More Wānaka search and rescue callouts as unprepared people drawn outdoors by social media
Photo:
RNZ / Katie Todd
Wānaka search and rescue teams are responding to more avoidable accidents as unprepared people venture deeper into the back country, lured partly by the influence of social media and websites.
Volunteers said they had observed more people "lost and out of their depth" in 22 rescue operations between October and March, including nine alpine cliff rescues, three swiftwater or canyon rescues and three sub-alpine or bush rescues.
Alpine cliff rescue team leader Davie Robinson said the type of call-outs had changed in his 25 years with Wānaka Search and Rescue.
"We're definitely seeing more and more accidents that generally shouldn't be happening," he said.
"When you're rescuing people that don't really need rescuing, we're getting a little bit frustrated because one day we will have an accident. And it's just a matter of time and numbers."
Rob Roy Glacier, Wānaka
Photo:
RNZ / Katie Todd
Robinson highlighted the summer rescue of three women near the Brewster Glacier in Mt Aspiring National Park who were stuck in "steep, dangerous country" - one of 17 call-outs in three years on the Brewster Track.
They called for help using the satellite text function on their phones and were winched to safety by helicopters in bad weather at night in "scary" conditions for rescuers, Robinson said.
"As soon as we get a helicopter in bad weather, the danger increases. We start doing that stuff at night that [danger] ratchets up again," he said.
"Sending out a beacon, we're going to assume it's the worst case scenario. So we're going to try really hard to get there."
Robinson said people were venturing into the backcountry without learning how to read a map and compass or properly preparing for alpine hikes.
"It's a combination of the Insta kind of thing - people just flashing up great photographs of an alpine lake ... but at the same time it's an alpine walk, in apline terrain, with alpine hazards," he said.
"There's also a lot of ultra-light travel going on now, so if people have got better and better at doing stuff, they've tended to go lighter and lighter. It might be websites like Fastest Known Time ... Strava, all those apps that are recording stuff, advertising it. So you quite often go in the backcountry and you're rescuing people who are following some ultra runner's route."
Wānaka Search and Rescue said many other rescues were the result of genuine accidents, where people had not necessarily done anything wrong.
Chair Raewyn Calhaem said Australian woman Claire Frances Connell, who died while hiking the Te Araroa trail near Lake Hāwea in February, slipped and fell "in just the wrong place".
Later that month, Argentinian Hector Gaston Artigau slipped on the Rob Roy Glacier track and fell into the river.
His body was believed to be trapped in one of the deep Rob Roy stream canyon pools.
Hector Gaston Artigau fell into a river on Waitangi Day.
Photo:
Givealittle screenshot
Search crews spent more than 800 volunteer hours over nine days, using dog teams, underwater cameras, probes and other specialist equipment in what Calhaem said was an "extraordinarily difficult" attempt to find him.
"This was unquestionably the most difficult operation we have undertaken ... we deeply regret we could not bring appropriate closure to Hector's family," she said.
Calhaem said mistakes or accidents were always possible but people should prepare by starting with easy trips and visiting the Department of Conservation and Mountain Safety Council's websites for information about specific hikes, recommended equipment and weather warnings.
"You can be extremely well prepared and still have an accident, but there are things that people can do to try and mitigate that risk," she said.
"The thing with New Zealand back country is it's open and accessible to everybody. You can't close it off and for the majority of people, it's fine, it's just every now and then people get themselves in trouble or they accidentally put themselves somewhere that they shouldn't be."
She said Wānaka Search and Rescue was fortunate to be financially well-established, with a highly-skilled team that often dropped everything to come to the aid of the lost, missing and injured.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Weather: Wet winter not over yet for drenched Tasman region
Flooding in Waimea River, Tasman after heavy rain in June 2025. Photo: Samantha Gee / RNZ More wet weather is on the way for the top of the South Island, with MetService again issuing heavy rain warnings for Tasman - a region still recovering from recent storms. A weather front, moving east across the country, is expected to bring up to 180mm of rain to the region. There were orange rain warnings in place for Tasman east and south of Motueka, Nelson and Marlborough west of Havelock, and north of the Wairau River, through to Tuesday evening. Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane told Morning Report on Monday there was a moderate chance of those upgrading to red. "We've just been under this period of those weather fronts moving through bringing heavy rain as well as strong winds. "And as we saw with the last one, those rainfall amounts maybe weren't the biggest, but they still had the potential to bring those impacts." Heavy rain and flooding hit the area in June , and the ground was still sodden when more rain arrived a week later, prompting evacutations , then again later in the July. "It is really tied to how much rain we're expecting and what the expected impact from that rain will be," Makgabutlane explained. Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane. Photo: Screenshot "Even if it doesn't get upgraded to a red warning that area is still quite sensitive, looking at what's happened over the last couple of weeks, and definitely still want to keep a very close eye on." Forecasters should have a better idea later on Monday as more information was collected. "Tuesday is the day when we're expecting that front to move through. That warning starts around [2am], so yeah, that overnight early morning Tuesday and throughout the day as that weather system passes through." It should clear by the end of the day. In the North Island there were strong wind warnings across Northland, Coromandel and Bay of Plenty expected on Tuesday. Coromandel residents might also get heavy rain, with a high chance of it reaching warning level. A heavy rain warning was already in place for Taranaki Maunga and a heavy rain watch for the central mountain ranges, while strong winds were possible to the south. While it had been for the most part a warm winter, that comfort brought with it wetter conditions. "It's very similar to what we've been seeing over the last few weeks, and I'm sure people would have been feeling - apart from last week, it was quite cold last week - but prior to that, it was quite warm or relatively warm for this time of year," Makgabutlane said. "These northerly airflows [are] what we're feeling bringing those warmer temperatures as well as this moist airflow that's been bringing all of this rain."

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Holes in wall designed to keep polluted water out of Lake Rotoiti alarm locals
Large holes have formed in the sides of the Ōhau channel diversion wall, which was constructed to block the flow of more polluted water into Lake Rotoiti. Photo: Supplied There is growing discontent in Rotorua about the state of the Ōhau channel diversion wall, which was meant to protect the pristine waters of Lake Rotoiti. The wall was built in 2008 to divert polluted nutrient-rich water from Lake Rotorua, which otherwise flowed into Lake Rotoiti through a small channel. But the wall is corroding, and locals RNZ spoke to said the Bay of Plenty Regional Council wasn't fixing it fast enough, something the council disputed. Lake Rotoiti is one of the larger lakes in the region, and also one of the most popular. Lakes Water Quality Society chairman John Gifford said the Ōhau diversion wall was expected to last 50 years, but only six years after it went in, corrosion was noticed. Now large holes had opened up, and instead of a diversion wall it was more like a leaky bucket. Lakes Water Quality Society chairman John Gifford, at Lake Rotoiti. Photo: RNZ/ Libby Kirkby-McLeod "With holes in the wall of course there's the opportunity for water to move straight through the wall, contaminate and increase the nutrient-load of Lake Rotoiti and that's just totally inappropriate," Gifford said. However, Bay of Plenty Regional Council lakes operations manager Andy Bruere said it wasn't as bad as it sounded. "The wall is still there. Having some holes in it doesn't mean it's not doing its function," Bruere said. "It's continuing to function, but probably not quite as efficiently as it would if it had no holes in the wall." Lake Rotoiti Photo: RNZ/ Libby Kirkby-McLeod Bruere said that when the wall went in, the water quality of Lake Rotorua was very bad, but that wasn't so much the case now. "It's important to acknowledge that we have made very significant improvements to the water quality in Lake Rotorua and so that makes a difference to the impact of the wall, compared to 2008 when it was put in." This argument isn't very convincing though to locals such as Tim Manning, who wasn't happy with the regional council. "Its job is to keep the diversion going for 50 years and its mandate is environmental. It made me think maybe [Minister for Regional Development] Shane Jones got it right that these regional councils are so far out of touch they maybe shouldn't be there," he said. Manning had lived on Lake Rotoiti for 35 years, and also owned the local hot pools. He said the lake was awful before the diversion wall went in. "There was algal blooms, there was discoloured water, there was smells, there were people being sick," he said. One of the holes in the wall, underwater. Photo: Supplied The difference after the Ōhau diversion wall went in was stunning - for a time. "The last five or six years, every year, it goes backwards. "It's discolouring more, there's more algal blooms cropping up - not quite to the extent it got to 15 years ago - but every year it's getting worse," he said. Both John Gifford and Tim Manning said the regional council was not doing enough to stop Lake Rotoiti from becoming polluted again. But Andy Bruere said that wasn't the case. "We have a strategy around managing the wall which we put in place in 2015, so we are monitoring the corrosion every three years and that is very intensive and detailed monitoring," he said. Bruere pointed out that the council put in a beam to strengthen the wall and was trailing ways to repair the holes. "And then also we are currently looking at a range of options around what could be done to repair the holes and repair the wall in a short-term way or in a long-term way." He said that it was important that any improvements had a positive effect, and the council also needed to consider the level of impact climate change might have in the future. Whether this will satisfy unhappy locals was still to be seen. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
21 hours ago
- RNZ News
Weather: MetService issues wind, rain warnings and watches to start week
MetService said there was a front moving east across the country which was expected to bring heavy rain and strong north to northeast winds. Photo: MetService In a gloomy start to the week several severe weather warnings have been issued, with high winds and heavy rain expected from late Monday into early Wednesday. MetService said there was a front moving east across the country which was expected to bring heavy rain, and strong north to northeast winds. Orange rain warnings were in place for the Tasman region from Motueka westwards, Tasman east and south of Motueka, Nelson and Marlborough west of Havelock and north of the Wairau River, Taranaki Maunga and the ranges of the Westland District. The warning for Tasman from Motueka westwards would be in place from 2am to 6pm on Tuesday, 29 July, and had a moderate chance of upgrading to a red warning. People in the region were to expect between 130mm and 150mm in a strong northerly flow. Rainfall intensities could reach 15 to 20mm per hour, especially from mid-morning until early afternoon, MetService said. Tasman east and south of Motueka, Nelson and Marlborough west of Havelock and north of the Wairau River would be under orange warning from 5am on Tuesday until 9pm, again with a moderate chance of becoming red. There, 100mm to 130 mm of rain in a strong northerly flow was expected, with rainfall intensities of 15mm per hour possible, especially during the afternoon. The Nelson Tasman region has already been gutted by two major floods since late last month and is in an official recovery period. Residents were advised to clear their drains and gutters to prepare for heavy rain, and to avoid low-lying areas and drive cautiously, MetService said. Taranaki Maunga was under orange warning from 7am on Tuesday to 1am Wednesday, while the ranges of Westland District were under the same from 1am to 5pm Tuesday. Both warnings had a minimal chance of upgrading to red. Heavy rain watches would also be in place for many regions around the motu between Monday and Tuesday, and in some cases through to Wednesday. Watches for the Coromandel Peninsula, Bay of Plenty and an area about and within 15km east of the Divide from Arthur's Pass to the Dart River had a high chance of upgrading to a warning, while those for for the Central North Island mountains, Northland and Auckland, including Great Barrier Island, all had a moderate chance of upgrading. Along with their rain watches, Northland, Auckland and Great Barrier Island would be under a strong wind watch from Monday evening, with both watches given a moderate chance of upgrading to warnings. Strong wind watches would also be in place for The Coromandel Peninsula, eastern Waikato and the Bay of Plenty for most of Tuesday, and about and south of the mountains and high-country from Taranaki to the Central Plateau from late Monday evening through to Tuesday evening. The Coromandel Peninsula, eastern Waikato and the Bay of Plenty had a moderate chance of upgrading to a warning, while the areas about and south of the mountains and high-country from Taranaki to the Central Plateau had a high chance of upgrading, MetService said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.