The
felling of the native forests and the ingenious way logs were
taken out of the wilderness is one of the most extraordinary and
least known chapters in New Zealand history.
With the discovery of rare archive film, shot in remote corners
of the country, along with the memories of some of the older folk
who worked in those times, this controversial story is now told
on DVD. Scenes from the old movies vividly bring to life a world
that has disappeared forever.
In Northland, from the Coromandel to Southland, and on the West
Coast, native forests fell to the forces of steam, animal and
man power. In the making of a new agricultural and urban world,
the bush echoed to the screech of sawmills and shook to the toppling
of giants like the Rimu, Totara and Kauri.
Steam log haulers dragged the felled trees on skylines and through
dense undergrowth. Centre stage in this drama were the tramway
engines, or lokeys — legendary designs from the USA like
Heisler and Climax and New Zealand-built Price and Johnston -
hauling the logs out over high timber trestle bridges, along slippery
steel and wooden rails laid hastily over thousands of miles of
wilderness.
Brought to you by the international award-winning Memory Line
team, this documentary recalls an era that New Zealand will never
witness again.