuccessful gold rush in 19th century Wellington. Lenny photographed one on the fence that separates the various kinds of wildlife from endangering one another.
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