She's the only one of her kind — a Catalina flying boat that is fitted to carry passengers — in the world. And last week the Wandering Witch was in Kaitaia.
She was flown north, after two false starts last year, by members of the New Zealand Catalina Preservation Society, and was joined a little later on Friday morning by three Yaks, which announced their arrival from Pauanui by flying low and in tight formation over the airport before touching down.
The visit was made in support of a Kaitaia Aero Club open day on Saturday, and the Catalina, built in Montreal in 1944 for service with the Royal Canadian Air Force (but now sporting traditional RNZAF colours), was the star of the show.
Pilot Brett Emeny, from the Catalina Group of New Zealand, said the RNZAF had three squadrons of Catalinas during WWII — Edmund Hillary was a navigator aboard one of them — and the planes had collectively established a proud record.
It was a Catalina, he said, that had found the Japanese fleet before the Battle of Midway, and earlier located the Bismark, subsequently sunk by the British Navy.