18:04:56 Wednesday 17 September 2025

Rocket head blown up on beach

The warning is out to beachcombers and boaties to beware, after the Navy exploded another dangerous air force rocket head on a remote Coromandel beach.

It is the eighth unexploded flare head reported on the New Zealand coastline in the last year and many more may be floating around the Pacific.


The phosphorous flare rockets are fired from air force planes and supposed to ignite when they hit the surface of the water. A scuttling system is meant to sink the rocket, if it doesn't ignite.

In the latest case, Claire Rogers was walking the remote White Beach on the western shores of Great Mercury Island, when she found the grey cylindrical device rolling in the wash near the high tide mark.

It had the words 'Danger do not touch. Contact Police.”

The police contacted the military, who from the Rogers' description decided the device was an unexploded location marker flare head. The Rogers were asked to carefully carry it above the high waterline, so it would not wash away.

A New Zealand Defence Force spokesman says they do turn up occasionally, but does not know how many bombs turn up in 'our little part of the world”.

'They pop up every now and then all over the place. They could wash up in the Coromandel or it could be the top of the west coast.”

He says the rockets are destroyed safely by administering a small charge and as long as people heed the warnings they will be okay.

Within hours, the Navy had despatched bomb disposal personnel and an army explosives expert.

The device was blown up on the beach.

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