With thousands of people walking Te Araroa every year, most might be tempted to tell you their favourite hut is one that’s not overflowing or the one they get to themselves. But what makes a favourite hut is much more than that.
Vaughan Turner from New Plymouth loves East Ahuriri (Quailburn) Hut, after visiting it with his wife Eliza.
“There’s nothing else like it,” he says. “It’s rustic and old, with framing made from beech branches and corrugated iron cladding. Even the bunks are made of beech branches with wire mesh.”
This classic mustering hut – once part of Benmore Run – is significant for its role in high country pastoral farming. The one-roomed hut was thought to have been built between the late 1870’s and early 1890’s. It’s located on the true left of the Ahuriri River East Branch below Quailburn Saddle.
Often, it’s not the hut itself but the location that makes it a winner. Tanya Fourie Louw from Invercargill stayed at Crooked Spur Hut in Te Kahui Kaupeka Conservation Area and treasured it so much she had a painting commissioned.
“I’m a sucker for being surrounded by mountains,” she says. “Descending to Crooked Spur in Bush Stream Valley, looking towards the Rangitata, was magnificent. We had perfect weather that culminated in a kick-ass sunrise.”
Crooked Spur is an eight-bunk Department of Conservation ‘basic’ hut with limited facilities, so it’s free to stay in, but Tanya describes it as ‘rustic’. “It’s an old musterer’s hut, so it’s just corrugated iron and it does get cold, but we had a loo with a view and saw our first kea there.”
Some trampers can’t help but be impressed with the new huts being built around the country. Wellingtonian Callum Neil loved Anne Hut in St James Conservation Area. The 20-bunk serviced hut opened in 2012 after the previous hut was destroyed in a fire. It’s situated on a grassy flat with 360-degree views of the surrounding mountains.

