
It was 9 a.m. when we met at Auckland Harbour. Some people already came with breakfast from McDonald’s – so a healthy breakfast for hiking! All the German exchange students and our NZ partners were there. A deputy principal of the Lynfield College, who organized this special trip to Rangitoto, first talked to us and told us not to leave rubbish on the island and to clean our shoes because of “biosecurity.” Rangitoto is a volcano island in Auckland, so it already sounds like an adventure. Rangitoto is actually the youngest and largest volcano in the Auckland volcanic field. It emerged only about 600 years ago after a series of eruptions, and its name in Māori means “Bloody Sky,” because of the red glow seen during its formation.
At 9:30 we took the ferry. The air smelled like the sea, and the skyline of Auckland slowly got smaller behind us. It looked like a postcard – just wow. While we sat on the ferry, Ms. Abraham said we had a small competition: who can take more photos of typical New Zealand birds. I loved this idea! Since I had my camera with me that day, I decided I wanted to win this.
We arrived at 10:10. The island was full of black stones and green bushes, everything looked so different from Germany. We started walking along the coast, and at 12:00 we made a short break on a small rocky beach. Everyone ate, played and joked. After the break, it finally went uphill.
I walked in the front with my exchange partner and my friend Sawa from Germany because I wanted to see birds before the big group scared them away. It got hot and steep, and we were sweating like crazy, but we went faster and faster. Suddenly someone said somebody fainted behind us. We stopped, a bit worried, but then it was a false alarm and we kept going.
At 1:10 p.m. we reached the top first! The view was unbelievable – the ocean, the city of Auckland, and so many small islands. When the rest finally arrives, Ms. Malon-Willisch points excitedly at a round bird hopping in the middle of peoples. “It’s a kiwi!” we all whisper. But no, it’s actually an Australian quail. Still cute, though — and now officially part of my bird photo collection, along with a brilliant “tūī “and a cheeky “tīeke” (the saddleback).

Tieke – Saddleback 
Tui 
Australian Quail
We took group photos with the skyline behind us, then at 1:40 p.m. we started going down. Somehow people had new energy – they were singing and running on the rocky path. It was even harder downhill because the stones were sharp and slippery – real lava rocks! At 2:20 we finally reached the bottom again, tired but super happy.
Back in Auckland, we were free to go around. Some went shopping, others for food. I looked at my photos and smiled. Only three birds, but three nice photos from that crazy day on a volcano island.










