
Long-awaited bike track now open to the public
After delays due to the weather, trees in the way and a diligent focus on accessibility for all, the Waikaia Forest Trails will finally be open to bike-riders this week.
The trail is having its "soft opening" on Thursday, Waikaia Trails Trust chairwoman Hilary Kelso said.
The track needed the community's mountain bikes on it to help compact the clay.
The trails will have a more official opening in the spring, but after nearly four years in the pipeline, she said it was time to let the community have a go.
The 8km of forest is the second stage of an ongoing project that began with the child-friendly, bumpy tar-seal "pump track" in the centre of the Waikaia township.
The trails were meant to flow on from the pump track, Mrs Kelso said.
With the idea being part of the family could stay at the pump track while the other half can go to the forest, she said.
The riders just needed to make their way through the shops and across the bridge to the old water tower that marked the beginning of the trail, Mrs Kelso said.
Both spots were built by Christchurch company Graded Earth, but owner Milty Coultas had to stop work in the forest around a year ago when the weather "refused to play ball", Mrs Kelso said.
The trail is also within an active logging site, and she said some trees had not been thinned in time, which again put construction on hold.
The most integral part of the project that she said took the a lot of time and care was making sure that the track was usable by those at a "beginner" level as well as the 29% of Southland that identify with a disability.
She said the trails were wider to accommodate "adaptive riders" or three-wheelers using a wheelchair, and the trail's berms were also built to their level.
"We just saw this as a real point of difference, which is why it has taken longer," she said.
The trust always had the varying ages, skill levels and disabilities of families in mind when planning the project, she said.
After the setbacks, Mrs Kelso said there were moments where the trust got re-excited and the opening of the trail will be one of those moments.
Now the public needed to use the it and give their feedback, she said, which will be used to show potential benefactors for the next stages of the ongoing project.
When The Ensign went to preview the track last week, trust member Sam Ruddenklau was on his bike, mapping the trail with the GPS on his Smartwatch.
Mr Ruddenklau previously worked at Wanaka mountain bike park Bike Glendhu, and Mrs Kelso said his knowledge and expertise had been invaluable to the project.
She said it was his idea to have a map at the beginning of the trails with access points highlighted, so riders could accurately and efficiently direct first responders to where they were in the case of an emergency.
The first section of the trail is one-way, so safety was a key concern for the trust, Mrs Kelso said.
Looking to the future, she said they will add on offshoots to the trails with a higher difficulty, and if the more adventurous riders enjoy it, they can loop round to go again and again.
With the pump track to teach riders the basics of the ups and downs, the forest section at a beginner-level and the future tracks potentially harder, it was almost as if the trust was teaching the community step-by-step how to ride, she said.
Mrs Kelso said education and wellness were one of their first tenets.
With the education, passion, integrity and community as the trust's four key principles, the trails were an impressive result, she said.
ella.scott-fleming@alliedpress.co.nz

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


Otago Daily Times
01-05-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Cemetery project makes grave discovery
At least three probable unmarked graves were discovered using ground-penetrating radar at Cromwell Cemetery and it is very likely more will be discovered in the coming weeks as the data is analysed. Southern Geophysical geophysicist Jack Fleming said during the mapping process his team found sites with a few surface depressions that align with unmarked graves during their time at Cromwell Cemetery yesterday. "They show all the signatures of an unmarked burial." The data will be analysed properly over the next few weeks when it is hoped the probable graves as well as others would be confirmed. Mr Fleming said it was surprising to find three probable unmarked graves while out on the site. The Southern Geophysical team (from left) George Dart, Jack Fleming and Jess MacFarquhar scan the southeast corner of Cromwell Cemetery with ground-penetrating radar. PHOTOS: ELLA JENKINS "It's not always the case that it shows up that clearly in what we call the raw data. "We usually have to do a bit of processing and analysis but yeah, no, that was certainly nice." The Christchurch-based company had offered the service for more than 15 years all over New Zealand, he said. Mr Fleming said the mapping process involved pushing a trolley with a 350 MHz hyper-stacking antenna which was one of the leading ground-penetrating radars in the world. Also on the trolley was a GPS antenna which allows Mr Fleming and his colleagues to correlate the data collected and get it to within 2cm accuracy in real time. Jack Fleming discusses the mapping process with Friends of Cromwell Cemetery member Katie Seymour. The radar collects the data, stores it and then displays it on a screen. "Our team of geophysicists will assess the data, make our picks, we call it, and we will map out the unmarked graves or features that are indicative of unmarked graves," he said. Otago Goldfields Heritage Trust treasurer and project manager Odette Hopgood said the work was part of the trust's heritage sites review. With the help of the Central Lakes Trust, Pub Charities, donations and funds raised from events, the trust was able to call in Southern Geophysical to map the cemetery's northeast corner. Ms Hopgood said the mapping would ensure no unmarked graves would be encroached on during repair works.


Otago Daily Times
30-04-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Possible unmarked graves discovered in cemetery
At least three probable unmarked graves were discovered using ground-penetrating radar at Cromwell Cemetery and it is very likely more will be discovered in the coming weeks as the data is analysed. Southern Geophysical geophysicist Jack Fleming said during the mapping process his team found sites with a few surface depressions that align with unmarked graves during their time at Cromwell Cemetery yesterday. "They show all the signatures of an unmarked burial." The data will be analysed properly over the next few weeks when it is hoped the probable graves as well as others would be confirmed. Mr Fleming said it was surprising to find three probable unmarked graves while out on the site. The Southern Geophysical team (from left) George Dart, Jack Fleming and Jess MacFarquhar scan the southeast corner of Cromwell Cemetery with ground-penetrating radar. PHOTOS: ELLA JENKINS "It's not always the case that it shows up that clearly in what we call the raw data. "We usually have to do a bit of processing and analysis but yeah, no, that was certainly nice." The Christchurch-based company had offered the service for more than 15 years all over New Zealand, he said. Mr Fleming said the mapping process involved pushing a trolley with a 350 MHz hyper-stacking antenna which was one of the leading ground-penetrating radars in the world. Also on the trolley was a GPS antenna which allows Mr Fleming and his colleagues to correlate the data collected and get it to within 2cm accuracy in real time. Jack Fleming discusses the mapping process with Friends of Cromwell Cemetery member Katie Seymour. The radar collects the data, stores it and then displays it on a screen. "Our team of geophysicists will assess the data, make our picks, we call it, and we will map out the unmarked graves or features that are indicative of unmarked graves," he said. Otago Goldfields Heritage Trust treasurer and project manager Odette Hopgood said the work was part of the trust's heritage sites review. With the help of the Central Lakes Trust, Pub Charities, donations and funds raised from events, the trust was able to call in Southern Geophysical to map the cemetery's northeast corner. Ms Hopgood said the mapping would ensure no unmarked graves would be encroached on during repair works.


Otago Daily Times
25-04-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Cycling family of four test new forest trail
The Waikaia Forest Trails had their soft opening this week and, come sunny Anzac Day, families with a variety of skill levels were riding the accessible bike track. A family of Waikaia locals had brought their bikes to the newly unveiled track with their two young children in tow after hearing the trail was three-wheel and beginner friendly. Benji and Zoe Gillespie hit the track in the late morning, after the frost had cleared and the sun was out, with their two daughters Maylee and Lyla in a trailer attached to Mrs Gillespie's bike. Mrs Gillespie said they had come with their children after reading the trail was beginner level and accessible for all types of riders, including those with two extra wheels on the back. Waikaia Trails Trust chairwoman Hilary Kelso told the Otago Daily Times the trails were designed with the differing abilities in a family in mind and with a special focus on the percentage of Southland who identify with a disability. She said because of this special focus the forest trail section took a little longer to perfect as the trails were widened and berms levelled to accommodate wheelchairs and other-wheeled riders. The new mountain bike track was the second stage of the trust's ongoing plan for bike trails. The first stage was the bumpy, tar-sealed "pump track" in the Waikaia village, which was made for users to gain confidence by going up and down the hilly circuit, Mrs Kelso said. The forest section was meant to flow on from the pump track, riders passing the shops and going over the road to the old water tower in McKee Park, where where the second stage began, Mrs Kelso said. The forest was an active logging site, which meant another slight delay to the track as the trust had to wait for trees to be thinned, she said. Bike Glendhu director Sam Ruddenklau was a member of the trust, and his experience and expertise were invaluable to the project, Mrs Kelso said. Mr Gillespie said work on the track had taken quite some time and he was keen to try it out. He said he was looking forward to the next stages, which might include some more difficult sections: "Not that I'm any biker but I just want to see if I can do it". In regard to pulling her two children through the forest, Mrs Gillespie said: "We'll just see how it goes".