Wairoa Mayor: Road upgrades between Napier and Wairoa will boost safety and accessibility
The road between Napier and Wairoa is on the mend.
Six months on from Cyclone Gabrielle, despite everyone’s best efforts there is seemingly no end to the problems.
Wairoa mayor Craig Little says the scars and wounds around Wairoa are far from healed and almost on a daily basis more are occurring.
What the future holds is anyone’s guess.
“We are doing our best, but we can’t beat the weather,” says the frustrated mayor.
Little is full of praise for the work of the transport agency, Waka Kotahi, which he says is doing its best. However, most of the repairs are temporary and it’s been a case of getting roads open rather than doing major repairs.
“There are three major bridges that need repairing and in one case, every time we start to do the repairs, the rain comes and we have to stop work,” Little told Rural News.
“Just recently we had three new major slips come down in the space of a few days. It is so soul destroying because we do lots of hard work and then there is another incident and we are back to square one.”
The other worry in the minds of many farmers, according to Little, is what the summer will bring. He says some fear a drought similar to what happened after Cyclone Bola back in 1988, which was devastating for the region.
As well as the woes of the rural community, the mayor and his council are still coming to grips with dealing with the people in the town who lost their homes. He says the government funding for flood protection is most welcome and will give people certainty that they can rebuild and have a secure future.
Little believes that if this same package was offered after Cyclone Bola in the 1980s there would not have been the same degree of flood damage that there was with Gabrielle.
Chinese textile company Saibosi has partnered with Wools of New Zealand to put the 'farm to floor' story of New Zealand wool rugs on screen for its customers.
Showcasing the huge range of new technologies and science that is now available was one of the highlights at last week's National Fieldays.
Coby Warmington, 29, a farm manager at Waima Topu Beef near Hokianga was named at the winner of the 2025 Ahuwhenua Young Maori Farmer Award for sheep and beef.
Northlanders scooped the pool at this year's prestigious Ahuwhenua Trophy Awards - winning both the main competition and the young Maori farmer award.
Red meat farmers are urging the Government to act on the growing number of whole sheep and beef farm sales for conversion to forestry, particularly carbon farming.
The days of rising on-farm inflation and subdued farmgate prices are coming to an end for farmers, helping lift confidence.