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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

‘Never seen as much’: Branches, debris cover beaches near Napier

By Gary Hamilton-Irvine
Multimedia journalist·Hawkes Bay Today·
31 Jan, 2023 11:55 PM3 mins to read

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Branches and debris washed up along the Haumoana coastline, south of Napier, on Wednesday. Photo / Warren Buckland

Branches and debris washed up along the Haumoana coastline, south of Napier, on Wednesday. Photo / Warren Buckland

Significant amounts of debris and branches are coating beaches near Napier, as the effects of a wild end to January continue to wash in with the tide.

The Haumoana coastline was covered in driftwood and debris on Wednesday morning, with one resident stating: “I’ve never seen as much along the beach.”

Hawke’s Bay Regional Council says there is no obvious sign the debris is the result of forestry slash, and it includes a mix of tree species rather than just pine.

Logs and branches have also been spotted floating close to the Ahuriri shoreline, and swimmers, boaties and surfers are being asked to take extra care.

Haumoana resident Keith Newman said he had been living along the coastline since 2009 and had not seen anything like it in terms of the amount of debris.

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Swimmers, boaties and surfers are being asked to take extra care in the water. Photo / Warren Buckland
Swimmers, boaties and surfers are being asked to take extra care in the water. Photo / Warren Buckland

“It has been building up over the last week, really,” he said.

“I’ve never seen as much along the beach in the whole time I have been here.”

He said he suspected the weather bomb which had impacted large parts of the country in the past week had likely resulted in branches and debris being washed down rivers and into the ocean.

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He said it was a “bit of a mess” at present but it would, if historical shoreline trends continued, wash away in the coming weeks.

Hawke’s Bay Regional Council asset management group manager Chris Dolley said there was “no obvious sign” the debris in Haumoana was the result of “forestry slash”.

“There is a mix of tree species - and debris size, from small branches to large stems - that have washed up at the high water line, and this is expected following a flood event that flushes flows from the Tukituki River catchment that extends to the Ruahine Ranges and covers about 2500 square kilometres.”

More driftwood and debris at Haumoana. Photo / Warren Buckland
More driftwood and debris at Haumoana. Photo / Warren Buckland

He said a number of factors were behind the debris washing up on shore, but it was “mostly a natural process associated with flushing river flows”.

Hawke’s Bay Regional Council shared a video on social media on Tuesday showing some of the increased debris at Ahuriri not far from the Napier inner harbour.

“Boaties, swimmers and surfers beware,” the post read.

“Our Harbourmaster team were out this morning and were concerned [about] how much debris is floating around at the entrance to the Inner Harbour and along Hardinge Road .... if you’re out in the water, please take care.”

Last week, a boy was killed after being hit by a floating log on a Gisborne beach.

January was officially the wettest January on record at the Hawke’s Bay Airport weather station in Napier, which has rainfall data going back to 1937.

A total of 265.2 millimetres of rainfall was recorded for the month.

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