Water is such a useful element. For
some of us it has therapeutic properties – nothing like walking alongside a
babbling brook, or watching the waves crash on the rocks or beach to clear your
mind. For others it is something to avoid like the plague – an irrational fear;
is it really irrational though if you can’t swim or you get seasick just
looking at a boat ?
It sustains us, it helps plants
grow, and crops and feeds farm animals. It falls from the sky (if we are lucky)
and nourishes life. It is used for recreation; swimming, sailing, rowing,
kayaking, surfing, even ice skating and skiing if it gets cold enough.
Water is a renewable resource (as
long as there is enough rain) it is a clean, sustainable energy source.
My grandfather was a fitter and
turner. He completed his apprenticeship with P & D Duncan Ltd Christchurch between
1922-1927 and stayed on until at least the middle of 1928. By 1929 he was employed
by what was to become State Hydro Department and was working at Lake Coleridge the
first large power station which had been built by the state between 1911-1914, From
there a life long association with hydroelectricity began.
Those early stations in South Island
were each constructed on separate rivers. The first state owned station in
North Island was Mangahao commissioned in 1924. During WW1 the government investigated
large schemes in North Island and planning for what became the foundation of
the country’s 20th century integrated electricity system began. The
Waikato River scheme built multiple stations on one river, using the same water
over and over again to generate electricity and power the nation beginning with
Arapuni commissioned in 1929.
As a child my mother moved from
station to station following her father’s employment. She and her siblings were
born in Kurow, while her father was at Waitaki. He had moved there shortly
before his marriage and his new bride followed a little later once cottages
were built for married men allowing them to be joined by their families. From Waitaki
they moved to Highbank on the Rakaia near Methven, and then to North Island: first
to System Control at Hamilton and then to Mangahao, Maraetai as Assistant
Station Superintendent and lastly Whakamaru where he was Station Superintendent
when it was commissioned in 1956.
In 1924 my grandfather’s elder
brother Frank aged 20 told his parents he and a mate were off to Auckland for a
holiday…but went to Sydney instead. Construction for the harbour bridge had
only just begun, but Sydney wasn’t were Uncle Frank ended up. He went south and
found employment in the Latrobe Valley where the State of Victoria was
beginning what would be a 70 year programme of power development based on brown
coal deposits. Yallourn was a thermal, coal fired station, still using water
(from the Latrobe River) but in a different way, to generate electricity for
the masses.
In 1947 my Dad joined the State Hydro-electric
Department as a draughting cadet. After two years he progressed to become an
engineering cadet and went on to study at the School of Engineering at Ardmore.
He met my mother while working at Whakamaru and Maraetai. In Hamilton he worked
with the District Power Station operation and maintenance often spending days visiting
stations on the Waikato. I remember a couple of times he drove the pilot vehicle
ahead of the wide or long load trucks transporting massive pieces of machinery.
Sometimes if we were at Nana and Grandad’s we would go up to the top of the
section where you could spot a piece of the road between the trees to watch them.
In 1972 we moved to Wellington, Head
Office where Dad took up a position as Design Engineer, working on the design
of stations in the Upper Waitaki Scheme specifically Ohau A, B & C.
As kids we knew those power station names
like the back of our hands along the Waikato; Aratiatia, Ohakuri, Atiamuri, Whakamaru,
Maraetai, Waipapa, Arapuni, Karapiro. Along with others we had visited on
family holidays, sometimes staying in the village hostel, Tuai and Piripaua at
Waikaremoana, Benmore, Aviemore and Waitaki.
Lots of things stick in my memory
from those holidays; my brother locking himself in the toilet at the hostel at
Waitaki, learning about the salmon ladder at Aviemore, the force of water
spilling down the dams, the immense size of the earthmoving equipment.
We knew all about headraces and
tailraces, pipelines and penstocks, turbines and generators – and water was what
made it all happen.
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