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Most of the following information is from the document " Proposed Waimakariri
River Regional Plan". The complete document can be downloaded from the Canterbury
Regional Council website.
View
a map of the Waimakariri Irrigation Scheme. The
Rivers of the Waimakariri Plains The
Waimakariri
The Waimakariri is one
of the larger braided rivers in New Zealand. Its flows are controlled
by the weather in its upper basin, the stronger and drier the Nor-West
wind is on the plains, the greater the flow be from heavy north
west rain in the upper basin. This rain seldom extends to the Plains.
The current demand for
water abstraction from the river is low but growing . In 2001, Resource
Consents for surface water takes, including 10.5 cumcs for WIL,
totalled 16.237 cumecs. A Resource Consent application for 40 cumecs has been
lodged with Environment Canterbury by the Christchurch City Council,
the Selwyn District Council and the Ashburton Community Water Trust.
The mean flow of the Waimakariri River is 126 cumecs.
The
Eyre
The Eyre River rises
in the western foothills and, unlike the Waimakariri river, is largely
fed by easterly rains. As a consequence of the unreliability of
these rains, for much of the summer it is dry. Its bed and banks
are covered with gorse and broom. The only fish in the river live
over a short length where it flows into the Waimakariri River.
.
The Cust
The Cust River runs
from the foothills behind Oxford, through the Cust valley and then
into the Cust Main Drain. This drain was built in 1862 to drain
the Rangiora Swamp, which covered all of the land from Rangiora
to the Waimakariri River. When the drain was enlarged in 1868, it
accidentally captured the Cust River and the drain is now this river's
main course. During the 1998 drought, sections of this river also
dried up.
The
Ashley
The Ashley River originates
in the Puketeraki Range behind Lees Valley and is fed largely by
Southerly rainfall and snow. When the snow melts in spring the flow
is high, peaking in September, It dries up regularly above the Ashley
bridge at Rangiora.
The significant difference
between these three rivers, the Ashley, Cust and Eyre, and the Waimakariri
River, are their east coast catchments. While hot north-westerly
winds are drying out the Waimakariri Plains, the Waiamakariri River
is often swollen by nor-west rain or snow-melt from its mountainous
catchment.
Water
Resources
Under their consent conditions WIL is required to
independantly and regularly monitor nitrate levels in representative wells throughout the
scheme area . Records have been taken in the subject wells back to 1980 allowing longer
term trends to be seen.
The 2008 Wamakariri District Council report shows
that since the introduction of WIL, 5 wells have shown no change in nitrate levels with 4
wells showing reduced nitrates in the ground water. The Councils report provides an
explanation for these positive trends. The full report can be accessed via the home
page of www.wil.co.nz .
The catchment water resources
comprise: (a) rainfall; (b) ice and snow, alpine bogs and streams;
(c) the flow of the Waimakariri River and tributary rivers which include:
- Bealey River
- Esk
River
- Poulter River
- Broken
River
- Kowai River
- Eyre
River
- Cust River
- Kaiapoi
River
- Cam River,
- Styx
River
- Otukaikino Creek
(South Branch of the Waimakariri River);
(d) a groundwater resource beneath the Plains which feeds the Cust,
Kaiapoi, Styx, Otukaikino Creek, and other smaller streams on the
lower plains
(e) more than twelve
lakes and associated wetlands which include Lakes:
- Blackwater
- Grace
- Grasmere
- Hawdon
- Letitia
- Marymere
- Mavis
- Minchin
- Pearson
- Rubicon
- Sarah
-
Vagabonds Inn
(f) Brooklands Lagoon
2
(g) Pines Beach wetland.
The flow in the Waimakariri River is continuously recorded at the
Old Highway Bridge where there are some 30 years of records indicating
that the river has a mean flow of 126 cubic metres per second (cumecs),
, flood flows which can exceed 4,000 cumecs , and flows as low as
25 cumecs . The mean annual daily low flow is 41.5 cumecs. Over
90% of the river flow is derived from precipitation in the upper
catchment. Winter snow and ice is stored and released in spring,
contributing to higher flows in the river during this part of the
year. The period of lowest flows occurs in late summer. Flood flows
can occur at any time.
Water leaves the bed
of the river below Halkett and recharges groundwater to the north
and south of the river. The estimated range of this recharge is
3-12 cumecs . A considerable groundwater resource is stored in
the gravels beneath the plains and feeds a number of streams on
the lower plains, including the Avon and Heathcote Rivers.
Beneath the Waimakariri-Ashley
Plain is a groundwater resource of great significance to the communities
that live there. It provides 90% of the area's drinking water, mostly
without any treatment.
The Waimakariri River
presents a major flood hazard to Christchurch, a city of 300,000
people, which has developed on the southern floodplain, and to Kaiapoi
(5,000 people), which has developed to the north. An extensive system
of flood protection works has been developed along both banks of
the lower river. (Refer to the Proposed Waimakariri River Floodplain
Management Regional Plan.)
The Eyre River which
drains foothills to the west of Oxford, bisects the plains between
the Waimakariri and Ashley Rivers but rarely carries any surface
flow in its reach across the plains.
Water is abstracted from
the Waimakariri River for three community stockwater schemes and
for Darfield's community domestic supply. The Selwyn District Council
scheme intake is at the Waimakariri Gorge. It takes water from the
Waimakariri River and the Kowhai River and provides stockwater to
some 47,500 ha. A second Selwyn District Council scheme, with an
intake at Halkett, provides stockwater to about 17,000 ha. The Waimakariri
District Council Scheme has an intake at Browns Rock and provides
stockwater to some 45,000 ha. Domestic water supply to Darfield
comes from a gallery system in the bed of the Waimakariri River.
Above State Highway 1
there are no significant point-source discharges to the Waimakariri
River.Below State Highway 1 the Waimakariri River receives trade
waste and treated sewage effluent.
The plains tributaries
(Kaiapoi-Cam-Cust system, Styx and Otukaikino Creek) were once the
most important sources of mahinga kai in the catchment but their
use for this purpose has declined as the plains were developed and
the streams altered to control flooding and improve drainage. Pollutants
in runoff and from direct waste discharge to these rivers and the
drainage network feeding into them, devalue them as sources of mahinga
kai. The community uses the plains tributaries to dispose of stormwater,
treated trade wastes and treated sewage effluent.
Within the Waimakariri
River Catchment there are about 90 discharge permits to surface
water, and 80 to land, mainly for storm water, agricultural wastes
and industrial wastes.
The Waimakariri River,
primarily because of its location in relation to Christchurch, is
the most heavily used river for recreation purposes in Canterbury,
with the possible exception of the Avon and Heathcote Rivers and
their common estuary.
The Waimakariri River
has potential for hydro-electric power generation, for groundwater
recharge, and as a future source of water for Christchurch City.
There is a small commercial eel fishery based on the river and there
are opportunities for freshwater fish farming.
Other
Resource Values Of The Waimakariri River And Catchment
The source of the Waimakariri
River is in the Main Divide of the Southern Alps amongst the spectacular
scenery and natural landscape of Arthurs Pass National Park. Downstream
from the National Park the river winds its way through the relatively
little-modified Waimakariri basin with its scattering of attractive
lakes, limestone outcrops and scenic backdrops before passing through
the spectacular 25 kilometre long Waimakariri Gorge. It emerges
from the gorge at Woodstock and flows to the sea in a wide, braided
riverbed, with constricting narrow reaches at the Waimakariri Gorge
Bridge and downstream from the motorway bridge.
In the catchment above
Woodstock the Waimakariri River and tributaries are anintegral part
of the landscape. Their unmodified form and natural setting contrast
with other South Island rivers now controlled by dams and drowned
by lakes. The natural untamed river and its landscape is sought-after
for jet boating, rafting, canoeing and a range of other recreation
activities.
The State Highway and
railway through the upper catchment link Canterbury with Westland.
Much of the upper catchment is included in Selwyn's District Plan
as a scenic corridor. The upper catchment has very high natural
values and the reach of the Waimakariri River between the Mt White
bridge and the upper gorge has very high habitat value for Wrybill
plover.
Below Woodstock the Waimakariri
River has its own identity, distinct from the adjacent plains. The
braided section across the plains presents a special jet-boating
challenge as well as attracting salmon and trout fishers, picnickers
and others. The braided sections of the river are habitat for Wrybill
plover, Black-fronted tern and the Banded dotterel, all threatened
species of native wildlife.
The river below its confluence
with the Kaiapoi River is within the Coastal Marine Area, which
is outside the area covered by this plan. The Coastal Marine Area
includes Brooklands Lagoon, which is both a wildlife refuge and
a source of game birds in season, and the Waimakariri River mouth,
which is a magnet for fishermen and whitebaiters.
The high country, the
Waimakariri River, and the coast provide many opportunities for
recreation while the plains provide for the material needs of the
community, for food and fibre, and sites for housing and industry.
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