Nelson Mail

West Coast businesses hurt by Paparoa Track delay

- Joanne Carroll

West Coast tourism operators expecting a big boost this summer are now ‘‘disappoint­ed’’ that the full opening of New Zealand’s newest Great Walk cannot happen until March.

New businesses were gearing up to take advantage of the expected influx of visitors, walkers and mountainbi­kers coming to the Coast to traverse the new

Paparoa Track this summer.

The $12 million Department of Conservati­on (DOC) track spans 55 kilometres of pristine wilderness in the Paparoa mountain range, linking the villages of Blackball and Punakaiki.

Another 11km trail, the Pike 29 Memorial Track, is still under constructi­on. It will pay tribute to the 29 men who died in the 2010 Pike River Mine disaster, and is expected to open after November 2020, when work to re-enter the mine’s access tunnel has been completed.

A 20-metre slip caused by extreme weather has prevented the middle section of the track from opening until March. Walkers and cyclists can still go in from either end, stay in a hut and come out the same way.

DOC had originally estimated that the slip would be fixed by December, but Greymouth operations manager Shane Hall said more heavy rain had made the ‘‘difficult to fix’’ slip worse. Contractor­s could not work safely in the area until conditions improved. He expected it would not be fully open until March 1.

Hall said 2642 people had booked into the huts between December 22 and February 29, paying a total of $137,200.

Punakaiki Beach Camp manager Jed Findlay said the closure was ‘‘devastatin­g’’ for his new business, Paparoa Track Services, which was set up to run a daily shuttle taking walkers to the start of the track near Blackball. ‘‘Three months is a big blow. I am still going through all our cancellati­ons.’’

The track will bring a boost to the

West Coast when it is fully open.

‘‘New activities such as the Paparoa Track, Kawatiri Trail, Old Ghost Road and the Wilderness Trail will bring a fresh look on life on the West Coast. We can’t wait to be part of it,’’ Findlay said.

New Blackball cafe and accommodat­ion business owner Jane Wells said people were still coming even though they could not walk all the way between Punakaiki and Blackball.

‘‘It is disappoint­ing, but there’s nothing we can do about it,’’ she said.

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