Otago Daily Times

Search for 1962 aircraft continues

- LAURA MILLS

A TASMAN man is planning his own search for a missing West Coast aircraft, which he believes could be in the wider Wanaka area.

West Coast police search and rescue conducted a reconnaiss­ance mission last week into the flanks of the Southern Alps, south of Franz Josef Glacier, for the De Havilland Dragonfly ZKAFB, which went missing on February 12, 1962, on a scenic flight from Christchur­ch to Milford Sound, with four passengers and pilot Brian Chadwick. The plane was never found.

A new policelead search is planned for later this year.

Late last year, a seat harness from an early aircraft was washed up and found in a South Westland riverbed during the whitebait season.

Lew Bone, from Mapua, said a new search, south of Franz Josef, was well worth pursuing.

In 1962, search authoritie­s were overwhelme­d by the volume of reported hearings and sightings on both sides of the Main Divide, he said.

There was understand­ably much concentrat­ion on the

West Coast as that was pilot Brian Chadwick's preferred scenic route. His secondary route to Milford, if he was unable to get over the divide due to weather, was via Canterbury and Otago.

On the day, seeing the state of mountain weather, Mr Chadwick said he would have to go south via Canterbury, Mr Bone said. Searchers came to believe that Mr Chadwick would not have got over the divide.

Mr Bone has been researchin­g the disappeara­nce for many years, in collaborat­ion with the Rev Dr Richard Waugh, of Auckland, who, in 2005, published an authoritat­ive account of the incident.

‘‘I now have new evidence, within reasonable bounds of probabilit­y, that the aircraft never got across the divide and was instead forced to stay on the Canterbury side.’’

However, Mr Bone said the harness find was nonetheles­s well deserving of an organised search.

‘‘I am meanwhile endeavouri­ng to put together a profession­al search of these slopes this coming summer. The terrain, which I'm very familiar with, is not a place for amateurs to be scrambling around in. It needs presearch planning by helicopter or drone, and of course Department of Conservati­on approvals and experience­d people.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand