TARHC September 2021 Newsletter

Chair – Derrick Field      Secretary – Wendy Gray   Treasurer – Ed Trotter

 Kia ora koutou

Welcome to this newsletter of the TARHC. This will be published every few months, depending on what activities the TARHC members have been up to in the forest parks.

 We’re looking forward to the end of  the spring weather  that’s hammering the forest parks are currently getting, so  some huts and tracks can get attention. The committee is funding member clubs and volunteer groups to do maintenance on six huts this year, in the Tararua’s. Along with hut maintenance that may be funded by the backcountry trust, members of the TARHC are going to have a busy summer.

 The committee  is reviewing the future role of the TARHC , following a Special Meeting held there was strong support to continue the TARHC in the role of supporting hut upkeep in the forest parks. The was also support for extending the scope of the TARHC into backcountry track upkeep. Also important was involving the wider community in supporting backcountry recreation and promoting backcountry recreation in the forest  parks. The review is looking at a smaller and more active  formal committee supporting affiliate members in track and hut upkeep.  There’s more on this below.

 Part of the committee’s aim is to increase communication with the wider backcountry community. Our Discussions Email Group has been setup to support this. If you are interested in what the TARHC is up to, and/or want to volunteer to help us in the forest parks, join our email group here…

 Hats off the Wairarapa and Wellington SAR teams that battled the extreme conditions to rescue  the  two tramper’s in Tararua recently. Even on a typical windy Tararua day, that ridge can  be a hands and knees trip. Were it not for  the dedication of the SAR volunteers,  the results may have been a lot different. 

 The Tararua range has been highlighted as a “hot spot” for tramping fatalities by the Mountain Safety Council, being among the three highest areas for fatalities in the country. Hypothermia related fatalities  in particular.  From what I have seen, most hypothermia cases are primarily caused by poor decision making.  Embarking on trips when weather forecasts indicate alpine tops travel will not be safe,  failing to stay put at shelter if caught out, or failing to turn back / change route before it's too late.  The one thing that these incidents have again shown, don’t go without a PLB. It could save your life.

Derrick Field Chair TARHC

TARHC Review

This process has taken some time, since the initial discussions  on the future of the TARHC. The TARHC is an Incorporated Society  and Registered Charity. 

In order to achieve  future directions for the committee,  the stages we are going through are;

Ø  Determine changes needed to the TARHC Rules and develop a revised set of Rules.

Ø  Identify  the committee structure, including how members are nominated, voted, how many, do they represent  clubs/or not?

Ø  Determine the purpose and structure of an Affiliate membership

Ø  Develop an MOU with  DOC that defines the relationship, communications, support

Ø  Develop  Community Agreements for the TARHC to take on management responsibilities of some huts and tracks

Ø  Register  the revised TARHC Rules with the Companies Office

Ø  Elect TARHC  committee members, chair etc.

Ø  Enable  the backcountry community to become affiliate members of the TARHC

Ø  Get on with fixing huts and tracks

Huts Maintenance 

The Tararua and Aorangi hut maintenance programme is going to be bigger this year, than has happened  for many years. The TARHC receive a grant annually from DOC, which began 33 years ago.

Local DOC Wairarapa pass on much of their available hut funding so that the TARHC can maintain the majority of the public backcountry hut network in the three forest parks.

 The TARHC is funding work on six huts (Andersons, Nichols, Waiotauru, Dorset Ridge, Waitewaewae huts and sharing the cost  at Alpha with the BC Trust. Inspections are still needed, to confirm work at most all of these huts. The BC Trust is also looking at  funding up number of huts, if proposals are approved by the BC Trust board.

 Clubs and other volunteers  manage 42 of the 47 public non Serviced huts in the forest parks. Over the last 5 years, 70 percent of those huts have had maintenance work done. By the end of summer, 90 percent of the huts will be up to date with maintenance.

New MSC Trip Planning App

The Mountain Safety Council (MSC) have launched an app to help trampers plan their trip. The MSC say the development is  “A new app to ensuring the safety of walkers and trampers in New Zealand.

Plan My Walk  is designed to make planning easier by bringing the most important information needed in one place, in what is believed to be a world first”.

The app, available for iOS and Android users, was developed by the MSC, and includes Met Service weather forecasts and gear lists as well as more than 1000 DoC tracks.

LocallyAt this stage, the only the Southern Crossing in Tararua Forest park listed on the app. Along with  route descriptions, levels of experience needed to undertake the track are shown, as is current weather forecasts. Gear list, trip dates and emergency contacts can be provided.

Check out the Southern Crossing on Plan My Walk here

Mangatoetoe Hut

Meanwhile, at the bottom of the North Island in Aorangi Forest Park, Mike Mulder has been caring for one of the huts in the area. Mangatoetoe isnt far from the roadend, and like many others similarily situated, suffers a fair amount of use. Mike had signed up to a DOC management agreement to look after the hut. Along with his  brother Johno,  they have been quietly workng away, making repairs and and keeping it tidy despite the occasional visit from untidy visitors. Carrying out their rubbish left behind is a regular chore.

 Mangatoetoe hut began life as a shelter, but was coverted into a hut by the NZ Forest Service.

 Some of the work they have done on the hut is replace the skylite , clean and repaint the interior, fill some holes in the floor, fix a window , fixed spouting, fixed the water tank, and cleaned it out ( there was a deerskin in the roof courtesy of some idiot) . Next task is replace the open fire with an internal firebox, and a tidy up of the exterior.

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 This newsletter is published by the Tararua Aorangi Remutaka Huts Committee Inc.

To contact us, email is info@tarhc.org.nz