Barrett Reef

The cluster of rocks that is Barrett Reef (often known as Barrett's Reef) is one of the most hazardous reefs in New Zealand.

It lies on the western side of the entrance of Wellington Harbour, on the approaches to the city of Wellington, at coordinates 41°21′9″S 174°50′6″E / 41.35250°S 174.83500°E / -41.35250; 174.83500Coordinates: 41°21′9″S 174°50′6″E / 41.35250°S 174.83500°E / -41.35250; 174.83500. The reef is named after Richard (Dicky) Barrett (1807–1847), a whaler and trader. Its Maori name is Tangihanga-a-Kupe. It is popular with recreational divers.

Dangerous entrance

Wellington Harbour entrance showing Barrett Reef

The reef, much of which is exposed even at high tide, is located to the west of the two-kilometre-wide channel that links Cook Strait with Wellington Harbour, close to the shore of the Miramar Peninsula. Due to the channelling effect of Cook Strait, which lies between the Pacific Ocean and the Tasman Sea, the currents are strong and fickle and gales are common. Add to this the volume of traffic which uses the channel (including several crossings daily of the inter-island ferries to Picton), and it is not surprising that the reef has a lengthy roll-call of shipwrecks.

History of vessels damaged, stranded, or wrecked on Barrett Reef

Sources Evening Post, Volume XCIII, Issue 48, 24 February 1917, Page 6 Wanganui Chronicle, Issue 19883, 27 August 1913, Page 5 Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 126, 31 May 1933, Page 10

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