Otago Daily Times

Visitors providing a boost for Chatham Islands

Covid19 is behind a surprising windfall on the Chatham Islands, fast becoming the goto destinatio­n as New Zealanders look for somewhere new to visit, Jane Phare reports.

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TOURISM has been booming on the main Chatham Island, normally dead during the winter and shoulder periods, as New Zealanders, knowing they will not be travelling overseas in the foreseeabl­e future, are booking trips to the remote archipelag­o in all seasons.

Tourist operators on the island — located about 800km east of the South Island — reported a stream of inquiries and bookings when the country came out of lockdown in June. And with Auckland now out of Level 3, those inquiries have surged again.

The increased visitor numbers have been an unexpected bonus for Air Chathams which, like all airlines, took a hit from Covid19.

The airline took over several of the domestic routes abandoned by Air New Zealand in 2015 but was unable to fly them during lockdown.

That came on the heels of the live food markets closing in

China in January, a move that brought the lucrative live crayfish export to an abrupt halt.

It was Air Chathams that transporte­d the island’s seafood — crays, kina, paua, hapuka and blue cod — to Wellington and Auckland to connect with internatio­nal flights to meet the Asian market.

Chief operating officer Duane Emeny said the boost in visitor numbers had helped during those tough months after the export market disappeare­d.

In addition, doing freight runs as an essential service during lockdown had helped keep the airline in the game, he said.

The closure of China’s markets could not have come at a worse time for the Chathams’ fishing industry, which represents 75% of the island’s economy.

Chinese New Year, which fell on January 25 this year, is normally boom time with the Asian market snapping up the luckyred lobster catch.

About 390 tonnes of live crayfish alone are exported every year, and local processing factories earn a ‘‘beach price’’ of between $65 and $85 a kilo, bringing in between $25.3 million and $33.1 million. Another 600 tonnes of wetfish — blue cod and hapuka — fetches $25 a kilo, earning $15 million for the island.

‘‘That cost us a horrific amount in February when it stopped and the island was hurt quite badly as well,’’ Mr Emeny said.

‘‘So it’s good to see a new market [tourism] opening up. It is one of the nice little surprises you get among the whole lot of notsonice ones.’’

Seafood New Zealand data shows that the country’s exports were well down in the first half of 2020.

Last year, New Zealand exported 2650 tonnes of rock lobster, also known as crayfish, worth $300 million. By comparison, just 874 tonnes of lobster, worth $89 million, was exported, down 32% on volume and 41% in value.

Last year, 597 tonnes of paua worth $34.7 million was exported but in the first half of this year, just 69 tonnes, worth $4.4 million, was exported.

Moana New Zealand, which runs the Aotearoa Fisheries factory at Waitangi on Chatham Island, moved quickly to come up with a plan when exports stopped.

Company communicat­ions manager Michelle Cherringto­n said existing catches were frozen and sold within New Zealand, but at considerab­ly less than the lucrative live market.

Some frozen crayfish tails were sold to the US market.

And the firm came up with Plan B, launching a Grab One offer of frozen blue cod, cray tail and pots of minced paua to the North Island — an offer that quickly sold out.

‘‘People were craving seafood [during lockdown],’’ Ms Cherringto­n said.

Private fisheries such as the Chatham Island Food Co pushed online sales of fish to New Zealanders to help fill the export gap.

It was freighting that seafood around the country that proved a lifeline for Air Chathams.

Ruled as an essential service, the airline put on charter flights to help South Island fishing companies, frustrated by the lack of connecting domestic flights, to meet internatio­nal freight flights leaving from Auckland.

Mr Emeny said the Government’s aviation support package helped keep the airline operationa­l.

It meant Air Chathams’ Convairs were ready to go within 24 hours of receiving the first call to collect seafood.

‘‘We were able to head down to Manapouri to pick up some crayfish,’’ he said.

Mr Emeny, a pilot, was so impressed with the way the Ministry of Transport handled aviation details during the lockdown that he and his father Craig, the company’s chief executive, made a point of personally meeting some of the officials later in Wellington.

One of the officials revealed that, preCovid19, he had been working on legislatio­n for electric vehicles.

‘‘He had absolutely no idea about aviation,’’ Mr Emeny said.

‘‘These guys had to learn it all overnight and they did a good job, I must say.’’

Although the seafood export market is recovering, it appears tourism will be an added bonus for the Chathams.

The main accommodat­ion on the island, Hotel Chatham, is already booked for summer and next winter, and its bookings stretch into spring 2021 and summer 2022.

In October, Air Chathams will add its 68seater ATR72 500 aircraft to its passenger fleet of ageing Convairs to accommodat­e increased numbers.

The aircraft, bought from Air New Zealand last year, has been used as a charter aircraft for wealthy Americans, a sector that has since disappeare­d.

The Government announced a $36 million project to upgrade and extend the tiny Tuuta Airport last month, a move that means Air Chathams can eventually introduce Boeing 737s, cutting travel time and increasing freight and passenger capacities.

Chathams Islands Mayor Monique Croon said visitor numbers to the island were steadily increasing.

‘‘It’s the big OE trip without going overseas. You don’t need a passport.’’

Auckland going back into Level 3 had had an immediate impact, she said, but since the region had dropped back to Level 2, bookings had been rolling in.

‘‘It shows how important that Auckland market is for us.’’

Ms Croon’s family arrived from Auckland in the mid ’70s with a plan to live there for a year.

They never left; her father was lucky enough to secure one of the early fishing quotas and used the proceeds to establish accommodat­ion on the island.

Her sister, Toni, now runs the family’s tourism business with her brotherinl­aw Floyd Prendevill­e, based at Hotel Chatham on the foreshore at Waitangi, the island’s main settlement.

Francesca Bonventre, marketing and booking manager for the Hotel Chatham group which runs threequart­ers of the accommodat­ion on the island, said Covid19 had been a gamechange­r; the number of inquiries from travel agents after lockdown had been ‘‘unbelievab­le’’.

She was having to turn down bookings but thought some of the island’s 650 residents, used to relying on fishing and farming, would start to convert buildings into accommodat­ion and develop activities for tourists.

She was one example, expanding her freezedrie­d honey business into a place where tourists could visit to watch the bees and learn about the endemic plants.

Her partner, Kaai Silbery, who used to be the sous chef at Auckland’s Soul Bar, had worked hard to develop menus at Hotel Chatham using fresh local produce and seafood, and spread the word to other Kiwi chefs.

‘‘It [Covid] has finally put us on the map. We are expecting a boom in tourism.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? Every cloud has a silver lining . . . Hotel Chathams on Petre Bay, Chatham Islands.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED Every cloud has a silver lining . . . Hotel Chathams on Petre Bay, Chatham Islands.
 ??  ?? Hotel Chathams is owned by Toni Croon (right) and managed by Floyd Prendevill­e.
Hotel Chathams is owned by Toni Croon (right) and managed by Floyd Prendevill­e.

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