As Kakepuku Mountain emerges from the landscape it is easy to understand how it got its name. According to several accounts the full name of the mountain is ‘Kakepuku-te-aroaro o Kahu’ or the swollen stomach of Kahu. It was so named some six centuries ago by Rakataura, a tohunga of the Tainui waka. The name referred to the advanced pregnancy of his wife Kahurere (referred to in some accounts as Kahukeke).
An old volcanic cone, Kakepuku features prominently in Waikato history. Tainui settlement in the Kakepuku area began about 1550AD, although there were probably earlier people’s present - notably Ngāti Kahupungapunga. Various Tainui hapū have occupied the mountain or its surrounds to the present.
Two pā sites lie within the reserve, and there are two more on adjacent Waipā District Council land. A Māori relationship with the mountain is well established in legend and mythology.
These pā sites are found under forest canopy or regenerating bush so it is necessary to walk around them to appreciate their extent and features.
A track passes through a fine remnant of original forest in the ancient crater and emerges at the summit itself, where magnificent views of the surrounding Waipā-Waikato landscape reward your efforts.