A landslide came crashing down on popular Coromandel beach Cathedral Cove, with witnesses describing the moment as 鈥渇rightening鈥 and 鈥渟cary鈥.
Between 9.30am and 10am today, rubble, boulders, rocks, trees and debris came sliding down the cliff face, pounding on to the sand and water below.
The Department of Conservation has now closed the beach for at least a week.
Chris Southwick, who witnessed the landslide, told the听Herald听he could hear a 鈥渕assive boom鈥, adding it could have been catastrophic if tourists had been sunbathing on the beach.
听鈥淚t was a massive boom when it came down. We called the Coastguard to report,鈥 he said.
鈥淟ucky there was nobody on the beach at that time. The tree under it was used by many for shelter. If it was peak time there would have been many people there. Very lucky it didn鈥檛 kill anybody.鈥
A landslide has come crashing down on to Coromandel's Cathedral Cove. Photo / Chris Southwick
He estimated there would have been at least a few hundred tonnes of weight behind the landslide.
DOC Operations Manager Nick Kelly said with visitor safety the priority, the path to the idyllic beach has been blocked to prevent access.
听鈥淐athedral Cove is prone to rockfall and erosion during and after weather events like the ones we鈥檝e seen over the last month,鈥 he says.
鈥淲e consistently monitor the geology at the site, and we are concerned the large landslip that has occurred in the last 24 hours signals a greater chance of more erosion there.
鈥淭he slip is active with more material falling to the beach.鈥
With Cyclone Gabrielle predicted to hit the North Island next week, potentially packing heavy rain and gale-force winds, Cathedral Cove will be closed for at least a week and possibly longer, DOC confirmed. There is no reopening target date at this point.
鈥淭his is not a decision we鈥檝e taken lightly,鈥 Nick Kelly says. 鈥淲e appreciate how popular Cathedral Cove is with visitors and our community, but the risk of landslide, combined with more wild weather, leaves us with no choice.鈥
A landslide came crashing down on popular Coromandel beach Cathedral Cove. Photo / DOC Whitianga
Kelly says DOC is arranging for geotechnical engineers to visit and assess the site 鈥 but that work will take time to arrange and undertake.
Commercial operators who take visitors to Cathedral Cove have been asked not to land on the beach until further notice. Boaties can still enjoy the Te Whanganui a Hei Marine Reserve around the cove and are urged to exercise caution and be up to date with weather forecasts and expected high sea swells.
鈥淥ur message here is simple: stay away from Cathedral Cove for your own safety,鈥 Kelly stressed.
DOC confirmed last month the popular tourist spot had been closed to visitors in early January, with the organisation 鈥渟trongly discouraging people from visiting鈥 due to the weather.
Also last month Cathedral Cove was closed to visitors due to the subtropical storm that battered the Coromandel.
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