Lakeview's newly opened youth park buzzing

Settling in to the Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park's youth park yesterday are (from left) Amelia...
Settling in to the Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park's youth park yesterday are (from left) Amelia Gaskill (18), Cadyne Geary (18), Martine Matapo (17) and (in front) Abby Zonneveld (18), Emily Mathias (18) and Amy Densem (18), all of Dunedin. Photos by Tracey Roxburgh.
Within 24 hours of opening, the Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park's youth park was expected to reach its capacity of 1500 last night.

The youth park, set up on the former Queenstown Camping Ground site, was buzzing yesterday afternoon as hundreds of young people set up their tents and lapped up the Central Otago sun. Among them, a group of girls from Dunedin who arrived yesterday afternoon.

Emily Mathias (18) said her camping experience started off on a bung note, thanks partly, she said, to her mother.

''She told me the tent was all sorted.

''We came up here and [found out] it was only the fly.

''I had to go ... and buy another one. It cost me $17, but it's not waterproof.''

The girls also forgot a chilly bin - by yesterday afternoon, they were drinking warm beer - but they did remember to bring other supplies, including a loaf of bread, some fruit, cereal and ''a couple of potatoes'' picked up from Abby Zonneveld's grandfather on the way through Alexandra.

Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park manager Peter Coppens, who has employed Cougar Security to...
Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park manager Peter Coppens, who has employed Cougar Security to ensure the safety of young campers in the holiday park's youth park. CCTV cameras have been installed across the site, situated on the former Queenstown Camping Ground.
The bread, however, was likely to be donated to representatives from the Queenstown Ice Skating Club, who were holding a sausage sizzle for the starving campers.

For some of the girls, it was their first New Year in Queenstown - described by Amelia Gaskill as ''the New Zealand version of schoolies''.

Queenstown Lakeview Holiday Park manager Peter Coppens said he was happy with the numbers and the behaviour so far, helped in no small part by a team from Cougar Security, on a 24-hour watch over the coming days.

Yesterday, there were about nine security guards on duty, doing sweeps of the camping ground every 20 minutes - by tomorrow, there would be about 30 security staff on deck.

''We're trying to do the community a service,'' Mr Coppens said.

''We over-provide, but we do it on the basis of safety first - it's all about safety.''

A separate area had been set aside for ''vulnerable'' campers, including young women, set up directly beside security staff.

The Arrowtown Holiday Park opened its youth park yesterday, on Jack Reid Park, beside the camping ground.

Along with Connectabus, a shuttle bus would be operating from Arrowtown to Queenstown from this afternoon, including New Year's Eve.

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