Otago Daily Times

Dream finally realised Cloud covered helicopter crash site, court hears

- MARK PRICE GUY WILLIAMS

A 16YEAR, $1 million dream has finally begun to bear fruit for new Central Otago restaurate­ur Hayden Johnston.

Yesterday, just minutes before greeting guests for his first commercial function — a group of motoring writers — the man behind the Canyon Restaurant was still unwrapping bar stools and arranging tables.

‘‘It’s been quite a journey; a lot of tradesmen and expense — more than I anticipate­d,’’ he said.

Mr Johnston said it was ‘‘easy to get a little bit down with all the costs’’ but his dream had not changed.

‘‘It’s still the same vision I had at the start and getting more exciting.’’

Mr Johnston’s restaurant is high in the Bendigo hills between Cromwell and Tarras on the edge of the precipitou­s canyon containing School Creek.

The building was originally the Big Picture winetastin­g venue at Cromwell and then the Nose Restaurant at the Highlands Motorsport Park.

Two years ago, while having a coffee there, Mr Johnston learned it was to be demolished.

‘‘At that moment I hatched a plan, before I got to the end of the cup of coffee,’’ he said

He bought the building and had it trucked up the gravel road through his vineyard to a hilltop site with views towards the Pisa Range.

‘‘It’s awesome to finally see it come together,’’ he said.

Mr Johnston, a former Dunedin accountant, plans to use the venue for weddings, corporate events and as a ‘‘popup’’ restaurant for celebrity chefs. A DEEP layer of cloud blanketed the hills around Lindis Pass when a helicopter crashed in the area, a trial in Queenstown has heard.

MetService meteorolog­ist Ross Marsden was giving evidence in the Queenstown District Court yesterday on the second day of the trial of Athol man Murray Sarginson.

Sarginson was piloting the Robinson R22 when it crashed in limited visibility on April 30, 2016. His sole passenger and business partner, Otautau man Liam Edwards (32), was able to walk and talk after the accident, but died at the scene soon afterwards.

The two men, partners in an earthmovin­g business, were flying to Canterbury’s Mount Algidus Station for work.

Mr Marsden said there was a continuous and deep layer of cloud over the higher slopes of the hills in the area, which extended to the crash site from the east.

The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) is prosecutin­g Sarginson over what it alleges are ‘‘two fundamenta­l failures’’: that he overloaded the aircraft and then flew it in poor visibility.

Sarginson, who was seriously injured, is facing four charges under the Health and Safety at Work Act and one charge under the Civil Aviation Act.

He is charged with reckless conduct in respect of duty, and failing to comply with duty that exposes an individual to risk of death or serious injury, either in his capacity as a director or a worker of the business.

He is also charged with operating an aircraft in a manner that exposed a passenger to unnecessar­y danger.

Whether the crash was a direct cause of Mr Edward’s death is relevant only for sentencing, should Judge Bernadette Farnan find Sarginson guilty of the charges.

The issue would be a factor in determinin­g the amount of reparation the defendant would be ordered to pay to the victim’s family.

Counsel for the prosecutio­n and defence agreed before the trial Mr Edwards died as a result of a ‘‘highenergy impact’’ that caused chest and pelvis injuries.

 ?? PHOTO: MARK PRICE ?? Getting ready . . . Canyon Restaurant owner Hayden Johnston sets out bar stools before welcoming his first guests.
PHOTO: MARK PRICE Getting ready . . . Canyon Restaurant owner Hayden Johnston sets out bar stools before welcoming his first guests.
 ??  ?? Judge Farnan
Judge Farnan

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