archived.ccc.govt.nz

This page is not a current Christchurch City Council document. Please read our disclaimer.
City Scene
  City Scene
  
City Scene

 

City Scene - June 2005
Top stories this month

» Other stories this month

Cave Rock no place to swim

Christchurch City Council has erected temporary signs on either side of Cave Rock, reminding swimmers that this part of the Sumner coastline is unsafe.

“The area around Cave Rock’s full of rips and holes because of the strong inflow and outflow of water,” Surf Life Saving Canterbury district manager Grant Lewis says.

“It’s never safe to swim around there. Because of the strong tidal flow, the water scours out the sand and it is deceptively deep one or two metres from the rocks.”

Mr Lewis says a number of people have been rescued from the sea near Cave Rock, which is never flagged as a safe swimming area. Rodney Chambers, the City Council Coastal Parks area head ranger, says most people would probably not want to swim near the rocks but the need for more signage was highlighted by a coroner’s report on the death of man in January 2004.

“This man drowned after being swept off his feet while trying to wade out to a small rock off the end of Cave Rock,” Mr Chambers says.

The temporary signage will be replaced with permanent fixtures following an audit of safety-related signage from Shag Rock to Scarborough, which will be conducted by Surf Life Saving New Zealand’s aquatic signage experts.

It is hoped this review will be completed by the start of next summer. Recommended actions will be integrated into the Sumner Coast Master Plan being prepared by the Council.

This page is not a current Christchurch City Council document. Please read our disclaimer.
© Christchurch City Council, Christchurch, New Zealand | Contact the Council