Back
1343 days ago

Cyclone impacted catchments tracked

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

From local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:

Landslides high above State Highway 67 north of Westport in a stream catchment straddling an active fault-line is worrying the West Coast Regional Council.

An internal engineering staff report has highlighted the deterioration of vegetation on slopes at Barrytown and parts of Buller from Cyclone Ita in 2014, and delves into the progressive erosion in the Lake Stream catchment, 10km northeast of Westport township.

The cyclone caused massive damage throughout the entire West Coast, flattening swathes of native forest and vegetation, particularly in river valleys.

In Buller, the Lake Stream catchment on Mt Rochfort had already split into three channels by the time of the heavy storm this February, but the erosion has now escalated, regional council engineer Paulette Birchfield said.

"Multiple landslides" had left a huge volume of slip material sitting high up in the catchment, about 1 kilometres above the highway.

When the slip material did eventually move it could radically change the stream's direction, with significant potential to spill on to the road at the bottom of the slope, Birchfield said in her report.

The majority of the slips in Lake Stream were in the upper catchment, diverting the flow across a fan. In future heavy rain events the high slip material was likely to mean the stream would "take any number of other flow paths".

Birchfield said the possibility of mechanically diverting the flow and excavating the original Lake Stream channel would be difficult. Steep topography and thick vegetation made both foot and access for machinery challenging.

A large-scale landslide did occur in the catchment in at least 2015, a year after Cyclone Ita, and this had been supplying increased sediment and debris to the Lake Stream channel.

In normal conditions the stream flow would not have sufficient energy to transport additional slip material and the channel would slowly evolve in response.

However, an earlier heavy rainfall event in early May 2020 was probably large enough to move significant volumes of sediment and debris, causing Lake Stream to tear away from its original channel, breaking out in several places.

A 1997 thesis noted that until the downstream channel width and depth was increased to the new flow regime, floodwaters would continue to break out of the channels and drains, causing flooding and sedimentation of farmland and damage to property.

PICTURES: West Coast Regional Council

1: Lake Stream catchment, north-east of Westport.

2: Approximate location of the diversion site in Lake Stream.

More messages from your neighbours
4 hours ago

Poll: Do you set New Year’s resolutions?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

🎉 2026 is almost here!

We’re curious ... how do you welcome it?
Do you set resolutions, follow special traditions, or just go with the flow?

Image
Do you set New Year’s resolutions?
  • 20% Yes! New Year, New Me
    20% Complete
  • 20% Yes - but I rarely stick to them
    20% Complete
  • 60% Nah - not for me
    60% Complete
5 votes
7 days ago

Poll: Is it ok to regift something that you have been given?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

🎁 Holiday Gift Chat!

Do you ever regift?
What’s your take on asking for a receipt if a gift doesn’t fit?

Image
Is it ok to regift something that you have been given?
  • 78.7% Yes! It's better to regift what I don't need
    78.7% Complete
  • 21.3% No. It's the thought and effort that matters
    21.3% Complete
1224 votes
5 days ago

Today’s Mind-Bender is the Last of the Year! Can You Guess It Before Everyone Else? 🌟🎁🌲

The Riddler from The Neighbourly Riddler

I dance in the sky with green and gold, a spectacle few are lucky to behold; I’m best seen in the south, a celestial sight—what am I, lighting up the New Zealand night?

Do you think you know the answer? Simply 'Like' this post and we'll post the answer in the comments below at 2pm on the day!

Want to stop seeing these in your newsfeed? No worries! Simply head here and click once on the Following button.

Image