Mount Cook Airline


Mount Cook Airline was a regional airline based in Christchurch, New Zealand. Formerly part of the Mount Cook Group and latterly a subsidiary of Air New Zealand, it operated scheduled services throughout the country under the Air New Zealand Link brand. In December 2019, the brand name was retired with all services operated under the Air New Zealand banner.

Early history

NZ Aero Transport Co was established in 1920 at Timaru by Rodolph Wigley, who in 1906 had driven the first motor car to The Hermitage. Wigley bought five surplus Royal Air Force aircraft for sightseeing. It was the first company of its kind in the country. The first aeroplane to land in Fairlie was a war surplus bi-plane E 4242 in May 1920 still with the RAF roundel on the fuselage. Passenger and freight routes served areas between Wellington and Invercargill. On October 1920 with Captain JC Mercer, Wigley flew on the first one-day flight from Invercargill to Auckland. After a series of mishaps, e.g. damage to landing equipment during forced landings in paddocks, the company went into liquidation in 1923.

NZ Aero Transport Co fleet

In the 1930s, Wigley formed Queenstown - Mount Cook Airway in conjunction with his son Henry, who remained the Managing Director of the airline until 1979 and Chairman until his death in 1980. The company operated charter flights around the Otago Lakes, Milford Sound and Mount Cook regions, until it was suspended by World War II.

Queentown - Mount Cook Airways fleet

Postwar history

Flying resumed in 1952 using an Auster J1-A Autocrat, registration ZK-BDX.
In 1954, NZ Aero Transport Company was reformed as Mount Cook Air Services Ltd, specialising in scenic flights, agricultural work and rescue missions. Henry Wigley solved the problem of landing in the Tasman, Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers by attaching retractable skis to the Auster, and landed on the snow of Tasman Glacier. This is how the Ski Plane operation started, aimed at taking tourists to skifields and glaciers in ski-equipped light aircraft.
at Christchurch Airport in 1971
The Mount Cook Group operated bus services, trucking, skifields and built an airfield at Mount Cook to bring in the growing number of visitors to the Southern Alps. Scheduled services for Mount Cook Airline began on 6 November 1961 between Christchurch, Mount Cook, Cromwell and Te Anau with a 26-seater Douglas DC-3. At this stage Queenstown was not certified for DC-3 operations and passengers were bussed from Cromwell to Queenstown. On 1 November 1963 the service to Cromwell was extended to Dunedin on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and from 3 November 1963 to Invercargill three days a week. The first scheduled flight into Queenstown was operated by DC-3 ZK-BKD on 4 February 1964.
at Palmerston North Airport in 1974
ski-plane at Mount Cook Aerodrome in January 1977
at Rotorua Airport in 1992
livery at Hamilton Airport in 1997
in 2001
in Air New Zealand Pacific Wave livery
Mount Cook Airline was one of New Zealand's tourism pioneers opening up the tourist trail of Rotorua through to Christchurch, Mount Cook and Queenstown. For almost 30 years, it operated a fleet of Hawker Siddeley HS 748s across regional tourist routes in New Zealand. The first HS748 to arrive in NZ was ZK-CWJ. Its first flight was from Christchurch to Timaru and onto Oamaru on 25 October 1968. After a long evaluation study, the first of the new ATR 72-200s arrived in October 1995 as the chosen replacement of the HS 748s. They in turn were updated to the ATR 72-500 type in 2000
In June 2001, Air New Zealand Group added extra capacity on domestic routes by introducing four BAe 146s to supplement the ATRs. These aircraft were taken from the failed Qantas New Zealand franchise. A temporary measure, they retired the following year after six extra Boeing 737-300s were added to the mainline fleet.
Air New Zealand purchased part of the Mount Cook Group in the 1980s after Henry Wigley's death, increased to 30% on 5 December 1983, then another 47% in October 1985 after gaining approval on 18 July that year; and the remainder on 18 April 1991. On 9 December 2019, the airline was merged into the mainline Air New Zealand fleet and ceased to exist.
Mount Cook Airline had 378 employees.

Destinations

Mount Cook Airline served the following routes in New Zealand at its closure:

Former destinations

Over the years Mount Cook Airline served many destinations throughout New Zealand, including:
Alexandra, Blenheim, Chatham Islands, Cromwell, Great Barrier Island, Greymouth, Hokitika, Kerikeri, Kaikohe, Kawau Island, Milford Sound, Mount Cook, Oamaru, Paihia, Stewart Island, Taupo, Te Anau, Timaru, Twizel, Waiheke Island, Wanaka and Westport.

Fleet

Mount Cook Airline currently operated ATR 72-500 and ATR 72-600 aircraft from main cities to larger provincial towns and also on some main trunk routes, complementing fellow subsidiary Air Nelson's smaller capacity Q-300 airliners.
The original ATR 72-200 fleet was swapped for the updated ATR 72-500 during 2001–2002. Extra aircraft were also added allowing Air New Zealand to retire the last of its Boeing 737-200s. In October 2011, Air New Zealand announced an increase of the ATR fleet by purchasing seven new ATR 72-600 models with five on option. Air New Zealand received the first of these 68-seat aircraft in October 2012, the rest following gradually through to 2016. Four purchase options were taken up in November 2014 when Air New Zealand announced the shutting down of Eagle Airways' flight operations and giving over route capacity to Mount Cook and Air Nelson The ATR-600s were delayed for four years due to the economic conditions of the time. The -600 model is a further development of the type including a revised cabin layout and RNP navigation to allow flights into New Zealand's more marginal weather dependant airports such as Wellington, Queenstown, Rotorua and Hamilton.
Air New Zealand announced on 5 November 2015 that an order for an additional 15 ATR 72-600 aircraft, worth NZ$568 million, had been placed making Mount Cook Airlines the third-largest ATR fleet operator in the world with 29 ATR72-600 aircraft. Deliveries of the additional 15 -600 aircraft, started in late 2016 with the last aircraft delivered to Mount Cook Airline in 2019. Subsequent aircraft will now be delivered to parent company Air New Zealand. The new aircraft replaced the existing 11 ATR 72-500 aircraft. The additional ATR 72-600, are used on domestic regional services, supplementing existing ATR 72-500, -600 and Q300 aircraft.
The Mount Cook Airline fleet consisted of the following aircraft :

AircraftTotalOrdersPassengers
Notes
ATR 72-5007068Being replaced by ATR 72-600s
ATR 72-60023668Replacing ATR 72-500.
Total306

Former fleet

From 6 November 1961, Mount Cook Airline operated three Douglas DC-3 aircraft operating until their final withdrawal on 16 May 1978. These aircraft were used to open up routes between Christchurch and Mount Cook, Cromwell and Te Anau/Manapouri. Passengers bound for Queenstown were initially bussed from Cromwell until DC-3 certification was obtained for Queenstown airport. DC-3 aircraft were also used at various dates for services from Christchurch to Timaru and Oamaru, Queenstown to Alexandra and Dunedin and an extension from Te Anau to Invercargill.
A fleet of Hawker Siddeley HS-748s was operated from 1968 to 1996 operating into Mount Cook Airline's many tourist airports. The type operated scheduled services to the Chatham Islands from 1990 to 1992 after Safe Air withdrew flying operations. From 1992 to 1994, Air New Zealand chartered a 748 to operate the late evening off peak Invercargill - Christchurch route. The last commercial flight was on 9 February 1996, from Wellington to Christchurch. The HS 748 fleet was replaced by 7 ATR 72-200s from 1995 after an evaluation process that included the Fokker F50, BAe APT, and Saab 2000.
On 2 December 1969, Mount Cook Airline introduced a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter, intended for scenic flights from Queenstown to Milford Sound and scheduled flights from Queenstown to Te Anau/Manapouri and Queenstown to Alexandra and Dunedin. The Twin Otter wasn't an economic success and was cancelled from 24 September 1973. A second Twin Otter was purchased in November 1983 for services between Auckland, Kerikeri and Rotorua as the HS 748 was too big for the loads on offer, but Mount Cook's Islander aircraft was too small. In 1988 this was transferred to Queenstown, to operate scenic flights from Queenstown to Milford Sound and scheduled flights from Queenstown to Te Anau/Manapouri. A third was purchased in 1995 but both were disposed of in 1998 when Mount Cook Airlines light aircraft business was sold.
Eight ex-Qantas New Zealand British Aerospace 146-300s were temporarily operated by Air New Zealand after Qantas New Zealand's collapse. They were used to boost extra capacity to domestic service from June 2001 to 2002. The BAe 146s were placed under Mount Cook Airline's management structure for the duration. This allowed time for Air New Zealand to add another six Boeing 737-300s to the mainline fleet. The BAe 146s were then retired ending 12 years of domestic service in New Zealand.
Aircraft previously operated include:
AircraftIntroducedRetiredNotes
ATR 72-20019952006
Auster J/1B Aiglet1951Two aircraft
Auster J/5P Autocar1956Two aircraft
British Aerospace 146-30020012002Eight aircraft
Bell 206B Jetranger19801985One helicopter
Britten-Norman Islander1970Six aircraft
Cessna 180Four aircraft
Cessna 185 SkywagonNow operated by Mount Cook Ski Planes.
Cessna U206 StationairThree aircraft
de Havilland DH.98B DominieThree aircraft
de Havilland DH.89A Dragon RipideOne aircraft
de Havilland Tiger MothTwo aircraft
De Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter19691998Three aircraft
Douglas DC-3 Dakota19611978Four aircraft
Eurocopter AS.350B Squirrel 119971998One helicopter
Fletcher FU.24Six aircraft
Fokker F27-100 Friendship1991One leased aircraft
Fokker F27-200 Friendship1981Three aircraft leased from the Department of Civil Aviation.
GAF N22C Nomad19931998One aircraft
GAF N24A Nomad19931998One aircraft
Grumman G-21A Goose19721975One aircraft
Grumman G-44A Widgeon 1975Six aircraft
Hawker Siddeley HS 74819681996Eight aircraft
Kawasaki BK 117 Helicopter19961998Three helicopters
Miles M-11A Whitney StrightOne aircraft
Pilatus PC-6 Turbo Porter1982Four aircraft. Now operated by Mount Cook Ski Planes.
Piper PA-18A Super Cub1956Two aircraft
Piper PA-22 Tri Pacer1956One aircraft
Piper PA-31-350 Chieftain19931997Three aircraft

Change in heavy maintenance

In April 2010, parent airline Air New Zealand announced that it was moving the ATR 72-500 and ATR 72-600 heavy maintenance work away from Mount Cook Airline's home of Christchurch Airport to Nelson. Air Nelson's maintenance base would take over all ATR 72-500/600 heavy maintenance work from November 2010.

Logo

The airline's symbol was the Mount Cook Lily which was displayed on the tails of its aeroplanes prior to the integration with the Air New Zealand link brand in the mid 1990s. At this stage, the flower was relegated to a spot just below the tail, before vanishing totally in the early 2000s. However, it made a return in 2012, appearing towards the front of Mount Cook's ATR 72-600 aircraft. The new logo was a much-simplified flower, featuring six separate petals rather than the former layered specimen.

Surviving aircraft

Most of Mount Cook Airline's ATR 72's are still in operation, either with Air New Zealand or sold off to other operators. Below is a list of other known aircraft that flew in Mount Cook colours.
TypeRegistrationLocation/OperatorNotes
Auster J1-A AutocratZK-BDXLocated at Mount Cook Hermitage Hotel Edmund Hillary Centre
De Havilland DH.89B DominieZK-AKYLocated at Croydon Aviation Heritage Centre, MandevillePainted in Mount Cook Airlines blue, but never wore the Mount Cook Lilly
Douglas DC-3 SkylinerZK-BKDLocated at Smash Palace Bar, GisborneEx Australian National Airways and NAC
Douglas DC-3 ViewmasterZK-CAWLocated at McDonald's, TaupōEx Australian National Airways
Hawker Siddeley HS 748ZK-CWJLocated in Dhaka, BangladeshStored, last used as freight aircraft