In just 36 hours after the traps were set last week, a half-tonne of pests were netted.
The 376 pests caught included possums (95), rats (261), stoats (4) and mice (16), and make for a promising start towards an overall goal of trapping three tonnes of pests for the week.
Over the next five years, the operation will expand as funds and resources allow, eventually covering the whole block.
The zipline operation, which was launched last year, will cover less than 3 per cent of the entire restored forest.
"But we will have a canopy tour where people can sit up an ancient tree and listen to a kokako at dawn, or watch a flock of kereru fly below," Mr Fitzgerald said.
"It will be an incredible, uplifting and life-changing encounter with nature. Currently our customers learn about how amazing the forest would have been 300 years ago. We want them to be able to experience the past."
Mr Fitzgerald said most Kiwis who had taken the tour were unaware of the danger posed to our native biodiversity, and the scale of the slaughter.
"It's estimated only 5 per cent of birds make it to adulthood, and conservatively, 26 million are killed every single year.
"I think building this awareness will make people become more aware and more likely to become engaged, proud and horrified at the same time - and ready to do something about it."