This Site is dedicated to all those families of the people that have tragically disappeared on flights in and around New Zealand. I only hope that from all the effort in building this site and from all the effort of those taking part in this venture, that it will bear fruit in bringing ‘closure’ to their memories!
Gavin Grimmer
We know that they would have entered cloud somewhere east of Denniston as this witness
saw them disappear from view in the area of Denniston. There is no mention of where
this observer was at the time he/she observed this, but I suspect it was on the northern
outskirts of Westport so as to be in a position to be able to observe the flights
over Westport and Denniston and also be close enough to define that part of the aerobatic
display was over the “nothern end of Palmerston Street” - where Reynold’s parents
lived.. When they were in the area of Denniston, the observer commented that they
appeared again several times “over the coast” in other words they were circling Denniston.
Denniston is situated on the northern (facing the coast) edge of a Plateau 9 nm
further up the coast east of Westport, hence if they disappeared from view, appeared
again, disappeared, appeared, etc., then it would be a reasonable assumption that
they were circling the once thriving mining town. I would presume that a lot of the
men in Westport would have worked in the mine there.... if not Reynold’s himself
before the War, so he would have known at least some of the people there. He also
commented that “shortly after the aircraft disappeared over the hills at the back
of Denniston, only three aircraft were observed, instead of four.” How could he
have known that? He had to have been talking to someone that was “beyond the hills
at the back of Denniston.,” that were in a position that saw them after Sheppard
had turned back! Not only that, it means that they must have been between cloud banks
(Reynolds said it was only scattered cloud at that point) for the person to have
seen them. The “hills at the back of Denniston” would have to be the Mount William
Range. The observer obviously didn’t know that one of the Corsairs had turned back
before NZ5517 disappeared otherwise his assumption would not have been that NZ5517
could possibly be in the “vicintity of Denniston.”
Westport to Denniston, 3 x Orbits, and to Mt William Range = 26.4 miles = 8 x Minutes
By using Google Earth, we can ascertain that to arrive at Westport 10.40, then three
orbits of Westport would take the 5 minutes as they claimed 10.45 - 3 mins to Denniston
10.48- another 5 mins over Denniston and to the Mt William Range, (where the cloud
entered was most likely to have been), (Denniston allowance: three tight orbits i.e.“several
times over the coast”) = 10.53
Position North of Westport, Looking Toward Denniston, Demonstrating What Observer
Would Have Seen