Showing posts with label Big River Track. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big River Track. Show all posts

Monday, 22 November 2021

Waiuta Historic Gold Mining Town, 12 November 2021

 A visit to the historic mining town of Waiuta...

I was booked to stay for two non consecutive nights at Waiuta and one night at the Big River Hut but as I alluded to in my last post the very heavy rain I encountered here meant I was unable to complete my plan. Instead I spent two nights at Waiuta Lodge and visited the old town while I was there. 


On the gravel Waiuta Road for six kilometers....

The road into Waiuta is long, narrow and winding gravel but it was nowhere as bad as I thought it was going to be. The actual gravel section of the road is only six kilometers long and although care is needed it would be accessible to most vehicles including caravans and campers. Just drive slowly and keep your wits about you...keep your lights on as a warning to oncoming traffic!!!


An old 1920's water trough on Waiuta Road

I spent two nights at Waiuta Lodge which is a DOC backcountry hut with lots of modern conveniences like hot water, power and showers. It is about 700 meters away from the remaining buildings at Waiuta and makes an excellent base of operations for visits to the nearby historic town and track network. 


Waiuta Lodge is close to the old mining town of Waiuta

The area around Waiuta is a series of low rolling hills, ridges and flats that was once home to the most profitable gold mine in New Zealand. The town had over 600 permanent residents at its peak and was a fully self contained community with stores, banks, churches, a Police station, bars and other support services. There were several streets of houses both around the mine itself and down along Bottom Road. 

There are only six original buildings left here but there are a multitude of old mining relics, mine equipment and sites to explore including mine shafts, mine tunnels, mining buildings and such things as an old aerial bucket system. 


Looking across to the Blackwater Mine from Waiuta Lodge

On my first day at Waiuta I spent the afternoon walking around the old town precincts and looking at the historic remains that exist there. Lets go have a look around the town...


On the Waiuta town walk:

I set out on my walk around the town of Waiuta from the Waiuta Lodge...I parked my car there and after some lunch set out to explore the town. It takes around 45 minutes return to walk from the Lodge to the information kiosk and back along the circuit Bottom Road-Top Road-New Road...


Waiuta in a photo from the 1940's...Blackwater Mine to center...

Map: Waiuta road network...


The ground is most flat as the old town was built on the flatter sections of land in the area. The first building you pass is Gills Cottage next to the Lodge...it is maintained by the Friends of Waiuta. It was the private residence of the Gill Family and has served as an out of the way holiday bach until quite recently. It has now been fully restored by the Friends of Waiuta...


Gills Cottage is next to the Waiuta Lodge

From there you continue along Bottom Road to the entrance to Waiuta and a small information kiosk located on Top Road. It has a map of the environs of the old town and some information about the area but the main information kiosk is located closer to the Blackwater Mine shaft. 


DOC information kiosk at the entrance to Waiuta

From the kiosk at the entrance to Waiuta I walked down the Top Road to the old workings around the Blackwater Mine shaft. This was the first of two shafts sunk down to the quartz deposits that underlay the whole Waiuta area. 

The quartz was raised to the surface and crushed to recover the gold within it at the Snowy river crushing plant just to the south of Waiuta.


Underground map of the Blackwater Mine at Waiuta

There is an old miners bathing shed at the mine shaft and the foundation of the old power house that provided power for the elevator in the shaft. There is still a tall chimney stack and the huge boiler in the building where the hot water was stored before use. 


Old bathing facilities at the Blackwater shaft head, Waiuta

The foundation of the powerhouse at Blackwater mine at Waiuta

Next to the bathing building is the actual Blackwater Mine shaft...it is nearly 600 meters deep (1850 feet) and was the first and main shaft for the mine. The area is fenced off as DOC do not want people falling in as it is not covered over like the nearby Prohibition Mine shaft is.

 The Blackwater and Prohibition shafts were the two deepest in New Zealand with the Prohibition shaft reaching nearly 900 meters deep of which 300 meters was below sea level...



The Blackwater mine shaft was nearly 2000 feet deep

You can still see the shaft from right around the perimeter of the fenced area.  At one time there was a tall winding tower above the shaft but this has been removed in the 1950's. It was recycled to some mine workings outside Reefton which is where a lot of the ex residents of Waiuta moved to when the mine closed...

Closer view of the Blackwater Mine shaft at Waiuta

Next to the Blackwater Shaft was an office and the bowling pavilion. The residents of the time took some effort and care to flatten out the slag heap next to the mine shaft and turned it into a bowls green. It is just one of the many sporting facilities the townspeople had available...


The Bowling Pavilion and clubrooms at Waiuta

The old School House information kiosk at Waiuta

I walked along the edge of the huge pile of mine spoil (...called Molloch by the miners...I don't know why...I saw a sign at the mine site...) which surrounds the mine shaft. They shifted a lot of rock here as the spoil pile is huge...later a horizontal tunnel was cut to the Snowy Battery site and the mine spoil was taken out that way. 


Waiuta Lodge from the slag heap at Blackwater Mine

All this is waste rock from the Blackwater Mine at Waiuta


From the Blackwater Mine shaft I walked over to the main information kiosk via the Gold Discovery Loop Walk which I will cover in a separate post. It is a short 10 minute walk around this track to the old swimming pool and the fenced off entrance to the original mine tunnel built when they were exploring the potential of the mine in the 1920's-1930's. 


The area around Reefton is full of historic mining relics....

The old School house was demolished some time after the mine closed in 1951 but the foundations were used by DOC in the 1980's as a location to build a new information kiosk at. There are some photos of the old buildings which once occupied this section including a BNZ bank and the school. 


The information kiosk in Waiuta on the old school foundations...

The covered structure has a number of interesting photos of the town as well as a wealth of information about the history, people and environment around Waiuta. There are also a couple of covered benches located here so you can sit out of the weather when you visit. 


Waiuta information kiosk: lots of panels....

Waiuta information kiosk: Blackwater Mine...

Waiuta information kiosk: photos of Waiuta in the 1930's

Directly opposite the School house information kiosk is the last house that was occupied at Waiuta. The house was once the resident Policeman's house and later belonged to Tim White. White was born in Waiuta in 1921 and used the cottage as a bach for most of his life. Many of the photographs of the town in the 1950's were taken by him and adorn the many information panels about the town. He passed away in 2011....


One of the six existent buildings at Waiuta...Tim Whites house


From here you walk back to the Waiuta Lodge down New Road and Bottom Road passing a couple of old buildings along the way. One is Rimu Cottage that the Friends of Waiuta are currently in the process of clearing and restoring. The other is the fully restored historic Barbershop about 40 meters further down the road. 


The historic Rimu Cottage at Waiuta...under restoration!!

The old Barbershop at Waiuta township...restored

There is a track near here which goes down to the Snowy Battery site which is a 2-3 hour return loop track to the old quartz crushing plant. I didn't manage to get down there but it is on my plan for my next visit to Waiuta...

I also passed the old rugby field between Waiuta Lodge and the Blackwater Mine site. According to the information panels the Waiuta rugby team was quite competitive and often played games against other teams from the surrounding area. With over 600 people living here at its peak they probably had plenty of players to choose from.


Waiuta had several sports facilities...including a rugby field

Photo of the old rugby clubrooms at Waiuta in the 1950's


As you would have seen in my last post I spent two nights staying at the Waiuta Lodge. Waiuta Lodge is a DOC owned 24 bunk hut but it is set up like a base camp facility so it has a lot of amenities as it is often used by school groups, tours and large tramping parties.


Waiuta Lodge was the old hospital site for the town of Waiuta

 I have written a separate post about the hut but it was a great place to stay and I'm sure I will return here at some time in the future. 


Interior of the Waiuta Lodge is warm and accommodating.

Waiuta is an interesting place to visit and even though it is a bit out of the way there is a very acceptable place to stay at the bookable Waiuta Lodge. There is a wealth of history here and I still have a number of tracks to visit in the area so I am sure you will see me back some time over the next couple of years. 



Access: From Reefton head south for 21 kilometers along SH 7 towards Greymouth. Turn onto Waiuta Road at Hukarere and follow Waiuta Road to the lodge. 
Hut Details: Waiuta Lodge: Serviced, 24 bunks, wood burner, electric lights/heating/cooking, water from aquifer, wood shed, toilet/shower block
Miscellaneous: On the DOC hut booking system, must be booked for overnight visit. Close to the historic mining town of Waiuta. The Waiuta Road is a winding, narrow gravel road take care at all times. 

Sunday, 21 November 2021

Overnight stay at Waiuta Lodge, Waiuta...

A visit to historic Waiuta near Reefton...

As I was saying in my last post I was on my way to visit the historic mining town of Waiuta on the West Coast of the South Island. Waiuta is about 20 kilometers south of Reefton on the road to Greymouth and up a side valley near Ikamatua.

Front entrance to Waiuta Lodge, Big River Historic Reserve


Waiuta was the location of the most profitable gold mine in New Zealand which operated from the early 1930's right up to 1951. Over the twenty odd years of operation they removed over 750 000 ounces of gold from quartz reefs in the area. There was still workable gold in the area but a 1951 collapse of the ventilation shaft meant the mine closed down for good. 


Silver Surfer parked outside Waiuta Lodge


The town became a ghost town with only a couple of residents until the 1980's when the Friends of Waiuta started a campaign to make the old town a tourist attraction. Today there are several old cottages on location and a wealth of old mine relics to explore. One of the remaining buildings is the old hospital which has been converted into a DOC backcountry hut.


The rear of the Waiuta Lodge at Waiuta

Waiuta Lodge is a fully self contained 24 bunk hut with many modern conweniences....it is located atop a low ridge to the south of the main town. The lodge has electricity and water pumped from a local well and has been lovingly maintained over the years by the Reefton DOC crew and Friends of Waiuta.
 

View from the front veranda at Waiuta Lodge

There is a separate ablution block with toilets but also with hot showers which is unusual for a DOC hut. There are great views over the site of the old town from the lodge and there is a large grassy area around the lodge where additional tents could be set up for larger community groups and school parties. 


Toilet and ablution block at Waiuta Lodge

There are picnic tables next to Waiuta Lodge

The living area is open with a large space for activities but there is a supply of folding tables and chairs which can be used when people are eating. The building has a lovely veranda around three sides with many benches to sit on so it is possible to sit outside and watch the weather roll through. 


Waiuta Lodge: interior of the living area

There are 24 bunks spread over three rooms with 4 bunks in one, 8 places on platforms in the middle and 12 in the largest room. All of these have either doors or curtains for privacy and they have electric lighting and windows in each space for natural light. They have those standard DOC mattresses but they are the older style not those plush new navy blue ones that you are starting to see in huts. 


Waiuta Lodge: main bunk room...


Waiuta Lodge: the middle bunkroom...


Waiuta Lodge: the small bunkroom

The area is rich with history so there are a number of interpretive panels, photos and notices around the lodge which gives you an idea of what the town looked like in its heyday. At one stage the town had a population of over 1200 people which is why it had a hospital...that would have been the same number as modern day Takaka and much bigger than modern Reefton...


Photo showing Blackwater Mine in the 1950's, Waiuta Lodge

Waiuta Lodge: some history of the area...

Memorial plaque inside the Waiuta Lodge

The lodge has electric ovens, refrigerators, a wall mounted hot water device, electric jugs, toasters and a microwave. It has a full set of pots, cutlery and crockery for at least 30 people and electric heating as well as a centrally located pot bellied stove for heating. 


Waiuta Lodge: the cookers and pot bellied stove...

There are two refrigerators in Waiuta Lodge

Waiuta Lodge has a full set of cooking pots, cutlery and crockery...

Jon inside Waiuta Lodge on the first day...

I stayed in the lodge for two nights and found the lodge warm and comfortable to stay at. We had no electricity the first day as a local farmer had accidentally cut the power to Waiuta but I got by as I had a gas cooker in the car. If there is no power the water will not work (pumped from an aquifer) but again I always carry supplies of emergency water in my car boot so I was fine. 

It was certainly more comfortable once the power was working...you need a surprising amount of water each day just to stay hydrated and clean. 


View from the Waiuta Lodge veranda towards the old mine

They had limited coal for the pot belied stove and little dry wood so I replenished the wood box from a grove of standing dead manuka just over the boundary fence from the hut. Coal is a great heating material but you do need wood to get a bed of embers for it to burn on...


A blazing coal fueled stove for heat...Waiuta Lodge

My tasty repast on the first night at Waiuta Lodge

I spent two nights at the hut as it was raining far too heavily for me to accomplish my original plan of walking to Big River Hut. It absolutely hosed with rain for much of Thursday afternoon and also on Friday morning. 

I was packed up and ready to head back to Christchurch on the Friday but luckily the power came on at 2 pm and since I had food and books to read I just decided to stay where I was for another night. I shared the hut that night with a couple from Blenheim and there are stories to tell about that experience but not on here...


We have power...Waiuta Lodge!!!

I managed to get a few short walks in while I was there including a walk around the old town precinct, a short walk around the original mine sites and up to the Prohibition Mine site. You will see posts about these trips coming over the next week or so...


View of Waiuta from the Lodge....


Heavy rain sets in over Waiuta...from Waiuta Lodge

I drove back via Lake Brunner and over Arthur's Pass in the rain and a little snow around Porters Pass. There were a lot of waterfalls flowing right up the Taramakau Valley....

I will be heading back to Waiuta to walk to Big River Hut either in late December or early January so look out for that trip. I would also like to take Karen to the Lodge as I think she might find it interesting but we will have to see how things go...


Access: From Reefton head south for 21 kilometers along SH 7 towards Greymouth. Turn onto Waiuta Road at Hukarere and follow Waiuta Road to the lodge. 
Hut Details: Waiuta Lodge: Serviced, 24 bunks, wood burner, electric lights/heating/cooking, water from aquifer, wood shed, toilet/shower block
Miscellaneous: On the DOC hut booking system, must be booked for overnight visit. Close to the historic mining town of Waiuta. The Waiuta Road is a winding, narrow gravel road take care at all times.