An example of a common sandpiper feeding in shallow water

The Fast Twitch to Auckland: A 10-Year Rare Bird.

Primary keyword focus: rare bird sighting New Zealand Auckland twitch

Secondary keywords: bird twitch NZ • Ōtara Creek • rare vagrant bird New Zealand • NZ bird lister • fast twitch adventure

When the Alert Dropped — Everything Changed

On Tuesday night, just after dinner (about 8pm), news broke of a rare bird in Auckland — a genuine vagrant species that hadn’t been seen in New Zealand for ten years.

This wasn’t something I could ignore.

It was 5½ to 6½ hours’ drive from home depending on traffic — but that hardly mattered. For a birder, a decade-long gap for a species is a lightning-strike moment. You get one chance — and when it’s gone, it’s gone.

This was pure fast twitch.

Not slow, considered endurance.

Not wait-and-see.

Just like fast-twitch muscle fibres power explosive sprints — birders have this reflex too.

When a rarity drops — you don’t ruminate — you fire off the blocks.

So yes — the fast twitch was on.

A Whisper to a Friend — and New Zealand’s Top Lister Joins the Twitch

I discussed the twitch with my friend — Steve Wood — a dedicated twitcher (LISTER), who currently holds the highest New Zealand bird species tally of any one individual. (307)

He has tried four separate times over many years to see this same species.

He had failed every time.

This time — he felt — was the one.

So while I left home at 5am and drove six hours north, Steve flew up from Nelson. He thought being part of this twitch with me might bring him some luck.

We met at Auckland Airport bang on time — then headed straight to the site.

The Scene at Ōtara Creek Weir Lagoon

The location was Ōtara Creek Weir — surprisingly good habitat in the midst of suburban Auckland.

We arrived to a handful of other birders — scopes up, tension high.

At first — nothing.

Just habitat that felt right.

We waited, chatted, and watched.

Others drifted away further toward the bridge above the lagoon — which gives an elevated vantage.

We followed… except for one individual who stayed seated right at the weir itself and refused to move.

And then — just as in so many twitching stories — the moment arrived.

The Bird Arrived — and Chaos Ensued

Suddenly — there it was.

The rare vagrant species that every single person had come for.

But unbelievably — the person who refused to move stood up at the worst possible moment and flushed the bird away.

Later — it returned.

This time, we got enough time on it.

Clear views.

I even managed a flight photo — not perfect — but enough to confirm the sighting.

Flight in distance. Unsettled by an Oaf.

Common Sandpiper in flight over Otara Creek Weir Auckland during rare bird twitch November 2025

And while this species was not new for me internationally, it was a first for New Zealand — which made the moment even more satisfying on home soil.

Tick.

Done.

The Next Morning — and the Realisation

We celebrated with a beer, overnighted in a motel and decided to check the site again the next morning.

High tide.

Same person — sitting on the weir again.

We decided enough was enough.

So I returned home — stopping briefly in Tauranga — satisfied that we had achieved what we came to do.

Why Fast Twitches Matter. ie The fast twitch to Auckland

For non-birders — this all sounds crazy.

For birders — this is completely normal. In the Twitching Community, this is what we live for.

When a rare bird that hasn’t been seen in New Zealand for ten years appears — you go.

You don’t hesitate.

You don’t sleep much.

You twitch fast.

⸻If you’d like to read more about my bigger journey and why these moments matter so much to me now, see my cornerstone article here on finding purpose after medicine

Final Thoughts

This fast twitch to Auckland was memorable — not only for the rarity itself — but for the people, the reaction, and the strange human behaviours that reveal themselves around a single rare bird.

And for Steve — who had failed on four previous attempts — this was the payoff he’d been waiting for.

Like fast-twitch muscle fibres, this twitch was explosive, instinctive, and very much in the moment — one quick strike before the opportunity vanished.

Sometimes one twitch is all it takes.

If you enjoyed this twitch story, you might enjoy my recent Tasmania trip as well

Visit my home page here : Birds, Beasts and Beyond

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