On this page…
Photo gallery 1: Bedrooms at Hone Heke Lodge (scroll down to view)
Photo gallery 2: Facilities at Hone Heke Lodge (scroll down to view)
Photo gallery 3: Bay of Islands photos (scroll down to view)
Photo gallery 4: Maori Chief Hone Heke photos (scroll down to view)
1. Bedrooms at Hone Heke Lodge…
Click any thumbnail to view the “Bedrooms at Hone Heke Lodge” gallery and scroll through the photos.
- Double ensuite motel room.
- Double ensuite motel room.
- Ensuite shower in double ensuite motel room.
- Private double room. Single bunk above, double bed below.
- Sunny sitting area at the end of a dorm room.
- Dorm room in daylight.
- Dorm room at dusk.
- Dorm room in daylight.
- Dorm room at dusk.
2. Facilities at Hone Heke Lodge…
Click any thumbnail to view the “Hone Heke Lodge Motel & Backpackers” gallery and scroll through the photos.
- Looking across the car park to the accommodation blocks
- Motel rooms on the left, recreation and TV rooms on the right.
- Te Araroa walkers ready to go
- Guests playing football in the car park
- A peaceful spot near the entrance
- Victoria at reception
- Reception area
- TV Room
- Common room
- A graduation in the common room
- Guests cooking in the communal kitchen
- Communal kitchen area
- Gas hobs in covered courtyard area
- Cooking in the covered courtyard area
- Cooking in the covered courtyard area
- Dinner time is fun time!
- Pizza lunch in covered courtyard
- Dinner in the covered area
- Band playing at Hone Heke Lodge
- Exterior view of covered courtyard at dusk
- Exterior view of covered courtyard at dusk
- Courtyard dining area before the evening rush
- Courtyard dining area before the evening rush
- Getting busier in the courtyard dining area
- Guests enjoying pool
- The pool table is always popular
- Covered courtyard area showing log burner, dining tables, gas hobs and pool table
- Close-up of the log burner in the covered courtyard area
- Pre-dinner drinks at our cuisine-of-the-world pot luck dinner.
- Some recent Kerikeri backpacker guests
- Making sushi
- Watching World Cup football one morning.
- Outdoor smoking area
- Our expansive lawns and native bush
- Entrance to Hone Heke Lodge
- Native Trees at Hone Heke Lodge
3. Bay of Islands photos…
Click any thumbnail to view the “Bay of Islands” gallery and scroll through the photos.
- Your hosts David & Victoria and their children with the stunning Bay of Islands coastline behind them.
- Kerikeri inlet with the Stone Store on the left.
- Dave with kids at lookout over Kerikeri inlet.
- Kerikeri river mouth with Stone Store on left, and Mission Station on right.
- The Stone Store at Kerikeri was built in 1835, making it the oldest stone building in New Zealand.
- Our kids on the lawn in front of Kerikeri Mission Station.
- Kerikeri Mission Station, oldest wooden building in New Zealand.
- Kerikeri Mission Station viewed from the rear.
- Kerikeri Mission Station was built in 1822, making it the oldest wooden building in New Zealand.
- Kerikeri Mission Station was called Kemp House for 160 years but changed its name in the 1990s. This early sign remains.
- David, Victoria & kids during a Waitangi Māori “experience”!
- A waka (Māori war canoe) at Waitangi.
- Paihia beach in the Bay of Islands.
- Waitangi Beach.
- Marsden Cross beach in the Bay of Islands.
- The famous Bay of Islands “Cream Trip”.
- Dolphin watching on the way to Cape Brett and the Hole In The Rock.
- Bay of Islands dolphin eco encounter.
- Puketi Forest.
- Ancient Kauri tree at Hokianga.
- Matai Bay, north of the Bay of Islands.
- The lighthouse at Cape Reinga, northernmost point of New Zealand where two oceans meet.
4. Maori Chief Hone Heke photos…
Click any thumbnail to view the “Chief Hone Heke” gallery and scroll through the photos.
- Hone Heke and his wife Hariata.
- Hone Heke and his wife Hariata.
- Hone Heke on left and Patuone on right.
- The Warrior Chieftains of New Zealand. Hone Heke centre with wife Hariata and Chief Kawiti standing behind.
- Hone Heke, first Maori chief to sign the Treaty of Waitaingi on 6-Feb 1840, shakes hands with Governor Hobson (background) while behind him Kawiti signs the Treaty.
- A Maori chief signs the Treaty of Waitangi on 6th February 1840.
- With armed men watching on, Hone Heke wields an axe and fells the British flagstaff at Korororeka (Russell).
- A humorous sketch from the Auckland Weekly News, 12 December 1896 depicting Governor Hobson interrogating Hone Heke about the axing of the flagpole.
- A view from the British camp of the assault on Hone Heke’s pa at Lake Omapere, Ohaeawai. In the background British troops can be seen attacking the pa in two places.
- Section, elevation and ground plan of Hone Heke’s pa at Lake Omapere, Ohaeawai drawn by Reverend TB Hutton from a drawing taken by Mr Symonds of the 99th Regiment in 1845.