Milford Track still open after rock fall hazard
Media
release
2 November 2012
Milford Track still open after rock
fall hazard closes Sutherland Falls
Track
The Great Walks
Milford Track is still open and offering opportunities for
walkers to view Fiordland’s unique splendour, despite the
closure of a side trip, the Sutherland Falls Track, due to a
rock fall hazard.
Photo: Aerial Photo of rock
fall above Sutherland FallsTrack DOC (2012)
A
heavy rain event late October triggered a significant rock
fall over the Sutherland Falls Track. The track was
immediately closed by the Department of Conservation, and a
geological specialist has been in to view the site. Two
large rocks high above the track are deemed unstable, and
DOC has been advised to close the side-trip track for the
immediate future.
Department of Conservation’s Ross Kerr, who visited the rock fall site, said ‘visitors can not access the base of the falls, but it can still be viewed from the Milford Track, which is unaffected by the rock fall. Movement of the rocks will be monitored and DOC will re open the Sutherland Falls Track once it is safe to do so’.
The Milford Track is well known for its impressive scenery, and heavy rain events like this help supply the hundreds of spectacular waterfalls gushing down the valley sides. Walking through this area offers an opportunity for observant visitors to catch rare sightings of the endangered whio/blue duck. The whio is a unique native duck with no close relatives anywhere in the world and is specially evolved to live in the clean, fast flowing rapids of New Zealand streams and rivers.
While weather events in the area can provide a challenge for DOC, who work hard to maintain safe and appropriate access for the public, they are also what make the area so special, so worth visiting, and so worth protecting.
Photo: Rocks still attached
above the Sutherland Falls Track –DOC
(2012)
Background
information
ROCK FALL
The rock fall has left a
reasonably clean face, but unfortunately there are two very
large rocks at the start zone which are deemed very
unstable. A geological specialist has advised DOC to close
the track for the immediate future.
This recent rock fall was in the same place as a previous one, but covered a wider area. The problem rocks are in an exceptionally difficult place to access. As a result the track will be closed until several storm events pass, as these events may release the rocks naturally. If this does not have any effect, then other intervention will have to be investigated. If the existing Sutherland Falls Track is deemed too risky to use, an alternative track may have to be built.