Whanganui's Summer Nature Programme is now an institution that draws conservation visitors from around the country. I was fortunate to be involved in the programme in the 1990s and working with the indomitable Ridgway Lythgoe, then field centre manager at DoC.
Major problems included bus breakdowns and unseasonal high tides on beach walks but our supporters were a game lot. They loved the Kiwi bush and birds just as much as we, and — even on the far side of 70 — could get to the top of Kapiti Island or hike the 17km Rimutaka walkway, facing off against rogue cyclists and driving Wellington southerlies.
Lythgoe was involved in the programme when it began in Ohakune in the late 1970s. His photographic collection, which includes historical images of Antarctica along with this region's conservation treasures, is now in the National Library and it is to be hoped the city will get behind curating an exhibition of this work
There will be a lot of public interest and what will enrich the show are Lythgoe's journal records, also now in our National Library.
But this record reveals a more adventurous programme than would now get passed OSH? In the early 1980s he was guiding walks to the Ruapehu summit. This is spectacular terrain, but also spectacularly perilous.