Massive rescue mission set to recover cavers
6:52PM Wednesday January 09, 2008

A massive rescue operation is under way after three cavers became trapped  
near Motueka this afternoon. 
Senior Sergeant Grant Andrews of Motueka police said the three were stuck in  
Harwood's Hole, at the top of Takaka Hill. 
One of them was seriously injured at the bottom of the hole and the others  
were caught on the climbing rope at different depths of the hole. 
It was not believed the other two were injured, but police were concerned  
they had been caught on the rope for considerable time. 
Emergency services were alerted to the problems about 12.40pm by a fourth  
climber in the party. 
Mr Andrews said police did not know the extent of the injured person's  
injuries. 
Police, search and rescue teams and cavers were preparing to rescue the three 
 and a helicopter would be used to take the climbers to Nelson Airport, Mr  
Andrews said. 
"This is a difficult rescue given the location and type of terrain and it is  
expected it will take into this evening to rescue the trio."  

The identity and  experience of the climbers was not yet known. 
Harwood's Hole is described on travel website totaltravel.com as a massive  
sinkhole . 
Just off the main Motueka-Takaka road, it is part of an intricate network of  
hidden limestone caves that runs through the hill, and starts with a 176m  
vertical drop down a hole more than 15m in diameter. 
In December 2004, after four experienced climbers were assisted from  
Harwood's Hole - the third rescue in a year from the cave system - Nelson 
search  and 
rescue coordinator Sherp Tucker said it was frustrating that people  
continually went into the hole without enough planning or experience. 
Even though that group included a West Coast alpine guide and three  
Department of Conservation staff, he said the cavers had not had enough  
knowledge to 
complete the trip. 
"People think the hardest part is the hole, but there is a technical caving  
system to get through as well." 
The group rejected the criticism saying they had made a navigational  error. 
According to the national Speleological Society, police normally call in a  
regional search and rescue adviser for Harwood's Hole, and appoint a field  
controller to manage the operation, while an underground controller is in 
charge  
of the operation in the cave. 
Radio communications are not possible underground, but sometimes  
communications can be established using a specially-made earth-return 
telephone,  called 
a Michie-phone, which is connected at any point along a wire laid through  the 
cave at the start of the rescue. 
Harwood's Hole has been the site of a number of dramatic rescues, including  
the "Operation Long Drop" rescue on March 25, 1995, which involved the 
lowering  of a doctor down to a Christchurch caver who had badly fractured his 
leg. 
The  doctor stayed with the man administering morphine to him for 10 hours. 
In January 2004, a group of five cavers, three men and two women made up of  
two New Zealanders, an American, a German and an Israeli, reached the bottom 
of  the cave, but then got lost on the walk out. 
The American man climbed four hours to the top of Harwood's Hole to get  
help. 
In July 2002, rescue teams found two men fit and well after they became lost  
in the cave in a site known as Shorty's Terror. 
_http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10485963_ 
(http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10485963) 



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