Roxburgh Faces Tramping Track

Located in Flat Top Hill Conservation Area in the Otago region

This track connects Flat Top Hill to the Roxburgh Gorge Trail. It is also called Haul Road East.

This track steeply descends 400 m. It provides views of the Roxburgh Gorge and patches of native scrub. The upper reaches have interesting rock formations.

Mountain biking

This track is not recommended for mountain biking. Bikers should use Sphinx Rock Track instead. If you bike this track, give way to trampers.

Access to Flat Top Hill Conservation Area is via an easement over private land. Respect private property by keeping dogs on leashes until you reach the conservation area.

Travel south from Alexandra for 6 km along State Highway 8. Turn left into the Flat Top Hill carpark near Butchers Dam.

This track starts at the junction of Flat Top Tramping Track and connects to the Roxburgh Gorge Trail.

This is a hot dry very exposed area, take water, a sunhat and wind protection. There is a toilet along the Butchers Dam Loop Track.

Flat Top Hill Conservation Area lies at the foot of Kopuwai Conservation Area. It contains one of New Zealand’s most threatened ecosystems – dry, short tussockland – with native species that grow in the driest conditions. The area includes impressive rock outcrops.

Gold mining history

In 1862, gold was discovered in Butchers Gully (now submerged under Butchers Dam). Water was essential for mining the gold and for survival. European settlers quickly learnt the value of water in the dry Central Otago climate. Butchers dam is itself a legacy to the need for water reserves in an environment that makes water the equivalent of “liquid gold”.

During the 1860s, Butchers Gully as it was known, teemed with goldmining activity. Although not as rich as nearby Conroy’s Gully, it was productive for many years.

Butchers shop

A store and butchers shop was set up mid 1865. During 1868, the road between Roxburgh and Alexandra was completed and Butchers Gully Hotel was built. It was later destroyed by fire on 29 January 1886, In May 1890, a replacement hotel was built and successfully managed by a succession of owners, until it was submerged under the Butchers reservoir in 1937. It is said that when the water level is low, the chimneystacks may be seen below the surface.

Butchers dam

Butchers Dam and its outlet tunnel (728 m through solid schist rock) were built between 1935 and 1937 during the great depression in order to create a water reservoir for the nearby town of Alexandra. The dam and race are now only used for irrigation. The Last Chance Irrigation Company now owns the dam.

Chinese influence

The Chinese influence on Butchers Gully can be seen in the remains of a market garden, orchard, schist rock storeroom and surrounding stacked rock fence. These were the efforts of Lye Bow (Li Bo), a Chinese gentleman, one of the many Chinese miners who came to New Zealand in the early 1860s. A popular character of this area, his unusual story is told in detail on the Interpretative Loop Track.

The property surrounded by the conservation area and Butchers Dam is in private hands, but is still known locally as Lye Bow.