Cape Reinga fire now under control, iwi to monitor site


A wildfire that came within 1.5km of Cape Reinga lighthouse is now officially under control, a week after the blaze started.

On Tuesday evening, firefighters would hand management of the site back to Ngāti Kuri iwi, who would continue monitoring the area, Fire and Emergency incident controller Wayne Martin said.

That meant there would be no firefighters needed on Wednesday.

The blaze broke out on the afternoon of Tuesday, March 28, in a blaze which was “likely to be deliberate”, firefighters earlier said.

READ MORE:
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* New video of Cape Reinga fire shows extent of the damage from four-day blaze
* SH1 reopens as firefighters make steady progress on Cape Reinga scrub fire

By Wednesday, it had moved to within 1.5km of the famous lighthouse, closing State Highway 1 at the top of the country.

But favourable weather conditions since then allowed firefighters to attack the blaze both from the air and from the ground.

Helicopters continued to work on the fire until Sunday, when the operation began to scale down.

Just one helicopter was needed to help shuttle 34 firefighters on Monday and 22 on Tuesday.

Firefighters had to be ferried into the fire ground due to the remote location and difficult conditions of the Cape Reinga fire, as this picture from Saturday shows, but the fire is now under control.

Fire and Emergency/Supplied

Firefighters had to be ferried into the fire ground due to the remote location and difficult conditions of the Cape Reinga fire, as this picture from Saturday shows, but the fire is now under control.

Martin said all firefighters would be off the ground by the end of Tuesday.

Ngāti Kuri would continue to monitor the site for any flare-ups.

An aerial estimate showed the fire burnt through 298ha of scrub across nearly 400ha, with a perimeter of 19km.

An investigator would continue to look into the cause.

Ngāti Kuri said it had been given the all-clear to reopen its Taputaputa camp, at the top of the country, for visitors and campers.

The camp would open from 8am on Wednesday, in time for Easter, but all tracks and micro camps would stay closed until further notice.

Cape Reinga/Te Rerenga Wairua is a place of cultural, environmental and recreational significance, especially to Ngāti Kuri iwi – who alerted firefighters to the blaze and had been proactive in firefighting efforts.



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