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Massive clean up on the Whanganui Journey

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By Lesley Judd, Partnerships Ranger.

The Great Walks season is now underway in Whanganui and our staff are putting the final touches to a massive three months of clean up work.

Flying diggers and culverts in to Whanganui National Park.

Flying diggers and culverts in to Whanganui National Park

Record floods in late June caused the immediate closure of all tracks, huts and campsites in the Whanganui district until inspections could be carried out to assess the damage and any potential risk to visitors.

Damaged steps at Tieke canoe landing.

Damaged steps at Tieke canoe landing

Campsites on the iconic Whanganui Journey received a liberal coating of silt, signs were washed away and toilets damaged. Worst hit was John Coull Hut where a huge slip destroyed the boardwalk between the hut and campsite, closing the site.

Large slip at John Coull Hut as seen from the air. John Coull Hut slip in June. John Coull Hut slip in September.

The Bridge to Nowhere Track and Mangapurua leg of the Mountains to Sea cycle trail weren’t pretty – slips and washouts along the length of these tracks created 37 kilometres of muddy mess to clear.

Flooded toilets at Tieke campsite.

Flooded toilets at Tieke campsite

Windfalls had made walking hard work on the Matemateāonga Track on the western side of the Whanganui National Park, and slips closed the Trains Track and Ātene Skyline Track.

This amount of work would normally take many months to complete, but with less than 12 weeks until the start of the busy Great Walks season, the pressure was on to get our facilities open for visitors to enjoy, and to allow local tourism businesses to get back to providing their fantastic services.

Engineer Kate checking out the damage in Whanganui National Park.

Engineer Kate checking out the damage

Armed with photos, notebooks detailing the damage, and an impressive spreadsheet, a grand plan was hatched deep inside the Whanganui Office at the desk of senior recreation ranger Jim Campbell.

Jim wrangled engineers and planners, persuaded accountants, organised diggers, helicopters and dynamite, and enlisted a small army of hardy folk to get cracking on the repairs.

Assessing the track damage in the Whanganui district.

Assessing track damage

Abseiling and blasting specialists were brought in to clear some particularly gnarly slips on the Mangapurua Track, the rest were cleared by diggers, shovels, muscle and sweat.

We focussed on repairing John Coull Hut and the Bridge to Nowhere Track before the Whanganui Journey opened for summer. A hardworking contractor crew from Pipiriki got stuck into clearing the lower end of the Mangapurua Track, and a digger operator dealt to the many slips and washouts on the upper section of the track.

Pipiriki slip clearing crew.

Pipiriki slip clearing crew

Our neighbours from the Manawatu Office also pitched in and sent three staff to work with our Whanganui chainsaw crew clearing windfalls on the Matemateāonga Track.

Repairing the Bridge to Nowhere Track.

Repairing the Bridge to Nowhere Track

Our field teams have worked tirelessly at John Coull Hut, the Bridge to Nowhere Track and the Mangapurua Track. They spent long hours and most of winter camped out onsite clearing slips, digging drains and repairing signs and toilets.

The transformations are Extreme Makeover worthy and a real credit to the skills and hard work of the clean up teams.

Unloading a digger on the Mangapurua Track.

Unloading the digger on the Mangapurua Track

We are happy to report the Whanganui Journey is open for the Great Walks season, and we aim to have the Mangapurua Cycle Trail fully open within the next couple of weeks.

After three months of hard yakka we look forward to the sights and sounds of groups of paddlers, cyclists and trampers experiencing the Whanganui National Park this summer.

Keep an eye on the Whanganui pages on the DOC website for the status of our tracks.


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