Southern View: April 03, 2018
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8 Tuesday <strong>April</strong> 3 <strong>2018</strong><br />
Latest Christchurch news at www.star.kiwi<br />
News<br />
Call to rid river of hazards<br />
• By Sophie Cornish<br />
Dorothee<br />
Pauli<br />
NATURAL hazards and rubbish<br />
are causing congestion, accidents<br />
and near misses for more than<br />
800 rowers and paddlers who<br />
use the Avon River near Kerrs<br />
Reach.<br />
Plants called flag<br />
iris, geese, weeds,<br />
trees and water<br />
quality are all<br />
issues Union Rowing<br />
Club president<br />
Dorothee Pauli<br />
would like addressed<br />
in an<br />
“ideal world” to improve health<br />
and safety on the river.<br />
“We are grappling with natural<br />
hazards and the flag irises are<br />
chief among them. They detach<br />
from the side of the banks and<br />
cause free-flowing islands, they<br />
change position all the time and<br />
people collide with them. They<br />
trap rubbish also, making the<br />
islands even bigger.”<br />
Loose weeds are not able to<br />
drain away properly as they<br />
are getting caught in the plant<br />
islands.<br />
The iris, which Ms Pauli<br />
believes are often waist-height or<br />
higher, make visibility difficult.<br />
“For me as a coach, the worst<br />
PROBLEMS: Union Rowing Club president Dorothee Pauli is<br />
calling for action to combat natural hazards, such as flag iris<br />
plants, which are causing problems for Avon River users.<br />
PHOTO: GILBERT WEALLEANS<br />
thing is that they reduce visibility,<br />
sometimes I can’t see my<br />
crews and we are supposed to<br />
supervise them at all times.”<br />
City council acting manager<br />
land drainage Tim Joyce said<br />
it has not carried out any mechanical<br />
removal of flag iris this<br />
year. However, it has undertaken<br />
a more targeted spraying programme.<br />
“Getting equipment to these<br />
sites is very difficult, either due<br />
to the reach required or wet and<br />
unstable banks,” he said.<br />
“Flag iris is a pest plant and<br />
we get our contractor to spray<br />
it wherever we encounter it, not<br />
just limited to the Avon River.<br />
This is only done at certain<br />
times of the year when it is most<br />
effective.”<br />
Ms Pauli said several groups<br />
such as rowers, paddlers, and<br />
other recreational river users are<br />
having to adhere to strict rules<br />
to avoid collisions.<br />
“We have already looked at<br />
safety issues in terms of the<br />
rules of the river, how the traffic<br />
should flow, who goes where,<br />
how to overtake, it is difficult to<br />
enforce, but we are trying.”<br />
The flag iris’ reduce lane width<br />
in the river, taking 1-2m on each<br />
side, said Ms Pauli.<br />
Growing numbers of geese<br />
are a difficulty with their faeces<br />
covering the pontoons used at<br />
Kerrs Reach.<br />
“We have to clean them all the<br />
time and it all just goes into the<br />
Avon . . . it’s endangering our<br />
health,” said Ms Pauli.<br />
Concerns about the state of<br />
the trees on the river banks are<br />
also an issue.<br />
In January, a Shirley Boys’<br />
High School rowing boat was<br />
crushed by a rotten 30m tree,<br />
with the crew narrowly avoiding<br />
injury.<br />
The congestion has caused accidents<br />
in the past.<br />
Late last year a single skull<br />
rower was run over by a boys<br />
eight boat, causing a rescue<br />
operation, bad back injury and a<br />
boat to be written off.<br />
SOUTHERN VIEW<br />
Local<br />
News<br />
Now<br />
Fire rages, homes at risk<br />
Felled trees<br />
in Rawhiti<br />
Domain used<br />
for play area<br />
THE TREES felled at Rawhiti<br />
Domain due to safety concerns<br />
have been used to form a small<br />
natural children’s play area near<br />
the Keyes Rd entrance.<br />
City council approached the<br />
Guardians of Rawhiti group to<br />
ask if it could use the logs and<br />
stumps to form a play area in<br />
the domain after the trees were<br />
brought down on March 13.<br />
“It was all quite short notice<br />
and an opportunity we just<br />
grabbed. This was a case of<br />
seizing the moment, to make<br />
use of what we were loosing, to<br />
create a fun area with material<br />
that is naturally in the domain.<br />
It gives people an idea of the<br />
type of play area which could<br />
be extended into the tree grove<br />
area,” said Guardians of Rawhiti<br />
member Ruthie Gareth.<br />
The city council has put up<br />
a sign asking people not to remove<br />
the logs following an incident<br />
in June when logs reserved<br />
for a play area were chopped up<br />
and taken by members of the<br />
public.<br />
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