By Lynda van Kempen, on Friday 8 August 2014
Otago Daily Times
Cromwell could become ''the hub'' of new cycle trail networks
if a proposed Luggate to Cromwell trail is successful, the
trail promoters say.
The Upper Clutha Tracks Trust was given a grant of $25,000 by
the Central Lakes Trust this week for a feasibility study
into the proposed 40km trail.
Tracks trustee and treasurer John Wellington said the
proposed trail would connect the Upper Clutha trail network
to Cromwell and tie in with the wider Central Otago cycle
trail network.
It would link with the proposed Cromwell to Gibbston trail
and the proposed Cromwell to Clyde one as well, he said.
''Bit by bit, various groups have taken up the challenge of
forming trails along the Clutha River and we're working our
way towards Cromwell,'' Mr Wellington said.
When the proposed trails were completed, Cromwell would be
the ''hub'' of the new trail network, he said.
The Luggate to Cromwell trail was mostly within the Central
Otago district, on the true right of the Clutha River, and he
believed the feasibility study would show it was ''do-able''.
''Then it will be a matter of getting other parties on side,
talking to adjoining landowners and starting fundraising.''
The aim would be to have the trail on public land where
possible, but some of the route would cross private land, so
the trust would have to canvass landowners and negotiate with
them.
Mr Wellington said the feasibility study could be completed
by November and would include estimates of the trail cost.
''It's a longer trail than we've built previously, but it
won't have much in the way of structures, so that will make
it cheaper, but we really don't even have a ballpark figure
at the moment.''
Unlike the trails on the ''Great Rides'' national cycle
network, part-funded by the Government, this trail would have
a ''lower scale finish'' and was likely to be 1.5m wide,
narrower than trails on the national network, which were 2.5m
to 3m wide. That would make it cheaper to develop.
''As soon as the feasibility study gives the green light,
we'd look at getting it under way, maybe doing it in stages
if we need to,'' Mr Wellington said.
Among the other grants by the Central Lakes Trust in its
latest round of funding were $1500 for the Wanaka Preschool
Early Childhood Centre, for two additional shade sails, and
$4750 to the Drybread Cemetery Trust for a new concrete
burial strip for headstones and the creation of 40 new
graves. The Alexandra Musical Society was also granted a
guarantee against loss of $7500 to enable it to stage the
musical All Shook Up next month.
Friday, August 8, 2014
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