Ōhikanui River Explained

Mouth Location:Buller River
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:New Zealand

The Ōhikanui River is a tributary of the Buller River in New Zealand's South Island. It flows north for 30km (20miles), joining the Buller 20km (10miles) from its outflow into the Tasman Sea.[1] It and its smaller neighbour the Ōhikaiti River are often called the Big Ohika River and Little Ohika River respectively. Another variation is Ohika-nui.[2] Ōhikanui River has been the official name since 21 June 2019.

The New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "place of large incantations" for Ōhikanui.[3]

A surveyor named the tributaries to the west of the Ōhikanui River using Greek letters, as Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta and Eta Creeks. He also named Dumpling Creek after he returned to camp on a cold wet day and was given a dumpling stew.

The Ōhikanui River is a tributary consisting of a bouldery river bed and clear swift water.[4] It flows through the paparoa wilderness area which is unaltered (with no tracks or huts), though Buckland Peak Hut is just outside the catchment.[5] The area is popular with trampers because of its natural environment,[6] with Brown trout[7] fishers, who use the river about 140 times a year,[8] and with deer stalkers.

Most of the valley runs over a Late Devonian pluton of leucocratic muscovite granite. The mountains at the southern end of the valley, made of early Paleozoic Pecksniff Metasedimentary Gneiss,[9] have been carved by glaciation to form cirques and sharp ridges. The valley has high glacial aggradation, and lower degradation, terraces.[10]

There were never any sawmills in the valley.[11] Forest covers the whole valley, with no grassy flats. Tall forest is replaced by stunted forest, merging to alpine scrub, at 800m (2,600feet) to 1200m (3,900feet), depending on aspect, landform and cold air drainage. The valley has an average of over 2540mm of rain, more than 200 wet days a year and rainfall has been measured at over 5cm (02inches) per hour.[12] In the 1970s red deer, goats and rats were scarce, possums in moderate numbers and stoats everywhere. The valley now has pest control as part of the Paparoa Range TB Management Area.[13]

The lower valley has cabbage tree, northern rata, rimu, kahikatea, kamahi, kanono, karamu, kareao, kiekie, kōwhai, māhoe, mataī, porokaiwhiri, toro, tutu, yellow silver pine, mountain toatoa and mountain beech. The middle valley has horopito, silver beech, tawhai raunui, mountain tōtara and rimu, with crown fern and bush rice grass (Microlaena avenacea) in the understorey. Silver and mountain beech dominate the upper slopes, with Archeria traversii and mountain neinei. Birds in the valley in the 1970s included blackbird, chaffinch, dunnock, greenfinch, goldfinch, kākāriki, karoro, kāhu, kākā, kakaruwai, kārearea, kawau, kawaupaka, kea, kererū, koekoeā, korimako, kōtare, kōtātā, ngirungiru, pihoihoi, pipipi, pīpīwharauroa, pīwakawaka, redpoll, riroriro, roroa, ruru, silvereye, skylark, song thrush, titipounamu, tūī, weka and whio.

A truss bridge over the Ōhikanui was finished in September 1879, though the approaches, which required rock-cutting, took until March 1880.[14] Its spans were 3 x 60feet and 1 x 18feet. It was built to cope with floods rising to 39feet,[15] but floods in 1925, 1967, 1970 and 1971 covered the bridge.[16] [17] The bridge was raised[18] and rebuilt as a 272feet timber truss on concrete piers in 1927,[19] [20] though in later years it could only take light traffic and had to be supplemented by a bailey bridge.[21] SH6 now crosses the river near its mouth[22] on a concrete bridge built in 1992.[23]

In 1962 the National government agreed in principle to building a 13.6MW hydro-electric power station, with a 58m (190feet) head, after Labour had refused in 1960.[24] [25] Since July 2001 the Buller Water Conservation Order has protected the river from development.[26]

References

-41.8449°N 171.7128°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ohikanui River, West Coast . 2023-01-27 . NZ Topo Map . en.
  2. Web site: 1944 . 1:63360 map Sheet: S31 Buller . 2023-01-26 . www.mapspast.org.nz.
  3. Web site: 1000 Māori place names. New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage. 6 August 2019.
  4. Web site: Ohikanui River . 2023-01-26 . nzfishing.com . en-US.
  5. Web site: Buckland Peak Hut . 2023-01-27 . www.doc.govt.nz . en-nz.
  6. Web site: 2014-09-20 . Paparoa tiger country . 2023-01-26 . Wilderness Magazine . en-GB.
  7. Web site: D.J. Jellyman, E Graynoth . January 1994 . Headwater trout fisheries in New Zealand . NIWA.
  8. Web site: Fish & Game National Anglers Survey 2015-16.pdf .
  9. Web site: Geology of the Greymouth area : scale 1:250,000 Digital Download . 2023-01-27 . GNS Online Shop . en.
  10. Web site: P. R. Wilson, R. H. Taylor, B. W. Thomas . 1988 . Effect of Topography on Seasonal Distribution of Forest Birds in the Ohikanui, Lower Buller and Inangahua Valleys, North Westland .
  11. Web site: 11 May 1979 . Conservation Council has its say on Paparoas. Press . 2023-04-02 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  12. Web site: WCRC - Rainfall, Ohikanui Rv at Buckland Peaks . 2023-01-27 . envirodata.wcrc.govt.nz.
  13. Web site: Paparoa Range TB Management Area . 2023-01-27 . www.ospri.co.nz.
  14. Web site: Public Works Statement, By the Minister for Public Works, The Hon. Richard Oliver, Friday, 6th August, 1880 . 2023-01-26 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  15. Web site: Enclosure 2 in Appendix E. ROADS in the Westland District.—Statement of Work Done and in Progress on each Road, under Public Works Acts, to and on 31st March, 1880 . 2023-01-26 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  16. Web site: John Benn . West Coast River Flood History 1846 - 1989 . West Coast Regional Council.
  17. Web site: 1 September 1970 . Buller Drops, But Westport Isolated. Press . 2023-01-26 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  18. Web site: Coleman . R. T. . 1920-01-01 . Auckland Weekly News NEW BRIDGE OVER THE OHIKANUI RIVER. . 2023-01-26 . DigitalNZ . en.
  19. Web site: 25 October 1926 . MAIN HIGHWAYS BOARD Dominion . 2023-01-26 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  20. Web site: 1927 . Public Works Statement (By The Hon. K. S. Williams, Minister Of Public Works) . 2023-01-26 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  21. Web site: 7 September 1970 . BuIler Gorge Road Open Again. Press . 2023-01-27 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  22. Web site: Sinclair Castle, West Coast . 2023-01-26 . NZ Topo Map . en.
  23. Web site: March 2013 . RR 502 Assessing pre-tensioned reinforcement corrosion within the New Zealand concrete bridge stock . NZTA.
  24. Web site: October 2006 . Electricity Generation Database .
  25. Book: Parliamentary Debates 29 June 1962 Hansard Vol 330 . 552 . en. Parliament. New Zealand.
  26. Book: November 2011 . Protecting New Zealand's Rivers . DoC . New Zealand Conservation Authority . 978-0-478-14918-0.