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Thursday, 23 January 2020

The Haast, a small but Turbulent River


By world standards it is not a big river. It is only around 100 kilometres from its source in the rainforested Southern Alps to the Tasman Sea, but its impact on the environment can be huge. In a benign mood, the river is a beautiful placid blue, but during the frequent heavy rains it soon turns into a malevolent,  turbulent dirty grey-green monster which each year  can bring down some 10 million tonnes of silt. The average annual rate of flow is almost three times that of the River Thames in Britain. This is the Haast River of New Zealand’s South Westland.

The blue waters of the Haast River in its lower reaches, its benevolent mood
The grey-green waters of the Haast River during rain: its malevolent mood
Until 1960, the small settlement of Haast, near the mouth of the river, had no road access with the rest of New Zealand. The early families, known as the Far Downers, had come in by sea from the 1870s and a cattle track was established along the coast and inland to Lake Paringa. There was also a rough horse track that more or less followed Tiori Patea, the old less-favoured Maori route to the West Coast.  This route followed the river, with summer-flowering rata trees and dense rainforest, before winding up to, and over, Haast Pass to the more open country along the Makarora River.
The rata trees - Metrosideros umbellata - can put on a spectacular show along the banks of the Haast River
The Pass, the river and, in later years, the small town, were all named after the German geologist Sir Julius von Haast who, in 1863, travelled from Central Otago over the Pass and down to the Tasman Sea.  
 The modern road, now State Highway 6,  follows the river for almost its entire length and was constructed in the late 1950s, giving road access to the town of Haast for the first time. New Zealand’s most isolated community was now connected to the modern world. Ironically though, it was one of the first communities in New Zealand to have a regular air service, with West Coast Airways establishing a regular service from Hokitika in the 1930s. The road north to Lake Paringa, Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers, Hokitika and Greymouth was not completed until 1965.
A homestead in the settlement of Haast
Haast Pass, at 563 metres is the lowest of the three major road passes over the Southern Alps. After crossing the Pass one follows SH 6 into the rainforests of Westland. On the right a small stream, known as Cross Creek, appears and after a few hundred metres joins embryonic Haast River which plunges out of impenetrable mountain rainforest. The river soon widens as the traveller heads north. By the roadside is a small hut, still used by road workers. This once housed the explosives used for the large amount of rock blasting that was needed on this section of the road.  There are a number of waterfalls on both sides of the road with evocative names such as Fantail, Diana & the Trickle; the latter two often cause problems on the road in heavy rain. After passing an ‘escape’ road - in case brake failure! - the road passes over the spectacular one-lane Gates of Haast Bridge which crosses the now turbulent Haast river. After passing Thunder Creek Falls, the road again crosses the river at Pleasant Flat and a little further on the Landsborough River, the only major tributary of the Haast flows in from the right.  


The Gates of Haast Bridge over the Haast River
The rapids of the  river beneath the Gates of Haast Bridge
The river has now widened considerably and each bluff or little creek along the road has been given a name. There is Douglas Bluff, named after the indomitable Charlie Douglas, a surveyor and prospector known to local history as Mr Explorer Douglas. He was a man of grit and determination with a wry sense of humour. Once when asked if the rising barometer meant bad weather, Charlie Douglas replied, in his dour Scottish way ‘The barometer doesn’t affect the weather much on the Coast.’

Further along the road there is Dismal and Dizzy Creeks, Imp Grotto, where a prospector was said to have found uranium during the road construction. There is Chink Creek, the Roaring Swine, Dancing Creek, Depot Creek, Gunboat Creek and Snapshot Creek, where, I have been told, the road crosses the Alpine Fault which is the meeting of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates.
Snapshot Creek, where the road to Haast Pass crosses the Alpine Fault
After passing by the small modern town of Haast, SH 6 crosses the spectacular 750 metre single-lane Haast River Bridge, the longest in the country. 
The 750 metres single lane Haast River Bridge 
Having viewed the river from the road, let us now experience the river from the waterway itself.  Haast River Safaris operate jetboat tours along a 30 kilometres section of the lower river. 

After a short bush walk, hopefully evading attacks by the persistent Westland sandflies, the traveller scrambles into the large, fully-enclosed jetboat of locally operated Haast River Safaris.

A tour group boards a Haast River Safari jetboat while their tour coach continues over the bridge
With a thunderous roar of twin V8 engines the jetboat is off, heading up the wider reaches of this interesting river.There are single banks to wend around, rapids to zip through and trees, brought down by successive floods, to dodge.

With a roar of twin V8 engines the Haast River Safari jet boat is off.
Near Haast settlement the river is wide, but as the boat proceeds upstream, narrow channels between single banks become more frequent.  The Haast River is never constant, always changing. The boat operator knows the river; what to look for after a flood when the course of the river can change dramatically. The main channel of the river has been know to switch from one bank to the other in a matter of minutes. A flood will bring great trees crashing down, and as the waters drop, new unexpected hazards have been created; single banks will have moved. I have travelled the river many times over the years and have never ceased to be amazed at how things do change. A section of river bank, undermined by a recent flood, with large trees growing precariously on the edge, will have disappeared completely by my next trip, with these trees now forming new hazards in the river. It is very much a landscape in flux. The rainforest along the banks is dense, but it still cannot halt these extreme forces of erosion. 
Rainforest growing precariously on the edge of the eroded river bank.

This large kahikatea tree has succumbed to the erosive forces of the Haast
  Features seen from the River are quite different from those of the road. Joe and Harris Waterfalls, two permanent waterfalls, plunge through the rainforest and were, incidentally, both named by Joe Harris, a foreman during the road construction. The Roaring Swine takes the shape of a spectacular glacier-formed hanging valley, disappearing into the clouds of Mt Aspiring National Park. The fresh, clear waters of the small Thomas River mingle markedly with silt-laden main river. 

Threatenng weather up the Roaring Swine, a classic glacier-created hanging valley
Shingle banks of smooth coloured river stones, mostly greywacke, but also granite, schist, quartz and orange ultramafric, tells a geologist much about the makeup of the Southern Alps.  

Investigating a shingle bank on the Haast River
No jetboat journey would be complete without several fun 360 degree spins. These large, powerful machines spin more sedately than their smaller, open counterparts, but nevertheless it is still exciting - and dry!!
Inside a Haast River Safari jet boat during a fun 360 degree spin
. Journey's end is at Roaring Billy, a waterfall which plunges through the dense rainforest of the left bank and was named for its likeness to a billy of boiling water when in full spate. At times of little rain, it could be likened to ‘Whispering Willy’! 

Roaring Billy plunges through the rainforest on the banks of the Haast River.

© Neil Rawlins  text & photography




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