Tinopai

Tinopai is a settlement on the Komiti Bay, part of the Hukatere Peninsula in the northern Kaipara Harbour in Northland, New Zealand.

[6] The Hukatere Scenic Reserve is on the road to Matakohe[7] and contains a bush walk with mature kauri trees, to the north of Tinopai.

[8] The original settlement was called Te Komiti, which was a regular stopping point for Māori travellers on the Kaipara.

[9] The Komiti Fruitlands Development Association bought 3,255 acres (13.17 km2) in 1915 to grow fruit, particularly apples, and built a wharf in 1917 from which to ship them.

Apple growing finished in the mid-1930s due to the Great Depression and poor management.

Ngā Tai Whakarongorua Marae and its Ngā Tai Whakarongorua meeting house, and Waihaua / Arapaoa Marae and its Kirihipi meeting house are connected with Te Uri o Hau and Ngāti Whātua.

The results were 71.2% European (Pākehā), 50.0% Māori, 2.5% Pasifika, 2.5% Asian, and 2.5% other, which includes people giving their ethnicity as "New Zealander".

Tinopai wharf, opened 1991 by MP Lockwood Smith